"Green, Sharon - The Hidden Realms" - читать интересную книгу автора (Green Sharon)CHAPTGR OMG
It wasn't my fault. I'll
be the first to admit it usually is my fault, but not that time. It
was a simple accident, and Master Haddil shouldn't have—But
maybe I ought to start from the beginning.
At first it was a
perfectly ordinary day. I'd dressed to go riding right after
breakfast, but the heavy gray clouds that had been threatening since
the day before finally let loose. It wasn't exactly rain that came
down, not with the air as cold as it was. Half sleet and half snow,
likely to become all one or the other before very long, and nothing
any sane person would deliberately go out in. I'd stared at it
through the diamond-paned window of my kitchen, not very pleased.
And then I'd gotten
curious. Water fell from the skies in different forms, but it was
still water. We drank it, bathed in it, washed things with it, cooked
with it—but how much experimentation had been done? If memory
served there wasn't very much, and what better day to correct that?
There were ail sorts of things to try with water, so I headed for my
workshop to get started.
All right, so I didn't
change out of the heavy riding clothes and boots. I tend to keep my
house on that world on the cool side; when I'm in the mood for cold
weather, I want to know it's there. Staying in those clothes
shouldn't have made any difference ...
Well, I gestured a bucket
of water into being, then thought about what I wanted to try first. A
sorceress at my level is
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capable of quite a lot,
but I didn't want to use magic to make water do things. I wanted to
investigate water, with magic just another tool. But what was there
to try . . . ?
And then I saw the single
drop, shimmering at the rim of the bucket. What was a single drop,
and how much water had to be present before it became two drops, or
three, or a dozen? Some drops were smaller or bigger than others, so
where did the cutoff point come? Was it possible to extend the cutoff
point, using magic only lightly? How far beyond was it practical to
go?
The questions increased to
a dozen, then began multiplying. On top of that I'd gotten an idea,
which in turn suggested a test to answer the questions. Wording my
spell carefully, I used the water in the bucket to make a sphere a
foot and a half in diameter. I was able to hold the sphere in my
hands without bursting it like the soap bubble it resembled, which
was one of the things the spell had specified. I had to be careful,
but 1 could hold it.
Once that was done, I
brought into being nine more gallon buckets of water. The first
question to be answered was how many gallons the one-gallon sphere
would be able to hold without rupturing or leaking. That meant
filling it slowly and watching for the natural stress point, not
forcing it to hold what / wanted it to. A wizard could have garnered
the waters of an ocean into a ball; that wasn't what I was trying to
accomplish.
I had just finished adding
the contents of the fourth bucket when the Summons came. The sphere
was very full but not yet leaking, and then my attention was taken by
the entry that chimed into existence not two feet away. It looked
like a perfectly ordinary doorway, except that the name Haddil sat in
large block letters on its top. A quick spell matched the master's
true resonance with the work, which meant it really was him doing the
Summoning. Come now, was the message, one Master Haddil had never
sent before. There had to be some kind of trouble . . .
Without wasting another
moment, I stepped through the entry. Moving from world to world like
that is effortless, so much so that you sometimes forget to watch
where you're walking. One step, after all, and not even across a
raised threshold. It let me out just short of a real doorway, one
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that did, unfortunately,
have a raised threshold ...
So it wasn't my fault.
Maybe I did forget I was still holding the sphere of water, but that
wouldn't have mattered if the entry had been put beyond the raised
door sill. All my attention was on the room I approached, trying to
see who was in it. It seemed to be a conference room in the Palace of
Ease at Yellow Rivers, and the master wasn't alone. People came in by
ones and twos through other doorways that must also have had entries
behind them, and Master Haddil was in the midst of creating even
more. I heard part of one spell as I approached, and then—
And then my heavy riding
boots made me trip over the sill. My reflexes were good enough to
keep me from falling, which was the major part of the problem. As my
arms flew up to reestablish balance, my hands threw the sphere of
water I'd forgotten I was holding. I recovered my footing in time to
see the sphere go sailing toward Master Haddil, and immediately felt
relieved. Master Haddil, after all, was warded against magic with his
own wizard's strength, so my sphere couldn't possibly reach him.
And it didn't. But his
warding also didn't destroy the sphere, as I'd thought it would.
Instead, the sphere bounced—straight toward the man who stood
beside Master Haddil on his right. Again, since the man was Sighted,
it shouldn't have mattered; his own warding should have protected
him. What's that saying about "should" and "would"
and "could"? To make a long story even longer, he wasn't
warded. The sphere hit him head-on, burst the way it was supposed to,
and drowned him in five gallons of water.
"Chalaine!"
Master Haddil screamed, staring in horror at the man who was drenched
from head to foot. "What have you done this time? Have you any
idea? Even a hint?"
Chalaine, that's me.
Master Haddil pronounces it as though it should be Abysmal or
Catastrophe, but he's always done that. Things tend to go badly for
me, especially when he's around.
So I was used to being
accused, and that's why I didn't say anything as I watched the big
drowned man use one hand to wipe water out of his eyes. His long,
golden blond hair hung in strings, his dark tunic and leather
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breeches sagged, and his
boots must have been full. Even his swordbelt was wet, and I had just
enough time to wonder why a magic user would be wearing a swordbelt
before he moved his hand in a banishing gesture. All the water and
wetness disappeared immediately, of course, leading me to also wonder
why no one else had thought to do that.
Like Master Haddil.
"Forgive me, Your Highness, but I should have done that,"
he apologized, tugging at his bright yellow robes. "It's just
that girl — when she appears, my mind ceases to function. Are
you all right?"
"I'm not so delicate
that I dissolve in water, Master Haddil," the big man returned,
annoyance in his deep voice. They were both trying to ignore the
hysterical laughter coming from the other new arrivals, all of whom
were Sighted. "If the girl's that bad, why did you include her
in the Summoning?"
"She isn't bad, Your
Highness, merely a catalyst for chaos," Master Haddil answered
with a sigh. "If we simply avoid her close proximity, we should
survive with only minor damage. If you'll excuse me now, I'll finish
creating the rest of the entries."
The big man nodded sourly,
and Master Haddii went back to work. By then I'd crossed over to a
deep leather chair, hoping that sitting quietly in one place for a
while would calm the upheaval I'd caused. It was almost as though
cause and effect were two halves of a piece of rope that sometimes
folded back on itself. Normally each effect needed a separate cause,
but the folding brought about effect after effect after effect . . .
And I was always in the
middle of that folding. I sighed as I leaned back in the chair,
noticing that the big blond man hadn't even given me a second glare,
let alone a second look. Well, there was nothing unusual in that, not
once I'd "caused." People don't enjoy being in the middle
of chaos, not even if they're Prince Bariden of Melen. Which was who
he had to be. Third son of King Agilar of Melen, and unexpectedly
born Sighted.
Two more entries were
created, one after the other beyond adjacent doorways, and Master
Haddil still wasn't finished. The conference room had been built
especially for the
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use of a wizard, with more
than two dozen doorways spaced around its circumference. Normally
those doorways led only to various corridors or halls in the Palace
of Ease, specifically the corridors and halls just outside the room.
If an emergency happened and the king needed to meet with his nobles
quickly, his wizard could establish entries through the doorways and
bring them right to him.
But this time it was
Sighted who were being brought through, and not just any Sighted.
From the few I recognized, Master Haddil seemed to be Summoning
everyone he'd ever taught who hadn't yet reached wizard strength.
Since it wasn't likely he was simply holding a reunion, something
important had to be going on. Once the Summoning was over, we'd all
find out about it together.
In the meanwhile, those
who had already arrived were finding places to wait. Small groups had
begun to form, using couches, chairs, and the small tables they
surrounded, for the purpose. The furnishings in that room were all
brightly colored silks and brocades, reds and yellows and blues and
greens, all bound around with the royal maroon and gold. Some parts
of it looked like an autumn tree had exploded, but that was the way
the king liked it. Lots of bright colors all thrown together, and
never mind if some people had to squint against the glare.
Aside from the colors, the
room itself was magnificent. Round and high-ceilinged, it gave the
impression of large sunshiny windows bright with the warmth of
summer, the beautifully made furniture gleaming in reflection of
that. The effect came from magic, of course, since the room had no
windows at all. And it was warm despite its size, reminding me about
the heavy clothes I wore. I thought about changing entirely, but
wasn't in the mood for dress-up. A short spell simply changed my
white tunic, brown breeches, and brown boots to lightweight form, and
that served the purpose.
I wasn't the only one who
sat alone in the room, but I was the only one pointed out to
newcomers by whatever group they joined. After that the story was
retold, and then came the inevitable laughter. But most of the
laughter
6 SHARON GRCCN
seemed to be aimed at
Prince Bariden, as though he'd had some hand in what had happened to
him. It occurred to me that in a way he had, by not being warded, and
that made me curious. Why would a magic user not be warded,
especially if he was also a prince? Even I wasn't that blase or
absentminded ...
I had some time to
consider the question, but before I came to any conclusions, Master
Haddil finished the Summoning. Almost two dozen people had come
through the entries, and every one of us looked at him when he raised
his arms for attention.
"It pleases me that
all of you honored your obligation so promptly," he began,
looking around at the group. "As the one who taught each of you
his or her craft, I have the right to call on you for assistance
should the need arise. It's my unfortunate duty to inform you that
more than simple need has arisen."
Soft murmurs of surprised
comment came from a few places around the room, and not only because
of what had been said. Now that I looked directly at Master Haddil, I
could see what certainly must be worry lines creasing his face. His
gray-touched brown hair was less neatly combed than usual, his light
eyes were bleak, and he seemed not to have slept in much too long.
For someone who was Court Wizard to King Agilar of Melen, he looked
pretty awful.
"In the last month a
... situation has developed that I— haven't been able to get to
the bottom of," he continued. "Before I go into details,
you're entitled to know that there will be a good deal of danger for
anyone who assists me. I... have already lost four of you, those I
Summoned more than a week ago. I had no idea—I certainly
wouldn't have— without warning them—"
His voice broke completely
then, and he stood in the middle of the room looking down at his
folded, robe-covered arms, silently trying to pull himself together.
It occurred to me that yellow was an odd color for a wizard's robe,
but it probably had been the king's idea. Master Haddil's grief and
guilt were so clear he might as well have been projecting them,
giving us the feeling that black would have been more appropriate. A
new round of murmurs arose,
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accompanied by stirring,
and a man from one of the small groups stepped forward.
"Master Haddil, are
you saying you're giving us the choice about whether or not to become
involved?" he asked, his brows knit with disturbance. "Four
of us have already been ended, and there's a good chance more will go
the same way?"
"They haven't
precisely been ended, but the rest of what you said is accurate,"
Haddil agreed after taking a deep breath. "I cannot in all good
conscience demand your assistance, not with something like this. I
ask for your help, but will understand any refusal to give it. Take a
moment to consider, and those who decline may then leave."
Everyone stared at Haddil
for the first moment, and then those in groups began to murmur among
themselves. Those who sat alone simply looked thoughtful, but none of
the deliberation took very long. Without glancing at Master Haddil
again people began to leave, presumably to go back to safer and more
important pursuits. Since I didn't have anything more important —
or at least nothing mat wouldn't keep — I stayed to become one
of thirteen with similar opinions. That number wasn't the best of
omens for most, but for me it had always been lucky.
"Well, we're left
with a larger number than I had anticipated," Master Haddil
observed once the last back had disappeared through a doorway. "You
all have my thanks, of course, but I must repeat that I want you to
be very certain. If anything happens to one of you . . ."
He didn't want it weighing
on his conscience any more than it already did. The problem was
actually Master Haddil's, which was why he felt like that, but we
already knew that. The man who had spoken earlier had been one of the
first to leave, so we sat without commenting until the wizard was
ready to go on.
"All right, let's get
down to details," he conceded with a sigh when no one else
moved. "The problem began about a month ago, when the king
guested a deputation of merchants from the city. Business had been
going so well for them that they were ready to branch out, and they
came to discuss possible trade treaties with the king. Trading with
people you won't be able to collect from isn't very good
cueeri
business, nor do you want
to get involved with potential enemies. Not that this realm has many
enemies . . ."
His voice trailed off
again as though his mind had become distracted, and some of us
exchanged glances. This wasn't the Master Haddil we knew, and the
difference was disturbing. He was badly shaken by the —
situation, and in another moment we found out why.
"At any rate, the
king held a feast the night they arrived, and the next day the first
of the discussions was scheduled to begin. Everyone showed up in the
conference chamber at the appointed time — except for the head
of the deputation. Thinking he'd overslept, they sent a servant to
his rooms to wake him. The servant came back on the run, reporting
that the man hadn't overslept. There was something wrong with him,
and a healer had already been sent for. The healer arrived promptly,
spent a few minutes with the man, then immediately called me.
"When I first walked
into his bedchamber, I was startled," Master Haddil continued
with a sigh. "The man sat in a chair at his breakfast table, the
remnants of his meal spread out before him. To the casual glance he
was about to take a last swallow of coffee before going to dress, and
I nearly apologized for intruding. Then I realized that he wasn't
moving, and in fact was breathing only shallowly. The healer had
tried rousing and neutralizing spells, thinking he might be drugged,
but nothing had worked. It was almost as though someone had stolen
his soul . . ."
If Master Haddil didn't
shiver, some of the rest of us weren't far from it. Death, being
natural, is acceptable, even if it's caused by unnatural means. What
had happened to the merchant didn't come under the same heading, and
a sudden chill insinuated itself into the warmth of the room.
"And that was only
the first of it," Master Haddil said into the deep silence. "Two
more merchants were taken the same way before the rest packed up and
left on the run, and then two of the king's advisers were stricken,
one right after the other. By then I'd Summoned your predecessors,
but they weren't able to discover any more than I had. Ilainna,
Saydra, Hannar and Gadran — one night they were fine, the next
morning they'd become a group of living
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statues. Maybe they did
discover something, and paid the price for forbidden knowledge. Do
you see now why I told you to be very, very sure?"
The haunted look in his
eyes touched each of us in turn, an odd sort of pleading that was
only partially for help. The rest of it seemed to be begging us to
get out of that mess as fast as possible, for his sake as well as our
own. After hearing the details I'd almost decided to do just that,
but then he'd mentioned which Sighted had been taken ...
I shifted in my chair in
the midst of the new silence, fighting to keep from demanding that he
get on with it. I knew Ilainna, Saydra and Gadran only slightly, but
Hannar—He and I had been lovers, and after that, friends.
Finding a lover isn't hard even for someone like me, but a friend ...
who wasn't ashamed to have others know ... who had been there for me
that time I'd needed someone so badly <... now he was the one in
need and, chilled or not, I'd be there to do everything possible.
But glancing up showed not
everyone felt the same. Of the thirteen who had been left after the
first culling, another eight were in the process of leaving. That
left four others besides me, but they looked as determined as I felt.
They must have had similar personal reasons, and Master Haddil seemed
to accept that once the others were gone.
"So we have five who
have made up their minds to experiment with the unknown," he
said with a sigh. "And, of course, Prince Bariden, who is
involved on behalf of his father. I wish it were possible to thank
you for coming and then send you home, but I need you too badly.
Right now I'd like each of you to make a small tile with your name on
it, half inch by one inch, in white. Then place it facedown on this
table over here."
He walked to the table he
meant, a round thing of gold and red enamel, and waited for us to do
as he'd asked. It took no more than a moment to speak the very brief
spell that produced the tile, and then I joined the others in placing
it on the table. Each tile had its maker's resonance as well as his
or her name, which had to be why Master Haddil hadn't simply produced
them himself. He wanted something with our individual traces, and now
he had them.
1O
"Rather than assign
working partners, I've constructed a spell that will choose the best
possible working pairs from among you," he said, glancing around
at us. "We'll need all the help we can get in this affair, so
I'm sure you'll all cooperate."
We nodded to show that we
would, but the nods of the other four, two men and two women, were a
bit on the reluctant side. I had no idea who they were, but they,
apparently, knew me. None of them said a word, but their glances
informed me their cooperation would be minimal at best if one of them
was named my partner. Well, that was all right. I was used to working
alone.
Master Haddil waited until
Prince Bariden put his tile down with the rest, and then he muttered
a single sound I didn't catch. The tiles immediately began to spin
around, as though each one was trying itself against the others. That
told me Master Haddil had prepared his best-match spell in advance,
and then had keyed it to a single sound. The language of spells may
be a verbal shorthand, but you'll never find a complex spell
described with no more than one sound.
It didn't take very long
for the combinations to sort themselves out. The six tiles separated
into three pairs, and the pairs formed an almost circular triangle in
the middle of the table. Master Haddil reached for the pair of tiles
at the right of the base, and turned them over.
"Vaminda and Regel,"
he said, smiling at the two. Vaminda was a couple of years older than
me, with blond hair, green eyes, a slender build, and a sweet,
understanding smile. Regel was her age but not as sweet, with brown
hair, brown eyes, and a short, neatly trimmed beard. The two glanced
at each other, looking a good deal happier than the other man and
woman. Master Haddil reached out again for the left side of the base,
and the unnamed two watched with bated breath.
"Nolar and Jilla,"
the wizard announced, possibly proving bated breath adds to the
strength of fervent prayers. Jilla was very close to my age with
black hair and dark eyes, but seemed to have the self-assurance of a
woman two or three times older. Or that of an absolute monarch. Nolar
was clean-shaven with the same black hair and
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dark eyes, but there the
similarity ended. Despite being a year or so older, he seemed less
assured than his new partner.
And then it came to me who
my new partner had to be. Without looking at him, I reached out and
turned over the two remaining tiles. Yup. None other than the now-dry
Prince Bariden.
"That means, of
course, that the final pair is Prince Bariden and Chalaine,"
Master Haddil said, rubbing it in. "With that settled, I'll now
be giving you initial assignments. After that, you'll follow whatever
trails and clues you come across on your own."
"Did our predecessors
work in pairs?" Jilla asked, interrupting smoothly. "If
they did, it might be a better idea for us to work separately. We
can't show we're better than them if we repeat their mistakes."
"Your predecessors
worked singly," Master Haddil informed her evenly, obviously
working to keep from saying anything else—less friendly. "That
was one of the reasons I decided on pairs this time. Now—"
"And we aren't here
to make other people look bad," Regel said to Jilla, his new
partner Vaminda smiling sweetly and nodding in agreement. "We're
here simply to let others know how selfless we are, how dedicated to
what's right, and how supportive of Master Haddil. Nothing else
matters."
"Not even all the
accolades that will come to whoever figures this puzzle out?"
Nolar asked him, coming to the aid of his own partner Jilla. "I
don't believe in modest anonymity. When I finally prove just how good
I am, I want everyone to know about it."
"When you really are
good, the only one who has to know it is yourself," Prince
Bariden put in suddenly, his deep voice cutting across comments from
the other three. "If you don't know it, what others think is
useless. Just as it is about most things. Now how about letting
Master Haddil get on with it."
All four of them muttered
to themselves, two resentfully, two piously, but that was as far as
it went. Master Haddil paused another moment to be sure of that, then
continued.
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SHARON
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"There are certain
lines of investigation that haven't yet been looked into," he
said, gray eyes moving among the four who had spoken. "For
instance, it's certain that magic is involved in this mess, but we
still don't know why magic was used against the victims. Very often
when you discover motive, the one responsible suddenly becomes
obvious. Jilla and Nolar, I'd like you to interview the families and
business associates of the three merchant victims, especially the
first. Find out about any enemies or people with grudges, and whether
anyone involved has had recent dealings with magic users."
He then turned to the
other pair. "Regel and Vaminda, I want you to do the same with
the two stricken advisers. And while you're about it, see if there
are any ties between them and one or more of the merchants. Did the
merchants want the king to make a treaty with someone those advisers
were set against? Did the advisers suggest a realm the merchants
would have had minimal profit from at best? What about personal
grudges, things mat had nothing to do with the talks? Is there anyone
who had something against all of the victims? The four of you should
compare notes often, to see if there are any common links."
The four of them nodded
dutifully, but from the way they avoided even glancing at each other,
I had doubts about how much comparing would be done. And they looked
bored already, as if they'd thought investigating a mystery like that
would be more exciting.
"And last but not
least, Prince Bariden and Chalaine," Master Haddil said, looking
only at the male half of the team. "I'd like you to go over the
places each of the victims was found, inch by inch if necessary, to
see if you can pick up any trace of the one responsible. Was the deed
done from a distance, or do you believe an entry was used? Are there
similarities between the locations, some one point that makes them
identical? Some one point that makes them totally different?
Anything, especially if it supplies a clue as to who or how."
The Prince took his turn
at nodding dutifully, but since I hadn't even been glanced at, I
didn't find it necessary to do the same. Instead I asked, "And
what assignment have you given yourself, Master Haddil? Something
with
a chance for more definite
results, I hope."
He finally turned to look
at me thoughtfully, and then he nodded. "You and Hannar were
rather close, weren't you, Chalaine? I'd forgotten, but I remember
now. And yes, my own assignment has a chance to generate more
definite results. I'm working to break through whatever spell is
holding the victims living but lifeless. My one most fervent hope is
that their essences weren't taken for some twisted purpose. If that
proves true, we'll never get any of them back."
That chill wind blew
through the room again, but this time I wasn't the only one riffled.
Regel paled somewhat under his beard, Nolar looked briefly
frightened, Vaminda's smile turned from sweet to sympathetic, and
Jilla shrugged. All of us were reacting in our own separate ways,
including my own new partner.
"Then we'd better get
started as quickly as possible," he said, the words more of an
order than a suggestion. "If those essences are going to be used
for something, our only hope of stopping it is to find the one
responsible. Let's go."
It was fairly obvious he
was talking to the other four, and they responded by immediately
heading for a door that would take them through the palace to the
locations of then- assignments. Each pair was engaged in low-voiced
discussion even before they were out of sight, probably deciding on
how to begin. Master Haddil banished all the entries he'd created
with a single gesture, then also headed out of the room,
unconsciously brushing at his robes to straighten them.
Even before that, my
partner had disappeared completely in yet another direction. He'd
given his orders and then had left with a broad stride, supremely
confident that any unimportant details would follow along behind.
Without his needing to even glance at the detail. I paused to get a
few thoughts in order, then chose my own way out into the corridors.
The Palace of Ease was
what all palaces should be like: opulence on a gigantic scale with an
equal amount of comfort. Melen was a wealthy kingdom filled with
satisfied, wealthy people, and rather than resent the riches their
king
14
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displayed, his palace made
them proud. It also employed a large number of the kingdom's less
affluent citizenry, which added to everyone's happiness. Too many
poor, jobless people were bad for a kingdom, not to mention
unsightly.
I used the conference room
to orient myself, then headed for the main kitchens. I'd learned my
way around while I was studying with Master Haddil, even though it
had been necessary to stay out of the royal family's way. The king
didn't mind his Court Wizard spending time training those who also
wanted to be higher level magic users, but Master Haddil felt it
would be an imposition if his students were visibly there. The
kingdom was too safe and secure for him to have much else to do
besides teach, but he was still firm on the point.
Rather than use
invisibility to satisfy the requirement I'd used the deep night,
wandering the corridors and halls while most people slept. I've
always been a creature of the night, so doing it that way hadn't been
much of a hardship. I'd also gotten to know some of my fellow night
creatures, those who preferred working late hours and those who,
being new, had been assigned to them. It had been more man a year
since I'd left, but there should still be those around who remembered
me.
The main kitchens were
staffed at all times, fully staffed between the hours of dawn and
midnight. The king wasn't much of an early riser, but the queen
tended to start things moving at first light. She expected the day's
baking to be done, all meals planned and more man started, all
cleaning well under way. At the other end of the scale was the
Princess Efria, who slept till noon then invited people to late night
suppers. The staff had to cope with all of that, or they would have
gotten another staff.
Right then it was the
middle of the day, just past lunchtime according to the position of
the sun. I stopped just inside one of the kitchen entrances, the only
spot immediately available for keeping out of the way of the rush.
There were enough people hurrying around to fill a small town, which
the kitchens were almost large enough to be. It had only been a short
time past breakfast on the world where my cold weather house was, but
watching all that activity started to make me hungry.
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"Chalaine, is that
you skulking in that corner?" a booming voice demanded. "It
is you, and not a word for an old friend. Whatever is this world
coming to?"
By that time the speaker
was about eight feet away, standing with wide fists on wider hips and
forcing everyone to go around her. She also wore the sort of devif
ish grin that didn't usually go with a woman her size, a grin that
said she liked fun more than authority. Not that she didn't also have
the authority. Benatha Aylie ruled completely in the royal kitchens,
either personally or by proxy. She watched me try three times to
cross the eight feet between us, laughed at the measly
foot-and-a-haTF s worth of progress I made, then finally took pity on
me.
"What you need is the
sort of size / carry," she informed me after simply walking
forward and letting everyone else get out of her way. "With the
queen holding a reception for the ladies of the city this afternoon,
that "traffic won't slow down until bedtime. Let's get you some
place where we can sit down and talk."
She put a giant arm around
my shoulders, then led the way left toward her alcove. The area was
furnished like a very small sitting room a short distance away from a
chopping and skinning table, two of the roasting hearths, three of
the freestanding soup cauldrons, and a minor storeroom. The area was
also no one's but hers, and anyone trying to use it uninvited would
be lucky if they were able to leave again on their own.
"I had a feeling
you'd be showing up about now," Bena said as she deposited me in
a chair before moving to take her much larger one. "Everyone in
the palace knew Haddil was going to be Summoning help today, which
was probably why he took an early lunch. Are you sure it's smart to
get involved in this? The first four who came to help were supposed
to be the best, and now look at them.'1''
For once her face wore
nothing of a grin, and the short amount of time she'd teased me
showed how upset she was. I knew she wanted to be reassured, but not
if I had to lie.
"One of those four is
a special friend of mine," I told her with a shrug. "Would
you be able to simply turn around and walk away?"
"For a freak, you
make an awfully good decent person,"
16
she grumbled, not very
happy to get an answer she couldn't argue. "Most of those other
freaks don't give a damn about anybody but themselves, especially not
if giving a damn means they have to put themselves out. I've always
wondered what makes you so different."
"How many freaks do
you know as well as you know me?" I countered, feeling no real
insult at what she called me. A lot of people considered the Sighted
to be freaks rather than gifted, but most weren't as honest about it
as Bena. Or as fair. My being a freak didn't stop her from being my
friend.
"I've run across a
lot of freaks in my time," she assured me, her wide face still
unusually serious. "Even the ones who didn't treat me like dirt
acted like they were doing me a favor eating what my kitchens
produced. What none of 'em have is good manners, but you do. That's
what makes you so different."
"You didn't think so
the first time we met," I reminded her with a badly swallowed
grin. "You called me a clumsy sneak thief, and an underfed one
at that."
"And you told me to
keep my night-cook opinions to myself," she came back, finally
recapturing a grin of her own. "You hadn't come to steal food,
only to look around, and you weren't underfed, you were fashionably
slender. I always wondered why you didn't zap me when I laughed."
"Not because I wasn't
tempted," I assured her, feeling myself relax as I always did
around Bena. "But if I had the king would have put a bounty on
my head, and that would have been the end of my studies. I had no
idea who you were, or that someone hi your position would be a night
rover like me."
"I didn't know who
you were either, or why you would study with someone like Haddil."
Her light brown eyes were on my face again, not as grim but certainly
serious. "He's one I'd watch starve with a smile, and you have
no reason to like him any better. All he ever did was criticize you,
but not in a useful way. If I treated my chefs half that bad, they'd
pick up and walk out."
"Not the ones who
were determined to study with you," I disagreed. "There are
a lot of people in the worlds who have an incredible amount to teach,
even though they have
17
little or no personality.
You don't have to like them to learn from them, and Master Haddil had
one really big attraction for me. I knew he'd never let me be sloppy
in my lessons because of my reputation. For some reason, I generate a
lot of supposed toleration from a lot of people."
"For some reason,"
she echoed, back to studying me. "And for the same reason you
generate panic in others. They don't know how to deal with
that—special talent you sometimes show, so they react according
to their natures. I never saw it for myself so I can't say if it's
true or not, but you tell me you cause problems at times for the
people around you. Things happen, and those things aren't pleasant,
so people get rattled. Even if it never happened to them, most don't
know how to treat you, so either they pretend they're tolerant, or
they panic."
"Which doesn't change
the fact that they do react like mat," I said with a sigh.
"Master Haddil became impatient instead—which usually made
me nervous—but that didn't keep me from learning. It did cause
some spectacular 'accidents,' though . .."
She chuckled when I let
the words trail off, finding more amusement in most of those few but
incredible incidents than I ever had. Complex accidents as opposed to
the simple sort, more involved than any of the situations could
possibly have called for. Like that first time it had happened
directly to Master Haddil... I'd rolled on the floor when I'd heard
about it, even though laughing wasn't the usual way I handled hearing
about it... As a facet of talent, that sort of thing leaves a lot to
be desired ...
"Bena, teli me what
you know about what happened," I said, shifting to another
unpleasant topic. "All those people who were left as empty
shells—doesn't anyone have an idea about why it was done, if
not by who?"
"One's as good a
question as the other," she replied with a shrug. "Some are
saying the merchants and the king's men were planning something that
would hurt everyone in the kingdom but them, and the EverNameless
stepped in to stop them. Others think it has to be an enemy of
Haddil's, trying to make him look bad. The king's worried that it
might be someone testing a new spell, one that they'll use later on
their real target. The queen thinks it's someone getting even
18
7HA6OM GR€£M
TH€
19
for not being invited to
one of her parties. If you happen to have a favorite theory, just ask
around a little and you'll find five or ten other people who think
the same thing."
"And what do you
think?" I asked instead, unsurprised at the way people were
taking it. "You always know what's going on in this place, and
more importantly you know rumor from fact. Give me something I can
work with."
"I wish I could,"
she said, sympathy in those light-dark eyes. "And not just
because you bring out the mother in me. Whatever took those people
like that could take one of us next, like me, for instance. The idea
scares me worse than being invited to a new bride's first meal, but
there's nothing to build a real theory on. Nobody knows anything,
everybody's just guessing. And everybody's worried about who'll be
next."
"Why are people
expecting more victims?" I asked, tripping over the oddness of
that "The merchants and king's men could have had a common
enemy, and the Sighted were done because they came close to finding
him. The king's theory is as silly as the queen's, and both match the
thought mat the EverNameless would bother. But everybody, including
you, expects more victims. Why is mat?"
"That's another good
question," she allowed, brows raised in surprised thought "I
hadn't looked at it like that before, but—You're right, we do
expect more people to be taken. Why don't you have something to eat
while I try to figure out why that is."
"Bena, I ate only a
couple of hours ago," I said with a sigh, suddenly finding
myself in a too-familiar position. "I really don't think you can
call me underfed any longer, and on top of that I haven't much time.
Right now I'm supposed to be somewhere else, and if I don't get there
soon, we'll probably be able to hear the explosion from here. Is
there anything at all you can tell me, no matter how silly or useless
you consider the information? Take a minute to think, but don't try
to force it. I may have to leave now, but I'll be back later some
time."
"Right now I can't
think of anything," she admitted, her wide brow creased into a
frown. "Something just might come to me later, so don't forget
about coming back. If you're still in one piece, that is."
Her last words were
accompanied by a sudden, mischievous grin, making it my turn to raise
brows questioningly. Bena would never joke about my staying unhurt,
even if she didn't know how much it would take to harm me. And then I
noticed that she was looking past me, and the answer became perfectly
clear.
"What the hell are
you doing in here!" a deep, angry voice demanded from behind me,
confirming a guess that had been a virtual certainty. "Chatting
with friends over tea wasn't part of our schedule."
"You're right, Your
Highness, she does deserve a good scolding," Bena promptly put
in, that look in her eyes increasing. "If you're the one she was
supposed to be someplace else with, she has no business visiting with
an old woman instead. Give it to her good."
"Bena," I
muttered warningly, but that did as much good as you would expect. I
was ignored completely—but only by her.
"Well?" my new
partner demanded again, coming around to my left. "Answer my
question."
"I'd say you've
already answered it yourself," I responded, not quite looking at
him. "But it doesn't matter, because I'm through here anyway.
Let's get to that schedule you mentioned."
"Just a minute,"
he said as I stood, one big hand coming to my left shoulder. "What
do you mean, I've already answered the question myself? I don't ask
questions I already have the answer to."
"I'm sure you don't,"
I said with a nod, glancing around the kitchen. "I must have
been mistaken, the way I often am. Let's just forget about it and get
on with what we're supposed to be doing."
"Don't accept that,
Bariden," Bena said suddenly as the hand finally began to leave
my shoulder. "She has a nasty habit of holding people at arm's
length by refusing to argue with anything they say, even if it's
wrong. You two seem to have gotten off on the wrong foot, and if you
continue to let her push you away it can only get worse."
"I'm sorry, Bena, but
you've somehow gotten the wrong impression," the man answered,
most of his impatience gone. "She and I don't have a personal
relationship, only
QO SHAROM
a working one. She can
push me as far away as she likes, and I won't mind a bit. But you
really do have to excuse us now. Let's go, girl, and this time try
not to lose me."
Once again he strode away,
leaving me to wonder if that was the only method of walking he knew.
Bena, now looking upset, started to say something, but I took off
after my partner before she could get the words out. She deserved to
be upset for practicing out-of-the-blue matchmaking, and hopefully
whatever embarrassment she felt would keep her from doing it again
very soon. Expecting it to stop her for good would be living in a
dream world.
I had to use a minor
repulsion spell to get out of the kitchens without getting run over,
but Prince Bariden didn't have the same problem. He had more size
than Bena, but distributed it differently. Rather than being fat he
was just plain big, broad shoulders above a massive chest, thick
arms, wide, flat waist, muscled legs. He also had big feet, but I
suppose he would have looked funny with small ones. What he looked
was dangerous, something most magic users took pains to avoid. Maybe
it was the sword.
His broad stride led the
way from one corridor to the next, and although he never looked back
I was sure he knew I was following about ten feet behind. Mostly he
seemed to be involved in his thoughts, as though something were
bothering him. I wondered if it had anything to do with the problem,
and if he knew something I didn't. He finally turned into a corridor
in the guest wing, and stopped in front of one set of double doors.
"This is the
apartment where the first merchant was found," I was informed as
soon as I reached him. "It's as good a place to start as any,
even though too many people trampled through it before Master Haddil
closed it off. If we don't get anything here, we'll go on to the
others in turn."
"Don't step in yet,"
I said as he reached toward one of the doors. "I'd like to try
to get a body count first, and the setting of Master Haddil's
exclusion spell will be more than the tail end of it. It will also
let me know if anyone's been in here since the spell was set."
"I can see where that
last would be useful, but why a body count?" he asked with the
usual frown in his voice.
"What good will it do
knowing there were fifty people rather than forty?"
"If fifty people went
through that doorway and we can find the traces of fifty-one inside,
we then check the win-dows," I said, thinking about how to word
the spell. "If they weren't used instead of the door, we'll know
an entry or something else magical was used to get in. Finding traces
of something is easier when you know that that something was
definitely there."
"I hadn't thought of
that," he responded, the admission ungrudged and actually almost
neutral. "It's a good idea, so I'm glad you thought of it. Why
don't you look at me when you talk to me?"
The question seemed to
hold nothing but curiosity, but I have to admit I was surprised he'd
noticed. Right then I was still studying the double doors, so I
shrugged.
"You can consider it
a bad habit, if you like," I suggested, continuing on with that
habit. "You'd be best off ignoring it. Now let's see how
effective my spell is."
I raised my hands and
spoke the spell, causing the doors to do something they were capable
of but not usually required to do. Ail doors "know" how
many people pass through them, it just takes more than a simple
request to get the information. There was an instant of recollection
during the time period specified, and then the right-hand door began
to open and close. It did it seventeen times, hesitated a full five
heartbeats, then closed more fully with a click.
"Seventeen people
went in and out, but no one after the exclusion spell was set,"
I reported. "Now we can check that against the number of people
who were actually in the rooms."
He made a vague sound of
agreement and led the way in, using the key phrase Master Haddil had
given him to exempt us from the exclusion spell. It would have been
possible to enter even without the key, but it wouldn't have been
easy to start with and eventually we would have found it impossible
to stay. Even some unSighted could have managed to get in, but their
stay would have been a lot shorter.
The apartment's reception
room was a good size, large enough to accommodate at least two dozen
people comfort-
ably, more if it happened
to be necessary. The wall lamps had come on when Prince Bariden had
snapped his fingers, but they were the only source of light. There
was a closed door to the left and one to the right, lots of chairs
and couches and tables and wail paintings and knickknacks— but
no windows.
"The merchant was
found in his bedchamber, through that door," my partner said,
nodding to the left. "Let's count and separate the traces in
here, and then we'll have something to compare the ones from in there
to."
"First let's see
what's behind there," I answered, heading toward the door to the
right. "It's probably nothing but a guest lavatory, but it won't
hurt to take a look ..."
Looking inside showed
exactly that, a full lavatory including a porcelain bathtub. Why mere
would be a bathtub I had no idea, but walking closer showed it had
even been used at some time. A grayish residue partially circled the
drain hole, but the rest of the tub was clean. The sink was closer to
being spotless, as was the commode, both of which were emptied by
magic rather than piping. I could feel the trace of similar cleaning
spells around each of them, a trace the tub didn't have. Pipes
carried that water away ...
The lamp I'd turned on
suddenly went dark, which shouldn't have happened. When you light a
lamp with magic, it doesn't go out again for no reason. Realizing
that made me turn toward the doorway, and sure enough, the reason
stood there with folded arms.
"When I spoke to you,
you didn't seem to hear me," he said, faint annoyance back in
his tone. "Don't you think we have better things to do than
stand in small rooms staring off into space?"
"Sometimes I get
distracted," I half-apologized, feeling my cheeks grow warm. I
had been wasting time, wondering about cleanser residue while nine
people lay helpless and half-alive. I can be a real imbecile at
times, and it was just my luck that this particular time had had an
audience. I quickly headed out of the room, and my audience stepped
back to let me through the doorway.
"I'd appreciate it if
you could save being distracted for when you're alone," he said
as I passed him, doing a good
TH€ HIDD€M
job of making me feel
worse. "Do you know a spell for separating and identifying
traces, or do we have to construct one ourselves?"
"I know a spell,"
I answered, forcing myself to concentrate on what was at hand. "It
was developed by forensic wizards, so you don't have to worry that I
constructed it myself. It goes like this."
I spoke the spell I'd
learned just for the fun of it, adding the proper gestures at the
proper time. A rush of wind came, as though we stood outdoors, and
then the traces began separating under glowing numbers. Traces are
like delicate scents or light touches are to the physical, indistinct
but definitely there. I could sense the traces with my abilities as a
Sighted, and even tell one from another; what I couldn't do was get a
firm grip on them.
"But the numbers only
go up to eleven," Prince Bariden objected. "I thought you
said there were seventeen people involved."
"There were seventeen
instances of people going through the doors," I corrected,
carefully studying the traces under the glowing numbers. "That
could be seventeen individuals, or one person going in and out
seventeen times. I used this spell once just to see how it worked,
and I noticed that it was really efficient. Multiple traces are shown
under a single number, but they're separated by tiny black dots. Like
that one, under T."
"Two dots, which
means three traces," he murmured, now understanding what he was
seeing. "The next four numbers have one dot apiece, which means
two traces each. The last six have no dots, which means those people
came in only once."
"And the first, with
three traces, probably stands for the victim," 1 agreed. "You'd
expect the man who lives here to be in and out the most. There are
only three, because he wasn't here that long. The ones with two
traces are probably the servant who found the merchant, the healer
who sent for Master Haddil, and someone else, maybe another servant.
The fourth is definitely Master Haddil, since I happen to know his
trace well enough to recognize it. The rest—servants, most
likely, and maybe a couple of curiosity seekers."
"If it becomes
necessary, we can find out," he said, and then 1 felt the weight
of his stare on me, "You said you'd used this spell once before,
but I've never even heard of it. What could you possibly have used
it/or?"
"I—used it
because I was curious," I admitted, feeling the return of the
heat to my cheeks. "It wasn't/or anything, only to see how it
worked. Now let's do the same thing in the bedchamber, and see what
we get from there."
I strode off toward the
bedchamber without waiting for any sort of answer, fervently hoping
there wouldn't be one. I was beginning to feel downright gawky rather
than simply awkward, and I hated it. As soon as I found the guilty
party we were looking for, I'd get out of there as fast as possible.
The bedchamber wasn't
quite as large as the reception room, but it didn't miss by much.
Silk hangings decorated the walls, the furniture and the bed curtains
were color-coordinated, and the private meal-nook had armchairs at
the table. Like the first room, what it didn't have was windows,
which might or might not be helpful. That depended on what we found
in the way of traces, and there was no sense in not getting right to
it.
I spoke the spell a second
time, and after the wind had blown through got the sort of results
I'd been hoping I wouldn't. One person had three separate traces,
again probably the victim, Master Haddil had been in there twice, and
one other person twice. The remaining five had come in one time each,
but none of them looked very promising.
"We'll have to do
some deliberate comparisons, but I think we have a problem," I
told my partner. He'd followed me into the bedchamber, but hadn't
said anything. "Unless I'm mistaken, every one of these traces
has a match in the next room."
"If that's true, then
no one came through an entry," he responded, once again sounding
thoughtful. "That should mean the guilty party walked in through
the door, and is therefore someone whose trace we found."
"Not necessarily,"
I disagreed with a sigh. "If the culprit was sneaky enough, he
or she could have used a delayed spell. You speak it after you pass
someone in the hall, say, and it's designed not to work for another
three or four hours.
THG
Or, if the Sighted was
strong enough, he or she could have stood out in the hall and still
reached the victim. Since we don't know what was done, we also don't
know how close you have to be."
"Then what was the
point in counting traces?" he demanded, frustration thick in his
tone. "I thought you expected to learn something from it."
"I did learn
something," I answered with a shrug. "I learned that no one
used an entry to get into this room. If I can eliminate enough other
possibilities, whatever I have left will be the answer."
"1 just noticed
something," he said, and suddenly his hand was on my arm,
pulling me around to face him. "Not only don't you ever look at
me when you speak, if you're not paying attention you say T rather
than 'we.' I take it that means you see yourself working alone,
rather than as part of a team. Is there some particular reason I'm
being dismissed like that, or is it just that you don't happen to
like me?"
Frustrated anger carried
him all the way through the speech, but surprise at having his hands
on me made me look up directly at him. Obviously it wasn't his
intention to harm me, otherwise my warding would have flared blue and
thrown him back. My warding didn't flare at all, but suddenly he
looked thrown anyway. Light brows rose over pale blue eyes, and the
scowl that often twisted his broad, handsome face disappeared
completely.
"Hey, I'm sorry,"
he said at once, both hands releasing me immediately. "This
insanity has been getting to me, making me almost as crazy as whoever
is doing it. I didn't mean to frighten you."
"You didn't," I
answered with my own furious anger, having more trouble than usual in
keeping it from showing. He was staring down at me in the way I'd
seen so many times before, the way I hated more than almost anything
else. Abruptly I turned away and said, "Let's finish the
comparisons, and then we can get on to the next place."
He made a faint sound of
agreement, but that was all he said. Big, tough Prince Bariden of
Melen, folding up as quickly and easily as anyone else. I spoke a
spell to bring the bedchamber traces out into the reception room, and
once
SHAftON
there began comparing. But
most of me was running on automatic, my mind being too busy with
other things to cooperate.
Other things! I wanted to
scream and stamp my feet and break fragile glass items, but I'd
indulged the urge at other times and it hadn't done any good. I
happen to have been bom with very large, very dark eyes, and if I'd
been even a little less stubborn I would have changed my appearance a
long time ago. Someone had once said I resemble a frightened, wounded
doe when I look straight at people, and that throws them off
completely. Most, to their credit, I suppose, if they don't know
about my talent for causing catastrophe, immediately turn kindly and
concerned and anxious to help make things better.
There's another reaction,
of course, and I definitely prefer that one. I took a deep breath as
the last of the traces searched for their matches, knowing that
definite preference said a lot about my nature. Some people took one
look at me and immediately tried to take advantage, picturing me as
the shy, helpless son who could be walked over in complete safety. I
usually had fun with that kind, kicking their feet out from under
them even before they realized dieir mistake. What I didn' t have run
with was the first reaction, especially from people who felt bad
about "frightening" me...
"Well, it looks like
you were right," my partner said with a sigh. "There are no
unaccounted-for traces, so we know an entry wasn't used. That doesn't
leave us much to work with, even if it does eliminate a possibility.
Eliminating the rest won't be as easy if we can't figure out what
they are."
"We can make a list
later, after we've seen the other locations," I replied, waving
a hand to get rid of the traces. "If the second and third
victims were also merchants, their apartments shouldn't be far."
"No, you're right,
they're just down the hall," he said, his tone gentle and
reassuring. "Follow me, and I'll show you."
I followed him as
requested, but would have preferred doing it while pronouncing the
list of all those words you aren't supposed to use in mixed company.
Prince Bariden
TH€
Q7
was being very careful not
to frighten me again, and wasn't that comforting. I'd tried hard to
avoid the circumstance, but the Fates were still against me. And we
still had so much time we'd need to be in each other's company . . .
CHAPTGR TWO
W,
e checked traces in the
two merchants' apartments and then in those of the king's advisers,
but might as well have skipped it. Only two traces were to be found
in all five places, Master Haddil's and what turned out to be the
healer's. We finished with the sitting room all four of the Sighted
had been found in, and finished was the proper word. Nothing in the
way of a clue or suggestion came jumping up to present itself.
"That seems to be
that," Prince Bariden said after a long period of silence,
looking around the tan, brown, and gold sitting room. "We're out
of locations and out of ideas."
"Not yet," I
disagreed, wishing I had more hope for the success of what looked
like our last few chances. "I don't know about you, but I still
haven't seen the victims themselves. Since we know the guilty one
touched them in some way, maybe we can pick up part of a trace from
them. There are also one or two other things to be done, but first I
need to take a break and get something to eat. I'll meet you back
here in about an hour, and we can see the victims together."
The idea of having to look
at an unliving Hannar upset me, so I headed out of there even faster
than I normally would have. I was almost to the door when a big hand
wrapped gently around my arm, pulling me to a halt.
"Why are you always
in such a hurry?" my partner asked, the lighthearted look pasted
on his face almost making me flinch. "I was going to suggest
getting something to eat
28
TH€ HIDDEN REALTY 09
before we continued, but
you beat me to it. Why don't we have the meal together, and at the
same time get to know one another? I know you must have studied here
in the palace, but I don't remember ever meeting you before. I hope
you're not going to tell me we did meet?"
By then his expression had
relaxed, and the charming grin he showed looked almost natural. He
really was handsome when he wasn't frowning, but his newest reaction
was also one I'd run into before.
"No, we never met,"
I reassured him—unnecessarily, I would have bet. For one reason
or another, people don't often forget meeting me. "But before we
do all this getting-to-know-each-other, I have one question. What's
my name?"
His charming grin faltered
and he said, "I don't understand," but he sure as Hellfire
did. "You have to know your own name," he tried next,
obviously working to keep it light. "I'm sure you'll remember
once we get some food into you."
"I can remember
without the food," I told him, ruthlessly demolishing his new
grin. "What I'm trying to find out is if you remember, which I
don't think you do. You heard my name at least two or three times, so
come on. Tell me what it is."
"What makes you think
I don't remember your name?" he asked, now trying to play it
cool. "Have I been referring to you as 'Hey, you' without
realizing it? And what has your name got to do with our taking a meal
together? If we're going to be partners in this, we'll certainly eat
together more than once."
"I have this rule
about never breaking bread with people who can't remember who I am,"
I said, folding my arms as I looked up at him. "What tells me
you don't know my name is the fact that you took my arm to stop me,
rather than speaking to me as most people would. For all you knew I
could have hiked up the gain on my personal warding, but that still
didn't stop you from touching me. Would you like to claim now that
you didn't know I was a sorceress?"
"Is this the reason
you were so quiet for so long?" he countered, his face darkening
a bit under its tan. "Because when you finally do open up, you
do it like a steel bear
30
trap? Why are you acting
as if I tried to assault you? All I did was invite you to share a
meal."
"And all I did was
ask you my name," I pointed out, refusing to let him argue a
safer topic. "Show me I'm wrong in my beliefs, and I'll
certainly apologize."
"You don't give an
inch, do you?" he said, and the observation wasn't a compliment.
"Most men hate being put on the spot like that, and most princes
refuse to allow it. Are you so used to dealing with princes that
getting one mad is nothing new? Or do you just like hearing me say
you're right? Which, I'm once again forced to admit, you are. I know
I heard your name more than once, but for some reason it didn't stay
with me. So what happens now? Execution for the heinous crime of
being distracted by what we're working on? If so, go ahead and do
it."
The look hi those blue
eyes was completely steady, not even a comer of the charm showing. He
hadn't enjoyed admitting the truth but had done it anyway, and now
waited for what would come because of it. I usually make a habit of
encouraging honesty, but not to the point of stupidity.
"What happens now is
what I said before," I told him, ignoring the dramatics of his
speech. "I'm going to get something to eat, and I'll meet you
back here in an hour. Do enjoy your own meal."
I heard what sounded like
a growl as I turned away, which was just fine with me. His sudden
interest in sharing a meal with me was certainly an extension of his
initial reaction, that of a strong man wanting to protect a poor
little female. After the urge to protect seems to come physical
desire, but I'll be double-dyed in purple and pink if I know why.
Enough men had reacted that way to make me certain of it, so it must
have been a male thing. As if that was supposed to make me feel
happier about it.
I gloomed my way through
the halls and down a flight of stairs, then took the corridor that
led to my favorite hideaway. Not far from the kitchens is a small,
walled-in garden, one that no one from the royal family had ever used
while I studied with Master Haddil. I knew that because I'd used it
so often, and just then I needed its quiet beauty to help me out of
the deeps. I know men can't help acting like men, but having it
happen again and again is completely depressing.
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31
If, just once, I could
find a different reaction . . .
I sat on one of the stone
benches with a sigh, then spoke the spell that created the food I
wanted. It all appeared on an oblong tray beside me, and the first
thing I reached for was the coffee. The last couple of hours hadn't
been particularly strenuous, but they had been wearying.
"I knew I'd find you
here," a voice said, and then Bena Aylie moved around from the
left toward the bench opposite mine. She still wore her long-skirted
brown dress and gray apron, and she stopped by the bench without
sitting. "I thought you were going to come back to talk to me
again? And what are you doing eating out here, when you could be
eating decent food in my kitchens?"
"One of the nice
things about this garden is that I don't have to fight my way in and
out of it," I said as I reached for the sandwich on the tray.
"And although this is later, it isn't the later I had in mind
for talking. This later is for eating excellent food and relaxing.
How did you know I was here?"
"Maybe I found you
the way Prince Bariden did earlier," she said, walking a few
steps closer to me as she frowned at what was on the tray. "How
excellent can that stuff be, if it wasn't made by one of my chefs?
And it wasn't, was it?"
"No, it wasn't,"
I agreed around a mouthful of sandwich, then chewed and swallowed
before adding, "Prince Bariden found me with magic, probably by
using a tracking spell. Since you aren't Sighted, I doubt very much
that you did the same. Don't tell me you had someone watching for
me?"
"All right, I won't
tell you," she agreed in turn, still giving cold disapproval to
my food. "I'd love to know how you can sit there calmly
poisoning yourself, when it would have been just as easy to get
something decent. That soup even looks funny."
"That's just the
distortion from the protective spell keeping it hot," I told her
after the next bite. "Why don't you taste it before telling me
how bad it is."
I banished the insulating
spell with a flick of my finger, then produced another spoon which I
held out to her. She sniffed in disdain, thinking about refusing,
then realized she had to put up or shut up. She accepted the spoon,
stirred the
contents of the bow!
twice, then brought the coated spoon to her mouth.
"So, you've taken to
lying," she pronounced once the spoon was out of her mouth
again. "I should have known you'd never settle for seconds when
firsts are so easily available. That's Lidiar's best vegetable soup,
which means it's the best anywhere. There are one or two chefs who
can almost match him, but no one anywhere is better. What about that
mousse?"
She bent again to take a
very small bit of my dessert pudding, then nodded with satisfaction
after tasting it.
"Even through the
residue of soup I know that taste," she said. "Nida's
mousse is famous on every civilized world in this sector, and the
only dessert chef better than her died ten years ago. Why did you say
you weren't eating from my kitchens when you were?"
"Bena, what soups was
Lidiar supposed to make today?" I asked without looking at her.
"And didn't I hear some place that Nida was supposed to be
married and away on her honeymoon around this time? Did something
happen to make her change her plans?"
There was heavy silence
from the woman standing over me, enough of it to let a bird in the
trees trill its pleasure and then be answered. It really was a
beautiful day, reminding me that I hadn't eaten picnic-style in much
too long.
"All right, I'm
asking for an explanation," she said at last, putting down the
spoon before returning to the opposite bench to sit. "Lidiar
made potato soup, barley soup, and beet soup today, and only those
three. Nida left on her honeymoon two days ago, and her assistants
wouldn't dare try mousse on their own—at least not yet. Where
did you get that food?"
"I got it where I get
most everything else," I told her, finishing the last of the
sandwich and reaching for the soup. "The last time someone tried
discussing this with you, you went for them with a rolling pin.
Talking about magic seems to give you indigestion."
"Nothing gives me
indigestion, and I don't happen to have a rolling pin right now,"
she gritted out, her annoyance with me growing. "You're right
about me not liking talk about magic, but we're also talking about
what my kitchens
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produce. Since you
couldn't have simply taken the food, I want to know how you got it."
"I got it by being a
magic user," I said, finally meeting that light-dark stare. "In
order to do magic, you have to describe something in the language of
spells. The more detailed a description you can give, the better the
hold you have over the object and the more strength you can bring to
bear.
"If I described that
stone bench you're sitting on as just a stone bench, I couldn't
affect it much because there's not enough description. If I described
it instead by saying it was Rangri marble and Tansan wood, five feet
long, three feet wide, and three feet high, I'd have a better grip on
it and could do more. But if I really wanted my spell to work, I'd
add that the marble came from the north side of the quarry, had a
fifth level density, had a blue-veined pattern two millimeters wide,
and so on, doing the same for the wood. Then I could make that bench
sprout wings and fly away if I liked. Do you understand that?"
"I understand that
you'd damned well better leave this bench alone," she stated,
glaring at me harder. "And if you have to put so much into those
spells of yours, why doesn't it take an hour to do each one?"
"Because the language
of spells is a verbal shorthand, one sound or gesture able to stand
for strings of words or phrases. Like tsp for teaspoon, only more so.
I don't know the abbreviations for pinch and dash."
"That isn't funny,"
she grated into my grin. "Only amateurs follow a recipe exactly,
and that's what this freak stuff sounds like to me. This first and
then that, and don't ever change it."
"Some of the stronger
wizards change it," I disagreed, reflecting that she knew more
about magic than she was willing to admit. It was true that spells
had to be spoken precisely the same to get the same results, but I
hadn't told her that. "Half of the ones who fiddle with changes
make big names for themselves, almost as big as those famous chefs of
yours."
"What about the other
half?" she asked, trying not to feel pleased at the thought of
all those artists under her wing. "Do they give it up and get
married and have children?"
34
SHABON GR€€N
"Most of them spend
the rest of their lives as three-foot, orange frogs," I said,
exaggerating only a little. "Or they disappear in a puff of
smoke one day, and no one ever sees them again. Changing spells
without knowing exactly what the change will produce is dangerous, a
lot more dangerous than changing a recipe. The worst a mishandled
recipe can do is make you throw up. A mishandled spell can literally
turn you inside out, or freeze you in one position for the rest of
eternity."
"And playing with
that sort of thing is what you do," she stated, suddenly pale
and indignant. "I knew I should have tried talking you out of
learning it, knew it mat first night we met. You have a lot less
sense than my kids had, so I never should have just let you go your
own way. I should have said somediing and kept on saying it—"
"Bena, please,"
I interrupted, refraining from reminding her that she had said
something, more than once. "Sighted who try to deny what they
are end up insane, and I do not do the sort of thing you mean. I'm
just a harmless sorceress who has no intentions of ever getting
involved with the dangerous stuff. I may be curious, but I'm not
crazy."
'That's a matter of
opinion," she returned, still not happy with me. "You don't
have to tramp through an entire mud puddle to get splattered;
stepping in one coiner of it is usually enough. And you still haven't
said how you got that food. Did you say a spell that caused Lidiar
and Nida to cook for you?"
"I don't do zombie
spells, even when using one would be practical," I responded,
making no effort to keep the stiffness out of my voice. "As a
matter of fact, I wouldn't use one even if they were legal. Have I
ever told you how much I appreciate your high opinion of me?"
"Okay, okay, you can
unbottle that tail," she grumbled, shifting her bulk on the
bench. "I didn't mean to insult you, and I apologize. So how did
you do it?"
"I Saw the
ingredients the first time I ate the various dishes, and have been
able to copy them ever since," I told her with a shrug. "Any
Sighted above magician and witch level can do that, and many probably
have. That's why the king's chamberlain tried to suggest that you
have the dishes protected by magic. Unless and until you do, every
magic
TH€ HIDD€M
35
user coming by can
afterward eat as well as the king. Or sell the recipes to anyone who
wants them."
"Sell my chefs'
recipes?" she demanded in horror, finally getting the big
picture. "To every shopkeeper and fishwife in the city? In every
city? Chalaine, I thought we were friends. Why didn't you tell me
this sooner?"
"I try not to tell
people things they don't want to hear," I pronounced, for the
second time holding her stare. "Not long after we met, you asked
me not to discuss 'freak stuff' with you. As a friend, I respected
that request Are you saying I was wrong to do it?"
"No," she
grudged after a short hesitation, shaking her head with a sigh. "No,
obviously I asked for it. Can you fix it so that this kind of thing
can't happen again? I don't mind you having the dishes, but a
stranger who would sell them—!"
"Ask the chamberlain
to have Master Haddil do it," I recommended. "Not only will
he do a better job, he has to have another wizard in this world who
maintains his spells when he leaves for a while. I don't, which means
the protection would disappear the minute 1 stepped through an entry
or a gate."
"I thought you
planned to be around for a while," she said, and somehow I got
the feeling the subject had been changed. "I mean, now that
you've met Prince Bariden and all... Didn't you like seeing how
attracted he was?"
"Attracted?" I
asked with a short laugh. "How can you say that with a straight
face? He told you himself he couldn't care less about me, and he
stuck to that until he got a really—fullface—look at me.
After that he wanted me to eat with him."
"I swear, I never
know how to take the things you say," she complained, looking at
me with brows raised. "Of course he was attracted, why else
would he bother to say he wasn't? Somebody would think you knew
nothing at all about men. So what are you doing out here instead of
being somewhere cozy with him?"
"Bena, how much time
do you spend with people who think there's something wrong with you?"
I demanded, suddenly all out of patience. "I don't mean people
who are concerned about you in general, but those who think of
36
SHARON
you as crippled? And I
don't mean handicapped, because that's not the same thing at all. How
much time do you give people like that? An hour, half a day, two or
three days at a clip? I'd really like to know."
"Chalaine, I don't
understand why you're angry at me," she said slowly and
seriously, no longer playing the archetypal matchmaker. "The
last thing in the world I want to do is upset you, but sometimes the
teasing gets out of hand. You've—never been this bothered
before."
"That's because I've
never been through so many disasters before." Her soothing
apology hadn't made me feel better, and I couldn't imagine what
would. "He started out by apologizing for frightening me, and
didn't even hear it when I said he hadn't. That was after he'd gotten
a good look at me, of course, and from then on there wasn't a harsh
word out of him. When we finished the first stage of our
investigation and he asked me to eat with him, / asked him what my
name was."
"Oh, don't tell me,"
she said, looking appalled. "He didn't know your namel No wonder
you're so out of sorts. Even being a prince doesn't excuse something
like that."
"He didn't think it
was a hanging offense, but I disagreed," I grumbled, putting the
soup bowl aside in favor of the coffee. My spell had specified that
the cup continually refill itself, so I didn't have to nurse it.
"Aren't there any men in the worlds who judge on something other
than looks? His eyes told him I was a wounded, helpless little thing
that needed to be looked after and protected, and he didn't enjoy it
when I refused to act that way. If I'd whimpered and limped a little,
he probably would have done handsprings."
"You know, that
doesn't sound like the Prince Bariden / know," she mused,
staring at my tray without seeing it. "When he was a boy, he
started to play at slipping into my kitchens without me seeing him.
If I caught him I would make him sit down and tell me about his day,
and then I noticed I was catching him more and more often. He didn't
seem to get on well with his brothers and sisters, but not because
there was anything wrong with him. He's a full-grown man now with a
reputation or two he'd be better off without, but he's never stopped
treating me decent."
TH€ HIDDEN
37
"Maybe that's because
you're almost as big as he is," I muttered, then looked at her
curiously. "What did you mean about a reputation or two? Has he
made himself notorious?"
"Only in a way,"
she hedged, then glanced at me and sighed. "Well, you can see
part of it for yourself, in that sword he wears. They had him
learning weapons from the time he was really small, but I don't think
they expected him to be as good with them as he is. He's been
challenged three times to serious fights, and answered all the
challenges personally. As a prince of mis kingdom he could have used
a champion, but instead chose not to."
"That's stranger than
you know," I said, my brows way up there. "Those who are
Sighted don't usually get involved in physical fights, not when using
magic is so automatic to mem. It would be like—oh, an ordinary
man trying to fight a duel while hopping around on one leg. If his
other leg wasn't tied to keep him from using it, sooner or later he
would forget and stand on it. Did the Prince forget and end up doing
something he shouldn't have?"
"He most certainly
did not," Bena huffed indignantly. "Bariden is an honorable
man, and he killed those three fair and square. He would never cheat,
not even if it meant losing. But he didn't lose, and that's what has
people talking. His oldest brother Trayden is heir to the throne, but
even though he's good with a sword, he isn't as good as Bariden.
People are afraid Bariden intends to challenge his brother once their
father is gone."
"And with him being
Sighted, they're also afraid they'll have an unopposable tyrant for
centuries rather than for a single lifetime," I summed up,
finally seeing the point. "None of them will consider the
possibility that he'd make a better king than his brother, because a
freak couldn't possibly be. What's the other crime he's accused of?"
"It's—not
exactly a crime," she grudged, and I had the feeling she'd hoped
I would forget about that second part. "Or maybe it is, I don't
think I know any more. He—has something of a reputation
with—women, like where they're always after him, you know?
He—usually lets himself be caught, but—not for long. /
say he's looking for the right woman, and when he finds her he'll
stop looking."
38
SHAROM cueen
"But in the meantime
he's forcing himself to have fun," I summed up a second time,
ignoring her gallant interpretation of not-so-gailant actions. Bena
tends to think the best of the strays she adopts, even if they happen
to be freaks. Or fast-living princes.
"Chalaine, he's a
man," she said with an exasperated sigh. "Men do things
like that, but not because they mean harm. Would you be happier if he
was a prim and proper virgin? Men tend to think virgins are special,
but women know better."
"Bena, I wouldn't
care if he also had bad breath, flat feet, and writer's cramp,"
I told her as clearly as possible. "He may be a man, but he's
one I don't care to know any better than I already do. If you're
looking for someone to pair him up with, look somewhere else. It
would eventually get to be annoying to have to remind him what my
name is."
She winced as though she'd
forgotten about that, but didn't get the chance to make any more
excuses. Just as she parted her lips a servant came rushing out into
the garden, and he looked frightened sick. Since I was the one he
headed toward, I knew something else had happened. I didn't yet know
what, but had the definite feeling I'd regret what I'd eaten ...
Bariden, third prince of
Melen, cursed himself silently as he watched the girl walk out of the
room and disappear up the hall. He hadn't been that clumsy with a
woman since the age of fifteen, when an older woman of nineteen had
let him know she was interested. He'd been nervous with his first
older woman, but only to begin with. As soon as he realized that all
women, young or old, responded the same, he'd been just fine.
Until about five minutes
ago. He ran a hand over his face, possibly in an effort to wipe away
invisible boot prints. She'd stomped him up one side and down the
other, and to say he hadn't expected it would be vast understatement.
Women just didn't talk to him like that, even if they weren' t very
happy.
"And how the hell did
she know?" he growled, still finding it incredible that he'd
actually forgotten her name. He didn't believe the explanation she'd
given him, about
THG HIDDGM
39
his touching her rather
than speaking. That was the sort of thing you thought of after you
already knew, and she hadn't been guessing. For a shy and quiet girl,
she was unbelievably sharp .. .
He felt the urge to go and
do something, but instead went to a comfortable chair, sat, and spoke
a spell for the meal he wanted. He'd been too busy to stop for lunch,
and then he'd been too distracted. Never in a million years had he
expected that old spell of his to work now, in the middle of chaos,
and certainly not with a girl who had almost drowned him the first
time they met. ..
Bariden shifted his sword
into the chair's slot, then reached for the wine he'd specified with
the food. What he needed right then was someone to talk to, but not
just any someone. Bena, for instance, would listen sympathetically
and then give him advice, but chances were good that the advice would
be wrong. She didn't understand magic, and therefore tended to
dismiss it—along with most Sighted. The unSighted didn't
usually have his kind of problem ...
He sighed when he realized
he had only one choice of whom to talk to, even though the
conversation wasn't likely to be pleasant. ReSayne was one of the
strangest entities he'd ever come across, and that was saying a lot
when you considered some of those he'd met during occasional trips.
ReSayne's people were somehow related to demons, but not in any way a
human would understand, he'd been assured. They called themselves
fiends and considered themselves better than demons, but again
refused to discuss in what way. There was a lot they refused to talk
about, but ever since he'd helped ReSayne—in some way he still
didn't understand—his problems weren't part of the refusal.
Bariden took a sip of wine
before replacing the glass on the tray floating in front of him, then
reached to his left hand with his right. Using his right little
finger, he pressed his left hand just below the wrist bone, an action
he wasn't likely to perform by accident. At the same time he said,
"ReSayne ... ReSayne ... ReSayne ..." as though sending out
some sort of message. After three repetitions, he stopped and went
back to his meal. The fiend would have heard him, and would come as
soon as possible.
4O
SHARON GR£€M
He was just about finished
with his duck a Forange with stuffing and honeyed yams, when the air
in front of him began to ripple. Fiends didn't use entries any more
than demons did, although they both used gates on a regular basis.
The rippling air began to swirl, and as it did, very bright rainbow
colors appeared. The colors grew bright enough to dazzle, and then
they settled down to simply float.
"Bariden, how could
you?" a smooth, light voice asked from the middle of the colors.
"Stuffing and yams with duck a 1'orange? A prince is supposed to
have style, not a lumberman's appetite. And how do you like my new
look? Isn't this nicer than thick blue smoke?"
"Absolutely,"
Bariden agreed, ignoring the comments about his taste in food.
"Flashy and gaudy are you, ReSayne. Do you by any chance have
some time to listen?"
"Bariden, dear boy,
why else would I have responded to your summons?" it said, and
then its voice went morose. "Although I dislike admitting it,
you're probably right about the gaudiness. I'll just have to think of
something else, but that's for later. Where are we, by the way? I can
feel the strangest spell on this room."
"That's an exclusion
spell, to keep people out," Bariden explained as ReSayne settled
down to a solid form. The form it chose, though, was that of a fancy
straight-backed chair, with cushioned seat in orange and two eyes in
the polished-wood backrest. The eyes were a bright leaf green, and
Bariden couldn't help thinking that his father would probably love
ReSayne.
"We have something of
a problem around here, but that's not what I need your help for,"
he continued. "There's this girl, and that spell I told you
about a couple of years ago, and the fact that things have been going
from bad to worse with every move I make. I never went through the
awkward teenager stage, but I'm beginning to think that's because the
experience was saving itself for now."
"That does sound
serious," the ReSayne chair said, bright green eyes blinking
thoughtfully. "Why don't you tell me about the girl and the
spell, and then we can get into what's been going wrong."
TH€ HIDCO
41
"I suppose I should
start from when she drowned me," Bariden mused, reaching again
for his wineglass. "She was one of those Summoned to help with
this problem we have, and she and I ended up being paired as
partners."
"She drowned you,"
ReSayne stated, and this time the eyes looked impressed. "She
must be a good deal more formidable than the females you usually
associate with. I hadn't thought it would be possible to find one
larger and stronger than you, but—"
"No, no, no, she's
not bigger than me," Bariden interrupted. "You can see how
well I'm doing even with explanations. She's about average height for
a woman, I suppose, and seems to be built fairly well. Her hair
is—auburn, I suppose you would call it, brown with a lot of
dark red. and it's long enough to reach her behind. She wears it
braided, to keep it out of the way, I guess, but I'd love to see it
loose. And her eyes, the biggest, darkest eyes I've ever fallen into
. . ."
"Bariden, if you want
to daydream, you'd be best off doing it alone," ReSayne's voice
came after a moment, bringing him back to the present. "If you
want to talk instead, it's more effective when you use words."
"Words, right,"
he agreed after clearing his throat. "You can see what kind of
shape I'm in ... At any rate, what she did was bring this big—bubble,
I thought—through the entry with her, and somehow it got away
from her. It went straight for Master Haddil, but he uses personal
warding. It bounced off his warding straight at me, but why would I
bother trying to avoid what looked like a giant soap bubble? Only it
wasn't a simple soap bubble. When it hit me it burst, and gallons of
water poured out of it all over me."
"I would have enjoyed
being there to see that," ReSayne chortled, its green eyes
narrowed with amusement. "And to have seen that very interesting
bubble. Was that when you discovered your bottomless fascination for
the girl?"
'"What I discovered
was the urge to mutilate," he answered, finding ReSayne's
reaction the expected one. "After I banished the sogginess I
ignored her, otherwise I might have been tempted to commit mayhem.
I'd parted company with my latest—female companion just the
night before, and as unpleasant as it had been, I was somewhat
SHAROM
down on women just then.
When I ended up paired with this one to work on our problem with no
possible way to refuse associating with her, my mood turned even
sweeter."
"But that obviously
changed," ReSayne commented, probably to hurry the story. "When
and where, not to mention why?"
"When we began
working together, I couldn't help noticing how sharp she was despite
also being very quiet. She knew what had to be done, and went ahead
and did it. But she hadn't once looked straight at me, not even when
she spoke to me, and that quickly became very annoying. After a while
I grabbed her, and forced her to look directly at me."
"And ended up being
thrown across the room by her warding," ReSayne concluded, the
green eyes all but nodding. "I could have told you that would
happen. How many times have I pointed out how foolish you're being
when you refuse to use warding of your own? Haven't I—"
"ReSayne!"
Bariden interrupted again, in no mood to be lectured. "Let's
save that argument for another time. The point here is that I didn't
set off her warding. It must be keyed to intent, and it wasn't my
intent to harm her. Instead, I got my first good look at her—and
that set off the spell with a vengeance."
"Now's the time to
refresh my memory about that spell," ReSayne cued him, not in
the least insulted over having been interrupted. That meant it
intended to return to the interrupted subject later, a realization
that made Bariden groan on the inside. The fiend never forgot
anything that involved lecturing, leading Bariden to wonder if it
took invisible notes ...
"Only a few years
after I began to study magic, a wizard came from another realm to
speak to my father." Bariden remembered the episode clearly,
more clearly than most things from that time in his life. "Master
Haddil was off doing something or other on one of the planes he
frequents, so the wizard, Tramfeor, felt it would be impolite to
visit long. But while he was here he spent some time talking to me,
asking about my life and my studies and such. I remember getting the
feeling he already knew the answers to the questions he put, but that
had to be my imagination. If
THG HIDDEN
43
he already knew the
answers, why would he have bothered to ask?"
"Some wizards are
like that," ReSayne assured him, the green eyes moving three
inches higher in the chair back. "They like to pretend that they
know everything, just to impress the people around them. If they did
know everything, they'd be fiends rather than wizards."
"Yes, of course,"
Bariden murmured diplomatically. "Well, his questioning got
around to how well I liked girls, so I told him. He didn't think it
was unusual that I'd already had more offers than I'd been able to
take advantage of, or that a lot of the giris had been encouraged in
their interest by their mothers. I was a prince, after all, and one
who was Sighted. Either of those things alone would have made me a
'catch,' but both together guaranteed that I would do exceptionally
well in life. When he said that, it made me feel very strange. It
hadn't occurred to me that the girls were more interested in what I
was than in what sort of person I was becoming."
"But weren't you all
barely more than children?" ReSayne asked gently, almost as
though it could feel the pain he'd experienced. "Children are
usually self-centered and shallow, or so I've been led to believe."
"No one past puberty
is still a child," Bariden stated, reaching again for his
wineglass. "Your basic personality is formed and set even before
then, and once your body changes you're fully adult. If you've
decided by then that what a person has is more important than what he
is, nothing short of getting kicked in the teeth two or three times
will change your mind. If anything can change your mind. Tramfeor
noticed how disturbed I was, and that was when he offered to teach me
the spell."
"Your dramatic pause
is very effective," ReSayne said as though it were complimenting
a toddler. "Now that I've noticed, do feel free to go on."
"It was a Spell of
Affinity aimed at the opposite sex," Bariden answered, almost in
a growl. ReSayne could be so damned annoying . . . "It's meant
to tell me just how well a particular woman will match with me, just
how seriously committed she's capable of being. Until now I've had
glimmers, small bursts of light when I looked into
44
9HARON
women's eyes. Some were
stronger than others, like the one with Miralia, the girl I just
broke up with. At first I thought she was the best match for me, the
glimmer was so strong. But there were certain things about her—Well,
let's just say she and I disagreed over a few matters I consider
important."
"Am I correct in
assuming the burst of light was stronger with the new girl than it
was with this Miralia?" ReSayne asked. "If so, I fail to
see your problem. As you felt it necessary to pursue the former
woman, now you must pursue the newcomer. You bipolar entities always
make things so difficult when they're really quite—"
"ReSayne,"
Bariden interrupted, knowing the fiend was getting ready to leave
again. "Whether or not to—'pursue' the girl isn't my
problem. The burst of light I got from her was so strong it almost
blinded me. Of course I want to get to know her better, but—I
did something really stupid, and now she doesn't want to know me.
Considering the fact that she's a Sighted, I thought you might be
able to help me figure out a way to—to get her to change her
mind."
Bariden all but muttered
the last of his words, which immediately put vast amusement into the
leaf green eyes studying him. ReSayne was enjoying itself, and wasn't
that outcome surprising.
"My dear boy, you
must really be desperate," the light voice purred while the
green eyes shifted leftward along the chair back. "For a human
of your experience to be asking help from a fiend—? Whatever
you did to annoy her must be of monumental proportions. I can't wait
to hear what it was."
"I—had to admit
I didn't know her name after hearing it three separate times,"
Bariden grudged. "Don't ask me why I didn't remember, maybe it's
the way women usually repeat their names for me over and over, to be
sure I don't forget. Somehow she knew all about it, and even
admitting she was right didn't help."
"Oh, Bariden,"
ReSayne said in shock, the green eyes wide. "Even a life-form
such as myself can appreciate a blunder like that. And with a female
Sighted? The woman must be truly remarkable if she didn't reduce you
to a pile of ashes on the spot. You'll certainly need every bit of
charm
HIDDGM
45
you possess to even begin
to make headway against that."
"I've already tried
charm, and it didn't work," Bariden said morosely. "If I
didn't know better, I'd think she was warded against it. For such a
pretty little thing, she's— well, like a meat grinder.
Completely quiet and harmless until you start to turn her handle. And
I sure as Hellfire turned her handle, but now it seems to be going on
by itself. What I need is a suggestion on how to get it to stop."
"Is that all?"
ReSayne said in a pooh-poohing tone. "Nothing easier, my boy.
Just do something for her that will outweigh the insult you gave. And
now that that's settled—"
"No," Bariden
interrupted immediately, before the fiend could change the subject.
"That isn't settled. Generalities I've been able to come up with
on my own. It's specifics I need some help with, like suggestions on
what I could possibly do for her. What is there to do for a woman
who's also a sorceress?"
"Bariden, the time
has come to speak plainly." ReSayne's green eyes stared
unblinkingly at him. "I'm aware of the fact that you have very
little experience in the actual pursuit of females. For most of your
adult life they' ve pursued you, which must certainly have had its
pleasant moments. Now, however, the effort has become yours to make,
and the first thing you do is ask someone else to solve the problem
for you. Is that what being a prince does to a human male? Turns him
incapable and dependent?"
Bariden was about to
heatedly deny the charge, but the quietly sober way the fiend had
spoken made him pause. ReSayne wasn't usually that serious, not
unless the point it discussed was more than somewhat important. And
now that he'd stopped to think about it, the charge was uncomfortably
true. When it came to—fighting his own battles with a sword,
say, he would have considered it cowardly to go running to others to
ask for their help. His current situation was harder and more
dangerous than a sword fight, but still...
"All right, I'm
forced to admit you've made a very good point." The words
weren't easy, but Bariden said them anyway. "If this is
important enough to be a problem, it's one I have to solve for
myself. I just wish you weren't also
46
WARON
right about how little
experience I have with pursuit. Even Miralia came to me, although she
did make me work for the privilege of sharing her bed. One problem
was that it never stopped being a privilege, never grew into
something we both looked forward to ..."
Bariden let the thought
trail off, at the same time gesturing away the tray with the remnants
of his meal. She'd accused him of being spoiled by all the female
attention he'd had, unable to appreciate the real, true gesture she
always made. He was nothing but an ungrateful boor, telling her she
ought to be behaving like his legion of trollops. If he didn't know
what a real lady of quality was like, he ought to find out before
accusing her of improper behavior ...
He hadn't been accusing
Miralia of anything, but her attitude had made him wonder if he was
being a boor. She'd walked away from him with her head high and her
body stiffly offended, and two hours later his mother had sent for
him. Somehow she'd heard about the exchange, and had lost no time in
telling him again what a disappointment he was to her. He'd listened
with jaw clamped shut to her usual lecture about how she'd never
dreamed she'd give life to such a sorry excuse for a man and a
prince, and then he'd left. Later, when Miralia had announced that
she was ready to listen to his apology, he'd told her he was still
trying to figure out what he'd done that needed to be apologized for.
She'd then informed him he needn't come back until he did figure it
out, and he'd agreed that that might be best...
"Was there anything
else you needed to discuss with me?" ReSayne interrupted his
thoughts, for once in a gentle way. "I am somewhat involved with
a project of my own at the moment, but since I'm already here, you
might as well take advantage of the fact."
"No, no, there's
nothing else," Bariden decided aloud with a sigh. "There
are some things I'd love to palm off on others, but I don't know
anyone stupid enough to willingly accept them. The one thing I might
eventually need your expertise for is this mystery I'm helping to
investigate. The lives and well-being of a lot of people are at
stake, and if we can't figure it out ourselves I'll need everything
you can offer. Hopefully your own project will be finished by then."
TH£ HIDDEN BGA1M
47
"Even if it isn't,
I'll probably be willing to be distracted," ReSayne answered,
and then the chair melted into a blue-gray cloud that had the same
leaf green eyes. "Your mystery sounds intriguing, and the moment
I have time I want to hear all about it. If my project is completed
sooner than anticipated, I'll come right back rather than wait to be
summoned. And I may even have a new look by then that will satisfy us
both. Good hunting with your problems."
Bariden nodded his thanks
as the fiend faded from view, deliberately making no comment about
the next possible new look. He had enough to worry about without
that; trying to anticipate what ReSayne might come up with would
drive him even crazier than he was right then. What he needed was
some solitary time filled with serious thought—
"Your Highness,
excuse me," a voice came from the hall. He looked up to see the
anxious face of a messenger peering in through the open door, but the
man didn't enter. For a moment Bariden wondered why, and then he
remembered about the exclusion spell.
"What is it,
Stollen?" he asked as he stood. Since there was nothing left to
do in that room, he might as well find someplace else for his
thinking. But when he walked out and pulled the door closed behind
him, Stollen looked only faintly relieved.
"Your Highness, it's
happened again," the messenger said in a strained whisper,
obviously trying to keep the word from spreading too quickly. Which
had to be why he'd waited for Bariden to reach him before speaking.
"Since you're one of those working on the problem, I've been
sent to bring you there. Master Haddil is unavailable at the moment,
but the healer has been sent for as well."
"Who is it this
time?" Bariden asked as he gestured for the other man to lead
the way. "And what about— my working partner. Has she been
sent for?"
"Yes, sir,"
Stollen answered even as he started off. "The sorceress Chalaine
was expected by Benatha Aylie, so another messenger is checking with
Bena first. If she isn't there, he'll have to search. And the victim
this time is Diri,'one of the maids who usually works in this part of
the house."
SHARON
Bariden was surprised to
hear that, but speculation would be more profitable when he reached
the scene of the occurrence. In the meantime, he took a moment to
really appreciate the messenger system his father had put into
effect. There were messengers scattered all over the palace, and
their job was to know the whereabouts of those people in the palace
who mattered. In normal times one of their number made the rounds
every couple of hours, gathering information from individual
messengers and collating it for a complete picture. If someone needed
someone else, it rarely took more than a few moments to locate mat
person ...
And just then they'd done
him more of a service than simply locating him. He smiled as his mind
repeated the name Chalaine, a name he really should have remembered.
He still didn't know why he hadn't, but he wasn't about to forget it
again. The investigation they were working on had to come first, but
after that...
By the time Stollen showed
him to the maid Diri's rooms, Bariden had lost a lot of his
satisfaction. Din had worked her way up to a quasi-supervisory
position, and for that reason had earned a small apartment of her
own. The two rooms were tiny compared to the major apartments, but
they were worlds better than the dormitory slots or shared cells many
of the other maids lived in. Din worked along with the girls she also
supervised, which meant it was hard to understand why she'd become a
victim. Could she have learned something important, and been silenced
before she was able to tell anyone?
"The healer is
already here, and so is the sorceress," Stollen told him in a
soft voice. The man undoubtedly knew that from the other messengers
standing outside the room, both of whom looked frightened. From
inside came the sound of sobbing, and when Bariden reached the
doorway he found out who was producing it. "That's the girl who
found her," Stollen supplied. "It wasn't like Dili not to
get back to work on time after lunch, but her girls thought she might
have needed to do something. When hours went by and they still hadn't
heard from her, one of the girls came looking. The messenger in this
section heard her screaming, and immediately sent for the circulating
supervisor."
THG HIDD€M
49
Bariden thanked Stollen,
then left him outside and went in alone. The tiny sitting room had
only a single easy chair, positioned opposite the doorway in the far
right-hand corner of the room. The crying girl sat huddled in it, her
face buried in her hands, clearly wanting to be as far from the
unmoving body to the left as possible.
Diri sat in one of the
four chairs around the small table to the left, an almost-empty cup
of something on the table in front of her. Her left hand rested on a
book and she seemed to be reading, but no book ever written could
absorb someone to that extent. The woman was barely breathing, and
when the healer, who was crouched in front of her, touched her arm,
it was as though he touched a statue.
It was then that Chalaine
appeared, from the doorway to the right that must lead to Diri's
bedroom. She glanced at him as she passed in front of the crying
girl, but she didn't speak to either of them. Instead she walked to
the center of the room and began to study the walls. For someone who
had wanted to see a victim, she was paying more attention to the
interior decorating than to Diri.
"Was there anything
out of place in the bedroom?" he asked, just to be saying
something. The paneled design the walls had been painted with was
intricate and more attractive than one would expect in a place like
that. Still, Bariden didn't enjoy the idea that Chalaine preferred
looking at if to looking at him,
."The bedroom is
neater than any pin ever made," the girl muttered, still staring
around. "It also has a design on its walls, but not separated
into panels like in here. Do you see anything . . . unbalanced in any
of these sections? There's something wrong, but I can't put my finger
on what."
Bariden started to demand
what a painted wall could possibly have to do with the mystery, but
that was the whole point. They hadn't been able to find anything to
do with the mystery, and for all he knew the answer was on the wall.
With that in mind he began to look more closely at the panels, trying
to compare each section with the ones to either side of it. He also
moved farther into the room, but hadn't taken more than two steps
before Chalaine made a sound of satisfaction.
5O
"That's the one,"
she said, pointing to the first panel beyond the far left-hand comer
of the room. "That section there is the one that doesn't match.
Can you see it?"
Bariden's view was blocked
by the stricken Diri and the now-standing healer who continued to try
to reach through to her. On top of mat, Chalaine was moving toward
the panel she'd singled out. In order to see what she was talking
about, he had to swing right before circling in behind Chalaine to
the left. At that point there was nothing in the way—and that
was when it happened.
Like a giant, invisible
hand, the compulsion reached out and grabbed him. He had to get to
that section of wall, and as fast as possible! Nothing could stop
him, nothing would stop him! Clouded by vast confusion and unyielding
determination, Bariden broke into a run. Having no real idea what he
was doing, he also failed to understand when Chalaine stepped
directly into his path. Her back was to him as she examined the wall
panel, but she didn't reblock the compulsion. It continued to pull
him, and he just kept running—even when he crashed into her,
sending her forward ahead of him—up to the wall—and then
through it—
CHAPT€R
I fell into something soft
when I went down, and it took a moment to realize it was also cold. I
was too dazed to understand immediately what had happened; I heard
the cursing from my right, and then a hand touched my shoulder.
"Are you all right?"
Prince Bariden's voice demanded, and then he was trying to help me to
my feet. "Come on, you can't just lie there in that, you'll get
frostbite. We've got to find our way back."
"Frostbite?" I
echoed, getting up only because he was doing the lifting. "Back?
What are you talking about? What happened?"
"I must have hit you
harder than I thought," he said, sounding savage. "Damn
that setter of traps. Here, take a quick look around and then we have
to get moving."
He helped me turn away
from him, and what I saw men made no sense. We stood in an open wood
at dusk, thick white snow covering the ground, new flakes falling
silently all around to add to them. It was also cold, very cold
despite the lack of wind. How could we possibly have gotten to a
winter wood ... ?
"I think it's safe to
guess what bothered you about the walls in Din's sitting room,"
he said from behind me. "There was an entry hidden just at the
surface at one point, and it distorted the pattern of painting just a
little. But it was also primed with a compulsion aimed at me,
demanding that I get to it as fast as possible. I remember starting
to run, and didn't stop even when you got in die way."
51
"Which made you knock
me through ahead of you," I added, finally remembering getting
shoved hard toward the wall. "I expected to be flattened, but
ended up flying through the air instead. But if we came through an
entry, where is it? I'm starting to freeze solid."
"I hope it's masked
rather man one way," he answered as I brushed snow off the front
of my tunic and breeches. "If it isn't, we'll have to call up an
entry of our own. Or you'll have to. I've never called up an entry,
and I understand you need certain coordinates."
"You do, but it isn't
a problem," I assured him. "I have the coordinates to a lot
of places, so you aren't as trapped here as you were obviously
supposed to be. But first I'm going to do something about these
clothes I'm wearing. It's too cold for summer lightweights."
I could see my breath as I
spoke, so I hurriedly added a warm-clothes spell to the speaking. It
was short and simple, which means the reaction came very quickly. The
spell carved itself into the air in glowing letters, overbright in
the dusk, and then the letters began to crumble from the bottom. Tiny
pieces fell the way the snow fell, and in no time at all the letters
were completely gone.
"Fantastic," the
prince muttered from behind me, his tone full of disgust. "This
place is sealed by someone with wizard strength, and no one's spells
will work but his. Apparently he wasn't taking any chances about my
knowing an entry spell after all. We'd better get to shelter before
we try to figure out what to do next."
"What kind of shelter
is there around here1?" I aske'd, my teeth already beginning to
chatter. I'd also wrapped my arms around me, trying to remember I
liked the cold.
"That way, through
the woods," he said, putting his hands to my arms to turn me.
Behind where he'd been standing I could see something that looked
like a house a short distance off. It was dark and looming rather
than well-lit and cheery, but we weren't in a position to be choosy.
"Then let's go,"
I said, pulling away from the delightfully warm hands that had been
touching me. I needed something warm just then, but Prince Bariden's
hands weren't it. He could save that for when he got back to his
horde of girlfriends.
TH€ HIDDGh
53
It wasn't possible to run
through the deepening snow, but the hurried shuffle I adopted brought
a small amount of warmth. My companion drag-trotted beside me to the
right, his left palm against his sword hilt, his eyes moving around
the woods we passed through. There couldn't be many beasts out
hunting in a snowstorm, but even one would be one too many. With that
in mind I added my own looking around, at the same time hoping snow
wasn't what mat world always had. If it turned out to be the norm, we
could run into any number of hunting beasts who considered it a
lovely day ...
Whatever the true
situation was, we finally reached the house without anything
attacking us. The thing was larger than it had looked at first, but
wasn't any lighter. Dark stone blocks made up what we could see of
it, with a heavy wooden door closing off access to the inside. I was
so cold by then that I didn't care what was inside. Even if it was
something dangerous that preyed on visitors, it would still have to
fight to keep from being kicked out of its lair.
Prince Bariden, his grim
expression saying he felt the same, gripped the metal knocker and
pounded on the door with it. The metal must have been cold to the
point of pain, but he pounded away as if he didn't care what he held.
But he used his left hand rather than his right, which said he knew
he might be leaving some skin behind.
I could almost hear the
sound of his knocking reverberating inside, a demanding
boom-boom-boom-boom that echoed around in emptiness. If no one came
to answer the door we'd have to try to break in, and I didn't even
want to think about that. There were no windows in view from where we
stood at the front door, and—
"Watch it,"
Prince Bariden said softly, at the same time stepping in front of me.
The large wooden door was beginning to open, with nothing to show who
or what was doing the opening. The hinges groaned rather than
screeched, and then—
"Come on in fast,
before you freeze," a light, friendly voice urged. "And
before / freeze, from standing near this open door."
I couldn't quite look over
the prince's shoulder, so I
54
SHAROM
moved to the right to look
around him. Standing in the doorway was a pretty blond girl about my
age, her smile matching the friendliness we'd heard in her voice. Not
exactly what we'd been expecting, but...
"Thanks," my
companion told her, then reached around to push me through the
doorway first. "We really appreciate this."
"For a minute I
thought you were alone," the girl said to him with a laugh,
stepping aside to let me pass. "It's been all pairs so far, but
you never know. I'm Janissa."
"Nice to meet you,
Janissa," he acknowledged with a smile, then helped her push
closed the door. "I'm Bariden, and my companion is Chalaine.
What did you mean when you said it's been all pairs so far? Where are
we, and what's going on?"
"We have no idea
where we are," Janissa answered, diverting me from marveling
over the fact that Prince Bariden had managed to learn my name. "We
also don't know what's going on, but we've found a theory most of us
like. As pure guesswork, it tends to give us something that makes
sense. Come on into our gathering room, and we'll tell you about it
after you've met the others."
She turned and led the way
toward the right, through a wide, dark hall that was lit by a single
torch. Everything around us, floor, walls, and ceiling, seemed to be
made of the same dark stone, without anything in the way of
adornment. It was a lot warmer inside than it had been out in the
snow, but that's not to say it was warm.
Janissa, wearing a long
dress of pale green and what seemed to be matching slippers, ignored
a shadowy doorway to the left in favor of the one beyond it. Soft
light came through that second doorway, and when we reached it I
could see there was a fireplace which added to the light and warmth.
Around the fireplace was an austere room of rigid comfort, a place
for someone to relax who didn't really enjoy relaxing. Stiffly rather
than deeply upholstered chairs, couches that encouraged sitting up
straight, small, sturdy-looking tables, nothing on the walls but
mostly empty torch sconces. No decorations, no frills, not even
carpeting on the stone floor. And five people sitting loosely
together, watching us walk in.
TH€ HIDD€h
55
"Everyone, this is
Bariden and Chalaine," Janissa said, stepping aside to gesture
at us. "It looks like our friend is at it again, and maybe this
time we'll get a usable clue."
"I certainly hope
so," one of the men said as he stood. "We haven't been here
all that long and the company is certainly congenial, but I'll be
happier if I'm free to go about my business. I'm Vadran, and this is
Wellia."
He was tall, brown-haired
and blue-eyed, and his very attractive smile seemed aimed mostly at
me. The woman beside him, introduced as Wellia, had the same brown
hair and blue eyes, but wasn't as tall. Her smile and nod seemed
intended more for Prince Bariden, which balanced the greeting. Vadran
wore black boots and trousers and a blue tunic, while Wellia was in a
dress and slippers like Janissa's, only in a blue like Vadran's
tunic.
"We were the
newcomers until you two arrived," a second man said, also
standing now. "That doesn't mean we're not just as anxious to
get out of here, an attitude you'll unfortunately be finding out
about for yourselves. This is Idara, and I'm Halad."
Once again Halad's smile
was for me, Idara's for Prince Bariden. These two were redheads with
dark eyes, and they were dressed like the others except that Halad's
tunic and Idara's dress and slippers were a reddish brown. The
pattern was absolutely clear, and then the last man stepped forward
to clinch it.
"I'm Kamen," he
said with a smile all for me. He was tall, blond, and green-eyed,
wearing a light green tunic that matched Janissa's dress. "Janissa
and I have been here the longest, so we tend to feel like the host
and hostess of the place. Why don't we take you two upstairs to find
the clothes that will have been provided for you? After you've gotten
past being cold and wet, we can exchange information over a meal."
"I think we'd rather
do some drying out by that fire," Prince Bariden said, all but
taking the words out of my mouth. "That way we can exchange
information right now, without having to wait. Kamen, you said you
and Janissa have been here the longest. Just how long is that, and
how did you get here?"
By then we were already on
our way to the fireplace, but
56
9HAROM GR€€h
Kamen didn't seem to be
bothered by having his suggestion ignored. He glanced at Janissa, and
then shrugged.
"By the day-and-night
cycle of this world, it's been about four weeks," he answered.
"As for how we got here, we're still not quite sure. Janissa was
simply walking from one of her houses to another by entry, and I was
on my way to Conclave. Pd called up an entry to take me there, but
when I stepped through I was ankle-deep in snow with Janissa only a
few steps away. When we spotted this place we headed for it, and
found the door open and inviting."
"Not inviting, but
better than the snow," Janissa amended. "About a week later
Vadran and Wellia came knocking, and a week after that Halad and
Idara. This week it seems to be your turn."
"We were all going
elsewhere and ended up here," the brown-haired Vadran said. "Not
only are we all Sighted, we each became one of a matched set. But you
two don't fit into that, and I wonder why. Is the game almost over,
or has the player simply decided to change the rules?"
"The game he means is
what goes on in this house," red-haired Idara said with a small
shiver. "I'm sure you've already discovered that your spells
don't work here, and that because of the wizard strength of whoever
set this up. He or she seems to want to watch us cope without the
help of magic, and that hasn't been easy. The player feeds and
clothes us and keeps us warm, but for everything else we're on our
own."
"Everything else
means the—things—this house is haunted with,"
brown-haired Wellia said with her own shiver. "They appear
mostly when you're alone, occasionally when you're with someone who
can't do much better than you. Then you have to drive the thing off
somehow, or else it will—disgust and nauseate you."
"But only if you're
female," Halad said, taking his turn. "If you're male the
thing will be out for blood or broken bones, which may or may not be
worse. The only real weapon in this house is that sword you're
wearing, Bariden, but even if the rest of us had the same it would
make no difference. I can't use a sword, and I doubt if Kamen or
Vadran can either."
"He's right about
me," Kamen admitted while Vadran
TH€ HIDDGM BOWK
57
simply shrugged and
nodded. "I never thought I'd need any weapon beyond magic, which
proves how shortsighted it's possible to be. But now that you know
about us, what about you two? As Vadran pointed out, you two aren't
matched. Did you know each other before you got here?"
"It so happens we
did," Prince Bariden answered, turning partially away from the
fire I was still drying myself at. "Chalaine and I were working
on a serious problem our realm has, and apparently the guilty party
was afraid we would get to the bottom of it. A new victim was made
for us to go look at, and the room was booby-trapped with an entry
and a compulsion. The compulsion forced me through the entry, and
Chalaine was accidently swept along."
"Which means one of
two things," I contributed, only glancing over my shoulder.
"Either our guilty party and your game player are one and the
same, or our guilty party simply happens to know about what's going
on here, and took advantage of it to get rid of us. At this point
it's a matter of pick the one you like best."
"But maybe we can
figure out which one it is," Kamen said, his green eyes suddenly
bright. "If two more rooms and sets of clothes have been
prepared, then you're expected rather than just tossed in. If they're
not, you weren't meant to be here."
"That only works one
way," I disagreed while everyone else commented or exclaimed.
"If no rooms are prepared, that means we were tossed in. If
rooms are prepared, that could mean the original spell on this place
allows for newcomers automatically. It doesn't have to mean our
guilty party is your game player."
"I hadn't thought of
that," Kamen said as he blinked, and then he produced a grin.
"But the thought occurring to me now is that we finally have a
real thinker among us. I have a feeling you're the one who will find
us a way out, Chalaine."
"Isn't that funny,"
Idara said, toying with a strand of her red hair. "I was just
thinking that about Bariden. I hope at least one of us is psychic."
"As long as it's not
psychotic," Halad said from beside her, looking amused. "This
place is enough to do that to
58
anyone. Why don't we go
upstairs and check out the room situation? If they have been provided
for, they'll at least be able to change for dinner."
"And it is getting
close to that time," Janissa put in. "if there isn't any
provision for them, we'll have to share what we get. Let's get
started now."
All six of them made
sounds of agreement as they began to move, drawing the prince and me
along with them. I would have preferred staying by the fire, and not
just because my clothes were still wet. That whole situation felt
really strange, even beyond the strangeness it was supposed to be.
Six magic users trapped in an unpleasant situation, and ail they'd
done was settle in? Granted they couldn't use their magic, but
still...
The group led the way left
out of the room, and only a short distance away was a wide staircase.
The steps were some sort of polished stone, hard to see in the
dimness of the single torch burning nearby. It was also colder away
from the fire, but that wasn't the only thing trying to make me
shiver. That house insisted on feeling deserted even with eight
people walking through it...
The staircase led to a
second floor that somehow gave the impression of being larger than
the ground floor. Corridors stretched left, right, and straight
ahead, and we were directed left. This corridor had occasional
candles burning in sconces on the walls, while the others had been
dark.
"The first two
bedrooms, to left and right, were given to Janissa and me,"
Kamen said with appropriate gestures. "The next two belong to
Vadran and Wellia, and the third set to Halad and Idara. If you two
have been provided for, the fourth pair will be lit."
The doors to the indicated
rooms were open, and I could see what was probably the light from
only one or two candles in each. I wondered if it was our fellow
captives who were so frugal with the candles, or if that was our
host's doing. And then I forgot the point as we reached the fourth
pair of doors.
"Well, so much for us
getting a useful clue," Kamen sighed. "These rooms were
dark, and now they're lit. One way or another you two have been
included in, so we might as well get you settled. This way, Bariden."
THe HIDDGM
59
He and the other men took
the prince to the left, and Janissa touched my arm before heading
right. I followed her into a fairly large chamber that was as
formally stiff as the gathering room downstairs, and just as spartan.
Against the far wall to the right was a large bed without canopy or
curtains, and farther right was a plain wooden wardrobe. A couple of
small tables held unlit candles in plain silver holders, utility
uncombined with any sort of beauty. To the left of the door was a
fireplace complete with fire, two uncomfortable-looking chairs set a
few feet away in front of it. Closer to the door on the right was a
washstand with basin and pitcher, and that was it as far as interior
decoration went.
"The inside door of
the wardrobe has a mirror," Janissa told me, walking over to
open it and prove the point. "You'll notice there's only one
dress and pair of slippers in here at any one time, but that's all
you'll need. When you take your worn clothes off put them in here,
and the wardrobe will take care of them,"
"But you have to take
care to change as quickly as possible," Wellia added. "The
longer you're alone, the better the chance that one of
those—things—will come after you. You can't avoid them
entirely, but there's no sense in making things worse."
"Easiest is being
with one of the men when it happens," Idara put in, checking
herself quickly in the mirror. "The thing always turns out to be
one that goes after them, so you don't have to put up with the
awfulness more than once hi a while."
"Don't the men mind
if you take advantage of them like that?" I asked. "I know
they're supposed to be big and strong and all, but dumping the whole
load on them doesn't seem fair. Even if they know all about it and
insist on doing it like that—"
"They do insist,"
Janissa interrupted with a smile. "They get their own benefit
out of the arrangement, so they don't mind at all. But dinner should
be ready soon, so you ought to get changed now. We'll be waiting
downstairs."
The other two added their
smiles to hers, and then all three left. The last one out closed the
door, but I just stood there for a moment wondering what hadn't been
6O
said. I would have bet
gold on the fact that there was something, and maybe even two or
three somethings. For people who had been dragged unwillingly into
some unspecified experiment, they'd adjusted to the situation awfully
fast and awfully well. . .
The clamminess of my
clothes reminded me rather quickly that I was there to change, so I
gave up on speculation for the moment and turned back to the
wardrobe. The dress hanging in it was dark brown trimmed with red,
not exactly my favorite color combination, but predictable. The
slippers matched perfectly, of course, so I took them and the dress
over to one of the chairs near the fire.
Once I was out of my own
things and into dry, I spread my wet clothes as close to the fire as
was safe for them. The wardrobe could have back anything it gave me,
but I didn't care for the idea of losing what I'd worn to that world.
When you have a choice, even in what clothes you'll wear, it's easier
to keep from going along with the demands of others. The six previous
victims of that trap might have settled in, but I had no intention of
doing the same.
With my wet clothes taken
care of, I went back to the wardrobe to check my new finery in the
mirror. The fit was perfect, of course, and even the colors didn't
look as bad as I'd thought. The dress was long enough to brush the
top of my slippers, was long-sleeved, and closed with buttons up the
front of the bodice. The material was very soft and rich-feeling,
like silk but without the slipperiness of silk. Most of the red trim
was lace, and—
I stiffened as I saw, in
the mirror, the figure appear behind me. It materialized out of thin
air, and its arrival was so abrupt it took me an instant to realize
what it had to be. I whirled around, needing to face it rather than
have it behind my back, but that did no good at all. I couldn't use
magic to get rid of it or defend myself, and the thing laughed when
it saw I'd remembered that.
The thing. Actually, it
was supposed to be a man, but not your ordinary, everyday type. He
was fairly tall but stood round-shouldered, as though preferring to
blend into the crowd rather than stand out. He was long-faced and
dull-eyed, but wore a smirk as though he thought no one else was as
good. He also had long-fingered hands, the sort
THG HtDDGh
61
that are constantly on the
move and just itching to touch you. He was dressed in a long and
belted maroon robe that was too dirty to look anything but repulsive,
and his very light-skinned feet were bare. AH of him was
light-skinned, fish-belly dead rather than simply untanned.
And then the look in his
flat, dull eyes changed, showing sly and crafty eagerness rather than
plain stupidity. I'd seen that look before, the one that said he'd
just realized I could be taken advantage of, and I hated it as much
as the rest. He was virtually made of what I detested most in a man,
and the thought of his coming closer made my skin crawl. If he ever
touched me it would be sickening . . .
The thing laughed again
and suddenly began to walk towarj me, shuffling along the bare wooden
floor in bare white feet. It was almost as though he'd waited to let
me get a good look before doing it, just to make it all worse.
Everything I hated in a man, looks and attitudes both .. . he knew
what I was thinking and feeling, and intended to use that against me
...
Anger flared beside
disgust, but even as I turned and ran toward one of the small tables
on my left, I couldn't help wondering what the point was. The
gameplayer's spell had created and sent the sort of man I'd never be
able to stomach, but according to what I'd been told it wouldn't harm
me. I had no interest in waiting to find out what it would do, but
that question was answered just as I reached the table.
"Where you goin',
pretty?" the thing asked in a thin, high-pitched voice,
condescendingly amused. "You can't get away from me, you oughta
know that, and I'm not gonna hurt you. Just a little snugglin' and
touchin' and a few kisses, and then I'll be gone. Until the next
time. Come on, be a good girl and stand still. The sooner we start,
the sooner I'll be done."
"You're done right
now," I muttered, reaching hastily for the heavy candle standing
unlit in one of the sticks. I noticed that when you mix anger with
disgust your hands shake, but I wasn't about to let that stop me. I
yanked the candle from its holder, accidently knocking the holder off
the table, but that didn't matter. If I had to throw it after the
candle, I'd just pick it up again.
The candle was heavy
enough to make a good impression
on anyone, so I took aim
for the composite man's head and threw hard. I was usually good at
hitting what I aimed at, and that time was no different. The candle
flew straight for the thing's face, smacked into it—and kept on
going! It— sank—into the face, and when it was gone it
left behind nothing but a dirty smirk and a laugh.
"Nice try, pretty,"
he said in a greasy way. "But now that you know you can't stop
me, why make trouble? Come on over here and let's get acquainted."
He'd paused a moment
earlier, probably to let me learn how useless throwing things was,
but now he'd started walking again. Rather than waiting for me to
come to him, he was doing the approaching. I wasn't afraid, exactly,
not when it wasn't something deadly coming at me, but_being
sickeningly repelled was almost worse. And the worst of it was that I
couldn't think of anything to do, nothing that would let me defend
myself...
And then I saw the thing
pause, his smirk wavering for just an instant. A peculiar expression
flickered on his face, and then he took a longer step before resuming
his shuffle and amusement. It was so odd I couldn't help but notice,
but for a moment I didn't understand. Why in the worlds would he do
that... ?
As soon as I looked down,
everything became clear. The silver candlestick, the one that had
been a victim of my clumsiness and had ended up on the floor—that
was what the thing had so carefully avoided! Good old silver, a magic
user's best friend! I wasted no time in reaching for the second
candlestick, got rid of the candle, then turned to the thing with my
newly found weapon in hand.
"What do you expect
that to do for you?" he tried to bluff, now forcing smirking
amusement even though he'd stopped again. "You feel the urge to
try another throw? Go ahead then, throw it and see what happens."
"I already know what
would happen," I answered, looking straight at him. "You
would avoid the throw rather man letting it hit you, and then I would
be without a weapon. If you're so eager to show you're not afraid of
it, just keep coming."
Frustration flashed
through those flat, dull eyes, an emotion he tried to hide, but then
he realized the game was up.
THG
63
I wasn't guessing about
the silver, and I wasn't warning him to keep away. If he tried to
come near me I'd bash him with the candlestick, and smile while I did
it. When you're not afraid to hurt someone they know it, even if
they're constructs.
"You think you're so
smart," the thing said sullenly, his good time ruined. "Well,
it so happens I didn't want to have anything to do with you anyway. I
don't like life-forms that cheat."
With that he disappeared
back to the nothingness he'd come from, possibly thinking he'd left
me feeling guilty. If the day ever came mat I felt guilty about
defending myself... I shook my head with a sigh, wondering how even a
construct could be that thick-skulled. I also wondered what the
gameplayer would try next, now that the first attempt hadn't worked.
There were any number of unpleasant things to be considered, but
luckily I was diverted by a knock at the door. Hastily pushing aside
thoughts of true horror, still clutching the candlestick, I went to
the door and opened it.
"I thought I'd see if
you were ready to go down to dinner yet," Prince Bariden said
from where he leaned against the doorpost with folded arms. "Are
you expecting to need a candle, or are you just still mad at me?"
"It so happens you're
my second visitor," I said, stepping back to let him come in.
"The first was a walking collection of everything I dislike in a
man, who announced that we were going to kiss and touch and cuddle.
Now we know what the operating spell sends after female Sighted in
this place."
"Is it still here?"
he demanded, losing the casual air as he strode into the room and
looked around. "What did it do to you before it left?"
"I doubt if he was
going to do more than he said he would, but he didn't even get to do
that." I followed more slowly, wondering how much of his
agitation was on my behalf. A man who targets a girl wants to get to
her first, without someone else cutting in front "I accidently
discovered that the construct didn't get along with silver, and used
this candlestick to convince him to be on his way."
"Convinced him,"
Prince Bariden echoed with a snort
64
9HARON
of amusement, turning to
grin at me. "Saying that, you probably smashed him flat with it.
And you look like such a sweet, gentle little thing. As long as
you're sure he didn't hurt you."
"I told you, I don't
think hurting is part of what it's supposed to do," I said,
ignoring the fact that he looked genuinely concerned again. "Being
pawed and mauled by someone you can't stand may be nauseating, but it
doesn't qualify as traumatic for many girls above the age of fifteen.
No, that thing had another purpose, but I'm damned if I know what You
didn't have a visitor of your own?"
"Not even a
suggestion of one," he said with a headshake, now looking
thoughtful. He'd changed clothes too, and his tunic was a blue to
match his eyes. "Maybe the fact mat I'm armed kept anything from
trying."
"Unless your sword is
silver, which I doubt, I don't see that happening," I disagreed.
"The first thing I did was throw a heavy candle at my guest, and
his face simply swallowed it up. Cutting him into slices probably
wouldn't have worked either, not when he wasn't truly human. It's
possible he or something like him will try again, so I intend to hang
onto this candlestick."
"That you should have
to really bothers me," he said, the concern sliding toward
self-condemnation. "You ended up here because of me, and even
though I didn't do it deliberately, that doesn't stop it from being
my fault. I'd like you to know that I'm really sorry."
"Excuse me, but I
don't understand what you're apologizing for," I said, watching
as he turned away. "The compulsion on the entry was so strong it
dragged you to it and through, and it was my own bad luck I got in
the way. Or my own thickheadedness, for not being suspicious about an
entry being present when there was no sign of one at any of the other
scenes. How does any of that make it your fault?"
"The fact that I
didn't realize being partners with you would put you in danger,
that's what makes it my fault." He'd turned back to look at me,
to show just how unhappy he really was. "I should have
anticipated an attempt to get rid of me before I learned something
important, and kept you well in the background. The arrow can't hit
you if you
TH£ HIDDGN
65
aren't standing between it
and its true target."
"Ah, so you're the
only one they wanted to get rid of," I said with a nod, finally
understanding. "They weren't counting on my being drawn along
with you, or even following after if you went through alone. They
knew I would simply stay in the palace and putter around, getting
nowhere with the mystery once my invaluable partner was gone. Now I
see."
"Why are you taking
my attempt to apologize as a major personal insult?" he demanded
as mis time I did the turning away. "It's hardly likely our
enemy knows you, but he's certain to know me. If a trap was set, and
it was, logic would say it was set for me. And not just logic, since
you didn't set off the compulsion and I did. Would you be happier if
this was all aimed at you, and / was the one accidently dragged
along?"
"You're absolutely
right, I was just being foolish," I said, brushing at the skin
of my dress. "Now that that's settled, we ought to get
downstairs. If they're holding dinner for us, they could be as hungry
as I am."
I headed out into the hall
and after a brief hesitation Prince Bariden followed. He didn't say
anything else, but it felt as if he wanted to. Persorially, I was
sorry I hadn't just accepted his apology and let it go at that. He
was a prince, after all, so it was natural for him to consider
himself the most important person around. If our enemy didn't know me
our enemy wasn't as clever as we thought, but that was beside the
point. In the prince's eyes I wasn't important enough to be lured
into a trap, so why argue?
At the bottom of the
stairs I turned right, and a few doors down, also on the right, was
the dining room where our fellow victims waited. They sat at a table
set for eight, but one that could easily have held twelve. Again the
room was mostly dim, but two candelabra on the table would keep the
coming meal from being a mystery. What I could see of the room itself
said we were still going with stiff and formal, utility first,
comfort second, decorative a long way beyond third. When we entered,
the low conversation broke oft and Kamen rose to his feet.
"Glad to see you two
are all right," he greeted us with a smile. "Chalaine, your
place is here to my right, and
66
cueer*
Bariden, yours is to
Janissa's right at the other end. Once we get settled, the food will
start coming."
Without hesitation I moved
left toward his end of the table, and the prince did almost as well
going right. His very short pause might have meant he saw all the
women he would be in me middle of, and was savoring the largesse to
come. I silently wished him a hearty appetite, and took my place
without comment. Kamen, to my left, remained standing until I sat,
joined by Halad to my right and Vadran to Kamen's left, directly
across from me. Once I was settled, they resumed their own seats.
Prince Bariden had Janissa to his left, Idara to his right, and
Wellia directly across from him.
"Is there some
special reason you're carrying that candlestick?" Kamen asked
me. I noticed that his tunic was a darker blue than Prince Bariden's,
and so were his eyes. "Did you think you'd need to fetch your
own light in order to see what you were eating?"
"Not at all," I
answered, partially distracted by the platters of food mat were
appearing along the center of the table. "This candlestick is my
weapon against any future unwelcome visitors, so you can expect it to
be my constant companion. Dragging it around is a lot more pleasant
man what almost happened."
"Almost happened?"
Vadran echoed from across the table, exchanging surprised glances
with Halad and Kamen. "You mean one of the sendings came at you,
but you were able to stop it? How? Idara hit one with a chair, and
that did nothing but make it laugh."
"I discovered by
accident that it can't abide coming in contact with silver," I
told him, noticing peripherally mat me three women were also
listening. "That sort of an aversion is too basic to change, so
I'd say it will continue to work against any construct sent."
Peculiar expressions moved
across the faces of the men as they glanced at each other again, but
when it came to speaking one of the women beat them to it.
"What about the thing
sent at you, Bariden?" Idara asked from his right. "Were
you also able to chase it away with silver?"
"Since nothing was
sent at me, I didn't have the chance
reams
67
to try," the prince
answered, aware that all eyes were now on him. "If something had
been sent, I probably would have first tried to—"
"Nothing sent?"
"How can that be?" "What's going on now?" "I
don't understand."
The protests all came at
once, running together and almost drowning each other out. Some of
them even sounded indignant, so I decided it was a good time to ask a
few pointed questions.
"That wasn't the way
it was supposed to go, was it?" I asked all of them, drawing
their eyes. "We were supposed to have come down here shaken from
our first brushes with the moves of this—game. You were all
certain it would happen."
"What makes you say
that?" Kamen countered, looking at me in a very neutral way.
"It's true all the rest of us had almost immediate encounters,
but what makes you think we were all that certain it would happen to
you two?"
"One reason is the
fact that you left to let it happen," I obliged with a humorless
smile. "You just said you all had almost immediate encounters,
and yet the girls left me to dress alone, and you boys left my
partner. That means you wanted us to run into our respective
attackers, and were all ready with your own first move. Would you
like to claim there's no significance in this seating arrangement?"
The glances flickered back
and forth again, and this time the women were included. With them
ranged around Prince Bariden and the men around me, we were obviously
expected to involve ourselves in something having to do with the
opposite sex. Just what, though, was the next question to be
answered.
"Just what is it that
you think we're trying to force you into?" Janissa put from her
end of the table, a faint flush to her cheeks. "You sound as if
you suspect some—devious plot on our part, aimed at luring you
into our clutches. What are we supposed to be guilty of?"
"I'd say bad
judgment, if nothing else," I answered with a shrug, reaching
for a wineglass that was now filled. "You know you were all
brought here for a purpose, to do something whoever set this up
wanted you to do. With that in mind you should have noticed what you
were being
68
SHAROM
forced to do, and
understood that doing it was just plain cooperating with your
capture. How fast do you expect to be released if you behave the way
the gameplayer wants you to?"
"A lot faster than if
we resist," Idara stated, her own cheeks reddened. "And
resisting could have made things worse, so what good would it have
done? Those things could have been sent to do more than touch and
kiss us, and then what would we have done?"
"Maybe found out
sooner that silver will stop them?" I suggested, then watched as
all three women flushed darker. "Those constructs are stomach
turning, but they're not so bad that they'd make you desperate to
find something that would stop them. By cooperating with the desires
of the gameplayer, you denied yourselves the sort of state of mind
that lets you find a way out of an unbearable situation. It wasn't
unbearable, merely unpleasant, so you avoide'd it by accepting an
arrangement that wasn't all that bad. What I still don't know,
though, is what the men get out of it besides the obvious."
"I seem to be the
only one who doesn't understand what's going on," Prince Bariden
said when the silence descended. No one was looking at anyone else
any longer, and the air of discomfort was thick enough to feel. "What
sort of arrangements are we talking about?"
"I was told that the
constructs don't bother the women if they happen to be with the men,"
I answered, looking around as I spoke. "That would indicate they
usually sleep in pairs, since your time of greatest vulnerability is
when you're asleep. This seating was probably arranged to let us
choose our first partners, but it's unlikely nothing more than sleep
is involved. Of course, if I'm wrong I'll certainly apologize."
None of them spoke up to
say that I was wrong, and no one even seemed to remember there was
food on the table. They all appeared to feel horribly embarrassed,
which was perfectly ridiculous.
"All right, so you
all take turns sleeping together," I said, letting them hear the
annoyance I felt. "I realize no one ever does that sort of thing
anywhere else, but that's no reason not to talk about other subjects.
Like what additional benefit
THG
69
the arrangement has for
the men. Since they can still be attacked, what is there that adds
the urge to cooperate?"
"Don't you think the
easy sex is enough?" Kamen asked, now sounding and looking
angrily defensive. "That's all men think about, isn't it? What
other reason do we need?"
"Give me a break,"
I responded with a groan, aware of the same stares from the other two
men. "Even teenage boys think about more than sex. And what kind
of an experiment would this be, if half the subjects were going to
react in a completely predictable way? You do understand this is an
experiment, don't you?"
This time all the looks
exchanged were filled with surprise, which answered my question. They
hadn't even gotten that far in figuring things out, and suddenly they
were filled with actual interest.
"What sort of an
experiment could this possibly be?" Vadran asked from across the
table. "To see how quickly strangers will take to one another?
I'll admit I didn't like being forced to cooperate, but the choice
was between a painful beating from something I couldn't defend myself
against, or making love to one of three attractive women. I couldn't
see what playing stubborn would get me, so I went along with it."
"There's a part you
still don't know about," Halad said from my right, obviously
agreeing with Vadran. "Those things would still appear if there
was a woman with us, but seemed to be incapable of striking at that
woman. If we put her in the middle neither of us was hurt, and then
the thing would disappear. Could the experiment be to find out how
well we would learn to cooperate?"
"I doubt it," I
said with a headshake, finding that too simple an answer. "If
that was the aim, you would have discovered somehow that cooperation
was the key to getting out of here. Chances are the point is more
involved, like just how far you could be pushed before you stopped
being cooperative. Vadran mentioned that one of your choices was an
'attractive' woman. What would have happened if the next pair showing
up were a very handsome man and a rather plain-looking woman?"
"That's easy,"
Wellia said with a laugh from the other side of Halad. "We three
would have each done our best
7O
9HARON GR€€M
to be the one who welcomed
the man, which would have left one of our current companions with the
woman."
"And whichever one of
us was left with her would have a different choice to make,"
Kamen pounced, looking excited. "Making love to a plain woman is
still worlds better than getting kicked around, so we would probably
cooperate again. But what about the couples after that? What if
eventually the woman was not only physically ugly, but also had one
of those poisonous personalities? Would we be so used to compromising
by then that we would accept her without hesitation, having decided
that anything was better than getting hurt? If not, at what point
would we dig in our heels?"
"That possibility
would work for us as well," Janissa said, glancing at the other
two women. "If the new arrivals were a gorgeous woman and a
plain man, how long would any of us refuse plain when the only other
choice was nauseating? But the game would probably get more involved
after that, since nauseating would quickly be balanced by repulsive.
Maybe the constructs would start hitting us, too."
"None of which tells
us how we're supposed to climb out of this," Wellia said,
looking seriously disturbed. "I started out making the best of
an unpleasant situation, but this will get worse than unpleasant
before it's over. Once people get used to giving in to small
tyrannies, they find themselves giving in to large ones as well. If
the gameplayer is trying to find out the point I'll say no, then he
has what he wants. I'm now saying no, and I won't change my mind
again."
"Not even to keep one
of those—things—away from you?" Idara asked, her
face pale. "I don't like this any better than the rest of you,
but I'll take an ordinary man any day rather than a—a—Damn
it, we're still trapped here!"
"But maybe not for
long," Prince Bariden said soothingly, reaching to his right to
pat her hand. "Something someone mentioned gave me an idea, but
there's still one unanswered question. If everyone including Chalaine
had one of these constructs sent after them, why was I the only
exception? If a sharp edge was likely to stop them, there would
hardly be knives on this table as part of the settings. That means my
sword had nothing to do with it, so what did?"
THG HIDD€M
71
Everyone considered that
in silence, diverted from the first thing he'd said. I wasn't
diverted, but a possibility still occurred to me.
"Since all of you are
Sighted, does that mean all of you used normal warding before finding
yourselves here?" I asked. "No, the question isn't silly,
so please answer it."
"The question is
silly," Idara contradicted. "When ordinary people pay good
silver to have themselves warded, why would one of us do without when
the cost would be nothing? Weren't you warded?"
"Yes, I was," I
replied, seeing that every one of them agreed with her. "The
point here is that my partner wasn't, and that could be the answer.
The constructs are made to key on our warding, nauseating to female,
and attacking to male. Since we each warded ourselves, the work would
have our own individual trace."
"If you're serious
about his being unwanted, that must be it," Kamen said, once
again looking around at the others. "But wait a minute. How can
something created by magic get through our warding? The girls were
touched and we were hit and kicked, but that shouldn't have been
possible."
"You're confusing a
magical creature and the use of magic," Prince Bariden said
before I could respond. "Most warding protects you only from the
direct use of magic or an effect caused by magic. It won't stop a
physical attack from anything including a magical creature, not
unless you're so proddish you have it set specifically to do that. If
you do you won't be touched by anything including a heavy wind
without setting it off, and will probably leave a trail of
unconscious bodies every time you move through a crowd. Anything less
is just about useless, which is why I don't bother. Most people
assume I'm warded, which is just as good as actually having it"
"That makes a strange
kind of sense," Halad said as he blinked at the prince. "I'll
have to think about it once I'm home again, but right now I'd rather
discuss your earlier comment. Did you say you have an idea about how
we might get out of here?"
"I did, but before we
try it I suggest we have dinner," Prince Bariden responded,
reaching for one of the platters
CHARON
near him. "There's no
guarantee my idea will work, and if this food disappears again before
we eat it, we'll end up going hungry. We'll take care of this first,
and then see about escape."
Once again there were a
lot of glances exchanged and this time I joined in the effort, but
there was nothing to be done. Prince Bariden was giving all his
attention to the food, and unless we wanted to try to force him into
talking, pur only option was to do the same. A general movement
toward the bowls and platters told me which option the others were
going with, which was hardly surprising. Muttering under my breath
about the high-handedness of those with titles, I reluctantly did the
same.
Dinner was topped off with
coffee all around, the cups having a standard refilling spell that
any good Sighted host or hostess would provide. By that time the
prince was chatting lightly with the attentive women around him, and
the men at my end were talking desultorily among themselves. Not
being interested in conversation, I wasn't speaking to anyone. I'd
fallen into a dark mood over all the time we were wasting, and
couldn't seem to climb out of it again. What if Prince Bariden's idea
didn't work, and we were trapped there? How long would the stricken
left behind us be able to survive in me pale shadows they now lived
in .. . ?
"Now that we're
comfortably filled, I think it's time for an experiment of our own,"
Prince Bariden suddenly announced, beginning to rise from the table.
"If you'll all come with me, I'll explain what's needed."
Everyone hurried to follow
after as he headed for the hall, but I took a final swallow of coffee
before making my own way out. If Prince Bariden's idea didn't work,
what would there be left to try ... ?
"Okay, now that we're
all here, we can give it a try," the prince said when I joined
the group in the hall. "What we want is an entry out of here,
but, as Chalaine knows, I'm not familiar with entry spells. The rest
of you will have to pick a destination, and that's where we'll try to
go."
"I'd say our best
destination would be Conclave," Kamen offered above the comments
of some of the others. "That way we can report what was done to
us, and get some
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wizard strength on our
side. It won't help if we just go home, and then wake up tomorrow to
find we've been taken again."
"But how are we
supposed to go anywhere at all?" Idara asked with a worried
expression that was becoming familiar. "With the gameplayer's
blanket spell still working, none of our spells will do the same."
"None of our
individual spells," Prince Bariden corrected before anyone else
could add to the protest. "No single one of us is strong enough
to counter the gameplayer, but what about all of us together? If the
gameplayer had the strength of eight trained Sighted, would he still
be involved with silliness like this? Aren't there better things to
do with your time once you develop that much strength?"
The only proper answer to
his question was maybe, but none of us wanted to be the one to say
the word. Doubt can negate the strongest effort when it comes to
spells, and what we needed then was the greatest push we could
generate. Punching through a wizard's already-cast spell could be
tricky no matter what our combined strength, but that was hardly the
time to mention that point either.
"Well, all we can do
is try," Halad said, shaking his red-haired head. "If it
doesn't work we won't be any worse off, and if it does we're out of
here. Is there anyone besides Bariden who doesn't know the spell for
an entry to Conclave?"
There was a lot of looking
around, but no one spoke up to say they shared the lack. It was odd
to think that any Sighted could reach sorcerer strength without
visiting Conclave at least once in a while, but there was no real
time to think about that. The others were beginning to link hands,
the most effective way to increase the strength of a shared spell.
"Let's put the entry
into the doorway to the dining room," Prince Bariden suggested
as he took the hands of Janissa and Idara. "That way if it
doesn't work, we can all go back for dessert. Is everyone ready?"
A variety of nods answered
him, none of them as lighthearted as his comment about dessert was
supposed to make them. His linking hi would add a portion of his
strength to the effort even if he wasn't speaking the spell,
74
SHARON
so there was no sense in
waiting for some nebulous better time. He glanced around one last
time, then said, "Begin," the way a wizard instructor would
have. That gave us our benchmark and suggested rhythm, and we began
to speak the spell. The first thing you learn when you start to study
magic is the standardized way of speaking a spell. In later years you
develop your own personal style, but no one ever forgets what they
learned first.
The spell wasn't very
involved, and as we began together we finished together. There had
been something of a drag on the words as I spoke them and I suspected
the others had felt the same, but with the last syllable out there
was a—popping—of sorts. It was very much like your ears
adjusting to a change of altitude, and when we looked at the dining
room doorway there was a faintly glowing outline that hadn't been
there before.
"It's really there!"
Vadran shouted, turning to Wellia, picking her up, and spinning her
in a circle. The others were also laughing and jumping around, but
Prince Bariden was simply grinning. Idara paused to throw her arms
around his neck and kiss him, but for some reason that didn't ruin
his mood. As soon as she turned away to find someone else to kiss, he
chuckled his way over to me.
"Looks like we did
it," he commented over the yelling and whooping. "And I do
mean 'we.' You said something about mis not being an experiment about
cooperation, because then it would take cooperation to escape.
Hearing that made me wonder if you'd touched on something we weren't
supposed to see, and from that came the idea about combining
strength. Do you want to lead the way through the entry, or let
everyone else go first?"
"I think it's going
to be a matter of first come, first gone," I answered, nodding
toward the activity I'd been watching. "Kamen is about to lead
Janissa through, Vadran is right behind them with Wellia, and Halad
is bringing up the rear with Idara. If we don't get a move on,
they'll leave us behind."
I headed for the end of
the line with that, and after a brief hesitation the prince followed
me. Once again I had the feeling he wanted to say something, but that
wasn't the time for anything but the briefest conversation. Kamen and
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75
Janissa stepped through
the entry, Vadran and Wellia right on their heels, Idara alone
turning to gesture us after them before following with Halad. The
prince was beside me as I began to step through, but suddenly there
was a—crackling blur—and then—and men—
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77
CHAPTGR K)UR
A
ind then Bariden found
himself outdoors again, Chalaine beside him. Wherever they were it
was midaftemoon, and although the air was cool there wasn't a trace
of snow. There also wasn't a trace of the six people who had gone
through the entry before them, which was definitely not an
encouraging sign.
"If this is Conclave,
it's changed a lot since the one time I visited there," he
commented, looking around at the very ordinary countryside. Grass,
trees, sky, and sunlight, nothing threatening or even vaguely
sinister. A short distance away from where they stood was a dirt
road, fairly wide and looking fairly well traveled.
"I'd like to know
whose idea of a joke this is," the girl said in annoyance, also
looking around. "That crackling blur, just as we stepped through
the entry—it didn't happen for any of the others, or I would
have noticed. They ended up at Conclave, and we ended up—where?"
"Someplace there's no
immediate way back from," Bariden told her, having already
turned to examine the entry they'd come through. The thing was gone,
not the least hint of where it had been, nothing but a stretch of
meadow to be seen with woods just beyond.
"Great,"
Chalaine muttered, having turned herself to see that the entry was
gone. "Now we don't even have the choice of jumping back into
the frying pan if this turns out to be the fire. And I'm cold again."
Almost by reflex she spoke
a spell to replace her dress
76
with the boots, breeches,
and tunic she'd left behind, only in slightly heavier material.
Bariden understood the spell perfectly—and then blinked when
the clothing nickered into being. He'd enjoyed seeing her in a dress,
but that had nothing to do with his reaction.
"Hey, we can do magic
again," he said, then proved it by providing himself with his
own original clothing. "Now all we have to decide is whether or
not to try for Conclave again."
"You think we ought
to go straight back to the palace?" the girl asked, big, dark
eyes just brushing past him. "I thought the stop at Conclave
could be used for getting wizard-strength warding against future
compulsions, but I suppose Master Haddil could do that for us. But
first I'm going to get rid of my own warding. I didn't like what it
brought to me in that house trap, and I don't care to have the same
again."
"Wait," Bariden
said before she spoke the words and used a banishing gesture. "That
might not be the best idea right now. Why don't we wait to see what
happens next."
"What will happen
next is my creating an entry to take us out of here," she said,
looking around at the landscape. "What do you think will jump us
before I can do that?"
"I wasn't thinking
about something happening before," he answered, finding it
impossible not to stiffen against the taint impatience in her tone.
As though she were dealing with someone very young and not too
bright... "It was afterward I was considering. If the enemy was
prepared to stop us from reaching a destination decided on almost
randomly and what should have been unexpectedly, what will happen the
next time we try?"
She hesitated a moment,
obviously thinking, and then said, "Let's try it and see,"
before raising one hand and speaking a spell. Logic told Bariden she
was calling an entry into existence, but logic was the only one who
knew that. Nothing else seemed to notice, and all faintly glowing
doorways were conspicuous by their absence.
"I don't believe
that," she stated, glaring at a volume of air that should
obviously have contained more. "This has to be someone's idea of
a joke. How can magic work for everything but the calling up of an
entry?"
78
"A better question
would be, why is the enemy so determined to keep us away from the
palace?" Bariden suggested. "First we're forced out, and
now we're being kept from going back. Is there something scheduled
that we might stop if we were there?"
" 'We'?" she
said, for a moment looking straight at him. "I thought you were
the only important one in all this. Why has that suddenly changed to
we?"
"What would be the
sense in disallowing entries if I was the only one who was supposed
to be here?" Bariden was trying to keep his voice mild as he
explained his thinking, but the girl wasn't making it easy. Every
time she spoke to him, he felt like—"And why did that
compulsion have to be so strong? Instead of making me run, it could
have simply caused me to walk through the entry without fuss. That
way no one would have noticed until I was through and taken, and that
would have been the end of it. Not to mention the fact that the two
of us were diverted here by that last entry. Am I supposed to believe
it couldn't have been me alone just as easily?"
"We still don't know
what you're supposed to believe," she pointed out, a hint of her
favorite lecturing tone behind the words. "First you thought you
were the only one who counted, but now I've gained equal prominence.
Or almost equal. Never let it be said that I'd presume to think of
myself as being on equal footing with a prince. But I do feel honored
that I'm not being dismissed out of hand any longer."
"All right, that's
the last of it I'm going to take," Bariden growled, finally fed
up. "If you think you have any complaints against me, get them
said so we can clear the air. I don't like getting sniped at without
having the chance to strike back."
"You're right, I've
been unforgivably rude," she responded immediately in that
neutrally dismissive tone he was beginning to hate. "Just chalk
it up to my being a commoner, and try to overlook it. I'll make the
effort not to presume again."
"Not this time,"
he denied, grabbing her arm as she began to turn away. "You've
already had your last time of getting in the final word by insisting
on dropping the
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79
subject. You've been
snapping at me almost from the first minute we met, and I want to
know why that is. What have I ever done to you?"
"Shall I start with
the way you couldn't be bothered with remembering my name?" she
asked, those dark eyes now flaring at him. "Or is that a point
I'm supposed to have forgotten? Maybe I ought to go with the way I
was supposed to be so very flattered when you finally did notice me
and turned on the charm. Was I supposed to chuckle and enjoy the
attention, feel special because I'd soon be able to number myself
among your hordes of—female acquaintances? Imagine, me drawing
the attention of a prince! How lucky can you get?"
"So that's what's
wrong with you," Bariden said, finally letting her arm go.
"You're one of those reverse snobs. You should have told me, and
then I never would have bothered you."
"How dare you?"
she demanded as this time he began to turn away. "I am not a
snob, and you have no right to call me one. If there's anyone—"
"You're just like all
the rest!" he returned harshly, turning back to look at her with
memory of that other time. "All those oh-so-special Sighted I
met the one time I went to Conclave. 'Dear boy, a princel How quaint
and utterly amusing. Imagine, the boy's & prince. We'll have to
try not to let that make a difference.' You claim to be outraged over
the fact that I didn't remember your name, but isn't that only
because I'm a prince? If an ordinary man had done it, wouldn't you
have forgiven him by now?"
"Why—I—no,
I don't—" She stumbled over the words, her eyes wide and
confused, but Bariden wasn't finished.
"I think the answer
to that is, of course you would have. You would have understood it
wasn't done on purpose, and accepted an offered apology. And as for
my second crime, the one where I found myself attracted to you—that
was obviously a mistake. You see, some years ago I spoke a Spell of
Affinity aimed at women. I wanted to be sure that the woman I
eventually ended up with was someone who wanted me, not just a
prince. When I looked into your eyes and the glow of the spell flared
brighter than ever before, I tet it make me forget the fact that
you're one of them. Now
8O
that you've reminded me,
you can be sure I won't forget again. The first Sighted woman I tried
to get to know will also be my last. Right now I'm going to follow
that road to see if it leads any place useful."
Once again Bariden turned
away from the now silent girl, but not to walk to the road. As angry
as he was a little exercise would have helped to calm him, but just
then he preferred to retain his anger. He spoke a spell to create a
copy of his favorite horse, then walked over to the construct when it
appeared. It was less man the living original would have been,
limited to form and behavior only, but as a mount it was more than
adequate.
He climbed into the saddle
and headed for the road, making no effort to look back to see if the
girl would follow. She wasn't an ordinary girl, after all, she was
Sighted. If a sorceress wasn't capable of taking care of herself in a
place where her magic worked, no one was. There was nothing Bariden
could do for her that she couldn't do for herself, a circumstance
she'd managed to make very clear. And he'd been so worried about
pursuing her in the right way. For him there was no right way, not
even with the help of an Affinity spell. She looked at him the way
those other Sighted had, as if he were a freak, and that was worse
than anything unSighted women did. At least with them his being a
prince meant something positive, and his also being Sighted was
nothing more than unusual.
Bariden brooded for a
while as he rode along, and then he became aware of being followed.
The sound of another set of hooves came behind his mount's along the
road, which undoubtedly meant the girl had called up a horse of her
own. But she rode a few feet back, pacing him rather than trying to
catch up. Well, that was fine, probably even for the best. The less
they had to do with each other, the happier she would undoubtedly be.
When he'd left the meadow
he'd turned left up the road, as far as he could tell heading roughly
west. There had been no real reason to choose that direction rather
than the other, it was just better than standing still while thinking
about it. The landscape hadn't changed from ordinary woods around the
occasional ordinary meadow, but after a couple of miles there was
suddenly a meadow with grazing cattle. Along
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81
with the herd were three
boys with sticks and two dogs, all of whom were busy watching their
charges.
"There's no fencing,
and that herd looks too big to belong to a single farm or even two
farms," a quiet voice said from behind him to his right. He'd
stopped to look at the cattle, which had obviously given the girl a
chance to move closer. "I'd say we probably aren't far from a
town or city, and that's probably who the herd belongs to. Maybe
someone mere will be able to direct us to a gate."
"That would be
useful," he commented without looking at her, then touched his
heel to his mount to start it moving again. The sooner he got back to
where he'd come from, the sooner he'd also be able to get back to
important concerns.
As they continued along
the road the girl dropped back to the position she'd been in earlier,
which meant the ride for the next few miles was a silent one. After a
while Bariden wondered if he should have responded a little more
warmly to her attempt to start a neutral conversation, but eventually
decided it hadn't been called for. He didn't want any kind of
conversation from the girl, and as soon as he got back he would tell
Master Haddil he intended to work on the mystery alone. He didn't
need any more Sighted partners to—
"What in the name of
chaos—!" he exclaimed. The road had led around a tight and
heavily treed curve, and finally Founding that curve brought a
surprise. The trees ended abruptly no more than fifty yards ahead,
and after that the road ran between two grazing meadows directly to a
large town about a mile away. That part was normal enough, but the
rest—! Crowds of what looked like every man, woman, and child
from the town filled the two meadows, each group standing behind a
solitary figure on a small, raised platform. The two figures wore
long, dark gowns, and beyond the fact that they seemed to be looking
at him and the girl, Bariden could make out no other details.
"Can that welcoming
committee be for us?" Chalaine asked as she moved up again to
ride to his right. "If so, I'm not happy about the only way they
could have known we were coming."
"The enemy,"
Bariden agreed with a nod, watching carefully as they rode nearer to
those two gowned figures. "The
8Q THAROh
only one who could have
known we were coming is the one who caused us to be here. But maybe
this has nothing to do with that."
"Then I'd love to
know what it does have to do with," she muttered before falling
silent again. Bariden echoed that wish silently, but not with the
hope that they'd be able to ride on and never find out. They were
being watched too closely for that, and as they got within ten feet
of the two platform figures, the crowds behind those figures briefly
applauded. For all the worlds as if they were being welcomed to
something ...
"We greet two
travelers on the road to Lovaire," the figure to Bariden's left
suddenly intoned. "Do you come this way with a purpose?"
"Yes, as a matter of
fact we do have a purpose," Bariden allowed, trying to be
cautious. The figure who had spoken was male, with a long white beard
and matching hair, worn above a dark blue gown decorated with moons
and stars and other supposedly mystical symbols. Across the way to
the right was a woman, and although she wore the same sort of gown,
she had black hair with no more than two narrow streaks of white.
Both figures stood very still and tall, and the sternness of their
expressions reminded him of stock characters in a bad play about
magic users.
"And you, girl,"
the woman intoned next, her voice only slightly higher than the
man's. "Do you also ride the road to Lovaire with purpose?"
"Actually, we both
have the same purpose," Chalaine answered, looking the woman up
and down. "Don't you have anything better to do with your time
than stand around asking silly questions? Even if we were just
wandering, our purpose in riding this road would be to continue
wandering. Strange you should miss that, when even a—'guT—
didn't."
Her tone had been so even
and easy, Bariden was taken completely by surprise. Obviously
Chalaine didn't like to be called 'girl,' and didn't mind showing her
displeasure when it happened. Only—damn it, didn't she have
enough sense not to do something like that until they knew what they
were in the middle of? He had the very strong urge to shake her hard,
especially since the two people were
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83
drawing themselves up even
straighter.
"It would seem, then,
that a challenge has been given and accepted," the man said,
annoyance now heavy in his voice. "It matters not who challenged
and who accepted. Oily the outcome will be of concern, and that is a
foregone conclusion. Now we begin."
"Hold on a minute,"
Bariden said with one hand up, trying to keep trouble from starting.
He was a firm believer in defending himself if attacked, but things
got complicated when the person he was with instigated that attack.
"Wouldn't it be better if we talked about this first?"
Rather than answering in
words, the male figure raised both arms and muttered into his beard.
Bariden had enough time to see mat the woman was doing the same
without the beard, and then he was covered with all sorts of insects
and worms, flying, crawling, slimy, and trying to sting or bite.
Surprise and disgust made him immediately start to brush and slap at
the things, but that did no good at all. In desperation he tried a
banishing gesture, but that was just as useless. By then the things
were attacking his eyes, and trying to crawl into his nose and mouth.
He had no idea what he could possibly do next, short of destroying
the man in the white beard—
And then Chalaine spoke a
brief spell, and the things were gone as quickly as they'd appeared.
Bariden coughed while he tried to calm his mount; the horse construct
hadn't been bothered, but his rider's thrashing around in the saddle
had turned the beast skittish. A glance at the bearded man showed him
looking annoyed, but before any words came Chalaine spoke up.
"Now he and I are
both warded," she said, apparently addressing the woman as well
as the man. "Since your illusions will be useless from here on,
you ought to consider giving it up. If we have to suggest that again,
it won't be in words."
"That, young woman,
was magic, not illusion," the man returned coldly. "If you
don't know the difference, we'll soon teach it to you. Whatever
trickery you used to avoid the first lesson won't continue to protect
you for long."
He raised his arms for the
second time, and again the woman across the road did the same. The
people in the
84
9HAROM GR€€M
crowds were watching
almost breathlessly, some of them pointing and whispering to each
other. Bariden-could see food and drink sellers moving here and
there, their trays of wares suspended by straps over their shoulders.
If there had been tents, he would have sworn it was a fair...
"You warded me?"
he said low to the girl. "What made you think that would do it?"
"This time the attack
worked against you, but not against me." Her voice was just as
low, and for some reason she looked almost embarrassed. "When I
saw you trying to banish those things and not being able to do it, I
was sure they were illusions that warding would block. I'll remove it
again as soon as they finish with their—lessons."
Bariden nodded without
saying anything else, most of his attention on the robed and
gesturing two. They were still muttering what should have been
spells, but nothing was happening. Considering everything it was
possible to do even if someone was warded, he didn't understand that
He waited another pair of moments, and when mere was still nothing
happening he decided to ask the question out loud,
"Excuse me, but my
companion and I would like to know what you think you're doing,"
he said, turning his head briefly to include the woman in on the
question. "We didn't come here to sit and watch you wave your
arms in the air."
Everyone in hearing drew
in their breath in shock, a vocal reflection of the fury the man
showed. The woman, on the other hand, looked frustrated and faintly
frightened, which still told him nothing.
"Whatever it is you
hide behind guards your puny selves well," the man spat, his
anger all but regal. "But as we cannot touch you, so will you
find it impossible to touch us. In this instance, a draw is a victory
for our side."
"That doesn't
necessarily follow," Chalaine said mildly into the man's sudden
smirk. "And if this is a contest of some sort, we should be
getting a turn. Do we have to wait for some kind of signal, or are we
just supposed to go ahead and do it?"
"Chalaine,"
Bariden began, trying to keep her from starting something again, but
the attempt was too late.
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85
"Ignorant girl!"
the bearded man laughed. "Those who can, do without let. Those
who cannot, pretend to await permission. Need we ask which you are?"
"No need to ask,"
Chalaine responded immediately with a smile. "I'll be more than
happy to show you."
"Chalaine, wait,"
Bariden tried, but once again he might as well have been talking to
himself. She raised her right hand to point as she spoke a short
spell, and the wooden platform the man stood on obligingly
disappeared. He went down the four feet to the ground with a mump and
a yell, sprawling like a bearded sack of oats. The crowd immediately
erupted into laughter and cheering, and when Bariden glanced to the
other platform, it was to find it already abandoned.
"The woman took off
before I could make it her turn," Chalaine said over the crowd
noise when she saw the direction of his glance. "I love the
bully-follower mentality even more than that of the actual bully.
She's lucky she did leave."
"I wonder how lucky
we'll be," Bariden said, abruptly seeing the group of
official-looking people making their way through the crowd around the
bearded man. Some of them were richly dressed, but the larger number
wore what had to be guardsmen's uniforms. "If we get out of this
without being lynched, remind me to have a good long talk with you.
The topic of conversation will be, 'The better part of valor.* "
Bariden was sure she could
see how annoyed he was, but she didn't get the chance to argue or
protest or even to apologize. That group of people had reached the
roadside to his left, and it was them he had to pay attention to. Of
the four men who were well dressed, one stood alone in front while
the other three bowed.
"We offer the
greetings of Her Majesty Queen Lova, ruler of the city and realm of
Lovaire," the first man said with a polite bow of his own. "The
queen sends her congratulations on having won the yearly contest for
magicians, and bids the winners feast with her in the palace. The
privilege of leading you there is ours."
"Just a moment,"
Bariden said as the man turned to signal that horses be brought up.
"We didn't know this was a
86
contest for magicians, and
we aren't legitimate entrants. We happened along by accident, and
simply defended ourselves. We're looking for directions to the
nearest gate."
"Gate?" the man
echoed, while those behind him glanced at each other blankly. "Do
you mean the gate to the city? There are other, smaller gates inside,
of course, but—I can see that isn't what you mean. Can you
describe what you're looking for?"
"No," Bariden
said with a sigh. "At least not to anyone who isn't Sighted.
What about—" He looked immediately toward the bearded man
Chalaine had dropped to the ground, but he wasn't there any longer.
Like the woman, he'd disappeared into the crowd. Great. "What
about the man with the long white beard? If we could speak to him for
a couple of minutes, or anyone else who's a— magician ..."
"I'm afraid Am well
won't be appearing in public for a while," the spokesman said
with the headshake that had made Bariden's words trail off. "This
is the first time in five years he hasn't won the contest, and
humiliation will certainly keep him out of people's sight for a time.
He hasn't been very popular, you understand, not like the previous
holder of the office. I'm sure the lovely young lady will do much
better along those lines."
"The lovely young
lady doesn't qualify for this contest any more than I do,"
Bariden said as the man beamed at a startled Chalaine. "We
haven't been at magician level for years, so you'll just have to hold
your contest again. We offer our apologies for intruding, but we
really can't stay. There are extremely important matters waiting for
us back home."
"I'm sure there are,
but none of us can direct you to this— gate—you're
seeking," the man replied smoothly, tugging at the sleeve of his
brocade coat. "If you'll accept the queen's hospitality for just
a short while, we'll make every attempt to locate someone who can
help you. Amwell's apprentice, for instance, might be less difficult
to find ..."
This time it was the man
who let his words trail off, giving Bariden the chance to understand
he had no choice. It would be easier finding someone Sighted in the
city man at random in the countryside, and if they refused the
queen's
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invitation they might be
barred from the city. He didn't like the idea of having to go along
with even part of that game they'd stepped into, but there really was
no other choice.
"We thank you for the
offer of hospitality," he said at last, giving in as graciously
as possible. "And also for whatever assistance you can give to
help us on our way. The lives of innocent people could well depend on
our speedy return."
"The pleasure will be
ours, sir," the man answered with another bow. "I'm Nalkin.
the queen's Privy Aide. If you'll both follow me?"
This time die horses were
gestured over and mounted, and they began to make a procession toward
the city. The people in the crowds applauded and shouted and waved
things, but Bariden's glance at Chalaine said she wasn't seeing any
of it. The girl seemed lost in disturbing thought, possibly realizing
at last the full extent of what she might have gotten them into. If
she didn't, he'd certainly point it out when they had their little
talk ...
The ride to the city and
through it to the palace didn't take very long, and then we were
shown to guest quarters. Two of Nalkin's people took Prince Bariden
one way, while Nalkin and the fourth took me another. The guard
escort was left mostly outside the palace altogether, but there were
enough like them inside to keep the halls from looking empty. Nalkin
told me to ring for a servant if I wanted anything at all, and he
would be back to let me know what time I would be presented to the
queen. Then he and his friend bowed and left, finally giving me a
chance to be alone with my thoughts.
The apartment I'd been
given was a large one with other rooms leading off through arches
from the first, but I did no more than glance around before sitting
in a large, comfortable chair done in thick-napped white velvet. I'd
been doing a lot of thinking lately, but that wasn't to say I had
everything nicely worked out. I'd really put my foot in it, and this
time there was no one but myself to blame, not even bad luck.
I spoke a spell that gave
me a large cup of coffee, the refilling sort, then sat back with a
sigh. The argument Prince
88
Bariden and I had had
after coming through to that world—I could still hear him
calling me a snob, one of them, making me feel as though I'd helped
to beat up on someone who couldn't fight back. I now knew why he
never went to Conclave, or had bothered to learn the spells for
entries. Since he lived in the world he'd been bom into, he didn't
feel the need to search for one of his own. Or one where he'd be
likely to find other Sighted. The Sighted had hurt him badly, and he
had no desire to go looking for more of the same.
But he'd broken that rule
for me, and I'd responded by treating him just as badly as those
overblown idiots he'd met on his one visit to Conclave. He had been
wrong, though, in thinking I would have been understanding about his
forgetting my name if he hadn't been a prince. That sort of thing had
happened to me too many times with other men for me to laugh lightly
and dismiss it, but there had been no need to be that nasty.
I sipped at the coffee as
I crossed my booted ankles, determined not to get up and pace. I'd
spent the entire ride from the entry feeling horribly guilty, and my
one lame attempt to start a normal conversation hadn't worked. With
all that weighing on me it hadn't been hard to jump down the throat
of the first person to say the wrong thing, and that first person had
been the female magician-apprentice. Naturally, the jumping had just
made things worse, but before I could regret what I'd said, that fool
with the beard had sent his illusions after Bariden . . .
"Which, of course,
made me jump immediately to Bariden's defense," I muttered to
the coffee. "It's ridiculous to think the man needs me to
protect him, but I couldn't stand hearing him insulted. He just sat
there taking nonsense and abuse from the bearded fool, and I couldn't
stand it. I had to do something, so I made the fool look ridiculous."
But Bariden hadn't
appreciated that any more than anything else I'd done, not if his
promise about "having a long talk" meant what that sort of
thing usually did. I'd obviously put my foot in it yet again, but
then he'd done something that had distracted me from the guilt. In
the conversation with Nalkin he'd done all the talking and made all
the
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decisions, just as though
I wasn't there—or wasn't bright enough to be consulted.
I took another swallow of
coffee, aware of how strange annoyance on top of guilt felt. Or maybe
it was anger instead, I couldn't quite decide. Another memory that
kept bothering me and interfering was the one about the spell Bariden
had mentioned, the Spell of Affinity. Those things were supposed to
be really reliable when used properly, but that was also the problem
with them. Being told there's an affinity between you and the person
you're looking at only helps to increase your interest, not the
affinity itself. If you've gotten no more than a minimal glow,
chances are that's all you'll get. And telling minimal from best
possible is a matter of comparison. If most of the people you meet
show only a faint flicker, the first one to show up who could be a
fairly good friend looks in comparison like a sun flare ...
Which had to be what had
happened in my case. The man saw a stronger glow, one that said we
could conceivably become friends, and immediately jumped to the wrong
conclusion. He was looking for a woman he could trust enough to love,
but that wasn't likely to be me. I'd * always considered the idea of
royalty silly, the custom of If royal offspring even sillier. I mean,
if all you have to do to gain a title is be born, how important can
that title really be considered? Not to mention the fact that no one
like that could possibly find someone like me of interest...
"So there you are."
I looked up at the words to see Bariden coming in, through the door
left open by Nalkin. '- "Since we have the privacy here, we can
use it on that talk I mentioned earlier. You do remember what I
said?"
"I remember," I
conceded quietly, hating that all-business ". distance in his
voice. From what he'd said we could have been friends, but I'd ruined
the chance of that. So much for reacting by reflex instead of with
thought. Chalaine* you're a real winner. Action and reaction and
reaction and reaction.
"Good," he said,
taking a blue velvet chair near mine. "Then let's get right to
it. Do you have any idea what kind of trouble we might have now, and
all because you let your temper get the best of you? What do we do if
the queen
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decides you now have to
take the place of that Arnwell? You did defeat him, so you might be
required to take up his duties. Do you think we can spend a year here
and not have it matter?"
"It would be more man
a year," I muttered to the coffee in my cup. "Arnwell went
undefeated for five years, which has to mean he was the strongest
around. I don't understand how that can be, but not understanding
doesn't change the fact that it is. Even if they held a competition
daily, it isn't likely someone better than magician level would ever
show up."
"That makes it even
better," he said, the anger in his tone gaining strength. "I'm
delighted to see that you're back to being analytical, but that
doesn't solve the problem. Since we aren't likely to find a gate very
soon without the help of these people, what do you suggest we do
next? Refuse to cooperate and forget about the gate, or agree to
cooperate, find out where a gate is, and then ignore it? Since you're
the one who got us into this, the choice ought to be yours as well."
I couldn't help noticing
that he hadn't listed lying and then running out as one of our
options, but that wasn't surprising. I had a feeling his word was
important to him, just as mine was to me. He was right about the
possibility of there being a problem, but the solution wasn't as
involved as he thought.
"Since I'm the one
who got us into this, I'm the one who'll get us out," I said to
the coffee. "If I have to give my word about staying here I'll
do it, and that will leave you free to use the gate. No sense in both
of us paying for what only one of us did, and I'm not likely to be
missed. And it isn't as if we were going to continue being partners."
"No, it isn't,"
he agreed after a very short pause, some of the edge gone from his
words. "But that has nothing to do with the fact that I'm not
about to leave you here. I don't believe in running out on people,
not even ones who don't think much of me. When we leave we'll be
leaving together, just the way we arrived." There was another
pause, this time a longer one, and then he said, "What did you
mean, that no one would miss you? Everyone has someone who would miss
them."
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"It isn't important,"
I answered with a shrug, shifting a little in the chair. "I
spend so much time alone, I suppose I've gotten into the habit of
thinking—Well, it really isn't important."
"I see," he said
after another moment, and then there was nothing. I felt so terrible
I wished he would leave, but couldn't manage to make the request
vocal. It seemed I was destined to do something wrong no matter what
I was involved in, and destiny isn't often comfortable or easy to
endure. There had been such hostility in his voice, and I'd earned
every bit of it.
"Look, I may have
been a bit too—intense—during those words we exchanged
after coming through the gate," he said at last. "I didn't
mean to make it seem like the end of the worlds, so there's no sense
in taking it like that. We got into this together, and we'll get out
of it the same way. All I ask is that you give me the chance to
smooth things over, without getting upset and doing something to make
them worse. I have a lot of experience in dealing with the people
around my father's court. There's not much sense in wasting it, is
there?"
I shook my head to agree
there wasn't, which was the best I could do. So he hadn't been
ignoring me during his conversation with Nalkin, he'd just been
trying to smooth things over before I could make them worse. That
wasn't hard to understand, in fact it was downright easy. If there
was one thing I could be counted on for, it was to make things worse.
"You know, it's just
come to me that we've been on the go for quite a while," he
said, now trying to sound encouraging. "The problem with moving
from world to world is that you think you should still be going
strong if evening hasn't come yet. We left evening behind when we
came through the entry, but we couldn't do the same with tiredness.
Why don't you get some rest while I do the same in my own apartment,
and we'll talk again later, after the feast."
This time I nodded, but I
still couldn't bring myself to look at him. For once his hesitation
didn't last very long; after a very brief moment he got up, and then
his footsteps were taking him out of the apartment. I waited until
the
door was closed, then
banished my coffee cup and went to look for a bed to lie down on.
Anything to keep from having to live with my thoughts any longer ...
Bariden closed the door to
Chalaine's apartment behind him, then just stood there for a moment
rubbing his eyes. When he'd first arrived he'd been all ready for a
fight, and that had left him totally unprepared for what he'd found
instead. He'd all but shouted at the girl and had blamed her for
everything that had happened—and all she'd done was agree with
him. She'd even tried to take the responsibility for getting
them—him—out of there again, and he was certain she
hadn't made the offer without really meaning it.
And the pain! When he'd
finally calmed down enough to notice, the pain and self-recrimination
she all but radiated had almost knocked him over. She hadn't waited
for him to blame her for what had happened, she'd already blamed
herself and had accepted the responsibility. Just as if things might
not have gone better if he hadn't been quite so patient with the
bearded and arrogant Arnwell...
"And not once did she
try to apologize for anything said between us," he muttered.
That point bothered him most of all, and not because he thought it
meant she had no regrets. Added to the fact that she hadn't once
looked straight at him, he was convinced she thought what had passed
between them was beyond apology. She'd often failed to look directly
at him, but not with such complete misery ...
Bariden sighed as he began
to walk back to his own apartment. He hadn't known it at the time,
but it looked like he'd made a bad mistake saying what he had to her.
She acted as if she were always blamed for things, and had long since
stopped arguing the accusations with a trace of truth, and simply
accepted and believed them. He'd called her a snob, and one of them,
and everything he'd felt toward those hateful people had spilled out
over her. And all she'd done was be angry over his having forgotten
her name—
"Damn," he
muttered, the idea suddenly coming to him. Was it possible he wasn't
the first to do that, or even the second or third? What would it do
to a bright, attractive woman, to have people constantly telling her
she wasn't
HIDDEN
93
important enough to be
remembered? She was so quiet and withdrawn, lots of people must have
found it impossible to do anything but overlook her. She was quiet
because people ignored her, and people ignored her because she was
quiet. Talk about reinforcing the bars of a prison . . .
Well, that tore it all the
way. He'd misjudged everything about the girl, even the point of how
badly he'd insulted her. He wondered how long it had taken her to
come around to being able to feel insult over that sort of treatment.
It had probably been years, and then he'd gone ahead and ruined it
all by Warning her for doing it. He'd proven she was wrong about why
he'd shown interest in her, and in her eyes that had made everything
she'd done wrong.
Bariden reached his rooms
in one of the blackest moods he'd ever experienced, and every bit of
his anger was aimed at himself. He closed the door behind him quietly
enough, but if he'd been anywhere else he would have slammed it off
its hinges. He'd started out determined to court a girl he'd made a
blunder with, and had somehow ended up doing little short of slapping
her in the face. It was hard to understand how he could have been
such a fool, such a clubfooted and club-mouthed idiot. He'd probably
ruined any chance there had been of something developing between
them, but it wasn't possible to simply shrug and forget it. His first
concern had to be the matter of getting them both out of that place
without starting a war, but his very next priority .. . right after
finding the way home ...
CHAPTER
I followed the servant
along the hall, feeling only slightly better after die nap I'd had.
I'd also had a bath and had produced some party clothes to wear, and
one of the girl servants had even shown up to brush my hair. Nalkin
hadn't had anyone wake me up to see the queen, because the queen had
decided to give me a few private minutes before the feast. I was
trying to work myself up to the point of feeling honored, but the
best I could do was wish I was home again. All alone on my own world,
with no one around to hurt or mess up...
"By the Diamond
Realm, will you look at you" a voice came, one I unfortunately
recognized immediately. "Chalaine, that must be one of the most
beautiful gowns I've ever seen, and you look incredible in it That
electric blue does the most wonderful things to your hair."
By then he was standing in
front of me, possibly still looking me over. From what I could see
he'd called up his own finery, including a dark blue wide-sleeved
silk tunic, cream-colored leather breeches and matching boots, a
jeweled swordbelt, and a golden medallion to brighten up the dark
silk tunic. I wore silver with my gown, earrings, necklace, and
shoes, and not just because I like silver better than gold. Ever
since I'd awakened, I'd had the strangest feeling about the things
that were happening to us ...
"Since we're both
going to the same place, I insist on being a proper escort," he
said, moving to my right to take my arm. He wrapped it around his own
arm which put
94
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his sword between us, and
then patted my hand. "We're ready to continue on now," he
said to the two servants, the unfamiliar one obviously having been
his. "Lead the way, and we're right behind you."
Our procession got under
way again, but I was too uncomfortable to do more than notice that in
passing. I had no idea what Bariden was doing, or why he was doing
it. Couldn't he understand that the less contact we had before we
parted, the happier I would be?
"Have I mentioned how
wonderful your hair looks brushed out loose like that?" he
murmured, fractionally tightening his hold on my hand. I'd tried to
slide my arm free of his, but he didn't seem to want me to do that.
"I've wondered how that auburn glory would look unbraided almost
from the first moment we met, and now I finally know. The wait was
worth it."
I held up the rather full
skirt of my gown with my left hand, certain I could hear a really
attractive grin in his voice. Under other circumstances I would have
commented mat it was getting kind of deep in that hall, but Bariden's
purpose in saying what he had couldn't possibly be the usual one. It
could be he was trying to show me what it might have been like if I
hadn't ruined things, but that seemed a bit much. No, most likely he
was trying to keep things going on a friendly basis until we got out
of there, pretending we were still partners. Which, of course, we
weren't.
"If there's dancing
at the feast later, I claim the first one with you," he said
next. "I haven't danced in a while, so I hope you'll forgive me
if I'm rusty. I'm sure you'll be much better, and—you do dance,
don't you?"
"Yes, I dance,"
I answered with a sigh. If friendly was what he wanted right then,
that's what he'd get. "I wonder how long it will take to find a
Sighted who knows where a gate is."
"It shouldn't be too
long, so we'll have to be patient," he murmured back. "Just
remember that the aim is to get both of us out of here, so don't be
too quick to promise things. And if discussions are necessary, try to
leave them to me. A good part of my education covered all the ways
it's possible to say things without committing to anything at all."
96
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"Diplomacy on the
highest levels," I murmured back, deciding I needed to listen to
something like that. I had no interest in learning how to do it, but
knowing how it's done can help to keep it from being done to you.
Bariden made a sound of
agreement, but didn't say anything else. We'd moved into an area of
the palace that had more guardsmen stationed along the hall than any
other part we'd seen, which probably meant we were getting close to
the queen. Why she needed so many guardsmen I had no idea, especially
since Bariden's father made do with a good deal fewer. She might have
been in the middle of some sort of problem, and if so we'd probably
be hearing about it in just a few minutes.
Our guides turned a
corner, and when we followed we saw a set of ornate doors at the end
of the relatively short hall. In addition to the guardsmen to either
side of the hall, there were four more and a squad leader positioned
directly in front of the doors. When the squad leader saw us coming
he turned to speak to his men, and by the time we reached them they
were out of the way. Our two guides each opened a door, men stood
still to bow us past them.
A new guide was waiting
just a few steps away to take over, but this time it was someone we
knew. Nalkin was absolutely resplendent in plum-colored velvet
kneepants and coat, lacy white silk shirt and white silk hose,
gold-buckled, plum-colored leather shoes, and a heavy gold necklace.
The room was L-shaped with the shorter leg nearest the doors we'd
come in by, and once those doors had been closed behind us Nalkin
gestured us forward.
"Her Majesty is
waiting to meet you," he said softly when we reached him,
glancing toward the part of the room we couldn't yet see. There was
carpeting on the floor and silk drapes and a large mirror on the long
left-hand wall, but aside from that and a few lamps, the entry area
was unfurnished. "Do you need to be told the proper protocol
when being presented to royalty?"
"If it's standard
protocol, no," Bariden answered for us. "If Queen Lova
requires something special, you'll have to tell us what it is."
"The queen isn't one
for a lot of pomp and ceremony," Nalkin answered with a smile.
"A simple bow and curtsy
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will do when you're
presented, and if she wants anything else she'll tell you herself.
But don't worry about being imposed upon. What Her Majesty wants is
never an imposition. Follow me."
He turned and straightened
his coat before walking slowly toward the place where the rest of the
room would be visible, and Bariden and I exchanged glances behind his
back. What he'd said about the queen raised more questions than it
answered, most especially since Nalkin had looked only at Bariden
when he'd made his comments. It didn't take a genius to figure out
the most likely thing that Bariden would not find to be an
imposition, but there was no sense in jumping to conclusions.
Besides, Bariden was old enough to make his own decisions about
things like that. Even if we had become friends, it would still have
been none of my business.
"Your majesty, allow
me to present the Lady Chalaine and the Lord Bariden," Nalkin
announced from where he'd stopped to bow. "The lady defeated
Arnwell the magician in today's competition, and the lord accompanies
her. My lord and lady, step forward into the presence of Her Majesty
Queen Lova II of Lovaire."
Bariden and I moved
forward with that, and when we reached Nalkin's side we stopped to
bow and curtsy. Bariden's courtly bow bent him all the way forward,
so I was the first to get a good look at the queen. Since I like to
tell the truth whenever possible, I'll have to admit it was all I
could do not to stare.
Queen Lova sat in a fancy
chair that wasn't quite a throne, which stood on a two-step platform
that wasn't quite a dais. Her incredible gown was white silk and
lace, and diamonds glittered at her ears and throat and on three of
her fingers. Her hair was a bright, flaming red, worn long and loose
and topped with a slender, stylized crown of diamonds. Her face—how
do you describe a woman who turns every other woman no more than
pretty by comparison? Radiantly lovely? Unbelievably beautiful?
Inconsiderately unfair?
I knew it immediately when
Bariden got his first good look at her. The arm under my hand
stiffened, as though all of him was suddenly tightly braced against
involuntary
action. A glance at bis
face showed it expressionless, another dead giveaway. He stared at
die queen as though she were nothing more than another living
organism, but mat had to be his high diplomatic training at work.
"We welcome you both
to Our Court," Queen Lova said with a dazzling smile, her light
and beautiful voice a perfect match to the rest of her. "We also
offer Our congratulations to you, Lady Chalaine, for finding it
possible to defeat Arnwell. He was our Court Magician, but considered
the position more an excuse to take advantage of others man a
responsibility or duty to me right. You have Our thanks for ridding
Us of him."
A light pattering of
applause came after that, showing there were other people in the
room. Considering what the queen was like, it wasn't surprising
they'd gone unnoticed till then.
"We have been
considering means other man mere words to thank you for so valuable a
service," the queen continued, still smiling at me. "That
will require a private discussion between us, which we will certainly
have in the very near future. For tonight we need concern ourselves
with no more than feasting and merrymaking, which is just as it
should be. Lady Chalaine, We ask that you allow Lord Wimail to escort
you into the feasting hall, and now you may all retire."
There was a lot of bowing
and curtsying as the queen stood up after dismissing everyone.
Considering Nalkin's earlier hints I was surprised she hadn't said
even a single word to Bariden, and I got the feeling he looked at it
the same. The nonexpression on his face had turned peculiar, but then
I forgot about it as we were joined by someone else.
"Lady Chalaine,"
the man said with a smile and a bow. "I'm Wimail, and I've been
given the honor of escorting you to table. Allow me to offer my arm."
He was a fairly tall man
with dark hair and gray eyes, a man who was handsome and knew it. He
wore a green velvet vest, tight brocade trousers, green leather
boots, and a frilly gray silk shirt. He also wore a sword, but it was
hard to tell how much use the weapon had had behind all the gold and
silver and jewels.
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"And I'm Bariden,"
my former escort announced before I could take the offered arm of his
replacement. "I know customs differ from place to place, but
where I come from a man asks leave of a lady's companion before
trying to walk her away from him. Even if he's been told to do so by
his queen. That custom isn't observed here?"
"Only by the
pitifully uninformed," Wimail responded coolly, looking Bariden
up and down. "Since it's obvious no one has told you, allow me
to do the honors. I'm the one who usually escorts the queen to table,
which means you're expected to take my place even as I'm taking
yours. While you stand here telling me about quaint customs in
faraway places, Her Majesty stands unattended and unescorted. But
perhaps that's another custom from wherever it is you come, the
custom of ignoring queens."
"No, it's usually the
ill-mannered we ignore," Bariden responded, but more to me man
to a suddenly invisible-to-him Wimail. "Chalaine, I'll have to
ask you to excuse me. I've just learned there's a duty I'm expected
to perform, but I'll see you later. Think about what we discussed
earlier."
He gave me a proper and
unhurried bow before turning and walking away, heading toward a Queen
Lova who wasn't quite as unattended as Wimail had suggested. Most of
the men in the room were trying to get her attention, an effort
completely beyond understanding. After all, why would a man want to
be noticed by a woman who made other women look as attractive as tax
collectors?
"What a relief,"
Wimail said from my right. "As long as he took to leave, you'd
think he was being asked to attend someone's maiden aunt. As soon as
he gets around to escorting the queen into the feasting hall, you and
I will follow immediately. It's still my place to take the opposite
end of the table from her, and you'll be seated to my right."
I couldn't help noticing
that he hadn't glanced at me once while making that speech, which was
actually a great relief. I wouldn't have enjoyed fending off the
attentions of a man engaged in pouting over having been traded by the
queen for someone else. He seemed to think the substitution wasn't
likely to last long, and was therefore more annoyed than worried. For
myself I was already getting bored, not to
too
9HARON
mention hungry. If we
weren't given access to the food pretty soon, I'd have to supply my
own snack.
With nothing else to do, I
watched Bariden approach the queen. The men around her gave ground
reluctantly, stepping back only because they had no choice. When he
reached her he bowed and then said something, and she responded with
a dazzling smile. I wondered what he'd said, which made me toy with
the idea of speaking a spell that would let me hear their
conversation, then decided against it. What they said to each other
was none of my business, and I was supposed to be thinking about what
he and I had discussed earlier. I wasn't sure if that was supposed to
mean my not promising anything and letting him do all the talking, or
what he'd said about how I looked. After all, it could have been
either ... Sure it could.
There was only another
minute or so of small talk, and then the queen, on Bariden's arm, led
the way toward the double doors that were to the right of where she'd
been sitting. She was a tall, graceful woman who looked perfectly at
home on the arm of a strong, handsome man, and I had a feeling Wimail
was thinking the same. The second offer of his own arm was somewhat
less than courtly, and then we were all but hurrying after the
perfect couple in the lead. Servants opened the doors as they
approached, and the feast was finally and officially under way.
The dining room we entered
was enormous, and was already filled with what seemed like hundreds
of people. One very long table, glitteringly set, stood empty in the
middle of the room, but all the rest around it were filled. The
others were smaller tables, each holding no more than twelve people,
but were almost as richly set. When the queen entered everyone
sitting down stood up, and those already standing turned. Along with
the serving people they all bowed or curtsied, and I could feel
Wimail eating it up and just about expanding. Obviously when he
walked with or near the queen, he could pretend all that bowing and
scraping was directed toward him.
A gigantic crystal
chandelier hung over the middle of our table, its scores of candles
making sure everything put in front of us would be well illuminated.
Wimail seated me, then took his own place to my left at his end of
the table.
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Bariden had already seated
the queen, of course, and other men were doing the same for other
women before finding their own places. I'd always wondered why women
were supposed to be incapable of sitting down all by themselves, and
had never found anyone able to supply a definite reason. I might have
asked Wimail, but he'd started a languid conversation with the woman
to his left, who obviously admired him enormously, and it wouldn't
have done to interrupt.
"Some people are
endlessly fascinated by those who worship and adore them," a
soft voice murmured on my right. 'Trying to break into that
fascination doesn't pay, not when you stop to realize what you'll
have even if you happen to succeed."
I turned my head to look
at the man, who had gotten himself seated without my noticing. His
amused green eyes looked only at me, but mere was no doubt he'd been
talking about Wimail and the woman to his left. This man's hair was
very dark, probably black, and it was hard to understand why the
queen would have bothered with Wimail with him available. Handsome
was too mild a word, and standing up he would have been Bariden's
size.
"I, on the other
hand," the man continued, "prefer to exchange worship and
adoration. One-way worship ends up being boring no matter which side
you're on, but I haven't yet found a proper partner. I'm Lord
Naesery, by the way, and I already know you're the Lady Chalaine."
"Just Chalaine,
without the lady," I told Naesery with a smile he seemed to
deserve. "Where I come from, the single name has more
significance than almost any title could add. Not that there's
anything insignificant about a title. I mean—"
"No, no, it's quite
all right," he said with a laugh when I began to trip over my
own feet, the smile forgotten. "I know you were referring to
yourself, not to me. But even if you Had meant me, I wouldn't have
been offended. The truth of the matter is, I did nothing at all to
earn the title of lord. What fuss can you honestly make over a title
that wasn't earned?"
It was amazing to discover
that he felt the way I did, especially since he had the title. A
servant came by to
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fill our wineglasses,
offering a choice of yellow or white, which occupied us for the next
couple of minutes. Once the servant moved on it was time for a
subject-change in our previous conversation, and I knew just the one
I wanted to try.
"Tell me, Lord
Naesery," I said as he leaned back toward me. "Why is it so
many men indulge in this seating-of-women thing? Are we supposed to
be helpless, or do men just want us to believe we are?"
"Dear girl, the
proper answer is neither," he responded with a grin. "A man
would be an idiot to consider a woman like you, for instance,
helpless, but he still enjoys seating her. In general, it makes him
feel good to do things for a woman he finds attractive, even so small
a thing as that. It makes him feel like a man worthy of such a woman,
rather than like a lout coming begging with hat in hand. Or like a
thief, coming to steal what doesn't belong to him. It satisfies his
sense of the proper, without any belittling reflection on the object
of his solicitude. And I think I should add that my previous comments
cover just about every man but Wimail."
"I take it you don't
think much of him," I said with a laugh I couldn't hold back.
"Would I be prying if I asked why?"
"To be truthful, it's
mostly a personal and irrational dislike," he admitted with a
shrug. "I have this old-fashioned and narrow-minded view of what
a man's behavior should be like. If he decides to pair off with a
woman, for instance, it ought to disturb him that she makes a regular
habit of— entertaining—other men. He ought to have enough
pride to bow politely and walk away, leaving her to her multitude of
dalliances. To merely step aside each time and then go hurrying back
when she's through—it makes one think of a lapdog, and
distantly paints all men as shallow beasts without a trace of heart.
Aside from that and the fact the man has no personality or
intelligence, I have very little against him."
"Well, that's a
relief," I said with a grin of my own. "For a minute there
I thought you might not like him. Since I've started with intrusive
questions, I might as well add another—which you certainly
don't have to answer if
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you don't care to. Were
you one of those that particular— woman—dallied with?"
"I was supposed to
be," he answered with no self-consciousness or false modesty or
even self-righteousness. For such a young and attractive man, he had
the presence and ease of someone decades older. I might have
suspected he was a sorcerer or wizard who had simply changed his
appearance to one much younger than his chronological age, but
Naesery wasn't Sighted. Since it's impossible for someone of power to
hide it from someone else who's the same, I knew that as a fact.
"I was supposed to
be, but I declined the honor," he said, the words going the
least bit dry. "I've never been one to take a number and stand
in line, not even for fame and riches. I suppose it's just a basic
dislike of having my elbows jostled—or of command performances.
Are you wondering if your—companion will share the dislike? But
he hasn't been here long enough to learn about the lines, has he?"
"We had a small hint
before we were presented," I said, realizing I couldn't refuse
to answer a countering intrusive question. "But no, I wasn't
wondering that about my— companion. What he does is his
business, and none of mine. We barely know each other, and once we
get home we'll be going our separate ways."
"But in the meantime
you travel together," Naesery said, tills time musingly, those
strange green eyes considering me thoughtfully. "If I'd been
asked to bet on it, I would have thought he was bright enough to see
the riches under his nose. I'd love to ask what's wrong with him, but
1*11 ask instead how soon you expect you'll be free to leave. Unless
I'm completely mistaken, the queen has plans that include your
remaining here."
"It was highly
unlikely that she wouldn't," I replied with a sigh, not very
happy to have the possibility confirmed. "I'll just have to make
her understand that I wasn't trying to win her competition, and I'm
not free to give my time away as I please. Since the mistake was mine
I was willing to stay here and try to fix it, but I can't consider
that an option now. Bariden said he won't leave without me, and at
least one of us has got to get back."
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9HAROM GR€€M
"Well, I'm glad to
see the man has some sense," Naesery said, faintly put out. "Any
man who would leave a woman behind is no man at all. Especially when
the woman is one like you. But if getting home is so important, why
aren't the two of you on the road there right now?"
"We would be, if we
knew where the proper road was," I said, leaning back to let
another servant put a small plate of cold fish and sauce in front of
me. Once we were both served I added, "What we need is something
called a gate, but to find it we'll also need someone like Amwell,
the former chief magician or whatever. Even his associate would do,
if she happens to be familiar with the countryside. Without help, it
could take us years to find one."
"Unfortunately,
Arnwell isn't likely to be available for a while," he replied,
picking up a fork with an even more thoughtful look. "He'll hide
out somewhere to lick his wounds, and if his apprentice hasn't
already found him, she certainly will shortly. Neither of them were
particularly popular, so they're probably in a place no one knows
about."
"If nothing else
turns up, tomorrow I might have to try to track them," I said,
lifting my own fork. "Assuming, of course, that the queen
doesn't have any violent objections. If she does, well, it could get
tricky."
We each gave our attention
to the food then, and it was really quite tasty. There isn't much you
can do with plain, cold fish other than supply a superior sauce, but
in this case the sauce was only a little above average. I could have
used magic to change it to something really worth eating, but that
sort of thing is tacky when you're someone's guest. There wasn't so
much that I couldn't finish it without trouble, so I forgot about
superior sauces and did just that. When I finished I noticed that
Naesery had done the same first, and was waiting to resume our
conversation.
"You know, I'm fairly
familiar with the countryside around here," he said as soon as I
put the fork down. "If you'd like to describe this gate you're
looking for, I might be able to tell you where it is."
"The gate we need
looks like a brilliant slit in the middle of the air, at least from a
distance," I responded with a smile. "If you're with
someone Sighted, when you get
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closer the slit expands
into a glowing curtain of light and that's your gate. If you're not
with someone Sighted, the slit stays just as it is and you don't even
know it's there. All you know is that you're uncomfortable in the
area, and can't bear to hang around even a little while. I appreciate
the offer of help, Naesery, but through no fault of your own you're
not equipped to supply it."
"I appreciate the
qualification, but the lack still smarts," he answered wryly. "I
find I'd very much like to be of help to you, you see, even if that
help takes you somewhere I can't follow. I enjoy the sight of your
smile too much to want to see it disappear, so I'll do some checking
around. If there's anyone capable of seeing that gate who has seen
it, I'll let you know at once."
At that point we were
interrupted again, by one servant taking away the remnants of the
fish, and two others with a cart offering a choice of four soups.
Naesery didn't seem disappointed that I wasn't able to thank him for
his offer, and in fact didn't even appear to notice that I hadn't.
Just as he hadn't yet put me in the position of needing to respond
somehow to his compliments. He seemed to be the most open and
easy-to-get-along-with man I'd ever met, even more attractive inside
than he was on the surface.
But that didn't mean I was
overlooking the possibility that the man had a purpose in offering
help that he hadn't yet mentioned. His words seemed to indicate that
he wasn't terribly fond of the queen or her favorite male partner,
but disapproval hadn't kept him from attending the feast in a place
at their table. The queen herself was seeing to giving Bariden reason
to hang around for a while; what better way to handle me than to
provide a very good-looking man who just happened to disapprove of
that extremely beautiful woman? And one who also wanted to help me to
get home. Wouldn't it be easier to depend on him rather than do any
poking around of my own ... ?
Thinking those thoughts
didn't quite ruin the soup I'd chosen, but that was only because
high-level politics wasn't as unknown to me as the queen probably
assumed. I'd had my share of it from a couple of different sources,
and had chosen to turn around and walk away before it all drove me
mad. It had gotten to be a habit to suspect everyone I met
1O6
of having ulterior motives
no matter what they did, friendly or cold. If they were friendly they
had to want something, and if they were cold they were trying to
manipulate me or impress someone else . . .
I broke off a piece of
fresh-baked honey bread and chewed with determinationr trying to
shake off most of those old feelings. It was hard to understand how
anyone stayed sane when they played those games all the time, or even
why anyone would want to play them. But so many people did, on almost
every human-populated world, and not only played, but enjoyed the
game. It seemed like such a waste of time, always maneuvering to gain
or prove something, never satisfied with what you'd already gained or
proved—
The sound of startled
exclamations pulled me out of my thoughts, exclamations that were
joined by a few screams of fright and shouts of distress. Looking
down toward the other end of the table I saw what was causing the
fuss—the sudden appearance of the magician Arnwell. He stood no
more than five feet away from the queen, and the way he stood said he
wasn't there to wish people a hearty appetite.
CHAPTER 9IX
T
he robed and bearded
Amwell stood with folded arms very near the queen, but she didn't
seem all that bothered. I spoke a quick spell to let me hear what was
being said even if they whispered, and found I'd acted just in time.
"I don't see my place
at your table, Your Majesty," Arnwell said in a voice that
grated like metal but was nevertheless very soft. He'd dropped that
pompous, overinvolved accent he'd been using, probably because no one
was likely to be impressed any longer. "Tell one of these fools
to get up and give me what's rightfully mine."
"My dear Arnwell,
that's exactly the point," Queen Lova responded just as softly,
satisfaction in her tone. "You no longer have a place here, not
that you ever really did. Treating those around you like dirt is fine
as long as no one is in a position to feel insulted. Once you slip
from those heights, however, you find that your plight brings
sympathy from an equal no one. You thought you were unbeatable and so
acted as you pleased, but now you have to live with the consequences.
You'll favor Us if you do that elsewhere."
With that she returned her
attention to her meal, but the magician wasn't ready to be dismissed.
Fury drew him up another inch at least, and he gestured with one
hand. Rather than bringing a spell into play, though, the gesture
proved to be a signal. At least a dozen of the servants standing
closest to our table uncovered or unwrapped crossbows rather than
food, and not one of them wavered with the least uncertainty.
1O7
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"One of the
consequences of doing as you please, is the desire to continue doing
it," Arnwell said as soon as the gasps of alarm and outrage had
quieted. The queen had paled, but seemed determined not to shrink
back or cower. "Magic may be able to counter magic, but it can't
do anything at all against a dozen steel-tipped quarrels.
Negotiations concerning my place at your court have been reopened,
Your Majesty, and we'll get to the discussions as soon as I see to
another small matter first."
The smirk on the man's
face would have given one of the EverNameless the urge to hit him,
and I didn't have quite their level of patient self-control. But I
was curious about what Arnwell would do next, and since I'd already
taken care of the crossbows, there was no reason not to indulge
myself. As soon as the weapons had been uncovered I'd spoken a spell
to freeze every weapon in the room, and had felt a similar spell
locking itself into mine. Bariden's glance and very small nod said
he'd done the same and was also aware of my effort, which meant we
could both sit back and wait to see what cropped up.
"There's someone here
I've been looking forward to seeing again," Arnwell said,
stepping back to get a clear view of me without coming closer. "Give
a woman a few lessons and a way to protect herself against magical
attack, and she begins, to imagine she's almost as good as a man. I
was given public humiliation today by someone who isn't even fit to
lick my boots, but mat will change. By tomorrow she will be fit to
lick my boots, and will do so as publicly as she gave humiliation, or
she will be dead. Stand up and give me your decision now, you tart."
Since he'd raised his
voice in order to speak to me, no one but those around the edges of
the room had missed his speech. The silence surrounding us was
frightened and unsure, the people producing it as motionless as the
queen's guardsmen at their posts. Rushing forward probably would have
gotten the queen hurt or killed, so they stayed in place and chafed
at being helpless. Once again I wondered why everyone knew so little
about magic, but that wasn't the time to consider the point.
"Most people consider
me more dry than tart," I responded after a moment. "Of
course, you couldn't be expected to
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know that, so you'll have
to be forgiven. As for standing up, I don't see any need. I can give
you my decision from right here, which is: grow up. Only children
think they know it all, and children tend to get hurt when, in their
ignorance, they try to do what's beyond them. And get rid of that
stupid beard. Facial hair has never yet been able to increase
someone's ability to do magic."
Needless to say, Arnwell
didn't like any part of my answer. His rage grew so high his eyes
nearly left their sockets, and the stirring and sounds from the
people all around only added to it. They weren't quite laughing at
him out loud, but they might as well have been. The spoiled brat
Arnwell thought he was much too good to be iaughed at, and patience
wasn't his strong suit.
"Kill her," he
snarled, talking to his crossbowmen without looking at them. "Three
of you shoot her, and three more stand ready to shoot anyone else I
point to! Every one of them will be on their knees to me, that I
swear by the Highest Power! Shoot her rtowl"
"Don't get mad, they
are trying," I said as reasonably as possible. "Their
biggest problem is that I'm not letting the weapons work, and their
second biggest is the compulsion you have them under. Doing that to
people isn't very nice, but I seriously doubt if the point bothers
you. But if you don't release them, I can make it bother you."
With that I called up a
needle with a very sharp point, and let it tap at his hand. He howled
and jumped back, gesturing frantically to banish an illusion, but the
needle was no illusion. Those at magician level aren't yet able to
produce the real thing, so they rely a good deal on making people
believe whatever-it-is really is there. Banishing one of those
illusions is possible once you know what it is, but banishing the
real thing is a lot harder.
"You're not releasing
them," I mentioned, this time tapping at the hand he'd gestured
with. "If I have to say it again, that point will be made
somewhere other than your hand. You have the right to be as stupid as
you like, but you don't have the right to force others to join you."
"You can't do this to
me!" he screamed, face livid and mouth almost foaming. "I
am Arnwell, and in five years no one has even been able to approach
me! I was born to
no
be great, destined to
reach heights that lesser minds can't even dream of! You can't keep
me from my destiny, no one can!"
Then he screamed again,
this time wordlessly. Since I hadn't done anything I wondered why,
but a glance at Bariden answered the question. Very surreptitiously
he was using one finger to direct something, probably a needle like
the one I'd called up. From the way Arnwell choked and hopped around
I wasn't sure I wanted to know where Bariden was sticking him, but it
seemed to do the trick. Suddenly all those with crossbows jumped and
looked wildly around, and then began to throw the weapons to the
floor. Which, in turn, caused even more confusion. The guardsmen who
had been standing helplessly by tried to jump forward at once, but
they were all holding spears. With the weapons-spell still in effect
the spears were as good as bolted to the floor where the guards had
rested them, and the guardsmen were yanked back when they tried to
run forward. In the middle of all that bedlam Arnwell tried to slip
away again, but this time I was watching. He got all of two and a
half steps before I froze him in place, something he'd probably
thought I couldn't do. He'd clearly been trying to stay out of what
he considered my range, which only said something about his own.
"Okay, everybody
quiet down!" I said after speaking a spell to amplify my voice.
"Everything's under control, so mere's no need for hysterics. I
think you guardsmen ought to stand Arnwell up again, then take the
quarrels out of those crossbows. I can't release the spell on your
spears and swords until that's done, not when some of the crossbows
will go off when the spell is gone. That's right, he isn't going
anywhere."
Some of the guardsmen had
abandoned their spears to rush to the magician, but when they tried
to pull him out of the room he just tipped over. It took a moment for
them to understand that he was frozen, and couldn't escape even if he
wanted to. Two of them still stayed near him while the others went to
the crossbows. Then someone who must have been an officer started to
point to the servants who had produced the weapons, and it was time
to interfere again.
111
"No, don't arrest
those servants," I said in my still-amplified voice. "Arnwell
had them all under a compulsion, and they had no choice about obeying
him. I checked each of them before I spoke to Arnwell, and you can
take my word for the fact that none of them was here voluntarily."
The officer paused to look
to the queen, and she smiled and nodded her confirmation of the
order. Then her smile came to me and warmed, and I suddenly wondered
if I'd put my foot in it again. It was hard to see what could have
been done differently, but when people are very pleased with you
there's usually a reason. Although not necessarily one that you'll
like ... And there was also the question of why Bariden was hiding
his own magical ability. He would have been able to handle things
personally a lot more easily if the queen knew she could get what she
wanted from him as well...
"Allow me to be the
first to say how I admire your style of managing things,"
Naesery told me with a grin as soon as I leaned back. "You're
clearly a good deal more talented man the unfortunate Arnwell, not to
mention the possessor of a—sharper—sense of humor. And it
was thoughtful of you to catch him for the guard. They probably would
have found stopping him a bit more difficult."
"I think you know I
didn't do it just for the guard," I
replied after canceling
the amplified-voice spell. "I need
r to question him before
he's locked away in a dungeon
somewhere, and that
thought brings up a problem. He may
- only be magician level,
but an ordinary cell isn't likely to ; bold him for long. If nothing
else, he can put the nearest . -guard or jailer under a compulsion to
release him." ;"1 "The queen probably expects your
help with that," ; Naesery said, studying me with a faint smile.
"Whether or not you give it will be your choice, but I suspect
you'll
* end up doing whatever's
right. I couldn't help noticing that °v your first concern was
for those innocent servants Arnwell
used as dupes. Those with
power seldom worry about the 1 helpless and unimportant, and that's
a trait you share with
the queen. Whatever other
faults she may have, her people
are always her first
concern."
He reached for his
wineglass then, leaving me to won-v der if that made things better or
worse. It was somehow
112
easier to think of the
queen as a self-indulgent parasite, not a dedicated ruler who loved
the people of her country. I toyed with my own wineglass until things
settled down, and once all the crossbows were secured and most of the
guardsmen had returned to their spears, I removed the weapons-spell.
One spear still hit the floor with a crash, but none of the swords
went flying out of their scabbards. That meant no one had tried to
draw one, which kept the confusion from starting again.
The two guardsmen stayed
near Arnwell, but even though servants were bringing out food again,
no one tried to move the magician. I had the feeling Queen Lova was
keeping him there as a sort of object lesson, like hanging the
severed head of an enemy from your city gates. Whatever, the unending
stream of food and drink distracted most of those at the feast from
paying much attention. Naesery supplied pleasant, meaningless
conversation while we ate, making the meal even more enjoyable.
Right after various
desserts had begun circulating, the unintrusive background music
being played by the small orchestra changed to obvious dance music.
People at other tables stirred, as if they'd been waiting for that,
but no one got up or even looked like they were going to. And then
the queen rose, bringing all the men at our table to their feet, and
headed out to the clear area only a few steps away. Following her was
Bariden, who took her in his arms when she turned, and then the two
of them began to dance.
"They make a striking
couple," Naesery commented as I called up a cup of coffee. That
was the only thing not offered by the servants, and I tend to go into
withdrawal when I have to do without. "As soon as the queen and
her escort finish the first dance, everyone else will be free to
indulge. Will you do me the honor of joining me on the floor? Only a
very brave woman can qualify as my partner, which is, of course, the
only reason I chose you."
"Oh, of course,"
I agreed, matching his grin with a smile. "I'll be glad to
consider your proposal, but I'll need a few minutes to make a
decision. I hope you don't mind."
"Not at all," he
said with one brow high. "Please take as much time as you need."
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He looked as though he
wanted to ask questions, but we were no longer exchanging intrusions.
Which was a damned good thing, since I couldn't think of an
unembarrassing way to explain what I was waiting for. I supposedly
had a previous request for the first dance, even though I hadn't in
any way agreed to it.., it had probably just been a silly comment,
forgotten as soon as it was spoken, but still..,
The orchestra finished the
song it was playing, and the two dancers stopped to applaud the
musicians while everyone else applauded them. Then the music began
again, and while people rose to go out onto the floor, the queen and
her partner began to dance again. I took another sip of my coffee
before putting the cup aside, then smiled at Naesery.
"I've made my
decision," I told him. "I'd love to join you on the floor."
"The delights of
dealing with a brave woman," he said with a smile, standing to
offer me his hand. "You can always count on her to come through
for you. I promise I'll try to make this as painless as possible."
"As long as you don't
ask me for the same promise," I murmured, which made him laugh
as he guided me toward the dancing area. He put his arms around me
and we began to move to the music, which proved we'd both been
exaggerating our lack of ability. He was one of the best partners I'd
ever had, making me seem more graceful than I'd ever before felt. I
followed him easily through the steps of a dance I'd never done,
learning it quickly and pleasantly without once appearing awkward. I
was enjoying myself thoroughly, which made Nalkin's sudden appearance
beside us more than simply surprising.
"I hope you'll excuse
the intrusion, Lady Chalaine," he said with a bow. "The
queen has asked me to request your presence at a private audience.
I'm instructed to assure you Ihat it won't take long, and you'll be
free to return to the feast in just a little while. If you'll follow
me, I'll take you to where Her Majesty is waiting."
"If you weren't
offering to lead the way, I'd suspect you of wanting to get rid of
me," I said, not terribly thrilled to hear that my "private
audience" had been moved up. "To take my place dancing with
Lord Naesery, I mean.
114
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Why has the queen decided
to see me tonight rather than tomorrow?"
"I'm afraid I wasn't
told that," Nalkin answered with an apologetic shrug. "It
may, however, have something to do with Arnwell and his disposition.
She's already had the body removed to the audience chamber."
I turned to see that tile
magician and his guards were indeed gone, which meant the audience
wasn't something I could refuse even if I'd been given that option.
If I had to I could follow to wherever they'd taken him, but there
was no sense in making unnecessary trouble. Besides, when you really
need to question someone, you're better off doing it as soon as
possible.
"Then we'd better get
going ourselves," I said, then turned to Naesery. "I'd like
to thank you for a wonderful time. I don't know if I'll be able to
get back, and if I can't I wanted you to know that."
"If you aren't able
to get back, then I'll see you at breakfast," he answered with a
bow that didn't take those eyes from my face. "When you're ready
just send a servant for me and I'll come to your apartment."
Well, at least he wasn't
inviting himself in for a nightcap before that breakfast, I thought
as I followed Nalkin across the feasting hall. Naesery didn't seem
prepared to let himself be avoided, but he also wasn't trying to
corner me. Or at least not very tightly. I wondered if he would turn
out to be another problem, men dismissed the question as stupid. What
else was there in those places but problems?
We left the feasting hall
by a side door, and followed a short corridor to the audience
chamber. Its door was decorated with two guardsmen to show that that
was the place, and Nalkin knocked softly before opening the door and
bowing me in. When he closed the door again he was still on the
outside, which made Queen Lova and me the only ones in the room. Not
counting Arnwell, of course, who stood frozen in midstep in the
center of the small,
cozy room.
"He used to hate it
if I used this place as an audience chamber for him," the Queen
said suddenly, her stare still on the magician. "He considered
it an insult, you see, mat I wasn't receiving him in a place as grand
as his exalted status
TrC HIDDCN
115
demanded. To tell the
truth, I began to fear my people and I would never be free of him.
Once he gained the place of Court magician, there was no dislodging
him from it. And I think after this year's contest, he planned to
depose me and declare himself king."
"A small amount of
power is usually worse than a lot," I commented, walking to a
large, soft chair covered in tile same flower pattern as the couch
the queen sat on. "Do you mind if I sit?" When she shook
her head I made use of the chair, then continued, "If he wanted
to be king, why didn't he just put you under a compulsion to marry
him? Then the whole thing would have become your idea,"
"A man who marries me
can never become anything more than the Queen's Consort," she
answered with a faint smile. "That's the law, and even I can't
change it. Besides, I'd made it quite clear to everyone in my Court
that I disliked the man intensely, and always would. If 1 suddenly
changed my mind and announced that I was marrying him, everyone would
have known his magic was responsible. And he wouldn't have wanted me
there, as a constant reminder that he'd stolen what he had. He wanted
to believe his brilliance earned him whatever he got."
"There's a big
difference between inborn ability and brilliance," I said,
joining her in looking at the man with the long white beard. Now that
I took the trouble to notice, it was clear he wasn't old enough to be
naturally white-haired. He must have used his appearance as window
dressing, then, or because he thought that was what he ought to look
like ... "It's never a matter of how much you have, just what
you end up doing with it. I need to speak to the man, Your Majesty,
before you put him wherever it is you're going to. He may very well
have a piece of information my companion and I need badly."
"I know," she
said, again with that faint smile. "Nalkin told me about it
earlier, and your companion danced all around the subject during the
feast. That's one of the reasons I asked you in here now, so that you
might speak to him before he's taken away."
"That was really very
thoughtful of you," I said, meaning the words exactly as spoken.
"A lot of people in your place wouldn't have bothered—or
would have conveniently
116
'forgotten.' What are the
other reasons you asked me in here?"
"I wondered how
quickly you would notice I said that," she returned with a wider
smile, finally moving her gaze from Amwell to me. "The speed
with which you did delights me, as I'd like to discuss mat first. Do
you mind?"
"I suppose my
questions for him can wait a little while longer," I responded
with a shrug, disturbed over her own question. It wasn't like a
queen, to ask if people minded
things...
"Good," she
said, leaning back on the couch. "Would you like something to
eat or drink before we begin? No? That's too bad. I've been trying to
work up the nerve to say what I have to, and could have used a little
more time."
Now her smile was on the
weak and nervous side, but I didn't cooperate by commenting aloud. I
didn't expect to like what she was about to say, but I stilt had to
listen.
"All right, then the
time has come," she said, visibly drawing herself up on the
inside. "I think I'd better start by explaining what you've
undoubtedly heard about my— bed habits. Before you make any
judgments, you ought to know that my physicians have told me there's
no more than a small chance I'll ever become pregnant. I've been
trying to utilize that one chance by—trying as many men as
possible, in the hopes that one of them will be virile enough
to—overcome my handicap. So far it hasn't happened."
Her beautiful face was a
shade or two less than perfectly calm and serene, but there was
nothing of self-pity showing. She'd been trying to do something about
a personal tragedy, but her efforts hadn't worked. I seriously
doubted if anyone other than her physicians knew what she'd just told
me, and that raised the question of why an exception had been made.
"You don't have to
ask," she said, that faint smile back again. "You want to
know why I've told you this, and I'll answer that in a moment. First
I'd like your opinion of Wimail, the man I've chosen for my permanent
escort. I deliberately let him escort you tonight, just so you could
meet him."
"Well, I was honored,
of course," I temporized, wondering just how far it would be
possible to go toward the truth, but she waved her hand with a small
laugh.
TH€
117
"No need to be
diplomatic," she assured me. "I know just what Wimail is
like, and that's the point. He's in love with the idea of being my
usual escort, and nothing else bothers him as long as that continues.
Another man in his place would be hurt by what I've found it
necessary to do, and mat's why there isn't another man in his place.
It wouldn't be fair."
I suppose the abrupt
understanding was very clear in my expression; she nodded with
satisfaction, and then continued.
"Now for the question
of why I told you what I have, and its equally simple answer. I need
an heir, someone who will care as much about my people as I do, but I
no longer believe I'll be able to produce one. You already care about
people in general, and you have the strength to protect yourself in
ways that I don't. I want you to stay here and be my heir, and let my
people become yours."
Her smile had grown warm
and welcoming, something I concentrated on to keep the stunned look
off my face. After knowing me slightly for a matter of hours, the
woman wanted me for her heir? And, at the same time, was offering me
a home? If I could have doubted her I would have, but it just wasn't
possible. Instead I thought frantically for a moment, and came up
with something else to mention.
"This need for
protection," I said, for once letting myself think me way those
who play politics do. "A ruler who cares for her people
shouldn't have to worry about protecting herself, not when everyone
ought to love her for it. Is that why you have so many guardsmen
around, because not all of your people understand how deeply you
care?"
"If only my own
people were involved, the guard would be totally unnecessary,"
she answered at once. "It isn't them my advisers want to protect
me from, it's one or two of my neighboring rulers. They aren't quite
as popular with then-own people, so they have to find ways to
distract them. Like looking around for other realms to conquer, after
that realm's ruler has been—taken care of. If you wanted to
ride around and talk to people before making a decision, I'd have no
objection."
The clearly serious offer
left me with nothing to say, and what came before it explained why
the queen had
118
SHAROM
gotten involved with a
Court Magician to begin with. When powerful people are after your
head, you do what you must to counter their plans. I could see that,
all right, but still couldn't quite see myself settling down there. I
had responsibilities, after all...
"Please stop looking
so upset," the queen said with another of those warming smiles.
"I wasn't expecting an immediate answer, not from someone who's
so very much like me. You'd be faced with the need to spend many
years here, learning what to do before you took the throne when I
died or abdicated. Only then would your own rule start, and then
you'd have many more years of work before you handed things over to
your own heir. You'll have to think about it first, and while you're
thinking, you might as well ask Amwell those questions you have."
Yes, there was still that.
1 took a deep breath to steady myself, then spoke a spell that would
unfreeze the magician but still keep him under my control. One
syllable of the spell also required him to speak nothing but the
truth, which would save me some trouble. The man shuddered and
straightened, glanced at the queen, then turned to look directly at
me.
"The queen believes
you meant to depose her and make yourself king," I began, as
good a place as any to start. "Is that true?"
"Certainly,"
Arnwell answered immediately and unemotionally. "I was bom to be
great, and what greater tiling is there than to make yourself a
king?"
"I'd say to make
yourself useful," I couldn't help countering. "If you need
a title to impress people, it's only because you can't do anything
that would accomplish the same end. And while we're discussing it,
how do you know you were born to be great?"
"My mother told me,"
he responded. "Even before she found out I'd be able to do
magic, she knew I was destined for greatness. She made sure I knew it
too, and naturally never denied me anything. You don't deny people
who are going to be great, you know."
Queen Lova and I exchanged
glances, both of us probably thinking the same thing. Arnwell was a
spoiled brat, which would simply have ruined him if he hadn't been
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born Sighted. As it was,
things had been made a good deal worse...
"Arnwell, my
companion and I are looking for the nearest gate," I said,
dropping a subject it was much too late to do anything about. "Even
if there isn't one all that near, I still want its location."
"The nearest gate, as
far as I know, is in the west wall of the palace," the magician
replied immediately. "It leads to the west road out of the city,
and should be just a little nearer to this room than the north gate."
"That's not the kind
of gate I'm talking about," I said, wishing those under a truth
spell weren't so prone to taking certain questions so literally. "I
mean a gate that leads to other worlds, the glowing vertical line
that spreads out into a glowing curtain when you get near it. If you
grew up in this area you surely must have Seen one or at the very
least heard about one from someone who was also—a magician."
"That doesn't sound
familiar at all," Amwell replied, no trace left of that very
involved way of speaking. "I don't understand what you mean."
"I'm talking about
places that would be in the countryside," I elaborated, trying
to ignore the uneasy feeling I suddenly had. "No one would go to
those places unless they could See the gates, because they would be
very uncomfortable without knowing why. If you don't know much about
the countryside, give me the name of someone with your gift who knows
it better."
"I grew up in a small
village about ten miles from the city," Arnwell said with a
vague frown. "Since my mother worked to keep us fed, I was free
to explore the woods in all directions before I started my lessons
with the old woman who taught me magic. I can't think of anyone who
knows the area better than I do, and no one has ever mentioned
anything like what you're asking about. And the old crone who taught
me told me everything she knew."
"What's wrong?"
Queen Lova asked as I just sat there staring at the magician. "This
gate is obviously important to you, but I don't understand why. Where
is it supposed to lead?"
I shook my head without
answering, more than simply upset. It was hard to imagine a world
allowing magic having
1QO
no gates at all, but that
didn't have to be true. Its gates could be in remote, inaccessible
spots, places no Sighted had been, which would make them completely
unknown. That would explain the low level of magic users; without a
regular influx of Sighted from other worlds, the natives would be
working blind. With enough power a trained Sighted can do just about
anything, but first you have to know how to get enough power to
handle whatever your project is. If you try it without the proper
strength and control, its not working might convince you it wasn't
possible . . .
"I—need to do
some thinking," I said at last, the understatement of the
century. If that world didn't allow the creation of entries—which
it didn't seem to—and its gates were inaccessible,
then—then—"Do you mind if we speak again at another
time, Your Majesty? I really need to be alone for a while."
"No, of course I
don't mind," she answered with another of those smiles. "You
take all the time you need, and then send word to me. Whatever your
decision is, I promise I won't try to talk you out of it. And I hope
you've asked Arnwell everything you need to. I'm afraid this is the
last time he'll be available for questioning."
"Why?" I
couldn't help asking. "Where is he supposed to be going?"
"He's going on that
journey no one ever returns from," she said, weariness and
strain suddenly appearing in her expression. "He's a menace to
everyone around him, and right now the only thing holding him
harmless is your power. If he should somehow escape from that—For
the sake of my people, not to mention my own peace of mind, he'll be
executed as soon as we're finished here. He was ready to hurt or kill
anyone who opposed him, and I can't take the chance that he might
somehow get loose again."
My first urge was to argue
that decision, but then I closed my mouth without speaking. I'd been
about to say that Arnwell couldn't escape my spell, but that was true
only if I stayed in that world. If I somehow managed to find a way to
a gate and through, the spell would disappear as soon as I was gone.
That would free the man to go back to his original plans, which in
turn would create all sorts of havoc and hurt. No, if I couldn't cure
him of being the
product of a damaged
upbringing—and I couldn't—there was only one other
possible choice.
"There's nothing else
I need to ask him," I said, then returned him to the frozen
state. "He won't be aware of what's done to him, but that's for
my sake rather than his. He might have turned out all right if he
hadn't been twisted, but then again he might not. I'll—send
word when I've made a decision."
She smiled and nodded
without saying anything else, then rang for a servant to take me back
to my apartment. Three guardsmen waited for me to step out of the
room before they went in, but I preferred not to think about their
reason for being there. I had enough with the rest of what I needed
to think about, and barely even heard the music when we went past the
feasting hall. Party time was over for me, at least until I could
straighten out my thoughts.
Once I was back at my
apartment I dismissed the servant, changed my clothes, then sat down
in a chair with a cup of coffee. I couldn't remember ever being that
confused and uncertain, and the offer of a throne had very little to
do with it. Anyone who reaches my level of skill can find a world
somewhere and take a throne, whether or not the natives care for the
idea. As long as there's no one around who's better at magic, and
there are plenty of places like that, the throne is yours.
No, being a queen wasn't
that big a deal, but what went with it—that's what I was having
trouble with. Queen Lova wanted me—wanted me—and was
willing to trust me with the well-being of the people she loved. No
one had ever done that for me, offered me something that personally
important. She would name me her daughter, and I had no doubt she
would also treat me like one. A beloved daughter, someone to be proud
of, someone to show off to her friends and associates ...
I shifted around to pull
my booted feet up into the chair, automatically holding the coffee
still to keep it from spilling. What I needed was an impersonal point
of view, but it wasn't likely I'd be the one to supply it. I'd been
very young when my parents were accidentiy killed, but not so young
that I was unaware of my loss. And then being taken in by my mother's
cousin and her husband, supposedly because
1QQ
they wanted to raise me.
What they'd wanted was control of my very large inheritance, to add
to their own considerable wealth. When they discovered they'd have
access to it only when / was old enough to have access to it, they'd
taken out their disappointment on me. Nothing I'd ever done was
right, or worth their paying attention to, and certainly nothing to
compliment. If I hadn't had memories of my parents and the way it
should have been done ...
But memories hadn't
stopped the time with them from being a sentence served in a torture
pit. It had made things worse that neither they nor their children
were Sighted, especially when one of them began to treat me like a
cripple. The rest picked it up immediately, excusing me from things
at the drop of a hat because I wasn't—quite—as I should
be ... others had picked up the habit from them, until I actually did
feel almost incompetent. But I'd learned not to argue with them past
a certain point, which usually took away their looks of smug
satisfaction. Declaring yourself the winner of a battle doesn't mean
much if the other side simply shrugs and walks away.
But now I was being
offered the chance to get back what I'd lost, to be with someone who
wanted me in a place where I was needed. And it looked like I might
not even have a choice about staying. It could take years to find a
gate—assuming finding one was possible in the first place—and
by then whatever had happened in Bariden's world would be long over.
Our going back then would be just about pointless, or at least my
going back would be...
A knock came at the door
then, pulling me away from inner argument. Rather than getting up I
gestured the door open—and blinked in surprise.
"I hope I'm not
intruding," Naesery said, stepping inside and walking slowly
toward my chair. "I arranged to be told when your audience with
the queen was over, but when it was you didn't come back. I wasn't
going to bother you, but—Are you all right? Is there anything
wrong?"
He stood not five feet
away, the second handsomest man I'd ever seen, true concern in those
gorgeous green eyes. If I stayed he would be there too, a man who had
been immediately attracted to me. And wasn't I forgetting that
HIDD€N
123
it wasn't a question of
'if? What real choice did I have?
"I'm fine," I
answered with as much of a smile as I could produce. "As a
matter of fact something very not wrong has happened, and I'm in the
middle of thinking about it. Queen Lova has asked me to—stay
here."
"Marvelous!" he
exclaimed, breaking into a wide grin. "I was hoping she would,
but sometimes queens end up acting politically rather than
intelligently. Is there anything I can do to induce you to accept?"
By then he was crouching
in front of me, his right hand having come to take possession of my
left. As he waited for my answer he raised my hand to his lips—and
that was when another voice broke in.
"I'd apologize for
intruding if this door hadn't been left open," Bariden said, the
words even but very soft. I turned my head to see that he looked
straight at Naesery, and seemed to be speaking only to him. "I'm
Bariden, and I don't believe we've been introduced."
"I'm Lord Naesery,"
my first visitor answered evenly as he straightened, proving he was
Bariden's size. "Am I mistaken, or aren't you supposed to be
attending the queen?"
"I was the queen's
escort into the feast," Bariden answered, coming forward a few
steps before stopping again. "When she left my duty to her was
over, and now I'm here. If you don't mind, Lord Naesery, I'd like to
speak to Chalaine for a few minutes. Alone."
By the words themselves
you would have thought Bariden was asking permission, but his tone
killed that idea completely. The steel-hard near growl was an order,
and Naesery acknowledged that with a faint smile and almost
nonexistent bow.
"A gentleman always
accedes to the polite request of others," he said, for some
reason distantly amused. "I do indeed mind leaving, but shall do
so anyway. Lady Chalaine, please send a servant for me when
your—visitor—has gone on his way."
My bow was more than the
token Bariden had gotten, and then Naesery was striding past him and
out of the apartment. Bariden followed to close the door that was
left open for the second time, and then came back to crouch where
Naesery had been.
124
"I can't believe
you'd let a smooth article like that come anywhere near you," he
said then, those light blue eyes pinning me where I sat. "What
happened to the practical deductive sorceress I started this trip
with?"
"Lord Naesery has
been nothing but a gentleman," I muttered in answer, giving a
lot of attention to my coffee. That gaze looked more disappointed
than accusing, a reaction that made me very uncomfortable. "But
there's something I have to tell you, and it isn't good news."
"Go ahead," he
said after the briefest hesitation. "I also have news, but it
can wait another minute or two."
"The queen let me
question Arnwell before they—permanently settled the problem he
presented," I told him. What I didn't mention was that I'd felt
it when they executed him, a—loosening and freeing of the spell
I'd placed. Restraining the dead isn't necessary, and would take a
different kind of spell even if it were . . . "He told me he
didn't know about gates, and no one he knew had ever mentioned coming
across one. That would explain why they don't know more magic than
they do. No easy access to routine crossovers."
"I can see you've
decided most gates are out of casual reach," he said with a nod.
"That would be a logical assumption. Is that it?"
"Not quite," I
answered, wondering how he could take such upsetting news so calmly.
"The queen—wants me to stay here. She can't have children,
so she wants to adopt me as her heir."
"You haven't agreed
to that yet, have you?" he asked at once, and now he was looking
upset. "Chalaine, tell me you haven't given your word."
"I told her I'd have
to think about it," I said, leaning back from his intensity just
a little. "Why are you so bothered about that part of it? If
we're going to be trapped in this world, there are worse things that
could happen. Or were you picturing us taking off in search of a gate
across the entire face of this world?"
"I'm picturing us
checking out something I just heard about that's in this very
palace," he said, relief letting him relax again. "The
queen insisted that I stay with her for the first couple of minutes
of the second dance, and after that she thanked me and left. As soon
as she did I went looking
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125
for you, but you were
already dancing with someone else. It didn't take more than a minute
to decide I would cut in, but just before I started off to do it, one
of a pair of servants spilled something. The man who did the spilling
was just about horrified, and the two of them said something that
made me forget about dancing."
"What could they
possibly have said?" I asked when he paused, firmly refusing to
think about dancing. Of course he'd started looking for me as soon as
the queen was gone. He didn't yet know any other women here.
"What the girl with
him said was, 'Now you've done it. If you aren't sent to the Shunned
Room again, no one else ever will be.' And he came back with, Til
leave the job first, I swear I will! The last time I thought I'd die
before I got out! I can't go back there again, and I won't!* He'd
turned pale and his hands were trembling, and that turned me curious.
I suddenly had to know what the Shunned Room was."
"You can't mean you
thought it might be a gate," I said, trying to decide whether or
not I believed the same. "No one would build so much as a shack
around one, let alone a palace. And what about anyone coming through
it? Wouldn't these people have figured out what it was when Sighted
began to appear in the room?"
"I eventually ran
through all those arguments myself," he agreed with one hand up.
"I know just what you're saying, but I couldn't make myself walk
away and forget about it. I had to find out what I could without
making my interest too obvious, so I used a minor glamour and took a
walk through the kitchens. That way I didn't have to bother with
invisibility, but people still didn't notice me. What I found out was
that there's a stairway at the back of the kitchens leading down to
where the Shunned Room is. It's the only way to get to it."
"Why do I have the
feeling you haven't yet used those stairs?" I asked with
something close to suspicion. "And why did you need a glamour?
Has anyone here said you can't go anywhere you care to? You're making
it sound like they're our enemies, when most of them couldn't be
nicer. These people here care, Bariden—"
"Chalaine, please,"
he interrupted, taking my hand. "I'm not saying they don't, or
that they're not decent or fair.
SHARON
What you have to remember
is how we got here, and that it wasn't by accident. We can't assume
getting out again is simply a matter of finding that gate and going
through. If there's someone—or something—watching the
area, I didn't want to warn them by going to look at it alone. I've
already told you—if we don't leave together, neither one of us
goes. Will you use those stairs with me while we both have a look?"
The light blue gaze that
refused to leave my face was an underlining of his question, a
request that wasn't quite that easy to agree to. I'd been offered
something very special in that place, something I was reluctant to
simply walk away from, but I did still have our original problem to
consider... and the people who waited, neither alive nor dead, for
someone to help ...
"All right, I'll go
and take a look with you," I agreed, but reluctant was too pale
a word for the way I felt. I couldn't— quite—wish there
would be nothing at the bottom of those stairs, but—"What
will you do if we don't find anything? Take your horse and head for
the nearest mountains?"
"I thought you
understood that I wasn't going anywhere alone," he said,
straightening as I banished my coffee cup and rose. "If we don't
find anything and I can't talk you into heading for the mountains
with me, I'll have to stay here with you. If you're going to be the
queen some day, you'll need the right consort."
"You're volunteering
to help me find a man?" I asked, feeling my brows go up. "Or
do you just intend to turn thumbs down on anyone I find attractive?
Really, Bariden, that kind of help I don't—"
"Wait a minute,"
he said, his hand on my arm stopping me halfway to the door. "I
wasn't volunteering for anything but being the man. Am I wrong in
thinking you weren't even considering that?"
"Well, of course I
wasn't considering that," I said, for once looking straight at
him. "I know you have no real interest in me, so why would I put
you in an awkward position? I usually try not to embarrass people on
purpose."
"I feel as if I've
missed a large chunk of this conversation," he said, shaking his
head with what seemed like confusion. Personally, I was delighted it
was finally out in
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127
the open. "What do
you mean, you know I have no real interest in you? How can you know
something like that when it isn't true?"
"Hey, I wasn't trying
to say I didn't think you cared about me," I told him quickly,
finally realizing I must have hurt his feelings. "Since we're in
this together I know you feel a responsibility toward me, but that's
only because you're a decent man. It doesn't necessarily have to go
beyond that, and in this case it certainly doesn't. But it's all
right, I don't mind at all. If anyone understands how you feel, I'm
the one."
"How do you think I
feel?" he asked, glancing down at the hand I'd put to his arm
before bringing those eyes back to my face. "And is that why
this is the first time you've touched me in any way at all? Because
you believe I don't want you to?"
"Bariden, think about
everything that's happened between us from the first moment we met,"
I said with a sigh as I took back a hand that must have had a mind of
its own. "I'd have to be crazy to believe there could be any
interest on your part after all that, and I haven't quite reached the
crazy stage yet. If you disagree—or think you do—it's
perfectly understandable: that Spell of Affinity has you confused.
Take my word for it, you don't want to have anything to do with me.
If—when we get back, you'll see I'm right."
The deepening confusion in
his eyes was beginning to disturb me, so I smiled a reassuring smile
and headed for the door again. I suppose it would have been really
nice if a man like Bariden had found me of interest, but that wasn't
likely to happen. I hadn't "caused" much lately, but the
calm could hardly last much longer and once it was gone ... No, I was
much better off not even thinking about it, and so was he ...
The corridor outside my
room was deserted, but Bariden cast a glamour to cover the two of us
anyway. Explaining why we were wandering the halls could have been
awkward, and there was no need for us to make ourselves look foolish.
Bariden had gotten rid of his fancy party clothes just the way I had,
and there was, of course, nothing we had to take with us. The horses
we'd left in the palace stables weren't horses. If we did find a gate
and stepped
128
SHAROTi
through. the horses would
go back to the nothingness they'd come from.
Servants were still
hurrying back and forth between the kitchens and the feasting hall,
unbelievably with even more trays of food. I'd thought the meal was
over, but it looked like some people were starting all over again.
Any servants going by were careful to avoid us, but they also didn't
notice us as we made our way to the back of the kitchens. In one
corner to the left was a narrow set of stairs leading down, and most
of those in the kitchens avoided that area as well.
"Hope as hard as you
can," Bariden said as he led the way to the stairs. Those were
the first words he'd said since we'd left my apartment, and I still
wasn't sure if I agreed with the sentiment. Of course, I could always
find my way back there someday ...
The stairs were made of
stone, as though someone had chopped them into the bedrock the palace
rested on. They didn't look terribly new, but they also weren't as
worn as they could have been. The wooden hole they went down through
looked as though it had been built like that rather man added after
the rest of the structure, and mat was odd. If the room had been
built around the hole and stairs, then people had known it was there.
Why would anyone build over something that no one who wasn't Sighted
could stand to be near for long? And why leave an easy way to reach
mat something? Things just didn't make sense ...
I followed Bariden down
the relatively narrow stairs, noticing that he was moving slowly
enough to let me keep up with him easily. The steps ended about
twenty feet down, and we didn't have to make our own light. A torch
flickered on the stone wall to the left about fifteen feet ahead of
us, dimly illuminating the narrow corridor. Two people could have
walked abreast if they 'd really had to, but not comfortably. Bariden
continued to lead and I followed, senses sharp and defenses ready.
We couldn't have gone more
than ten feet past the torch when we came to an opening in the rock
to the right. I say opening rather than doorway because there was
nothing of a door, just a round-topped opening that was only just
high enough for Bariden to pass under. Rather than do that he
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glanced inside, then
turned to me looking very relieved.
"Once again the power
of hope does the job," he said with a grin. "Wizards will
swear there's nothing to the idea, but I've seen it work too often to
doubt. As specified, my lady, one gate ready to go."
By then I was standing
next to him, and didn't need the sweep of his arm to See the gate. It
hung in the exact center of the large stone chamber surrounding it,
the back parts a definite semicircle against the flat wall with the
opening. Rough stone benches were carved into the rounded parts of
the walls, and faint torchlight flickered against the bright glow of
the unopened slit. I stood there staring at it, one small part of me
completely unsurprised that it was there, and Bariden's hand came to
my left arm.
"Do you See that?"
he asked very softly, head up as though trying to get a scent from a
breeze. "There's some sort of spell on that room, but I can't
tell what it is. Rather than being hidden it's very plain, but I
don't recognize it. Have you ever Seen anything like it?"
"Now that you mention
it, yes," I answered, suddenly Seeing exactly what he was
talking about. 'The feel of the thing says it's a Spell of Volition,
and unless I'm mistaken it's aimed only at Sighted. And it isn't in
the room, but around the gate. Unless you really want to use that
gate, the spell won't let you activate it. Now isn't that strange . .
."
1 let the words trail off
as I tried to remember where I'd Seen a Spell of Volition before, but
the memory wasn't cooperating. It refused to come within reach of my
thought-fingers, no matter how far I spread them. And then I noticed
that Bariden was staring at me rather than at the gate with its
spell, his expression shadowed with worry.
"That means I can't
simply drag you through the gate behind me, doesn't it?" he
said, those light eyes showing the agitation he felt. "Damn it,
I knew this would be a problem, I just knew it. Now what do we do?"
I didn't have to ask what
he meant, not with all the times he'd insisted he would never leave
without me. I was about to suggest it again anyway, but a sudden
thought made me change my mind.
"Has it occurred to
you that the way things stand you might not be able to go through
either?" I asked instead,
13O
frowning at the idea. "I
mean, even if you agreed to go alone, your heart certainly wouldn't
be in it. Unless I'm mistaken, that would be enough to keep the gate
from opening for you."
"And would
incidentally explain why the Sighted of this world have never used
it," he said in surprise. "If you didn't know what it was
and what it would do, wouldn't there be at least a small amount of
reluctance about using it? Someone like Arnwell might have been
egotistical enough to try, but what are the chances an Arnwell would
ever listen to the problems of servants or casually visit the
kitchens? He may have spent five years in the palace, but he never
found out this place was here."
"A punishment place
for servants who mess up," I muttered, wishing more background
thoughts would come clear. There was something about that entire
arrangement that refused to make sense, but my analytical ability
seemed to be out to lunch. I knew something was going on, and not
knowing what had apparently helped me make up my mind.
"I don't like the
idea of being shown a gate neither of us can use," I said after
the pause to think about it. "That's a rotten trick to play on
people, especially when they're in a place they're not supposed to
be. I'm really beginning to want to get my hands on whoever is
responsible, but I can't do that if we don't get through the gate.
That means we will get through, and right mis minute."
I brushed past Bariden and
entered the gate chamber, holding my anger up in front of me like a
shield. The Spell of Volition flickered as I moved closer,
threatening to exclude me, and that got me even angrier. I was not
about to let someone use my own feelings against me, not now and not
ever. I marched up to the gate thinking about nothing but anger and
outrage, Bariden close behind me, and suddenly the gate flared into a
glowing rainbow curtain ... Had to move fast... get to it and through
... hold to the anger... forget about what was being left behind ...
Mother, it's been so many years, but I still miss you so terribly ...
if only 1 could have stayed Here ...
CHAPTER
B
ariden was all but
standing in Chalaine's footprints when the gate flared wide. Without
wasting an instant, he picked her up with an arm around her waist and
stepped into the gate, making sure if it closed it would be behind
them. He'd felt a flicker in the Spell of Volition, what had to be a
reaction to the girl's feelings. No matter what she'd said, she
really wanted to stay ...
And then he forgot about
that as Chalaine gasped, a reaction he wasn't far from himself. The
gate—on the inside diere were supposed to be a large number of
choices about where to go, the gleam of many worlds vying to take the
traveler's attention. This gate, though, was empty of all choice but
two, the world they'd come from and one other. The two of mem stood
there in the star-rush as long as possible, trying to find a third
choice, but there wasn't any. They had to move forward or go back, or
else they could be swept away into oblivion.
The girl struggled in his
grip, obviously wanting to be put down, and mat settled the matter.
If she decided to go back, he'd probably never get her through
again—or himself, either. Forward was the only way they could
go, something he knew without knowing why... One step would take care
of it, one step and then they could talk as much as they had to ...
He took that step, causing
the gate ahead of them to flare, and then they were through into the
world that held it. The darkness of night spread all around,
concealing the
131
132
details of their,
surroundings, but not the fact that they were outdoors. A few stars
shone in the sky overhead and crickets chirped contentedly, but there
was no moon to show them more.
"Put me down!"
the girl snapped, kicking at his leg in an effort to be released.
"You had no right to do that!"
"What I had was no
choice," he answered, finally releasing her. "I could feel
that spell about to push us out of the gate. And I think we now know
why the gate we came from doesn't have a constant stream of arrivals
from elsewhere. The only elsewhere travelers could come from is
here."
"And that's something
I've never seen before," she said with a hand to her hair,
turning to look at the gate. "I've never even heard of a gate
operating only between two individual worlds. What in Hellfire have
we been tossed into?"
"I wish I knew,"
he assured her, also turning to look at the gate. "It looks like
your average, ordinary gate—"
And then he stopped,
because what he'd said wasn't true. He was no more than a long step
past the gate, but it just hung there like a glittering vertical line
in the dark. With him that close—not to mention Chalaine's also
being there—the gate should have already spread into a
multicolored curtain. That it hadn't meant—
"It won't open from
this side," the girl said, completing his thought aloud. "From
the other side you have to really want to go through, and from this
side all the wanting in the worlds doesn't matter. Now I'm really
getting mad."
A glance at her face in
the limited glow of the closed gate confirmed that, showing her
tight-jawed and hard-eyed. Bariden wondered if real anger would make
her even more attractive than she was normally, then dismissed the
thought. Getting mad when you might have to protect your back at any
time wasn't smart, and they would be making enough mistakes by
accident. No sense adding to that on purpose. . .
"I'm going to put up
a shelter for us to spend the night in," he said, moving away
from the gate. "In the morning we can look around and see what
we've got this time, and then decide what to do."
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"If we get a choice
about it," she muttered, obviously not in the mood to be
soothed. "Which I doubt we will. The only time we get what we
consider a choice is when we're about to step into something where we
won't be allowed to change our minds. If I knew what this game was
about, I'd also know the best way to play it."
Bariden paused a moment to
construct his spell, then raised both arms and spoke it. A small
house appeared in the darkness, cheery light spilling out of its
windows. He hadn't let himself wonder whether or not his spell would
work, and now he didn't have to. Magic was possible for them in this
new world, and once that was proven he was able to turn back to
Chalaine.
"What did you mean,
if you knew what game this was you'd also know how to play it?"
he asked. "We do know what this is about, and it's no game."
"Then why do we have
to be constantly alert to make just the right move?" she
countered, glancing at him before heading toward the house. "The
one who started us on this trip is the enemy we were trying to
uncover, but wouldn't it have been simpler to kill us? If that first
entry had led to a plane where we would have been immediately
devoured, wouldn't he have been rid of us without all this nonsense?
How much good will this clever game do him if we find an exit off
this one-way road?"
"You're assuming
there is an exit," he returned, moving along with her as a nasty
thought occurred to him. "What if this 'game' you're talking
about is fixed, and there's no possible way we can win? The enemy can
be sitting somewhere with his feet up, watching us struggle and
laughing his head off."
"That's possible, but
not very likely," she disagreed with a headshake. "As long
as we keep finding ourselves in places where magic is allowed,
there's always the chance we'll also find a way to break out. We're
not amateurs, after all, and even the most powerful wizard alive can
accidently overlook something we See right away. No, someone is
definitely playing a game, and we're apparently expected to pick up
the rules as we go along."
"Rules," he
muttered, gesturing the door to the house open to let them step
inside. You tend to lose a lot of
134
WAROh GR€€h
points when you learn a
game by playing it, that and gold and sometimes even blood. Maybe it
would be possible to get a look at the rule book some time, even if
it were only one quick glimpse ...
"This is very nice,"
the girl said, stopping in the middle of the front room to look
around. "Not quite what one would call homey, but still very
nice."
"Thank you,"
Bariden answered, having no need to do his own looking around. He'd
put extreme luxury in the little house, including very thick
carpeting, wonderfully comfortable and oversized chairs and couches,
silk and jewels for decoration, diamonds for the lamps—he'd
even made two bedroom suites behind the sitting room, just to keep
the girl from feeling pressured.
"Only one thing seems
to be missing," she said, using a simple word and gesture to
summon a cup of coffee. "There, that takes care of it. And now
if you'll excuse me, I'm feeling really worn out."
"Chalaine, wait,"
Bariden said quickly, stopping her from going toward the suite door
on the right. "There's something I'd like to talk to you about
before you go to bed."
"Sure," she
answered with a small shrug, actually looking straight at him with
those dark and lovely eyes. It was the second time she'd done that,
maybe the third. Bariden didn't know why she'd stopped avoiding his
gaze, but he didn't actually care. He preferred to think of it as a
step in the right direction, and use it as the encouragement he
wasn't getting in any other way.
"Why don't we sit
down while we talk," he said, gesturing to a couch while he shut
the door. "I almost feel as if I'm making a pest of myself about
this, but I've never hked misunderstandings. You said something that
isn't true, and I want you to know it."
"What did I say?"
she asked with brows high, sitting to one side of the middle of the
couch. Bariden knew women well enough to know what that meant, and he
had no choice but to accept the boundary. The middle of the couch was
the point he wasn't supposed to move past, a no-man's-land if ever
there was one.
"You said I had no
real interest in you," he explained after sitting on his
couch-half and calling up his own cup
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of coffee. "You said
I only think I'm interested because of the Spell of Affinity, and I'd
be much better off without you. I don't happen to agree with any of
that, and I want you to know I intend to prove the truth."
"Really?" she
said with brows raised again, and then she smiled. "I'd love to
know how you expect to do that— without using black magic."
"You're really
convinced you're right," he said with all the disturbance—and
annoyance—he felt. "You think I'm kidding myself, and
you're just waiting for me to wake up and realize mat. What will you
do if I never wake up, and it suddenly turns out that you're wrong?
Refuse to change your mind and simply walk away, or act like a
grown-up and start listening to me?"
"But I'm not wrong,"
she said, so calmly and gently for what was actually stubborn
arrogance. "I happen to be right, which you'll eventually have
to admit. When mat time comes, don't worry that I'll be upset or
blame you for anything. I know how compelling ongoing spells can be,
even if they aren't supposed to behave like mat. When this is all
over, I promise that we'll still be friends."
Even if I give in to
temptation and strangle you? he wanted to ask that patient, superior
smile she showed. Then it came to him that she might be acting like
that on purpose, to "help" him get over his delusions
faster. Instead of groaning he swallowed down some coffee, which gave
her the chance to add something else.
"About my acting like
a grown-up," she said, this time looking at him with veiled
amusement. "I think I already am, but don't feel mat you have to
agree with me. Consider me a child as much as you like, I don't
mind."
Bariden studied her over
his coffee cup, frustration jabbing at him from all sides. Unless he
was mistaken she'd just confirmed his guess, and was definitely
"helping" him to get over his illusions. He'd never known a
woman who wasn't immediately ready to take all the advantage she
could, and now that he'd met one who thought about him as well as
herself—she was convinced his interest couldn't possibly be
real. If he managed to get out of that mess sane as well as in one
piece, it would only be because the EverNameless decided to take a
hand...
136
"You're not going to
talk me into your version of the truth," he said at last,
forcing his tone to be as calm and easy as hers had been. "I
will find a way to prove I'm right, and when I do I expect an apology
from you. A sincere apology."
"What happens if you
prove the opposite?" she asked after a sip of coffee. "Will
/ get an apology, or will it just be one of those things people never
talk about? Well, maybe we shouldn't talk about it."
The last of that was
mumbled before she hid most of her face with the cup again, back to
looking anywhere but at him. For a moment Bariden was confused, and
then sudden insight gave him the probable answer.
"I'm going to put
this badly, but I still have to say it," he told her, groping
for words that would not make things worse. "I know you didn't
want to leave that last world, but you did it to keep me from being
trapped. We won't know if leaving was the right thing to do until
this is all over, but I still want you to know how much your doing
that means to me. Whatever happens, I won't ever forget; if it makes
you feel better to blame me for forcing you through the gate, go
ahead and do it. I did force you, and you're entitled to at least
that."
Her answer was a nod of
sorts, something that said she'd heard him but wasn't prepared to
discuss the subject. And she still wasn't looking at him, which
goaded him into saying something else he'd been wanting to.
"And you can stop
being anything but yourself," he told her a bit more harshly
than he'd intended. "All that clinical patience and
understanding, watching your every word, never feeling or showing
anything real—For a very little while in the last world I got a
glimpse of the real you, and I liked what I saw. It's not likely to
kill either one of us if you start showing it all the time."
Now it was her turn to be
confused, but at least she was looking at him again. And then the
confusion disappeared, to be replaced with something else.
"So you want me to be
myself all the time," she said, surprisingly looking pleased
with the idea. "All things considered, that could be the best
suggestion either of us might have made. You did get a look at the
real me, but you must
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have forgotten about it.
Okay, you'll get what you asked for, but don't forget you did ask."
"Why do I feel as
though I'm facing a master swordsman while armed with nothing but a
practice weapon?" Bariden asked, very suspicious of her sudden
good humor. "That must be the expression predators wear just
before they start gobbling down their meal. What are you up to?"
"Me?" she asked,
dark eyes wide with one hand to her chest. "Whatever could / be
up to that wasn't the specific request of someone who ought to learn
to think before he speaks? You asked for the real me, so you're going
to get her. Unless you use this very last chance to be smart and
change your mind. You won't get another."
Once again she looked
straight at him, and Bariden suddenly knew this was one of the
reasons she usually refrained from doing it. A quick look into her
eyes made you believe she was soft and small and helpless; this
steady stare was a different matter entirely, one most people would
find themselves backing down from. Realizing that, Bariden felt more
satisfied than surprised, and he gave her a faint grin.
"I appreciate the
offer, but my image would suffer if people began to think of me as
smart," he drawled. "That means my request is not
withdrawn, so you keep doing whatever comes naturally. And this is
fair warning: soon I'll be expecting us to be doing those natural
things together."
"Of course you will,"
she answered dryly, then sipped at her coffee without looking away.
"It's too bad it will probably happen a lot sooner than
you—expect. Was there anything else you wanted to talk about?
I'm looking forward to soaking in that bath for a bit before I go to
bed."
So she'd listened to his
spell and knew he'd put a tub filled with hot water in her suite.
He'd half-expected to surprise her with that, then realized she'd
deliberately let him know she knew. Part of what her real self was
was Sighted, and she'd decided to rub his nose in it. Bariden was
tempted to be annoyed, but there was no sense hi going ahead with his
plans if he would be that easy to get to.
"No, that's all the
conversation I had in mind for tonight," he said, this time
giving her a smile. "You go ahead and do your soaking, but if
you need someone to scrub your back, give me a call. I guarantee you
won't be waking me."
138
This time it was his turn
to use an unwavering gaze, but she broke it in the only way it can be
done without admitting defeat. If you aren't aware of someone's
Significant Look and fail to acknowledge its existence, there's no
contest to be defeated at. She took a long swallow of coffee,
banished the cup before rising, then gave him a vague nod and smile
before strolling off to her suite. No becoming flustered at overly
friendly suggestions, no rush to escape an uncomfortable
situation—Bariden had never seen anything to match it, not even
the smoothness of certain ladies at his father's court.
"You're going to make
this as hard as possible for me, aren't you," he murmured, now
staring at the door she'd closed between them. "Instead of being
soft and pretty and too quiet, you're going to be hard as blade
steel, brutally direct, and as unimpressible as an eighty-year-old
dowager empress. That's supposed to be your real self? I wonder who
you think you're kidding."
But maybe that was one of
the problems. If she saw herself like that, she'd expect him to do
the same. Even if she was just exaggerating what she considered
flaws, she'd still believe she was being nothing but honest. Getting
around that ought to be fun, at least as much as being used as the
target at quarterstaff practice ...
"Damn," he
muttered even more softly, banishing his cup before standing. By
rights he ought to be thinking about how many other girls there were
in the worlds, girls who would be more than happy to listen to
reason. Instead, he could feel his determination increasing,
accompanied by a wish that there was only a single bedroom. But it
wasn't just a physical attraction he felt, a regrettable truth that
intended to prove itself by not letting him quit. It was all of
Chalaine that he wanted, and in order to get her he was willing to
fight.
If he was allowed the time
to fight. Their enemy was obviously herding them toward something,
and Bariden had picked up the conviction that they would have to win
against the something or lose a lot more than a game. It hadn't been
too bad so far, but that was only so far and only for him. Chalaine
would not be likely to agree, which led him to wonder what tomorrow
would be like ...
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Rather than follow that
line of thought, Bariden dropped it and went to soak in his own tub.
And if he turned the water really cold, maybe he'd even be able to
sleep...
They had no trouble
getting an early start the next day, and that after a good breakfast.
Once again an entry spell had refused to register, as though no such
thing was possible rather than that someone stronger was disallowing
it. They both felt that meant something, but neither of them could
figure out what.
Bariden rode his
horse-construct quietly next to Chalaine's, trying to talk himself
out of being annoyed. The girl had used breakfast to tease him, and
he'd been too distracted with thoughts of what lay ahead to do more
than get caught.
"No, /'// make our
food." she'd told him when he offered to produce whatever she
felt like eating. "Men are never any good at doing things like
that."
She'd been so offhand
about it that he'd simply shrugged and let her call up whatever she
pleased. He was halfway through the incredibly tasty meal before he
realized that every single dish had originally been made by one of
Bena's chefs—her male chefs. At that point he also realized he
was being surreptitiously but carefully watched; although he wasn't
being laughed at on the outside, inside was another matter entirely.
I should have done more
than just glare at her, he told himself sourly as he watched the
uninteresting countryside go by. She'd played a practical joke on
him, probably as part of showing the "real" her, and he'd
responded as if he were half asleep. But what really annoyed him was
the fact that he didn't know how he should have responded, how she'd
been expecting him to respond. Talk about feeling as if you were
being tested and graded ...
"I wonder if it's a
coincidence that all these worlds are so ordinary," the girl
said suddenly. She'd been looking around at the wood the road wound
through, just as he had. "It probably isn't, but I can't think
of any sinister purpose for something like that. Can you?"
"No, and I've been
trying," he admitted. "We can't accept anything as a
coincidence in a place where we've
14O
been deliberately sent,
but unless our enemy is trying to bore us to death, I'm missing the
point."
"Maybe the point is
to throw us off guard," she suggested. "You know, let us
think there's nothing dangerous around, and then hit us without
warning. If that's it, it doesn't look like it's going to happen
here, but maybe up ahead, where the cleared land starts .,."
She let the thought trail
off, but he didn't add anything as he studied the area they were
approaching. The road left the woods only a short distance ahead, and
the cleared land was obviously growing crops. That should mean there
were also people up ahead, like in that village he could just see
beyond the nearest stretch of farmland. Communal fields rather than
individual farms could be good or bad, depending on how close the
nearest city was. They'd just have to wait and see ...
Their mounts were moving
at a brisk pace, which meant it wasn't long before the wood and even
most of the fields were behind them. The village was a good deal
closer, an ordinary village that looked mostly lived-in. Nothing
seemed too new or too clean, and nothing that was too old or badly
kept. Ordinary, everyday, usual—except for the fact that no one
was around the part of it they could see. "It certainly isn't
deserted," the girl said, obviously sharing his thoughts. "The
people aren't out in the fields we just passed, but maybe there are
other fields. Or maybe something's happening that's taking everyone's
attention."
Bariden saw it too, then,
the small amount of dust that seemed to be coming from the other side
of the village. And sounds, as if people were talking—or
shouting ...
"Let's take a careful
look," he told the girl, getting ready to move a little faster.
"And this time try not to start anything."
She glanced at him over
that but didn't say anything, and he chose to consider her silence as
agreement. Urging his mount to a slightly faster pace he pulled out
ahead of her, moving along the village street toward the dust and
muted noise. At least it was muted until the street curved around to
the left, past what looked like a smithy. Beyond it the open area was
filled with what must have been most of the villagers—and two
groups that didn't belong in a village.
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Bariden came to a halt at
the back of the crowd and dismounted, then began to make his way
through the people who were watching some sort of confrontation. One
of the groups that didn't belong was larger than the other, as well
as being all male. The smaller group was apparently being led by a
woman who was in the middle of speaking to her opponents even as
Bariden drew closer from behind.
"... can't keep
taking people to be his servants and slaves!" she said heatedly,
hands closed to fists at her sides. "These people don't want to
serve a sorcerer, and neither do any other villagers in this kingdom!
If my father wasn't dying, he'd take care of Halvin—! And why
would a sorcerer need servants anyway? If he's all that powerful, he
should be able to see to his needs himself."
"I don't think
there's any question about how powerful Halvin is," one of the
woman's opponents answered with amusement that grated. "The king
couldn't have matched him even on his best day, so what difference
does it make whether or not he's dying? My lord doesn't owe you any
answers, but if you must know, he doesn't need servants. He just
happens to want them, to save himself the trouble of having to see to
those needs you mentioned. You—"
The man's words broke off
as one of his own people touched his arm, and he moved his head to
the side to listen to the hastily whispered message. He and his group
numbered at least fifteen, and Bariden could see them around the
leftmost member of the woman's group. By the colors they wore only
seven men stood behind the woman, and, incidentally, between the
villagers and the more numerous intruders.
"I've just been given
a message that concerns you" the man continued, smiling
offensively at the woman Bariden hadn't yet seen. "My Lord
Halvin says you have one minute to get yourself and your escort out
of the way of his men, otherwise we're to add you to the number of
young girls we're to get. That way you can find out firsthand what
sort of serving he likes—when he decides to get around to you.
It's his habit to make use of the prettier ones first."
The men behind him laughed
out loud at that, a threat and an insult rolled into one. The woman's
escort stiffened
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in outrage, but the way
they were outnumbered left them very few options. All they could do
was stand mere and seethe, their own silence underscoring the
woman's, and then the man spoke again.
"That minute is just
about up," he said, now looking around at the woman's escort as
he loosened his sword in its scabbard. "If you don't intend to
move aside, my men and I have some bladework to do. Which, by the
way, we mean to enjoy. It's been too long since the last time anyone
was stupid enough to try to stop us."
He licked his lips with
anticipated enjoyment, and his eyes told Bariden the man wasn't
bluffing. He really was the sort who enjoyed killing, the sort who
loved to make people crawl and scream before he ended them. Well,
this was one time he was due to be disappointed, and if Bariden had
his way there would never be any other times. Softly he spoke a
freezing spell aimed at the fighters behind the man, and
when—surprisingly—it worked, he stepped out and moved to
face the spokesman.
"Stupid would be not
trying to stop you," he said, making no effort to look at the
woman. There would be time for amenities after the threat was taken
care of. "Lowlifes like you never stop on your own, you lack the
necessary intelligence. And if you want someone to use that sword on,
you now have me."
"Well, what do you
know, somebody who thinks he can play hero," the man growled,
his skin darkening with the anger of insult. "I really like that
idea, since my favorite hobby is making dead heroes. Come on, boys,
we'll start with this one."
He unsheathed his sword,
sneering when Bariden did the same, but the sneer didn't last long.
He'd been expecting to hear the sound of other swords being drawn by
his cronies behind him, and when he didn't he realized it
immediately. He threw a quick look over his shoulder, paling when he
saw everyone frozen in place, then looked back at the newcomer in
shock.
"That's right,
the—boys—aren't included in this," Bariden told him
with a lot of satisfaction. "It's just you and me, so why don't
you come ahead and make me a dead hero."
The man's fist closed
convulsively tighter on his sword at the same time that he swallowed
hard, a typical reaction of a longtime bully suddenly on his own. He
looked as if he'd be happiest just turning around and walking away,
but the way he licked his lips said he was thinking about something
that would not allow that. Then he forced himself straignter, and
made an effort to renew his previous sneer.
"Just because you're
holding that thing doesn't mean you know how to use it," he
said, obviously trying to convince himself. "In fact, it isn't
likely you can, not when you had to be the one to do that to my men.
You've got to be running a bluff, so I'm going to caH you on it."
By then the sneer was
real, and Bariden would have enjoyed shaking his head at the man's
stupidity. He'd managed to make himself believe Bariden couldn't use
a sword because he could use magic, and therefore would be vulnerable
to someone with even a small amount of sword skill. Even if that were
true, wouldn't Bariden then use magic to protect himself? The blind
spots of people who didn't know how to think ...
And then there was no time
for thinking, only for reacting. The man charged forward with a yell,
swinging his sword, obviously trying to drive his opponent back.
Bariden stood his ground and simply blocked the swing with his own
sword, the strength he put into the block also cutting short the
charge. The man started hacking at him then, a clenched-teeth attempt
to use his own strength, no technique evident in any of his moves.
Bariden blocked the first three swings, ignored the following feint,
then blocked the first backhand swing before beginning to reply.
And that was when the man
gave it up. Twice he just managed to block Bariden's attacks, each
time coming close to losing a body part, and then he hurled his sword
like a block of wood and ran. The thrown sword was easy to knock
aside; harder was not separating the man's backbone before he'd gone
a full two steps. If Bariden had believed in slaughter he would have
done it, but what was the point? Taking a coward in the back only
started you on picking up his bad habits ...
But three steps was still
as far as the man got. A red aura suddenly enveloped him and then he
burst into flame, his
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hair, his clothing, and
even his flesh. The sounds of terrified horror from the people behind
Bariden were drowned out by the burning man's screams, and all the
big man could do was stand there and watch his former opponent die
horribly. The flames were on the inside of a shell-like warding, and
even if Bariden had been able to break through, it wouldn't have done
the burning man any good. Even a wizard-level healer would have had
trouble with the results of that much burning...
The screams from inside
the shell lasted both too long and not really long at all, and when
they and the flames disappeared there was nothing left. Bariden heard
the whimpering of fear behind him, adding to the fury he'd begun to
feel. What sort of twisted animal did things like that, and for what
conceivable reason?
"He lost, so he
deserved to be punished," a light, unconcerned voice came from
the left, almost in answer to Bariden's thoughts. "If I allow
someone the honor of serving me, losing is not permitted, nor is
surviving the loss. Most men tend to fight to the death to avoid my
little punishments, but every now and again there's a fool who lets
his cowardice make him forget. At least this one won't forget again."
The man chuckled at his
little joke as he inspected Bariden casually, as though the much
bigger man was of minimal interest. He, himself, was very
interesting, but only indirectly because of what he looked like.
Slightly below average in height, dull brown hair and eyes, slender
to the point of skinniness—even the silks and jewels he wore
did nothing to disguise his complete lack of musculature and clumsy
movements. His facial features were beyond ordinary to the point of
boredom, and even his nose wasn't too large. Larger than average,
yes, but only by a little. Slightly wider forehead than average,
slightly weaker chin, slightly narrow-lipped mouth—all so
ordinary no one would look twice—except for the expression in
those flat brown eyes.
"I can't believe the
fool was actually running toward me," the man continued with
what sounded like annoyance. "He and I grew up together, and he
made my life unbearable until I was old enough to begin studying
magic. When I reached my current level of strength and began to
gather
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servants, I gave him the
choice of groveling at my feet and doing as I ordered, or dying
slowly then and there. Even if he hadn't broken one of my most basic
rules, I certainly wouldn't have protected him. Who are you, and what
are you doing trespassing on my territory?"
"Right now I'm
standing here trying to figure you out," Bariden answered,
resheathing his sword before folding his arms. "Many Sighted go
through the phase of wanting to be an absolute ruler, but it's so
easy to do once you reach a certain level it also quickly becomes
boring. After that they either go back to studying magic, or go out
among the worlds to find something that's really fun. Why are you
still wasting your time playing child games around herel"
Quick hatred flashed in
the man's eyes, immediately joined by other, less easily read
emotions. That reaction really made Bariden wonder, but before he
could start guessing with the clues he had, part of the answer was
given to him.
"That just goes to
show how much you know!" the man shrilled, having lost the phony
languidness he'd been speaking with. "I'm Halvin, and being
stronger than everyone else means I don't have to go back to
studying! And if being an absolute ruler is so easy, why doesn't
everyone do it? Because it isn't easy, that's why, not even for the
big and handsome ones like you\ You're jealous that I can do it and
you can't, so you're making up stories about other places to make me
feel bad. Well, it isn't going to work because I know better. There
aren't any other places, so I have to find my fun right here. Like
this!"
He spoke a quick spell and
launched something dark green at Bariden, something with a lot of
teeth that came at him already chewing away. He was caught enough by
surprise that the thing would have reached him before he could react,
either with a counterspell or by throwing himself out of the way.
Bariden took half a step back, braced for pain—but it didn't
happen. The thing struck the warding Chalaine had forgotten to
remove, and that was as close as it could come.
But that didn't stop it
entirely. Bariden looked down at the small monster that clung to his
warding at chest height, needing to watch it chew for a moment before
he
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WAROTI
understood what it was
trying to do. If he'd been unwanted it would have already chewed
through him, that was easy enough to see. The point that took some
thought was that the thing was now chewing at his warding, as if it
expected to be able to break through. Briefly Bariden thought that
interpretation must be wrong, and then it, with all the rest, gave
him the answer.
"You're no stronger
than sorcerer-apprentice, are you?" he said to Halvin, knowing
he was right. "You're standing there expecting mis thing to chew
through my warding, because it would be able to chew through yours.
And that's also why you haven't changed your appearance to something
more heroic, which I'll bet you mink you deserve. You're not yet good
enough to change yourself without making things worse, so you have to
settle for nothing but fancy domes and maybe the occasional illusion.
All of which also tells me why you haven't tried to unfreeze your
thugs. You haven't yet learned how to counter anything more complex
than basic spells."
"Stop trying to sound
as if you're better!" Halvin screamed, so furious he was almost
foaming at the mourn. "I 'm the strongest around here so you
can' t be better, do you hear me, you can't\ If I have to prove it,
then I will!"
He began to speak spells
men, one of which sent more green things with teem, one that produced
yellow and orange lightning bolts which tried to skewer Bariden. The
rest were too imprecisely spoken to become anything more than a
string of gibberish, but that didn't make the situation any less
dangerous. The people behind Halvin's target were stumbling back with
screams and shouts, certain that some of the lightning bolts would
attack mem instead, and someone could be hurt because of the panic
alone.
Which told Bariden he was
wasting time and maybe lives just standing mere. He banished the
toothy things and the lightning bolts with a single gesture, then
spoke the spell ReSayne had taught him not long ago. It seemed there
was a young wizard with a talent for unSeen magic who was coming up
with some interesting new spells, simple, elegant phrases that
accomplished what hadn't been possible until then. ReSayne had taught
him the spell, but since
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me fiend wasn't Sighted it
hadn't been able to invoke the power of it.
Bariden, however, was
Sighted, and fairly powerful for his level. The spell, which produced
a shimmering magic-resistant sphere around the person it was aimed
at, worked at once, cutting Halvin's ranting short. He looked around
wildly at the transparent bubble and tried to banish it, but he
wasn't strong enough to affect it. His next try was to break it with
a fist, and when he couldn't bring even one of his ineffectual blows
into contact, his frustration and hatred took over completely. Before
Bariden could explain exactly what me sphere was, Halvin spat out a
spell and, unfortunately for him, it was very precisely done.
Blue-white flames flared inside the sphere, contained and
concentrated, and me sorcerer-apprentice didn't even scream long, hi
a matter of moments the flames disappeared, no longer sustained by
the pile of ash mat had shortly before been a man.
"Stupid to the end,"
Bariden muttered as he banished me sphere with a gesture, turning
loose a brief stench of scorched flesh. "Someone should have
told him mat when you play games with fire, you have to expect to get
burned. But even if someone had told him, ne probably would have
refused to listen."
"You're right,"
a soft voice said from behind his right shoulder. "His sort
never do listen, they have to learn the hard way. I'd like to thank
you for risking yourself to protect people who are strangers to you.
It's the sort of noble thing my father always did when he was young."
By then Bariden had turned
and was looking down at her, the woman who had been trying to protect
the villagers when he'd arrived. She was a little taller than
average, and seemed to be slender but roundly built under her plain
but richly made white gown. She had bright red hair and green eyes,
but rather than making her beautiful, the combination gave her a
pixielike quality of quiet good humor and calm intelligence. And most
startling of all, her glow was as bright as the one he'd seen from
Chalaine!
"I'm Tenillis,
daughter of King Graff," she continued without the least sign of
boasting, her smile warm with the thanks she'd mentioned. "On
behalf of my father I'd like to welcome you to our kingdom, and
invite you to join
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us at the palace for
however long you'll be here. If we don't owe you all the hospitality
we can provide at the very least, we don't owe you anything."
"I'm Bariden, and you
don' t owe me anything," he replied, responding to her smile
with one of his own. "If someone is causing trouble and you're
capable of stopping it, it's your duty to do so. If you can and
don't, you're directly responsible for whatever harm is caused after
that. I don't mind being responsible for the things I do, but I don't
like being blamed for the doings of others. And speaking of doing,
what would you like done with that lot?"
Bariden nodded toward the
heavies who were still frozen in place, and the girl Tenillis turned
her head to consider them.
"I think I'd like
them to be released two or three at a time so my guardsmen can disarm
them and put them under arrest," she said, needing very little
time to decide that. "Having Halvin's protection let them do
anything they cared to, and now it's time for them to answer for it.
One of the magistrates holding court in the municipal section of the
palace will take care of that, and all we have to do is bring them
in."
"Sounds fair to me,"
Bariden agreed, then waited while the guardsmen stationed themselves
around the first of the heavies. When they were in place he released
the surrounded men, waited until they were disarmed and bound, then
did the same with the next few. It wasn't long before the job was
done and Tenillis and her men were ready to leave, which meant it was
time to find out where Chalaine was. He hadn't seen her since he'd
taken the lead when they'd first entered the village, but the
dispersing crowd of villagers parted to give him the answer.
She stood alone holding
their two horses, silently watching people chattering happily in
relief as they headed for their homes. The faint smile she wore said
she was glad the villagers no longer had to fear for their lives and
safety, and it didn't matter that she hadn't had a hand in seeing to
that. The end result was what counted, not who would be taking the
credit for it, an attitude that surprised Bariden very little. As he
walked toward her, he realized he'd somehow known she would feel that
way ...
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"Very entertaining
show you put on," she said to him when he got close enough, her
expression downright bland. "Is that the definition I'm supposed
to use when you talk about staying out of trouble?"
"If you think back,
you'll remember I said I wanted you to stay out of trouble,"
Bariden countered, holding his reaction down to no more than faint
amusement. "I never said a word about me, so excuses are
something I don't have to look for. We've been invited to a palace
again, but this time without any promises of help. I would have
asked, except that the late Halvin answered the question in a way I
have to believe. You heard?"
"When he accused you
of lying about other worlds?" she asked with a sigh. "I
wish I hadn't, but unfortunately I did. Maybe there's a gate hidden
in this palace, too."
Now that was a thought,
one that made Bariden pause. What if there was ... ?
CHAPTGR GIGHT
If there is a gate in this
palace too, I don't know if I'll trust it enough to use it,"
Bariden said to Chalaine after a moment, taking his reins while he
frowned. "It's fairly obvious we're being herded, but without
the end being in sight I'm getting more and more nervous about
blindly stepping forward. There's no telling when the next step just
won't be there, and we'll—"
"Bariden, excuse me,"
Tenillis's voice came, and then she was standing there with them.
"We're ready to leave for the palace now. Is this someone I
should be introduced to?"
"As a matter of fact
it is," Bariden answered, watching the two women inspect each
other. The process was one most men preferred to stay out of,
considering that it often looked like a wordless challenge. Like
right then, for instance ... "Tenillis, daughter of King Graff,
allow me to present Chalaine, my partner and traveling companion."
"Be welcome in our
kingdom, companion of Bariden," TeniUis said with a smile and a
nod. "He's earned enough welcome for ten companions."
"So I saw,"
Chalaine commented, her own expression on the neutrally cool side. "I
can tell you're Sighted, but it feels as if you're totally untrained.
Is there any particular reason why that would be?"
"Just the best of
reasons," Tenillis replied with one brow raised. "No true
lady will involve herself with magic, not and expect to stay a lady.
It simply can't be done."
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"Oh, I know some who
have managed, but basically you're right," Chalaine returned,
and now there was a faint smile curving her lips. "The study of
magic requires a woman rather than a lady, one who understands that
it's worth occasionally getting your hands dirty. Few—ladies—
are capable of understanding that sort of truth."
"For which we praise
all the Powers that be," Tenillis replied with the same calm
smile. "Once you reach a certain level of intelligence, you know
mere are some things you don't want to understand. Like that old
saying goes, 'Only a fool seeks knowledge he's better off without.' "
"Personally, I think
it's the fool who lets other people decide what he is and isn't
better off without," Chalaine countered with even more amusement
in her smile. "But that's undoubtedly because I'm a woman rather
than a lady, and usually make it a point to test idiotic sayings like
(hat I haven't found one yet that wasn't meant to sway the
shortsighted into taking a dead-end road."
"Now, ladies,"
Bariden interrupted before me conversation turned into a fistfight,
then flinched when he realized what he'd said. Chalaine still wore
that infuriating smile, but Tenillis was beginning to look rather
upset. "Why don't we save this discussion for another time?"
he quickly tried instead. "Since we have all those men waiting
to be delivered to justice, we ought to get them taken care of
first."
"You're right, of
course," Tenillis said with a quick and grateful smile for him,
one mat warmed for no reason other than being there. "I'd almost
forgotten my father is also waiting, not to mention anxiously hoping
we were able to sway Halvin. He didn't want me to go, but there was
no one else to see to his duty for him. Please follow us ..."
She let the request trail
off after emphasizing the word "please," then turned and
hurried back to her escort As if she thought he might not follow, and
was begging him to change his mind. He turned his head to look at the
most likely reason she thought he'd be going elsewhere, and once
again Chalaine met his stare directly.
"What can I say?"
she asked with a shrug, looking not in the least embarrassed or
guilty. "That's the tamest excuse there ever was for not
studying magic, not to mention that it has to be someone else's idea.
People who let others decide
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what's best for them
usually end up regretting it."
"But not always,"
Bariden felt compelled to point out, his annoyance rising again. "And
aren't you doing the same by telling her she's wrong not to see
things your way? If the way she's living her life satisfies her, what
right do you have to tell her it shouldn't?"
"I wasn't telling her
to change her life, I was arguing against an idea I don't agree
with," Chalaine answered quietly, all amusement, real or
pretended, now gone. "If you don't see it like that, there's
nothing I can say to change your mind."
She turned away from him,
ending the discussion by paying full attention to mounting up.
Bariden hesitated a moment before doing the same, choking down a
flare of anger. He hated the way she handed over the victory in an
argument, which invariably turned it into a loss that couldn't be
challenged. It also left him stuck with a position that he didn't
necessarily subscribe to, which was her interpretation of his
opinion. It was time for another talk about that infuriating habit of
hers, but not there and then. He wanted privacy for that, and time
enough to take as long as necessary ...
Tenillis and her escort,
each of them leading some of the horses Halvin's ex-henchmen were
tied to, were already on the road leading out of the village. The
procession didn't move very fast even when Bariden and Chalaine
finally joined them, but they didn't have all that far to go. Less
than five miles down the road was the palace they'd been told about,
definitely impressive but even more surprising.
Rather than being high and
crowned with battlements, it was no more than three stories tall in
the center. To either side, however, it stretched on and on and on, a
single building rather than a number of buildings standing close
together. Bariden had never seen anything like it, especially the
absence of a defensive wall. The place seemed to be open to anyone
who wanted to enter, and quite a number of people were doing just
that. And here, closer to the palace, the fields were full of people
working.
They were less than half a
mile away from the city-palace, when a mounted troop appeared from
some lower part of the building to the left of what looked like a
main
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entrance. The troop was
more than large enough to help the guardsmen with the prisoners, and
in a few minutes all but two of their escorts plus prisoners were on
the way back to where the troop had come from. With most of the crowd
gone, Tenillis backed her horse to the place on Bariden's left.
"Father must have
seen us approaching, and sent extra guardsmen to help," she
said, glowing happily like a small girl. "I'm glad he already
knows things went well."
"If there were that
many men available, why did you ride out with only seven?"
Bariden asked, bothered as well as annoyed. "You could have been
badly hurt, not to mention captured or killed. With more men—"
"Bariden, that was
something / insisted on," she interrupted gently. "Even the
presence of every man in my father's guard would not have kept Halvin
from doing as he pleased, and the more there, the more who could die.
I took only volunteers, and none of them expected to return. If
father had been stronger, he would have looked at it your way. But
now that he is feeling strong enough, we can go straight to him—Oh,
Bariden, I hope you like him. I know he's going to like you."
Her smile drew him forward
with her as she began to move again, but not even a glance went to
Chalaine, who rode to his right. Bariden expected his—companion—to
comment about that, but all Chalaine did was urge her mount along
just in their wake. Silence probably wasn't a good sign, but there
was nothing Bariden could do about it. He'd have a talk with both
women later, pointing out mere was no reason they couldn't be friends
... Sure, no reason beyond an instant mutual dislike ...
Trying not to think about
being caught in the middle of a female free-for-all distracted
Bariden, so much so that the next thing he knew they were at the foot
of the steps in front of the palace. Tenillis was being helped off
her horse by one of the guardsmen, and only then did Bariden notice
that she rode sidesaddle. Like a real lady, and unlike Chalaine, who
was dismounting all by herself. That would be yet another point of
discord between them, he realized, seeing to his own dismounting. As
if it mattered what a woman wore and how she rode ...
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The horses were led away
by the guardsmen, and Tenillis herself led the way up the stairs
toward the doors that were standing wide. Two guardsmen stood beside
these doors, and a glance around showed Bariden that the people
entering and leaving the palace were doing it through other doors.
This entrance must be reserved for the royal family and their guests,
and needed nothing more than a couple of duty guards to keep it
private.
That and a mild exclusion
spell. Bariden could feel it as he passed through the doorway, a
suggestion that anyone who didn't belong should find another way into
the palace. It didn't have enough strength behind it to affect anyone
with more power than the one who had cast it, but a fleeting look of
disappointment on Tenillis's face said she'd been hoping Chalaine
would have trouble. The words they'd exchanged must have really upset
her.
A servant appeared and
bowed to his princess, listened for a moment, men led the way toward
a wide set of stairs leading upward. At the top the servant switched
his bow to Chalaine and asked her to follow him, which she did after
a hesitation so short it could have been imagination. But she didn't
even glance at Bariden before walking away, not to mention saying
anything to him. He was about to do his own bit to change that, when
Tenillis took his left arm in both hands and briefly leaned against
him.
"Father doesn't have
the strength to meet more than one new person at a time," she
said with a sad smile. "If two were presented, he'd try to be
gracious to them both even if it harmed him, which it would. Tonight
we'll have a private dinner of celebration, just my family and a few
close friends. Father isn't allowed to attend things like that, so
your companion will be able to rejoin you then. Right now she's being
taken to a suite where she can rest and refresh herself."
"Tenillis, Chalaine
isn't your enemy any more than I am," he said, trying to make
her believe him. "I know you two got off on the wrong foot, but
it doesn't have to continue like that. Holding a grudge would be
foolish ..."
"Oh, I'm not very
good at holding a grudge," Tenillis said ruefully when his words
trailed off. He'd been thinking about Chalaine's ability when it came
to holding grudges ... "I'm
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sure she and I will work
out our differences in no time, for your sake if for no other reason.
My father's apartment is this way."
Her smile of encouragement
urged him to walking again, and this time she kept possession of his
arm. Bariden had thought about telling her that Chalaine wasn't
likely to be that easily convinced about differences, then decided to
keep the comment to himself. It would be nothing but borrowing
trouble, which he had no need whatsoever to do.
King Graff's apartment was
as splendid and large as a monarch's private quarters ought to be,
and seemed even more tastefully decorated than Bariden's father's.
But it was also quieter, and those who moved through the outer rooms
took pains to make no unnecessary noise. There might as well have
been a sign reading "sick room," right above a pointing
arrow; when Tenillis pasted a pleasant smile on her face as they
approached a set of closed doors, Bariden knew which way the arrow
would be pointing. As they reached the doors one of them was opened
from inside, and Tenillis passed through first and moved straight
ahead.
"Father, did you
see?" she asked gently but happily as she approached an
oversized four-poster. "The problem is solved, and our people
are safe again."
"Yes, my dear, I
certainly did see," a weak but steady voice answered from the
bed. "Bring the young man closer and present him to me."
At Tenillis's gesture
Bariden moved forward, and once he reached her side he was able to
see the man in the bed. The king had obviously been a big man, but
some wasting disease had taken the flesh from his bones and die
strength from his arms. The bright red hair around his sunken face
made it look even more pale than it was, but mere was still life left
in the sharp blue eyes. King Graff lay propped up on pillows with a
silken cover in blue reaching to his chest, but something about him
still said he was far from beaten.
"Your Majesty, allow
me to present Bariden, a most welcome visitor to your realm,"
Tenillis said with a smile. "Through his efforts alone the
sorcerer Halvin was defeated, and the land made safe once again for
your people."
"You are indeed most
welcome to Our realm, Bariden," the king's weak voice said with
true warmth, his smile
156
matching that of his
daughter. "It's been much too long since a hero walked these
halls, and it pleases Us to see another before Our death. Tenillis,
wait for the young man in the next room. We would have words in
private with him."
"Yes, Father,"
the girl said with a curtsy, then left with a parting smile for
Bariden. She also left without any attempt lo argue or even to
hesitate, which raised Bariden's brows somewhat. Even his sisters
didn't obey that wholeheartedly ...
"And now, Bariden, we
can speak man to man," Graff said once a silent servant had
closed the door behind Tenillis. "Because I was worried about my
daughter, I watched everything that happened through a vision sphere.
If it had become necessary, I would have used the sphere to send all
my remaining strength against Hatvin in an attempt to end him.
Whether or not it would have worked is another question."
Bariden nodded,
understanding the problem. Attacking someone through a sphere meant
for viewing is possible, but the attempt invariably drains the
attacker completely. If that attacker started out strong and healthy
he might survive, but it would still be quite a while before he got
his strength back. And if the person being attacked was too much
stronger, the attacker could conceivably give up his life and still
do less than lethal damage.
"So I think you can
imagine my delight when you stepped forward," the king
continued, grinning weakly. "And men when you proved to be
stronger than that emotional cripple—I was watching carefully,
you know, and I saw you step out in front of the helpless without
waiting to find that out. That you were stronger, I mean. You would
have fought Halvin even if he proved the stronger,"
"I don't like to see
people being taken advantage of," Bariden answered with a shrug,
faintly embarrassed. "And it's been my experience that there are
times when strength isn't the most important factor. No competent
sorcerer with imagination needs a flock of bullyboys to push ordinary
people around; there are ways to do that with magic that are a lot
more effective. If this Halvin was using them, either he wasn't all
that competent or he had no imagination. In either
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case, I had no real doubts
about being able to take him."
"You do a good job of
rationalizing an act of pure bravery and courage," the king said
with a chuckle. "If you're more comfortable like that, just keep
on doing it. I, however, prefer to look at it differently, which
brings us to the real reason I wanted to speak to you. As you can
see, I'm dying."
"If you like, I'll be
glad to see if there's something I can do," Bariden offered at
once. "I don't have anything like a talent for healing, but
maybe I can—"
"No, no, that's not
what I meant," the king interrupted with surprised pleasure.
"It's to your credit that you would make the offer, but even
someone with your strength could do very little to help me. This
disease has weakened my body on the inside, and the damage was
already beyond repairing by the time I first noticed that something
was wrong. My healers have been able to keep me free of pain, but
that's the best anyone can do."
"Anyone here"
Bariden muttered, disturbed that this brave monarch had no way to
reach a wizard-strength healer. The ravages of disease could be
repaired, but only by someone who had the strength and the skill. ..
"No, what I wanted to
speak to you about is something quite different," King Graff
went on, obviously having missed Bariden's muttered comment. "As
I said, I'm dying, but that won't be the greatest tragedy of my life.
What was infinitely worse was when my two sons were killed."
The man's face turned
really bleak, and this time there was nothing to say. Bariden had no
children, and therefore could only imagine what losing two would be
like.
"It was a stupid
accident that should never have happened," King Graff continued.
"But it did happen, and it took both of them. Shortly after that
this disease made itself known, and that was the end of all chance to
produce another heir or two. Tenillis is very dear to me, but she's
still a girt. What this kingdom needs is a man as heir."
"You can't be
serious," Bariden protested in shock. "I'm nothing but a
passing stranger, someone you don't know at all. And what about the
people of this land? How would they feel, having a sorcerer for a
king? It's not—"
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SHARON
"So you noticed that
you'd said something foolish," King Graff observed with a faint
chuckle when Bariden's words broke off. "They already know what
it's like to have a magic user for a king, and they love the idea. If
a king is capable of getting what he wants by magic, he tends to
leave his people alone to build satisfactory lives of their own. It's
been generations since someone of .my line hasn't been able to do
magic."
Hearing that made Bariden
stop and think. He'd never had any designs on his father's throne,
but that hadn't stopped the spread of rumors. Because he was better
than most with weapons, a lot of people were expecting him to
challenge his oldest brother for the throne once their father was
gone. And the belief that he would win had made even more people very
uneasy. After all, he was a highly competent sorcerer that they would
then be snick with as king. Who knew what he might decide to do to
them...
"Woman or not,
Tenillis is still your only remaining heir," Bariden said then.
"It would be very unfair to exclude her, especially after what
she tried to do earlier. And especially in favor of a complete
stranger you know nothing about. I could have done what I did just to
get you to make this very offer, to legitimize my takeover. If
nothing else, I do have more imagination than the late Halvin."
"Even most trees have
more imagination than he did," the king countered dryly. "The
only intelligent thing he ever did was wait until I was too sick to
stop him before starting his game of domination, and even that was
more cowardice than intelligence. But mat point alone disproves your
contention. If Halvin was able to do as he pleased, you certainly
could. A man's rule is legitimized if he takes over and no one is
able to stop him. Who around here do you imagine is able to stop
you?"
That was a question
Bariden couldn't answer, but the king gave him a moment to do so
anyway. When the moment was over, King Graff smiled gently.
"So, as you can see,
your objections are groundless— with the possible exception of
the one concerning Tenillis. I admit you have a point there, but the
matter could be rectified rather easily if you made Tenillis your
queen.
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Or don't you consider her
as attractive as she obviously considers you?"
"On the contrary, I
find her very attractive," Bariden muttered, remembering the
flash he'd gotten from her when they first met. The Spell of Affinity
said they would do very well together, and the way she asked for
things rather than demanding them seemed to support that. But still.
. .
"Why don't you take
some time to think about what I've said," the king suggested
gently. "Even if a man is capable of making snap decisions, he
shouldn't have to do it with the most important matters of his life.
Get some rest, take a slow look around, and tomorrow we can talk
again."
Bariden nodded, grateful
for the reprieve. He did need some uninterrupted thinking time,
especially in view of what Halvin had said before he died. If that
was the last world he and Chalaine would be able to reach...
Tenillis wasn't waiting
outside the sickroom as Bariden had thought she would be. She'd left
a servant there with her apologies and the promise that she would see
him later, along with instructions to show Bariden to his apartment.
The big man followed the servant without comment, and once he was
alone he sat wearily in a chair. The apartment was gorgeous, what he
could see of it even better than what he had in his father's palace,
but his mind was too agitated to appreciate it.
King Graff really wanted
him as his heir, without any sense of reluctance whatsoever. That was
what disturbed Bariden so deeply, that one major difference between
the king and his own father. King Agilar was a large, pleasant man
who enjoyed his children and loved them, but he wasn't Sighted. He
had never made any obvious difference among his three sons, but
Bariden had always had the feeling he was the one the king worried
about most. As if there were something wrong with Bariden, something
that couldn't be cured.
Or as if he couldn't be
completely trusted. His father had never said that in so many words,
but Bariden had gotten that feeling more than once. King Graff, on
the other hand, obviously trusted Bariden without question, or he
wouldn't have offered him his people and his daughter. It was so
tempting to think about staying in a place where you were
16O
not only needed but
wanted, really and truly wanted. A place that could become more of a
home than you'd ever known ...
He would think about that
for a while, just a little while . . .
The apartment the servant
showed me to was pleasant, but nothing like what I'd been given in
Queen Lova's palace. I thought about that as I looked around briefly,
then shrugged it off. This time it was Bariden's turn to play hero,
mine to simply tag along and get in the way. Most especially get in
the way. That girl Tenillis ...
I called a cup of coffee
into being, but rather than sit down with it I went back out into the
hall. There were no guardsmen posted at my door with orders to keep
me inside, and even the servant who'd guided me there was gone. That
meant I could go for the stroll I wanted without creating any scenes
or confrontations, a pleasant change I took immediate advantage of. I
had some thinking to do, but also had the definite urge to take a
good look around.
The hall I strolled
through was made of marble, into which nicely carved doors were set
to give the apartments privacy. But I'd already noticed that my
apartment wasn't all that lavishly decorated, and now saw that the
marble wasn't top quality either. There was no doubt that sweet,
ladylike Tenillis had told the servant where to put me, and it wasn't
likely to be anywhere near Bariden's apartment. That little
sweetheart had staked him out as her own from the first minute she
saw him, and had no intentions of letting me get in her way.
Which was something of a
laugh. I paused to sip at my coffee before turning left at a
cross-corridor, wondering if Bariden had told her yet that he and I
were just friends. Our last conversational exchange had seemed to
indicate he was ready to do just that, exactly as I'd said he would.
It had been easy to see he found the girl attractive, and she was a
princess, which matched his own station in life. The fact that /
didn't like her at all meant nothing, not as far as he was concerned.
I wasn't the one she was trying to catch.
A female servant came out
of a room and hurried past me, intent on whatever her errand was. Her
glance was very
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brief, only long enough to
show her I wasn't someone she had to be concerned about, and a moment
later even her footsteps were gone. There didn't seem to be very many
people in that part of the palace, which might or might not mean
something. I had been moving from corridor to corridor almost at
random, letting my vague urge to explore choose the direction. If and
when it led me to a dead end, I'd have no trouble finding my way
back.
And then I turned one
corner to see, about a hundred feet ahead, what looked like a
breezeway or a small, enclosed bridge. Rather than there being rooms
to either side of the corridor, there seemed to be large open
windows. Walking down there confirmed that, but neither view looked
out at the front of the palace. This was somewhere in back, then, and
the stretch was a bridge of sorts. It connected the palace proper
with a small building straight ahead, something that did not look
like a simple extension of the palace. A flare of curiosity sent me
on, just to find out what it was.
About twenty feet beyond
the bridge stood a door, but a very plain door without carving of any
sort. It was also unlocked, but I could detect a faint exclusion
spell, one that would certainly keep out any unSighted who came
calling. Someone who was Sighted, though. . . even the most untrained
novice would be able to pass with no trouble at all...
Which meant I was ail but
being invited. I sighed as I banished my coffee cup, wondering just
how credulous I was supposed to be. I'm not one of those who flatly
refuse to admit there's such a thing as coincidence, but there are
limits beyond which I stop swallowing. I just happened to get the
urge to explore, and then, by pure luck, just happen to come across
this door? Sure, of course, no problem. Any day of the week.
Rather than touch the
doorknob I gestured the door open, ready for anything to jump out in
attack, but not really expecting that anything. My suspicious mind
had come up with a different idea, and when, after a moment, I
stepped through, my suspicions were confirmed. Behind the door was a
railed walkway, something like a balcony that gave an observer a
clear view of a shrine. The building containing it was a simple,
three-storied structure without separated
162
floors or rooms,
spotlessly clean but also undecorated. Tbe idea of that, I suppose,
was to keep anything from competing with the glory of the only thing
it contained.
Which was, of course, a
gate. It hung in the middle of the air, almost directly opposite the
balcony I stood on, and the building had obviously been constructed
around it. I could have created a bridge from the balcony that would
have let me walk directly up to it, but what was the point? As close
as I was the gate still hadn't flared open, and once again I could
detect a Spell of Volition. If someone didn't really want to use mat
gate, they never would.
And that meant I now had
even more thinking to do. Not to mention hunting Bariden down to give
him the news. We were still being played with, and I didn't like it
even a little. But we also had a decision to make, and that would be
the hard part—for more than one of us ...
Bariden stood with a cup
of wine in his hands, glancing around the reception room. For the
moment he was alone again, but certainly not ignored. Tenillis's
ladies were in a cluster about twenty-five feet away, all but staring
at him as they whispered and giggled among themselves. They'd been
nervous about being presented to him, but none of them had let the
opportunity pass.
But they hadn't been the
only ones he'd been introduced to, nor the most important. When
Tenillis had come to his apartment to tell him about the reception
being held before dinner, she'd begged him to dress for the occasion.
Her idea had been to have some of her father's domes fitted to him,
and she'd been delighted when he proved he didn't need anyone else's
finery. The same outfit he'd created for Queen Leva's feast did the
job, and Tenillis had been glowing when she'd entered the reception
room on his arm.
And as soon as they
entered, he'd been presented to the queen. Tenillis's mother was a
strong, slender woman who obviously had her own opinions about
things, but she'd greeted him with such warmth and approval that
Bariden still hadn't gotten over it. And she'd compared him to her
late sons, saying he was so much like them that it was almost like
having one of them back again. After that,
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163
(he introductions to
members of the court had gone by in a blur.
"You seem to be
enjoying yourself," a gentle voice said from his right. "If
you are, I'm glad."
"It would be hard for
someone not to enjoy himself in this beautiful room," Bariden
answered, turning to a smiting Tenillis. "The only problem is, I
don't yet see Chalaine. You did send someone to tell her about the
reception, didn't you?"
"Of course I did,"
Tenillis answered at once, her green eyes making no effort to avoid
his. "She should be here any minute, and will even have enough
time for a drink before dinner."
"That's good,"
Bariden said, hoping she was telling the tram. He hadn't tried to see
Chalaine earlier, mainly because he couldn't think of what to say to
her. Or how to say what was necessary. After her, of course, it would
be Tenillis he would have to speak with, and after them the king...
"See?" Tenillis
said, sounding very pleased. "I knew I was right. Here she is
now."
Bariden looked up to see
the figure coming through the doors, tangentially realizing he wasn't
the only one watching the entrance. Everyone in the room seemed to be
staring, but not because the new arrival was that beautifully gowned.
She wasn't gowned at all, but still wore the domes they'd reached
that world in. As the only female in the room hi pants—and
travel-worn pants at that—the growing murmurs of comment
weren't ones of admiration.
"Oh, dear, she must
have disliked the gown I sent her," Tenillis said, now sounding
embarrassed. "I'm sorry, Bariden, I suppose I should have sent a
selection and let her choose. This is all my fault."
"I don't think so,"
Bariden answered, trying to keep the growl out of his voice. "What
you sent has nothing to do with what she has on. If she wanted to,
she could have—"
"Tenillis, this is
quite intolerable," the queen said suddenly, coming up on Ban
den's left. "1 realize that person is a companion of Lord
Bariden's, but there is such a thing as propriety. If someone can't
be bothered to dress properly for an occasion, they really can't
expect to be welcomed.
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165
I would very much
appreciate it if someone did something about this."
"I'm sure Lord
Bariden will speak to her, Mother," Tenillis said in a soothing
way, immediately picking up and using the title for him that her
mother had supplied. "I'd do it myself, but for some reason she
doesn't seem to like me—Oh, here she comes."
Chalaine had been looking
around, almost hesitating, Bariden thought. But as soon as she
spotted him the hesitation disappeared, and she headed straight for
him. Next to everyone else in the room she looked shabby and out of
place, and strangely enough that calmed Bariden's anger. If you're
simply trying to be difficult about something, why would you do it in
a way that made you look almost pathetic ... ?
"Bariden, we have to
talk," she said as soon as she was in speaking distance,
ignoring Tenillis completely. "I'm sure your new friends won't
mind if—"
"Chalaine, Lord
Bariden would also like to speak to your Tenillis interrupted
smoothly, her smile gentle and understanding. "It has to do with
the standards of polite society, and lying won't do you any good. He
already knows the truth."
"Really,"
Chalaine said, a flash of quickly suppressed anger in the eyes she
turned on the other girl. "And what truth is it that Lord
Bariden already knows?"
"He knows you refused
the gown I sent for your use," Tenillis answered sweetly. "I've
already admitted I should have sent a selection rather than just one,
but under the circumstances it was rude of you to refuse the offer.
Not to mention uncaring about simple civility. Very obviously, you
have no interest in fitting into this sort of life."
"Well, at least I
can't argue with your conclusion," Chalaine said, then turned
those eyes on him. "But I'd like to know what Prince Bariden
thinks about the rest of what you said. Especially since no one came
to me with any sort of gown. Or even told me the occasion was formal.
I was back in my apartment long enough for both."
"No, no, my dear,
that's Lord Bariden," Tenillis corrected, her smile having
turned pitying. "I realize you probably don't know one title
from another, and thinking up that
story you just told has
helped to confuse you, but—"
"No, my dear, it's
Prince Bariden," Chalaine corrected in turn, but without the
smile. "With all the truths you've exchanged with him, I can't
imagine how that one was overlooked. And I'm still waiting to hear
what he thinks about whose story is made up."
Once again her stare had
come back to him, but Bariden didn't mind. He knew exactly what he
wanted to say, but waited just an instant too long. Before he got the
first word out, Tenillis's mother took her turn.
"Tenillis, we should
have known this man was a prince rather than a commoner," the
queen announced, sounding more pleased than ever. "It was our
mistake that we judged him by—other things. This exchange has
been disgraceful as well as extremely distasteful, but at least it's
almost over. I know your brothers would have done the right thing,
just as Prince Bariden will. He may have—enjoyed—this
person's—company—in the past, but now he no longer needs
someone of her sort. After all, he now has—"
"And just what sort
is that supposed to be?" Chalaine demanded, now making no effort
to cover her anger. "Is it someone as mannerless as you, who
doesn't even have the decency to insult people directly? I'm standing
right here in front of you. If you have something to say to me, show
a minimal amount of good breeding and do it to my face."
"How dare you!"
the queen gasped in outrage while Bariden flinched. Luck had been
with him in his life until then, and he'd never been smack in the
middle of a potential catfight. Everyone knew a man in that spot had
no guarantee of survival, especially if he was foolish enough to try
interrupting. But something did have to be done to restore peace and
quiet, so he'd have to—
"How dare you speak
to me like that, you little slut!" the queen thundered,
instantly beyond outrage. "You march hi here like the intruder
you are, call my daughter a liar, and then insult me. Just who do you
think you are?"
"I don't just think,
I know who I am," Chalaine countered, apparently having regained
some control of herself. "What I am is someone who has earned
what she has, not someone who was given a magnificent title in
exchange for letting a man bed her. When I want to have fun, I
166
c&een
never accept payment.
Keeps my amateur standing intact, you understand."
Horrified gasps sounded
all over the room as the queen went white, proving they were playing
to a larger audience than four. In spite of himself Bariden was
tempted to let it go on, just to find out if anyone could top that
last statement. Had the situation been less serious he might have,
but that was no time to indulge a morbid curiosity. "All right,
I think that's enough from everyone concerned," he announced,
speaking loud enough to override anyone else. "You all started
out looking for my opinion and thoughts, but none of you has let me
get a word in edgewise. If you've changed your mind about wanting to
hear from me, just say so."
"Certainly not,
Prince Bariden," Tenillis assured him at once, her mother making
no effort to disagree. "I, for one, would love to hear what you
have to say."
Her smile of encouragement
was really warm, and she seemed to be diplomatically keeping herself
from taking his arm. A glance showed mat Chalaine was also waiting to
hear what he had to say, only not quite as happily. This was going to
start even more trouble, but there was no possible way to avoid it.
"Tenillis, there's
something about Chalaine you seem to be forgetting, and that one fact
changes everything," Bariden said, making no attempt to soften
his words. "She's a fully trained sorceress with the same
abilities that I have, which means she has no more need of someone
else's clothes than I do. And beyond that, if she'd decided to show
contempt for everyone around her, I think she would have dressed in
something really offensive, like a beggar's rags. Simply wearing her
original clothes would mean nothing."
"Bariden, what are
you saying?" Tenillis whispered, a hint of tears in her wide
green eyes. "You can't believe I would deliberately lie to you?
Not when knowing you has come to mean so much? I can see now that she
knows you so much better than I do, so well that she knew what you
would think. I should never have risked telling you the truth, but I
wanted nothing of lies to stand between us. Oh, Bariden ... !"
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With that she turned away
from him, ostensibly to hide her tears of pain. The queen's
expression had changed to one of pure sympathy, and Chalaine wasn't
showing anything but slightly raised brows. Bariden was willing to
give credit for an excellent performance, but beyond that he was
rapidly losing patience.
"Tenillis, your
second mistake is forgetting that I really am a prince," Bariden
said with exasperation. "At my father's court I grew up watching
things like this, and always wondered why grown men seemed to equate
tears with the truth. More often than not the tears covered something
else entirely, like a determined attempt at manipulation."
"Are you saying you'd
rather take her word over mine?" Tenillis demanded with a sniff
after turning back to him. "I've never had anyone doubt me,
especially not someone I cared about so much. Maybe you'd just rather
not hurt her feelings, and if that's it, then I understand. You're
not a man who would want to hurt anyone's feelings, but I really can
stand it more easily than other women. As long as I know what the
real truth is ..."
The look in her eyes
begged him while her tone went wistful, but apparently she'd
forgotten Bariden wasn't the only one listening to her.
"If it's the real
truth we all want, how about a truth spell?" Chalaine suggested
innocently. "That way no one's word has to be taken, and nothing
could be easier. You know how to do one, don't you, Bariden?"
"That's enoughr
Tenillis shouted, turning to glare at Chalaine. "I've seen
trollops like you before who think they know everything, but all
you're doing is wasting your time! You'll never be as good as a true
lady, no matter how long or hard you try! You're common dirt who
simply doesn't belong here, but you don't even have the decency to
leave! Why do you insist on staying where no one wants you?"
"As a rule, I don't,"
Chalaine answered with a faint smile, looking only at Tenillis. "And
if you're an example of a true lady, I thank the EverNameless for
whatever help they might have given in making me something else. I
hope you get exactly what you think you want."
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And with that she turned
and walked away, neither hurrying nor dragging her feet. She was
heading for the door out, Bariden knew, but before he could take a
single step after her Tenillis was suddenly wrapped around his arm.
"Don't embarrass her
any more, Bariden, please don't," Tenillis begged, wide green
eyes filled with compassion. "We both know she doesn't belong,
so just let her leave quietly. I promise you everything will work out
much more smoothly that way."
"Work out for whom?"
Bariden asked flatly as he deliberately unwound her from his arm.
"I'm sorry, Tenillis, but if Chalaine doesn't belong here, I
don't either. I would have said that a lot sooner if you'd waited to
stage your production, and then all that acting wouldn't have been
necessary. But you are one of the best I've ever seen, so do accept
my congratulations on a fine performance."
And with that he walked
off, leaving a furiously indignant Tenillis to begin sputtering in
outrage. Whatever she had to say might have been interesting, but
Bariden was more concerned with catching up to Chalaine. There was
something she'd wanted to tell him, and with any luck at all her news
would save him from having to make a very painful decision .. .
By hurrying just a little,
Bariden reached Chalaine before Chalaine reached the first turn in
the corridor. When he stopped her with a hand to her arm she turned
blazingly furious eyes on him, so he quickly held up both hands in
surrender.
"Don't attack me, I'm
not a lady either," he pointed out, then grinned when she
immediately looked startled. "But you'll have to admit she
certainly is persistent. Someone else would have dropped the act
fifteen or twenty minutes ago."
"Are you trying to
say you didn't believe her at all?" Chalaine demanded, sounding
half-disbelieving and half-hopeful. "When I first walked up to
you ..."
"I was already
suspicious," he assured her, knowing she was mentally reviewing
his expression from that time. "I'll admit her story was good,
but it made sense only if it involved an ordinary woman. Using it
against a full sorceress canceled most of it out, but she didn't
understand
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169
that. And she kept
thinking she could make me believe her, even when I specifically
pointed out where she'd made her mistakes."
"A lot of men would
have believed her," Chalaine said, almost grudgingly. "It's
that air of sweet loving-kindness she projects. Most men would find
it hard to accept that someone like her would lie and manipulate—and
I had the impression you were very attracted to her. Unless I'm
mistaken, you have a thing for redheads."
"You're very
observant," Bariden admitted, starting them walking again. "I
do prefer redheads, and I did find Tenillis very attractive.
Especially when her father offered to make me his heir, and said I
could marry her to legitimize the succession."
"And you really
wanted to accept his offer," Chalaine said, staring at him so
closely that Bariden felt uncomfortable. "There's something
about this world that appeals to you more strongly than any other
place you've ever been. But you weren't expected to make a decision
on the spot, so you didn't."
"You're not
guessing," Bariden observed, suddenly seeing the point. "Is
that the way it went with you on the previous world?"
"Almost exactly,"
she agreed with a nod. "The only difference I can find is that
last time you happened to overhear a conversation that led you to
find the gate. This time I had the urge to take a walk and explore,
and surprise, surprise. Guess what was at the end of my random
stroll."
"I don't like the
sound of that, and obviously you don't either," Bariden said
with a frown. "This is the second time we've been brought to a
world, told there was no way to leave again, then shown almost at
once that there is a way. What kind of reason can there possibly be
for this insanity?"
"A complicated one,"
Chalaine said, her pretty face troubled. "I spent some time
thinking about this, and after a while I discovered I had a theory.
On the last world, thinking there would be no way to leave it, I
almost let myself accept what I'd been offered. It was all so
perfect, so much what I would have chosen if I'd had the chance.
17O
SHAROM
Not just a place, but a
place where I was needed and wanted by very special people."
"Just like here for
me," Bariden agreed, hearing an exact echo of his feelings in
her words. "Not the place, but the people."
"And then, with the
shock of rude awakening, you announced you had found a gate,"
Chalaine continued. "My first reaction was, well of course he's
happy he found a gate. He doesn't belong here, not the way I do.
There's no reason he can't use that gate alone, and I can stay here
and make a happy life for myself."
"But there was a
reason," Bariden pointed out. "I refused to leave without
you. Was that the way it was supposed to go, do you think, or did I
accidently mess up our enemy's plans?"
"I'd say most
eventualities were planned for," she responded with a sigh.
"Neither of us could have used that gate unless we were
absolutely certain we wanted to, so we both could have been stuck. Or
I could have refused to go, and you eventually got sick and tired of
hanging around and used it alone. If you had, you would have found
this world waiting for you without my being here to ruffle the
feathers of the lovely heroine. Under those circumstances, how long
would it have taken you to accept the offer you were made?"
"Probably about a
minute and a half," Bariden agreed, "But you believed me
when I said I'd never leave that world without you, and you were able
to get around that Spell of Volition long enough for us to use the
gate. That means you were still with me when we got here."
"And, I think, I was
supposed to be in the middle of blaming you for making me leave the
place of my dreams," Chalaine said, leading the way left up a
cross-corridor. Bariden wasn't certain about where they were going,
but he could guess. "If I had been blaming you, sweet Tenillis
would have looked like a breath of free air after a week of being
locked in a closet. You would have found her irresistible, and would
also have believed everything she said. If I managed to get to tell
you I'd found a gate, you'd probably decide I was trying to get even
for your having taken away my dream world by taking away yours. In
case
TH€ HIDD€h
171
you haven't yet guessed,
there's a Spell of Volition on this gate, too."
"I had a feeling
there would be," Bariden said with a sigh, then reached over to
touch her arm. "Are you sure you don't blame me for having made
you leave your 'dream' world? I know you didn't really want to go,
and if I hadn't insisted—"
"If you hadn't
insisted, I would have eventually gotten around to doing it myself,"
she interrupted, paying no attention to the hand on her arm. "Dream
worlds are fine to live in, as long as you don't have friends left
behind who badly need your help to regain their lives. I might be
able to talk myself into forgetting about strangers in need, but
friends are something else entirely. You weren't really the one who
made me leave that world, so why would I blame you?"
"A lot of people I
know would have done it anyway," Bariden muttered, wishing she'd
said something about wanting to be with him more than staying in a
dream. And she'd left the reception room without looking at him even
once, probably because she'd expected him to support Tenillis. She
still didn't believe he had any real interest in her, something that
made him want to put a fist into a wall in frustration.
"And now, with most
of the possible outcomes behind us, we have to consider what's ahead
of us," Chalaine said, apparently unaware of what he was
feeling. "That gate I just happened to find by pure luck and
accident—do we use it as we're obviously supposed to if we
don't stay, or do we try to find a gate a little more to our liking?
That's assuming there is such a gate, and we can find it in less than
two lifetimes, neither of which may be possible."
"I'm really tempted
to lose my temper and start destroying things," Bariden said,
glancing at the doors and walls they passed as his left hand
tightened on his sword hilt. "No matter what we do we're still
being manipulated, and the thought of that is making me furious. If
we use the gate so thoughtfully provided for us, we're doing exactly
what our enemy wants us to do."
"And if we don't use
it we could be stuck here, which is another thing the enemy obviously
wants." Chalaine's voice was filled with as much annoyance as
his had been,
17Q
telling Bariden she was
ready to do some destroying of her own. "All this anger and
frustration and indecision we feel can't possibly be a coincidence,
not when there's a Spell of Volition on the gate. I'd say we're
supposed to be in a turmoil, and possibly even disagreeing about what
to do. If we were, it would be more effective than locking us up."
"So we have to agree on what to do, and then go ahead and do
it," Bariden summed up. "We'll still be cooperating with
the enemy, but at least we'll be in agreement about it. Would you
like to toss a coin, or should we have some sort of contest where the
winner gets to decide?"
"I think what we need
to do first is cool off," Chalaine muttered, glancing at the
anger she could certainly see on his face. "If we're supposed to
be angry, then I for one don't want to be. We can stop to have
something to eat, talk the situation over, then do whatever we decide
to. And maybe you can talk me out of really wanting to go through
that gate."
"You have to have a
reason for what you just said," Bariden observed, actually
finding himself distracted somewhat from the anger. "I'd like to
hear what it is."
"My reason is as
follows," Chalaine said, stopping just short of a breezeway area
to look straight at him. "The more I think about this trap we've
been forced into, the more I want to find a way out of it the enemy
hasn't anticipated. The only way I can do that is to keep going
straight through the way I'm supposed to, while at the same time
keeping my eyes open. If there's the least little thing that hasn't
been covered, I'm willing to bet I can find it."
"What's wrong with
that?" Bariden was honestly puzzled. "I think it's a damned
good way of looking at this mess, and a lot better than simply
getting angry."
"But that's the whole
point," she insisted, looking up at him with those big, dark
eyes. "It's something someone of my temperament would be sure to
think of, so how do I know I'm not being manipulated into the
feeling? The enemy knows me well enough to have given me my dream
world; doesn't that mean he knows me well enough to encourage feeling
like this?"
"It's possible,"
Bariden allowed after a moment's thought. "In fact it's very
possible, but it isn't something I would
TH€ HIDDEN
173
worry about. The enemy may
have known you well enough to give you your dream world, but his
effort wasn't quite good enough to do the job. If he really knew you,
you wouldn't have been able to bring yourself to leave."
"I hadn't thought of
that," she answered with a frown, her stare now directed inward.
"He knows me somewhat well, but not well enough to really hook
me. And that should mean he's underestimating me, which in turn
should mean I have a better than good chance to find his mistake. How
does that sound to youT
"Not like a
rationalization, if that's what you were asking," Bariden
replied. "As a matter of fact, I was wondering why I wasn't more
tempted by this place than I actually was. One answer could be that
he doesn't know me that well either, and is therefore underestimating
the both of us. Or mistaking what will really touch us. In either
case, our chances of winning free look better now than they did five
minutes ago."
"Even with that Spell
of Volition in place," Chalaine agreed. "Since the gate is
just beyond that door up ahead, why don't we stop here to have our
meal? Or did you want to go straight through and stop once we're in
the next place?"
"I think we'd better
stop now," Bariden decided, eyeing the door at the far end of
the hall. "If we just keep going we might find ourselves in
another version of that first world, snow all around, no shelter, and
no magic."
"Good point,"
she agreed, then turned away from him, thought for a moment, then
raised one hand and spoke her spell. A table and two chairs appeared
in the middle of the breezeway, the table covered with a large number
of dishes. The chairs looked extremely comfortable, and when Bariden
made sure to seat her before taking his own place, he saw an amused
smile on Chalaine's face.
"Is something funny?"
he asked as he sat. "If there is, I could use hearing about it."
"It's nothing,
really," she answered with a shake of her head. "Just
something I discussed with Lord Naesery on the last world. It's pure
silliness, but I have something that isn't. Your comment about what
we might find beyond the gate has given me pause."
174
"Given you paws?"
he asked, immediately looking at her hands. Then it came to him what
she'd meant, and he started to laugh. When she looked at him
questioningly he explained the misinterpretation, which let her join
him in the laughter. Bariden found it a beautifully plose moment, but
Chaiaine must have been born without a romantic bone in her body. As
soon as she stopped laughing, she was right back to the original
topic.
"So far, we've been
through one world without magic and two worlds with it," she
said, holding up three fingers. "In the first world I was warded
and you weren't, and that worked out to your benefit. In the second
world you also weren't warded, but it turned out you needed to be.
Here, in the third world, the warding I gave you turned out to be
absolutely essential. Any guesses on how it will stand on the other
side of this gate?"
"Sure," he
answered, reaching for the pitcher filled with a cold soft drink.
"Either I won't be able to survive without warding, having it
will give me trouble, or I won't need it at all. Drink?"
"Yes, thank you,"
she responded absently as she nodded. "And you're right. The
next world will most likely be one of those three choices, but we
won't know which until we get there and then it might be too late. I
think we should do something about it before we go through."
"Like what?"
Bariden asked, replacing the pitcher and raising his now-filled cup.
"How can we know in advance what we'll—wait a minute. I
just had an idea, but you could be way ahead of me. Were you trying
to say you already know about variable warding?"
"I've never heard of
it," she answered with a frown. "What's variable warding?"
"It's something I
heard about from a friend," Bariden told her, seeing no reason
to mention that ReSayne was a fiend. "My friend is in touch with
a demon who spends its time with a young wizard, and the wizard's
specialty is unSeen magic. But the wizard also works with adapting
ordinary spells, and she came up with warding that does more than
simply vary in strength of response. Her spell for warding is like
not having any warding at all, unless you happen to need it. Then you
get only as much warding as
THG HIDDGN
175
you need, adapting and
varying according to circumstance, and it's also voluntary. If you
don't want your defenses set off, they won't go off."
"There when you need
it, not there when you don't, and not there at all if you don't want
it to be," Chaiaine summed up with brows high. "That sounds
like quite an improvement over automatic, preset responses, but why
would your friend tell you about it? You don't use ordinary warding."
"That's why my friend
told me about it," Bariden said with a smile. "My friend
thinks I should be warded, and doesn't understand why I usually don't
agree. But this sounds like the perfect time to try that spell, and
I'd like you to use it, too."
"Why?" she
asked, her big dark eyes showing faint puzzlement. "What do you
think is wrong with my normal warding? I do have it keyed to intent,
after all—"
"Which didn't help at
all in the first world," Bariden reminded her. "It brought
you something instead of protecting you from that something, and I
don't want that happening again. Unless, of course, you like the idea
of it happening again ..."
"All right, point
taken," she said, holding both hands up as she made a face at
him. "I doubt if I'd get that composite again, but the way
things have been going the next one would be worse. How does that
spell go?"
Bariden produced a piece
of paper and a stylus, then wrote out the spell while Chaiaine
removed her warding from him. He spoke the spell while she studied
what he'd written, felt something settling around him, then watched
her speak the spell. He wasn't able to detect anything after she was
through, but most warding wasn't visible to the naked eye anyway.
"How do we find out
if the spell worked the way it was supposed to?" Chaiaine asked,
obviously thinking along the same lines he was. "If I pick up
this cup of mousse and throw it at you, my lack of intent to do
serious harm might leave the warding unactivated."
"If you throw that
cup of mousse at me and it hits, we'll then be able to test your
warding," Bariden responded darkly. "And you won't have to
worry about any lack of
176
intent, that I promise
you. If you insist on thinking about mousse, forget about testing."
"Whatever you say,"
she responded with a heavy, theatrical sigh that didn't quite hide
the glint of devilment in her eyes. "Warding isn't supposed to
work against the nonmagical anyway, but if the spell turns out not to
work against magic either, don't forget who refused to talk about
testing."
Bariden muttered a
wordless response before joining her in helping himself to the food,
but he wasn't really annoyed. As a matter of fact it was all he could
do not to grin, but he didn't dare encourage her. He was absolutely
certain the new warding would not stop mousse thrown in fun, and he
didn't need to confirm it the hard way. The close, warm feeling
between them had come back, and this time Chalaine wasn't chasing it
away. He'd kick himself later if he did the chasing because of a
faceful of sticky pudding.
The meal was delicious and
the company silent but pleasant, but eventually it had to end.
Bariden wondered briefly why they hadn't been disturbed by anyone in
the palace, but wasn't in the mood to go back and find out. If he ran
into King Graff and was told he could stay even if it was Chalaine he
married rather than Tenillis... No, he was much better off not being
faced with that sort of temptation.
When they both stood,
Chalaine banished the table and chairs. Right after that she spoke a
spell, and when Bariden heard it he realized immediately that it was
an excellent idea. She'd turned her clothing variable, directing that
it be heavier in cold weather and lighter in warm, an idea she must
have gotten from the new warding spell. He realized then that he was
still in his reception finery, so he replaced it with his usual
breeches and boots, altered to fit the same spell.
It wasn't far to the door
that hid sight of the gate, and it wasn't hard to construct a bridge
from the balcony to the gate. As he followed Chalaine along the
bridge, Bariden concentrated hard on what he expected the next world
to bring. A way for them to break loose, of course, but also an
opportunity to get even closer to Chalaine, He needed a chance to
take her in his arms, and show her just what
TH€ HIDDEN
177
being near her did to him.
He visualized that as he moved forward, promising himself that it
would happen—and then the gate flared wide and let them enter.
This time neither of them
hesitated going through and, unsurprisingly, once again there was
just a single point for them to exit from. They stepped through the
new gate, Bariden, at least, expecting the same sort of countryside
they'd found until then—
But this time they were in
a city, specifically in a back alley, and not far away someone was
screaming.
CHAPTER MIM€
w,
herever that alley was it
stank, the smell so bad it even seemed to dirty the darkness around
us. And the air was cool enough to make my clothes thicken in
response, just the way they were supposed to do. But that scream made
me wonder if my new warding would be equally as effective, not to
mention making me aware of the heavy feel of magic in the air.
Somebody strong had been working in that city, and not just in one or
two places ...
"It's coming from
that way," Bariden said, and I suppose he gestured in the
direction he meant. It was too dark to see more than a thickened
shadow of him, and that despite the closed gate hanging in the air
behind us. Under normal circumstances I wouldn't have expected to
find even a closed gate in the middle of a city, but "normal
circumstances" said it all.
I saw Bariden's shadow
form begin to move toward the end of the alley, and followed along
with an unvoiced sigh. He was going looking for the source of that
scream, but would never consider it also looking for trouble. I
should have resented the fact that he seemed to believe it was all
right for him to do the things he didn't want me doing, but for some
reason I couldn't get angry. He was so—honest and open about
his opinions and prejudices,.. and he'd actually taken my side
against that Tenillis female. I still didn't quite know what to think
about that...
"Over there, past
that narrow intersection," he said, and this time when he
pointed I could see the gesture. The
178
179
buildings around us were
on a narrow back street and were mostly of old wood, but a couple of
them had torches in sconces not far from then- doors. What I could
see of the signs above the torches said the places were taverns,
definitely of the sleazier sort I toyed with the idea of creating
enough tight to let us see what was going on, but after a moment
decided against it If we were going to tell the world we were mere,
we'd certainly find a better time later on.
Bariden headed straight
for where the screams were coming from, and I was right with him. As
we got closer we could see five or six people standing around
watching something on the ground, and once we reached the group the
something turned out to be a man. He was screaming and rolling around
as though in a lot of pain, but even the dimness couldn't mask the
fact that there didn't seem to be anything wrong with him. His
clothes looked to be a shade better than average for that
neighborhood, his brown hair didn't reach much below his shoulders,
and at some time that day he'd been clean-shaven. But he was still
screaming in pain, and the next minute we found out why.
"Hey, Dal, what's
happening?" a female voice asked, and then two women came up to
the man apparently named Dal. The women were wearing low-cut gowns
with slits in the skirts as well as too much face makeup, and the man
was a hefty sort almost as tall as Bariden. He also wore a truncheon
tucked into his belt between leather trousers and a light cotton
shirt, and he shrugged at the woman's question.
"What's happening is
mat fool opened his mouth one time too many," he said, sounding
more disgusted man upset. "He came into the place about an hour
ago, and as soon as he had a drink hi his hand he started to ask
questions. How long has the king been a wizard? How many high-level
sorcerers does he have under him? Does he guard the palace only with
magic, or does he also have men stationed in some places? The only
thing he didn't ask about was the last time somebody came by to
challenge the king with magic."
"Or what spells the
king has set up to let him know when new challengers show up,"
the woman added, also
18O
in disgust. "But even
though he didn't ask it, he got part of an answer anyway. I bet he
thought he was too well warded for anything like that to happen, and
was real surprised as soon as he stepped outside."
"These down-country
fools are all alike," the man Dal said, shaking his head. "As
soon as they reach high-level sorcerer, they head for the nearest
city to challenge the king. They never understand how big a step it
is from where they are to wizard level. Or that those of us who live
here don't use nothing but permitted magic because that's the way we
want it. Maybe after spending the night screaming in pain he'll start
to understand."
"Isn't there anything
anyone can do for him?" Bariden asked, drawing the man's bored
attention. "I'm new here myself, and I've never seen something
like this. Can't anyone help him?"
"Only if they want to
share what he's getting," Dal answered with a glance for me.
"Touch him and you join him, and that means with hands or magic.
He's learning a lesson now that could save his life, and the king
doesn't want that lesson cut short. Without it the country kid might
just go ahead with his challenge, and then the king will have to
smear him. The king doesn't like smearing anybody he doesn't
absolutely have to. It's a waste of his valuable time."
"I see," Bariden
answered, and I, at least, could tell he didn't see at all. Giving
someone extreme pain simply for asking a few questions—the man
on the ground could have been thinking about working for the king
rather than challenging him, and he would have asked the same things.
If Bariden decided to try helping the man anyway, I knew I would back
him up without the least hesitation. But rather than do that he took
my arm, and we joined most of the other watchers in slowly drifting
away.
"We may have been too
hasty in simply stepping through that gate," he murmured after a
moment, the people we'd walked away with having taken off in their
own directions. "This place isn't going to be easy to accomplish
things in."
"Or pleasant while
we're trying," I murmured back, still able to hear the
screaming. It also seemed that certain of
HiDt>en
181
the stinks were following
us, as though delighted to have found places they hadn't spread to
yet. "Are you sure you don't want to try to do something for
that man? Maybe if the two of us work together—"
"Then the two of us
could get caught," he interrupted with a headshake. "If not
by that little trap, then maybe by another. I think you know me well
enough to believe I want to help that man, but fighting blind against
an unknown wizard's spell isn't the best way to do it."
Seeing the strained look
on his face and getting a glimpse of the anger hi his eyes told me
something else as well. Walking away from someone who needed help was
one of die hardest things Bariden had ever done, and also probably
die most painful. It was another couple of points to chalk up against
our enemy—as if we needed more things to blame him for.
"So what do we do
now?" I asked, looking around at the narrow street that was
taking us toward a wider one. "Leave the city, or stay here and
hope we can figure out where to go next without breaking a law? I
have no idea which would be the better move."
"Neither do I, but
since we're already here we should look around before leaving,"
he said. "We also don't know what it takes to get in and out of
a city in this world, and if we leave we may not be able to get back
in. Or, for that matter, they might not let us leave without trouble
in the first place. What we need is a room at an inn, preferably an
inn with a talkative landlord."
Now that sounded like a
good idea, at least as far as getting information on that world went.
I had my own ideas about where the next gate was, and also about
whether or not an entry spell would work. Those were two things we
really needed to talk about, but not out there on the street.
The wider street we
reached was the start of a better neighborhood, and more people were
out and walking around. Most of the women wore long dresses or
skirts, but every now and then there was one in breeches. The men
wore simple shirts and pants and coats, and quite a few had swords.
Those who were armed seemed better dressed than those who weren't,
and they didn't hurry quite as much. But
182
9HARON GR€€M
no one stopped to
socialize with anyone else, and a general mood of Hghtheartedness was
conspicuously absent.
Bariden spotted a place
called The Horseman's Inn and headed us toward it, but I happened to
look down the block and across the street. The establishment there
was called The Travelers' Hostel, but I hesitated a long moment
before pointing it out.
"I'm glad you saw
that," Bariden said when I did. "It's potentially exactly
what we're looking for, a place that will be used to strangers and
their questions. But—why are you looking so uncertain?"
"Because we can't
trust coincidence in this trap, and that's all we're running into,"
I explained, wishing I could take an end of my hair to chew. "As
soon as we got to this world, we happened to find a man who was being
punished for breaking a law. We wouldn't have known that that's what
was happening, except that someone standing around happened to
explain the situation to someone he knew. Now we're looking for a
place it might be safe to ask questions, and I happen to see an
establishment called The Travelers' Hostel. What do you want to bet
we'll find out everything we need to in there?''
"You mean everything
we're supposed to," he answered in disgust. "That isn't
quite the same thing, and you're absolutely right. We're being herded
in a specific direction, and as long as we keep following that
direction we don't have a prayer of breaking loose. Let's bolt to the
right instead, and see what happens then."
"They can solve that
problem easily by not having any rooms available," I said,
stopping his first step toward The Horseman's Inn. "In fact, we
might not be able to get a room anywhere but where we're supposed to
be. Why don't we try something that's not quite as straightforward as
trying to get a room."
"I don't know if I
trust that look in your eyes, but I can't see any way out of asking,"
he told me warily. "What have you got in mind?"
"It has nothing to do
with mousse, so you can relax," I reassured him with a grin.
"What you ought to remember is that we just saw something very
upsetting, and I'm a poor little female who's having trouble handling
it. After all, we
HIDD€M
183
haven't been in the city
long and therefore don't understand its ways, which means I really
need some place to sit down, and probably could use a fairly strong
drink ..."
"You know, I hadn't
remembered that," he said with a delighted grin, then suddenly
grew very concerned. "You poor little thing, you must be
absolutely torn up over having seen that awful sight. I think we have
to find you some place to sit down so you can pull yourself together,
and maybe even get you a bracing drink."
By then his arm was around
me to help hold me up, and I was so deeply touched by what I'd seen
that I really did have to lean on him. I also had a hand to my mouth,
but I couldn't quite manage to turn pale. It looked like I'd have to
settle for acting pale, and hope that did the job.
Bariden coaxed and urged
me through the front door of the three-story inn, and I clung to him
in perfect poor-tittle-thing fashion. The innkeep, a tall, thin man,
appeared almost magically in our path, and understood the situation
immediately. He led the way to the left of the door into his common
room, fussed in concern while Bariden got me seated, then sent a
serving girl for a pot of tea and some cups.
There were at least a
dozen other people in the common room, and four of the men and one
woman came over to see if they could help. Considering the atmosphere
of the city that was really nice of them, and Bariden handled it all
beautifully. When the innkeep asked what was wrong, he sighed and
patted my shoulder.
"We saw something
pretty terrible," he admitted, sounding open and honest and a
lot younger than usual. "I have to tell you, if she hadn't
broken down first, I might have done it myself. We've been dreaming
about coming to the city for years, maybe even being good enough to
earn a place with the king, but now that we're here—our first
day, and we have to see something like that."
I moaned a little to help
him out, privately pleased that he'd spotted the people in the room
who were Sighted. There seemed to be quite a few Sighted in that
world, and every one of them would have known us to be the same.
Mentioning that we'd hoped to take service with the king was a nice
touch, and might even encourage someone to
184
SHARON GK€€M
THG HIDDEN
185
tell us why it was or
wasn't possible.
"You still haven't
said what that was," the innkeep pointed out, his rather high
voice working to be soothing. "It couldn't have been a crime and
wouldn't have been an execution, so maybe it was an accident."
"No, it was a crime,"
Bariden hastened to assure the man, running a hand through his long
blond hair. "A man was rolling around on the ground and
screaming, and we came up to the crowd watching him in time to hear
something about his wanting to challenge the king. He was being
punished for that, but all he did was ask some questions. / was going
to ask some questions, but now I don't think I dare. All I want to do
is take service with the king, but what if someone thinks I mean to
challenge him? What would happen to me is bad enough, but what would
become of my woman? She and I mean to marry as soon as I've found a
decent position, and we were hoping she might be accepted too..."
He let it trail off,
wisely not suggesting we were certain I'd also be accepted into
service. Two young people from the country might be naive enough to
think a woman had as good a chance as a man, but that might not be so
in the big city. If the king was narrow-minded and old-fashioned, the
only sorcerers he would take into service would be male.
"You really are
newcomers, aren't you?" the innkeep said with an indulgent
chuckle. "And you have to be from the real boondocks if you
don't already know—Well, suppose I start from the beginning,
eh?"
Bariden and I both nodded
eagerly, encouraging his feeling of indulgent superiority. When
people feel they're better than you are, they don't often hold things
back. Everything they tell you shows how good they are, and people
who react that way want to look very good.
"To begin with, you
don't have to worry about the king's spell," he said, looking
back and forth between Bariden and me. "I'm not a magic user so
I don't know exactly how it works, but it always knows the truth. If
all you want is information, you can ask a million questions and
nothing will happen. If you're really after a challenge, one question
is all it takes."
"Intent!"
Bariden exclaimed in revelation, pointing at the innkeep. "I'll
bet that's what it is, intent. If all you want is information, your
intent is innocent. But if you've got something else in mind ..."
He let the words trail off
with a Significant Look on his face, letting the innkeep know he
really did understand. The thin man smiled like a proud and indulgent
father, and all but patted Bariden on the head.
"That sounds just
right," he told him in approval. "So you see, you and the
little girl have nothing to worry about on that score. Now, as far as
taking service with the king goes, you happen to be in luck there.
Once a week the king holds a competition for newly arrived magic
users, and the winners of the competition get to face one of the
king's sorcerers. If you win against the king's man, you
automatically get to take his place. But if you lose, you don't
necessarily have to go back where you came from. If you lose well
enough, you'll be taken in as a Sorcerer's Apprentice. Your luck
shows in that tomorrow is the day the competition is being held."
"That is lucky,"
Bariden agreed, duly impressed. "But mere must be an awful lot
of magic users coming to the city if they hold a competition every
week."
"There are usually a
fair number," the man said, this time looking to the others
standing around for nods of confirmation, which he got. "Not so
many that you'll be trampled in the crowd, but enough to make a
contest of it. But how many show up isn't the reason for holding the
competitions weekly. It costs a lot more to live here in the city
than it does out in the country, and the king doesn't want a bunch of
flat-broke magic users hanging around for a monthly competition.
Something like that would be bound to cause trouble, so the king
doesn't let it happen."
"The king sounds so
smart" I ventured timidly, but definitely in awe. "Now I
really hope I can take service with him. I'll be able to join the
competition tomorrow too, won't I?"
"You couid if you
wanted to, little girl, but in your place I would think it over,"
he told me, and now he was being paternally serious. "If a man
tries and loses, the worst thing mat can happen is that he gets sent
home in disgrace. For a
186
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girl, though, and
especially a pretty girl like you—if you're defeated by a man
who wants you, you have to stay with him and do whatever he says.
Even if it's something that won't let you call yourself a good girl
any more. Do you really want to risk that?"
The emphasis he put on the
word—not to mention his very ominous tone—almost made me
blink. But at least I didn't have to worry about answering. Bariden
did it for me, and in no uncertain terms.
"No, she does not
want to risk something like that," he announced, glancing at me
sternly. "She is a good girl, and that's the way she's going to
stay. But I don't understand. Why would men be allowed to leave, but
not women?"
"Come on, boy, think
about it," the innkeep urged. "When a man enters a
competition he's serious about it, and if he doesn't really qualify
he won't enter. Girls, though ... we know they don't mean to waste
people's time by trying for something they're not qualified to do,
they just tend to be prone to wishful thinking. This way you won't
find many of them entering as a lark, not when they're held to that
requirement if they lose. And you're a man, so you know how men hate
to do anything rough to pretty girls. This way they usually don't
have to."
It was all I could do not
to add that men also tend to hate losing to a girl, but I did manage
to keep my mouth shut. Bariden nodded with enlightened understanding
and agreement, though, then stood and put out his hand.
"I want to thank you
for helping me out this way, sir," he said with sincere gravity.
"No, for helping us out. They told us back home that city people
would never give us the time of day, but I'm happy to say you proved
them wrong. How much do I owe you for this tea?"
The serving girl had
finally brought out a pot and two cups, just in time for me to wish
we'd asked for something stronger. The innkeep, after accepting
Bariden's hand, smiled and shook his head.
"No charge for the
tea, boy, not when you'll be competing tomorrow," he said. "You
and the little girl drink as much as you like, and then you can head
back to wherever you're staying."
THe HIDDGM
187
"As a matter of fact,
sir, we're not staying anywhere yet," Bariden took the
opportunity to say. "Since you've been so nice, the least we can
do is take a couple of your rooms."
"You could if I had
any left, boy," the thin man said as he turned away. "Since
I don't, you can't. You and the girl enjoy that tea."
By that time he was
heading back to his counter near the door, and the other people who
had been listening had returned to their tables. Bariden sat back
down slowly, and his expression was carefully neutral.
"I'll bet there are
rooms at the other place," I murmured as I reached for the
teapot. "And it looks like we'll be able to check on that in a
very short while. If there are more than two cups of tea in this pot,
I'll eat the table."
"Since we're not
paying for it, we can't very well complain," he countered in a
mutter. "I'm just wondering what else we'll find in that other
place. Another helpful conversation between strangers, do you think,
or someone willing to tell us what to do as a favor?"
"Whichever it is, the
thing we'll have to watch out for is whether we're directed to or
away from the palace," I said, pouring tea for both of us. "I'd
be willing to bet it's to, but only if the rules haven't changed."
"You mean you think
the next gate is there, the way it's been in the last two worlds,"
he said, taking his cup but looking only at me. "The chances of
that are excellent, as long as the rules haven't changed. And in the
next place, we'll have to ask about gates in general. If we don't,
someone might notice."
I nodded my agreement with
that, and we drank our tea in silence. It didn't take very long to
finish it, but on our way to the door Bariden stopped near the
innkeep.
"I just wanted to
thank you again, sir, and wish you a good night," he said, then
turned back as though he'd suddenly remembered something. "By
the way, sir, I meant to ask mis earlier. If—I mean when—I
get accepted into the king's service, I will be able to keep my woman
with me, won't I? I mean, I can't just march off somewhere and leave
her all alone. They won't ask me to do that, will they?"
188
"I really don't know,
boy," the man admitted, scratching at his cheek as he thought
about it. "Those accepted into service live and train in the
palace, but—I just don't know. You'll have to ask when you go
to sign up."
Bariden thanked him for
the tenth or eleventh time, and then we were finally able to leave. 1
wondered what he'd been after with his question, but when we reached
the street I saw he was deep in thought. Rather than disturb a
process that might come up with an idea to get us back to where we
belonged, I decided to wait. I could always ask him about it later,
and he'd probably only been trying to strengthen his assumed
character anyway.
Walking down the block and
across the street brought us to The Travelers' Hostel, and by then
Bariden was back from the land of thought and paying attention. We
walked inside to find a fairly plain entrance area in yellow-brown
wood, with a counter to the back and a door in each wall to either
side. Just beyond the door to the right was a staircase leading
upward, and a heavyset redheaded woman in long skirts was just coming
down. Her dress was a dark yellow that might have been meant to match
the paneling, and when she saw us she smiled.
"What perfect
timing," she said, heading directly for an opening in the
counter. "I was hoping no one would have to wait while I was
busy upstairs. May I help you young people?"
"We need rooms,"
Bariden said, closing the door before leading the way to the counter.
"We're new in the city, and thought we should find a place to
stay before we did anything else."
"That was a very wise
decision," she said, reaching for a guest register. "With
all the people in town to watch the competition tomorrow—you do
know about the competition, don't you?"
"Whatever it is, I'm
sure we'll have time to find out about it tomorrow," Bariden
answered, sounding totally uninterested. "What we really need
right now are rooms."
"Well, I have to say
I thought you were already registered for the competition when you
walked in here," she said, pausing in her checking of the guest
register to get really friendly and chummy. "You are a magic
user, after all, and
189
magic users your age
rarely come to the city for any other reason. You see—"
"How do you know he's
a magic user?" I interrupted, not about to just let that pass.
"Are you Sighted yourself, and that's why you can tell?"
Since I knew she wasn't
Sighted, the question was far from idle. She hesitated a very brief
moment, and then she smiled winningly again.
"No, dear, I'm not
one of the lucky ones," she answered, then shifted her gaze back
to Bariden. "But I've come to know the look of them, and this
young man certainly has it. And I associate with so many of them,
I've learned more about magic and those who use it than most. That's
why I was saying—"
"If you know so much
about magic, then maybe you can answer a question for us,"
Bariden said, taking his turn at interrupting the woman. "Has
anyone ever mentioned how close the nearest gate is? And I don't mean
city gates. What I'm interested in are gates having to do with
magic."
"I've never heard
anyone mention anything like that," she answered at once, all
eagerness again. "If there was such a thing, the best ones to
ask would be the sorcerers at the palace. And if you happen to be
going there anyway—"
"Excuse me,"
Bariden interrupted again. "I know it's rude to keep cutting you
off, but the lady and I are really tired and would appreciate those
rooms. Tomorrow, after we've had a good night's sleep, we can all sit
down together and talk."
'Tomorrow at breakfast,
then," she grudged after a moment, trying not to look too
disappointed, then returned her attention to the register. She looked
through it, checked it a second time, then made a sound of annoyance.
"Bother! I didn't realize it, but I'm afraid there's a problem.
The afternoon clerk rented out more rooms than I'd thought."
"You're out of
rooms?" Bariden asked, exchanging a surprised look with me.
Personally I was more than surprised, since that wasn't the way we'd
expected the game to go.
"Not completely,"
the woman answered with a headshake. "There's still one room
left, and it happens to be a double. If you and the young lady know
each other well enough to
19O
travel together, maybe you
won't mind sharing a room for a night?"
The way she looked at
Bariden was mild and very bland, but it was perfectly clear the next
move was up to us. He glanced at me for the second time and I raised
my brows to show I didn't understand either, but that seemed to help
him make up his mind.
"If that's the only
choice we have, we'll take it," he said to the woman. "How
much do 1 owe you?"
"A silver piece,"
the woman answered, still playing bland. "That covers the room
and either supper and breakfast, or breakfast and lunch tomorrow.
Prices are always higher the night before a competition."
The woman really was
persistent, but Bariden ignored the dangling hook and reached into an
inside pocket of his swordbelt. The silver piece he produced was a
trade coin, blank except for the stamp of a tiny scale exactly in the
center of the obverse. That was supposed to tell anyone it was
offered to that it should be checked for full weight before being
accepted, but the woman didn't seem to know that. Or simply didn't
care. The coin disappeared after she'd given it no more man a glance,
and in its place she offered a key.
"Top floor, second
door straight ahead on your right," she said, this time with a
smile. "Rest well."
"Thank you,"
Bariden answered as he took the key, his arm around my shoulders men
guiding me toward the stairs. We kept silent as we climbed to the
third floor and found our room, and a moment later we were inside.
After Bariden snapped his fingers to light a lamp, we could see that
the room was slightly larger than average, with a big double bed, a
settle, and an armchair. The bed was to the right of the door, and
since it was a corner room, there were windows both opposite the door
and to its left. Beyond the bed on the right wall was another door,
possibly leading to a bathing room that would be shared with the room
next to ours. The dark yellow drapes and carpeting weren't exactly
shabby, the curtains and bed linen were almost white, and the quilts,
armchair, and settle were just short of a rich brown. Not exactly
luxury, but it could have been worse.
TH€ HIDD€M
191
"So now we know they
do want us to go to the palace," Bariden said after shutting the
door and glancing around. "And they don't want us in separate
rooms. Do you have any idea why that would be?"
"No more than about
why they also want you in the competition," I said, walking over
to the left to sit on the settle. "Unless you want to count the
expression that woman was trying to cover. When she said, 'rest
well,' it was almost as though what she really meant was, 'have fun.'
I find it very difficult to believe mat our enemy is trying to
matchmake. Maybe there's a law against unmarried people sharing a
room."
"And the woman just
forgot to mention it to us," Bariden said with a nod as he
removed his swordbelt, put it on a nearby table, and sat on the other
end of the settle. "But that doesn't make much sense. If some
official in this city decided to arrest us, who would bother to ask
if we'd really done something? And not just bother, but have the
nerve to?"
"And if they really
do want you in the competition, why make it impossible by having you
arrested?" I contributed. "For that matter, we could have
been taken as soon as we stepped through the gate, even though that
might have proven difficult. We are both strong magic users, after
all, so maybe they were just being cautious. Or maybe it's something
else entirely, and we can't see it because we really don't know
what's going on."
The whole situation was
annoying, and it needed a lot more than casual guesswork. It was time
for some serious analytical thinking, and I do that best with a cup
of coffee in my hand. As I'd done so often lately, I spoke the spell
to create one, wrapped my fingers around the handle when it
appeared—and men screamed with the pain shooting through my
hand. It was terrible, as though I'd picked up a small ingot of metal
hot from a forge, and it was all I could do to fling the cup away. It
hit just beyond one edge of the dark yellow carpeting and shattered,
splashing coffee in all directions.
"What happened?"
Bariden demanded, suddenly right next to me and reaching for my hand.
"Let me see that, Chalaine. Cradling it against your middle
won't do any good."
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GR€€M
Cradling the hand might
not be doing any good, but that was all I was up to just then.
Intense pain radiated out of it in waves, so strong it was making me
sick to my stomach. Tears had formed in my eyes, my throat seemed
capable of producing no more than moans and whimpers, and I couldn't
stop rocking back and forth. From the way the hand felt I really
didn't want to look at it, but Bariden refused to understand that.
"I said, let me see
it," he insisted, his tone harder than it had been. "I
can't do anything to help if I don't know what the problem is."
"The cup," I
whispered, struggling to be coherent through continuing agony.
"Hotter than Hellfire ... must have burned ... all the way in
... going to be sick ..."
"Chalaine, I'm not a
true healer," he said, right hand now against my forehead. "I
need a visual scan in order to do anything, so you have to let me
look at it. I promise to be as careful as possible, and you can close
your eyes. That's probably the best idea, so you go ahead and close
them. I'll do the looking for both of us."
At another time I might
have complained about being babied, but having a hand that feels
seared down to the bone can change your mind about a lot of things.
Rather than argue any more I did close my eyes, then let him move the
hand. He did it gently with his grip above my wrist, and then he was
silent for a moment.
"You're not going to
believe this," he said after the moment. "I thought your
spell might have been just enough off to cause too much heat, and
since I wasn't listening, it was perfectly possible. Now, though ...
Chalaine, there's nothing wrong with your hand. It isn't burned at
all."
He was right about my not
believing him, and before I stopped to think about it I'd opened my
eyes. From the way my hand felt it should have been ruined, charred
black all the way down through the red of exposed flesh and the white
of bone. Instead it looked just the way it always had, except for the
curl of fingers into a claw because of the pain ...
"That... isn't
possible," I whispered, fighting to clear my mind enough to
think. "The pain ... it's still there!"
193
The look in the light eyes
staring at me was pure confusion, liberally laced with frustration
and helplessness. There was nothing wrong with my hand but I was
still in agony, and there didn't seem to be a way to stop it. Then
Bariden's expression changed, and he turned his head fast to look
past me at the cup I'd dropped.
"Maybe—maybe
that's it," he muttered, and then he raised his own hand in a
banishing gesture. The broken cup and every drop of coffee
disappeared, and then—so did the pain! Oh, I still felt an
aching through my hand and arm, but that was just an echo of abused
nerve endings. As soon as they settled down ...
"What is going on
here?" I demanded weakly. "The pain has stopped, but I
don't understand what you did."
"What I did was make
a lucky guess," he said, urging me to rest my head against him
until I got some strength back. Strong pain can be exhausting, and he
seemed to know that. "Everyone keeps saying how many magic users
there are in this city, but business is still going on as usual. That
combination wouldn't be usual, unless there are some very special
circumstances. Do you remember what that man said, the one who knew
about the questions the screaming man had asked? It was something
about permitted magic."
"Yes, I do remember
now," I said with a frown, forcing myself to lean away from him.
There is such a thing as being too comfortable. . . "He also
said something about it not being the decision of the people in this
city to use nothing but that. There has to be a spell prohibiting
everything not authorized."
"And creating your
own food and drink has to be high on the list of forbidden things,"
he agreed, letting me go with what seemed to be reluctance. "The
unSighted here have to be able to make a living, and if the Sighted
provide for themselves in most things, that won't happen. Are you
sure you're feeling strong enough to sit alone?"
"In another minute or
so I'll be fine," I assured him, already gently flexing my
fingers. The muscles hurt from bracing so hard against the pain, but
that would be gone soon, too. "So when I called up that cup of
coffee, I was breaking the law. How did you know that banishing
194
9HARON
what I'd created would
also end the prescribed automatic punishment?"
"As I said, I didn't
know, I was only hoping." His smile was more relieved than
satisfied, and his hand came to smooth my hair. "We were told
intent makes the difference here, and it wasn't your intention to do
this hostel out of its rightful income. You simply made a mistake,
and correcting that mistake showed you'd learned your lesson. It
might not be as easy to get out of trouble a second time, but
apparently first mistakes are dealt with rather leniently."
"That wasn't my idea
of lenient," I assured him, feeling the urge to shudder at
memory of what I'd gone through. "But now I think I understand
why that woman who registered us didn't bother to check the silver
you gave her. If the coin wasn't up to full weight you would have
known it, and knowing it would have made your intention one to
defraud. If you didn't immediately fall down rolling and screaming,
you were obviously honest."
"I just thought of
something else," he said, even as he nodded his agreement. "The
warding we've got protecting us—either passive spells don't set
it off, or we're not as well protected as we expected to be. Right
now I'd rather not guess which."
"It's possible I'll
be warded against a passive spell next time, but I'd rather not test
the theory this second," I said, leaning my head back on the
settle. "I've never been in a place where magic users aren't
free to do whatever then-skill level allows, and I don't like it. I
also feel as if I'm not considered trustworthy enough to abide by
whatever rules this place has without coercion, and that I certainly
don't like. If someone had bothered to say something, I would have
ordered that coffee from the kitchen rather than calling it up."
"But not everyone has
your sense of right and wrong," he told me, leaning just a
little closer. "Magic users are just as good or bad as anyone
else, and a certain number of them would still do as they pleased no
matter what the rules were. And you forget we're supposed to know the
rules, even though we don't. You're not being considered
untrustworthy, Chalaine, no one alive would think of you as that"
TH€
195
The last of his words had
come out in a murmur, and the next moment his lips touched mine in a
gentle kiss. By rights I should have stopped things there and at the
very least pushed him away, but I suddenly discovered I couldn't do
it. I wanted him to kiss me, as much as I wanted to kiss him back,
and as soon as I did, his arms were around me. He pulled me close and
held me tight as we tasted each other thoroughly, but after a pair of
moments he pulled his head back to frown at me.
"I'm suddenly hoping
very hard that there are no laws against people who aren't married
sharing a room," he said. "What we discussed earlier about
being arrested— it's occurred to me that arresting people is
unnecessary, when breaking the law brings immediate punishment. I
don't know if I have the right to ask you to try."
"But we're already
sharing a room and nothing's happened," I pointed out, trying to
tease away the worry in those very light eyes. "Are you saying
you don't consider me worth taking a risk for?"
"I never said
anything like mat and you know it," he countered, now looking at
me with a sternness that was trying to slip into a grin. "If
that's what I was worried about, I'd make you sleep in the hall.
Which I may have to do anyway. At this point I'm fairly certain I'll
never be able to trust myself."
The urge to grin had left
him, just as if he were the only one involved. And he'd also let me
go, which was doubly annoying.
"Hasn't anyone ever
told you the facts of life?" I asked, sitting straighter on the
settle. "Making up a girl's mind for her is rude, whether you do
it by attacking her or by bowing out gracefully. Since I'd supposedly
be a full participant in whatever you originally had in mind, I'm
entitled to a say in whether or not we try it. Or am I just making
foolish assumptions, because your plans were based on solitary
actions?"
"Why are you angry?"
he asked in turn, part of my annoyance touching him as well. "Of
course you were a part of my plans, but that's just the point. They
were my plans, and I have no right to put you in jeopardy because of
them. And I thought women liked a man who considered
196
WAROM GK€€M
HIDDGM
197
them before himself.
You're making my concern sound like a crime."
"There's a big
difference between concern and unilater-ally deciding what's best,"
I returned, then realized I was wasting my time. "I know you're
probably used to being in charge of what goes on around you, but you
should have noticed by now that I've gotten used to the same thing. I
think we'd better call it a night and get some sleep. With the
competition being held tomorrow, it's bound to be a big day."
"All right," he
agreed, settling on that after starting to say something else and
changing his mind. "I suppose this isn't the best of times to
argue opposing philosophies. But we do have something that needs to
be discussed before we turn in. We'll head for the palace right after
breakfast tomorrow, and see if it's possible to get in without
becoming involved in the competition. Somehow, I doubt it."
"I have the same
feeling," I agreed reluctantly, moving to the edge of the settle
but not standing. "If everything happening is aimed toward that
competition, they'd hardly leave so big a loophole."
"And that means we
have to come up with a plan that will keep us together," he
said, leaning forward to stare down at his folded hands. "I
intend besting whoever I have to face even if that isn't part of
their plan, which means I'll end up being admitted to the palace.
What will we do if they try to say I can't bring my woman in with
me?"
"So that's why you
asked that innkeep the question," I said, finally understanding.
"You were anticipating a possible problem. But don't you see,
that shouldn't be a problem at all. I also intend besting whoever I
come up against, so I'll have my own invitation into the palace."
"What do you mean,
whoever you come up against?" he asked, raising those eyes to
look directly at me. "Since you aren't entering the competition,
you won't be coming up against anyone."
"Of course I'm
entering," I said with a small laugh. "I didn't press the
point with that provincial innkeep, but I'm not about to let childish
threats keep me from doing what I have to. For all I care, they can
threaten to saute me with onions if I lose. I don't intend to lose."
"Neither of us
intended to get trapped in a circuit of strange worlds, but it
happened anyway," he countered, his tone and stare a good deal
sharper. "What happens if you do lose, and you're forced to pay
the price? I think it's safe to say you won't be able to overcome the
spell that's designed to uphold that law, so what will you do?"
"What do you think?"
I asked with a snort. "If I can't get out of that stupid
penalty, I'll have to pay it. Since I'm not an innocent child it's
hardly likely to kill me, even if it turns out to be distasteful in
the extreme. But maybe it won't be distasteful, maybe Til like it. At
least I won't have a partner who's worried about breaking the law."
He stiffened at that, but
I wasn't sorry I'd said it. For a man who was supposedly so
interested in me, Bariden was awfully easy to discourage. It looked
very much as though he thought he should be interested, so that was
the way he acted even if he actually felt differently. He was doing a
good job fooling himself, but not quite as good fooling me.
"You also would not
have a partner who cared about you," he said very flatly after a
moment. "No matter how easy you try to make it sound, letting a
strange man use your body can't be a lark for any woman. But you
won't have to worry about it, because it's not going to happen. I'll
be the only one of us entering the competition, and we'll find
another way to get you into the palace."
"Really," I
said, getting slowly to my feet to look down at him. "And how do
you expect to stop me from entering? If I needed anyone's permission
the innkeep would have said so, and he didn't. Are you in the mood to
test out my warding after all?"
Rather than answering
immediately he also stood, which then made it necessary for me to
look up. Because of that he might have been expecting a lessening of
the belligerence I'd been showing, but if so he was disappointed.
I've never backed down from someone bigger than me in an argument or
fight, and I never will. Just to make sure he understood that, I also
put my fists on my hips.
"Do you have any idea
how tempting you make the thought of cold-blooded murder?" he
asked then, his voice nearly a growl. "No matter what I say to
you, you consider
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SHAftOh GRGGN
it a personal insult or a
flat-footed challenge. Or a comment that can be ignored because
you're convinced I don't really mean it. How am I supposed to make
you understand that I don't want you to do certain things because I
care about you? I'm not trying to run your life, I'm trying to save
it!"
"Is that because
lifesaving is a hobby of yours, or because you don't believe I'm
capable of doing the job myself?" I countered at once. "Of
all the lame excuses there are, 'I'm doing it for your own good' is
the worst. Why don't you do us both a favor, and find someone else to
protect. I'm not the kind who appreciates that sort of thing."
I turned my back on his
frown of confusion and walked away, too upset to let that
conversation continue. Every time he tried to make it sound as if I
really meant something to him, all he proved was that he was doing
his duty to someone smaller and more helpless. If he'd really felt
anything for me he wouldn't have found it so easy to pull back after
that kiss, using me as an excuse for his worry. It was himself he was
worried about, which he wouldn't have been if things were the way he
claimed ...
I headed for the door that
should lead to the bathing chamber, silently cursing the attraction /
felt. If I didn't pay attention to what was happening we might never
get out of that trap, but all I could think about right then was
light blue eyes, blond hair, broad shoulders, muscled arms, a wide
chest—Thoughts going in that direction would never lead to
escape, and I suddenly understood why only one room had been
available. Too bad they hadn't realized what they were dealing with
where Bariden was concerned ...
I snapped my fingers to
light a lamp in the bathing chamber, then closed the door firmly
behind me. If—no, when I got out of there and found the one who
had done that to me, not even the possibility of his being a wizard
would save him. Or her. Or it. I sat down on the tile floor and
closed my eyes, intending to wait until Bariden was asleep before
coming out. It would be better if I stayed away from arguing with
Aim, but I pitied whoever I'd face in the competition tomorrow. With
the enemy out of reach I needed a substitute to practice on, to show
just how I felt about what was happening. And I would show it, no
matter
The
199
how skeptical my gallant
traveling companion continued to be...
Bariden stood staring
until Chalaine slammed the door to the bathing chamber, then he
closed his eyes and rubbed them with the fingers of one hand. He had
no idea what had just happened between them, except that it hadn't
been an example of the closeness he'd been hoping for. One minute
they'd been a step away from making love, and the next—
"I just don't
understand her," he muttered, sitting back down to let out a
long, slow breath. "How can it be a crime to care what happens
to her?"
Nothing in the way of
answers came in a blinding flash, which left Bariden exactly where
he'd been: floundering in confusion. If he'd ever refused to touch
Miralia because he was worried about her, she would have been
delighted. Chalaine had come down insulted instead, and had all but
drawn a line on the carpeting and dared him to step over it For such
a pretty little thing, she could be incredibly belligerent...
And it was obvious she
still didn't believe his feelings for her were real. Or was back to
disbelieving it. For a while things had gotten so much better, and
then they'd come through to that world. He'd sometimes wondered what
it would be like if most people were Sighted rather than not, but
hadn't managed to picture what it would have to be like. Laws against
unauthorized use of magic, laws to protect the unSighted and their
businesses, all of it brought about by wizard-strength spells. And
the wizard, who was also king, needing to protect himself from
constant challenges for his position...
That had to be why there
were also constant competitions, he told himself as he stretched out
his legs. Take the best coming forward and assimilate them, put them
in a position where they can either learn loyalty to the present
ruler, or be watched closely if loyalty was beyond mem. It wasn't a
life he himself would have enjoyed, especially if he were the king.
The need to decide what could and couldn't be done, what should and
shouldn't be allowed ... and who would or wouldn't be admitted into
service ...
QOO
"What reason could he
possibly have for making that rule about women?" Bariden
muttered, his gaze drifting to the door Chalaine had closed between
them. The innkeep's reason, that women didn't take competition as
seriously as men, was ridiculous. If anything, women who competed
took things more seriously, and any man who didn't understand that
usually ended up getting plowed under. Bariden could remember a few
he'd taken weapons training with; most of the women had worked harder
and had gotten to be better than most of the men they'd started with.
If it wasn't the same with magic, there wouldn't be as many female
wizards as there were.
No, there had to be
something else involved, and Chalaine was about to walk into it with
both eyes shut tight. She'd been told, in effect, to be a good little
girl and mind her own business, so naturally she'd immediately
decided to prove just how good a little girl she really was. She'd
done the same thing two worlds back against that magician, but here
the stakes were so much higher...
And there was nothing
Bariden could do to stop her, even if what he wanted to do was knock
her down, sit on her, and make her listen to reason. They were
dealing with someone who knew them, so her reaction might not only be
expected but actually planned for. He'd have to mention that
tomorrow, and hope she'd be calmed down enough to listen. Otherwise .
..
Otherwise she could end up
having no choice about giving her body to some stranger. Bariden knew
he'd never be able to stand by and just let that happen, not even if
it meant killing the other man to prevent it. No matter what she
claimed, the Chalaine he was coming to know would be hurt by needing
to do something like that, and he refused to let anyone hurt her. And
that was probably the reaction they were expecting from him, which
closed the circle nicely. And most likely into a noose, which would
then be around both their necks.
Bariden spent a few
minutes cursing softly, but it didn't do any more good than he'd
expected. They were headed ever more deeply into the trap, with
nothing in sight that could possibly be a way out. And he still
hadn't managed to convince one small girl that he really cared about
her.
THG
QO1
He was covering himself
with more glory every time he turned around, but he didn't know how
to stop it or change it. How did you make a girl believe you were
serious about her? Present her with a sworn statement to that effect?
Write bad poetry for her?
Bariden sighed as he
stretched out on the settle, leaving the bed for Chalaine to use. The
settle wasn't long enough for him, but he'd manage to make do. He'd
need as much sleep as he could get if he'd be competing tomorrow, and
there wasn't much doubt about that. He and Chalaine both . .. even if
he would have to kill someone if she lost. . . when all he wanted was
her, smiling at him and telling him she foved having his arms around
her... she was so different, so special . . . why, of alf the women
in the worlds, was she able to resist him so easily . . . ? Maybe
tomorrow he'd ask . . .
CHAPTER T€h
T
. he next morning had only
one thing in its favor: by having breakfast brought up to their room,
they avoided the conversation they were supposed to have had with the
redheaded woman. Bariden felt stiff from having slept on the settle,
and although Chalaine had been in the bed when he'd awakened, she
didn't look as though she'd had a much better night. They took turns
bathing before getting back into their magically freshened clothes—a
preset spell they'd both had the foresight to use—and for the
time they washed and ate, not a single word was exchanged. While they
were still at the table Bariden decided to change that and began to
speak, only to find Chalaine doing the same thing at the same time.
"I'm sorry,"
Bariden added at once to the confused silence they'd also begun to
share. "I didn't know you wanted to say something. Please go
ahead."
"I think there's a
law that requires me to insist that you go first," she told him
with a faint, wry smile. "In spite of that, though, I'm going to
accept your offer. What I have to say should be said first."
He nodded to encourage
her, but she paused to sip at her coffee before bringing her gaze
back to him.
"About last night,"
she said, sounding as though she were forcing the words out. "I've
been thinking, and I've come to the conclusion that I owe you an
apology. If I'd been the one who didn't want to have sex and you'd
made comments about the decision, I would have been up in arms
QOQ
THG HIDDCN
QO3
with outrage. The plain
truth is, it doesn't matter why you refused. I should have
accepted—and respected—the fact that you did, rather than
give you a hard time over it. I apologize, and promise not to let it
happen again."
"I don't believe you
said that," Bariden stated, feeling the next thing to stunned.
"There's not a woman anywhere who would look at it like that—!
Chalaine, this time you have to listen to me. Not taking you to bed
was one of the hardest things I've ever done, and if the choice had
been mine it never would have happened. If not for this stupid world
and the fact that we have to find a way out of it, there would have
been nothing for us to argue about. Or at least I hope there would
have been nothing."
He grinned in an effort to
lighten the heavy unhappiness he could see in her, but the smile she
responded with was still on the faint side.
"There probably
wouldn't have been arguing as far as the sex was concerned," she
answered, toying with a crumb on the table. "I think we find
each other physically attractive enough that we'd be satisfied. But
that's not to say we'd have nothing to argue about. I'm still
entering the competition today, and that's something I won't be
changing my mind about."
"Woman, you have to
be the stubbornest being in the entire universe," Bariden
growled, instantly filled with insult and outrage. "And you get
me so crazy, I don't even know which idea of yours to argue first. If
you did so much thinking, you should have spent some of it on our
situation."
"What's that supposed
to mean?" she began, obviously getting ready to bristle up, but
Bariden didn't care to be interrupted.
'To start with," he
plowed on, "I haven't taken a woman to bed for sex since I was a
boy. What I expected to do was make love, and with a woman who means
something to me. If all I wanted was sex, there are more than enough
women around willing to give it to me. I'm scarcely so hard up that I
have to take advantage of the woman I happen to be trapped with."
She parted her lips to
interrupt, but Bariden still wasn't ready to let it happen.
QO4
"In the second place,
you seem to have forgotten the discussion we had about the enemy
knowing us," he ground out. "We decided he doesn't know us
as well as he thinks he does, but how well does that have to be to
know how you get when you feel talked down to? If you're not expected
to enter the competition no matter what anyone says, there's nothing
in these worlds you are expected to do. Go ahead and argue that."
She hesitated a moment,
apparently considering what he'd said, then shook her head.
"Your idea is an
interesting one, but it doesn't hold water," she counterstated.
"Most of the time when people challenge me, either I ignore it
or else I agree with whatever they're using to start the argument.
That usually stops the disagreement on my terms, and leaves them with
a win that's as far from satisfying as you can get. Would you like to
tell me how that fits into what you said? It's not quite the same
point of view."
Bariden took his turn at
thinking for a moment, but what she'd said was true. Getting
belligerent wasn't her usual way of responding to things, which left
him with even more of a problem.
"Now I really don't
understand," he admitted, leaning back to frown at her. "I'm
as sure as I can be that your entering the competition is a trap, but
it doesn't fit in with the way you usually act. Even Bena mentioned
your habit of winning arguments by refusing to argue, so what's all
this supposed to mean? Could the enemy have been watching us, and set
this up in response to the new way you've been acting?"
"That would be giving
the enemy more credit than I believe he deserves," Chalaine
answered with a headshake, sipping at the last of her coffee.
"Personally I think I'm supposed to play it safe and not enter,
and only afterward would we discover that I wasn't allowed to enter
the palace with you. That would give us a good-sized problem, and one
we might not be able to think our way out of."
"Especially if they
have it set up that anyone accepted either goes along with them on
the spot or not at all," Bariden grudged. "That would
really set the icing, but it doesn't explain my feeling. If the trap
lies in your not
THG HIDD€h
QO5
entering, why do I stil!
feel so strongly that that's the last thing you should do?"
"Maybe because it's
the last thing you want me to do," she told him gently and
almost with pity. "Bariden, I'm sure you do care about me as a
companion in this mess, but you're trying to make yourself believe
your feelings go beyond that. You've told yourself you're a man who's
deeply interested in a woman, and what man in that position wouldn't
worry about the woman's safety? You seem to believe that the more
worried you are, the deeper your feelings have to be. Isn't it
possible that that's where any personal trap lies, in your reactions
rather than mine? Don't most people know how you prefer to think and
act with the women you become involved with?"
Her dark satin eyes
refused to let his go, at least until he answered her questions.
Bariden toyed with the idea of getting up, walking out, and finding
someone to get into a serious fight with, but that wasn't the time to
indulge in basic pleasures.
"All right, so maybe
people do know how I like to think about and act with women," he
allowed with no grace whatsoever. "That has nothing to do with
the fact that I'm not telling myself all sorts of fairy tales. I do
know how I feel about you, and all the gentle disagreement in this
world or any other won't talk me out of it. Without that main point
your theory falls apart, so where does that leave us?"
"Still chasing our
tails," she answered with a sigh as she stood. "Why don't
we take a break from it by asking some of the questions we need
answers to. If any of the answers don't turn out as expected, we may
find that loophole we've been looking for. And the next time using
personal magic isn't against the law, remind me to call up a
hairbrush. This braid has already put permanent knots in my hair, and
it can only get worse."
She threw the braid in
question over her shoulder, then headed for the door. Bariden, about
to offer to buy her a hairbrush, abruptly understood that she'd
surely refuse to allow that. They only had a limited amount of money
with them, and if they spent it on nonessentials and then couldn't
leave that world, they'd have no opportunity to make more.
<2O6
GReert
When you're forbidden to
call up a cup of coffee, you're certainly not going to be allowed to
produce gold or silver. Banden cursed that world under his breath—not
to mention what was proving to be a pitiful lack of foresight on
their part—and then followed her out.
They were able to leave
the hostel without running into the redheaded woman who was probably
the hostler, and once they were out in the streets the crowds quickly
swallowed them up. Even at that early hour it seemed as if the entire
city was awake and on the move, but the moving part didn't work very
well. Bariden's questions about the location of the palace got him
directions, but he and Chalaine had to fight their way through the
throngs to use them.
Once they got close enough
to their destination, the crowds started to thin. Only a handful of
people seemed to have business at the palace, and none of them were
Sighted. Bariden and Chalaine stood and watched for a few moments,
taking the time to study the square and blocky building. Most palaces
were like Bariden's father's, light and beautiful or dark and
beautiful, but at the very least beautiful. This palace, though ...
"It looks like it's
made up of nothing but dungeons," Chalaine remarked, almost
reading his mind. "Those five steps leading up to the central
doors may stretch all the way across the front, but they look more
like a barrier than a means of ingress. It's all so—gray."
"And a medium gray at
that," Bariden agreed in a murmur. "Maybe it's meant to
discourage people, to lead them to believe there's nothing inside
that anyone could possibly want. Magic users are as vulnerable to
suggestion as anyone else, so the effort would serve a double
purpose."
"Yeah, to keep out
all undesirables, magic users as well as thieves," Chalaine
muttered back. "I'm not welcome in there, and the feeling isn't
my imagination."
"No, it must be
another spell," Bariden agreed, still studying the large gray
edifice. "I feel the same thing, and there's no doubt to the
impression. I wonder if we'll be able to make it over to talk to one
of those guards."
Chalaine inspected the
four or five guardsmen visible from where they stood, as though
measuring the distances between them. The guardsmen were positioned
just in front
TH€ HIDDGM
QO7
of those barrier steps,
about thirty feet separating one from the next. Far enough apart to
keep them from having conversations, close enough for each of them to
support any of the others.
"We'll know if we can
make it over to them once we try," she answered, then turned a
little to take Bariden's hand. "You be the big, brave contest
entrant, and I'll be the poor little girl just tagging along to keep
you company."
"There's a chance
they might suspect something if we do it the other way around,"
Bariden murmured as he got ready to lead the way. "For some
reason most people refuse to think of me as a poor little girl."
The glance she sent him
said he wasn't amusing, but in full truth Bariden hadn't been trying
to be. He wasn't the one who had made the laws in that city, but
every now and then Chalaine treated him as if the entire situation
was his fault. He might have done the same if the situation were
reversed, but that didn't make unearned blame any easier to live
with. Bariden felt abused, and that wasn't something he enjoyed
having to deal with.
There was a wide stone
approach between the last of the shops and buildings and the place
where the guardsmen stood, and Bariden led Chalaine across it slowly.
The spell telling them they were unwelcome grew gradually stronger,
so by the time they reached the guardsman Bariden had chosen, they
were both sweating with effort. The easiest thing would have been to
turn around and go back, but then they would have had to do without
their answers. Chalaine's hand tightened its grip on his before they
were halfway there, but even when they reached the guardsman she
still hadn't said a word.
"Excuse me,"
Bariden said to the guardsman, fighting to act as if nothing was
trying to tear him into small pieces. "I understand there's a
competition that's going to be held today. Can you tell me where
entrants sign up?"
"Entrants sign up
right here, starting at two this afternoon," the guardsman
answered lazily, all but drawling. The look in his dark eyes said he
knew Bariden was suffering, an idea that was vastly amusing to him.
"Competition starts at three on the dot, and any not here have
to wait until next week."
QO8
SHARON GR€€h
"Three o'clock on the
dot," Bariden echoed with a nod. "And those entrants who
win the competition and are accepted into the king's service—they
can bring their fiancees into the palace with them, can't they? I
mean, if their fiancees have nowhere else to go?"
"Winners don't even
get to bring in wives, not until after they get through the first of
their training," the man answered after a short pause. He also
looked Chalaine over hi a way Bariden didn't care for, and then the
man grinned. "If you win and don't have anywhere to leave her,
come and see me. I'll take real good care of her for you."
"What about simply
visiting the palace?" Chalaine asked before Bariden could
stiffen all the way in insult. "Are there times when people are
allowed in just to look around and see where the king lives?"
"It's none of
anyone's business where the king lives, honey," the guardsman
answered, his eyes moving over her as he spoke. "But even if
people were allowed in, your boyfriend wouldn't be one of them. He'd
have to get past the spell first, and it gets a lot worse before it
gets better. If he really means to enter the competition, you'd
better get him away from here now. If you don't, he won't be in any
shape to so much as light a candle."
The man's expression under
his round metal helmet was bland, but his eyes were still showing
that enjoyment. He wore boiled leather armor with patches of ring
mail, a sheathed sword and dagger, and leaned on a glaive. His
attitude said Bariden's magic couldn't touch him, and Bariden's sword
wasn't even to be considered. Bariden thought he was wrong on both
counts, but before he could say so Chalaine tugged on his hand.
"Sweetheart, I'm sure
the nice man knows what he's talking about," she said in a voice
that proclaimed her to be young and not very bright. "If we want
everybody to see what you can do, we'd better get you away from here
now and to a place where you can rest. We've been enough trouble, so
let's go."
Her hand squeezed his with
the word "trouble," reminding him that they still didn't
know all about how the law worked in that place. If he did the wrong
thing he could trigger a
TH€ HIDDGN R€AIM
QO9
protective spell, and that
might be the end of his effort to get into the palace.
But he couldn't just turn
tail and run away, not and still have any respect for himself. That
guard had been laughing at him ... Bariden straightened where he
stood and locked eyes with the man. All knowledge of what the
exclusion spell was doing to him was banished from his awareness,
leaving nothing but the central core that made him what he was. He
started at the guardsman, showing the man what sort of potential
opponent he'd been toying with, and the guardsman suddenly lost his
amusement. When the man swallowed hard, almost ready to retreat from
the stare, Bariden was finally satisfied.
"Thank you for your
help," he said softly with no inflection whatsoever, then turned
and led Chalaine away. It was all he could do not to run back to
where he'd be out of range of the exclusion spell, but he managed to
keep himself to the same slow walk he'd used approaching. Rather than
stop where they'd stood before, he continued on until they were
around the corner and only then did he pause to slump against a wall.
"I'll say,"
Chalaine agreed, matching his slump with her back to the same wall.
"They must change the range of that for the competition,
otherwise I can't imagine there ever being a competition. And I hope
you feel better now."
"Better about what?"
he asked, resting most of his weight on his right shoulder, which in
turn rested against the wall.
"Not better about,
better than," she corrected, looking up at him with curiosity.
"You and that guardsman both knew you couldn't make trouble, but
he still let you back him down. You didn't like it when he teased you
about looking after me, but after he backed down you seemed to feel
better than you had. Considering how much trouble we could have been
given, I also hope the effort was worth it."
"You're not by any
chance scolding me, are you?" Bariden asked, suddenly very
amused. "You must be forgetting I'm the one who does the
scolding, just as I've always been. I never had to be scolded even as
a child."
"A strange thing
happens when you stop being a child," she returned dryly,
folding her arms. "People change, only
Q1O
sometimes they're the last
to notice it. The way you behaved just now was not like someone who's
never even had a scolding. You just about threatened mat guardsman,
and you enjoyed doing it. Would you have enjoyed it as much if it had
caused us to be stuck here?"
"You are scolding
me," Bariden said with a laugh, suddenly realizing it wasn't for
the first time. Back home he'd always had to be so careful not to do
anything wrong, not even to do anything someone might possibly
consider wrong. He was a prince of a well-respected house, but too
capable a prince when you considered that he wasn't his father's
heir. The rumors about him had always been filled with fear, so he'd
had to go out of his way to be absolutely correct It would never do
to make people really afraid of him...
But that was just what
he'd done with that guardsman, and he'd done it on purpose. He'd
demanded respect and he'd gotten it, but the act of demanding had
felt better than the respect. It was a freedom he'd never been
allowed before, a freedom everyone else in the worlds seemed to take
for granted. Never mind what other people think, just go ahead and do
what's right. Rely on your own judgment and trust it...
"Would I have enjoyed
it if I'd caused us to be stuck here?" Bariden echoed her last
question with a smile. "No, I wouldn't have enjoyed that sort of
an outcome, but since it didn't happen let's not worry about it. And
I've decided you're absolutely right, you do have to enter the
competition. I still don't like the idea and you'd better make damned
sure you don't get hurt, but we've been given no choice. If we don't
get into the palace—legitimately!—and find that gate,
neither of us will stay out of trouble long enough to get an eventual
chance. We move fast, or we won't find it possible to move at all."
"If you're saying
that just to get out of a scolding, consider the effort a success,"
Chalaine told him with her brows high. "I'll admit I never
expected you to change your mind, but I'm very glad you did. It's
been clear from the start mat we have to cooperate to get out of
this, and cooperation between us hasn't been easy yet."
TH€ HIDDEN RGALH9
011
"I have a feeling it
will soon become a lot easier," Bariden assured her, then pulled
her to him for a quick kiss to which she didn't have time to react
before he released her again. "And now you can take me back to
the hostel for the rest I'm supposed to be getting, which you'll join
me for. We have an appointment for this afternoon, and we don't want
to be late."
He grinned as he held up
his hand for her to take, and wasn't surprised when she ignored the
hand and simply started back to their temporary quarters. Her
beautiful dark eyes had gotten even wider than usual from the kiss
he'd given her, and she didn't seem to know how to react to what he'd
done. Well, that was all right. He'd gotten a very interesting idea,
more of a theory, really, but if he turned out to be right she'd have
a good deal more to be startled about. Yes, a good deal more, and
she'd never be able to say she hadn't asked for it...
When we got back to the
hostel we stopped in the dining room for coffee, Bariden's
suggestion, which was more like an order. I didn't argue, and not
only because I needed the coffee even more than usual. In less than
an hour the man had somehow changed, and I was still trying to figure
out in what way. And that kiss he'd given me—even the one we'd
shared the night before had somehow been mild in comparison...
"We'd better spend
some time thinking up individual strategy," Bariden said after
the coffee had been put in front of us and the serving girl had left.
"This time we'll be facing equals or superiors, so we'd better
be prepared."
"They'd better not be
much superior, or we'll be in trouble," I pointed out after
sipping from my cup. Strangely enough the coffee in that world was at
least as good as what I usually called up for myself, which was one
small high spot among a forest of lows. It didn't help all that much
to know I'd have what to drink if we ended up stuck there.
"I was once told by a
wizard that where magic is concerned, attitude counts almost as much
as skill," he answered, folding his arms on the table in front
of him as he studied me. "If you believe you have no chance
against your opponent you won 't have, even if you happen to be
better than him. Of
019
9HARON GR£€N
course, attitude won't win
a confrontation against someone with a lot more strength, but we
won't be facing that except, possibly, in the final encounter with
the resident sorcerers. But keep in mind that even there we have an
edge. Some people get lazy and sloppy when they consider their own
skill level in comparison to a novice. We're supposed to be the
novices here, so we'll be underestimated. Let's take all the
advantage of that we can."
I nodded to show I
understood what he was talking about, and in actual truth I wasn't
all that worried about whoever I would face. At Conclave you're
sometimes given the chance to measure yourself against the stronger
wizards, but not just for fun. At the end of the encounter the wizard
usually whaps you good, but you come away having learned something.
What I really had to guard against was being the fool who stepped
forward filled with ov^rconfidence. . .
"So there you are,"
a delighted female voice said, and then the redheaded woman was at
our table and sitting down. "For a while I thought you might be
avoiding me."
"After you've been so
nice to us?" Bariden countered with a smile, answering the coy
charge that had been aimed solely at him. "I'd never do anything
like that, at least if I could help it. The girl and I had to go out
early this morning, but now we're back and ready for that
conversation."
"And just in time,"
the woman said with a smile as she leaned toward him. "There's a
competition being held this afternoon that you have to enter,
otherwise your visit to this city will be over and they'll ask you to
leave. At least I'm assuming they'll ask you to leave. You are
sorcerer strength, aren't you?"
"Yes, it so happens I
am," Bariden agreed with raised brows. "But why would that
be the cause of their asking me to leave? Even if I miss the
competition, I don't have any plans to break the law."
"But that's just the
point," she said with a certain amount of anxiety. "If you
stay past the time of the competition without entering, you will be
breaking the law. People of sorcerer-level skill and higher aren't
allowed to stay in the city for more than a day and a night. If they
stayed longer they might make trouble, and the king doesn't like it
when people make trouble. Since you got here last evening, your
HIDDGM
013
day and a night is up this
evening. If you haven't entered the competition and won, you have to
be gone by then."
Bariden exchanged a glance
with me, probably thinking the same thing I was. The innkeep from the
night before had said something about how expensive it was to live in
the city for a week. He'd said that right after telling Bariden how
good his luck was, because he'd arrived the day before a competition.
He hadn't said anything about it being illegal for sorcerers to stay
in the city, and when you came right down to it, who else would be
entering the competition? Those with lesser skill would certainly
lose, so why would they bother? And the woman also hadn't mentioned
there would be another competition in a week ...
"I hope you don't
mind my asking this," Bariden said to her, "but why are you
so concerned? You don't know us, so why would you care if we did get
thrown out?"
"Now that's a
question with an interesting answer," the woman replied with a
sudden grin. "It also happens to be the reason I was able to buy
this hostel. There will be a lot of betting during the competition, a
lot of gold and silver changing hands. If you happen to know more
about a particular contestant than everyone else, the gold and silver
moves to your hand. The last time I felt this way about someone and
bet on him, I won enough to buy this place. This time I could make
enough to pay my taxes for a year and have this place redecorated.
But I'll only win it if you compete, because I know you'll win. Will
you believe me enough to take the chance?"
She was looking at him
with such earnestness it was difficult to (&sbelieve her, which
was obviously the way it was supposed to go. If we hadn't known she
was telling us only what she wanted us to learn . .,
"You know, all this
talk about a competition for sorcerers has made me curious," I
said, forcing her to shift her attention from Bariden. "What
exactly will my friend get if he does win? If it's good enough, I
might decide to enter myself."
"If you like wasting
your time, go right ahead," the woman said with a shrug and a
neutral smile. "What a man wins in the competition is a chance
to be trained to work with the king, the best place there is below
being
014
CHARON GReer)
king. A woman, though—the
king doesn't think much of women, so if one of them happens to win,
he rides her until she gets disgusted and leaves. Even if she doesn't
leave, she isn't taught much and doesn't ever move up in rank. I've
heard from one or two who tried it that a job as a chambermaid would
be a better deal. So what do you say, good-looking? Are you going to
make an effort to move into the palace?"
The last, of course, was
addressed to Bariden, and he smiled faintly as he leaned back.
"I'll have to think
about it for a while, but I'll probably go for it," he conceded.
"What time is this thing, and how do you register for it?"
"The competition
itself is at three o'clock, but you have to be there to register by
two," she answered, now excited as well as delighted. "I am
so glad you're being sensible, and just to prove it, I'll place a
small wager for you. It won't hurt you to have a few extra coins in
your pocket while you're training. You go upstairs now and get some
rest, and I'll have you called in time to eat lunch before you leave.
Come on, now, take that cup with you and go."
Bariden let her chase him
out of the dining room, and I, naturally, went with him. The room was
to the right of the front door as you enter, so we turned right again
when we left and went up to our room. As soon as we were inside
Bariden finished his coffee, put the cup aside, took off his
swordbelt, then stretched out on the bed.
"After spending the
night on that settle, I can use a couple of hours of comfort,"
he said, moving a little to maximize that comfort. "I'm also
going to be thinking about attack strategy, and you might want to do
the same. Unless you've changed your mind about entering."
His words weren't
precisely a question, but I still shook my head.
"Not after hearing
our friend with the red hair describe what a good deal it is," I
said as I sat in a chair. "Her entire attitude was calculated to
kill any interest I might have in competing, especially since I'm not
the crusading type. If someone makes it clear I'm not wanted
somewhere, I usually leave and don't go back. If we hadn't asked some
questions before listening to her, I probably would have
TH€ HIDDGN REALMS
215
shrugged and sat back to
wait for you to win."
"Which I probably
will do," he said, tucking his hands behind his head. "I
don't expect it to be easy, but if I show even moderate creativity I
should have very little trouble. At mat point we would be forced to
separate, something they've been trying to accomplish all along. Want
to bet that if I tried to refuse going into the palace alone, I'd
permanently lose the chance to go in at all?"
"I never bet against
a virtual sure thing," I said with a grimace. "Then we'd be
left with the choice of plowing through that exclusion spell, or
giving up and settling down here. I'm not too crazy about either
option."
"If there wasn't
important, unfinished business behind us, I doubt if I'd mind one of
those choices," he murmured, but when I looked at him sharply
his eyes were closed. "But why settle for just the cake when you
can have it and the icing as well? Get some rest now, and try to do
some thinking."
I didn't comment aloud on
what he'd said, but one point came clear immediately: with what he'd
given me to think about, I wasn't likely to get much rest
I ended up stretching out
on the settle for a while, but wasn't even nodding when the knock
came at our door. I opened it to find a housemaid bringing the news
that lunch was ready, and by that time Bariden was up and stretching.
The housemaid went back down and in a few minutes we followed her,
but lunch was very quiet. Bariden seemed lost in his thoughts, I
tried to avoid mine, and the redheaded woman was nowhere to be seen.
As soon as we were through
eating, we headed back to the palace. There were fractionally fewer
people in the streets, so we were able to get through them with less
trouble than that morning. I was also able to look around a little
more, specifically at the buildings and shops. For the most part they
were fairly well maintained, but it was obvious the maintaining was
done with elbow grease rather than magic. Which was, after all, in
keeping with the way tilings worked around there. Repairing your
building or shop with magic would put manual laborers out of work, so
magical repairs must be illegal. If a building fell because the
repair
016
wasn't done right, well,
that was a small price to pay for not needing to find manual laborers
a new line of work, wasn't it?
People were already
beginning to line up along me approach in front of the palace steps,
but they took care not to get in the way of anyone trying to sign up
for the competition. Two tables had been brought out and arranged
about ten feet away from each other, and two clerk-types sat behind
each one. The table to the right had a man in front of it signing
something, so Bariden led the way to the table on the left. The
exclusion spell had been withdrawn from the approach, so we had no
trouble getting over to it.
"I'd like to enter
the competition," Bariden said to the man who looked up first.
"What do I have to do?"
"Just give us your
name and sign the release," the man answered with a fault, cold
smile. "After that, whatever happens is up to you. Or to whoever
you're matched against."
The other man, seated to
that one's right, joined the first in smiling at the clever remark.
The two looked very much alike, thin, brown hair and eyes, ascetic
narrowness to their faces, long-fingered hands that were somehow more
threatening than graceful. I had the feeling they were constructs
rather than actual human beings, and that was perfectly possible.
Constructs have no choice about how they'll act and react, and
sometimes that's just what you want.
Bariden supplied his name
for the second man's list, then leaned over to sign the piece of
paper pushed forward by the first. I had an idea about the purpose of
that release, but didn't say so. If I was right, I'd find out soon
enough.
"I'm also here to
enter," I informed them as soon as Bariden was through signing.
"My name is Chalaine."
"A pretty name for a
pretty girl," the first man said with nothing of the
complimentary in his tone. "Entering the competition is your
right, as long as you thoroughly understand what will happen if you
lose. Do you understand?"
"If I lose, my
opponent wins me," I answered with a shrug. "But that's
something to consider only if I lose. And what happens if a woman
loses to another woman? If the winner isn't interested, is the loser
off the hook?"
The man I was talking to
actually went blank for a moment, telling me he wasn't a man. He was
a construct,
The
217
and as such couldn't
handle the silliness I'd thrown at him. Rather than handle it he
ignored it, at the same time producing another wintry smile.
"If you understand
what can happen, then you won't mind agreeing to it in writing,"
he said, sliding forward a fresh release form. "Once your
signature is on this there's no backing out, so consider what you're
doing very, very carefully."
"Can a man back out
once he signs one of these things?" I asked, reaching for the
stylus. "You didn't mention the point to Bariden."
"Men understand that
they're committing themselves completely when they sign their name,"
was the haughty answer. "Women often have trouble with the
concept, and that's why it's explained."
"Tell that one to
someone who'll believe it," I answered with a snort, tossing
back the stylus I'd finished using. "That release routine is
being used to make people uncertain and unsure of themselves, to
rattle them before the competition. It's a process of elimination
that has nothing to do with magic, only with how much confidence you
have. The men aren't told that because simply demanding a signature
is enough to reach the nervous ones. Women are told, but right after
emphasizing how much they have to lose. With them, it's that
combination you use for rattling purposes."
The construct's face went
blank again, then he picked up my signed release and gestured to our
left.
"The waiting area for
entrants is over there," he said in a voice that greasily
anticipated disaster for both of us. "You're committed now, so
all you have to do is wait for it to start."
Bariden took my arm and
headed us toward the indicated area, then murmured, "If that
last comment doesn't prove what you said, nothing will. I wonder how
many kids they send back to the farm with that routine."
"Most of the ones who
would do badly anyway, I would imagine," I answered in a
matching murmur. "Probably most of the ones with the greatest
amount of imagination as well. That last group is probably the one
the king wants to chase away. Get rid of those who could come up with
a
018
good idea for taking over,
and half your self-defense efforts see to themselves."
"You forgot to
include the women on your list," he said. "Get rid of most
of the women applicants, and you've gotten nd of the majority of your
most determined competition. Determined and ruthless. Look at that.
They seem to expect us to stand up for an hour."
I glanced at the large
square that was marked off with metal standards at its four corners,
and there was nothing else. Bariden had been right about our needing
to stand, but that wasn't what I was thinking about. When he'd
mentioned ruthless women, he'd sounded downright approving. Was that
the sort of women he really liked, ones who were determined and
ruthless?
If there was a more
ridiculous question I could have wasted my time with, the following
hour wasn't when I found it. Bariden and I were the first to step
into the square with the man from the other table right behind us,
but we didn't just stand there the way we were probably supposed to.
With one hand on his sword to keep it out of the way, Bariden folded
into a sitting position on the ground. I considered that the best
idea I'd seen in a long time, so I promptly followed his example. The
man who was our third hesitated for a moment, but then made it
unanimous by joining us.
Our numbers slowly
increased over the next hour, and those who made it to the square
followed our example by sitting down. A guard officer came by to
check his men at their posts, and for a moment I thought he would
come over and yell at us for not standing. Then he must have realized
who he was about to yell at—a large group of sorcerer-level
magic users who were being given permission to use their skill
freely—and abruptly thought better of the decision. The
incident was faintly amusing, but that was as good as it got.
"I estimate about one
out of every four changes his mind at the signing table,"
Bariden said abruptly, when the hour was almost up. "Since we
have almost twenty entrants here, they certainly don't hold these
competitions just for show. If the numbers today are typical, they
must almost have to beat them off with sticks."
TH€
019
"If most of them
aren't going to be allowed to use their magic, why let them be
trained in the first place?" I wondered aloud. "Wouldn't it
be easier to deal with untrained Sighted?"
"If you were a
Sighted who wasn't legally allowed training, wouldn't you sneak
around or even run away in order to get it?" he countered. "The
Sighted have to be a very large part of the population, which means
they're needed to keep the kingdom running. If most of them disappear
in an effort to get what you've denied them, your kingdom becomes an
untenanted wasteland. You have no choice but to let them be trained,
set the strongest guard spells you can devise, then weed out the best
of the lot to keep them from setting up shop on their own. Or from
coming at you from a direction you're not watching. I wouldn't be
king here for anything you could name. It's a bigger trap than the
one we're in."
"I see what you
mean," I said, and I certainly did. The king would have to spend
all his time watching his back, and that after years of scheming to
get the throne. Anyone who considered that living had to have
something seriously wrong with them; to me it sounded like prison
with no chance of escape.
Another few minutes went
by with two more men joining our group, and then someone stepped out
from between the two tables and walked toward us. He wore silken
trousers and tunic in a silver and bronze, soft black ankle boots,
had light eyes and hair, and was Sighted. He did no more than glance
at the rather large crowd that had garnered, and stopped to speak to
us as though they weren't there.
'Today's entrants number a
round twenty," he announced in conversational tones, looking
around at us as he spoke. 'Twenty people who are sitting when they
should be standing. Do you intend to go through the entire
competition on your behinds?"
His voice sharpened with
the question, and two or three people actually started to scramble to
their feet. The rest were either smarter than those few, or somehow
keyed in to Bariden and me. He and I—and the rest—didn't
move, and the newcomer was amused.
QQO
"A promising group,"
he commented, looking around again at everyone but those who had
stood. "A delightfully promising group. I'm Sarvallo, and we're
ready to begin. Follow me."
When he turned and walked
away we took our time standing, which means at least half the group
was up and after him ahead of us. Bariden didn't seem any more
worried about that than I was, even though the morning's sunshine had
turned to clouds. If it started to rain before the competition got
around to us, then we would have to compete soaking wet. Anyone who
used an umbrella spell would most likely be wasting strength they'd
need.
The man called Sarvallo
took two sheets of paper from the nearer table, waited until everyone
was gathered around him, then started calling off names. The people
he called were directed to the right of the group, to positions
marked by two of the constructs who had been registering entrants. As
soon as a pair was in place facing each other, the constructs moved
to the next position, which was invariably four feet away and ten
feet apart. With twenty entrants there were ten pairs, and I was the
only woman. I was called first to face a husky black-haired stranger
who grinned, and a few moments later Bariden was called to face a big
blond like himself. Obviously people hadn't been called in the order
they'd registered, but whatever order had been used was totally
obscure.
"And now you're all
in position," Sarvallo said when the last pair was stationed,
strolling to the middle of the ten-foot gap. "I think you
already know how this competition works, but I'll cover the important
points briefly. There can be only one winner from each pair of you.
That one will go on to the next stage of the competition, and the
other will go home. Those of you who lose are forbidden to enter
another competition for a year, after which you may try again. The
same rules do not apply to the lady among you, but she's already
aware of that."
My opponent grinned even
wider at that while others chuckled, which made me give in to a very
nasty urge. Instead of ignoring the comment and the reactions it had
brought, I looked at the black-haired man facing me and let a small
smile curve my lips. As a matter of fact I
HIDDEN
001
locked eyes with him,
letting him see how little the added threat bothered me, and his grin
faded slowly away.
"All of you are ten
feet distant from your opponent," Sarvallo went on. "This
distance is more or less arbitrary, but the maintaining of it is not.
Each of you will be allowed one step back from your present position,
but a second step will be the equivalent of outright defeat. You
won't be penalized for forward movement, at least not by us. By now
you should know what happens if the person you're engaged with is
stronger than you and you're too close to them."
What he meant was
"splashing," a backlash of your own spell bouncing off the
warding of your opponent, a nasty surprise for those who don't know
about it. Your own warding may be up to protecting you from the
product of your own magic, but a lot of people never think to include
that in their warding spell. I knew exactly what Sarvallo was talking
about, but an awful lot of the people around me looked blank and
worried.
"When the signal to
begin is given, you'll do well to begin at once," Sarvallo
continued. "Your opponent will certainly be doing so, and there
won't be stopping for any reason after that but winning or losing.
"Also, it's now
necessary to point out something entrants occasionally miss. When you
signed your name after entering this competition, you were
specifically giving your swom word to strive to the best of your
ability to win. If any of you entered just to be able to say you
competed, with no intentions of doing your utmost best, this is your
chance to leave. If you don't you'll be bound by your sworn oath, and
any attempt to break that oath will be harshly punished. After the
punishment will come permanent expulsion from the city, but by then
you probably won't care. Does anyone want to withdraw?"
There was a very small
amount of foot-shuffling, but no one took the opportunity to leave.
That meant we'd now given our sworn words, but with this group the
gesture seemed unnecessary. If I'd ever seen a bunch of people more
eager to get on with it...
Sarvallo nodded without
saying anything, then turned and headed for the left side of the
lines. That had to mean we
WARON
were ready to start and,
in spite of everything, I could feel my shoulder muscles tightening.
Bariden and I had to win, or we could end up spending the rest of
very long lives in a place we would quickly grow to hate even more
than we already did. We had to get out, we just had to ...
CHAPTER eievo
B
ariden watched Sarvallo
walk past him, but in full truth he was watching his opponent more
carefully. During his time in the last few worlds he'd noticed a
tendency in himself to hesitate when it came to using magic in
combat, a tendency he never showed with weapons. That had to be a
result of the disapproval his ability in magic usually produced in
the people around him, but the time for diplomatically soothing
people's fears was over. If he didn't start using his skills in the
right way, the mistake could end up being fatal,
And he also had to push
away all worry about Chalaine. Hesitation had never been one of her
problems, and she was as capable as anyone he had ever met. That in
itself didn't stop him from worrying; only the admission that he
couldn't help her worked the trick. Along with what would happen if
she won and he didn't. He had an idea about what was ahead, and a
suspicion that if he didn't do exactly right they would both be lost.
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo called as he reached the sidelines and turned again toward
them. Some of the people near Bariden twitched, but no one actually
attacked by mistake. Most of them were so keyed up, they'd expend
every ounce of their strength in the first few minutes of the combat.
After that they'd be vulnerable to anything including heavy
breathing, and might even get knocked out of the competition by
accidently coming in contact with something from the combat next to
them. Weapons practice had taught
QQ3
Bariden when to conserve
his strength—and when not to. He'd play it as it came, for once
trusting completely in his overall ability.
"Begin,"
Sarvallo suddenly announced, and more than half the entrants
immediately did just that. Spells were muttered or shouted with'or
without gestures, lightning and thunder flew and crashed, and in one
instance the ground even shook. Bariden, ignoring what was going on
around him, noticed that his opponent was doing as he was and simply
watching. The man seemed ready to defend against anything thrown at
him, but wasn't attacking immediately himself. It could be worse than
bad luck if Bariden's opponent had also thought out a plan beforehand
...
But then the man's
expression changed, and Bariden knew he'd hit good luck rather than
bad. The man, like him, was big and blond but, unlike him, had seemed
to be hoping his opponent would be one to waste his strength in
immediate, all-out attack. When he realized Bariden wasn't going to
be that foolish, his face twisted with fury, disappointment, and
frustration, and he immediately launched his own first attack.
Which wasn't bad as that
sort of thing went. A dozen daggers came flying at Bariden, living
daggers with eyes which attacked by themselves. If they couldn't
reach him they were supposed to drive him back, and the attempt might
have worked with someone else. But Bariden's wizard-formulated
warding was not about to let anything magical reach him, and it had
been years since the last time he'd given ground when attacked with a
weapon. He waited only long enough to be sure the warding was
effective— with Chalaine's safety in mind rather than his
own—and then it was his turn.
Bariden's opponent was
already beginning to speak another spell when Bariden spoke his, a
variation of the enclosing spell he'd defeated Halvin with on the
previous world. Rather than being invisibly enclosed with his own
magic, the man found himself trapped with a swarm of angry
construct-bees and wasps. The enclosure was a lot like warding:
almost impossible to banish or get through because its actual shape
was hidden in invisibility.
THC
QQ5
The man yelled, swinging
his arms as he tried to drive the insects away rather than banishing
them, a reaction Bariden had been hoping for. It's easy enough to
stay cool and in control when "magical" things come at you
in a contest between sorcerers; you are, after all, braced against
that sort of thing. But when it's everyday insects coming at you
instead, habit overcomes training and you sometimes act without
thinking. Bariden's opponent acted without thinking, and that was
what lost him his place in the contest.
Still yelling and swinging
his arms, the man did the only thing his unreasoning mind told him he
could: he retreated from the stinging, buzzing onslaught, just as he
would at any other time. When the retreat proved successful and the
attack suddenly stopped, he was extremely relieved—until he
realized why the attack had stopped. His retreat had taken him three
paces back from his original position, which was more than enough to
disqualify him. His opponent, Bariden, stood with folded arms, calm
in his victory—at least on the outside.
Inside, the victorious
Bariden was almost afraid to look to see how Chalaine had done. What
if she hadn't won? What if she now belonged to a total, uncaring
stranger? What if she hadn't survived to belong to anyone at all . .
. ?
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo said from all the way to my left. As if anyone there wasn't
ready. Another trick to rattle the entrants, and my black-haired
opponent almost fell for it. He pulled himself back just in time, and
even from ten feet away I could see his skin darken in embarrassment.
I'd seen what he'd almost done, and the tightening of his jaw said
he'd make me pay for having that knowledge. What had happened wasn't
his fault or Sarvallo's, but mine, and what a new, unexpected
reaction that was.
At another time I might
have sighed over once again being blamed for something that wasn't my
fault, but right men I was too angry to sigh. It had finally come to
me that letting people blame you without cause made you responsible
for the entire situation. Refusing to speak up in your own defense
made you an idiot rather than a martyr, a coward rather than a brave
but silent soul. And taking what
926
SHARON GR€€M
people felt like dishing
out wasn't good for them either. How were they supposed to grow up,
if you didn't help to discourage them from childish ways?
"Begin,"
Sarvallo said at last, and brother, was I ready. My opponent opened
his mouth and raised his right hand, but I was already speaking the
spell I'd decided on. It was an idea I'd gotten from what had
happened to Bariden two worlds back, with the magician Arnwell. My
black-haired opponent suddenly found himself under attack by pink,
hand-sized monsters that were almost all teeth, the nasty little
things clinging to him the way Halvin's monsters had clung to
Bariden's warding in the last world.
But some of my monsters
were beginning to chew through my opponent's warding, something mat
shocked him away from offense and into defense. His banishing gesture
got rid of less than a quarter of the things clinging to him, and two
or three additional gestures didn't improve on that The things stayed
right where they were, a beautiful rosy pink conglomeration of teeth,
voracious appetites, and nastiness, and millimeter by millimeter got
closer to the man underneath the warding.
Which meant it wasn't long
before the man panicked. He screamed as if imagining those teeth
beginning to chew on his flesh, and began to jump around and brush at
himself in an effort to get free. For a minute I was certain he would
understand what I'd done and come back at me in attack, but it didn't
happen. He jumped around, flapping and screaming, and then my
monsters were gone and it was over. He'd moved beyond the two-step
limit, and had been immediately disqualified.
But just then I didn't
think he minded that. He took a moment to make sure all the monsters
were gone before he wilted where he stood, still not understanding
that he'd been in no danger whatsoever. Most of the monsters I'd sent
at him had been illusions, along with a smattering of
monster-constructs. He'd been able to banish the constructs, but just
as Bariden hadn't been able to banish an illusion without knowing it
for what it was, neither had he. Part of the illusion had been the
monsters' seemingly eating their way through his warding, which made
him believe I was enough stronger mat my monsters could actually do
TH€
QQ7
something like that. It
had never occurred to him that a sorceress would use illusion like a
mere magician, and that was what had made the idea work like a charm.
With my own competition
over I was able to look around, which showed me that more than half
of the contests already had their winners. The majority of those had
people stretched out on the ground, whether unconscious or dead, I
had no idea. My first concern was Bariden, and even as I sorted him
and his opponent out, the other man began to yell. He jumped around
flapping his arms very much like my opponent had, and men he had
flapped himself out of bounds. I hadn't had time to see what Bariden
had done to him, but apparently we'd both gone for forced defeat
rather than blood.
After Bariden's win, there
were only two more contests that didn't yet have a winner, hi one of
them the two men were fighting for magical control of a giant,
two-headed axe, each man standing in his place with fists clenched
and sweat covering him. The axe hovered between the two, quivering as
it inched first mis way and then that, tilting a fraction forward,
and then the same fraction back. As someone who had once been silly
enough to try that sort of thing at Conclave, I knew it couldn't go
on much longer. When you're up against someone of equal strength in a
thing like that, it's no longer a matter of how much you can put into
the effort, but how long you can sustain it.
The man on the far side of
my line lost his concentration first, and then he lost the chance to
ever try again. When no one is mere to control whatever the two magic
users are contesting over, the object goes flying toward the one who
lets go first. I looked away just before the axe edge connected with
the center of the man's face, pretended I didn't hear the chopped off
scream, and didn't look back again.
By that time the last
contest was over, with one of the two having been forced out of
bounds by nothing but the other's strength. The loser had apparently
wasted his own strength early on, and had run dry at the worst
possible time. But at least he was still alive, which a number of
other losers definitely were not.
"We'll now have a
short intermission," Sarvallo announced from his place to the
left, sounding as though we'd all been sitting through a concert. "If
those of you
008
who were victorious will
wait over here, we'll soon have the area cleared for the
competition's next round."
He gestured to a place on
his right, the same place we'd waited for the competition to start,
then walked off toward the constructs who had registered us. Rather
than watching him any longer I made my way over to Bariden, who stood
waiting for me rather than heading for the waiting area as the others
were doing. "You have no idea how glad I am to see you still in
one piece," he said as I reached him, his arm going around my
shoulders. "Obviously your warding stood up all right."
"My warding didn't
get a chance to stand up," I told him as we walked, trying to
ignore that arm around me. "As soon as the word was given I
jumped first, and my opponent wasn't able to get it together again.
How about you?"
"My opponent managed
to get the first spell spoken, but I've always preferred being best
to being first." His amusement was real, and his light eyes
twinkled as he looked down at me. "At least I can report that
the warding worked just the way it was supposed to, which was the
main point worrying me. After that first time, though, there was no
longer a need for it."
"So now we've won the
privilege of facing some of the higher-ups," I said, stopping
with him in one corner of the waiting area. The day was slowly
getting darker and darker, but so far there hadn't been any rain.
"Obviously, we've reached the place where we have to change
tactics. Our next opponents won't be ones we can play games with."
"I think you're more
right than you know," he answered quietly, then gestured with
his chin. "It looks like at least one someone kept close tabs on
the contest."
Both of the things he'd
said were strange, but when I turned I understood the second. Four of
the men on the ground had someone bending over them, but the other
three were simply being carried away. So three of the ten who were
defeated had also died, proving those people weren't wrong for trying
to discourage entrants. If Bariden and I had cared less about who we
stomped over, it could have been five dead ..,
"At least if you
survive, you get to be attended by a healer," Bariden murmured
from behind me. "That's more
HIDD€h
009
than some places would
allow you. I still can't say I like this world, but there are things
about it that could be a lot worse."
"There's one thing
that isn't worse," I said, turning back to him. "I haven't
been able to try an entry spell, and now that I probably would not
get zapped for trying, I can't afford to risk it. If the king happens
to be watching, and he just might be, he could keep us from using the
entry and simply use it himself. If he has anything really special
arranged with his corps of sorcerers, he could do a lot of damage in
trying to take over before he's stopped."
"I hadn't thought of
that," Bariden said with a frown. "It must be hard to
expand to other kingdoms on this world, where you would have to go up
against another wizard and his group already ensconced and waiting.
No, you're right, we can't afford to hand over an unsuspecting world,
and that's assuming your spell would work. If it doesn't, it could
still bring us a lot of unwelcome attention. We'll have to stick with
the plan and find that gate."
"Assuming it is in
the palace, and hasn't been moved to the top of a mountain or the
bottom of an ocean," I muttered, but too low for him to hear. I
was getting more bad feelings about that situation the longer it
continued, but there wasn't any way to hurry it.
This time we stayed on our
feet while they cleared the combat area, but no one in our small
group said anything. The watching crowd took care of making any
comments, and they seemed more in the middle of critical discussion
than in simply watching a spectacle. I had the distinct feeling that
even dying had to be properly done, otherwise the crowd would deduct
points ...
"All right, you may
come forward again," Sarvallo announced when the last of the
wounded was gone and the one patch of blood cleaned up. He was back
to where he'd stood originally, and held a single piece of paper. "As
you can see we had a rather large turnout today, and none of the
contests produced two defeated rather than one, as sometimes happens.
For that reason we're invoking the appropriate rule, and there will
be one more contest between you entrants before you're permitted to
face a palace sorcerer."
Q3O
The only comments came
from the watching crowd, and even they weren't surprised. If the
other entrants weren't protesting, that meant the rule wasn't
brand-new and just made up. But I still didn't like it, not when it
meant even more of a delay, and I glanced at Bariden to share the
feeling. Only then did I notice that he wasn't sharing the feeling,
and in fact looked as though he'd just been proven right about
something. I wanted to ask what that something could possibly be, but
Sarvallo was continuing.
"We'll do this just
the way we did before," he said, gesturing toward the two
waiting constructs. "When you hear your name, go over and take
the indicated place."
The first two names were
the two men who had deliberately killed their opponents, and neither
one looked very happy about the match. I had just enough time to
decide the arrangement was very fitting, and then it was my name
being called. I walked out to the second position on the same side
I'd been before, facing the palace, and then came the really bad news
I'd been half-anticipating all along.
"Bariden,"
Sarvallo called, sending my companion to the place opposite mine. My
first urge was to demand someone else to face, but one look at
Bariden's expression kept me quiet. Somehow he'd known we'd end up
facing each other, and he didn't seem unprepared. As a matter of fact
he looked downright calm, which got me even crazier.
"You stupid fool,"
I growled under my breath while others were called out to their
places. "Don't you understand that if you lose to me, you can't
come back for a yearl And I can't simply stand here and let you win.
I gave my word to try my best, and that would hold even if there
wasn't a wizard-strength spell backing up the demand. How in hell can
you stand there looking satisfied?"
He didn't answer me, of
course, and not only because he hadn't heard me. Looking at him, I
got the distinct feeling he wouldn't have said a word in explanation
even if he could have. I couldn't understand that—until I
happened to remember the special condition attaching to a loss of
mine. But that was ridiculous. Bariden would never—I mean, even
if he won, he would never—
"All right, get
ready," Sarvallo said, heading for the sidelines to my left from
the outside this time. No threats
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or theatrics, not with the
children already eliminated, and not even a dig at me. Great.
Equality at last, and just in time to let me flatten the one man I
could least afford to do that to. Not that I had a choice. If I
didn't do my best to reach him, everybody would know it If I did do
my best and beat him, he would be barred from trying again for a
year. I couldn't even really hope that he would best me. Aside from
the fact that I didn't want to have to serve him, what real chance
could he have against someone who had spent all that lime at
Conclave, learning tricks he'd never heard of? The future looked
bleak and downright hopeless—and it didn't help in the least
that he looked totally confident.
"You may begin,"
Sarvallo said abruptly from his place to the left, and I had no
choice but to do exactly that. Bariden had proven to be very
one-track in his outlook, keeping physical doings with physical, and
magical doings with magical. The best strategy against him would be a
combination of the two, and one that would leave his warding
unactivated. Magic and magical things would never get through, but
things only created by magic ...
I was surprised to see
that he was already speaking a spell when I began mine, but jumping
in first shouldn't help him. My spell was short and relatively
simple, demanding the creation of a pit under his feet and a heavy
stick to follow. Falling into the pit would throw him off balance,
hopefully enough to let the stick knock him out before he knew it was
coming. He'd wake up with a headache and possibly a twisted ankle,
but with healers ready and waiting to help, it wouldn't—
I had just enough time to
notice mat he wasn't falling ' in the pit, and then everything went
black.
Bariden watched Chalaine
collapse to the ground with mixed feelings, the strongest of which
was relief. His spell had made sure she wouldn't be hurt when she
collapsed, so it was all over and neither of them had been hurt.
Thanks to pure inspiration on his part, and a large chunk of luck.
Being careful where he put
his feet, Bariden stepped off the invisible platform he'd created.
One gesture banished the platform, the pit it had saved him from, and
the stick
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that was undoubtedly
supposed to have knocked him unconscious. The inspiration had come in
when he'd remembered the wooden platform Chalaine had banished from
under the magician Arnwell. Deciding she would do the same with the
ground under his feet meant he was betting everything on a hunch, but
the risk had paid off. He'd not only been able to protect himself,
his own attack had been able to reach her.
He walked over to where
she lay, deeply asleep and finally out of it. Their enemy had been
trying to play cute again, but this time Bariden had been able to
anticipate the major trap. It was certain Chalaine had more
experience using magic against other magic users, and Bariden was
well known to be reluctant when it came to attacking women, even in
practice. With that oath binding her to try her hardest, she was the
one who should have logically walked away with the victory. Bariden
would then be barred from the palace for a year, but she would not
have had the choice of joining him. Her last opponent would have been
a palace sorcerer, without doubt a man who was considerably stronger.
After that she would belong to him, and Bariden would have had to
choose between walking away quietly or deliberately trying to break
the law.
But now that problem was
settled, and in a way that made him smile. He'd won the contest with
her fairly, even though she might not think so. Half of his spell had
gone to creating an invisible platform to protect him; the other half
had created a very special vapor, literally under Chalaine's nose.
There were times when healers had patients with serious wounds, and
it was necessary to put those patients to sleep either before or
after the healing. The vapor used was standard among healers, but
very few others knew about it. Odorless and colorless, it did its job
quickly, thoroughly, and without later side effects. Since it was
only produced by magic, not magical itself, Chalaine's warding hadn't
been able to stop it from appearing an inch in front of her face.
Bariden had learned the spell the time he'd been seriously wounded in
a fight, and he'd never forgotten it...
"Well, that makes the
numbers more manageable," Sarvallo announced, and Bariden looked
up to see that
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the other contests were
also over. The two men to his left, who had been the first to be
placed, were both down and could very well be dead. Bariden hadn't
been paying much attention to them, but he had the impression they'd
both developed a technique where most of their strength was
momentarily concentrated into a pinpoint attack. The pinpoint was
meant to thrust through an opponent's warding by sheer overload, and
from there go on to thrusting through the opponent. Since Bariden's
warding was designed to counter that sort of thing, he wasn't about
to spend time worrying about it.
Of the three other pairs,
only one of each two was still left standing. One of the three on the
ground was only sitting, but he was a good four feet back from his
original position. That meant there were four left who stood
victorious, with one slightly more victorious than the others.
"Your win, my friend,
seems a good deal sweeter than the others," Sarvallo said to
Bariden with a suggestive grin. "I wonder why that is."
"I can't imagine,"
Bariden answered with the satisfaction showing only in his eyes. "But
I'd prefer that no one tries to wake her until this is completely
over. I'll wake her myself then, and she'll be fine."
"Oh, I'm sure,"
Sarvalio agreed dryly, then pointed to the table Bariden and Chalaine
had signed up at. "You can put her there until this is all over.
There's still one more contest, you realize."
"Yes, I'm very much
aware of that," Bariden agreed just as dryly, then bent to lift
Chalaine in his arms. Even unconscious she weighed so little, and
that was the closest he'd ever held her. As soon as the nonsense was
over, he'd have to change that.
The table was a good, safe
place to put the girl, and Bariden stood beside her until the rest of
the defeated were taken or helped from the area. By then four men had
come out of the palace, men wearing silk outfits containing more
silver than bronze. If that was an indication of rank, then they were
higher—and presumably more skilled— than Sarvallo, who
wore more bronze. They stopped at the bottom of the steps and waited,
so unconcerned they almost looked bored.
034
"And now for the last
of it," Sarvallo said to Bariden and his three fellow finalists.
"In this segment you aren't expected to win, only to show how
close you can come. If you do win you have immediate acceptance, but
it would be foolish to count on that. Not only are these men more
advanced in their training than you, but they haven't just been
through two contests that drained at least part of their strength.
Just do the best you can, and those who make the best showing will be
accepted."
Bariden felt the urge to
ask who would make the decision on that, but the answer was too
obvious—not to mention inflammatory. As he listened to the
names being called— the palace sorcerers going first, of
course—he worried at the conclusions he'd come to. If the
finalist in his place was supposed to be Chalaine, the sorcerer
chosen to face her should be keyed to her. The flaw in that reasoning
was the possibility that they'd anticipated her losing, and had sent
someone designed to best him as well. If so, then the man would be
easily able to cope with anything Bariden tried.
But if he dwelled on that
possibility, Bariden might as well concede the match even before it
started. All he could do was his best, and stick with the plan he'd
already formulated. If it didn't work, he'd hopefully have time to
think of something else. If not—well, no sense borrowing
trouble.
Bariden was the third
finalist called out, and the man he faced wasn't quite his size. But
he was close as well as broad-shouldered and graceful, and the
sorcerer reminded him very strongly of that Lord Naesery from two
worlds back. Now that was strange—Suddenly Bariden was more
angry than puzzled. It was Chalaine who was supposed to have stood in
his place, and she'd been in the process of developing feelings for
the man Naesery. Of all the low, underhanded things to do to ensure a
win over somebody ...
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo called, once again standing to the left of the lines, but
the warning was wasted on Bariden. He was more than ready, and when
the word "Begin" came sooner than it had before, he did
just that.
The palace sorcerer wasted
no time raising his right hand and speaking a spell, but Bariden was
ahead of him. His
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first spell was something
special, conceived from what he'd learned about the young female
wizard's work. Since he was using her spell for warding, he'd decided
a spell using his opponent's strength to bolster that warding would
work very nicely. Should work nicely . . .
And it did! The sorcerer's
first spell sent magical winds designed to blow him back from his
place, magical winds rather than the real thing created by magic. It
was likely the man hadn't used real winds because they would have
caused harm among the spectators, but whatever the reason it still
worked in Bariden's favor. Rather than blow him and his warding back,
his warding absorbed the strength from the wind and used it to anchor
him firmly and easily in place. It worked so well that even his hair
wasn't ruffled.
The palace sorcerer
frowned when his spell did nothing, obviously not understanding.
Since the first stroke was supposed to be the last, it seemed he
didn't have any follow-up spell ready and waiting. Bariden, however,
did, and it was specially geared to an opponent with greater
strength. As a matter of fact, it was based on his experience with
hand-to-hand combat, something most magic users weren't familiar
with.
Like the man he was now
facing. He smiled when he saw Bariden speak a spell without anything
happening, and then he raised his hand for the second time, spoke his
own spell, and added a capping gesture. Now that was a mistake,
Bariden thought as he felt his magical strength being drawn on
sharply—just before the palace sorcerer was flung back a good
five feet with a final flash causing him to lie motionless. The final
flash was the capping gesture, of course, a mistake the sorcerer
would pay for with a pounding headache when he awoke.
But Bariden was too
gleefully pleased to spend time commiserating with his former
opponent. His spell had worked perfectly, even though the sorcerer
had thought it hadn't worked at all. He'd arranged it so that when
the sorcerer attacked, his own attack was turned back against him
with Bariden's strength added. That sort of thing wasn't hard to do,
but with magic you generally didn't have the time to do it. Bariden
had hoped that his presence rather than Chalaine's would throw off
his opponent's timing enough
236
9HARON GR€€M
to give him the
opportunity, and that was just the way it had worked. Luck was really
with him on that world, but only because he'd been able to anticipate
the enemy. Their next move would have to be to leave that world as
quickly as possible, otherwise . . .
"Well, I'm really
impressed," Sarvallo said, and Bariden looked around to see that
the ostensible director of the competition wasn't the only one who
had been watching. The other three palace sorcerers and one of his
fellow contestants were still in condition to pay attention. Of the
final two, one was out cold or dead, and the second was down on one
knee, retching hard with his arms wrapped around himself. Briefly,
Bariden wondered if retching was considered a win or a loss.
"Today is definitely
a day to remember," Sarvallo went on, his eyes glittering with
something very like pleased possess!veness. "Three new sorcerers
accepted, when I can't remember the last time there were as many as
two. If we can keep this up, we'll have the Eastern kingdom
outmatched in no time. As soon as the third of your number has been
eased by a healer, Tinsin will show you to your quarters and
familiarize you with the laws of the palace. There aren't many, so
you should have no trouble remembering them. Again, my
congratulations."
His bow was on the ironic
side, and then he was gone up the steps as one of the three palace
sorcerers came over to take his place. At the same time a healer went
over to the man who was retching, but not to the one stretched out.
That meant he was dead, and only had to be carted away. For something
called a "competition," the contests were a very rough
game.
"Who does she belong
to?" the man Tinsin asked, gesturing toward Chalaine with his
chin. "I'm hoping it was the entrant / defeated."
"Sorry, but she
belongs to me," Bariden answered with a calm smile. "Does
your comment mean that if I hadn't had a definite win against my
opponent, he would have ended up with her? Even though I was the one
who actually defeated her?"
"Of course,"
Tinsin agreed with a shrug and a grin. "If being in the king's
service didn't give a man the best of it,
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why would he go through
what you and these others just did in order to qualify? It looks like
you'll enjoy being one of us right from the start."
Bariden was surprised by
the man's friendliness, but a moment's thought gave him a possible
reason for it. Aside from the fact that he and the other two were now
members of the same elite group, they were also scheduled to begin
advanced training. If simply studying magic eventually brought
everyone to the level of wizard, there would be thousands and
thousands of wizards rather than just a few hundred. No one knew what
limited one man or woman to magician level while others climbed
easily to sorcerer, but the limitation grew more stringent the higher
you went. Only a very few would go on to become wizards, and Tinsin
wasn't taking any chances. If Bariden or one of his fellow newcomers
happened to reach wizard level while he didn't, he wanted no bad
memories standing between them. Which, Bariden had to admit, was a
rather wise move on his part.
In just a few moments, the
third of their number was sufficiently healed to join them. Bariden
picked up Chalaine again, and then Tinsin led them into the palace.
It was the place they needed to go, but just getting inside was
hardly likely to give them the rest. The first thing Bariden had to
do was get Chalaine to some place safe, and then he would start
searching for the gate ...
CHAPTER TWGLVie
"... wake up,"
the voice said softly and gently. "Everything's all right, so
it's time for you to wake up. Come on, Chalaine, open your eyes and
talk to me."
"Why can't I talk to
you with my eyes closed?" I mumbled, curious about the point. "I
don't talk with my eyes,
so—"
"That's a good girl,
that's right," the voice said patronizingly, beginning to get me
angry. "You try to talk to me, and I'll help you to sit up."
That was when I became
aware of the arm behind me, forcing me up from the nice, comfortable
thing I'd been lying on. I really didn't care for that—any of
it, in fact— and for some reason my warding wasn't working, so
I spoke a spell to take care of it. Since I was feeling very vague
for some reason, I spoke the spell slowly and carefully. I know I did
it right, but all it accomplished was to cause the voice to chuckle.
"You don't really
want to do that to me," it said, sounding amused. "And if
you did, you'd have something of a problem. I was told to tell you
your magic won't work in here, not with the king's spell actively set
against you in particular. You lost the contest, so now you're mine
to do with as I please."
I didn't like the sound of
that at all, but the voice was beginning to seem familiar and
memories were fighting to come within reach. I felt I had to do
something, so I forced my eyes open.
038
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What I saw then was a
surprisingly comfortable-looking chamber, a lot larger than the last
room I could almost remember being in. There was a good deal of
darkwood paneling offset by wall hangings in bright red silk, two
windows to the left with sheer gold curtains, and a heavy wooden door
to the right that was beautifully carved. Straight ahead the wall was
interrupted by a wide hearth of Hght-gray stone, where a smail fire
crackled pleasantly. At least four chairs of brown, red, and gold
cloth, plushly upholstered, were scattered around the room, and a
small table with two small, comfortable chairs stood to the left,
between the hearth and the bed.
Bed. That's what I was
sitting on, a big bed that felt incredibly comfortable, with a red
silk cover under my folded legs. I had an impression of gold silk
sheets and pillowcases without really seeing them, and the arm that
held me up was attached to someone on my left. By then I knew who the
someone was, but the rest insisted on staying hazy.
"What happened?"
I asked Bariden, having a lot less trouble getting the words out.
"Where are we?"
"Good, you're coming
out of it," he said, no longer sounding amused. "If I'd let
you sleep it off you wouldn't be feeling this confused, but I wanted
you to be awake. Where we are is in my quarters in the palace, just
where we hoped to be. I'm one of the three who were accepted."
"Three out of
twenty," I muttered, putting a hand to the back of my head as
the memories finally started to return. "That wouldn't be bad if
all the rest of the seventeen had lived to try again. But you still
haven't told me how we got here. The last thing I remember is—"
"Probably blacking
out," he finished when I didn't. His arm was still around me,
and when I tried to shift over and sit alone, his usual cooperation
wasn't there. The arm stayed firmly around me, his big hand curved
gently around my right bicep.
"I knew they were
going to set us up against each other," he said, satisfaction
heavy in his voice. "And they expected you to win, because you
have more experience with confrontations even though they were only
practice. I may not go to Conclave, but I still have some idea about
Q4O
what goes on there. If
you'd won, they would have had us exactly where they wanted us."
"But instead we're
where we wanted us," I said, twisting around to look at him.
"And I lost, even though I was trying not to. Would you like to
tell me how you accomplished that!"
"By being prepared,"
he answered, his grin too gleeful to be considered smug. "Just
as I was prepared against the palace sorcerer who would have defeated
you if you'd won against me. Aren't you going to thank me for saving
you from a fate worse than death?"
"As soon as I'm sure
I have been saved," I said, trying to dent his grating good
humor. "For some reason, it doesn't quite feel like it."
"Can't imagine what
would make you say that," he said, finally taking his arm back
even though the grin had widened. "I have to leave soon for the
tour they're going to give us of this part of the palace, so we'll
have to continue our discussion later. Right now I want you to know
mere's a meal for you, and it's waiting on the table over there. Once
you're feeling steady enough, you can get up and eat it. But don't
try to leave this room. You're not allowed to walk around
unescorted."
"Are they afraid I'll
wander into a place that's sacred to men?" I asked as I watched
him stand, more than a little annoyed. "And what if I don't feel
like eating? Won't I get my gold star if I don't finish everything on
my plate?"
"Chalaine, I'm the
one who wants you to eat, and I'm the one who wants you to stay put."
At another time he would have sighed as he told me that, but his
sighing days seemed to be behind him. Right then the words were a
statement rather than an admission, and he made no attempt to avoid
my gaze. "I know you're not happy about the position you're in,"
he continued, "but that can't be helped. We'll be out of here as
soon as possible, but until then you have to do as I say. I don't
want you missing any meals, and I don't want you wandering around
among sorcerers without magic of your own. And there's one more
thing."
He walked over to the
small table on the left, where I could now see dishes and things,
then turned back to me with one of the things in his hand.
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"Here's the hairbrush
you wanted," he said, showing it to me before putting it back.
It was a simple thing of yellow-brown wood and white bristles, almost
looking handmade. "After you eat you can brush your hair, but
don't braid it again. I've been looking forward to seeing it flow
free again, the way it did at Queen Leva's feast. I'll be back as
soon as the tour is over."
And he stared at me for a
good half minute before going to the door and leaving, quietly
pulling the beautiful carved wood shut behind him. I took my turn
staring at the door, afraid to wonder what my expression was like.
I'd known I wouldn't want to lose a contest in the competition to
him, but I'd had no idea how hard I should have tried to avoid it.
That wasn't the same Bariden I'd entered the trap with, and the new
him was downright—daunting.
"He's the first man
ever to get over worrying about how fragile I must be, and now he's
going to make me pay up," I said out loud, telling the room some
truths I had just noticed. "Even if it means putting off
leaving, he's going to make me pay up on that loss. And something
tells me it doesn't matter that I can't do magic right now. He would
have made the same decision even if I were fully up to strength. Just
as I was when he defeated me."
And that, of course, was
the worst of it, along with his new attitude. It hadn't been hard
keeping a distance between me and my temporary companion, but the
same didn't hold true for this new version. He wasn't going to allow
that distance, and the cold truth was I no longer wanted it either.
Right from the start I'd found him handsome and attractive, but now
...
Now he was no longer stiff
and formal, or deliberately charming. He was sure of himself and
comfortable in that certainty, and hadn't said a word about trying to
make me believe his intentions. He'd let me know what those
intentions were without words, and they were purely physical.
Which proved what I'd been
saying all along. I blew a long, slow breath out as I pushed my hair
back with both hands, then made the effort to get up. There wasn't
even a hint of dizziness as I got to my feet, showing that whatever
he'd done to me had worn off completely. I went to the door and tried
it, but even though it wasn't locked it refused to
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open. He'd backed up his
orders with magic, showing just how well he'd gotten to know me. But
not as well as he would get to know me ...
"Damn it, this
isn't/air!" I muttered, hating the way his blind stubbornness
was backing me into a comer. It was physical attraction he felt,
after all, and once his curiosity was satisfied I'd certainly become
just another name on his list. Back in the hostel I'd momentarily
forgotten that, but his drawing away had reminded me. He was curious
enough to want to try me, but not enough to risk getting zapped for
it.
But now he was free to do
as he pleased, and his new personality was strong enough to guarantee
it. I'd never be able to refuse him because I didn't really want to,
and that was the mast annoying part. Of course, my interest wasn't
pure lust, nothing but prurient curiosity, the way his was. Mine was
based on a lot more man that...
I left the door and walked
to the table, looking for and finding the cup of coffee I'd hoped
would be there with the food. I sipped at it for a moment, feeling my
thoughts squirming around, then had to admit there was no way out. I
usually tried to be truthful with myself even if it hurt, and this
was obviously going to be one of those times. Okay, Chalaine, say it
straight out, and you can keep on pretending you're a real grown-up.
Right. I sat down in a
chair and stared into the coffee, just to distract myself from how
embarrassed I felt. Most of my very noble interest in Bariden was
physical, just as his was in me. In its proper place there's nothing
wrong with good, honest lust, as long as you can admit that's all it
is. And as long as you don't try to take advantage of someone because
of it. The way I'd tried talcing advantage in the hostel room ...
But since I was into being
honest, I also had to admit that that incident still bothered me. The
good thing about lust is that sometimes it leads to a deeper
relationship, one based on more man simple physical attraction. That
wasn't likely to happen with Bariden, not when the only thing we had
in common was that Spell of Affinity, but where was the harm if I
already knew that? Wouldn't it be perfectly all right to simply
indulge myself a little ... ?
HIDDGN
Q43
This time I took a good
swallow of the coffee, trying to drown self-disgust. Maybe / knew the
truth of things, but there was a chance Bariden was still kidding
himself. Even if it wasn't likely it was still possible, and ignoring
it wouldn't be fair. Could I simply sit back and have some fun while
he told himself he was beginning the greatest love story of the ages?
Not if I ever wanted to be able to look at myself in a mirror again,
not when it couldn't possibly become any sort of love story for me.
Bariden and I came from two different worlds, and once we were out of
mat trap we'd go back to them ...
Which meant it was up to
me to say a good, firm no and stick to it. I leaned forward to rest
my arms on the table, wondering how difficult Bariden's new
personality would make that decision. I'd have the strength of
knowing I was doing it for his own good, but would that be enough? If
it wasn't I had reserves of stubbornness to call on, not to mention
the question of how we would get out of there. And what precautions
to take before stepping through any gate. Every new world we went to
posed a different problem, and so far we'd just been reacting to
them. Wasn't it time to try to anticipate what would happen next, and
maybe get a jump on it? At that rate we'd never get out of the
trap...
I spent some time thinking
about what we'd gone through and what might be ahead, finally using
the food to help me fight off depression. Every time we stepped
through a gate things got worse instead of better, but we hadn't had
a choice about stepping through. And we still didn't have a single
clue about how to break free. At that rate the only thing we had to
look forward to was a dead end, one where mere would be no more gates
and no other way out If we didn't find our own road before then ... I
threw my fork aside and sat back, no longer interested in anything
but the self-refilling coffee cup. Or maybe something a little
stronger. Too bad mere wasn't anything ...
After a few minutes of
silent brooding I noticed the hairbrush, which in turn brought memory
of the order I'd been given. Even if I'd been in the mood to follow
orders I wouldn't have followed that one, but my hair was badly in
need of brushing. I'd use the brush to get rid of the knots,
244
9HARON GR€€M
and then rebraid it. If
Bariden wanted to see hair flowing free, he could look at his own.
It took some effort to get
my hair brushed out, but I wouldn't have used magic to help even if I
could have. I wore my hair long because I liked it that way, and
didn't even mind how it picked up knots. Brushing it smooth and
shining was a physical therapy for the mind, a time when all you have
to concentrate on is repetitive movements of your arm. You can be as
violent or as gentle as you have to be, and eventually you slip into
a lake of calm and simply float there.
I finally found the lake
and did some floating, but time was passing and I didn't know how
much of it I had. Bariden could be back at any time, and I certainly
didn't want him to think I was encouraging him. I put the brush aside
with a sigh, reached to my hair and separated it into three long
sections, then—
Then discovered that the
three sections flatly refused to be twisted around each other. At
first I thought I was just being clumsy and tried again, but after
the third try there was no longer any doubt. That miserable son of a
diseased she-dog had set a spell, just as he had with the door. Now
that I'd unbraided and brushed my hair, it was impossible to braid it
again.
I'm sure students of human
nature find it fascinating how fast it's possible to go from easy
calm to raging anger. For myself I noticed no time elapse at all, or
maybe I was just too wild to notice. Whatever, I had just begun to
stalk back and forth across the room when the door opened, and the
fungus-rotted bastard himself walked in. A slow grin creased his face
as soon as he saw me, and that was the absolute end. I headed
straight for the table, snatched up the brush, then threw it at him
as hard as I could.
When it comes to targets,
I have a better than decent eye because I practice. Unfortunately,
what I practice isn't throwing by hand, and Bariden is awfully fast
for a man his size. He ducked before the brush could hit him smack in
the face, and then he had swung the door shut and was charging at me.
Refusing to be discouraged or intimidated, I reached for a serving
bowl heavy enough to do some damage, but couldn't quite get it into
position for the throw. I was only
TH€ HtDDGN RCALN9
945
half turned back when
Bariden reached me, and then he had one hand on the bowl and an arm
around my waist. I kicked and struggled but still lost the bowl, and
then he had both hands free to defend himself.
"I see you discovered
at least one of the spells I used to anticipate problems," he
grunted, having more trouble than he'd probably expected in holding
me still. "You'd better stop struggling so hard, or you might
set off my warding."
I told him what he could
do with his warding—folded up square so that it was mostly
corners—and then tried harder to kick him. I'd never used
language like that in my life, which meant I'd had no idea how good
it would feel. Somewhere in the back of my mind I expected Bariden to
be furious at being spoken to like that, but when he finally managed
to lift me off the floor he was laughing!
"I never believed a
woman could be even more beautiful when she was angry," he
chuckled, still trying to control my struggles as he carried me to a
couch. The armless and backless piece of furniture let him plump me
down easily, and then he was using his body as well as his hands to
keep me down. "Don't you want to hear about what I saw on the
tour?" he finally added.
"All I want to hear
is that the gate is right outside and we'll be using it in the next
five minutes," I growled back. "If that's not what you have
to say, I'd rather fight."
"You've really
changed, and I love it," he murmured, moving my wrists up above
my head so that he could start to kiss my neck. "If you'd rather
fight, then let's fight."
"I'm not the one
who's changed," I ground out in desperation, finding it
impossible to free myself. Those big hands of his were closed around
my wrists, his leg was keeping both of mine still, and his lips—!
"And this isn't my idea of fighting! Let go of me, you miserable
coward."
"If it's cowardly to
want to keep from getting mangled, then I'm a coward," he
answered with a grin. "And are you sure this isn't fighting?
I've always thought of fighting as fun, and I'm certainly finding
this fun."
"You're not funny"
I stated, no more than an inch away from blushing. "I don't want
to be held down, and I don't
246
want to be
kissed—especially not by someone who's an overbearing dictator.
If you like to give orders so much, go find someone who's willing to
take them."
"But I have that
someone right here in front of me," he said with one brow
raised. "Aren't you the one who insisted on entering the
competition, saying you would take the consequences if you lost? In
case you missed the point you did lose, and to me. If nothing else,
that gives me the right to hand you as many orders as I please."
"Then go ahead and do
it," I answered with the best shrug I could manage. "I may
have said I'd take the consequences, but I didn't say how I'd take
them. If you're wondering what that means, you're in the middle of
finding out."
"I don't think so,"
he came back, not a trace of anger or annoyance showing. "How
you define things doesn't matter here, something I tried to explain
to you yesterday. I was finally forced to agree that you had to
enter, but that doesn't change the fact that you would have done it
even if it wasn't necessary. I'd like to hear you admit you were
wrong."
Once again I couldn't help
noticing how calm and steady he was. And he hadn't let me go even if
he had stopped the kissing. I squirmed around on the inside, having
die usual trouble admitting I might be wrong. I'd had to be hard and
certain for so very long, uncaring about the opinions of others to
keep those opinions from cutting me open. Now . ..
"All right, I was
wrong," I muttered, all but dragging the words out. "I was
annoyed with the stupid system they have here—and with you—and
never stopped to consider that it might be a more subtle trap than
what I was anticipating. But I don't understand why I did that. What
I should have done was ignore all of it, stand aloof and refuse to
bite the dangling hook. Taking the hook with the intention of pulling
the fisherman in isn't at all like me."
"You say that only
because you can't see how much you've changed," he disagreed,
finally releasing my wrists. "I remember thinking, when this
first started, that I'd have to have words with you about the way you
refused to discuss things. It was a habit of yours that really got to
me, but we never had those words because you stopped doing it. What
you started doing instead was challenging people who
TH€ HIDDGN
Q47
tried to put you down,
demanding that they prove what they said or take it back. In my
opinion that's a much healthier habit, but you let it take you too
far. There are times when it is smarter to let things go by,
especially when you don't know for certain what answering their
challenge will bring."
He touched my face gently
and then stood up to stretch, leaving me with something troubling to
think about. I hadn't noticed myself changing, even though the time
period covering the change was no more than a matter of days. During
those days we'd both been affected, but why should that have
happened? I sat up slowly, trying to decide what the revelation could
possibly mean, but there were so many considerations and variables...
"Are you ready to
hear what my tour was like?" Bariden asked, and I looked up to
see him holding a glass of wine. "They also supplied us with a
selection of polite snacks, afterward explaining we were responsible
for providing our own meals and other requirements. A fully
functioning sorcerer ought to be able to call up just about anything
he can think of, and that was our primary gain: as long as we're in
service with the king, we're exempt from most of the prohibitions the
rest of the populace has to live with."
"That must help a lot
in keeping the palace budget down," I said, getting to my feet.
"Not to mention giving new recruits an incentive to behave
themselves in order to keep what they've gained. What are the
prohibitions you're not exempt from?"
"The first one is
obvious," he answered, watching me move to the table to retrieve
my coffee. There was a second glass of wine standing there, but I no
longer wanted the something stronger I had earlier. "Any effort
to plot against the king will get you bounced immediately. There's
also a schedule where those here who do well in their studies can
legally challenge the king. That, I think, is to keep groups from
forming, where everyone supports a particular candidate. After all,
why support someone else when you could easily have a chance of your
own?"
I nodded as I sipped,
reluctantly admitting the wizard-king seemed to know what he was
doing. Giving your underlings permission to challenge you brought
them at
948
you one at a time, making
them easier to handle than if they showed up in a group. And giving
them something important to lose—full and free use of their
abilities—also had to make any but a completely determined
challenger think twice. Yes, the man did seem to know what he was
doing.
"The second thing we
can't do is produce our own gold and silver," Bariden continued.
"If we get a vacation from our studies and want to spend part or
all of it in the city, we have to ask for money to be issued to us.
The king doesn't want a lot of extra coinage being spread around,
driving up the prices of things, and if we break that rule we get
burned the way you were over that cup of coffee. The third and last
major rule is, no one harms anyone in the city. They're all under the
king's protection, and he will protect them even from one of his
own."
"Now that's
interesting," I said, leaning back against the table as I
considered the point. "A wizard doesn't need anyone's support to
be king, let alone the people he rules, but this man is still careful
of his subjects. I wonder why that is."
"I have the feeling
that taking care of his people is something he needs," Bariden
answered, gesturing with his wineglass. "Playing king feeds the
need for power most people have, but usually the power need is
matched by selfishness. Why would I care if the multitude is
starving, as long as I have mine? Also, my not starving while they do
proves how much better I am. But this king has the strength and
ability of a wizard to take care of any power craving he might have,
so he doesn't need the incidentals. That alone would give him
people's fear, but what he seems to want is their respect and love.
It seems to be part of human nature to want what you don't have, to
struggle for what everyone says is impossible to get."
"Which would explain
why he hasn't cast a general 'love-me' spell," I said with
another nod. "The emotion would be false, and so would be the
satisfaction. No struggle, no pleasure from achieving the impossible.
Of course, he could just be playing fair and taking his job as king
seriously. I don't like thinking he might be, but it is possible.
What, if anything, did that tour show you?"
THG HIDDGN
249
"This wing is where
newcomers and the least powerful of the residents live," he said
after finishing his wine, also coming over to put the glass on the
table. "In the middle of it are chambers for practice and
instruction, where those who are stronger than you help you to learn.
There are also a couple of gathering rooms meant for relaxation, and
every week the two sorcerers who have made the most progress in
learning are each responsible for redecorating one of them. The one
we got to glance into had diamond walls, ruby ceiling and floor,
sapphire tables and sconces, and chairs made of solidified clouds. We
were also told that that one was the less imaginative of the two."
"I should hope so,
since even / couid do better," I scoffed, then pulled myself up
short. They used games to encourage people to learn, and I had no
business responding to the lure of it. Not only didn't they want me
to join in, I had no intention of staying around even if they
suddenly changed their minds.
"One corridor leads
to the next wing of the palace, where those of higher ability live,"
Bariden went on. "We weren't allowed to do more than look up the
corridor from our end, and were warned not to try to go farther,
either alone or with a friend or two. Anyone caught where he doesn't
belong is taken care of by those who do belong in the invaded
territory. We were told we would not be seriously or permanently
hurt, we would only wish we had been. If we disbelieved that, we were
invited to try it for ourselves and see."
"Which should do a
better job of keeping you out than the most bloodcurdling of
threats," I said. "And also make you work that much harder,
so you can walk up that corridor because you've earned the right."
"That's the way my
brother newcomers seemed to take it," Bariden agreed, folding
his arms. "They looked at that corridor the way a beggar looks
at a gold coin, and afterward didn't even seem to see the two
guardsmen stationed in front of a door just past that corridor. The
door they guarded was in our wing of the palace, but Tinsin, our
guide, never said a word about it."
"If I didn't remember
what happened in the last two worlds, I'd say it couldn't be that
easy," I commented,
Q5O
trying to decide whether
to feel relieved or suspicious. "Were the guardsmen Sighted, or
did the door have any complex spells on it?"
"No to both, at least
as far as I could tell," he said, looking no happier than I
felt. "And, predictably, the set-up doesn't make any sense. Why
have guardsmen in a palace filled with sorcerers? The weakest man
here would have no trouble getting past them, so why not just spell
the door and forget about guards? A wizard's spell could make it
impossible for anyone to even see the door, let alone go through it.
The only answer I can think of is the obvious one."
"That someone wants
to make it easy for us to get through the gate that must be behind
the door," I grumbled in agreement. "But even that doesn't
make any sense. What if we'd done the wrong thing, and both of us
weren't here in the palace? Did they expect one of us to go on
through and leave the other behind?"
"That would depend on
whether we were still together, wouldn't it?" he countered,
those very light eyes thoughtful. "What if one of us had stayed
on one of the previous worlds, and the other had gone on alone? Or
what if one of us was killed in that competition? The survivor would
have to go on alone, or else settle down here for life."
"But—the logic
of that thought doesn't hold," I said, even more disturbed than
I had been. "At least, not the way it should. If they were
trying to trap me into belonging to someone else, why would they make
it possible for me to get to the gate? And even with two alert
guardsmen, it would be possible. I've been trying to figure out what
they can be after, and this just makes the whole picture muddier."
"Tell me about it,"
he muttered, running an annoyed hand through his hair. "None of
it makes any sense, and especially not running straight for that
gate. People are still awake and moving around in this wing, so we'll
give them enough time to settle down and fall asleep. In the meantime
we'll get as much rest and nourishment as we can, and also see if we
can come up with an alternative to using the gate the way we're
obviously supposed to. If there's a way out of this trap, obediently
following the bread crumb trail isn't it."
THC HIDD€M
251
"But refusing to
budge can't be the way either," I fretted, hating the idea of
spending any more time in that place. "Why don't we get
ourselves to the gate, and then we can argue about whether or not to
go through? That way—"
"No," he denied
quietly, dismissing the suggestion without a second thought. "Where
guards are posted, guards are also relieved. If we're found there at
the wrong time we'll have to go through, assuming no one alerts the
king and he makes it impossible. We'll do our waiting here, where I
can relax and enjoy it."
He turned then and raised
his arms, but I heard nothing of whatever spell he spoke. Obviously
I'd been cut off from magic completely, even to the point of not
being able to hear it. That added even more to my annoyance, but then
Bariden's spell manifested and I was distracted by the surprise.
A wall of gray mist had
formed, with an archway standing open and inviting in the middle.
Beyond the archway I could see lots of green forest around a pool
being fed by a waterfall, soft green grass leading like a carpet from
the archway to the pool. I was certain Bariden hadn't created an
entry to another world, but what had he done ... ?
"Part of that is
illusion, but part isn't," he said, almost in answer to my
unspoken question. "Let's go make use of it, and you can see if
it's possible to tell which is which."
He put his hand out to me,
those light eyes showing an expression I couldn't define, and that
made me uneasy.
"Make use of it how?"
I asked, staying right where I was. "And won't they come down on
you for spreading out beyond the limits of your assigned quarters?"
"But I didn't spread
out beyond my quarters," he answered, now looking amused as well
as pleased. "That's one of the illusions. And what else would
you do with a heated waterfall and pool but take a bath? Come on"
"I had a bath this
morning," I began, suddenly knowing I didn't want to join him,
but that was as far as I got. Two steps brought him back to me, and
then I was being pulled toward the arch by one hand. I tried to get
loose—or even simply to hang back—but there was nothing
to grab onto or to pry Bariden's hand open with, and then—
Q5Q
And then I was through the
archway and stark naked. It didn't help that Bariden was just as
naked, and in fact made things worse. If I'd had the choice—about
anything at all—Damn it, this just wasn't fairl
"Give me my clothes
back this instant!" I demanded, using both hands in an effort to
stop the hulk who was pulling me toward the pool. The grass under my
feet was like satin, something I had no desire at all to think about.
. . "Damn it, Bariden, let me go and give me my clothes back!"
"It's too warm in
here for clothes," he answered without turning, and also without
slowing. "You'll get them back when we leave, and by then
they'll have refreshed themselves. Let's swim a little, and then we
can rest on the grass."
"I won't!" I
insisted, for once in my life wishing I weighed more. "If you
drag me in there I'll just climb right out again, so why waste the
effort? Let me go now, and—"
"Chalaine," he
said with a sigh, then turned back to look down at me. "Why are
you going through these motions? I disappointed us both last night
because I felt I had to, but those reasons don't hold any longer.
You're trying to refuse because you're still upset with me, and I
can't blame you for that. But once I begin to apologize properly,
you'll change your mind. Let's just wait until then, and if you don't
like it, then you can say something. Is it a deal?"
By that time my jaw was
practically down to my toes, and I honestly couldn't decide what I
most wanted to say first. Of all the incredible egotists I'd ever had
the misfortune to associate with, Bariden took first prize without
competition. My trying to refuse him was just going through the
motions, and as soon as he made the effort I'd change my mind?
"Do you know what you
can do with your deal?" I finally got out, glaring up at him
with the beginnings of explosion. "You can—what in
Hellfire are you grinning at?"
"You," he
answered, reaching out one big hand to stroke my hair, his amusement
increasing. "All I brought you in here for is to swim and relax,
but you were so obviously expecting me to attack you—or do you
a big favor—that it was painful. That's why I decided to put
the big favor into
The
253
words, just to get it out
of the way. I'd like to apologize properly for disappointing you last
night, but first you'll have to say you're ready to listen. Until
that happens, let's go and get wet."
The hand that was still
closed around mine pulled me after him again, but this time I
couldn't think of anything to say. Part of me was very embarrassed
over having misjudged him, but another part was wondering if I really
had. Maybe that speech he'd made had been a deliberate attempt to get
me angry enough to calm down, so to speak, but did that mean his
intentions were nothing but honorable? At one point me answer would
have been yes, but after the way he'd changed ...
The pool of water began
only a couple of inches below the bank, and the man who was beginning
to make me paranoid didn't give me the chance to climb in alone. He
took me by the waist and just about dropped me in, and while I was
still squeaking in surprise he joined me. The surprise came from the
fact that the water was warm, deliciously warm, even though it looked
clear and cold. It was that perfect temperature for soaking, and was
deep enough there to almost reach my shoulders.
"I liked the view
better on the bank, but we've both earned a little pampering,"
Bariden said from behind me. "There are a coupie of underwater
ledges opposite the falls, so if we get tired of swimming but don't
want to get out, we can stretch out there. Aren't you sorry now that
you made such a fuss?"
"No, I'm not," I
answered over my shoulder, bending my knees to let the water lap
higher. "And while we're discussing the landscape, I'd like to
know what made you come up with this. The last time you spoke a spell
to produce accommodations, it turned out to be a modest little house
with nothing in the least exotic. This, though ..."
I let the words trail off
as I looked at the falls, a misty cascade that fell from a good
hundred feet up. The sound of it was only a whispering shush flowing
through bright sunshine and the chirping of birds, making the whole
thing a delight to every sense I had. An undertone of tinkling seemed
to be calling me to play, and I had never felt so welcome in my
entire life.
254
"When I called up
that house, it was still the old me," Bariden answered in a
murmur. "Magic was like a weapon or a tool, to be used only
under strictly defined circumstances and only to the extent that was
absolutely necessary. Since then I've learned that magic is like any
other skill— wasted when limited by anything but common sense
and honor. There's no shame in being what you were born to be; the
shame is in failing to be that something because those around you
can't be the same. Let's swim over to the falls and check on the
temperature change I incorporated."
He moved through the water
on my left, already swimming and glancing at me as he went past. I
began to follow without comment, but not because I didn't know what
to say. I kept getting the feeling I was completely out of control,
and that had nothing to do with not being able to do magic. Bariden's
entire attitude ...
There was no gradual
change in water temperature as I neared the falls. What I swam in was
warm right up to the place the falls reached it, and only directly
under the falls was it cold. The water was also deeper there and as
far as I could tell the bottom was a long way down. Bariden glided up
and splashed me with cold falls water, so after screeching I returned
the favor. The splashing went on even after we moved away from the
falls, and some time during that period the laughing started. Because
of the laughter we both ended up swallowing a good deal of water, but
after the first gulp I didn't mind at all. What I seemed to be
swallowing was a light, sparkling white wine, definitely chilled, and
the best vintage I'd ever tasted.
There came a time during
the horseplay when Bariden surged through my water attacks to capture
me. He tried a couple of times without being able to break through
the barrage, and had to retreat with ringing laughter. The third
time, though... Don't they always say, "Third time lucky?"
It had never occurred to me to ask who the lucky one was supposed to
be ...
I was laughing when those
massive arms closed around me, and he was grinning in triumph. That
deliciously warm water lapped at our bodies, trying to coax us into
tasting more of it, but I suddenly felt as if I'd already had more
than I should have. Looking into those very blue eyes was
TH€ HIDD6N
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making my head spin, and
then he pulled me close and kissed me. His lips tasted of the wine,
and small runnels flowed down both our faces from our hair, and his
hard, naked body felt so good pressed up against mine, and—
"Bariden, stop,"
I mumbled as soon as I could, my hands spread out against his chest
and arm. His lips didn't want to let the kiss end, and mine ...
"Bariden, this is nothing but lust we're feeling. It wouldn't be
fair to—to—let it make us take advantage of each other."
"Why not?" he
countered in a murmur, one of his hands in my hair, the other moving
over my bottom. "If we're both taking advantage, we're also both
getting it. What's wrong with that?"
"There's—everything
wrong with it," I groped, trying to remember the very clear
reasoning I'd used when I'd decided to stay away from him. "It
just wouldn't be right, so we can't let this go any further."
"All nght, then we
won't," he agreed easily and comfortably, his lips and tongue
moving to my neck. "We'll just go on with this and nothing
else."
I gasped as he licked the
water-wine from my skin, still being held in those arms, still
pressed up against him. The water would have floated my body away
from his if he'd let it, but he was holding me too tight for that.
There was no bottom under my scrabbling toes, nothing but Bariden's
legs and calves, but I had the feeling he was touching bottom. I also
had the feeling I was about to drown, and being in water had nothing
to do with it.
"You can't be
serious," I finally managed to protest, my fingernails
undoubtedly digging holes in him. "You can't just—keep on
doing this\ You have to let me go."
"I'll let you go if
you can tell me you're not enjoying it," he murmured, his lips
at my face and ear. "But you have to tell the truth, Chalaine,
otherwise you won't be able to say it. Tell me truthfully that you
want me to stop, and I'll let you go immediately."
I parted my lips to say
what I had to, ignoring the way my eyes had closed in response to
what he was doing— and the words wouldn't come. Part of me did
want him to stop, but it was a very small part and had nothing to do
with how I felt. I wasn't enjoying what he was doing, I
256
9HARON GR€€h
was melting into a puddle
of mush from it, and the mush had been forbidden to He. He was in
complete control of me, and all I wanted to do was relax and enjoy
it.
"You bastard," I
whispered, pulling him closer with my arms around his neck so that I
could bite his ear. By rights I should have ripped it from his head,
but all I could do was close my teeth with exquisite care. His cheek
against mine was the smooth softness that came from being freshly
shaven, and his groan of pleasure set the water around me to boiling.
"That's been
suggested, but the contention can be positively disproved," he
mumbled. "My being a bastard, I mean. Licking my ear like that
won't do you any good. I promised not to go on to anything beyond
this, and I won't break my word. If you want anything more, you'll
have to release me from the promise."
I couldn't curse him out
that minute, not when he immediately kissed me again. This time the
kiss was more intense than I knew was possible, so much so that it
took a while before I realized that at some point we'd stopped being
vertical. I was still mostly underwater but had been put down on my
back, with my head raised slightly as if on a cushion. Those ledges
he'd mentioned when we'd first come through the arch, half a lifetime
ago... Bariden's body pinned me to the soft, form-fitting surface,
only part of his weight negated by the lift of the water.
And he was ready, as ready
as I, but was still doing nothing but tormenting me. When his lips
left mine to move to my right breast, I was finally able to say
everything I'd wanted to. I cursed him roundly, expecting it to make
me feel better, but I might as well have been pronouncing the
alphabet. I didn't want to release him from his promise but he was
forcing me to do it, in the most low, mean, underhanded way there
was. No threats, no pain, just the most exquisite pleasure—how
was I supposed to stand up against that!
I held out as long as I
possibly cquld, but there's a limit to what any human being can take.
Bariden must have paid attention to every woman he'd ever had sex
with, noticing what reached them and what didn't, practicing the
positive until he'd completely mastered it. The mush I'd melted
TH£
257
into had no chance against
him, and finally I had to admit it. I whispered my release against
his promise, found it necessary to say it again to make it audible
and at least partly grammatical, and then got a surprise.
"Thank you," he
whispered back, those blue eyes holding to me with more than desire.
"I was about to die from wanting you, and now you've saved my
life. The only thing I can do in return is make sure you don't regret
your decision, not now and not ever."
He kissed me again, but
this time the kiss was a sharing unlike anything I'd ever
experienced. I realized I kept thinking that, that almost everything
I felt was a first, just as though there was more than lust between
us. That was ridiculous, of course, but as my fingers slid through
the long, soaken strands of his hair, I began to wish it wasn't. He
moved me as no man ever had before, touched a part of me I hadn't
even known was there. I knew he'd never belong to me permanently, but
would it be so wrong to enjoy what he gave while I did have him?
Wasn't a small slice of the pie better than no taste at all? Even if
it left behind nothing but crumbs ...
Another man would have
been desperate to get on with it, but Bariden was still producing
firsts. He stood on the ledge while lifting me into his arms, then
carried me to the bank and a bed he produced with a snap of his
fingers. We were both also instantly dry, showing that his original
spell had been prepared for all eventualities. I was tempted to be
annoyed over that, the proof of his certainty that he'd get me, but
then he put me down on the bed, and all annoyance vanished. He was
sharing another of those kisses, the kind I'd never get enough of
even if I lived forever.
I think I half-expected
the actual sharing of sex to be an anticlimax, so to speak, but once
again I was wrong. If I thought I was mush to begin with, I learned
what boneless really meant as soon as he entered me. I moaned and
kissed him and tried to touch him everywhere, but his heavy stroking
quickly drove me into a state of pure sensation. I knew nothing but
that I didn't ever want it to stop, not even after I fell from the
cliff twice in rapid succession. He had me completely, his to do with
just as he pleased, and it pleased him to take me higher than
258
even the EverNameless
could have gone. It was incredible, indescnbable—and when it
finally ended, we ended it together.
He kissed me one last time
before withdrawing, then lay beside me to hold me in his arms. I
needed very badly to sleep right then, but even as I snuggled up
against his chest I reminded myself sternly about what I had to do.
Keep it light and unimportant, let him know it was fun but no more
than that. Head off all need for eventual embarrassing good-byes, an
effort that will be more than worth it. Once you get back it will be
completely over... don't forget diat. . . never forget. . . never. ..
CHAPTGR THIRT€€N
B
'ariden awoke to find
Chalaine still sleeping, and the way she snuggled against him brought
a smile to his lips and the oddest feeling to his insides. He thought
about that feeling for a moment, trying to define it, then silently
laughed at himself. The feeling was one he'd never had with a woman
before, not even those women he'd considered special. What he felt
for Chalaine said he never again wanted to wake up without her being
there, safely and lovingly beside him. He'd known from the first that
she was different, and now he also knew he loved her.
And he would tell her that
as soon as possible. This time she couldn't disbelieve him, not after
what they'd just shared. He shifted more to the side so that he could
put a hand to her back, needing to feel the softness of her skin
again. That stubbornness of hers had almost kept them apart; if he
hadn't counted on her feelings from last night to resurface ...
"What are you looking
so satisfied about?" a sleepy voice asked with a yawn. "Aside
from the obvious, that is."
"I was just thinking
how much I love your skin," he answered her with a smile. "And
your hair. And your entire body. At this point, I might even be
forced into admitting less than total dislike for
your—singlemindedness. The wait was definitely worth it."
"Well, obviously sex
does make some men expansive," she drawled, looking up at him
with a teasing smile. "But it was fun, I'll give you that."
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9HARON GR€€N
"Lovemaking, not
sex," he corrected her without amusement. "I thought we got
the difference between the two settled yesterday, but the point is
worth repeating. When I take you in my arms it's to make love to you,
not to have sex."
"If you insist,"
she capitulated with another yawn, not quite as convinced as Bariden
wanted. "How much longer until we go for the gate? Or have you
thought of something else we can do?"
"No, I haven't
thought of something else, and not for lack of trying," he said,
diverted from the previous topic. "I'm forced to admit that the
trap is narrow at this point, making us go the way they want us to.
If we try to stand still and look for another way out, the one ahead
of us could be permanently closed off."
"I hadn't thought of
that," she admitted with reddish brows high. "We're only
assuming there's another way out, and that we'll find it if we look.
At this point there might not be an alternative, and by refusing to
move on we could be permanently trapped."
"Which, despite the
position I've earned, I wouldn't care for," Bariden said,
running a finger across her flat middle. "When the time comes
for me to settle down somewhere, I want the location to be my choice,
not someone else's. And to answer your earlier question, we still
have a couple of hours before what I hope will be the best time to
try for the gate. Let's rinse off, and then we can sit down to a
meal."
"Why not?" she
said with a shrug, stretching hard before sitting up. "The thing
that still bothers me, though, is that we don't know why we're being
put through this. I have a feeling that if we did know, we'd have the
answer to a lot of other questions as well."
"Questions like
what?" Bariden asked, watching the way her body moved as he got
out of the bed. And that auburn hair, sliding around her arms to
frame her in silken glory...
"We've already
discussed some of them," she fretted, unaware of his
appreciation as she followed him to standing. "Like, why are we
here? If someone wanted to get rid of us to keep us from finding out
what was done to the
TH€ HIDDGM
261
stricken people and by
whom, it would have been easier to kill us. Why go to all this
trouble instead, and gamble on our not finding a way out? But at
least we know one thing for certain: this trap was prepared for both
of us, not just you alone. Do you see that now?"
"At this point I'd
have to be blind not to," Bariden answered with a nod. "We
discussed this once before, but now there's no doubt. Most of what
we've gone through was aimed at both of us, but I've just thought of
something. What if the only reason we're in this trap is to prove
we're not better than the enemy? I mean, what if he's unstable enough
to want to prove his superiority in everything over everybody? That
would be the reason we're still alive, even though, objectively
speaking, it's such a bad idea."
"I don't know if I
like the sound of that, or hate it," Chalaine returned, hugging
herself as if against an inner chill. "On the one hand, those
who are mentally unstable are prone to overlooking things that fall
into one of their twisted blind spots. That would mean we had a
better chance of breaking free, but only if the enemy has enough
blind spots. If he doesn't, there could be something really horrible
waiting for us at the end of this."
"Let's not start
thinking that way," he cautioned, pulling her into his arms to
hold her close. "If there's a Spell of Volition on this next
gate the way there was on the previous ones, dreading what might be
ahead of us could trap us here. I prefer to believe that we'll win
against whatever's thrown at us, which is what has to be our enemy's
major nightmare. If, deep down, he wasn't afraid we really were
better, he'd never have set this up in the first place."
"Which should also
mean that, given the chance, we'll be able to figure out who he is
when we get back," she agreed, raising her head to look up at
him. "With that in mind, let's get this show on the road. The
sooner we get back, the sooner we'll have the chance to meet him face
to face."
"Now that's what I
call incentive," Bariden agreed, then joined her in heading for
the pool. Five minutes would do for his part of the face-to-face
encounter, five satisfying and really pleasant minutes ...
They swam briefly to wash
the sweat away, then got out and headed back to his actual chamber.
As they passed
262
SHARON
under the arch of mist,
his spell returned their clothes to them, fresh and sweet-smelling
and better than new. He eyed Chalaine as he banished their unusual
bathing room and got ready to call up a meal, and she eyed him right
back.
"Why are you looking
at me like that?" she asked, having already brushed at and
straightened her clothes. "And if you don't mind, I'd like to
braid my hair."
"But I do mind,"
he answered, looking at her with his head to one side. "And I
was just wondering why you shouldn't be wearing skirts, at least for
the meal we're about to share. The one time I saw you in a gown I
loved it, but there hasn't been a chance for a repeat of that. What's
wrong with right now?"
She parted her lips to say
something in immediate answer, then paused to study his expression.
She'd obviously noticed he hadn't done much pushing over the fact of
her loss to him in the competition, nothing like what someone else
would have done. All he'd really asked for so far was to see her hair
unbraided, and now to have her in a dress. Considering the fact that
they'd be leaving after their meal, there would hardly be the time
for it to get any worse.
"What's the sense in
arguing?" she asked at last with a defeated little sigh, looking
away from him. "You're the boss here, and I'm just a worthless
slave. Go ahead and do whatever you like, you know I can't stop you."
For an instant Bariden was
shocked to learn what she really felt, but then he was brought up
short by sudden suspicion. Chalaine hadn't even thought that way when
she was still refusing to argue with people; now, with the change in
her personality, it was completely out of place. And in a strange way
it seemed familiar, almost as though she were conceding defeat with a
definite purpose in mind ...
Bariden made a soft sound
of annoyance, aimed mostly at himself but not entirely. Of course
what Chalaine was doing seemed familiar, it was a variation of her
original tactics. Telling him to go ahead and do as he pleased was
supposed to make him do the exact opposite, from shame if nothing
else. He didn't want to be known as a bully, after all, and what else
would taking advantage of a poor, helpless slave
THG HIDD€N
263
be considered? If he were
a real man he would forget about pressing his unreasonable demands
...
"You know, I really
like the way that sounds," he told her after his momentary
hesitation, letting enthusiasm flow in slowly but definitely. "Yes,
I'm the boss and you're the slave, and I can do anything I please. I
do like it, so let's make it a little more obvious."
His spell was only a few
syllables long, and when he added the gesture all her clothes
vanished. Despite the fact that they'd just spent a few hours being
equally as naked, she squawked and immediately tried to cover herself
with her hands. Bariden grinned, knowing there was a big difference
between being naked with someone and being naked alone, and she
looked up at him with embarrassment flushing hotly in her cheeks.
"Damn it, that wasn't
funny!" she growled, a miniature fury looking daggers at him.
"And this isn't the skirts you were talking about."
"So I liked your idea
better," he answered with a shrug, his grin full as he inspected
the loveliness she had no hope of hiding. "Drop your hands and
turn around slowly, just to give me a good look at my slave."
"Bariden," she
began with furious warning, then seemed to notice ail of his
expression. He was joking only up to a point; beyond that he was
totally serious. She'd tried to force him to do things her way, tried
to get out of paying anything at all against her loss. She'd been the
one taking advantage, but Bariden was never going to be taken
advantage of by a woman again.
"All right, you win,"
she conceded, not the words she'd originally intended to use. "I
wasn't playing fair, and you caught me at it. I apologize sincerely,
and won't ever do it again. Can I have my clothes back now?"
"In a minute,"
Bariden murmured, unable to take his eyes from her. "I love
looking at you any time, but this time is better than most. Take your
hands away and turn around slowly."
Her cheeks reddened again
with the knowledge that a simple apology wasn't going to do it, and
there was nothing she could base a protest on. He had the right to
finish any game she started—if he could—and they both
knew who
264
SHAROM
had started that one. They
also knew he was proving his ability to finish it, for him, at least,
in the most pleasant way possible.
It took a moment before
she was able to drop her hands, and strangely enough it didn't seem
to be embarrassment any longer that was bothering her. She kept her
eyes on him as long as possible before she turned, then quickly moved
her head the other way to get him in sight again. That magnificent
auburn hair swept around with the movement of her head, and the fact
that she watched him while he looked at her was too much for Bariden.
The two steps between them disappeared without notice, and then he
had her in his arms.
"By the EverNameless,
I've never loved so much about a woman," he breathed, burying
his face in that hair. "I wish I were a poet rather than a
prince. Then I would have all the words I'm only able to grope for.
Chalaine, I—Do you know how much you mean to me?"
"I wish I didn't,"
she murmured in response, then immediately looked up at him to banish
his confusion over so strange an answer. "What / would like to
know, though, is if there's enough time for something besides a meal.
I would really like you to—make love to me again."
That hadn't been a problem
since the instant he'd banished her clothes, and he couldn't imagine
when it would be a problem. He kissed her rather than answering in
words, banished his own clothes, then joined her in bed. This second
time was even better than the first, but at the end of it they
weren't exhausted. It was more like exhilaration that Bariden felt,
and the only thing he regretted . was that they hadn't the time to
swim again. He freshened them with magic instead, less satisfying but
more thorough than bathing, then dressed them and called up a meal.
"I was hoping you'd
forget about skirts, but after seeing this I'm glad you didn't,"
Chalaine said, examining herself in the full-length mirror standing
in one comer of the chamber. "I've never worn anything in silver
lace, most especially not anything as delicately lovely as this. If I
spill something from the meal on it, I'll probably kill myself."
THE HIDDGM
Q65
"I'm glad you like
it, but there's no need to go that far," Bariden answered with a
chuckle from beside the table. "Come and sit down and don't
worry about it. If anything spills, I won't have any trouble cleaning
it up."
"But right now I
would, and that's made me think," she said, turning away from
the mirror to walk slowly over to the table. "Except for that
one brief time on the first world, I've never been in a position
where I couldn't reach my ability at all. In fact, that time in the
first world—and in this one before the competition—aren't
the same at all. In both those instances I was constrained from using
a skill I still had, but now I can't even hear it when you speak a
spell. The experience is totally different."
"It has to be like
losing your eyesight or your hearing," Bariden said with a frown
as he seated her. "I should have realized sooner that you would
be suffering, but at least it won't be for much longer. As soon as
we're through eating, we'll be heading for the gate."
"That's not what I
meant," she said, watching him take his own place at the table.
"At first I was furious at being cut off so completely, but then
it came to me that our ability with magic has been a handicap as well
as a strength all along. Using magic keeps getting us into trouble
even when that trouble looks like a benefit, and having the ability
to use it has kept us from thinking. Aside from the new warding we're
using and the variable spell I put on my clothes against unexpected
weather extremes, when have we taken any precautions before stepping
through a gate?"
"We haven't,"
Bariden agreed, sipping at his coffee as he considered that very
excellent point. "We've been assuming we'd be able to handle
anything that came at us, simply because we're magic users. I
remember thinking back at the hostel that it had been stupid of me
not to be sure we had a good supply of gold and silver coins before
coming to this world, but I forgot all about it. If you hadn't said
anything I would have stepped through the next gate, supremely
confident that my magic would take care of anything that came up."
"So it behooves us to
do some thinking now" she said, peeking under one plate cover to
see what the dish was. "Silver and gold isn't the only thing we
could have used
266
SHAROM
on this world, and
probably won't be what we need on the next. What we need to do is
think for a while, and then make a list."
That was the most sensible
suggestion he'd heard in a long while, so he joined her in thinking
while they ate. He would have preferred a good wine with the meal
rather than the coffee he'd provided, but they'd need clear heads for
tackling the gate. And coffee did help when he needed to think, a
fact that proved itself when they began to make their list. More than
one good idea was put down, and when they were through he sat back to
consider the results.
"Silver and gold in
modest but adequate amounts, to form as soon as we step through the
gate in order to avoid problems here," he read off to Chalaine.
"A change of clothes for each of us. Food in concentrated form
that will last a week, the same with water. A miniature tent that
will grow to full-size when exposed to the air, fully insulated
against heat and cold. Emergency medical items. Automatic healing
spell, automatic strength-gathering spell—which may or may not
work—and a spell that sends greater magical strength used
against us back in the face of the one using it. Anything else you
can think of?"
"Not at the moment,"
Chalaine said with a headshake, nevertheless looking bothered. "That
should cover us whether we can use magic or not. But I have the
feeling we're still overlooking something, even though I don't know
what it can be. The magical ability of those around us has increased
from world to world, you know. Next time we could be utterly and
completely outclassed."
"Or we could be back
to the beginning, where we outclass everyone else," Bariden
pointed out. "There's no way of knowing until we see the place
and ask a few questions, and anticipating anything in particular
could be a mistake they're hoping we make. On the other hand—"
"On the other hand we
could spend the next year coming up with guesswork," she said
after taking a deep breath. "You're absolutely right, and
worrying about it will only make us reluctant to use the gate. That
is, it might make you reluctant. For my part, I can't wait to get out
of here."
"And I certainly
can't blame you," Bariden remarked, watching her take a final
swallow of coffee before pushing
THG HIDDGN B€ALW
Q67
the cup away. "If I
were a slave the way you are, I'd be just as eager to be on my way."
"Aren't you ever
going to let me forget that?" she asked, the color rising
faintly to her cheeks again. "No, your grin says you aren't, so
don't bother answering any other way. Maybe next time /'// get to be
the boss, then you'll know for sure how a slave thinks."
She glanced at him from
under those long, dark lashes, but there wasn't anything of a threat
in her expression. She seemed to know that even if he was put into a
position where he had to obey her, the results would never be the
same as they were there. And Bariden would never have to be ordered
to give her pleasure, not when that was all he wanted to do for the
rest of both their lives. He'd never get tired of the incredibly
wonderful feel of her in his arms .. .
"I think we'd better
get to it," he said after clearing his throat and rising.
"Another five minutes of conversation, and I will be reluctant
to leave. Do you need anything right this minute?"
"Aside from my
regular clothes and that hairbrush, no," she answered, running
her hand over the silk lace of her gown for a final time. "I'll
miss this, but once we get back I can always recreate it. Okay, go
ahead."
Peripherally Bariden
thought there was something odd about what she'd said, but most of
his attention was on the spells he was ready to speak. First he
changed their clothes, making his as variable as hers, and then he
produced the physical part of their list. Last, and separately, he
spoke the spells they were taking with them, spells he fervently
hoped they wouldn't need. What they did need was to be out of that
trap, but so far they hadn't spotted the necessary opening in their
prison walls ...
"Okay, I'm all set,"
Chalaine announced once she'd put her new hairbrush into the pack
holding the rest of what they were taking. "And I'm also the one
who gets to carry this pack. If we have to defend ourselves
physically as soon as we step through the gate, you're the one we
want to be unburdened."
Bariden was reluctant to
agree to that, but he had no choice. If he played the gentleman and
insisted on carrying
968
SHARON
the heavy pack, the
gesture could end up producing disaster. He nodded as he watched
Chalaine heft the thing, made sure it wasn't too heavy for her, then
led the way out into the hall.
When he and the others had
toured the area earlier, there had been a good number of men moving
about the wing. Right now the corridors were as deserted as he'd
hoped they'd be, with the only sounds of life coming from the nearest
gathering room. The room, halfway down a cross-corridor on the left,
was quickly behind them, and then they were moving through the soft
whisper of empty silence.
It wasn't long before they
found themselves approaching the room with two guardsmen in front of
it. The guardsmen watched incuriously as Bariden moved closer, but
they found Chalaine of enough interest to study her carefully. Not
that it really mattered. As soon as Bariden was near enough to be
certain the two weren't being guarded by magic, he froze them where
they stood.
"Now we go in,"
Chalaine muttered, shifting the pack she carried in her arms. "And
I think a couple of backstraps would be useful on this thing."
"Once we're inside,"
Bariden muttered back, moving between the two guardsmen to open the
door. "You first."
Chalaine moved past him
quickly and without comment, and Bariden followed the same way.
Inside was a large, undecorated room of gray stone, not even windows
breaking up the blankness. The only thing it held was the gate, the
glowing slit clearly surrounded by a Spell of Volition. Big surprise,
Bariden thought, turning to close the door, and then he saw what was
a surprise.
"She looks like she's
been waiting for a while," Chalaine remarked as he finished
closing the door. "Aren't you going to introduce us?"
"Not until I get my
own introduction," Bariden commented in return, studying the
woman. She stood in the near comer to the left of the door as you
entered, a position that had kept her out of sight until they were
inside. A tall and slender blond, she stood with all the grace and
confidence of a born warrior. She wore the sort of breeches, tunic,
and boots that Chalaine favored, but hers were in very light colors,
including the fawn boots. Her face was no more
TH6
269
than pretty, but her gray
eyes held depths that most eyes didn't.
"Since I have the
advantage of you, I'll perform the introductions," the woman
said with a faint smile as she took one step forward. "I'm
Darmillanne, and you're Bariden and Chalaine. I've been looking
forward to meeting you two."
"Since we've been in
this city for just under a full day, that's interesting,"
Chalaine said, setting the pack on the floor at her feet. "Would
you like to tell us why you consider us so fascinating?"
"I think I can answer
that in part," Bariden said with sudden inspiration.
"Darmillanne is Sighted, and I think what she forgot to mention
is that she's also the king. Am I wrong, Your Majesty?"
"You know you're not
wrong," Darmillanne said with amusement while Chalaine frowned.
"And I liked the way you put that. Nothing about 'king' being
the wrong title because I'm a woman. Most people would be too
thickheaded to understand that as ruler of this place, I can call
myself anything I damned well please."
"Not to mention that
it's more politically expedient and saves you a lot of trouble,"
Chalaine added with a nod. "Men fight under the banner of a
king, but they fight to protect a queen. The difference there is one
of attitude, and lets them believe the queen would be helpless if
they didn' t fight for her. When it's a bunch of ambitious sorcerers
you have under you rather than fighting men, letting them know you're
a woman would have them challenging you every five minutes. Most men
have this strange idea that they're better than a woman."
"So I noticed quite a
while ago," Darmillanne answered with a soft laugh. "My
predecessor had that kind of blindness, which suited me just fine,
but it also gave me an idea that let me cut down on the worst
competition I could face. It usually gives me a chuckle that no one
yet has figured out my unreasonable attitude toward women—except
for you, Bariden."
"I had occasion to
think about the matter," Bariden replied with an easy shrug.
"And now that I see the way you move and gesture, I find myself
with another suspicion. Was that you disguised as a man named
Sarvallo
Q7O
SHAROM
earlier today, directing
the competition? I have the strongest conviction ..."
"You are good,"
Darmillanne said, her nod accompanied by an approving smile. "Yes,
that was me, sizing up potential competition even as I accepted them
into service. And before you ask, I don't use what I learn to defeat
them if and when they challenge me. Real challenges are what keep me
on my mental toes, making me constantly work to improve my skill.
Without them I'd get fat, lazy, and sloppy."
"But you don't allow
challenges from just anyone," Chalaine said, deeply attentive to
what they were being told. "When we first got here, we saw a man
screaming and writhing on the ground. . ."
"One of them,"
Darmillanne said with scom and a gesture of dismissal. "There
are enough of that sort that it makes me tired. Whoever that Sighted
was, he was more interested in stealing than in challenging. I don't
blame people for wanting to be king—after all, once I was one
of them. But there's a legitimate way of putting yourself into
position to challenge, where you first qualify for service. Those who
want something for nothing have no patience for doing things the
right way, they just want the goodies without earning them. Without
proving they deserve them. They'd take the privilege without doing
the job."
"So that's what you
teach those in your service," Bariden said, seeing more of the
whole picture. "A sense of responsibility to go along with
earned rights. If you're ever defeated in a challenge, you want it to
be by someone who won't think of himself as an interloper. He'll know
the place he won is his by right, and will therefore value it rather
than strip it just to satisfy overwhelming greed. He'll take your
place, but he'll also keep doing your job."
"Which takes a lot
more work than most people seem to realize," she said, one hand
moving up to rub at her neck. "More than / realized before /
took over. Afterward, I spent some time wondering if my win hadn't
been just a little too easy ... He'd been king a long time, and he
always looked so tired and bored . . . Well, none of that matters
right now. What does matter is why I'm here, engaged in a pleasant
conversation with two strangers who have been sneaking
THG HtDDGN
271
around my palace and
freezing some of my guardsmen. Anyone care to make a guess about
thatl"
She looked back and forth
between the two people standing in front of her, and Bariden
exchanged a blank glance with Chalaine. The question she'd put was
the one that had been bothering him since he'd first caught sight of
the woman, and it looked like it was about to be answered.
"No guesses?"
Darmillanne said after a moment, less of that too-bright friendliness
in her expression. "Since there are also no time-wasting
protestations of innocence and ignorance, you've earned a small
reward. Have a seat, and help yourselves to the refreshments."
Her spell to produce
chairs and cups of coffee was simple, clear, and spoken loudly enough
for Bariden to hear every syllable. He considered that a generous
gesture of reassurance from a wizard who had more strength than he
did and knew it. As a matter of fact they both knew it, so he sat and
lifted his cup as soon as the king and Chalaine were seated. Refusing
a wizard's hospitality wasn't recommended for continuing good health.
"Now then, the reason
I'm here," Darmillanne continued. "It goes back to the time
I first became king. I developed the Sarvallo disguise to let me move
around anonymously, telling people that Sarvallo was my most trusted
servant. Since 'he' was heavily protected by magic even against
physical assault, I could wander as I pleased. When I was offered
bribes to tell people about the new king, I accepted the bribes, then
made it up as I went along. Since I made no effort to keep the
different stories straight, people soon noticed and disgustedly
stopped wasting their silver and gold."
She grinned with real
amusement at that, and Bariden couldn't help chuckling. Someone with
a strict sense of duty would have steadfastly refused the bribes, but
the woman had a sense of humor instead. And intelligence. Happily
taking people's money and giving them nothing in return stopped the
bribes faster than all the refusing in the universe would have done.
"At any rate, I
wandered," she went on. "What I paid most attention to was
the people and how they were taking the shift in power, and in the
process I stumbled across
something very odd. In the
newcomers1 wing there was a guarded door, and although I must have
passed the place a hundred times, I'd never before noticed either the
door or the guards. I considered going in and looking at whatever the
room held, but first I went to visit my guard commander.
"The man was
incredibly officious, but I finally pried loose the information he
had. It seems that that room had been under guard for years and
years, longer even than the commander had held his post. His orders
were to keep the door under guard, and never report the fact even to
the king. No one was allowed inside the room, but I had the feeling
the man had once taken a look out of sheer curiosity. When I pushed
him he admitted it, but said it really didn't matter. The room was
completely empty, and looked as if it always had been."
She paused to take a sip
of her coffee, and Bariden suddenly guessed that she'd supplied it
for their benefit. The way she drank it said it wasn't her favorite
beverage, but telling her story distracted her enough that she didn't
mind.
"After that I was
even more curious, so I went back to my apartment and started a
methodical search of my predecessor's records. He kept a daily diary,
bless his soul, and that was when I discovered he'd been chosen to
take over for the ruler before him. Not that he wasn't powerful, you
understand. Thousands of men must have tried him in his day, but none
of them had even come close to victory.
"But because he'd
been chosen, he'd also been given some information that a successful
challenger would have missed out on. He was told that once he became
king, he might come across a room he'd never noticed before. If he
did, he was to ignore it, not try to look inside or do anything to
change the situation as it stood. The guards on the room were to be
left where they were, and under no circumstances were they to be
replaced by a sealing spell. His diary said he tried searching the
palace for the room, but apparently he never got to the newcomers'
wing or thought to check with the guard commander. After a little
while he forgot about it, and never mentioned it again."
TH€ HIDDGh
273
At that point Bariden
exchanged a glance with Chalaine, and the king picked up on it
immediately.
"You seem to have
something to say," she observed, again looking back and forth
between them. "Whatever it is, I want to hear it."
"I think Chalaine and
I were reacting to what you said about the king being forbidden to
replace the guards with a sealing spell," Bariden told her
slowly. "She and I had been wondering about that, specifically
because this wing is filled with sorcerers who couldn't be stopped by
unSighted guards. Part of our question is answered if no one but the
king can see the door or the guards, but the rest of it remains."
"Like why you two can
see it," she said, resting her chin in her palm and her elbow on
the chair arm. "I doubt if that's the part you meant, but it's
the one I'm most interested in. But tell me first why you think the
guards were there. That is part of what you know, isn't it?"
"It's more of a guess
than knowledge," Bariden admitted with a sigh. The king was a
damn sharp woman ... "We think there are guards on the room
because we'd have no trouble getting past guards, even without using
magic. A sealing spell on the room would be another matter entirely."
"And wouldn't have
been so easy to spot," Chalaine said suddenly, pointing at
Bariden. "You might have dismissed a sealed room as a place
someone wanted kept private, but guardsmen in the middle of
sorcerers' quarters—You'd have to be dead to miss that."
"You're saying you
two were meant to find this room, and without any trouble."
Darmillanne saw the point at once, her tone now sharper. "Tell
me why, and also who arranged this. Not to mention exactly what it is
you're supposed to do in here. And stop looking at each other like
that. If you believe I'll let you get away with telling me only what
you think I ought to know, you've never dealt with a wizard before."
Bariden had to consciously
keep himself from looking at Chalaine yet again, a gesture that would
have been futile as well as stupid. She couldn't give him permission
to speak any more than he could give it to her, and they both knew
<274
SHARON
THG HIDDEN
275
how important keeping the
secret was. There was no way to judge how much damage they would do
by telling the full truth, and—
"Wait a minute,"
Chalaine said, then looked directly at him. "Are you feeling
what I am? That it would be disastrous to tell anyone what we're in
the middle of? That grim look on your face says you are, so I have a
question. Why would it be disastrous?"
"That's easy,"
Bariden answered with a snort. "It's because—well, it has
to be because—I mean, it stands to reason—"
Only then did Bariden
notice the blank wall, the empty place where a good, logical reason
for keeping silent should have been. Up until then it had made sense
not to announce to the world that they came from a different world;
when people don't know about other worlds—as most of the ones
they'd met didn't—they have a tendency to look at
self-professed strangers oddly, to say the least. But this was a
wizard now questioning them, and you don't try to keep secrets from a
wizard, not if you enjoy life without pain...
"Damn it, somebody
set a compulsion," he growled, feeling really stupid. "They
took our natural sense of caution and intensified it, and we never
noticed. Or at least I didn't."
"I don't think they
expected us to be questioned by a wizard," Chalaine said,
looking as annoyed as he felt, but also grimly satisfied. "And I
also doubt if we were supposed to pick up the information we just
did. This arrangement isn't new, it's been here for years and years
and years. That probably means we aren't the first to take this trip,
and won't be the last. Doesn't that tell us something?"
"It's time you told
me something," Darmillanne interrupted, but with less impatience
than a moment ago. "Start from the beginning, and don't leave
anything out."
Bariden still felt an
overwhelming reluctance to discuss the forbidden topic, but Chalaine
seemed to be doing better against the compulsion. She began with the
problem they'd been working on, described how they'd been pulled into
the trap, then listed the various worlds and their problems. Once
she'd gone through it to the end, she added,
"And I think I have
my competition loss to thank for being able to shake off the
compulsion against talking. My own strength is most likely supporting
the compulsion, but being cut off from that strength has weakened the
compulsion's grip. It's still there, but it doesn't have the original
choke hold."
"Fascinating,"
Darmillanne breathed, now staring at the closed gate on her left and
Bariden and Chalaine's right. "Other worlds, other kingdoms with
different people and needs. And your world, where gates to other
places are commonplace and plentiful. Absolutely fascinating."
"You haven't told us
yet how you knew we would be here," Bariden mentioned in a
casual way. It might help to know that, some time in the future.
"I set up a very
simple spell in the corridor outside," the king answered without
taking her eyes from the gate. "Everyone who came through here
ignored the door and its guards, so none of them could be the ones
meant to enter. My spell watched for someone who noticed the door and
its guards, and when that someone appeared, I knew it immediately. I
waited here for hours, but it was worth it. I now know what that
beautiful thing is, and in general how it works. What you haven't
told me yet is how you get around whatever spell is on it."
"Don't you want to
know first if you should try to get around it?" Chalaine asked,
the words very deliberate. "I have the feeling you've been
waiting for years for someone to come looking for this gate, but
since you didn't know what it was, you couldn't think the problem
through in a rational way. Right now you're seeing our world, with
all those plentiful gates, lying beyond this one. The fact of the
matter is, it isn' t, and going through may not even be a step in the
right direction. It's the only step Bariden and I can take, but it
could well turn out to be a dead end we're being herded to. Is that
really what you want to leave all this for?"
Darmillanne's head turned
back fast, and the look she gave Chalaine was narrow-eyed and
suspicious. Chalaine returned the stare calmly, showing nothing
remotely like guilt or embarrassment, and that annoyed Darmillanne
even more.
276
SHARON
"You're assuming I
have decided to leave, which doesn't happen to be so," she said
at last, her own words very neutral. "Just because I want to
know how to do it, you can't assume I will. For one thing, I'd first
have to decide whether to choose a replacement for myself, or just
put someone in temporary charge until I got back. You did say that
all the gates you passed through were two-way?"
"Absolutely,"
Chalaine lied without changing expression. "But wouldn't you
very first have to find someone strong enough to maintain your spells
here while you were gone? Once you step through a gate, any
unmaintained spells you leave behind will immediately cancel
themselves through lack of your talent to draw on. I've never had
that problem myself, but I'm not a wizard. Those from our world who
are wizards do have the problem, but don't often have trouble with
it. There are enough of them that they can call on each other for
help any time they need it."
A peculiar expression
passed across Darmillanne's face, and Bariden had to fight to keep
his own face straight. Chalaine was doing a very thorough job of
ruining the king's unspoken but fairly obvious intentions, and all
without arguing or refusing to tell the woman what she wanted to
hear. She'd lied about the gates being two-way, but that was only
commonsense self-protection. If the king had heard they were one-way,
she would have been certain she was being lied to. Bariden would have
bet gold that Darmillanne was seeing her sudden dreams of empire
building crashing down, most especially after that comment about how
many wizards there were and how well they cooperated.
"I think it's time
Chalaine and I got moving," Bariden said then, putting aside his
coffee cup. "Since we don't know what's waiting for us, we'd
like to be as fresh as possible when we face it."
Darmillanne hesitated,
then said, "Very well. I now know everything you do, except for
the one question you still haven't answered. How do you get through
the spell?"
"That's relatively
easy," Bariden answered, standing as Chalaine did the same after
retrieving the pack. "If you really want to go through the gate,
it will open for you.
TH€ HIDDGN ROW
277
Here, you can watch us
doing it, and then you'll know what to expect."
Darmillanne hesitated a
second time, and Bariden didn't have to tell Chalaine to hurry in
order to take advantage of it. Any minute the king could decide she
didn't want them out of reach if she thought of any more questions,
and they would end up settling down on that world whether they liked
it or not. He and Chalaine moved toward the gate together, the sound
of the king standing up coming clearly from behind them. She'd pushed
her chair back; was she going to—
And then whatever words
might have been spoken were turned into a gasp as the gate flared
wide. Darmillanne couldn't have seen that sight before, and it gave
Bariden and Chalaine the seconds they needed to move directly into
the gate. An echo of sound followed, as though someone might be
shouting behind them, but magic alone can't get past the barrier. The
only visible gate was a single step away, and they took that step ...
This time we were indoors,
with what looked like a smallish and deserted hut enclosing the gate.
Once we were out the gate closed, and a glance showed it seemed to be
embedded in the back wall of the hut. I put down the pack I was
lugging with a sigh of relief, and turned to look at Bariden.
"I don't think she'll
be following right behind us," I told him as he watched the
gate. "Even if she's angry enough to want to, the reasoning part
of her mind will have enough doubts to keep the gate firmly closed.
As a matter of fact, at her level of greed she may never get it to
open again."
"I know she's
ambitious, but greedy?" Bariden said, looking at me with one
brow raised. "What makes you think that?"
"I thought it was
obvious," I said with a shrug, wondering how he could have
missed it. "Ambition may make you kill for what you want, but it
doesn't make you want everything there is to have. Once she was king
she also mingled as one of the boys, making sure there was nothing
she didn't know about and therefore couldn't control. Overseeing the
competition was part of that, and I'll bet gold she was there
Q78
SHARON
to eliminate anyone who
looked like they might grow to real strength. Those entrants who put
everything they had into attack—their efforts should have
canceled each other out, but you said it killed them both. Using
magic isn't like using physical weapons, and that shouldn't have
happened."
"I hadn't realized
that," he said, now looking disturbed. "I thought she was
fairly decent, even though I didn't trust her not to stop us.
Ambition would lead her to want to expand her kingdom, but—what
about the personal challenges she answers, and all those laws that
showed concern for the people?"
"Personal
challenges," I echoed with a sound of disgust. "How hard is
it to make someone believe he's ready when he really isn't?
Especially when you're keeping tabs on him while disguised as someone
else? All those freely allowed personal challenges were another way
of eliminating competition before it turned into something she might
not have been able to handle. She didn't use them to keep her on her
toes, she used them to keep her on her throne."
"And the laws?"
he asked, speaking calmly and quietly in the face of my anger. I'd
been able to keep my voice down, but not my emotions.
"Those laws, except
for one, weren't hers," I stated, knowing it beyond doubt. "They
were established—or continued—by the king she eliminated,
and were most likely being maintained by her strength without her
knowing it. My best guess would be that she was being groomed to
eventually take the throne, but decided that 'eventually' was taking
too long in coming. Instead of waiting her turn, she ambushed her
mentor and took everything on the spot."
"Was that why she
looked so startled when you talked about maintaining other people's
spells?" he asked with sudden surprise. "I thought—Well,
I didn't think she was first finding out she was maintaining without
knowing it. But she did mention that her predecessor had been chosen
and trained by the king before him. Legal succession was the rule
before her, but hers wasn't the same. How did you figure all that
out?"
"The one law she put
into effect told me," I said, now glancing around the hut.
Packed dirt floor, rough wood walls, cut grass roof—architecture
at its finest. "That rule
HIDD€N RCALTO
279
about what's done with
women who compete and lose is hers, a pastiness contrived through
spite and fear. She said she wasn't underestimating other women the
way she'd been underestimated, but the word she should have used was
trust. She'd been trusted, and had used that to stab people in the
back. She didn't mist other women not to do the same, so unless they
were basically incompetent, she made sure they lost. The men were
free to come back and try again—after all, they were
manageable—but she didn't want her most feared competitors to
do the same. I realized the law was hers when she didn't say a word
about it to me. She knew I'd lost, but wasn't in the least
concerned."
"If that's true, then
we have her to thank for saving us some trouble," he said
slowly, apparently considering what he'd been told. "We were
certainly supposed to face each other in the competition, but under
the old rules one of us would have ended up barred from the palace
for a year. The only thing that saved us was that law, which let me
bring you into the palace when you lost. Without it—I don't
know what we would have done, but it wouldn't have been as easy as
what we did do."
'Then—maybe we were
meant to go in a different direction," I said, suddenly worried.
"We saw nothing of the countryside at all, and didn't even ask
someone besides the hostler any questions. What if we weren't
supposed to get through this gate, but another one in a place we
wouldn't find unless we left the city?"
"I'd say it's a
little late to be worrying about that," he answered, taking a
step back toward the gate we'd come through. "This gate is just
like Hie others, and it isn't opening even with me right on top of
it. What you said to the king about all the gates being two-way—it's
too bad it wasn't true."
I stared at him and the
unopen ing gate, a sinking fear twisting my insides, and that's when
we heard the shouts and screams coming from outside ...
CHAPTER fOURT€€M
B
ariden ran out of the hut,
and I was right behind him. Obviously there was a more immediate
problem than whether or not we should be where we were, and stepping
out of the hut showed it to us. The day was dark and cold, middle to
late afternoon, the cutting wind saying a weather change was
definitely on the way. It had been cold in the hut too, I realized,
but we'd been too distracted to notice . . .
And those people who were
screaming and shouting were far too busy to notice. There were quite
a few of them, men, women and children, but their six male attackers
were armed while they weren't. Some of the men were trying to defend
themselves with sticks or hoes, but those don't do well against
swords. The six attackers were laughing while they chopped down
everyone around them including some of those trying to run, and
acting as if they had nothing to worry about. Not five feet away from
the hut we'd been in was the probable cause of that attitude. A man
lay on the ground covered in his own blood, clearly dead or dying.
Beside him was a compound bow and a quiver of arrows, the one arrow
that had been in his string tangled up with the bow. The man seemed
to have had the only weapon there, and the attackers had evidently
taken care of him first.
"At least they're not
in armor," Bariden muttered, and his sword was already in his
hand. "You stay back out of it, Chalaine, and don't try using
magic unless they come at you over my body. We still don't know the
rules in this place."
<28O
281
He glanced at me with
more—expression—than your usual glance contains, and then
he was running toward the very uneven fight. Six to one is terrible
odds, but he was probably hoping he was good enough to take a few of
them out before they could make their numbers count. I itched to try
a freezing spell—and would, if it looked like he was about to
be bested; waiting until he was down was an absurdity only a man
would think of. I would use magic as and if I had to but, happily,
there was something else to try first.
The downed man's bow was
spattered with his blood, but at least the string hadn't been cut. I
stepped around him carefully but quickly, retrieved the quiver and
then the bow, withdrew three arrows from the quiver, then renocked
the arrow he hadn't had a chance to loose. No one else had gone for
the weapon, of course, not when touching it would bring the six
attackers down on the toucher with swords swinging. Terror tactics
designed to minimize resistance . . .
But just then the six men
were being distracted from their tun by Bariden's approach. Everyone
including them wore what looked like homespun made by an amateur, and
their swords had apparently seen better days. Bariden shouted
something I couldn't hear as he ran, and those men with sticks and
tools fell back away from the ones with swords. The attackers had
stopped laughing as they looked at the newcomer, and one or two were
snarling in outrage. The rest, though ... did those expressions mean
they already counted Bariden's clothes and weapon theirs ... ?
"Guess again, you
slime," I muttered as I drew the nock back to my ear. Three of
the six were coming forward to meet Bariden straight on, but the
other three, two to the left and one to the right, were circling
around in an effort to get behind him. The wind whipped my hair
around in gusts, me worst kind of wind where arrows are concerned,
but I'd loosed under conditions like those before. The front one of
the two on the left first...
Carefully timed between
gusts, the arrow flew straight and true, right into the chest of the
man I was aiming for. Hearing his scream and seeing his blood was
more upsetting than I'd thought it would be, but 1 couldn't afford to
let squeamishness distract me from helping Bariden. I nocked
289
SHAROM
another arrow from the
three I held with the fingers of my left hand, shifted aim, then took
out the attacker sneaking around on Bariden's right. I was reaching
for a third arrow when I suddenly noticed what was going on with the
fight, and the sight stopped me still with my jaw hanging.
That problem I usually had
with causing things to happen—I hadn't seen any evidence of it
in quite a while, but now it was back with a vengeance. The first man
I'd shafted had apparently stumbled backward, but not to simply fall
down. He staggered into the man behind him, the other one on that
side trying to flank Bariden, and the two had tangled up and gone
down together. The one on the right, also with an arrow in his chest,
had spun around rather than staggering or falling, and his sword had
chopped into one of the three men facing Bariden. That one was
clutching a bleeding middle and staring disbelievingly at the wounded
man who had chopped him, and then he added the icing. With a vicious
thrust he put his sword into the man who had accidently wounded him,
and the two fell to the ground together.
Which left only two
opponents for Bariden. I blinked at the way that had happened,
wondering why the twisted talent was suddenly working/or me rather
than against. Not that I was complaining. We needed all the help we
could get, and the thing couldn't have chosen a better time to
appear.
The two men left were
suddenly less eager to face Bariden, but he gave them no choice about
it. He brought the fight to them with such speed that they had to try
attacking in turn, and that became their final mistake. He slashed
open the one on his left and caught the other with his backswing, and
the two began to crumple to the ground together.
The last one of the six,
the one to Bariden's far left who had gotten entangled with the first
man I'd shafted, had made it back to his feet. He'd begun to run in
with his sword raised high while the previously last two were still
unhurt, but his timing was terrible. He reached Bariden seconds after
he'd dealt with the two, just as Bariden turned to him with sword
extended. He ran onto Bariden's blade as though he'd hit a brick
wall, but the big man he'd tried to attack wasn't thrown off balance.
The move had been
THG HIDDCM
Q83
carefully calculated to
take out the last of the six, and when Bariden jerked his sword free,
the fight was over.
It took a few seconds for
the people huddling out of the way to begin moving naturally again,
and when they did they went first to those of then- own who had been
hurt. Too many of the bodies on the ground were beyond help, but some
would survive their wounds and recover. Here and there a man or woman
cried quietly above someone who hadn't been so lucky, and the very
quietness of their mourning sent a shiver through me.
"Hurting the helpless
is a cowardice I've never been able to understand," Bariden
muttered as he came up to me, his expression savage over the waste of
innocent lives. He must have cleaned his sword without my noticing,
since it was already back in its scabbard. "And considering this
wind, that was incredibly good shooting. I had no idea you could use
a bow so well."
"Archery is my
nonmagical hobby," I said with a shrug, wondering if he'd
noticed the rest of what had happened. "It takes a lot of
practice to gain the proper grace of style, not to mention hit what
you're aiming at, but it's worth the effort. But to tell the truth,
it's never been worth quite as much as it was today."
"I'm just glad you
made that effort," he said with a gentle smile, putting an arm
around my shoulders. "I might not have survived this if you
hadn't. And we'd better get you inside out of this cold and nasty
weather. I can see how you're shivering—"
His words broke off as he
looked down at me, but I was already with him on that. I was
shivering because of the cold, but I shouldn't have been. The
variable spell on my clothes should have kept me warm, but it didn't
seem to be working. Bariden's expression said he was just realizing
his own clothes weren't adjusting to the weather, but before either
of us could say anything, a small group of people approached us.
"Please ... we need
to ask you . .." one of the women said, all but trembling with
fear. "Did you do that for yourselves ... or for us?"
Bariden and I exchanged a
glance, not quite sure how to answer. The woman who had spoken—thin
to the point
Q84
VHARON GR€€M
of gauntness, her
ankle-length dress faded to a washed-out brown and white, she stood
with two other women just like her. Behind them were others, and the
men among them were trying to hide the presence of sticks and hoes.
"We did it for us and
you both," Bariden answered carefully, looking around at them.
"If people don't stand together when they're attacked, no one is
safe. Who were those men, and what did they want here?"
"They were from the
next village over," one of the men supplied while the women just
hugged each other in relief. "They must have heard that we lost
two of our fighters, and the other three were out trying to get the
two taken swords back. What they wanted—why, what would they
want, if not our food and blankets and prettier women? What else is
there to want?"
There was no easy answer
to that, not when you looked around at the village. A scattering of
primitive huts, a dirt street, struggling fields beyond the farthest
huts—for people who did nothing but scrabble to survive, what
else was there?
"Will you—will
you stay to protect us until our own fighters get back?" another
man asked. He had brown hair and eyes, unlike the first man who was
blond, but the two were as thin as the women. "We'll share with
you the way we do with our fighters, and you can even have one of the
empty huts. There are other villages around here besides the one
those six come from . . ."
He let the words trail off
as his eyes begged us, the same way the eyes of all of them begged.
Even with the six swords they'd gained they were helpless, at least
until some of them were trained to use the weapons. Beside me Bariden
stirred, undoubtedly bothered by such naked need, but I couldn't wait
any longer to ask the most important question.
"But how can you
possibly need protection?" I blurted, more upset than I'd
realized. "You're all Sighted, every one of you. Why can't you
use magic to protect yourselves?"
"We're not from
around here," Bariden added hastily as they all stared at me as
though I were crazy. "We don't know anything about what's
happening here, so you'll have to tell us. And don't worry, we will
stay to protect
TH€ H1DD6M
985
you until your fighters
get back, so please—tell us what's going on."
"Don't know how
anybody could be that much of a stranger," the second man
muttered while the first rubbed his face with a grimy hand. "It's
the same for everybody . .. Well, I guess it doesn't matter, even
though I hate saying it out loud. We're just as good as them, we all
know that, but they got to their power first so we're out of luck.
They say the truth is we can't do what they do, that we're just not
up to it, but the truth we know is that they need somebody to look
down on if they're going to feel special. That's why they force us to
live like animals, scraping out an existence and accepting their
handouts."
"Kam means we can't
do magic because they won't let us," the first man said while
the second fought to control his anger. "They claim they haven't
done anything, but even if we get a spell and try it, it doesn't
work. Whatever we do has to be done by hand, the slow, hard way,
while they— they all live like kings. Can't you see it just by
looking at their city?"
The man's gesture was as
bitter as his words, and we turned to the right to see what he was
talking about. Just beyond the hut we'd come out of there was a
sparkling haze of sorts, something that suggested a kind of visible
warding. We could see through it easily enough, but walking through
was probably impossible.
But what there was to see!
It was close enough that it seemed to stretch into forever, a city
the likes of which I'd never even imagined. The buildings looked as
if they were made of pastel crystal and precious jewels, and each was
the size of a small palace. Lacy walkways extended between some of
the buildings, and the land between them and us looked like
exquisitely cared-for gardens. Even as I watched, a small party of
people rode beautiful horses out from one of the palaces and turned
left, I couldn't hear their laughter even though I could see it, and
their clothes were magnificent creations in all the colors there are.
They looked as though they were heading out for some exercise and
maybe even a picnic, but I didn't have to wonder where their picnic
basket was. When they got where they were going, they would create
whatever they wanted.
286
"Twice a year,
midwinter and midsummer, they give us handouts," the first man's
voice came from behind us. "Blankets and cloth mostly, along
with tools and seed for planting. And extra food, things they didn't
have to grow or raise in order to have. They claim they can't give us
everything, that we have to work to make lives of our own and
anything else we might want, but why should we have to? They don't
have to, so why should we?"
"Because watching us
crawl and struggle makes them feel good," the second man said,
answering what should have been a rhetorical question. "They
keep us from what ought to be ours, and expect us to believe it isn't
them doing it. Well, if it isn't them, who else could it be? We sure
as hell aren't doing it to ourselves."
I turned away from the
sight of magnificence that was totally beyond reach, and Bariden
reluctantly turned with me. The small group of people near us were
all agitated, some as furious as the two men who had spoken, the rest
miserable to the point of tears. One man seemed to be crying from
frustration, and I could understand exactly how he felt.
"Is it possible to
get into that city?" Bariden asked, one hand nibbing at his
neck. "Do they hire servants from any of the villages, or come
out on any sort of a regular schedule?"
"Why would they need
to dirty their city with servants like us?" the dark-haired Kam
asked bitterly. "They have magic to do what has to be done, no
lower life-forms needed or wanted. None of us ever go in, and they
don't come out. When it's time for the handouts, the things just
appear."
"Like magic,"
the blond man added, the words very flat. "We've got to go and
bury our dead before the skies really open up, but first I'll get you
some blankets and food. These three huts are empty, and you can have
your choice among them. You keep that bow, girl. There isn't a man
here who can use it half as well as you do."
The conversation was
breaking up because it had started to rain, a light drizzle that
might keep up for the rest of the day, or turn into a true downpour.
The crystal city beyond the mist had been bathed in golden sunshine,
something I'd seen but hadn't really noticed.
TH€ HIDDGM
Q87
"Chalaine, go back to
where we left the pack," Bariden said quietly. "I'll be
with you in a minute."
I picked up the quiver of
arrows before getting in out of the rain, then turned in the doorway
to see what Bariden was up to. He had his dagger in his hand as he
walked toward the six bodies we'd made, and when I saw him bending
over the first of the men I'd shafted I was able to turn away. He was
retrieving the arrows I'd probably need next time, and although I
knew it was necessary, the very thought of it made me sick.
It didn't take long before
he joined me in the hut, but by then I'd managed to get a fire going.
The smoke hole in the center of the roof looked like it had been
chopped through rather than planned for, but there was a wooden rain
shield over it that kept out all but a fine mist. It was starting to
rain harder, which meant I was glad a woman had already run in,
dropped a pile of blankets and a small cloth package, and immediately
run out again.
"I'm glad you knew
how to do that," Bariden said, putting the two arrows he'd
retrieved near the quiver before coming to stand near the fire. "I've
never had occasion to do it by hand, and I was picturing us shivering
in the damp."
"A Sighted friend of
mine goes camping out as his hobby," I answered, carefully
feeding a larger piece of wood into the fire. There was a pile of
wood in one corner of the hut, and despite the musty smell it gave
off, I was glad it was there. "He took me with him once, and
insisted on teaching me how to do this. He said it couldn't hurt to
have the knowledge, and one day might even come in handy. I haven't
touched the pack."
He looked at me as I
straightened, obviously feeling the same reluctance I did about
checking on our "preparations." It was all we had, a
representation of what we'd thought we'd learned, a last hope I
couldn't bring myseif to seek the truth about.
"The longer we put it
off, the worse it will be when we do look," Bariden said after a
very short hesitation. "And we already know the gold and silver
is useless. When not having a blanket or food can mean your death,
you don't give those things away for shiny but valueless pieces of
988
metal. But there has to be
something we can salvage."
He went to the pack and
opened it, and it turned out he was right. The extra sets of clothes
he'd provided were all right, and so was my hairbrush. The medical
items still included bandages and a small jar of ordinary salve for
cuts, but the cream to accelerate healing had disappeared, as had the
lotion for pain. The bars of concentrated food were there, but Banden
took one small taste and spit it out. Without the flavor of a
magnificent meal, the stuff had to taste like sodden paper. The small
jug of water was just a jug of water, and would not be refilling
itself. The miniature tent was nowhere to be seen, and certainly
wouldn't have worked even if it had been there.
"Everything depending
on magic is gone, but what was created by magic isn't," Bariden
said where he crouched beside the pack, his expression thoughtful. "I
wonder if that means anything."
"It means we've had
it," I supplied, turning away to walk to the doorway and look
out at the rain. It was falling really hard now, and the dark of the
clouds had merged with the dark of approaching night. As a landscape
it made me shiver with chill, but as a picture of what our future
would be like, it was perfect.
"I don't know how you
can stand there and watch mud being created," Bariden said,
coming up behind my right shoulder. "You seem to have a thing
for water—which reminds me of a question I kept meaning to ask
you. That day we met for the first time—why were you carrying
that giant ball of water?"
"I was in the middle
of an experiment when the Summons came," I explained with a
faint smile of memory. "It had occurred to me that in most
places people put out a fire by throwing buckets of water on it, one
at a time. Sometimes, if there are enough people and buckets it's two
or three at a time, but that's still horribly inefficient. If they
had spheres of water available instead, spheres that contained five
to ten gallons of water each, everyone could grab a sphere and throw
it... instead of running back and forth lugging buckets ... or
yelling for help from a Sighted ..."
His left arm came around
my shoulders when it was clear I couldn't go on, and then I was
turned around and
THG
RGALP19
Q89
held tight to his chest
with both arms. He made soothing, comforting noises as he patted my
back, but if he thought I was crying he was wrong. I was feeling too
desolate and defeated to cry, too much like someone at the dead end
of a long and unpleasant road. I rested my cheek against his shirt
without saying anything, only thinking about all the effort and
planning we'd wasted.
"Look, I know how you
feel because I feel that way, too," he said after a moment. "If
there's a next gate out of this place, it ought to be in one of the
palaces in that incredible city. Right now we can't get in there, but
tomorrow we might suddenly find a way in. You're not going to give up
when we might be only one more step from home?"
"Those might-he's
should answer your question," I said, moving myself away from
him and out of his arms. "We 'might be' only one step from home,
but we might also be a thousand steps from it. Or too far away even
to count the steps. I'm sick and tired of this game, and I don't want
to play any more. Even looking at that is beginning to bother me."
He knew by that I meant
the closed gate in the wall, and I wasn't joking. I was tired of
being led from one world to the next, chasing the dangling carrot of
eventual escape. We weren't going to escape, and it was time we
admitted it.
"I don't happen to
agree," he said, and I heard him closing the door and pulling in
the latchstring. "That gate hanging there is sticking its tongue
out at me, and I've never taken that from anyone. I'm good and sick
of this game too, but I won't give up until I win. The only reason
you're not seeing it the same is because you are tired, which means
you need to get to bed early for a good night's sleep. Tomorrow
you'll hate the sight of that gate as much as I do."
"If so, then I'll
move to one of the other empty huts that man mentioned," I said,
going back to the fire to put on another piece of wood. "Continuing
to struggle is just what's expected of us, and I refuse to keep on
doing the expected. If whoever-the-enemy-is doesn't like it, I have a
suggestion about what he can do with himself."
"By the EverNameless,
you're even stubborn when you're depressed," Bariden came back
with exasperation. Then he
Q9O
was in front of me again,
those blue eyes shadowed as he looked down at me with folded arms.
"And what if / don't like it? Are you going to tell me what to
do with myself?"
"Why not?" I
countered reasonably, folding my own arms. "I know you've come
down in life, but that's no reason for me to discriminate against
you. And I think I'll move tomorrow even if Sight of the gate doesn'
t bother me. If you're going to be busy making plans, you won't want
to be distracted by depression."
He studied me silently for
a moment, then said, "We can discuss that tomorrow. Right now
it's time to think about bed, but don't let your thinking dwell on
details. It won't be pleasant for us here, or even particularly
comfortable, but we will survive. And we'll win, Chalaine, we will
win. Even if you doubt everything else in this world, don't doubt
that."
He turned away from me
then to walk to the side of the hut, bent down, men straightened with
what looked like a long, lumpy sack in each hand. The thin sacks
seemed to be about three feet wide, and when he got them back to the
fire he shook them one at a time, apparently trying to distribute
their contents evenly. When he had them side by side near the fire,
he headed for the pile of blankets the woman had brought.
"The people of this
village pay well for protection," he commented after picking up
the blankets and looking at them. "One old and two relatively
new for each of us. But after the deaths from that attack, they
probably have blankets to spare. It's too bad we can't say the same
about beds. I've never slept on a straw-filled pallet, but people do,
so I'll manage. Now, let's see ..."
He took the two old,
frayed blankets, folded them in half, then placed one on each of the
sacks. After that he spread out two of the newer blankets one on top
of the other, then the final two as a sort of doubled, turned-down
cover. I stood there silently and watched him, feeling more depressed
by the minute. Pallets, those lumpy sacks were pallets, and we were
expected to use them instead of beds.
"We can't afford to
sleep in our clothes, not when the refreshing spell won't be working
any more," he said,
TH€ HIDDeri
reaching to his swordbelt
to remove it. "We'll let them air out overnight, and if it isn't
raining tomorrow we'll find out where clothes washing is done. After
that we'll have fresh clothes as often as we can wash the worn set."
He set his scabbarded
sword down on the ground near where he would sleep, then sat to
wrestle his boots off. I continued to stand where I was, totally
opposed to cooperating with that particular inevitable in any way at
all. Adapt and survive? For what reason? To give the enemy more fun
as he watched our useless struggle?
"Chalaine, you aren't
getting undressed," Bariden said, the reminder gentle. I looked
up to see that he was standing again, his tunic off and draped over
his boots. All he had on was his leather breeches, and suddenly a
previously dismissed idea popped up again.
"Damn it, that fool
is matchmaking," I growled, annoyance coming to join depression.
"First there was only one room at the hostel, then I had to stay
in your quarters in the palace, and now this. He must have been
having a grand old time watching, but the show is over. I'll be
damned if I perform for a fool."
"Hold it,"
Bariden said before I could turn away in anger. His tone was still
calm, but not quite as gentle. "That statement doesn't fit the
facts, and I think you know it. Didn't we agree that the results of
your competition loss were due to the king's spell rather than
anything done by the enemy? That single room at the hostel was
probably meant to distract us from effective planning, after which we
would have walked into the competition unprepared. Here—didn't
you say yourself there are two other empty huts available? Where can
deliberate manipulation possibly come in?"
"Just because it
isn't easy to see, that doesn't mean it isn't there," I answered
with almost no hesitation at all. "Everything else that's been
happening is manipulation, so why shouldn't this be? If you enjoy
doing everything the enemy wants you to, go ahead and do it. I don't
enjoy it, so I won't."
This time I did turn away,
and even walked to the hut wall behind me. I could hear the sounds of
rain outside, but without windows I couldn't see it. It was chilly in
the hut away from the fire, but it was also stuffy with the door
999
SHARON GR€€N
closed. I hated that
world, more than any of the others, more than anything I'd ever
experienced—
"Chalaine, stop it."
Bariden's voice came from directly behind me, gentle again but strong
with certainty. "The way you're acting has nothing to do with
the enemy, and not even with these primitive conditions. You know
what's really bothering you, so why don't you say it?"
I looked down at hands
that were shadowy blobs in the darkness, feeling how close he was. He
must have gotten his feet filthy, walking shoeless on that dirt
floor. . .
"Chalaine, say it,"
he repeated, those big hands coming to my upper arms. "Refusing
to admit the truth doesn't stop it from being the truth. Say it out
loud so we can bom hear it."
"I don't want to
belong to you," I stated in a very low voice, fighting to keep
from trembling. "This world is made for that kind of an
arrangement, and you're taking advantage of it without a second
thought. You're too big for me to fight without magic, so you think
you have it made. But I hate the whole idea, so I want you to wnmake
it."
"I see," he
said, the words at long last uneven, his hands dropping away from my
arms. "You don't want to belong to me. I thought it was
something else, but this isn't the first time I've been wrong. And I
certainly didn't mean to make you feel that you were being taken
advantage of. Since you hate the arrangements I've made, allow me to
make different ones."
I heard him move back
across the floor, there were sounds of activity, and finally there
was silence. After a moment of that I looked over my shoulder, and
the new arrangements he'd made were very obvious. His pallet and
blankets were still in the same place, but mine had been moved to the
near side of the fire. Bariden lay in his blankets with his back to
the fire—and to me—and all conversation seemed over for
the night.
Which was just as well,
since I had nothing more to say. I went to my pallet and straightened
it a little, then sat down to pul! off my boots. The rest of my
clothes would have to stay on, since I had no intentions of sitting
up all night just to feed the fire. Once it went out the hut would be
really chilly, and the blankets would never—
TH€ HIDDGh
993
I put my face in my hands
to be certain I made no sound, my back to the fire and to the man I'd
offended. Deliberately offended, despite the kindness he'd been
showing me. He'd been going to make me sleep beside him and once
there would certainly have made love to me again. But I couldn't let
him do it, not when one more time would have forced me to admit I was
in love with him. He loved my hair and my skin and having me in his
bed, but I loved him. The two things weren't at all the same, and the
difference would have killed me.
Was killing me. I slid my
hands down to my mouth, freeing my eyes to stare at fire shadows on
the wall. Chances were excellent that we were trapped on that world
for good, and once Bariden was able to admit that, he'd probably
insist that we marry. But I didn't want him because he had no other
real choice, because we shared knowledge of a far different life. He
wouldn't have understood how I felt and would have insisted, and I
wouldn't have been able to refuse. I did want to belong to him, but
only where he chose me above all others, not where he settled for the
only available choice.
So I'd ended everything
before I said the wrong thing, choosing loneliness over reluctant
acceptance as I had many times before. And it would turn out to be
the right choice, especially if we stumbled over a way to get out of
there. Once we got back, Bariden would be relieved not to have a
blurted confession of love on his hands. He'd be able to go back to
his old life with no complications blocking his path, and I'd be able
to go back to mine.. .
Our pack lay on the floor
not far from my pallet, so I stretched to it, slid the hairbrush
free, then sat again to brush my hair. First thing in the morning I'd
move to another hut, and then I'd sit down to do some serious
thinking. There was something wrong about what had happened to us
with this last gate, and if I could put my finger on the point it
might work to get us out of mere.
But just in case it
didn't, I'd say nothing about it to Bariden. I'd loved the way he'd
kept trying to make me feel better, the wonderful strength and
determination he'd shown. It was all so much a part of the total him,
the man I'd remember for the rest of my life. He deserved the best,
and as much as I hated to admit it, that wasn't me.
294
SHARON
I was even too stubborn to
settle for something I wanted desperately, not unless it was on my
own terms.
The brush I held slid
through my hair, now that most of the tangles were gone. Its handle
was smooth to my fingers and palm, and holding it that close almost
let me taste Bariden's trace. He was the one who had made it, after
all, so his trace would always be part of it. It was as much of him
as I would ever have, and probably more than I deserved. What a fool,
to fall in love with a man like that, and then refuse to settle . ..
I sat there until the fire
died, brushing my hair while quiet tears streamed down my face, and
then I went to sleep.
Bariden walked slowly
through the village, pretending he was thinking, in reality trying
not to think. Most of the men and women and older children were out
in the fields, trying to get as much done as possible before it
rained again. The older men and women still in the huts had their
hands full with the very young children, half of whom apparently
hated the mud, the other half wanting to play in it. They nodded to
Bariden but otherwise ignored him, and that suited him perfectly.
And that was just about
the only thing that did suit him. The sky was low and gray with the
threat of more rain, the wind was colder than the day before, the
ground was almost pure mud, and none of the huts he'd glanced into
held more than the one that was currently his. Pallets with blankets,
small piles of dirty clothes scattered around, a few pots and pans,
the occasional tool... As if all those people had just moved in,
rather than having been there long enough at the very least to have
put in the crop that was almost ready for harvest.
And that magical city,
beyond the shielding mist! Every time he caught sight of it he felt
the urge to pick up a rock and throw, fueled by the fervent hope that
he would somehow hit a crystal wall and shatter it. Beyond the mist
it was sunny and looked warm, and the grass glistened with the drops
left by a pleasant shower. No mud, no poverty and misery, just beauty
and the wealth of luxury provided by a power denied to him and those
around him . . .
THG HIDDGN
Q95
Denied, lots of things
were denied. Bariden stopped and stared at the thick forest beyond
the edge of the poorly cultivated fields, remembering the most
important thing that was being denied him. I don't want to belong to
you, she'd said, sounding as if she were talking about slavery. It
had been obvious something important was bothering her, and he'd been
so sure he knew what it was. She was being forced to admit that she
loved him, just as he'd already spoken of his own love. Once she said
the words there would be nothing left to stand between them, and even
that world would be beautiful...
But the words she'd said
hadn't been the ones he'd expected, and when he heard them the world
came crashing down instead. He'd been so hurt he'd fallen back on a
refuge of childhood and had sought escape from life in sleep. He'd
awakened that morning already searching for what he might say to her,
but it turned out he didn't have the chance to say anything. She and
her few possessions were already gone, moved to the empty hut two
huts from his.
"Not even next door,"
he muttered to the distant forest and not-distant-enough clouds, "She
wants to be as far away from me as she can get, even if it's only
another twenty feet. And there's nothing I can do about it."
Which wasn't strictly
true. As he turned and started back to his hut, he admitted silently
that it was a matter of nothing he would do. As she herself had
pointed out, he was big enough to carry her back to his hut over his
shoulder. Neither she nor anyone else would be able to stop him, but
the idea left something of a bad taste in his mouth. If the woman you
held in your arms didn't want to be there, you were cheating yourself
as well as her. Without the deep, intoxicating pleasure of mutual
desire, you might as well use your hand. Only inexperienced little
boys didn't know that...
And besides experience,
Bariden had enough stiff-necked pride not to want anyone who didn't
want him. He would feel like a beggar with hat in hand if he went
after her, even if he was capable of dragging her back. He usually
ignored people who didn't care to know him—even in his position
there had been a few—and he would do the same now. The very
same. Even if he couldn't stop loving her.
096
SHARON
Time passed without notice
while Banden wandered around, but his attention kept coming back to
the mistlike warding that blocked access to the magical city. In an
effort to know what the warding was like, he tossed a few rocks and
sticks at it. Everything thrown went into the mist cleanly, but
didn't come out again on the other side. It would probably exclude
living beings rather than absorb them, Bariden guessed, but both
exclusion and absorption would be automatic. What he needed to do was
get the attention of someone inside, someone who would bring him and
the girl through the warding. Once they had access to the crystal
palaces, finding the gate would be no harder than it had been up
unti! then.
But, assuming he could get
someone's attention, what could he possibly say to make them want to
allow two intruders inside? He could tell the truth about their
situation, but would that be enough to make those high-living Sighted
cooperate? If it wasn't, what would be enough?
Bariden pulled his pallet
to the door of the hut and sat on the end of it, looking outside at
the mud and trying to think. His biggest problem was lack of
sufficient detailed information, but he wasn't likely to get what he
needed from the villagers. They were so involved with hating the
people beyond the mist, they didn't want to know any details about
them.
And while he thought about
the villagers, he might as well consider what he could do for them.
With their fighters away they were just about helpless, but there
were now six swords in the village not being used. He could start to
train the men in small groups when they came in from the fields,
teaching them the feel of a real sword in their fists but training
them with practice weapons. It would be hard for them to work all day
and then practice, but he could keep the sessions relatively short
and still give them the basics. Since it would work toward preserving
their lives and the lives of their families, they would be more than
willing.
An older woman came by
with two cloth-wrapped packages, one of which she handed to him
without comment. She took the second to a hut to his left, where
Chalaine sat in her own doorway looking everywhere but at him. With
the way the huts were set in a curve he could see her easily,
TH€ HIDDGN
097
but looking would have
been a waste of time. He looked instead at the food that was wrapped
up in the cloth, but in a way that was worse. The small chunk of
unidentifiable meat was boiled, and so was the unpeeled potato. The
cut of bread was almost as hard as the rocks he'd thrown to test the
warding, and didn't even look as appetizing. He hadn't tasted what
they'd been given the night before, but somehow he knew there would
be nothing of seasoning or artistry used in the cooking. In order to
stay alive he would have to eat the food, but the experience wasn't
one he was looking forward to.
It took Banden a while to
get around to the food, and then it took effort to swallow it and
keep it down. He distracted himself with thoughts of what he would
teach the villagers first, and eventually became absorbed m setting
up a schedule. The day dragged on and on, but at least it didn't rain
again. Some older children drove a small flock of sheep past his hut,
and then the villagers were back from the fields.
Bariden decided to give
the men a few minutes to relax before he chose the first ones he
would train. He felt bored and impatient from not having done
anything all day, but it wasn't the same for them. While he waited he
toyed with the idea of suggesting the men might be able to set up a
rotation in the fields, giving him different groups of men to work
with for short periods during the day. That would let all of them be
trained in the fastest time possible, and—
He broke off the thought
at sight of the men approaching, what looked to be almost every man
in the village. Here and there two or three argued desultorily, an
exchange of words rather than a prelude to physicality. The rest
looked interested or satisfied or annoyed, but they weren't coming to
speak with Bariden as he'd thought they were. Without even a glance
in his direction they approached Chalaine's hut, and stopped about
five feet from it.
"What can I do for
you gentlemen1?" Banden heard Chalaine say as he got to his
feet. Part of the crowd was blocking his view of what was going on,
and he had the definite feeling he'd soon find that a problem.
"We heard you weren't
with the fighter any more, so the untended men drew lots," the
man named Kam answered.
098
SHAROM GR€€h
He seemed to do a lot of
the village's talking for it. "Riss here won the draw, so you'll
go with him. The rest of us came along so you'd know the drawing was
official. Go and get your things now, it's getting close to
suppertime."
"That's no problem,"
Chalaine returned with a shrug, rising to her own feet. "Since
I'm not going with him, it doesn't matter what tune of day it is. Was
there anything else?"
"Of course you're
going," Kam said with a smile as most of the men with him
chuckled. "Women aren't allowed to live alone, not as long as
there's a man who wants them. You'll go to Kiss's house as is proper,
and you'll tend to him. If you don't, you won't eat."
"That's your idea of
a threat?" Chalaine asked with a snort of ridicule. "After
tasting what I was given earlier, it sounds more like a major favor.
Why do you people live like this? There's not a stick of furniture in
any of these shacks, those fields are planted so sloppily half the
ground is wasted, and you keep grass-destroying sheep instead of
cattle. To top it off you make no effort even when it comes to what
you put in your bellies, so what da you do to make life better? Or
don't you want it better?"
"How can it be better
when we're denied what should be ours by right?" Kam demanded,
he and the others no longer amused. "Those thieves in the city
have stolen our rights, and all we have to call our own are our
houses! How much sweetness is a life like this supposed to provide?"
"Life isn't supposed
to provide the sweetness," Chalaine countered, looking around at
all of them. "Life provides the opportunities, and it's your
taking advantage of the chance that turns the trick. There's a big,
thick forest less than a mile from here, with all the wood anyone
could want. Why aren't you using it to make chairs and tables and
beds, and maybe even real houses with windows? Just because you can't
use magic, that doesn't mean you can't use sweat. Why—"
"Enough!" the
man who had been pointed out as Riss shouted, one hand in the ah- and
the other over an ear. "I don't want this woman any more, not
when she shows the world how stupid she is. Taking her into my
house—house, stupid woman, not shack—would be more
trouble than any
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299
possible pleasure I might
get. If anyone else wants her, it's fine with me."
Bariden watched the other
men in the crowd mutter and shuffle, but none of them stepped forward
to claim Chalaine. It wasn't necessary to guess to know why that was,
and now that their business with her was finished, he had his own to
discuss with them.
"Kam, I'd like a word
with you," he called, and all the men seemed glad of the
opportunity to walk away from a distasteful situation. Most of them
just turned in his direction, but Kam and the blond man who had
spoken the day before made their way through the others to stand in
front of him.
"I've got an idea I
think you'll like," Bariden said when he had everyone's
attention. "Those six who came attacking your village yesterday
weren't very good with their swords, and if they're typical of the
fighters around here, your troubles are over. I can teach you men
enough to be able to protect yourselves in a very short time,
especially if you take turns working in the fields and working with
me. I'm ready to start this afternoon, so who wants to be in the
first group?"
Bariden looked around,
intending to count the number of volunteers before deciding on class
size, but there wasn't a hand in sight. And not only that, but they
were all looking back at him as if he were out of his mind. The only
explanation he could think of was that they hadn't understood him,
but before he could rephrase what he'd said, Kam held up a hand.
"Two fools speaking
out on the same day," Kam stated, his other hand over an ear.
"No wonder they didn't stay in the village where they belonged.
If they weren't fighters, we wouldn't want them here either."
"What's so foolish
about learning to defend yourself?" Bariden demanded while the
other men made sounds of agreement with Kam. "Do you like it
better being helpless?"
"When our fighters
are here, we aren't helpless," Kam said in a
patiently-explaining tone. "They fight for us, and we're
perfectly safe. That's what fighters do, you know, in return for not
having to work in the fields. If we have to
3OO
SHAROTI
work in the fields anyway,
why would we want to learn how to fight?"
"And if we did all
learn to fight, who would he left to feed us by working in the
fields?" the blond man put in, almost as patient. "The
women can't do it alone, otherwise they would already be doing it.
The oldsters can't, because then we'd have to cook and care for the
brats ourselves. Do you understand now how foolish you were being?"
"That's not what I
understand, but I still withdraw my suggestion," Bariden said,
knowing when he was just wasting time. "And since it's starting
to rain again, you'll probably want to get back to your—houses."
It wasn't just starting to
rain it was beginning to pour, and that roused the villagers somewhat
out of their slowness of movement. They still didn't hurry, though,
and Bariden couldn't stand it. He stepped into his own house, kicked
the pallet out of the way, and slammed the door.
"Of all the stupid,
useless, closed-minded fools ever created—!" he fumed,
then had to turn and open the door again. He still didn't know how to
start a fire, and with the door closed it was too dark to see
anything. Of course, with it open his floor would soon become a sea
of mud, but what difference did that make? He was already floundering
neck-deep, and in more than mud.
"We've got to get out
of here," he muttered, staring out at the rain. "There has
to be a way to reach the people in that city, some way to get their
attention. Assuming they're willing to give their attention. What if
the handouts they provide twice a year satisfy their sense of
responsibility to those less fortunate? What if the only difference
between them and these people is that they can do magic?"
The thought was downright
sickening, and there were enough things in that world to turn
Bariden's stomach. He turned away from the door to pace the room,
remembering that Kam had said it was almost suppertime. Now that was
a prime example of stomach-turning if ever there was one, and if he
wanted to avoid it he'd better start thinking. So, how do you attract
the attention of someone who has lots of experience ignoring unwanted
overtures .. . ?
"Excuse me," a
quiet voice said from behind his back. "Do you mind if I come in
for a few minutes?"
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Bariden turned to see
Chalaine just outside the hut, standing in the pouring rain rather
than stepping inside without permission. If any girl in the universe
ever needed a keeper . . .And then he remembered how she felt about
him.
"For a few minutes,
no," he allowed, working to keep his tone cool and uninterested.
"What can I do for you?"
"I was wondering if
you were still as anxious to leave this place as you were yesterday,"
she said as she stepped inside, one hand pushing back her sodden
hair. She hadn't rebraided it, and it hung in dark strands against
her equally sodden tunic. "If you are, I think I know where the
necessary gate is."
"So do I,"
Bariden answered. "In that unreachable city beyond the mist. And
I'm not as anxious, I'm beyond climbing walls. Those people are—Go
and light a fire before we get into this any more. If you just stand
there and shiver, you'll end up with pneumonia."
Bariden all but growled
the last two sentences, having had no intention of saying them but
finding the words popping out anyway. Chalaine looked like a
half-drowned cat, and one who couldn't quite meet his eyes. He
couldn't stand seeing her like that, shivering from the cold and wet.
He couldn't put his arms around her, and he couldn't build a fire ..,
and he couldn't find their way out of that place ...
Rather than let the list
of couldn'ts build any higher, Bariden watched Chalaine build the
fire. She went and did it without comment, using wood from the comer
and some sort of small metal device that was near the wood. She
opened the metal device, used it to make scraping noises, somehow
produced a tiny flame in the bottom of the box, then transferred the
flame to a slender stick before blowing it out in the box. Small
branches had been put in the fire circle first, and setting the
slender stick under them soon had them alight. As soon as the fire
had definitely caught, Chalaine added a larger cut of wood, then went
to replace the metal box beside the wood pile.
"Here, wrap this
around you until the fire gets a little hotter," Bariden said,
handing her a blanket before going to close the door. "Now, did
you mean you know where in the city the gate is? That won't help us
much if we can't find a way into the city."
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SHARON
"No, that wasn't what
I meant," she answered, already wrapped in the blanket and
sitting near the fire—and still not looking at him. "We
have to start a little farther back, specifically with the last
world. From what we learned, it was guaranteed that one of us would
lose the competition and end up needing to leave the city. It
wouldn't have been possible for the one who was accepted into service
to sneak the other in secretly, not with wizard-strength magic to
fight. Either one or both of us would have had to leave."
"Both of us,"
Bariden decided as he sat on the other side of the fire. "If we
were still together, and we were, we wouldn't have let ourselves be
separated. We both would have left the city and—what? Found
another gate?"
"I think so,"
she agreed, fiddling with one corner of the blanket. "The gate
we were supposed to find, one that would take us deeper into the
maze. But we reached this one instead, and it led to what looks like
a dead end. Those people out there will never have more than they do
right now, because they flatly refuse to work for something that
others get with magic. They'll spend lifetimes stealing from and
killing each other, all the while staring hungrily through the mist
at what will always be beyond their reach."
"And I have the
feeling those inside the warding are no better," Bariden said,
watching the hungry flames lick at the wood. "The least they
could have done was make the barrier solid so no one could see
through, and also stop feeding their vanity with twice-yearly
handouts. If you want to help people you teach them how to help
themselves, you don't make them dependent on you. But you said this
looks like a dead end, and that means you don't think it is. If so,
where do we go from here?"
"Not into that city,"
she said, reaching one hand out to warm it near the flames. "If
we spent our time concentrating on a way to get in, we'd be no better
than those people out there. I had no idea where we would go—until
mat conversation of a few minutes ago. Didn't anything about it
strike you as odd?"
"Everything about it
was odd," Bariden returned dryly. "Especially that gesture
of refusing to listen to something by covering one ear. I'd love to
know where they got that."
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"Probably from the
same place they get everything else, the Sighted in the city,"
she said. "But that wasn't what I meant. These huts they all
live in—those people got me so annoyed I called them shacks,
and the one named Riss went to great pains to correct me. To them
it's a house they return to, even without windows, furniture,
plumbing, or amenities. A house, not a hut or shack."
"And?" Bariden
prompted. "I can see that means something to you, but I'm still
drawing a blank. What do you think it means?"
"Well, actually, it's
stretching a point," she admitted, glancing up at him and then
quickly away. "If a place is a man's house, it's also usually
his home. A lot of people use the two words interchangeably, and,
well, have you ever heard that saying about what a man's home is
supposed to be?"
"A man's home is his
castle," Bariden said slowly with dawning understanding. "Or,
to match our current needs, his palace. This hut was given to me when
we got here, so it can be considered my palace. And my palace has a
gate!"
"But one that won't
open for us," Chalaine pointed out, dampening his excitement.
"As I said, I think I found the gate we want, but we still don't
know how to make it work. That's the next thing we have to think
about, and I came here to tell you so we'd both be working in the
proper direction. I appreciate the blanket and the fire, but now I
ought to be getting back—"
"Don't move,"
Bariden interrupted, pointing a finger at her while his mind raced
furiously. "Give me a minute to think."
She settled back looking
puzzled, but that was all Bariden noticed. He was too busy putting
certain clues and hints together, and when he was through his
excitement had doubled.
"That's got to be
it," he said with a laugh, raising his head to look at her
again. "It was all right there, but I let myself be misdirected.
If this doesn't teach me not to assume, nothing ever will."
"Assume what about
what?" Chalaine asked, still looking puzzled. "You don't
mean you have the answer?"
3O4
WAROM
"At this point it's
only a guess, but it's one I'm willing to bet on," he responded
with a nod. "Now it's your turn to think back, to the time we
got here. We discussed the king and her machinations, then heard the
attack going on outside. We rushed out and ended the attack, learned
that the villagers are all Sighted, then were told no one outside the
warding mist is allowed to do magic. When we came back in here we
also discovered that what had been produced by magic was still in our
pack, but what depended on magic wasn't. We'd already noticed that
the gate wasn't opening for us even though mere was no spell of any
sort on it, so we decided we knew what we were up against."
"Where does 'decided'
come into it?" she asked, those dark eyes forgetting to avoid
him. "We did know what we were up against, from matching it to
what we saw and were told."
"And was that a truth
we made any attempt to prove or disprove?" he countered. "These
villagers are Sighted, so when they said magic was forbidden to them,
we believed it. After all, there were a lot of Sighted in the
previous world who were constrained from using most of their talent
by a single wizard. There seem to be a lot of wizards here, so why
shouldn't it be possible that all magic is forbidden?"
"Are you saying—"
she began, frowning in confusion. "What are you saying?"
"I'm saying think
about our major source of information," he told her, leaning
forward a little. "Those people out there are hopeless cases,
unwilling even to learn enough about weapons to protect their lives.
They said they got a spell from the Sighted behind the mist and tried
it, but it didn't work. Chalaine, does being Sighted guarantee that
if you speak a spell it will work?"
"Of course not,"
she breathed, now a picture of revelation arrived. "If you try a
complex spell without having first learned the basics, you can't put
the necessary strength into it. Without strength and training the
complexity will overcome simple inborn ability, and nothing will
happen. And those people out there are too stupid and lazy to have
bothered with the basics. They'd expect to be able to do magic just
by waving their arms!"
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3O5
"And we didn't try
our own hands at it because of the situation in the last world,"
he agreed somewhat grimly. "You called up a cup of coffee
without thinking, and paid for it with a lot of pain. That kind of
thing tends to make you nervous, not to mention overly cautious. We
were told we couldn't do magic here, so we simply took their word for
it."
"Making those
villagers absolutely right about one thing," she growled. "They
called us fools, and we are. Or at least I am, but I'm willing to
change and learn."
She sat up straighter and
spoke a spell, and suddenly she was no longer huddling into wet
clothes, soaked to the skin. All the rainwater had been banished, and
a cup of hot coffee had appeared in her hand. Bariden spent no time
watching her take the first, groaningly wonderful sip; he spoke his
own spell, which brought him a turkey sandwich as well as a cup of
coffee.
"So once again we
tripped over our own natures," Chalaine said at last while
Bariden was occupied with wolfing down the sandwich. "I didn't
try a spell because of that episode with the coffee, and you didn't
try one because in your position you're used to not using magic. What
else are we doing to blindfold and hobble ourselves?"
"We're still
assuming," Bariden supplied after he'd swallowed and had a sip
of coffee. "It didn't help that my previously cast spells were
canceled when we came through that gate, but maybe in the end it
helped enormously. There's still one assumption tripping us up, I
think, but this part of it is my guesswork. What did we do in other
worlds that we didn't do here?"
"I don't know,"
she groped, making a vague gesture with one hand. "Get ourselves
invited to a fancy meal?"
"Since we got the
fanciest available here, I'd say no," he answered with a brief
smile. "What we did on ail previous worlds was ask about gates,
and try to call up an entry. We passed on the entry pan in the last
world for a reason. If you hadn't been afraid the wizard-king might
be listening, you wouldn't have decided against trying."
"And here I didn't
try because I believed I couldn't do magic," she said with a
nod. "Does that mean you think it might work? Even though it
didn't work anywhere else?"
3O6
"One of the questions
that occurred to me was why it didn't work," Bariden said. "If
magic in general worked, and it did, why wouldn't an entry spell
work? And how can there be gates linking only two worlds? Everything
we know about gates insists that it's the points from multiple worlds
that brings them into being. Two points alone might start the
process, but other points would then be drawn in. How is it we keep
finding nothing but what ought to be impossible? And as two final
questions, why were the spells I prepared canceled as we came through
this gate, and why won't it open for us? There's no question about
our being able to do magic, so why won't it open?"
"Logic would say
there's only one possible answer," she replied slowly, staring
at the gate. "If it looks like a duck but doesn't walk, quack or
swim like a duck, chances are it's something else. These aren't gates
we've been using, they've only been made to look like gates. That
means they're probably entries instead, but I still don't see it all.
How does that help us?"
"It helps if my final
guesswork tucks in," Bariden responded, almost heavily. "When
you told me the way out has been under my nose all along—Well,
I jumped to certain conclusions. The first was that these aren't
gates, and that's why specific spells didn't come through with us the
way they would with a real gate. We were supposed to believe our
magic was useless here. Then came the part about why entry spells
didn't work, when these were almost certainly entries. Could it be
that entry spells do work, but only in a few, specific places?"
"Why, of course!"
Chalaine exclaimed, her large, dark eyes even wider. "There are
planes that are very hard to reach, where connecting up an entry
takes hours or sometimes days. One reason for that is supposed to be
the lack of—amenable entry sites, you could call it. Only
certain points of those planes will accept the creation of an entry,
so you have to wait until your spell connects up with one. If you
were on the inside looking out instead, you could go through to any
part of your own world, but only by using one of those limited
points! Bariden, you've done it! You've found the loophole that will
get us out!"
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"I certainly hope
so," Bariden muttered, all excitement and pleasure strangely
gone. "Why don't you try an entry spell on the indicated point
to let us know for sure?"
"In a minute,"
she answered, banishing her cup and jumping to her feet. "First
I have to get something I left in my hut. I'll be right back."
He watched her race out
into the rain without understanding, then dismissed it all with a
shrug. As soon as she got whatever it was she wanted to take with
her, they'd find out if his guess was right. It was stupid for part
of him to wish he was wrong, something that would continue to keep
them there together. He already knew how she felt about him, and that
wasn't likely to change no matter how long they spent in that world.
They'd both be better off at home, where distance would let him
pretend to forget...
"Okay, all set,"
she announced as she came back in, needing to banish water damage
again. "Keep your fingers crossed."
"Isn't that a gesture
the unSighted believe will prevent magic from affecting them?"
Bariden asked as he got to his feet. "What good do you expect it
to do MS?"
"As much good as it
does them, which is to say, at least it supplies hope," she
responded. "And we'll need every bit of help we can get,
considering the strength of the one we're up against. Here goes."
She raised both hands and
spoke her spell carefully, but it wasn't necessary for either of them
to hold their breath. The false gate flared wide instantly, inviting
them to step through, which they did. Side by side, partners in
adventure, strangers in every other way ...
"Well, it's about
time!" an indignant voice announced, and then Bena was bustling
up to them. Chalaine's entry had brought them to his father's palace,
in the corridor outside the kitchens. "Do you two have any idea
how frantic everyone's been? First you disappear into nothing without
a word to anyone, and you stay away for an entire day. Now you come
back out of nothing without the least warning, scaring a body—"
"An entire day?"
Bariden protested. "I don't know what kind of clock you use,
Bena, but for us it was a lot more than a day. Are you sure that's
all it's been here?"
3O8
"It's probably a
matter of different flows," Chalaine said before Bena could
answer. "A day here can equal a tenth of what's experienced
elsewhere. But that's not in the least important right now. We were
in the middle of an investigation when we were forced off the scene,
but now we're back. Let's get that cleared up first."
"Cleared up how?"
Bariden demanded, suddenly feeling left behind. "When we were
dragged out of here, we had no idea what was being done or who was
doing it. What do you imagine has changed?"
"Only one thing,"
Chalaine said, turning to look straight at him. "I had an
entire, uninterrupted day to think. Since I started from the very
beginning, I now know who the enemy is."
CHAPTGR
T
he chamber wasn't very
large, but there was still plenty of room for those of us who
occupied it. It had taken a couple of hours to get the interested
parties together, and I'd made sure to use the time wisely. Once the
preparations were complete I'd gone out to the garden near the
kitchens to wait, my feet propped up and a cup of coffee in my hands.
Bena came by to offer me something to eat, but I had no interest in
food. All I wanted was for that farce to be over, and then I'd be
able to go home. Home ...
At the moment there were
eight of us sitting around a conference table, plus a group of
guardsmen positioned around the chamber. Those last were there
because of Bariden's father's presence, and King Agilar had brought
four of his advisers. Along with me, Bariden, and Master Haddil, that
made the primarily involved eight.
"... and that's how
we managed to get back," Bariden was saying, the end of his
report on what had happened to us. He'd been shocked to hear I knew
who the enemy was, but the reaction had worn off by the time we
gathered in his father's meeting chamber. He also hadn't pressed me
for details, knowing he would hear all about it soon enough.
"Just the fact that
you are back, and safely, would be enough for me, Bariden," King
Agilar said warmly, his smile looking real. "I'd sooner lose my
kingdorft than one of my children."
The man was tall and
slender with light brown hair and blue eyes, a good deal less
imposing than you would
3O9
31O
SHARON
expect a king to be. In
point of fact he seemed more gentle than anything else, and it wasn't
possible to doubt what he'd said.
"Thank you, Father,"
Bariden answered with a warm smile of his own. "Your support has
always been my greatest source of strength. But getting back safely
wasn't the only thing we accomplished. Chalaine says she knows who's
behind the trouble here, and I'm certain she does. If she hadn't been
sure, she wouldn't have said anything at all."
"An admirable
quality, Lady Chalaine," King Agilar said with another smile,
moving those mild blue eyes to me. "I'm sure everyone here is
just as eager to hear your thoughts on the matter as I am."
"Not everyone, Your
Majesty," I said with no amusement at all. I was also no longer
looking at Bariden, who sat opposite me to his father's right. I was
to the king's immediate left, and two of the advisers shared my side
of the table. The other two were next to Bariden, leaving the end of
the table opposite the king for Master Haddil.
"Not everyone wants
this problem solved, Your Majesty, at least not yet," I said.
"People are nervous about what's been going on, but they haven't
gotten panicky yet. The best time to come up with a solution would be
once the panic did set in, which would make the revelation more a
miracle than simple good fortune. There are two other teams of
sorcerers working on this. Does anyone know how they're doing?"
The king seemed surprised
at the question, but he didn't ask why I wanted to know. Instead he
looked in Master Haddil's direction, and that worthy cleared his
throat.
"As far as I know,
the other two teams haven't discovered anything at all," he
said, speaking to everyone rather than just to me. "Of course, I
haven't had any reports from them since yesterday, so that could have
changed by now."
"Could it have
changed far enough that they've also gone missing?" I asked
next, immediately drawing his gaze. "What I mean is, do you know
for certain that they haven't been snared the way Bariden and I
were?"
"No, I don't know
that for certain," he answered slowly, his stare thoughtful. "Do
you?"
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"Not for certain, but
it's a good bet," I returned, then looked at the king again.
"None of those four struck me as the brilliantly deductive kind,
but even they could get lucky and trip over something obvious. But
the main reason they would be gone would be as a blind, to cover the
disappearance of Bariden and me. If only he and I were tossed into a
trap, someone might start wondering why."
"But the why would be
obvious," one of the advisers on the other side of the table
protested. "You might have gotten too close to the truth, which
is in fact what did happen. How else would it have come to you?"
"It so happens it
came to me because I had an entire, boring day to sit through, and
nothing else to do but think," I told him. "If I'd been
left here—well, if I'd been left here I would have come to the
same conclusion, but that's the point I'm trying to make. Prince
Bariden and I were gotten rid of because we were both determined to
get to the bottom of the mystery, because we were capable of doing
it, and because we were investigating here, in the palace, where the
answer happens to be."
"You're saying one of
the people close to me is responsible," King Agilar said after a
moment of silence from everyone. The statement surprised me, but it
shouldn't have. A stupid man wouldn't have been capable of creating
such a happy, prosperous kingdom.
"That's exactly what
I'm saying, Your Majesty," I agreed, then turned to look at my
former teacher. "Isn't that right, Master Haddil."
This time the silence was
thick and shocked, since my inference couldn't have been any clearer.
Master Haddil returned my stare without expression for a moment, and
then he smiled.
"You can't possibly
mean I'm responsible, child," he said, completely unworried.
"Not only is the suggestion ridiculous, it makes no sense.
Considering the damage the problem is doing to my reputation, I'm the
one suffering most here after the victims. And if I were responsible,
why would I be so foolish as to bring in others to investigate? Why
run the risk that one of them would find me out?"
"Let's discuss the
foolishness of bringing in others first," I said after sipping
at my coffee. "Wouldn't someone who
312
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was making no headway on a
problem, but who refused to ask for help, look even worse? It was
something you had to do, so you went about making the necessity work
for you. By inviting in your four best students first and turning
them into victims, you accomplished two things. The first was,
obviously, getting them out of the way before they could discover you
were the guilty party. The second I was there to see for myself, and
it did an incredibly efficient job."
"It discouraged
others from getting involved," Bariden said suddenly, snapping
his fingers. "Of course! I was there too, and when the people
Summoned heard that the four best among them had fallen victim, most
of them turned around and went home."
"After that
performance showing how distraught their teacher was, how could they
be expected to do anything else?" I agreed. "Only six of us
were left to look into the matter, but four of the six didn't count.
They were self-centered or ineffective nonentities, who would waste
their time on dead-end leads without ever noticing they weren't
getting anywhere. They'd be too busy feeling important, and trying to
make themselves look important."
"And the last two?"
Master Haddil prompted, apparently nothing more than interested. "If
four of the six didn't count, presumably the last two did."
"The last two were
the most dangerous," I obliged him, shifting in my comfortable
chair. "One of the two was a prince of the kingdom, determined
to catch the miscreant for his father's sake. The other was a very
close friend to one of the sorcerer victims, a sorceress who was
considerably more effective than most people believed. Those two
would need special treatment, and they got it."
"By being thrown into
a trap," Master Haddil said with a nod, but I shook my head.
"It started well
before that" I said, and there were sounds of surprise around
the table. "In point of fact it started a little while before I
was Summoned through the entry. You located me and saw what I was
doing, Master Haddil, and it gave you a really good idea. When your
entry appeared in my workshop, there was a very subtle spell on it
twined around the general Summoning. I was to come at once, but was
specifically not supposed to drop everything first. In
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313
point of fact, I was
compelled to bring what I was working on with me."
"Don't tell me!"
Bariden blurted, and I nodded without looking at him.
"Yes, that whole
episode with the sphere of water was a set-up," I confirmed. "I
was compelled to bring it with me, tripped as I came out of the
entry, and the sphere was knocked out of my hands. I remember
thinking everything would be all right when Master Haddil's warding
destroyed the sphere, but that didn't happen. Master Haddil's warding
bounced it, straight at a sorcerer who wasn't warded and also didn't
know what was in the thing. Believing it was nothing but a very large
soap bubble, he let it hit him."
"Are you accusing me
now of having so atrocious a sense of humor that I play practical
jokes?" Master Haddil asked mildly. There was a hint of
amusement behind the calm of his stare, but I didn't share the
feeling.
"That was no joke,"
I told him, meaning the words in every possible way. "It was
another plan with more than one purpose, basically meant to sabotage
the investigation. I was made to look and feel like a self-conscious
twit, Prince Bariden was made to look like an incompetent idiot, and
the two of us got off on the worst possible foot. You knew from the
start, you see, that he and I would be paired as partners for the
investigation."
"He rigged the spell
on the tiles," Bariden growled, coming to the obvious
conclusion. "He said the spell would produce the best pairings
possible, but he had the spell already prepared. He didn't speak it
where we could hear it."
"Probably because the
spell demanded the worst possible pairings," I agreed. "He
had already given you a reason for disliking me, but he isn't the
sort to leave things to chance. He also arranged for me to have a
similar reason, and the spell must have been very simple. He just
made sure you would not hear my name any of the times it was
mentioned, and also gave you no opportunity to ask what it was."
"By the
EverNameless!" Bariden roared as he glared at Master Haddil, a
very appropriate choice of words. "No wonder I couldn't remember
what it was. I never heard it! And I'll bet he also made sure you
noticed."
314
"He didn't have to,"
I said grimly, sending my own glare toward the wizard. "He knew
me well enough to know I'd notice, that's why he did it in the first
place. He was hoping we'd spend our time arguing and accusing rather
than being productive, but it didn't work out like that. He kept an
eye on us, of course, and when he saw me find the clue that would
eventually lead to his discovery, he hurriedly arranged that trap."
"So you think you
have more than pure guesswork and imagination?" Master Haddil
asked pleasantly. "If so, by all means, do continue. I can't
show everyone how wrong you are until I hear everything you have to
say."
"Oh, you'll hear it,
all right," I told him dryly. "What I found was an odd
residue in the bathtub of the guest bathing room of the first victim.
Since the merchant hadn't been in the apartment long, I wondered why
it was there. He had his own bathing chamber, and he hadn't yet had
the opportunity to have guests. It couldn't have been left over from
a previous guest, not when the queen's Chief Housekeeper is known to
inspect empty apartments on a regular basis. If everything in the
apartment isn't perfect, whoever is responsible for not having done
his or her job is dismissed.
"So the residue meant
something significant, but I was distracted before I could realize
that consciously. The memory came back to me while I was doing all
that thinking, and suddenly everything fell into place. Someone had
tried to get rid of the substance down the drain of the bathtub
rather than down the sink or commode, because the bathtub is emptied
by pipes and the other two are emptied by magic."
"My goodness, that
argument would convince everyone in the kingdom of my guilt,"
Master Haddil commented soberly. "I wonder if I should confess
now, and save people the effort of actually accusing me."
"Jumping in before I
can explain what I mean won't distract anyone, Master Haddil," I
said as quickly as possible. "These people aren't so stupid as
to let you divert them before they can hear all of it. If my
accusation won't hold water, they'll know it once I've finished."
The wizard's expression
was completely neutral, but he couldn't be very happy. Two or three
of the king's advisers
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315
had been one breath away
from supporting his ridicule, but what I'd said kept them silent. To
interfere now would be to acknowledge oneself as stupid, and none of
them cared to do that. It would be better to sit there and listen,
and declare me wrong once I was through.
"So a drain was used
that didn't depend on magic while two that did weren't," I
continued. "The problem was to figure out why that was, and it
took some skull sweat before I did. Finally, though, I realized that
to dump a substance down a magic drain causes all of that substance
in range of the spell to be disposed of. If you've got grease of some
sort on your hands, for instance, and some of it dripped on your
clothes, and got on the doorknob, and maybe even spilled on the floor
both inside and outside of the bathing room—all of it, every
bit, would be cleaned up by the spell as soon as you deliberately
tried to clean up some of it. That's the reason for having a spell
like that, rather than a plain, ordinary drain. And here in the
palace, I'll bet the range of that spell is wider than it would be
anywhere else."
"I still don't
understand, Lady Chalaine," King Agilar said, looking disturbed.
"If the substance was an important clue, wouldn't the person who
left it want it cleaned up completely? Why try to get rid of it in
the first place, if you don't want to be rid of it entirely?"
"You'd want to get
rid of it in the first place because that's what was left after it
had been used," I explained, trying to be as clear as possible.
"You would not want all of it cleaned away, though, if there was
a chance the person you used it on would be carried close enough past
the bathing chamber that he was in range of the spell. That would
cause the substance to also be cleaned out of him, and he would no
longer be frozen in place by some sinister, unknown malady. Then all
your plans would be ruined, and you would have wasted your time. And
before anyone argues the point, the commode spell works differently
from the sink spell, but works on ingested substances."
This time there was a
commotion rather than silence, all four of the advisers trying to
speak at once. Bariden seemed to understand completely, the king
looked really
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disturbed, and Master
Haddil raised his voice to drown out the advisers.
"I think—"
he shouted over the gabble, then went on more quietly when the four
gabblers settled down. "I think that sounds very clever, but it
doesn't quite fit all the facts of the problem. When the healer was
called, he couldn't find any trace of a drug that might have been
given to the victim. He tried a general banishing of all noxious
substances, and that didn't work either. How, then, could there have
been anything given to the victim for the drain spell to clean away?"
"That's easy," I
answered, and all the attention shifted back to me. "The drug
was protected by a spell, to make sure it wasn't banished. The healer
couldn't find it or get rid of it because it was protected by the
strength of a wizard."
"But that's still no
reason for me to use the bathtub," Master Haddil countered, and
all eyes and heads swung to him. "If I called the stuff up and
protected it, I could have banished the unused portion just as
easily."
"Not in that
apartment you couldn't," I disagreed, bringing the heads and
eyes back. "You knew there would be people poking around in
there, and one of those people would be me. I expect you learned
about the forensic sorcery I'd been dabbling with, and knew that if
you used magic in the apartment, I'd be able to tell. You also
couldn't afford to take the unused portion with you. If even one
grain of it spilled where it shouldn't, I might have been able to
trace it to you with a general match and search spell. Those were two
of the procedures I was going to use if the investigation hadn't been
abruptly cut short. The only thing I don't understand is why you
didn't include me in the first group of four. Or were some of them
into forensic sorcery too?"
This time when the heads
swiveled back there was no easy answer from him, not even a sneering
denial. The silence lasted about six heartbeats, and then King Agilar
stirred.
"But why would he do
such a thing?" the king asked, almost plaintively. "He's
lived and worked at my Court for so many years ... This is all beyond
belief and understanding!"
THG
317
"Your Majesty, over
the last year or so I've heard occasional rumors coming out of this
kingdom," I told him gently. "As prosperous and peaceful as
this place is, people have been wondering why you need such a
powerful wizard as Master Haddil. He's never gone out of his way to
be friendly with your townspeople—or anyone else—so many
of them would be happier if he went elsewhere. After all, when a
wizard isn't involved with protecting you, he's probably occupying
his time plotting against you . .."
King Agilar's expression
showed brief impatience with so ridiculous an idea, but he didn't
miss the reactions of his advisers. The two I could see easily and
clearly flushed with embarrassment as they avoided looking at Master
Haddil, showing they, at least, believed that sort of nonsense. Those
to my left might have done the same thing, and if they did it would
hardly be unexpected.
"In this instance me
rumors were almost right," I continued. "Master Haddil is
comfortable here, or for one reason or another doesn't care to leave.
You've supported him up until now, but the day could very well come
when you're persuaded to give your people peace of mind. Rather than
wait for it to happen and then try to change your mind, he came up
with a crisis that would demand his continued presence. The crisis
would get worse and worse, other magic users would fail to find an
answer or get taken themselves—and then he would finally crack
the thing and revive the victims. The nefarious enemy would remain a
mystery, and that would also require mat he remain. After all, if he
left, the evil genius could decide to strike again ..."
By then everyone's
attention was on Master Haddil, who studied me silently with a finger
to his lips. His gray eyes appeared thoughtful, and then he sent me a
faint but deliberate smile.
"You've changed,
Chalaine," he commented, just as though we were in the middle of
an ordinary conversation. "You used to avoid arguments and
confrontations with the very first sign of disagreement. Now you
continue on in your newfound aggressiveness, making things up to
support your stance. Your need to show the universe that you're
somebody has you creating fantasies—"
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9HARON
"They're not
fantasies, and she isn't lying," Bariden interrupted with a
growl, his light eyes cold. "She's a woman talented beyond the
ordinary, but she doesn't believe in making herself look good at
someone else's expense. You won't get out of this by casting doubts
on your main accuser. If you're all that innocent, prove it by
snowing us where she made her mistake."
"I can show you one
mistake rather easily," Master Haddil replied with that same
smile, while I tried not to think about the way Bariden had defended
me. A reaction left over from our time as travel companions, surely .
. . "If I were guilty, as everyone at this table now seems to
believe, I would be a guilty wizard. Two of you have sorcerer-level
strength, but I'm sure you know that means very little. Don't you
think it's a mistake of the first magnitude not to take that into
consideration?"
Master Haddil's pleasant
expression didn't change, but you couldn't tell that from the way the
king's four advisers froze. They were in the midst of accusing a
fairly powerful wizard of misconduct, and they suddenly knew they'd
never do anything that stupid again. Not that they might not want to,
but they'd never be able to ...
"But I did take into
consideration the person I was accusing," I said, speaking as
calmly and quietly as he had. "That's why I went to Conclave
while this meeting was being arranged, and explained my conclusions
to them. They decided there was enough evidence to question you under
a truth spell, which will settle matters without confusion or doubt.
If you think I'm bluffing, try speaking a spell."
By then he was looking
startled and unsure, as though he hadn't been expecting that
particular move. Some people did tend to underestimate me, but I
hadn't thought Master Haddil was one of them. Whatever, he suddenly
got to his feet and spoke a freezing spell aimed at everyone in the
room, but the final gesture did no more than the words. His ability
was being restrained by wizards his strength or stronger, then-
channel into that world established earlier by me. I couldn't use the
strength I'd arranged for, but it was more than clear they could.
HIDDG1
319
When everyone understood
Master Haddil was being restrained, they all jumped to their feet and
began shouting. Most were demanding that the guards arrest him, and
the king was trying to get everyone calmed down. I'm not all that
fond of bedlams, so I left my own chair and slipped out of the room.
Not only wasn't I needed any longer, I really didn't want to stay.
But as I walked down the
corridor I had to push away impatience, stemming from the fact that I
couldn't yet leave that world. I was the one maintaining the link for
the Conclave wizards to reach through to Master Haddil, and if I left
he would be free again to do as he pleased. The representatives from
Conclave would be there as soon as they decided who should go, but
until then I was stuck. Well, there was always that small garden as a
place to wait, and I was already heading in the right direction. When
they didn't need me any longer, they would let me know.
I was about halfway to my
destination and had just turned a corner, when I saw a group of
palace ladies approaching from the other direction. They were the
usual sort of high-nosed females who thought they were worth
something just because their fathers were, the kind whose male
counterparts usually started a fight with someone who was guaranteed
not to fight back. Normally I would have turned around and gone a
different way just to make sure there would be no trouble, but right
then I wasn't in the mood.
And, to cap my decision,
one of the beautifully gowned young ladies of station had spotted me
and was staring. To turn back then would have been to retreat, and I
hadn't even retreated from facing down a wizard. Granted, it hadn't
been a very satisfying tune, nothing like what I'd been looking
forward to. Master Haddil and I had never been close, but he had also
never refused to teach me what I needed as quickly as I could handle
it. Bena thought his criticism of me had been harsh, but in actual
truth it had been only as hard as it needed to be. And there had
never been a moment's pity or unnecessary condescension ...
"You there, girl,"
I heard in commanding tones, which brought me back from the fringes
of guilt. "I want a word with you, so stop where you are."
3QO
The young lady of station
addressing me seemed to be the leader of the group, all six of them
just enough older than me that they could play woman to my "girl."
Their gowns were silk in various pastel colors, a very pale yellow
for the one who was speaking. She also had red hair, green eyes, and
a beautiful face, but not enough sense to see that I wasn't in the
mood to take nonsense.
"But / don't want a
word with you" I pointed out mildly as I continued to approach
their group. "And even if I did, I don't make it a habit to talk
to people from ten feet away. Not unless I think they might bite. Do
you ladies bite?"
'Those who oppose us find
that we do," the redhead answered, stepping directly into my
path. "But in your case, we simply didn't care to be dirtied.
Your sort never has known enough not to approach people you don't
belong with, but this time you've really overstepped yourself. Why
don't you save yourself the eventual embarrassment and go back to
your own kind."
"My own kind," I
echoed with brows high. "And overstepping myself. Do you have
any real meaning hidden in that nonsense, or is this simply something
you tell everyone you see? If it is, you must be very bored."
"Only those without
breeding get bored," the redhead countered, her tone still even
despite the flush beginning to color her cheeks. "And those who
play stupid aren't always playing. I'm Lady Miralia, the betrothed of
Prince Bariden. If you think you've made a laughingstock of me by
disappearing with my fiance for a day, you're very much mistaken.
You're the one who's the laughingstock, for letting him take
advantage of whatever tiny amount of virtue you might have. I'm the
one he loves and the one he means to marry, and I want you away from
him now. I don't mind if he dallies a bit until the wedding, but I
will insist the woman be someone of quality. You, my girl, simply
don't qualify."
Her five cohorts smirked
from their places around and behind her, silently echoing everything
she'd said. I'd felt a stab from what I'd been told about Bariden,
but nothing like what it would have been if I'd let myself be stupid
about him. It looked like everyone in the palace knew he and I had
been gone together, but this specimen in front of me didn't
TH€ HIDD€M
321
care about the reasons for
it. She probably considered the problem we'd been working on nothing
more than a lame excuse for sneaking into bed. The Lady Miralia
reminded me of that princess Tenillis, who had been so eager to clear
me from her path to Bariden. The main difference here was that I had
no interest any longer in arguing possession of his attention.
"Do you have any idea
how embarrassing it is for me to stand here and watch you make a fool
of yourself?" I asked, long practice letting me keep to the
mildness. "Not only isn't there anything of consequence between
Prince Bariden and myself, you've just announced you're not woman
enough to satisfy the man you expect to marry. I hadn't known that
sort of frankness was required from someone of your exalted station."
There was an immediate
burst of snickering from Miralia's audience, and I didn't think it
was aimed at me. The same thought must have occurred to the redhead;
she flushed even brighter, and stiffened with humiliation.
"How dare you!"
she hissed with great originality, the words venom-covered. "I
know the point is probably beyond you to understand, but I am not a
slut like you! When I marry I'll be dressed in white, and that's why
I say nothing about my fiance's dallying. Actions that are fit for a
man are not fit for a woman, but obviously you've never been taught
that."
"Different people
learn different things," I observed with my own originality.
"For instance, you seem to think virginity is something special,
probably for the same stupid reason everyone else does, but you've
missed a couple of points. Back in the days when savages sacrificed
virgins -to their gods, it wasn't just girls they used, but boys as
well. That means if the idea is valid, it should go for men as well
as women."
"That has nothing to
do with—" she began impatiently, but I wasn't through yet.
"But the idea isn't
valid," I plowed on. "You have to remember these are
savages we're talking about, but they were only backward, not stupid.
On ordinary occasions they sacrificed chickens and ducks, moved up to
a lamb or sheep only when they had to, and used a young bullock only
if
3QQ
the situation was dire.
They didn't hand over their best right from the start, not when
handing it over might jeopardize their survival. That's why, when
they absolutely had to use humans, they usually offered virgins."
"But that proves that
virgins are special," one of the other girls objected, obviously
caught up. "The savages were giving purity and importance to
their gods."
"The savages were
giving unknown quantities to their gods, pretending they were
important," I corrected. "They needed a lot of children if
their tribes or clans were going to prosper, but they had no
knowledge of medicine and certainly no trained healers. Babies died
for many reasons back then; some were born dead, some died right
after birth, and some were too sickly even to survive infancy. The
most valuable possession those men had was a woman who bore strong,
healthy babies, a woman who wasn't barren or weak. If they were
seriously interested in giving their best, they would have given one
of those women, not an untried child of about nine or ten."
"Now that's too
much," another of the girls protested, highly indignant. "All
the books show virgin sacrifices as young women, not little girls.
And if children were so important to those people, why would they
kill one?"
"Because, in their
eyes, girls of that age were young women," I said, ignoring
Miralia's attempts to break into the conversation. "A girl
became a woman as soon as she passed through puberty, and shortly
thereafter she was paired with a boy who had survived his manhood
testing. If she didn't have her first child by the time she was
twelve or thirteen, it was only because she came late to puberty. The
male virgins were of the same sort, boys who hadn't yet changed and
survived the rites of men. After all, why waste a warrior and hunter
who had already proven himself?"
"None of that means
anything at all!" Miralia finally got in, the opinion inflexibly
firm. "We don't come from savages, and our families believe
firmly in the purity of women. It's a tradition that's been carried
on for centuries—"
"It's a joke that's
been carried on for centuries," I interrupted again.
"Specifically a man's joke. If a giri has no experience when she
marries, her husband doesn't have to worry about whether or not he'll
be as good as the others
TH6 HIDDEN
303
she's tried. Rather than
needing to develop an effective technique, he can get away with
minimal effort that still satisfies Him. Lazy is what they are, that
and little boys who think that size is what really matters ..."
I was only half-serious
about that particular part of it, but Miralia picked up on the wrong
half. Seeing my amusement made her think I'd been pulling
her—chain—the entire time, and that got her mad.
"Thank you for
explaining to us why you take to bed with every man you meet,"
she pronounced, the look in her green eyes malicious. "The
practice must be utterly fascinating to those who study the rutting
of animals, but we find it sickening. Just make sure that the next
bed you crawl into doesn't belong to Prince Bariden, and I'll never
need to lower myself by talking to you again. Is that clear?"
"What if it isn't?"
I asked just to be difficult, my head to one side. "You're a
silly child who thinks she has the right to tell other people what to
do, but what if I decide to ignore you? What do you imagine you could
possibly do?"
Her immediate sneer said
she was judging me by what I looked like, and because of that
believed I was helpless. She wasn't able to see the stubborn hurt
inside me that was beginning to create a great anger, and probably
wouldn't have cared even if she could. How she had missed the fact
that I was a sorceress I didn't know, but it was beyond doubt that
she had. Her sneering red lips parted to speak whatever threat she
had ready, but someone else's words beat her to it.
"Chalaine, hold on, 1
have to talk to you," we both heard, and by the tune I turned,
Bariden was just about up to us. It looked like he'd been moving
fast, probably because he had an unanswered question about Master
Haddil.
"Bariden, have you
been running!" Miralia demanded with vast distaste from behind
me. "Keeping low company has obviously taught you low habits,
but we'll break you of them soon enough. You may kiss my cheek in
greeting."
If I'd been Bariden I
would have told her what she could kiss of mine, but all he did was
stop and frown at her.
"Miralia," he
said, just as though he hadn't seen her before she spoke. "What
are you talking about? And what are you doing here?"
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HIDD€M
325
"It so happens I was
on my way to find you," she answered, smiling now as she moved
past me to stand right in front of him. "Since we're going to be
married, it's only right to greet you properly when you get back from
a trip. I really did miss you, darling."
And then she put her arms
around his neck and kissed him. I knew she was going to do that, so
as soon as it started I turned away and strode off through the line
of her followers. They were too busy sighing romantically to notice,
and once I got past I spoke a spell to make sure I couldn't be
followed by the use of magic. A brisk walk got me to the next
cross-corridor quickly, and once I turned the corner I ran. Running
isn't at all a low habit, not when it can get you away from someone
you never want to see again for the rest of your life.
Bariden was so surprised
by Miralia's kissing him, that for a moment he stood frozen. Then,
realizing it was more shock than surprise, he tried to end it.
Miralia had never kissed him like that, not in bed and certainly not
in front of people, but the death grip she had around his neck was
hard to break. It took some effort to pry himself loose without
hurting her, and by then he was good and annoyed.
"Miralia, stop it!"
he told her sharply, holding her by the arms to keep her back from
him. "What in the worlds has gotten into you?"
"Nothing but love,
darling," she answered with one of those pleased laughs that
always meant she'd gotten her way about something. "Don't you
think I have the right to kiss my fiance?"
"Since when are we
supposed to have gotten engaged?" he asked with a snort. "The
last / heard, you didn't care to see me again until I apologized for
something I hadn't done."
"Oh, that was just a
silly little misunderstanding," Miralia laughed again. "You
know you love me, and everyone else knows it too. That's why they
were so delighted when your mother announced our engagement this
morning. She's throwing a party for us tonight, and—"
"She announced whatT
Bariden shouted, refusing to believe his ears. "My mother—!
She had no right to do anything like that!"
"Of course she did,
darling," Miralia cooed, now preening herself. "She is the
queen, after all, and as a dutiful son you must obey her. I still
haven't decided exactly when I want the ceremony to take place, but
she and I will discuss it and decide together. Now . . ."
Suddenly, Bariden was
looking around rather than listening. It wasn't Miralia he'd run
through the halls trying to catch up to, and he cursed when he found
Chalaine gone. It wasn't surprising that she'd walked away when
Miralia began her nonsense, but—Abruptly Bariden was jolted by
a horrible thought.
"Miralia, be quiet!"
he growled, interrupting the silly girl in midbabble and putting
instant insult on her face. "I want to hear that you didn't tell
Chalaine this fairy tale about our being engaged. Let me hear you say
you didn't tell her!"
He was gently shaking her
by the arms, but from the way Miralia reacted, he might as well have
been beating her with a stick. She gasped in horror and tore herself
free from his grip, then glared long-bladed daggers at him.
"How dare you treat
me as if I were one of your common playthings?" she hissed, so
outraged her pale skin flushed crimson. "I have no idea who or
what a Chalaine is, but if that's the name of the creature who was
just here, you can be certain I told her the truth! You and I are
engaged, Bariden, but that won't save you from having to pay for the
way you just humiliated me. Oh, yes, you'll pay, all right.
You'll..."
By then Bariden was
running up the corridor, too sick inside to waste time worrying about
Miralia's spite. He'd made up his mind to get it all out into the
open with Chalaine, to ask her why sometimes it seemed she returned
his love, but other times there was nothing from her. He'd promised
himself not to drop the subject until he was satisfied he had all the
answers, but when he'd turned around in the conference chamber once
everyone had stopped yelling, it was to find her gone. He'd hurried
after her, tracking her with magic as he had once before, and he'd
finally caught up—
3Q6
WARON GR£€h
But not before Miralia had
made everything a thousand times worse. Bariden was cursing under his
breath as he reached the cross-corridor, but the words that usually
acted as a release for his anger did nothing when Chalaine was
nowhere in sight. It was as though she'd turned invisible—
which was perfectly possible—or had disappeared in a puff of
smoke—which shouldn't have been possible. He didn't even know
which way she'd gone—
"Damn fool," he
growled at himself, then spoke the tracking spell again. Finding her
the first time had canceled it, so it just needed to be revived.
Wildly impatient, he waited for her footprints to glow to life along
the floor, waited ... waited ... then was forced to notice that the
spell wasn't working. He spoke it again, just to be sure he hadn't
made a mistake in his hurry, but there was no mistake. No mistake, no
footprints, and no Chalaine. She must have done something to keep him
from following her again...
From halfway up the
corridor behind him, Bariden could hear Miralia shrilling something,
probably demands. At one time he would have gone back and tried to
calm her down, but right then he wouldn't have cared if she shrilled
the palace into a pile of pebbles and rubble. Without even turning to
look at her, he headed up the corridor toward a stairway that would
take him to his apartment.
Once in his own apartment
he threw himself into a chair and called up a cup of wine, and that
was all he could think of to do. His mind raced around madly with the
need for action, the need to win against opposition as he had in the
trap, but there was nothing to get a grip on. What he wanted was to
find Chalaine, but how in the name of the Diamond Realm was he
supposed to do that? She'd used magic to keep herself from being
tracked or traced, and if he tried to find her by ordinary searching
it could take years. Even if she didn't move from wherever she
currently was. In a palace the size of that one, someone determined
to stay lost would never be seen again.
Even with the system of
hall messengers. Chalaine didn't have to let herself be seen by any
of them, and that would neutralize them completely. Bariden banished
the wine and called up a brandy, then drank it down with a speed
THC
3Q7
that would have horrified
his old manners teacher. He needed the jolt the brandy would give
him, something— anything!—to clear his thinking. He
refused to give up on the idea of searching, but how in hell was he
supposed to find her... ?
"Ah, Bariden, how
delightful to see you again," a voice said, and then a very
large white rose appeared, hovering just above the floor. The
long-stemmed rose was fresh and beautiful, but it also had two green
eyes that inspected Bariden with amusement.
"ReSayne, is that
you?" he demanded, then shook his head. "No, forget that,
of course it's you. Who else would come visiting as a flower."
"Well, I did say I
would be back once my experiment was finished, and I also said I'd
have another new look." ReSayne didn't raise its brows, but only
because it didn't have brows. "Is something wrong? You seem even
more agitated than the last time we spoke."
"A lot has happened
since then," Bariden muttered in answer, running a hand through
his hair. And then he stopped to stare at the fiend. "Now isn't
that strange. I didn't mink of it even once, and I should have. I
wonder ..."
"Do you mean a lot
has happened with the problem you were working on?" ReSayne
asked, its green eyes concerned. "I'm available to help with it
if you still need me, and I'll wear this beautiful new form. It's so
tiring when people run screaming at the sight of me, but no one runs
screaming from a rose. That's one of the mam reasons I chose it. Tell
me what your problem involves."
"The problem's been
solved," Bariden said, still faintly distracted. There was
something that didn't fit, something strange... "Chalaine and I
were forced into a trap to get us out of the way, but we managed to
get free again and she figured out who was responsible. Master Haddil
is in custody now, waiting for the arrival of wizards from Conclave
to confirm his guilt. They'll also be able to cancel his spell on
whatever drug he fed the victims, and then the healer will be able to
banish it and restore them. Everyone is certain he visited the
victims in person in order to drug them, and once they're able to
speak they should confirm that."
328
"Then why are you
acting so out-of-sorts?" ReSayne asked, hovering fractionally
closer. "You said the name Chalaine—That isn't by any
chance the female you were so interested in, the one who needed to be
pursued? You can't possibly have failed with her when you were so
successful with everything else."
"Why not?"
Bariden asked sourly. "Between her and Miralia, I'm beginning to
feel completely outnumbered. One refuses to believe I love her, and
the other doesn't care if I do as long as everyone thinks I do. Love
her, that is. It's past time that I put my foot down about a few
things, but I have to start with Chalaine and I can't. She's hiding
somewhere in this overdecorated pile of stone, and I can't find her."
"And if I recall
correctly, you said she's a sorceress," ReSayne commented. "It's
very difficult to find a sorceress who doesn't want to be found,
but—Exactly how many sorceresses are there in the palace just
now?"
"As far as I know,
only Chalaine," Bariden responded, sitting up straight. "Do
you think you can find her, ReSayne? For me it would take years, but
for a fiend—! Just find her for me, and I'll do the rest."
"I'm pleased to see
you now have the proper attitude toward personal problems," the
ReSayne flower said with satisfaction. "Knowing you must handle
things yourself is the first step toward success—"
"ReSayne, save the
lectures and homilies for later!" Bariden said impatiently, now
on his feet. "Can you or can you not find her?"
"It's not a question
of can, but of have," ReSayne replied with a sniff. "I know
how upset you are, Bariden, so I forgive your total lack of good
manners—All right, all right! You needn't interrupt me again!
You may or may not know that when I seek for a human, I follow their
trace through—well, you have no word for that. Let's just say I
follow their trace, and when I arrived here in the palace I was
startled to seemingly find you in two places at once. Of course I
realized immediately that the stronger trace was you, and the other
simply something you'd produced. But I was curious, so I went to see
what that something was."
TH€ HIDDGN
309
"Something I'd
produced?" Bariden echoed with puzzlement. "But that isn't
possible. I always banish anything I happen to call up, so no one
will find it and get upset. But what can this possibly have to do
with Chalaine?"
"The item with your
trace was a plain, uninteresting thing," ReSayne continued,
almost as though it hadn't heard Bariden. "Made of yellow-brown,
unpolished wood, it's what you humans call a hairbrush. The young
female sorceress was sitting on a stone bench and using it on her
hair, long, dark hair with red all through it. And she had dark, sad
eyes . . ."
"Yes, that's
Chalaine!" Bariden shouted, wishing he could grab the fiend and
shake it hard. "Please, ReSayne, tell me where she is!"
"Locations in human
terms are difficult for me," ReSayne responded soothingly. "I
promise you, Bariden, I am trying. The female sat in a small garden,
spatially close to that very large place of substance
experimentation. You must know the one, where substances of different
sorts are put together with many others, and then subjected to heat
in one fashion or another? The results of the experiments are almost
always taken away, to be disposed of ritual-ly, I think, considering
the intricate workmanship on the containers used. I've never
understood why they produce such large samples with each experiment—"
"The kitchens!"
Bariden pounced with a yell. "She's in a garden near the
kitchens! ReSayne, I owe you!"
And then Bariden was
racing out, incidently banishing the brandy in his system as he went.
He'd need a clear head for what he intended, and now that he knew
Chalaine was in one of two places .. .
The first garden he
checked, beyond the far side of the kitchens, was empty. He'd pretty
much expected that, since only he and the gardeners seemed to know it
was there. It was the second garden his hopes were pinned on, but
when he reached it he didn't hesitate out of fear that it might be
empty. Needing desperately to know, he stepped out—and there
she was. Just as ReSayne had said, sitting on a stone bench all the
way to the left, Chalaine was brushing her hair with her back to the
doorway. The movement of her arm was slow and automatic, as though
her thoughts were
330
SHARON GR€€N
on something else
entirely. Bariden closed the distance between them quietly, then
cleared his throat.
"That's right, it's
me again," he said when she turned quickly and those big,
beautiful eyes widened even more. "I did say I wanted to talk to
you, but you disappeared. Do you mind if we have our talk wow?"
"How did you find
me?" she demanded as he moved around her to sit on the other end
of the bench. "And if you have any questions about what happened
with Master Haddil, just save them for later. Right now I'd rather be
alone."
"Finding you wasn't
hard," Bariden lied, "and what I want to talk about has
nothing to do with Master Haddil. It has to do with us, and it won't
wait until later. Chalaine, you and I have gone through a lot
together, and I think I'm entitled to a frank answer. Can you sit
there and say with complete truth that you don't have any deep
feelings for me? You and I are more of a team than I'd ever dreamed
would be possible with a woman, and I can't bear the thought of
losing that. Actually, I can't bear the thought of losing you, but I
know I'm about to. What can I do to keep it from happening?"
"I'd say everything
possible has already been done," she answered, staring down at
her hands and the brush they held. "You're back where you
belong, and as soon as the wizards from Conclave get here I can go
back to where / belong. I don't find teamwork with a married man very
appealing, especially since the problem we teamed up for has been
solved. And I don't have to guess how your new wife will feel about
having me around. She doesn't approve of that sort of teamwork, and
very frankly neither do I."
"Chalaine, I'm not
engaged," Bariden said forcefully, ready for the point. "My
mother and Miralia got together, and they decided they wanted an
engagement. I was through with Miralia even before I met you, but
she's determined to marry a prince. For my part I want a woman who
doesn't care what I am, only who I am. A woman like you."
"I'm sure you can
find lots of women like me if you start going to Conclave more
often," she said, beginning to get to her feet. "The
Sighted you met when you were young are jerks, but many Sighted
aren't. If you give them a,chance,
THG
331
I'm sure you'll find that
out for yourself. As for me, I'm too stubborn to settle for less than
exactly what I want. I'm sorry, Bariden, but that doesn't happen to
be you."
"Why isn't it me?"
he demanded, also getting to his feet, hope crumbling to dust in his
hands. "Chalaine, I love you more than life. Why isn't it me?"
"What did you say?"
she asked as she looked directly at him, startiement widening her
eyes again. "I thought I heard—No, it must have been my
imagination—or wishful thinking."
The miserable female
actually began to turn away from him again, but now he knew what the
problem was. If he'd had the time he would have cursed himself for an
idiot, but instead he took her arm and pulled her back to him.
"I said I love you
more than life," he repeated, looking down into those big,
beautiful eyes. "Didn't you hear me when I told you that before,
or did you simply not believe it? Right now I want to know if you
feel the same, but I warn you ahead of time: if I hear an answer I
don't like, I'm damned well going to ask again after I speak a truth
spell."
"Don't you have to
know the truth before a truth spell can make you tell it?" she
whispered, raising a hand to touch his cheek with gentle fingertips.
"Isn't it possible that what we feel for each other is just
physical attraction, nothing but plain ordinary lust? Think, Bariden,
and then tell me how well we'd fit into each other's lives. I spend
most of my time alone, studying and living on empty worlds, changing
that only when I go to Conclave. You, on the other hand, are a
prince, used to being at your father's Court. You'd want to stay here
rather than come with me, but—can you _ imagine what everyone
would think and say if they learned you were getting involved with
someone like me? You'd feel defensive and embarrassed, and after a
while—"
Bariden had just started
to interrupt her, knowing what she said wasn't true, but he was
interrupted in turn. Chalaine had undoubtedly avoided the hall
messengers on her way to the garden, but he hadn't seen any reason to
do the same. A really good reason had just come out, though, and was
clearing its throat in a way that wasn't going to stop until its
presence had been acknowledged.
33Q
"All right, Ordran,
what is it?" Bariden snapped, knowing the older man never gave
up until his message was delivered. "Say what you have to, and
then go and make sure I'm not disturbed again."
"Forgive me, Your
Highness, but part of that command isn't possible," Ordran
answered, calmly pleased rather than upset. The man had never hidden
his dislike for the third prince of his king's House, and although
Bariden didn't know why he was disliked by the man, he now found he
didn't care. His days of trying to be pleasant to obnoxious old
messengers were over.
"Well, spit it out!"
he growled, and had the satisfaction of seeing Ordran's smugness
fade. "If you can remember the message, just deliver it. /'//
decide what is and isn't possible."
"I beg your pardon,
Your Highness, but it's the queen who decides," the messenger
returned stiffly, apparently trying to work up the nerve to be nasty.
"Her Majesty your mother commands your immediate appearance in
her reception room, and I'm to escort you there. Without delay."
"And if I do delay,
you'll make sure she knows about it," Bariden said, annoyance
mounting quickly to anger. "Too bad, man, but you won't get the
chance to tell on me. It so happens I want to see her as well, and
now is as good a time as any. Come on, Chalaine, this involves you
too."
He took the woman he loved
by the hand, and led her past the startled messenger and back into
the palace. He'd always gone out of his way to avoid confrontations
and harsh words with his mother, but she'd finally pushed things too
far. He'd force himself to say what she deserved to hear, and then
he'd—he'd—
He didn't know what he
would do, but that didn't matter. As long as he had Chalaine beside
him, all the universe would be his for the taking. And he would have
her beside him, no matter who tried to keep it from happening ...
CHAPTGR
\—.verything was
happening too fast, but I couldn't seem to make it slow down. First
Bariden finds me when I would have sworn it was impossible, then he
actually says he loves me, then he goes trotting out dragging me
behind him ... If I didn't know better, I'd think the EverNameless
were into bad practical jokes ...
I finally got the chance
to catch my breath when we reached the queen's reception room, or at
least its anteroom. No one ever just walked in on the queen, and
there was a fussy official at a desk in the large anteroom to make
sure of that. His face wore that expression common to all ascetics
and most petty tyrants, the expression that says you're beneath their
notice so don't even think about making a fuss. A large number of
people were sitting on the elegant chairs the room contained, and
they all looked up when the official at the desk did.
"Ah, Prince Bariden,"
the official said, grudging the acknowledgment. "I expected you
much sooner than this. The queen commands that you await her pleasure
out here, and she'll see you in your turn. You—Just a moment!
Where do you think you're going?"
By that time we'd finished
crossing the anteroom, and it was obvious where we were going.
Bariden had no intention of waiting around for his "turn,"
a decision that delighted me. From what I'd seen in the last few
minutes, if that was the way they treated a prince around there, he
would have been better off being a commoner.
333
334
WAROM
The double doors ahead of
us were cream trimmed with gold, with matched footmen to either side
of them looking confused. They weren't supposed to open the doors
unless the fussy official gave his approval, but that was the queen's
son heading for them. Not knowing what to do kept them rooted in
place, so I made the decision for them. A flick of my finger opened
the doors without their help, and the next moment we were through
them.
It would have been nice to
have had a minute or two to think about what I was getting into, but
one glance around the queen's reception room said I wouldn't be
getting it. There were a couple of dozen guests in the room and
almost half a dozen servants, and all of them turned to stare at us
as we passed. The smiling group around the queen in her thronelike
chair stopped smiling at our abrupt appearance, as did the queen
herself. Bariden's hand tightened a little around mine, but he didn't
stop until we were right in front of them.
"Mother," he
said with a bow, ignoring everyone else— including the
redheaded Miralia, who stood to the queen's right. "I was told
you wanted to see me."
"What I wanted,
Bariden, was for you to wait like a gentleman until you were given
permission to enter," the woman answered in frigid tones.
Blond-haired and blue-eyed, most people would have considered her
beautiful, especially with her gown and jewels. Outer beauty has
never impressed me much, though, which meant the king's pleasant and
friendly homeliness was much more attractive to me than she could
ever be.
"Sorry, Mother, but I
haven't the time to waste sitting around in your anteroom,"
Bariden answered, sounding bored already. "If you think there
aren't enough people out there, find someone who has nothing better
to do. If that was all—"
"No, that was not
all!" the queen snapped, thrown off-balance by his answer, but
not about to let him walk out again. "I don't know what's gotten
into you, but you will watch your tone with me. And it so happens you
do have something to do with your time, and that's preparing for your
upcoming wedding. Your bride and I will see to the most important
details, but there are any number of things
TH€ HIDDGN
335
perfect for your attention
since they can't possibly be ruined. Knowing your memory, I've had a
list prepared and written down."
"You expect me to be
absentminded about my own wedding?" Bariden asked with a light,
ridiculing laugh while I seethed. If that stupid woman insulted him
one more time ... "No, Mother, my wedding day is something I'm
really looking forward to, since that's the day my beloved and I will
become one. And wasn't that generous of my mother to volunteer to
help with the details, Chalaine? She's so good at this sort of thing,
you'll have nothing to do."
He put an arm around my
shoulders and hugged me warmly, pretending he didn't hear the
concerted gasp from everyone watching. The queen went pale while a
flushed Miralia lost her smirk, but the battle wasn't over. Bariden
had dropped his hornet's nest, but no one had really been stung yet.
"What can you
possibly be talking about?" the queen said at last, scrabbling
inside herself for firmer footing. "You know very well the woman
you'll be marrying is Miralia, so why ever would you mention another
name? Really, Bariden, someone with so miniscule a sense of humor as
you, should know better than to joke in public. It's always taken the
wrong way. Since I announced your betrothal myself this morning, I
should know who your bride is."
"You should, Mother,
but apparently you don't," Bariden said, sounding more
aristocratic than the biggest snob I'd ever met. "Miralia and I
parted company days ago, an action recommended by the healer I
consulted. He said the nights I spent in her bed were putting me in
danger of frostbite."
Miralia's mortified "Oh!"
was drowned out by the laughter from our audience, and this time it
was the queen's turn to flush. She was losing ground rapidly, so she
grabbed for the first point in sight to stop the slide.
"For shame, Bariden!"
she cried, leaning forward with both hands on the arms of her chair.
"You find it amusing to admit to taking a maiden's virtue before
turning your back on her forever? No son of mine has ever been such
336
WACOM GR€€M
a cad, nor will one ever
be! You will honor your unspoken obligation to a lady in proper
marriage, and I'll hear no more on the subject!"
"But surely you'll
tell me who this maiden is that you mention," Bariden
immediately pounced, giving her no chance to follow through on her
dismissal. "Such lofty sentiments should never be wasted, most
especially not on a woman who wasn't a maiden. If she had been, I
wouldn't have touched her."
Miralia was beet red,
obviously wishing she could fall through the floor, and trying hard
not to look in my direction. Considering the conversation we'd had, I
didn't wonder why. Those who make the most noise about virtue are
usually trying to hide the fact that they believe they have none of
it, or wish they had none. I now knew which Miralia was, and in a
little while so would everyone in the palace. But if I expected that
to finish things, the queen had other ideas.
"And I say she was a
maiden, and you did despoil her!" the woman stated, ice forming
on every word. "Will you call me a liar, Bariden? I'm your
mother and your queen. Will you shame yourself even further by
disputing my word? I think not."
The woman was back to
feeling triumph, since even without looking at him I could tell
Bariden wasn't prepared to go that far. It must have cost him a lot
to do as much as he had, and being basically honorable was proving a
terrible handicap for him. He'd never be able to call his mother a
liar no matter how rotten she was being to him— but he wasn't
standing there alone.
"Honestly, Bariden,
your family must live in the dark ages," I said with a laugh,
immediately drawing the queen's glare. "Haven't they ever heard
of a truth spell? Why bother wrangling over who's lying, when
everyone can know for certain? It only takes a minute, after all..."
"Don't you dare!"
the queen shrieked when I lifted my hand, the color coming and going
in her face. "I should have known you were a freak, for like
calls to like, doesn't it? You both make me sick, and I curse the day
I ever gave life to someone so undeserving of it! You've been nothing
but a shame and a disgrace to me, Bariden, and—"
THC HIDDEN
337
"Bullshit!" I
stated, cutting into her tirade with sudden insight. "For a high
and mighty queen, you're a real fool. J Don't you think everyone can
see that it isn't shame but envy eating at you? Bariden was born with
an ability you think you should have had, and all this time you've
been blaming him for your lacks. You should be ashamed of yourself
for putting your son through that kind of hell, but I don't think
you're capable of it. You have to be sensitive and intelligent in
order to feel shame."
"That's a lie!"
the queen finally managed, one hand to her breast. Her face was still
mottled, but her eyes showed the truth. "I am not envious, how
could I be? Who would want to be a freak, when they could be a queen?
And he's my son, so the ability must have come from me\ That counts
even more than—than—"
"Sorry, lady, but it
doesn't work like that," I said, feeling no more pity for her
than she'd felt for Bariden. "Wizards have studied the matter,
and they tell us that if a woman carries the sleeping seed, all her
children are born with it. If only one or two of the children show
talent, it comes from the father. The only thing you gave your son is
his hair and eye color. AH the rest, including his goodness, comes
from his father."
Bariden's arm tightened
around me at that, but the queen didn't notice. She slumped back in
her chair, and there was still nothing to show she felt ashamed.
Bitterness now twisted that outwardly beautiful face, and I could see
she'd never accept what I'd told her. She'd decide at last that I was
lying, and would spend the rest of her life feeling cheated of what
she considered her due.
"Get out of my
sight," she muttered at last, looking at neither Bariden nor me.
"It sickens me to have to see you, and I never want to do so
again. Get out!"
"I feel really sorry
for you, Mother," Bariden said quietly. "Now that I
understand, I can finally feel sorry for you."
He took my hand again, and
we walked out through absolute silence. To their credit, most of the
men and women in the room looked sympathetic, but not for the queen's
position. Miralia had stood frozen beside the woman she'd thought
would make her a princess, and she hadn't looked
338
SHARON
sorry for anyone but
herself. Her plans had probably included goading Bariden into
challenging his brother for the throne once their father was gone,
and now she would neve*, be a queen either. I usually approve of
ambition in people, but not at the cost of other people's lives and
happiness.
"What now?" I
asked Bariden once we were out in the hall. "You ought to tell
your father about this, just so he knows and can be prepared."
"I have the feeling
my father already knows," Bariden said, nibbing the back of his
neck with one broad hand. "It must be the reason he always gave
me so much love and understanding. He knew I would never get it from
my mother. I've always felt he knows a lot of things he doesn't talk
about, including the fact that this blowup had to come sometime. The
only part of it I regret is what I had to say about Miralia. I
shouldn't have had to humiliate her in order to defend myself."
"You wouldn't have
had to defend yourself if she hadn't tried an ambush," I
countered. "You can't jump out in attack at people, and not
expect the possibility of getting whacked yourself. She has nothing
to complain about, and you're just being a sweet but softheaded
idiot."
"Well, at least you
added 'sweet,' " he said with a short laugh. "If I have to
be thought of as an idiot, that's the kind I prefer."
"It was my pleasure,"
I said with a matching smile. "We aim to please, but I do have
to repeat: now what?"
"Now we get married,"
he answered, putting both arms around me but not pulling me close.
"You asked me a lot of questions before we were interrupted by
my mother's spite, and now I'm going to answer them. Can it be a
physical attraction we feel for each other? Sure it can, because mat
attraction is there, but you're not the first pretty girl I've ever
been involved with. Can you honestly say you've never associated with
a man who was considered handsome?"
I was forced to shake my
head at that, since lying would have been a waste of time. One look
at Hannar—my former lover and current friend who would soon be
unfrozen—and most women melt into a sizzling puddle. And Hannar
hadn't been the first—or the best.
THe HIDDGM RGALM9
339
"So that takes care
of the physical," Bariden continued after my headshake. "You
also asked how people would react if I announced I was getting
involved with you, and I saw the answer to that just a few minutes
ago. Most of the men in that room had naked envy on their faces, an
expression that stayed there even when they learned you were
Sighted."
"Then I'm glad I
didn't look," I mumbled, beginning to feel very cornered.
"Strange men and naked expressions ..."
"Stop that," he
scolded gently. "You wanted the truth, and you're getting it.
The last objection you had was about where we would live, and the
answer to mat is, I don't give a damn as long as we're together. It
probably won't be here, not after that scene with my mother, but
we'll find a place to suit us both after the wedding."
"Bariden, stop saying
that," I objected, one step away from squirming. "You still
don't know what you're getting into with me, so we can't jump into
marriage. We'll live together for a while, and then, if you manage to
survive—"
"Chalaine, we have
lived together for a while," he counterobjected, but without the
squirming. "I refuse to spend years or decades waiting for some
nebulous 'something' to happen to me. What in the worlds are you
afraid of?"
"I'm not afraid, and
it isn't nebulous," I insisted, finding it was possible to be
even more uncomfortable than I'd been. "Hannar wasn't worried
either, but if I hadn't thrown him out he wouldn't have lived long
enough for us to be friends. I—have an effect on people I
associate with, especially Sighted people, and they tend to have ...
accidents. Like you with that sphere of water, when we first met. And
believe me, that's only the mildest of examples."
"That's not right,"
he said with a sudden frown. "Don't you remember, it—"
"Excuse me, Your
Highness," a voice interrupted, but this time it was a
respectful voice. "I regret the intrusion, but I have a message
from the king."
Bariden turned his head to
look at the second messenger to bother us in less than two hours, but
his reaction wasn't
34O
CHARON
the same as it had been
with the first.
"That's all right,
Stollen, I understand. What's the message?"
"His Majesty asks
that you attend him in his private audience chamber," the man
Stollen answered. "He also asks that it be as soon as you find
convenient, since there's still one part of your joint problem
remaining unresolved. He said you would know what he meant."
"I think I may know
even more than that," Bariden murmured, his expression
distracted. "Thank you, Stollen. Please tell my father that I'll
be right there."
The messenger bowed and
then took off, but Bariden stood where he was, obviously thinking.
Since his arms were still around me I couldn't quite think of it as a
waste of time, but I was suddenly curious.
"What could he mean
by saying one part of the problem is unresolved?" I asked. "With
Master Haddil caught and the mystery solved, what could be left?
Maybe he's talking about a different problem, one you and he have
privately."
"No, it's the same
problem," he answered with a headshake that banished his
distraction. "It must be time to clear up all those loose ends,
the ones I've just begun noticing. I'm glad they didn't wait until I
began tripping over them. Come on, Chalaine, let's go get our
answers."
"What answers?"
I demanded as he took my hand and led off again. "And who are
'they'? Bariden, answer me. Who are 'they'?"
He didn't answer, but
after just a few minutes I no longer needed him to. A guardsman
admitted us to a small, comfortable room done in leather and polished
wood, obviously the private audience chamber we'd been told about.
The king was there, sitting in an ordinary, high-backed chair
upholstered in butter yellow leather, and one of those with him was
Master Haddil.
Bariden felt Chalaine
coming to an involuntary stop at sight of Master Haddil, but he'd
been expecting the wizard to be there. He got Chalaine moving again,
guided her to a deep leather chair and into it, then turned to bow to
his
THG
341
father. King Agilar waved
away the courtesy, and gestured to the chair next to Chalaine's.
"Just make yourself
comfortable, Bariden," he said in his plain, warm way. "We've
dispensed with formalities for the moment, so we can just get on with
it. Between you and Chalaine, you should know everyone here."
"I know Tramfeor,"
Bariden said, nodding to the wizard as he sat. It had been years, but
of course the man hadn't changed at all. Black hair, light eyes, a
ready smile, and a tali, athletic body . .. "Chalaine, Tramfeor
is a wizard I met a long time ago, when I was still a boy. Master
Haddil was away from the kingdom then so he didn't stay long, but he
did spend some time talking to me. He's also the one who gave me the
Spell of Affinity."
Chalaine's startled glance
told him she was already heading up the right path, only a short
distance behind him. Master Haddil was looking comfortable and
pleased, which was another thing he'd expected. The fourth man, a
Sighted, was someone he didn't recognize, but evidently Chalaine did.
"And I know
Addadain," she said, indicating the small, frail-looking Sighted
who had light brown hair and gray eyes. "He's a wizard I met at
Conclave years ago, who decided to unofficially adopt me. He let me
test myself against his strength whenever I learned something new in
the way of combat magic, and never took it easy on me or let me get
sloppy. He would even listen to my troubles occasionally, and showed
superhuman restraint by never telling me what to do about my
problems."
"That wasn't
restraint, that was cowardice," the small Addadain answered with
a laugh, his voice hardier than his appearance. "Suggesting
things to a woman isn't quite as dangerous as offending a demon or a
fiend, but all too often the results become exactly the same."
"Speaking of fiends,
aren't we missing someone from this group?" Bariden asked while
the others chuckled. "ReSayne was a large part of this, so
shouldn't it be here?"
"You seem to be
catching up to us rather quickly, Bariden," Tramfeor said, his
light eyes filled with approval. "Yes, ReSayne should be here,
and it is. Would you like to join us more obviously, my friend?"
34Q
SHARON
"I suppose I might as
well," ReSayne's voice came with a sigh, and a section of the
brown, yellow, and blue carpeting suddenly showed two leaf green
eyes. "I had the feeling he was already beginning to understand
when he ran out to find the female, but I might have been wrong.
Since he showed no surprise at all when he walked in here, it's clear
I wasn't."
"I met ReSayne a
number of years ago," Bariden explained to Chalaine alone, no
one else appearing surprised at the fiend's presence. "It told
me I'd done it a favor, and was therefore beholden to me. I tried
several times to find out what the favor could possibly have been,
but never managed to get an answer. What I did get, though, was a way
to call it if I had a problem or found myself in trouble. Hearing
that, you should be asking the same question I asked myself when
ReSayne popped up again right after we got back."
"The question being,
why didn't you think to call it when we were trapped in that cycle of
worlds," Chalaine supplied promptly with a nod. "Could the
answer possibly be related to the reason you didn't know my name?"
"You mean something
like a selective forget-spell?" Bariden replied with brows high
and eyes wide. "So that even when I mentioned the special
warding spell a—'friend'—had taught me, I couldn't
remember I was able to contact that friend no matter where I was?
Why, Chalaine, whoever could have done that to me?"
He noticed out of the
corner of his eye that she joined him in looking silently toward the
three wizards, but most of his attention was on them. Tramfeor
shifted in his chair and cleared his throat, Addadain brushed at
invisible lint on his blue trousers, and Master Haddil—Master
Haddil— grinned then laughed out loud.
"These last few days
have been more fun than I've had in ages," the wizard said
without the least shame, casually smoothing at his yellow robe. "Once
this is over, Your Majesty, I really will have to see about finding a
temporary replacement for myself. The last decades made me dull and
stiff without my realizing it, but now it's time to revive. When I
return, I'll be the same fun-loving fellow I was in your father's
day."
TH€ HIDDGh RGALW
343
The king did nothing but
nod agreement and try to hide his amusement, and that was beyond too
much. With a growl, Bariden started to get out of his chair, but
Tramfeor stood faster and waved him back.
"Now, now, let's not
lose our tempers and start something we'll all regret," he said
to Bariden, then turned to look at his brother wizard. "Please,
Haddil, try to remember how you would feel if all you saw was what
had been done. Until these young people are told why they were put
through Hellfire, their anger is more than justified."
"If they had any idea
how successful they've been, they would be stiff-necked with pride
rather than anger," Haddil returned, then waved a hand. "But
you're right, of course, Tramfeor, and I apologize for my outburst.
Go ahead and tell them what we've been up to."
"For that I'll have
to start some years back," Tramfeor agreed, turning again to
Bariden and Chalaine. "In those days we had two problems, and
since we didn't yet know the same solution would serve bom, we
handled them separately. Since I was the one involved with you,
Bariden, I'll start with you."
Bariden watched wordlessly
as the wizard went back to his chair, but his mind clanged with
everything he had to say. He'd listen to their explanation, but if he
wasn't fully satisfied afterward, their being wizards might not save
them...
"The problem brought
to my attention concerned a young Sighted prince in a predominantly
untalented kingdom," Tramfeor went on once he'd gotten
comfortable again in his chair. "If he'd been an ordinary boy we
would have convinced his parents to allow fostering, and his foster
.parents would have been carefully chosen Sighted. As it was, the
suggestion wasn't even made to his father. There was no Sighted king
available, and the boy had a right to grow up as the prince he was.
"So a careful eye was
kept on him by the Court wizard, who also helped to train his talent.
He became altogether too good with mundane weapons, but that
shouldn't have mattered. What mundane weapon, after all, could
possibly equal the skilled use of magic? It struck me as nothing more
than odd, and I stepped in personally only when I
344
9HARON
was told about the young
man's attraction for the fairer sex. It would never do to have some
ambitious young untalented lady claim his heart, and then use him and
his gifts to gain advantage for herself. With that in mind I gave him
the Spell of Affinity, expecting that he would begin to visit
Conclave on a regular basis, and there discover that Sighted women
had a much greater affinity for a man in his position.
"Unfortunately,"
and Tramfeor's sigh was heavy, "the young man developed a strong
dislike for Conclave and didn't visit at all, not to mention on any
regular basis. He also did almost no traveling, preferring to remain
at his father's Court. His studies in magic progressed, however, and
he was provided with a confidante he might discuss things with. His
close association with humans was virtually nonexistent, and ReSayne
proved to be perfect. The young man had little trouble being open
with a fiend, and occasionally even took its advice.
"But by men our
problem was growing critical rather than resolving itself."
Tramfeor got to his feet and started pacing, his brow wrinkled in
concentration. "The young man should have already been going out
among the worlds, testing his strength as a magic user, deciding in
what direction to follow life first. Instead he stayed resolutely at
home, rarely used his considerable magic talent, and was unhappy in
the extreme. To make matters worse there were rumors in the kingdom,
whispered fears that he meant to challenge his eldest brother for
their father's throne. In such a matter his brother would have to
face him personally, and everyone knew the elder prince would have no
chance even if magic wasn't used. There was that unimportant point
about his ability with mundane weapons, you'll recall...
"And so there was a
heated debate at Conclave, among those of us charged with protecting
Sighted and unSighted alike." Tramfeor's sigh was lighter this
time, and he stopped to gaze at Bariden. "Some members of our
group insisted that you be removed immediately from this kingdom,
told that you would not be permitted to take over, and then sent on
your way. Those of us who thought we knew you best disagreed,
insisting that you had no intention of taking over, and where in the
worlds would you be sent on your
THG HIDDGD
345
way tol Another, smaller
segment had a suggestion there, one that quieted us all and made us
think. But before we came to any definite decisions, Addadain stepped
forward with his own problem, and described how it impinged on ours.
Addadain, would you be so good as to continue?"
The small, frail-looking
sorcerer stirred in his chair, but made no attempt to get up as
Tramfeor had. Bariden noticed that Chalaine also stirred, but he
didn't reach out a hand to her as he wanted to. What Tramfeor had
said about his being such a problem—he'd had absolutely no
idea, and now that he did, he wasn't sure how he should feel . . .
"My part of the story
starts years ago too," Addadain began, his mild gray gaze on
Chalaine. "I was asked to make the acquaintance of a young
visitor to Conclave, a girl who came on a regular basis but who
rarely mingled. Before I approached her I was told a few things, and
what I heard I didn't like. The girl had lost her parents at an early
age, both of whom had been Sighted. But her mother had been the first
in her line to be Sighted, and therefore had a large mundane fortune
from her family. For that reason the mother's cousins claimed
immediate custody of the girl, greasing their way through the courts
with gold. They had their eye on increasing their fading wealth by
taking control of the girl's fortune, the only way some unSighted
find it possible to prosper. When the girl's father's people found
out what had happened, they tried to make arrangements through
Conclave to have the girl fostered with one of them. The cousins,
however, visions of gold and property dazzling them, refused to even
consider the idea."
"And they also never
told me anyone had made the offer," Chalaine put in, anger in
her voice. "Not even after they found out my mother had
protected me from being robbed blind."
"Yes, a nasty,
vindictive lot," Addadain agreed, his gray eyes sharing her
anger. "And we, being bound by our own rules, were forbidden to
interfere—at least overtly. Privately we made sure you had
someone capable to begin your training in magic, but it wasn't
possible to protect you from the venom of those who blamed you for
their poor planning and jealousy. Isn't it too bad their nastiness
produced a result that turned around and bit them."
346
Addadain grinned, enjoying
the thought of whatever he referred to, but Chalaine stiffened in
silence. She wasn't happy about whatever had happened, but Bariden
could see that Addadain hadn't noticed.
"The result I'm
talking about was the stimulation of a rare—offshoot talent, I
suppose you could call it—in their victim," Addadain said
to his audience with a measure of quiet satisfaction. "I think
everyone here is familiar with the concept of an accident-prone,
someone who falls into every accident and mishap that comes past. The
young girl's offshoot talent was to bring out that condition in
others, so that if someone slipped on a wet floor, say, they didn't
simply recover their balance or fall down. In trying to recover their
balance, their windmilling arms would knock down treasured vases or
lamps, or send an expensive, carefully prepared meal to splatter on
the floor, or ruin the balance of someone standing next to them. If
they fell there was usually a cascade of things that went with them,
and the fall itself was both painful and embarrassing. The girl's
guardians took as much of that as they could, then agreed to let her
go to Conclave just to get her out of range for a while.
"And that should have
helped immensely, but it didn't," Addadain said, borrowing one
of Tramfeor's sighs. "At Conclave the girl discovered mat
Sighted were even more susceptible to her talent than mundanes, and
also that she had no real control over when the talent exercised
itself. She even began to learn Hellfire combat, and there was never
a problem. But just let someone pass a joking remark, and there was a
good chance that someone would not make it away from Conclave
undamaged. It didn't happen every time, mind you, but at least as
often as not."
Now Chalaine was staring
down at her hands, a slender, unmoving figure carved out of misery.
So that was what she'd been worried about, Bariden realized, the
terrible threat she'd been trying to warn him against. He reached out
a hand to stroke her hair, forcing himself not to say anything. The
wrong words could only make things worse, and he didn't yet know what
the right ones were.
"And, of course,
since gold attracts gold but problems attract complications, there
was another dimension soon
The
347
added to the trouble,"
Addadain continued. "The girl became a pretty young woman, and
the young men at Conclave quickly noticed. The unfortunate part about
that was the young lady's seeming air of helplessness and
vulnerability, which made the young men react in one of two ways.
Either they tried to take advantage of her innocence, or they
immediately became concerned and protective. With two reactions one
should have been better than the other, but in this case one was as
bad as the other.
"To begin with, our
young lady's background had left her neither innocent nor helpless.
Those who tried to take advantage of her learned that rather quickly,
and I don't think I have to go into details about what happened to
most of them. But most of those who tried to be overly protective met
a similar fate. Our young lady had developed a strong attitude of
independence, and being smothered was something she couldn't accept.
For a short while you wouldn't believe what a disaster area Conclave
turned into ..."
Addadain shook his head,
not in the least amused, and Tramfeor apparently shared the feeling.
They both must have been there to see it, Bariden thought, and that's
why they know it wasn't something to laugh at.
"Well, the ripples in
probability caused by the young lady's talent had to be allowed to
settle down, so I arranged for her to study with Haddii,"
Addadain went on. "It was something she had already decided on
for herself, having once met Haddii at Conclave. It was time for her
to change teachers anyway, and the greatest benefit to the
arrangement was that Haddii did his teaching here, in King Agilar's
palace. The young lady would finally get away from the family she'd
been forced to live with, and would also attend .Conclave only when
her study schedule permitted it. It seemed ideal, and Haddii jumped
at the chance to take her on. Haddii, it's now your turn."
"Obviously,"
Master Haddii agreed, still comfortable. "When I heard about
Chalaine's unusual talent I wanted to study it, and when I finally
met her to talk to for longer than five minutes, I also wanted to
teach her. She obviously had a large amount of potential, and was not
only willing, but eager to train it. She was nervous when I
interviewed her and just short of unsure of herself, and I decided on
the spot
348
9HARON GR€€N
to do nothing to calm her.
I wanted to see her special talent come into play, you understand,
and so couldn't afford to become friendly with her. That might have
inhibited the talent, and I was confident I could protect myself from
any overly serious consequences. After all, I was a wizard, and
Addadain seemed to have no trouble coping . . ."
Master Haddil's expression
had turned wry, causing Addadain and Tramfeor to chuckle. So it
hadn't been as easy as he'd expected . . .
"No, Prince Bariden,
it wasn't as easy as I expected it to be," Master Haddil
confirmed, reading Bariden's expression. "I hadn't known, for
instance, that Addadain had been chosen to comfort and companion the
girl because he seemed to have a resistance to that sort of thing.
And he and Chalaine had grown close, an added factor in the matter of
his protection. I had neither of those two factors working for me,
and I'll never forget the time I first encountered the talent I
wanted to study—head-on. And if you laugh out loud, Chalaine,
you have my solemn promise that I'll turn you into the ever-popular
frog. An orange and purple frog."
"Oh, be a sport,
Haddii," Tramfeor urged while Addadain laughed and Chalaine
choked trying not to. "I never heard that story, and I'm certain
Bariden hasn't either. How about you, Your Majesty? Did you hear
anything about it?"
"I'm afraid I saw the
results, and I'd really dislike being turned into a frog," King
Agilar said as he fought not to grin. "It might be best if we
dropped the subject and moved on."
"Just remember what
curiosity did to the cat," Master Haddil warned Tramfeor, more
than a little amused himself. "Oh, all right. It was the most
unbelievable thing, and I was totally unprepared. We have a really
great artist living in this kingdom, and she'd asked me to do her a
favor. She'd come across paints on an artifact from a dead world, and
was so taken by them that she was desperate to try them in her work.
She promised to pay me with a painting of my own if I examined the
composition of the paints and made some for her, so I gladly agreed.
I already had one of her paintings and treasured it...
TH€ HIDDEN
349
"Well, I'm sure you
can guess what happened. I examined the paint and produced buckets of
every shade I could See or extrapolate, completely forgetting that
I'd scolded Chalaine that morning for being less than perfect in a
lesson. The scolding had been deliberately severe and unjust because
I hadn't seen hide nor hair of the talent I wanted to study, and I
was growing impatient. Did I mention that the paints were indelible
dyes of the consistency of glue, that while I was working I was
brought the four large, very delicate feather pillows the queen
wanted me to reinforce with magic, and that the messengers bringing
the pillows didn't know they were opening my workroom door to
Princess Efria's four cats who were being chased by Prince Trayden's
two wolfhounds?"
"No, oh, no,"
Tramfeor begged, holding up both hands as he laughed so hard the
tears flowed down his face. "Please, no more! I can't stand it!"
"I think I did hear
something about that," Bariden remarked, privately delighted
that Chalaine had gotten even for being treated unfairly in such
an—interesting— way. "Everyone wondered why you
didn't simply banish the mess, and so did I."
"Banishing isn't very
easy when your mouth is full of feathers, your hands are glued to
your worktable, and there's bedlam raging all around," Master
Haddil answered dryly. "I was covered head to toe with paint and
feathers, and the messengers were completely involved with trying to
chase the dogs and cats out of my workroom. If King Agilar hadn 't
happened by, wondered what the uproar was about, then had the good
sense to send for my most senior apprentice .. . Well, as I say, I'll
never forget the time." . "Bariden happened to be away from
the palace that day, attending some sort of mock battle the kingdom's
troops were staging," Addadain put in, his eyes sparkling. "I
remember we eventually checked up on that, just to be absolutely
certain."
"Certain of what?"
Bariden asked, feeling confused. "You didn't think I was
involved in that? Not that it wouldn't have been a classic case of
comeuppance ..."
"Now, now, Your
Highness, I paid for my mistake," Master Haddil scolded mildly.
"The last thing I need is for
350
you to feel you must
avenge the injustice done your lady. And as for the thing we wanted
to be certain of, that's a very important part of the story. You see,
Chalaine's talent reached me a number of times over the years, and
although only the first instance was so very spectacular, there was
no doubt about the other times. 1 conferred with Addadain on a
regular basis, and almost by accident we discovered the one thing
those few but definite instances had in common: every time, for one
reason or another, you were gone from the palace."
"What could that
possibly have had to do with it?" Bariden asked, exchanging a
confused glance with Chaiaine. "We didn't even know each other
at the time, so it has to be a case of incredible coincidence."
"It wasn't,"
Tramfeor stated. "They found out because I'd stopped by to speak
with Haddil about you, and I had a list of your activities over the
past year supplied by ReSayne. I wanted to be sure Haddil realized
how infrequently you left the palace, but seeing the dates made him
realize something else entirely. He kept complete records of his
incidents with Chalaine's talent, and the two lists matched exactly.
The only times he had trouble were those times you were away from the
palace."
"But—that
doesn't make any sense," Chaiaine protested while Bariden simply
stared. "Even Addadain was affected once or twice, and if he
hadn't convinced me he firmly believed I wasn't responsible—Are
you saying you think Bariden somehow—cancels out the effect I
have on people?"
"There's no doubt
about it," Addadain reassured her with a smile. "Haddil and
I conducted a few experiments, and the point was proven conclusively.
As long as Bariden is around, no one has to worry about accidents."
"Ha, you see?"
Bariden told her, really delighted now. "I knew you were wrong
when you used mat sphere-of-water example to prove how dangerous it
is for me to be around you. Don't you remember that you yourself said
Master Haddil staged the incident? Since you can't have it both ways,
and I happen to believe what you said about Master Haddil, they're
telling us the truth. As long as I'm around, you don't have to worry
about causing people problems."
THE HIDDEN R€ALM9
351
"But that isn't
entirely true," Chaiaine said, frowning in disagreement. "I
distinctly remember seeing that miserable talent work while we were
still in the trap. It was in that last world, when I used a bow while
you went after those six swordsmen by yourself. Or didn't you notice
that two arrows knocked four of them out of play almost immediately?"
"Yes, I noticed, but
I was too relieved to worry about it," Bariden admitted with his
own frown. "You like to think something like that will happen if
you're badly outnumbered, but it rarely does. When it not only
happened but actually saved my life, I refused to ask the gift to
open its mouth."
"Why didn't someone
tell me that happened?" Master Haddil suddenly demanded of
Tramfeor and Addadain. "That's absolutely marvelous! Don't you
understand what it means? It means that instead of completely
canceling out the ability, Prince Bariden may be holding it still
long enough for Chaiaine to begin to exert control over it! If that
proves to be true, it will add enormously to their assets for what
they'll attempt."
"Haddil, they haven't
agreed to attempt anything yet," Tramfeor warned after no more
than a glance at Bariden. "Let's finish the preliminaries, and
then we can get on to the rest. Really, Bariden, we aren't doing it
this way just to annoy you. You first have to understand what's
involved before you can make decisions."
"That isn't entirely
true," Bariden felt compelled to comment in what was almost a
growl. "If I become convinced we're getting a runaround, I can
decide I've heard enough and ask Chaiaine to leave with me. After
that you might compel us to stay, but you can bet we won't go along
with whatever it is you have in mind."
"And yes, it's become
obvious that you do have something in mind," Chaiaine said,
clearly backing him up. "But if you take much longer in getting
to the point, we'll be too old to go along with you."
"No wonder they did
so well," Master Haddil commented to his brother wizards. "They
immediately present a united front to opposition—All right, all
right, I'm getting on with it! Now where was I? Oh yes, the
discovery. Well, once
359
WAGON
we were certain Bariden
could keep the worlds safe from Chalaine, we took the obvious next
step. We didn't know why Bariden was able to do what he did, but we
wanted him to do it permanently from then on. So we arranged
'accidental' meetings between the two of you, in the hope that nature
would then take its course."
"But we never met,"
Bariden protested, then looked at Chalaine. "At least I don't
remember our ever meeting. Please don't tell me I just nodded in
passing and then kept going."
"If you did, then I
must have done the same," Chalaine assured him, then looked back
to the wizards. "Unless the meeting was a disaster, and you made
us forget it."
"No, there was no
need to arrange for any forgetting," Master Haddil said, taking
his turn at sighing. "Every single arrangement we made fell
through, and you can't imagine how maddening it was. If you were
available, Prince Bariden, something came up that kept Chalaine
occupied. If you were available, Chalaine, Prince Bariden got caught
up. At one point the two of you were a single room apart, and the
combined efforts of three determined wizards were unable to bring you
together. We tried again and again and again, and then Chalaine was
through with her studies and left. Now that, my friends, is more than
simple bad luck. Something was telling us it didn't want you two
together."
"At that time,"
Tramfeor added hastily, undoubtedly noticing Bariden's expression.
"We were so upset and confused that we went beyond Conclave to
the Hidden Realm, and applied for a consultation appointment with one
of the Elder Ones. We can discuss this here because die room is
sealed, and King Agilar has allowed us to render him incapable of
repeating anything he hears. I'm sure you two know who the Elder Ones
are, even though no one ever speaks of them."
Bariden nodded as he
exchanged a glance with Chalaine, seeing that she also showed
agreement. All Sighted knew about the Elder Ones, but also refrained
from ever discussing them. Most wizards lived a very long time and
then died, but every once in a while there was a wizard who didn't
die. He or she kept learning and learning, and one
TH€ HIDDEN
353
day they were admitted to
the ranks of the Elder Ones. It was said quite clearly that you just
had to be able to do one particular thing, and your admission was
automatic. What that one thing was had never been mentioned to or by
anyone, but once you reached a certain level it was supposed to be
obvious.
And the Elder Ones didn't
hide out, or indulge in esoteric pastimes for their inferiors to gasp
at in awe. The joke of the Hidden Realm was that it was easily
accessible to every Sighted, and if you wanted an appointment you put
your name on a list. In a few days you were told, by messenger
sphere, when to show up and at what time, and when you got there you
spoke to one of the Elder Ones. It was said they looked like the most
ordinary people except that they were nicer and more pleasant, but
the power they must be able to wield . . . ! If the thought made a
Sighted too nervous to want to consider it long, no one in the
universe wanted the untalented to find out about them. Safer to start
a rumor that the EverNameless were on a rampage ...
"We were given an
appointment with the Elder Ones, but we couldn't make ourselves stop
fretting," Tramfeor went on. "We'd been so certain we had a
solution to Chalaine's problem, even though we couldn't see how the
arrangement would do Bariden any good—aside from the obvious,
of course. We had to wait months, and the worst part was the message
that came along with the appointment information. It said, 'Do
nothing further,' and couldn't have referred to anything but the
joint project we'd been working on. That meant the Elder Ones already
knew all about it, and might even have their own interest in the
matter."
"By the time the
appointment rolled around, we were all but quivering wrecks,"
Addadain said with a grin, taking up the narrative. "It wasn't
too farfetched to assume we'd been messing in something the Elder
Ones had a finger in, and we had no idea how they would take it. The
consultation room was pleasant but ordinary, and before we had a
chance to sit at the table, a woman entered through another door. She
was small and slender and quite lovely, and her smile put us
immediately at ease."
"She wasn't that
small," Tramfeor contributed, "but she
354
was definitely beautiful
and very gracious."
"She wasn't small at
all," Master Haddil added his own, "but she definitely had
an air of artistic beauty."
"At any rate,"'
Addadain recaptured the floor with the phrase, "we sat and
presented our problem. We also apologized if we'd intruded in
something she or one of the other Elder Ones had been involved with,
but she laughed and brushed the apology aside.
" 'After all,' she
said, 'how could you possibly have known? And if we can't make things
go the way they should no matter who interferes, we don't deserve to
be directing. And that's all we're doing, just directing certain
scenes to make the action flow more smoothly, which will make the
play a success.'
" 'Play?' I echoed.
'Are you saying we should consider life a play?'
" *Not at all,' she
returned with a smile. 'That's just a handy conceit some of us use,
to make it easier to understand what we're doing. Nothing in life is
inevitable, but some outcomes have a higher probability than others.
And some outcomes are more beneficial to everyone, high probability
or not. If you can trace an event far enough into the future, seeing
its impact on everything involved with it, it's sometimes possible to
know whether that event is generally good or generally bad. If you
and all your confreres agree on one or the other, you might then want
to make sure that event does or doesn't occur. But you never jump
into the action, and you never take your eyes off the future. If
something unexpected happens, and all too often it does, that can
change everything.'
" 'I don't think I'd
care to get involved with something that complex,' I told her,
meaning every word. 'Is that what we were interfering with, a
beneficial change of the future?'
" 'Oh, goodness, no,'
she answered with a laugh. 'This is just a small segment of
probability, a side trail that will affect only a small number of
people. Ignoring the situation would move it into the mainstream and
cause a few unpleasant occurrences, so we're directing the action
into the best probable path. There are no guarantees of happy
solutions on that path, but it does keep the major players
THG
355
out of mischief on the
mainstream path.'
" 'How much of it are
we permitted to know?' I asked, and she smiled again and told me. I
think she smiled because of the way I put my question, assuming she
had the right to know things I didn't. The truth of the matter, which
I finally saw after thinking about the interview, is that she has the
ability to see things I don't. If I were to develop the ability I
could see them too, and 'right' doesn't enter into it anywhere."
"Which is fine for
philosophical discussions, but not for explanations," Master
Haddil said firmly, then looked at Bariden and Chalaine. "We
were told you two may not be the best possible match for each other,
but finding anything better would be harder than looking for that
needle in its haystack. You'll be happy together for the rest of your
lives, and so forth, but first the two of you needed proof about
that. And you needed to show what you're made of, if you were going
to have a chance at what the Elder Ones had to offer."
"And that's why we
all dreamed up that little charade," Tramfeor took over. "If
you two managed to get together after a start like that, even you
would have to admit you were meant for each other. King Agilar's help
was invaluable, of course, and he understands fully what's at stake.
Haddil did all the dirty work, first providing victims and then
scaring off most of the help he supposedly needed so desperately. You
and Chalaine were guaranteed to stick with it, Bariden, so all we had
to do next was toss you two into that trap."
"Before Chalaine
discovered who the main culprit was," Master Haddil put in with
a chuckle. "I went to incredible extremes in order to cover my
tracks, but Chalaine has picked up more forensic sorcery than I've
had the time for. I was very proud of you, my dear, when you
reconstructed everything so neatly, then refused to let me make you
feel unsure of your conclusions. The ability to figure out what's
going on is all but useless without the courage to present your
conclusions against opposition."
"And now we're up to
mat trap itself," Bariden said while Chalaine smiled wryly at
Master Haddil's compliments. "If we were tossed in there to get
to know each other rather than
356
to keep us out of the way,
why were all those worlds so— strange and complicated? And why
more than one world to begin with? A single room with no way out and
nothing to divert us would probably have gotten us together a lot
sooner."
"Well, getting you
together wasn't the only purpose of setting you on that circuit,"
Addadain admitted, smoothly picking up the next part of it. He'd
called up a cup of something for himself, as had Tramfeor and
Chalaine, but Master Haddil was sharing the wine that had been put in
front of King Agilar by a servant before they'd started talking.
Bariden considered joining Master Haddil and his father in sampling
the wine, but mentally shook his head and called up coffee instead.
That discussion was far from over, and something told him he couldn't
afford to be anything less than completely alert.
"And we had nothing
to do with creating or accessing those worlds," Addadain
continued. "That part of it was arranged by the Elder Ones, for
purposes we don't completely understand. The arrangement tested you
in some way, tested each of you individually as well as together, and
we had no way of judging good from better. All we could do was supply
one of us to help out."
"And that one was
ReSayne," Bariden said, then enjoyed seeing their surprise,
including the fiend's. The green eyes in the section of carpeting had
been following the narration closely, and now rose up into the air
surrounded by gray-blue smoke.
"How in the worlds
did you know that?" ReSayne demanded, one step short of
outraged. "My performances were perfect, and even the Elder Ones
said so!"
"Your performances
and transformations were perfect," Bariden allowed, feeling only
partial amusement. "It was your ego that stuck out like a
bandaged thumb, both before, during, and after the fact. You couldn't
tell me what you were doing but you still wanted me to know, so you
waved a bunch of clues under my nose. I still don't understand why
you did it."
"I did it because
we're Mends, and even though the deceptions were for your own good, I
didn't feel right about lying to you." ReSayne spoke quietly and
without affecta-
THG HIDD€N REALTI?
357
tion, something Bariden
had never seen it do before. "I've gotten to know you better
than most fiends do humans, and I couldn't bring myself to betray you
completely. If what I did helped ease your mind at all... did you
figure it out before or after you came back?"
"After," Bariden
answered, wondering if the fiend was finally being honest, or simply
manipulating him again. "The key to it was the lame way you gave
me directions to where Chalaine was after I lost her trail. All that
roundabout description of the kitchens, as though a fiend would have
no idea what the area was or what it was used for. Was I supposed to
have forgotten that the first thing you did when I summoned you at
the start of this, was criticize my eating habits? If you know enough
about food that you know what should or shouldn't go with duck a
1'orange, how can you not know about kitchens?"
"And what were the
clues that told you ReSayne was involved in the circuit?"
Addadain asked while the fiend simply looked amused.
"That part of it was
very subtle," Bariden said sourly. "The first time it
showed up after my summons, it was surrounded by the gaudiest clash
of colors I've ever been blinded by in my life. When I mentioned
that, ReSayne gave in immediately and changed itself to a chair. At
the end of the conversation it promised to think up something new for
the next time we met, and sure enough, when I got back it showed up
in the form of a giant rose.
"That was when I
realized I hadn't remembered in the trap that I could call ReSayne,
and that thought triggered another. All those things, the gaudy
cloud, the chair, the rose—all of them had still had two bright
green eyes. We'd come across a lot of redheads in the trap,
supposedly because I have a liking for redheads, but there had also
been a lot of people with odd green eyes. Male and female people,
different worlds and different attitudes, but still that same green.
It's probably the only thing ReSayne can't change about itself."
"Damn it, I just
realized something," Chalaine said angrily, glaring at the
fiend. "That Lord Naesery, who showed such interest in
me—Naesery is an anagram for ReSayne! I was being ardently
courted by a fiend in man's clothing!"
358
SHAROh GR£GN
"Ardently courted,
yes, but not won over," ReSayne pointed out quickly in a
soothing tone. "As a man I found you immensely attractive,
Chalaine, but it was perfectly clear you felt only a moderate amount
of attraction in return. When it came to competing with Bariden,
there was simply no contest. If Lord Naesery had been really
important to you, you wouldn't have left him behind and continued on
at another man's side. Truthfully, I was glad that you did. Bariden
is important to me, and therefore so is the woman meant to be his."
"And then you became
Princess Tenillis, and tried your hand with me," Bariden said
when it was clear Chalaine couldn't argue the fiend's point. "The
Elder Ones must have made you seem Sighted, somehow, just to fit the
part. You were probably also the hostler in the next-to-iast world,
but I don't believe I spotted you in the last one."
"That's because I
wasn't in the last one," ReSayne confirmed, pleased smugness
back in its voice. "You two were supposed to have been forced to
leave the city after Chalaine won against you, where you would have
been directed to the 'gate' leading to the next world. There was a
whole string more of next worlds, but you surprised us by winning and
reached the 'gate' that led to a dead end."
"So that arrangement
with the female king was something that threw off your plans,"
Chalaine said, leaning forward. "But if those worlds were
supplied by the Elder Ones, how did an independent character manage
to show up?"
"It isn't quite that
simple," Addadain put in when ReSayne looked perplexed around
the eyes. "Those worlds weren't created by the Elder
Ones—quite—and they never claimed to have full control of
them. They could slip ReSayne in where they wanted it, and for all we
know it was taking the place of real people, but—the details
weren't something they felt we should know."
"But one thing we do
know is that you made it to the dead-end world sooner than you were
supposed to," Tramfeor said, capturing Bariden's attention. "The
circuit worlds are a test course the Elder Ones use for their own
purposes, and I understand that only once before did anyone think
their way out of the dead end with so little to go on. A number found
their way out by accident, but all the rest
TH£
359
eventually had to be
rescued. The Elder Ones were very pleased."
"So what did it win
us?" Chalaine asked in a very neutral tone. "A pat on the
head and an 'attaboy,' or a prearranged honeymoon in the world of our
choice? And while I'm asking, what gave them the right to test us in
the first place?"
"Chalaine,"
Master Haddil began in a warning tone, but the girl wasn't listening.
She was up on her feet and staring at Addadain, apparently addressing
her comments to him.
"The Elder Ones
aren't gods and we aren't their followers," she said, just as
though she hadn't been interrupted. "They had no more right to
test us than you three had the right to decide what man I should pair
up with. If life was too difficult at Conclave with me there, you had
the right to ask me not to come back. You had no right to consider me
a problem to be solved, like your own private puzzle or mystery. I
sat here and listened to everything you had to say, and now I don't
care to hear any more. If Bariden and I won a gold star for escaping
from that trap, take my half back to the Elder Ones and tell them
where I'd like them to put it."
And then she turned and
was heading for the door. Bariden swallowed a squawk and jumped after
her, having no idea what the problem was but not about to let her
disappear again. He reached her before she made good on her getaway
and pulled her into his arms, but she stood there square and blocky,
as if he were a stranger accosting her on the street.
"Chalaine, what's
wrong?" he asked softly, stroking her beautiful, thick hair. "If
you want to get out of here we'll leave together, the way we should.
Walking out on me as well as them would be—"
"A setback for their
plans?" she interrupted harshly, looking up at him. "You
heard everything I did, Bariden. How can you stand there and ask me
what's wrong—when you should see it as clearly as I do?"
"Are you saying you
think I'm not being allowed to see something?" he asked, her
disturbance immediately arousing his suspicions again. "Tell me
what it is, and if it makes no sense when it should ..."
360
SHAROM
"Prince Bariden,
please!" Addadain called from his chair. "I think I know
what she's talking about, but she's wrong. If you two will just come
back to your seats—"
"Think about it,
Bariden," Chalaine urged, those dark eyes staring up at him
intently. "They wanted us to get together, because you have some
ability that puts a damper on my erratic talent. They wanted it,
remember, and now you can tell me the reason you first got interested
in me."
"Why, it was because
of that Spell of Affinity—" Bariden began, then stopped
when her meaning hit him. "The Spell of Affinity that Tramfeor
taught me, and Tramfeor is one of them. But that was years ago, and
their nonsense doesn't stretch back that far. Not to mention the fact
that I know how I feel about you."
"Do you?" she
asked, much too coolly for his peace of mind. "Or do you know
how they want you to feel? The pleasure of winning a woman you're
blindly in love with could be what you're getting out of the bargain,
just as I'd be getting stability in my life. How long ago that spell
was first given to you doesn't matter, not when they can reach you
through it and not with the Elder Ones involved. I don't know what
any of them are after now, but whatever it is, I'm not interested.
Whether or not you are is for you to decide."
She moved out of his arms
and headed for the door again, and Bariden just stood there and
watched her. Could she be right, and what he felt wasn't really what
he felt? There had been so many games played with them that they'd
known nothing about. .. how many more were there that they never
would find out about... ?
"Chalaine, wait,"
he said, stopping her with her hand on the knob. "Maybe what you
suspect is true, and maybe I'm just being a fool, but—I can
remember every step of the way from attraction to love. You're
everything I've always wanted in a woman, and you're even what I
didn't know I should want. You're the perfect companion for trouble
or fun, someone who can surprise and delight me, someone I miss
terribly when she isn't there. If what I'm feeling isn't real, tell
me what is real and how I should be feeling. After all the time we
spent together, tell me what you think it should be."
THG HIDDGM
361
Bariden didn't hold his
breath as she stood on the verge of walking out of his life forever;
if she left, the pain would be so great he'd no longer have a life.
He'd studied magic long enough to know what could be done with it,
and it simply wasn't possible for any spell to make him feel like
that. His love for Chalaine was as real as anything could be, and he
had to make her believe that.
"Chalaine, I can't do
this alone," he said to her back, her slender form motionless
with indecision. "I've gotten too used to having you there to do
it with me, whatever the 'it' happens to be. I know by now that you
love me, so you don't have to worry about saying it. What I do need
to hear, though, is that you believe in my love. It isn't just lust,
or someone else's suggestion, or even the Elder Ones using the Spell
of Affinity to reach me with magic. It's a man's true love for a
woman, but it won't be anything if you don't stop looking for reasons
to doubt it. Without you it's a pile of cold ashes, but it's all I'll
have left if—"
He broke off as she turned
and raced back into his arms, hugging him so fiercely she actually
almost knocked him over. He quickly folded his own arms around her,
saying a silent thank-you for any help the EverNameless might have
supplied. He'd intended talking for as long as she stood there,
hoping to reach through to her, but he'd been running out of what to
say. Another minute and he would have started babbling and repeating
himself...
"It's nice to see at
least one of them has good sense," ReSayne's voice came, dry as
usual. "You'd think a man trying to convince a woman of his good
intentions would remember something important about the spell that
was supposedly making him want her."
"Like what?"
Bariden immediately demanded, swinging around to face the fiend
without releasing Chalaine. "I swear by the Edge of Chaos,
ReSayne, if you make things worse again, I'll—"
"Now, now, you can't
threaten a fiend, Bariden," ReSayne scolded him primly. "It's
not only unheard of, it's silly. I was just going to remind you that
your Spell of Affinity found 'Tenillis' at least as attractive as
Chalaine, but that didn't stop you from leaving Tenillis snuggling up
to thin air while you went chasing after Chalaine. One of the things
36Q
9HARON
the Elder Ones wanted to
know was if you would do that, and you did."
"Why would they want
to know that?" Chalaine demanded, also without letting Bariden
go. "What difference would it make, when all they wanted was for
him to neutralize me?"
"No!" Addadain
said before the fiend could answer. "That—nonsense, as
Bariden correctly called it, was our idea, Haddil's and Tramfeor's
and mine. The Elder Ones want something else, but it can only be done
if you two really want to be together. They were the ones who kept
you from meeting earlier, when we tried to arrange it, because the
time was wrong. Neither of you was ready to make a commitment, not to
each other, and not to something worth dedicating your lives to."
"And you wouldn't
have learned anything from the test situations," Tramfeor
contributed, on his feet but still near his chair. "They were
testing to see not only how you handled the challenges, but whether
you were capable of learning to adapt. In a very short time you both
changed significantly, but more through interaction with each other
than from any other cause. You supported each other up the face of
the mountain, and in that way both of you reached the top."
"And I've had
personal proof of that," King Agilar said gently to Bariden,
only the second time he'd spoken. "Haddil cast a spell that let
me watch you with your mother, and rather than being overwhelmed by
outrage and hate, you felt sorry for her. It's always been my most
fervent wish that you would someday understand the sickness that
twisted her so cruelly, the sickness of envying her own son. She'll
pay for what she's done to you by spending a very lonely old age; I'm
sure you know her sickness tainted her relationship with all her
children, and now not one of you can even force yourself to feel
close to her."
"She may have been
trying to get around that with her effort to pair me with Miralia,"
Bariden said, pitying the woman who had never been a real mother to
him. "Miralia is another one who wants what she's told she can't
have, and she must have been hoping they would grow to be close. I
doubt if she realized that one of the things Miralia
TH€
363
probably wanted was to be
queen."
"Which wouldn't have
happened even if you manage to make yourself a king," Tramfeor
said, much too casually. "Your queen will need to be a very
special someone, a woman who'll be able to support you in every way."
"And what's that
supposed to mean?" Bariden asked flatly, knowing better than to
believe Tramfeor was talking about his father's realm. "I have
no interest in being a king, and if Chalaine had wanted to be a queen
she would have said so. We don't yet know what we'll do with
ourselves, but we have plenty of time to decide."
"Maybe not as much as
you think," Tramfeor returned, and this time there was no
apology in his manner. "You two make a more formidable pair than
you realize, and the time has come for you to hear about it. There
isn't much more, but we'll appreciate it if you go back to your
chairs to listen."
Chalaine looked up at
Bariden with silent questioning, not quite sure if walking out would
be the right move, but he wasn't any more sure. He thought about it
for a moment, and then shrugged.
"Just because we
listen doesn't mean we have to agree," he pointed out. "If
there's anything you don't like, say the word and we'll both be
gone."
She nodded her acceptance
of the arrangement, and they walked together back to the chairs.
While they did, the wizards exchanged looks among themselves. They'd
all wanted Bariden and Chalaine together, but hadn't anticipated the
sort of team they made. Now they were in the midst of finding out,
and the team might not be as easily handled as they'd expected.
"What you two have
the potential of doing together is another factor that made the Elder
Ones keep you apart," Tramfeor said once they were seated. "They
needed to know more about it before they made any decisions about you
two, and apparently investigations of that sort take time. When they
finally decided to set everything in motion, that potential was the
first thing they tested. Do you remember liie first world, and the
house where other Sighted were already trapped?"
"Of course,"
Chalaine answered. "They weren't doing
364
SHABON
anything but accepting the
situation, and we changed that. Did they, at least, make ft back to
Conclave?"
"To Conclave, and
from there to the Hidden Realm to report," Tramfeor said,
surprising them both. "They watched the two of you very closely,
and were impressed no end. To begin with, you each noticed how
attractive the members of your opposite sex were, but there was no
interest beyond that even when you were encouraged to find some. That
was incidental, of course, to the main point, the presence of
constructs to make your lives miserable. The first thing you did,
Bariden. was refuse to let one approach you."
"That's ridiculous,"
Bariden scoffed. "I didn't even know the things were around
until Chalaine told me, and then we decided I wasn't visited because
I wasn't warded. How could I have refused to let one approach me when
I didn't even know they were there?"
"That's what the
observers couldn't figure out after they tried to send you one,"
Tramfeor countered, folding his arms. "Each of them tried in
turn, but none of them could do it. And then there was Chalaine, who
did nothing to stop the thing from appearing. All she did was change
its composition to make it vulnerable to silver."
"I did not!"
Chalaine yelped, looking as shaken as Bariden felt. "I noticed
the thing was vulnerable to silver, and simply used the fact against
it. It isn't possible for Bariden and me to have done what you claim.
That world had an inhibiting field backed by someone with a lot of
power, so we couldn't have used magic even if we'd wanted to."
"I think you're now
beginning to understand why the observers were so impressed,"
Tramfeor said, looking back and forth between them. "Neither of
you should have been able to do anything at all, but both of you did
anyway. And then, when it came to escaping from the place, you joined
together and forced an entry into existence."
"We all forced that
entry," Bariden corrected, but Tramfeor simply shook his head.
"No, the others
deliberately refrained from adding their strength," he said, and
Bariden wished he could disbelieve him. "They wanted to be able
to study the two of you longer, but when the entry appeared they
couldn't refuse to use it. One of the Elder Ones was alerted by the
presence
TH€ HIDCO
365
of the entry and was able
to shift the two of you into the circuit worlds, otherwise you would
have escaped then and there."
"Tell them about the
time in the next-to-last world," Addadain suggested, while
Bariden and Chalaine looked at each other in confusion. "What
they did when Chalaine's hand was being burned for calling up a cup
of coffee."
"Oh, yes, I almost
forgot about that one," Tramfeor said with a nod of thanks to
Addadain. "The wizard king of that world was putting a lot of
strength into her law spells, to make sure no Sighted got away with
breaking one of them. The pain and sense of being burned to cinders
was supposed to have lasted for at least an hour, but you, Bariden,
refused to accept that. You—somehow—linked with Chalaine
despite the pain that had destroyed her control, and—somehow—
ran the spell to its end. Banishing the cup Chalaine had created
should have done nothing and did do nothing. It was the combination
that accomplished its purpose, but only by achieving the impossible."
"I don't understand
what any of this means," Chalaine stated evenly, but still
groped toward Bariden to clutch his hand. "What, if anything,
are you trying to tell us?"
"We're trying to tell
you that you're not ordinary magic users, either separately or
together," Addadain said slowly, taking over in a very serious
tone. "The Elder Ones have some theory about the repression you
both grew up with, and how it affected your abilities in unexpected
ways. Mixed in is something about the fact that both of you are from
relatively new lines as far as being Sighted goes, and the new isn't
completely like the old lines we're familiar with. We three don't
understand it ourselves, but that's why the Elder Ones were watching
you. They spotted the signs early, and watched to see where they
would lead you."
"That somewhere
turned out to be here, listening to what we have to say,"
Tramfeor resumed, giving Bariden the impression he and Addadain
needed each other's support. "The fact is you two aren't the
first to develop in this way, and two of your predecessors got
together to accomplish something that shouldn't have been possible.
By the time the Elder Ones noticed it was too late to stop them with
anything less than direct intervention, and that's one thing
366
they won't do unless the
alternative is to let the universe blow up. Anything with lesser
consequences has to be handled by us, the superior beings people call
wizards."
"Only in this
instance not so superior," Addadain said, for the first time
sounding bitter. "The Elder Ones told us we would be out of our
depth in this problem, but we had to lose one of our number before we
believed it. The problem involved more than a question of strength,
and strength is all we have. You two have the more, which is why
you're being asked to take this on. Your performances in the circuit
worlds led the Elder Ones to believe you have a good chance against
those we don't, at the very least an even chance. If you win, you'll
be king and queen of a realm that very badly needs the help only you
can give."
"And if we lose,
we'll no longer be a potential problem to anyone," Bariden said,
just to show that the point hadn't gotten past him. But the rest of
it—! "As far as that goes, you people can't afford to let
us stay together if we refuse to try, can you? We'd be too much of a
potential threat, but not as hard to stop and separate as
our—'predecessors.' We haven't been together long enough to
learn everything we can do, or how to accomplish it voluntarily. If
we don't agree, we'll be forced to go our separate ways."
"Yes, but you won't
know that it's being done," Tramfeor said, refusing to avoid
Bariden's gaze. "It will be as if you two had never met, and you
never will meet again. We won't let you suffer if you have to refuse,
but we don't want to suffer either. We can't afford to let two people
like you walk around uncommitted."
"Now I know why there
are three wizards in this room," Chalaine muttered darkly.
"Someone's afraid one or two won't be enough. Giving us the
choice of risking our lives or living them alone is a really lousy
thing to do."
"But that's not the
choice you're being given," Addadain disagreed, finally rising
to come and stand beside Tramfeor. "If we have to separate you,
you'll be compensated by meeting people each of you will like well
enough to spend your lives with. It won't be love, but neither of you
will be unhappy or alone. So that choice you mentioned is this
instead: stake your lives and ability in an effort to help people who
really need it while you help yourselves, or accept
THG HIDD€h
367
a life of quiet,
unexciting satisfaction with no remembered regrets. The choice really
is yours, and whatever decision you make won't be argued with."
Bariden saw Chalaine turn
to look at him, and his expression couldn't have been as neutral as
he'd been trying to make it. Her own expression showed she knew
exactly what he was thinking, which caused her to blow out a small
breath of resignation.
"Okay, so I'm totally
outnumbered," she said. "You've already made up your mind,
and you want to go for it. But just like in the trap, either we both
go or neither of us does."
"Which is the way it
should be," Bariden said, stroking the hand that still held his.
"We're a team, and a team always acts as one. Would you really
want to live the quiet life, even if we were allowed to stay
together? When there are people in trouble, people only we can help?
We'd be fighting for a place to turn into home, and what better thing
is there to fight for?"
"Shorter hours for
more pay?" she offered, but her heart wasn't really in it. "Oh,
all right, you've got me again. I had a taste of the quiet life, and
even the addition of congenial company wouldn't do much to change my
opinion of it. Where's the dotted line where we sign our lives away?"
"Not so fast,"
Bariden interrupted before the three wizards broke out into cheering.
"Since everyone else has conditions, I've decided to put forward
one of my own. If we lose against our opponents, Chalaine, you and I
won't have anything more to worry about. But if we win we get to
start our own dynasty, and I want to be prepared for that. A king and
his queen need to be married, and I want to see to that first thing.
Do you agree, Father?"
"Absolutely,"
the king of that realm said immediately, his delighted amusement
visible only in his eyes. "If you give certain women the chance,
Bariden, they'll hem and haw and drive you crazy with delays. Your
Chalaine strikes me as one like that, so get it put into the general
contract before she develops cold feet and backs out."
"You really are
ganging up on me," Chalaine announced indignantly, but glancing
around showed her five men chuckling without the least sign of
sympathy. "Well, just remember
368
SHAROM
it took five of you to
make it work. And no, Bariden, you don't have to say it again. I
agree too."
"I was hoping you
would," Bariden said with a grin as he kissed the hand he held.
"I can't expect to use any talent I have against the one who
helps me to have it. So, gentlemen, what happens now?"
"First we attend a
wedding, and then you two leave on a rather unusual honeymoon,"
Tramfeor said with his own grin. "We'll try to give you some
appropriate wedding gifts before you go, but the Elder Ones sent a
message that they feel will do you more good. The message is, 'Get to
know your neighbors.1 "
"What kind of a
message is that?" Chalaine asked, her distraction saying she was
already thinking about it. "Chances are any neighbors of our
opponents are also under their heel. .. unless they've made an
alliance for some reason ..."
"Maybe the alliance
they made is with puppets, people who don't belong where they are,"
Bariden mused, also drawn into the question. "If that's true,
there may be others around who are trying to get back what was taken
from them unfairly. That would give us allies, and even the slightest
edge is better than none. Yes, that definitely has possibilities. .
."
"You know, I'm
hungry," Chalaine announced. "If we're going to think about
cryptic messages, I want something to eat first. And a bath, I
definitely want a bath, but first I need something to eat."
"Allow me,"
Master Haddil said at once, coming to join his brother wizards where
they stood. "The bath you'll have to see to for yourself, but
I'm prepared to create us all an incredible meal. Does anyone have
anything special they'd like included?"
"How about chocolate
mousse?" Chalaine asked with a lazy grin for Bariden. "I
understand it's traditional for cases of ganging-up-on ... or ought
to be ..."
"Forget it,"
Bariden tried to say with a growl, but found himself laughing
instead. Life with Chalaine was going to be incredible, and he
couldn't wait for it to start. Maybe they ought to start it right
after the meal, so he could take care of Chaiaine's bath. And with
that in mind...
THG
369
"No mousse, but what
about whipped cream instead?" The others seemed to have no idea
what he meant, but
once again Chalaine knew
exactly. Her laugh rang out along
with his, and then she
leaned close.
"We'll discuss it
later," she promised, brushing his lips
with her own. "In my
version of a bathing room. I think
you'll like it."
Think? Bariden laughed.
There was no think about it.
As soon as we finished
eating Bariden excused the two of us, then dragged me off through the
halls. The King called after us that he intended to see to the
wedding preparations personally, and would recruit Bena to help him.
I sighed as I thought about all the teasing I'd get from Bena,
especially after I'd given her a hard time for matchmaking between
Bariden and me. That was one point I'd never live long enough to hear
the end of...
"And here we are,
finally at my apartment," Bariden announced, hustling me inside
and closing the door behind us. Then he muttered a spell I didn't
quite catch, and turned back to look at me with a grin. "Now let
someone try to come in to interrupt us. If they do, I guarantee they
won't just be from the you-know-who, they'll be one of them in the
flesh."
He meant the Elder Ones,
of course, which immediately brought to mind thoughts of the Hidden
Realm. The past days had been chock-full of hidden realms—not
to mention surprises—and we still had at least one hidden realm
ahead. And our hidden talents, which made us even more different than
we ever would have guessed. But this time we weren't different and
alone, which made all the—difference—in the worlds.
Wherever we went we'd be going together, and we'd do our damnedest to
make the place ours. There had been a few comments during the meal
about the kingdom we'd be heading for, but no one had even come close
to mentioning where it was. I wondered if any of them knew ...
"Are you regretting
your decision already?" Bariden asked, and I looked up to see
that he'd guided me into his bedchamber without my noticing. Talk
about your subtle hints.
37O
VHAROM
"I'm trying to make
myself believe that I actually promised to marry you," I
answered, for the first time really looking him over. Thick, longish
blond hair, clear, light blue eyes, shoulders wide enough to strain
the cloth of his tunic, trim waist, long legs, firmly muscled arms,
incredibly handsome face ... "You must have caught me in a weak
moment, when I was thinking about what nicely rounded buns you have."
"Hey, that's supposed
to be my line," he protested indignantly, but a grin shone from
his eyes. "And I'm about to come down all insulted. Is my body
the only thing you want me for?"
"Absolutely," I
agreed, moving close to slip my arms under his and circle that body.
"You'll be nothing but a sex object to me, kept only as long as
you can satisfy my depraved lusts. In a little while, two or three
hundred years at most, I'll probably toss you aside for a newer
model."
"You'd better make
sure first that your newer model is better than average with a sword
and magic," he countered, and there was a hardness to the words
despite his continuing amusement. "I like to think of myself as
a generous man, but the one thing you won't ever find me sharing is
my woman. The point is nonnegotiable, so you'd better mink about
whether or not you can accept it."
"Do you really want
me to be your woman?" I asked, feeling the strangest tingle at
the idea. "I know I'm far from worthless, Bariden, but you—"
"Hey, none of that!"
he interrupted to scold, locking his hands together behind my back as
those blue eyes looked down at me sternly. "It's enough that I
feel that way about you. There isn't anything I can give you that you
can't get for yourself or from another man, and that includes this
muffling or neutralizing I do for your special talent. Master Haddil
was careful not to say it in so many words, but I'm willing to bet he
believes you're already on the way to controlling that talent by
yourself. All you needed me for was to start the process, and that's
been done."
"But that isn't
true," I protested, seeing he was serious. "What I can or
can't do for myself doesn't matter. What does matter is that you are
the only man to consider, because you're the man I love. Granted, I
know a lot of
TH€
371
men who are better looking
and have much better bodies, but—-"
"Hey!" he said
again in outrage, but the emotion wasn't real. The beautiful smile in
his eyes was, and that was what counted. "Do you want me to take
up wife beating even before you're my wife? A woman who's about to be
married shouldn't consider any man better than her future husband,
not in any way at all. That kind of talk is completely inappropriate,
and I don't want to hear it again."
"Yes, Bariden,"
I agreed meekly, snuggling up to him to hide my grin. "I promise
you won't hear that kind of talk again."
"And I don't want you
thinking it, either," he added dryly as his arms tightened
deliciously, proving he was really getting to know me. "You have
more deviltry in you than ten fiends and demons put together, but
don't think I'll let you get away with indulging it. You'll be a good
girl with me, and you'll behave yourself."
"Yes, Bariden,"
I said again, just as meekly, then deliberately moved in his arms. "I
think you'd better let me go now. If I'm going to be a good girl, I'd
better find an apartment of my own. Proper behavior is a lot easier
for me when you're not around."
"You little brat,"
he growled, men suddenly let me go but only to scoop me up in his
arms. "For that you deserve to be ravished, and I'm here to see
to it. You didn't know I'm the best ravisher in the kingdom, did you?
You thought I was only fair-to-middling at it, so you took a chance
in the hopes of getting away with it. Now what have you got to say
for yourself?"
"Oh, please, sir,
please don't ravish me," I wheedled, banishing my clothes with a
gesture before sliding my arms slowly around his broad neck. "I'm
a poor, helpless little girl creature, and I didn't realize who I was
dealing with. If you don't ravish me, I'll never do this sort of
thing again."
"Well, that settles
that" he decided aloud while I kissed his face and ear and neck,
then he headed directly for his bed. "For the sake of my future
married life, your fate is sealed, poor little girl creature.
Ravishment, here we come."
37Q
9HARON
"That's, 'poor,
helpless little girl creature,' " I murmured, taking a moment to
get rid of his clothes. "And how cruel you are, to ignore my
pitiful pleas ... Say, how do people manage if they aren't magic
users? I mean, this clothes thing. Do they really have to wait while
they take things off piece by piece?"
"I'll show you how
it's done next time," he promised in a murmur, putting me down
on the bed and immediately joining me. "With some practice and
imagination, it can be a lot of fun ... but not as much fun as you,
my beloved woman. Are you sure you really do want to go through with
this?"
I knew he wasn't talking
about making love, so I reached up with a smile to stroke the worry
out of his face.
"Yes, my love, I
really do want to go through with it," I assured him with full
truth. "We both need a place that's ours, not to mention
somewhere we can find out exactly what sort of—'new' people we
are, and I have a feeling that won't be all there is to it. Those
worlds that they call the circuit—they weren't just arranged at
random, and we were supposed to have learned something from them. If
we learned the lessons well enough, we should find them of value at
some point."
"If we learned them
well enough, and if we can figure out what they were," he
agreed, then leaned down to kiss me briefly. "One thing I did
learn, though. There's a time for thinking and planning, and a time
for the more important things in life. Guess which time we're up to
now?"
"I can't imagine,"
I answered, pulling him down on top of me. "How about a teeny
little hint."
He gave me more than a
hint, and believe me, it wasn't teeny. The hidden realm waiting for
us would have to wait a little longer, would wait until we took care
of the more important things in life. But after that. . .
HARON GREEN grew up in
Brooklyn and discovered science fiction at the age of twelve. A
voracious reader, she qualified for the school library medal, but
didn't get it because the librarian disapproved of sf. ("If you
want to press the point," she writes, "you could say that
Lucky Stair, Space Ranger, got me in trouble in junior high school.
It would be the literal truth.") Later, she earned her B.A. at
New York University, where she got rid of an unwanted admirer by
convincing him that she was from another planet.
Currently Ms. Green lives
in Nashville, Tennessee, with her cats and her Atari computer. A
prolific writer, she is the author of over twenty books, including
The Far Side of Forever, the Terrilian Warrior series, Lady Blade,
Lord Fighter, the Jalav series, and Dawn-Song and Silver Princess,
Golden Knight, which are currently available from Avon Books. When
she's not at her computer, she is engaging in one of her diverse
hobbies: Tae Kwon Do (in which she has a purple belt), knitting,
horseback riding, fencing, and archery.
CHAPTGR OMG
It wasn't my fault. I'll
be the first to admit it usually is my fault, but not that time. It
was a simple accident, and Master Haddil shouldn't have—But
maybe I ought to start from the beginning.
At first it was a
perfectly ordinary day. I'd dressed to go riding right after
breakfast, but the heavy gray clouds that had been threatening since
the day before finally let loose. It wasn't exactly rain that came
down, not with the air as cold as it was. Half sleet and half snow,
likely to become all one or the other before very long, and nothing
any sane person would deliberately go out in. I'd stared at it
through the diamond-paned window of my kitchen, not very pleased.
And then I'd gotten
curious. Water fell from the skies in different forms, but it was
still water. We drank it, bathed in it, washed things with it, cooked
with it—but how much experimentation had been done? If memory
served there wasn't very much, and what better day to correct that?
There were ail sorts of things to try with water, so I headed for my
workshop to get started.
All right, so I didn't
change out of the heavy riding clothes and boots. I tend to keep my
house on that world on the cool side; when I'm in the mood for cold
weather, I want to know it's there. Staying in those clothes
shouldn't have made any difference ...
Well, I gestured a bucket
of water into being, then thought about what I wanted to try first. A
sorceress at my level is
1
SHARON
capable of quite a lot,
but I didn't want to use magic to make water do things. I wanted to
investigate water, with magic just another tool. But what was there
to try . . . ?
And then I saw the single
drop, shimmering at the rim of the bucket. What was a single drop,
and how much water had to be present before it became two drops, or
three, or a dozen? Some drops were smaller or bigger than others, so
where did the cutoff point come? Was it possible to extend the cutoff
point, using magic only lightly? How far beyond was it practical to
go?
The questions increased to
a dozen, then began multiplying. On top of that I'd gotten an idea,
which in turn suggested a test to answer the questions. Wording my
spell carefully, I used the water in the bucket to make a sphere a
foot and a half in diameter. I was able to hold the sphere in my
hands without bursting it like the soap bubble it resembled, which
was one of the things the spell had specified. I had to be careful,
but 1 could hold it.
Once that was done, I
brought into being nine more gallon buckets of water. The first
question to be answered was how many gallons the one-gallon sphere
would be able to hold without rupturing or leaking. That meant
filling it slowly and watching for the natural stress point, not
forcing it to hold what / wanted it to. A wizard could have garnered
the waters of an ocean into a ball; that wasn't what I was trying to
accomplish.
I had just finished adding
the contents of the fourth bucket when the Summons came. The sphere
was very full but not yet leaking, and then my attention was taken by
the entry that chimed into existence not two feet away. It looked
like a perfectly ordinary doorway, except that the name Haddil sat in
large block letters on its top. A quick spell matched the master's
true resonance with the work, which meant it really was him doing the
Summoning. Come now, was the message, one Master Haddil had never
sent before. There had to be some kind of trouble . . .
Without wasting another
moment, I stepped through the entry. Moving from world to world like
that is effortless, so much so that you sometimes forget to watch
where you're walking. One step, after all, and not even across a
raised threshold. It let me out just short of a real doorway, one
The HIDD€M RCAIM 3
that did, unfortunately,
have a raised threshold ...
So it wasn't my fault.
Maybe I did forget I was still holding the sphere of water, but that
wouldn't have mattered if the entry had been put beyond the raised
door sill. All my attention was on the room I approached, trying to
see who was in it. It seemed to be a conference room in the Palace of
Ease at Yellow Rivers, and the master wasn't alone. People came in by
ones and twos through other doorways that must also have had entries
behind them, and Master Haddil was in the midst of creating even
more. I heard part of one spell as I approached, and then—
And then my heavy riding
boots made me trip over the sill. My reflexes were good enough to
keep me from falling, which was the major part of the problem. As my
arms flew up to reestablish balance, my hands threw the sphere of
water I'd forgotten I was holding. I recovered my footing in time to
see the sphere go sailing toward Master Haddil, and immediately felt
relieved. Master Haddil, after all, was warded against magic with his
own wizard's strength, so my sphere couldn't possibly reach him.
And it didn't. But his
warding also didn't destroy the sphere, as I'd thought it would.
Instead, the sphere bounced—straight toward the man who stood
beside Master Haddil on his right. Again, since the man was Sighted,
it shouldn't have mattered; his own warding should have protected
him. What's that saying about "should" and "would"
and "could"? To make a long story even longer, he wasn't
warded. The sphere hit him head-on, burst the way it was supposed to,
and drowned him in five gallons of water.
"Chalaine!"
Master Haddil screamed, staring in horror at the man who was drenched
from head to foot. "What have you done this time? Have you any
idea? Even a hint?"
Chalaine, that's me.
Master Haddil pronounces it as though it should be Abysmal or
Catastrophe, but he's always done that. Things tend to go badly for
me, especially when he's around.
So I was used to being
accused, and that's why I didn't say anything as I watched the big
drowned man use one hand to wipe water out of his eyes. His long,
golden blond hair hung in strings, his dark tunic and leather
SHAROM
breeches sagged, and his
boots must have been full. Even his swordbelt was wet, and I had just
enough time to wonder why a magic user would be wearing a swordbelt
before he moved his hand in a banishing gesture. All the water and
wetness disappeared immediately, of course, leading me to also wonder
why no one else had thought to do that.
Like Master Haddil.
"Forgive me, Your Highness, but I should have done that,"
he apologized, tugging at his bright yellow robes. "It's just
that girl — when she appears, my mind ceases to function. Are
you all right?"
"I'm not so delicate
that I dissolve in water, Master Haddil," the big man returned,
annoyance in his deep voice. They were both trying to ignore the
hysterical laughter coming from the other new arrivals, all of whom
were Sighted. "If the girl's that bad, why did you include her
in the Summoning?"
"She isn't bad, Your
Highness, merely a catalyst for chaos," Master Haddil answered
with a sigh. "If we simply avoid her close proximity, we should
survive with only minor damage. If you'll excuse me now, I'll finish
creating the rest of the entries."
The big man nodded sourly,
and Master Haddii went back to work. By then I'd crossed over to a
deep leather chair, hoping that sitting quietly in one place for a
while would calm the upheaval I'd caused. It was almost as though
cause and effect were two halves of a piece of rope that sometimes
folded back on itself. Normally each effect needed a separate cause,
but the folding brought about effect after effect after effect . . .
And I was always in the
middle of that folding. I sighed as I leaned back in the chair,
noticing that the big blond man hadn't even given me a second glare,
let alone a second look. Well, there was nothing unusual in that, not
once I'd "caused." People don't enjoy being in the middle
of chaos, not even if they're Prince Bariden of Melen. Which was who
he had to be. Third son of King Agilar of Melen, and unexpectedly
born Sighted.
Two more entries were
created, one after the other beyond adjacent doorways, and Master
Haddil still wasn't finished. The conference room had been built
especially for the
TH£ HIDDGN R€ALFK 5
use of a wizard, with more
than two dozen doorways spaced around its circumference. Normally
those doorways led only to various corridors or halls in the Palace
of Ease, specifically the corridors and halls just outside the room.
If an emergency happened and the king needed to meet with his nobles
quickly, his wizard could establish entries through the doorways and
bring them right to him.
But this time it was
Sighted who were being brought through, and not just any Sighted.
From the few I recognized, Master Haddil seemed to be Summoning
everyone he'd ever taught who hadn't yet reached wizard strength.
Since it wasn't likely he was simply holding a reunion, something
important had to be going on. Once the Summoning was over, we'd all
find out about it together.
In the meanwhile, those
who had already arrived were finding places to wait. Small groups had
begun to form, using couches, chairs, and the small tables they
surrounded, for the purpose. The furnishings in that room were all
brightly colored silks and brocades, reds and yellows and blues and
greens, all bound around with the royal maroon and gold. Some parts
of it looked like an autumn tree had exploded, but that was the way
the king liked it. Lots of bright colors all thrown together, and
never mind if some people had to squint against the glare.
Aside from the colors, the
room itself was magnificent. Round and high-ceilinged, it gave the
impression of large sunshiny windows bright with the warmth of
summer, the beautifully made furniture gleaming in reflection of
that. The effect came from magic, of course, since the room had no
windows at all. And it was warm despite its size, reminding me about
the heavy clothes I wore. I thought about changing entirely, but
wasn't in the mood for dress-up. A short spell simply changed my
white tunic, brown breeches, and brown boots to lightweight form, and
that served the purpose.
I wasn't the only one who
sat alone in the room, but I was the only one pointed out to
newcomers by whatever group they joined. After that the story was
retold, and then came the inevitable laughter. But most of the
laughter
6 SHARON GRCCN
seemed to be aimed at
Prince Bariden, as though he'd had some hand in what had happened to
him. It occurred to me that in a way he had, by not being warded, and
that made me curious. Why would a magic user not be warded,
especially if he was also a prince? Even I wasn't that blase or
absentminded ...
I had some time to
consider the question, but before I came to any conclusions, Master
Haddil finished the Summoning. Almost two dozen people had come
through the entries, and every one of us looked at him when he raised
his arms for attention.
"It pleases me that
all of you honored your obligation so promptly," he began,
looking around at the group. "As the one who taught each of you
his or her craft, I have the right to call on you for assistance
should the need arise. It's my unfortunate duty to inform you that
more than simple need has arisen."
Soft murmurs of surprised
comment came from a few places around the room, and not only because
of what had been said. Now that I looked directly at Master Haddil, I
could see what certainly must be worry lines creasing his face. His
gray-touched brown hair was less neatly combed than usual, his light
eyes were bleak, and he seemed not to have slept in much too long.
For someone who was Court Wizard to King Agilar of Melen, he looked
pretty awful.
"In the last month a
... situation has developed that I— haven't been able to get to
the bottom of," he continued. "Before I go into details,
you're entitled to know that there will be a good deal of danger for
anyone who assists me. I... have already lost four of you, those I
Summoned more than a week ago. I had no idea—I certainly
wouldn't have— without warning them—"
His voice broke completely
then, and he stood in the middle of the room looking down at his
folded, robe-covered arms, silently trying to pull himself together.
It occurred to me that yellow was an odd color for a wizard's robe,
but it probably had been the king's idea. Master Haddil's grief and
guilt were so clear he might as well have been projecting them,
giving us the feeling that black would have been more appropriate. A
new round of murmurs arose,
THG HIDDeN
accompanied by stirring,
and a man from one of the small groups stepped forward.
"Master Haddil, are
you saying you're giving us the choice about whether or not to become
involved?" he asked, his brows knit with disturbance. "Four
of us have already been ended, and there's a good chance more will go
the same way?"
"They haven't
precisely been ended, but the rest of what you said is accurate,"
Haddil agreed after taking a deep breath. "I cannot in all good
conscience demand your assistance, not with something like this. I
ask for your help, but will understand any refusal to give it. Take a
moment to consider, and those who decline may then leave."
Everyone stared at Haddil
for the first moment, and then those in groups began to murmur among
themselves. Those who sat alone simply looked thoughtful, but none of
the deliberation took very long. Without glancing at Master Haddil
again people began to leave, presumably to go back to safer and more
important pursuits. Since I didn't have anything more important —
or at least nothing mat wouldn't keep — I stayed to become one
of thirteen with similar opinions. That number wasn't the best of
omens for most, but for me it had always been lucky.
"Well, we're left
with a larger number than I had anticipated," Master Haddil
observed once the last back had disappeared through a doorway. "You
all have my thanks, of course, but I must repeat that I want you to
be very certain. If anything happens to one of you . . ."
He didn't want it weighing
on his conscience any more than it already did. The problem was
actually Master Haddil's, which was why he felt like that, but we
already knew that. The man who had spoken earlier had been one of the
first to leave, so we sat without commenting until the wizard was
ready to go on.
"All right, let's get
down to details," he conceded with a sigh when no one else
moved. "The problem began about a month ago, when the king
guested a deputation of merchants from the city. Business had been
going so well for them that they were ready to branch out, and they
came to discuss possible trade treaties with the king. Trading with
people you won't be able to collect from isn't very good
cueeri
business, nor do you want
to get involved with potential enemies. Not that this realm has many
enemies . . ."
His voice trailed off
again as though his mind had become distracted, and some of us
exchanged glances. This wasn't the Master Haddil we knew, and the
difference was disturbing. He was badly shaken by the —
situation, and in another moment we found out why.
"At any rate, the
king held a feast the night they arrived, and the next day the first
of the discussions was scheduled to begin. Everyone showed up in the
conference chamber at the appointed time — except for the head
of the deputation. Thinking he'd overslept, they sent a servant to
his rooms to wake him. The servant came back on the run, reporting
that the man hadn't overslept. There was something wrong with him,
and a healer had already been sent for. The healer arrived promptly,
spent a few minutes with the man, then immediately called me.
"When I first walked
into his bedchamber, I was startled," Master Haddil continued
with a sigh. "The man sat in a chair at his breakfast table, the
remnants of his meal spread out before him. To the casual glance he
was about to take a last swallow of coffee before going to dress, and
I nearly apologized for intruding. Then I realized that he wasn't
moving, and in fact was breathing only shallowly. The healer had
tried rousing and neutralizing spells, thinking he might be drugged,
but nothing had worked. It was almost as though someone had stolen
his soul . . ."
If Master Haddil didn't
shiver, some of the rest of us weren't far from it. Death, being
natural, is acceptable, even if it's caused by unnatural means. What
had happened to the merchant didn't come under the same heading, and
a sudden chill insinuated itself into the warmth of the room.
"And that was only
the first of it," Master Haddil said into the deep silence. "Two
more merchants were taken the same way before the rest packed up and
left on the run, and then two of the king's advisers were stricken,
one right after the other. By then I'd Summoned your predecessors,
but they weren't able to discover any more than I had. Ilainna,
Saydra, Hannar and Gadran — one night they were fine, the next
morning they'd become a group of living
TH€ HIDDeti RGALW 9
statues. Maybe they did
discover something, and paid the price for forbidden knowledge. Do
you see now why I told you to be very, very sure?"
The haunted look in his
eyes touched each of us in turn, an odd sort of pleading that was
only partially for help. The rest of it seemed to be begging us to
get out of that mess as fast as possible, for his sake as well as our
own. After hearing the details I'd almost decided to do just that,
but then he'd mentioned which Sighted had been taken ...
I shifted in my chair in
the midst of the new silence, fighting to keep from demanding that he
get on with it. I knew Ilainna, Saydra and Gadran only slightly, but
Hannar—He and I had been lovers, and after that, friends.
Finding a lover isn't hard even for someone like me, but a friend ...
who wasn't ashamed to have others know ... who had been there for me
that time I'd needed someone so badly <... now he was the one in
need and, chilled or not, I'd be there to do everything possible.
But glancing up showed not
everyone felt the same. Of the thirteen who had been left after the
first culling, another eight were in the process of leaving. That
left four others besides me, but they looked as determined as I felt.
They must have had similar personal reasons, and Master Haddil seemed
to accept that once the others were gone.
"So we have five who
have made up their minds to experiment with the unknown," he
said with a sigh. "And, of course, Prince Bariden, who is
involved on behalf of his father. I wish it were possible to thank
you for coming and then send you home, but I need you too badly.
Right now I'd like each of you to make a small tile with your name on
it, half inch by one inch, in white. Then place it facedown on this
table over here."
He walked to the table he
meant, a round thing of gold and red enamel, and waited for us to do
as he'd asked. It took no more than a moment to speak the very brief
spell that produced the tile, and then I joined the others in placing
it on the table. Each tile had its maker's resonance as well as his
or her name, which had to be why Master Haddil hadn't simply produced
them himself. He wanted something with our individual traces, and now
he had them.
1O
"Rather than assign
working partners, I've constructed a spell that will choose the best
possible working pairs from among you," he said, glancing around
at us. "We'll need all the help we can get in this affair, so
I'm sure you'll all cooperate."
We nodded to show that we
would, but the nods of the other four, two men and two women, were a
bit on the reluctant side. I had no idea who they were, but they,
apparently, knew me. None of them said a word, but their glances
informed me their cooperation would be minimal at best if one of them
was named my partner. Well, that was all right. I was used to working
alone.
Master Haddil waited until
Prince Bariden put his tile down with the rest, and then he muttered
a single sound I didn't catch. The tiles immediately began to spin
around, as though each one was trying itself against the others. That
told me Master Haddil had prepared his best-match spell in advance,
and then had keyed it to a single sound. The language of spells may
be a verbal shorthand, but you'll never find a complex spell
described with no more than one sound.
It didn't take very long
for the combinations to sort themselves out. The six tiles separated
into three pairs, and the pairs formed an almost circular triangle in
the middle of the table. Master Haddil reached for the pair of tiles
at the right of the base, and turned them over.
"Vaminda and Regel,"
he said, smiling at the two. Vaminda was a couple of years older than
me, with blond hair, green eyes, a slender build, and a sweet,
understanding smile. Regel was her age but not as sweet, with brown
hair, brown eyes, and a short, neatly trimmed beard. The two glanced
at each other, looking a good deal happier than the other man and
woman. Master Haddil reached out again for the left side of the base,
and the unnamed two watched with bated breath.
"Nolar and Jilla,"
the wizard announced, possibly proving bated breath adds to the
strength of fervent prayers. Jilla was very close to my age with
black hair and dark eyes, but seemed to have the self-assurance of a
woman two or three times older. Or that of an absolute monarch. Nolar
was clean-shaven with the same black hair and
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dark eyes, but there the
similarity ended. Despite being a year or so older, he seemed less
assured than his new partner.
And then it came to me who
my new partner had to be. Without looking at him, I reached out and
turned over the two remaining tiles. Yup. None other than the now-dry
Prince Bariden.
"That means, of
course, that the final pair is Prince Bariden and Chalaine,"
Master Haddil said, rubbing it in. "With that settled, I'll now
be giving you initial assignments. After that, you'll follow whatever
trails and clues you come across on your own."
"Did our predecessors
work in pairs?" Jilla asked, interrupting smoothly. "If
they did, it might be a better idea for us to work separately. We
can't show we're better than them if we repeat their mistakes."
"Your predecessors
worked singly," Master Haddil informed her evenly, obviously
working to keep from saying anything else—less friendly. "That
was one of the reasons I decided on pairs this time. Now—"
"And we aren't here
to make other people look bad," Regel said to Jilla, his new
partner Vaminda smiling sweetly and nodding in agreement. "We're
here simply to let others know how selfless we are, how dedicated to
what's right, and how supportive of Master Haddil. Nothing else
matters."
"Not even all the
accolades that will come to whoever figures this puzzle out?"
Nolar asked him, coming to the aid of his own partner Jilla. "I
don't believe in modest anonymity. When I finally prove just how good
I am, I want everyone to know about it."
"When you really are
good, the only one who has to know it is yourself," Prince
Bariden put in suddenly, his deep voice cutting across comments from
the other three. "If you don't know it, what others think is
useless. Just as it is about most things. Now how about letting
Master Haddil get on with it."
All four of them muttered
to themselves, two resentfully, two piously, but that was as far as
it went. Master Haddil paused another moment to be sure of that, then
continued.
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"There are certain
lines of investigation that haven't yet been looked into," he
said, gray eyes moving among the four who had spoken. "For
instance, it's certain that magic is involved in this mess, but we
still don't know why magic was used against the victims. Very often
when you discover motive, the one responsible suddenly becomes
obvious. Jilla and Nolar, I'd like you to interview the families and
business associates of the three merchant victims, especially the
first. Find out about any enemies or people with grudges, and whether
anyone involved has had recent dealings with magic users."
He then turned to the
other pair. "Regel and Vaminda, I want you to do the same with
the two stricken advisers. And while you're about it, see if there
are any ties between them and one or more of the merchants. Did the
merchants want the king to make a treaty with someone those advisers
were set against? Did the advisers suggest a realm the merchants
would have had minimal profit from at best? What about personal
grudges, things mat had nothing to do with the talks? Is there anyone
who had something against all of the victims? The four of you should
compare notes often, to see if there are any common links."
The four of them nodded
dutifully, but from the way they avoided even glancing at each other,
I had doubts about how much comparing would be done. And they looked
bored already, as if they'd thought investigating a mystery like that
would be more exciting.
"And last but not
least, Prince Bariden and Chalaine," Master Haddil said, looking
only at the male half of the team. "I'd like you to go over the
places each of the victims was found, inch by inch if necessary, to
see if you can pick up any trace of the one responsible. Was the deed
done from a distance, or do you believe an entry was used? Are there
similarities between the locations, some one point that makes them
identical? Some one point that makes them totally different?
Anything, especially if it supplies a clue as to who or how."
The Prince took his turn
at nodding dutifully, but since I hadn't even been glanced at, I
didn't find it necessary to do the same. Instead I asked, "And
what assignment have you given yourself, Master Haddil? Something
with
a chance for more definite
results, I hope."
He finally turned to look
at me thoughtfully, and then he nodded. "You and Hannar were
rather close, weren't you, Chalaine? I'd forgotten, but I remember
now. And yes, my own assignment has a chance to generate more
definite results. I'm working to break through whatever spell is
holding the victims living but lifeless. My one most fervent hope is
that their essences weren't taken for some twisted purpose. If that
proves true, we'll never get any of them back."
That chill wind blew
through the room again, but this time I wasn't the only one riffled.
Regel paled somewhat under his beard, Nolar looked briefly
frightened, Vaminda's smile turned from sweet to sympathetic, and
Jilla shrugged. All of us were reacting in our own separate ways,
including my own new partner.
"Then we'd better get
started as quickly as possible," he said, the words more of an
order than a suggestion. "If those essences are going to be used
for something, our only hope of stopping it is to find the one
responsible. Let's go."
It was fairly obvious he
was talking to the other four, and they responded by immediately
heading for a door that would take them through the palace to the
locations of then- assignments. Each pair was engaged in low-voiced
discussion even before they were out of sight, probably deciding on
how to begin. Master Haddil banished all the entries he'd created
with a single gesture, then also headed out of the room,
unconsciously brushing at his robes to straighten them.
Even before that, my
partner had disappeared completely in yet another direction. He'd
given his orders and then had left with a broad stride, supremely
confident that any unimportant details would follow along behind.
Without his needing to even glance at the detail. I paused to get a
few thoughts in order, then chose my own way out into the corridors.
The Palace of Ease was
what all palaces should be like: opulence on a gigantic scale with an
equal amount of comfort. Melen was a wealthy kingdom filled with
satisfied, wealthy people, and rather than resent the riches their
king
14
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displayed, his palace made
them proud. It also employed a large number of the kingdom's less
affluent citizenry, which added to everyone's happiness. Too many
poor, jobless people were bad for a kingdom, not to mention
unsightly.
I used the conference room
to orient myself, then headed for the main kitchens. I'd learned my
way around while I was studying with Master Haddil, even though it
had been necessary to stay out of the royal family's way. The king
didn't mind his Court Wizard spending time training those who also
wanted to be higher level magic users, but Master Haddil felt it
would be an imposition if his students were visibly there. The
kingdom was too safe and secure for him to have much else to do
besides teach, but he was still firm on the point.
Rather than use
invisibility to satisfy the requirement I'd used the deep night,
wandering the corridors and halls while most people slept. I've
always been a creature of the night, so doing it that way hadn't been
much of a hardship. I'd also gotten to know some of my fellow night
creatures, those who preferred working late hours and those who,
being new, had been assigned to them. It had been more man a year
since I'd left, but there should still be those around who remembered
me.
The main kitchens were
staffed at all times, fully staffed between the hours of dawn and
midnight. The king wasn't much of an early riser, but the queen
tended to start things moving at first light. She expected the day's
baking to be done, all meals planned and more man started, all
cleaning well under way. At the other end of the scale was the
Princess Efria, who slept till noon then invited people to late night
suppers. The staff had to cope with all of that, or they would have
gotten another staff.
Right then it was the
middle of the day, just past lunchtime according to the position of
the sun. I stopped just inside one of the kitchen entrances, the only
spot immediately available for keeping out of the way of the rush.
There were enough people hurrying around to fill a small town, which
the kitchens were almost large enough to be. It had only been a short
time past breakfast on the world where my cold weather house was, but
watching all that activity started to make me hungry.
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"Chalaine, is that
you skulking in that corner?" a booming voice demanded. "It
is you, and not a word for an old friend. Whatever is this world
coming to?"
By that time the speaker
was about eight feet away, standing with wide fists on wider hips and
forcing everyone to go around her. She also wore the sort of devif
ish grin that didn't usually go with a woman her size, a grin that
said she liked fun more than authority. Not that she didn't also have
the authority. Benatha Aylie ruled completely in the royal kitchens,
either personally or by proxy. She watched me try three times to
cross the eight feet between us, laughed at the measly
foot-and-a-haTF s worth of progress I made, then finally took pity on
me.
"What you need is the
sort of size / carry," she informed me after simply walking
forward and letting everyone else get out of her way. "With the
queen holding a reception for the ladies of the city this afternoon,
that "traffic won't slow down until bedtime. Let's get you some
place where we can sit down and talk."
She put a giant arm around
my shoulders, then led the way left toward her alcove. The area was
furnished like a very small sitting room a short distance away from a
chopping and skinning table, two of the roasting hearths, three of
the freestanding soup cauldrons, and a minor storeroom. The area was
also no one's but hers, and anyone trying to use it uninvited would
be lucky if they were able to leave again on their own.
"I had a feeling
you'd be showing up about now," Bena said as she deposited me in
a chair before moving to take her much larger one. "Everyone in
the palace knew Haddil was going to be Summoning help today, which
was probably why he took an early lunch. Are you sure it's smart to
get involved in this? The first four who came to help were supposed
to be the best, and now look at them.'1''
For once her face wore
nothing of a grin, and the short amount of time she'd teased me
showed how upset she was. I knew she wanted to be reassured, but not
if I had to lie.
"One of those four is
a special friend of mine," I told her with a shrug. "Would
you be able to simply turn around and walk away?"
"For a freak, you
make an awfully good decent person,"
16
she grumbled, not very
happy to get an answer she couldn't argue. "Most of those other
freaks don't give a damn about anybody but themselves, especially not
if giving a damn means they have to put themselves out. I've always
wondered what makes you so different."
"How many freaks do
you know as well as you know me?" I countered, feeling no real
insult at what she called me. A lot of people considered the Sighted
to be freaks rather than gifted, but most weren't as honest about it
as Bena. Or as fair. My being a freak didn't stop her from being my
friend.
"I've run across a
lot of freaks in my time," she assured me, her wide face still
unusually serious. "Even the ones who didn't treat me like dirt
acted like they were doing me a favor eating what my kitchens
produced. What none of 'em have is good manners, but you do. That's
what makes you so different."
"You didn't think so
the first time we met," I reminded her with a badly swallowed
grin. "You called me a clumsy sneak thief, and an underfed one
at that."
"And you told me to
keep my night-cook opinions to myself," she came back, finally
recapturing a grin of her own. "You hadn't come to steal food,
only to look around, and you weren't underfed, you were fashionably
slender. I always wondered why you didn't zap me when I laughed."
"Not because I wasn't
tempted," I assured her, feeling myself relax as I always did
around Bena. "But if I had the king would have put a bounty on
my head, and that would have been the end of my studies. I had no
idea who you were, or that someone hi your position would be a night
rover like me."
"I didn't know who
you were either, or why you would study with someone like Haddil."
Her light brown eyes were on my face again, not as grim but certainly
serious. "He's one I'd watch starve with a smile, and you have
no reason to like him any better. All he ever did was criticize you,
but not in a useful way. If I treated my chefs half that bad, they'd
pick up and walk out."
"Not the ones who
were determined to study with you," I disagreed. "There are
a lot of people in the worlds who have an incredible amount to teach,
even though they have
17
little or no personality.
You don't have to like them to learn from them, and Master Haddil had
one really big attraction for me. I knew he'd never let me be sloppy
in my lessons because of my reputation. For some reason, I generate a
lot of supposed toleration from a lot of people."
"For some reason,"
she echoed, back to studying me. "And for the same reason you
generate panic in others. They don't know how to deal with
that—special talent you sometimes show, so they react according
to their natures. I never saw it for myself so I can't say if it's
true or not, but you tell me you cause problems at times for the
people around you. Things happen, and those things aren't pleasant,
so people get rattled. Even if it never happened to them, most don't
know how to treat you, so either they pretend they're tolerant, or
they panic."
"Which doesn't change
the fact that they do react like mat," I said with a sigh.
"Master Haddil became impatient instead—which usually made
me nervous—but that didn't keep me from learning. It did cause
some spectacular 'accidents,' though . .."
She chuckled when I let
the words trail off, finding more amusement in most of those few but
incredible incidents than I ever had. Complex accidents as opposed to
the simple sort, more involved than any of the situations could
possibly have called for. Like that first time it had happened
directly to Master Haddil... I'd rolled on the floor when I'd heard
about it, even though laughing wasn't the usual way I handled hearing
about it... As a facet of talent, that sort of thing leaves a lot to
be desired ...
"Bena, teli me what
you know about what happened," I said, shifting to another
unpleasant topic. "All those people who were left as empty
shells—doesn't anyone have an idea about why it was done, if
not by who?"
"One's as good a
question as the other," she replied with a shrug. "Some are
saying the merchants and the king's men were planning something that
would hurt everyone in the kingdom but them, and the EverNameless
stepped in to stop them. Others think it has to be an enemy of
Haddil's, trying to make him look bad. The king's worried that it
might be someone testing a new spell, one that they'll use later on
their real target. The queen thinks it's someone getting even
18
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19
for not being invited to
one of her parties. If you happen to have a favorite theory, just ask
around a little and you'll find five or ten other people who think
the same thing."
"And what do you
think?" I asked instead, unsurprised at the way people were
taking it. "You always know what's going on in this place, and
more importantly you know rumor from fact. Give me something I can
work with."
"I wish I could,"
she said, sympathy in those light-dark eyes. "And not just
because you bring out the mother in me. Whatever took those people
like that could take one of us next, like me, for instance. The idea
scares me worse than being invited to a new bride's first meal, but
there's nothing to build a real theory on. Nobody knows anything,
everybody's just guessing. And everybody's worried about who'll be
next."
"Why are people
expecting more victims?" I asked, tripping over the oddness of
that "The merchants and king's men could have had a common
enemy, and the Sighted were done because they came close to finding
him. The king's theory is as silly as the queen's, and both match the
thought mat the EverNameless would bother. But everybody, including
you, expects more victims. Why is mat?"
"That's another good
question," she allowed, brows raised in surprised thought "I
hadn't looked at it like that before, but—You're right, we do
expect more people to be taken. Why don't you have something to eat
while I try to figure out why that is."
"Bena, I ate only a
couple of hours ago," I said with a sigh, suddenly finding
myself in a too-familiar position. "I really don't think you can
call me underfed any longer, and on top of that I haven't much time.
Right now I'm supposed to be somewhere else, and if I don't get there
soon, we'll probably be able to hear the explosion from here. Is
there anything at all you can tell me, no matter how silly or useless
you consider the information? Take a minute to think, but don't try
to force it. I may have to leave now, but I'll be back later some
time."
"Right now I can't
think of anything," she admitted, her wide brow creased into a
frown. "Something just might come to me later, so don't forget
about coming back. If you're still in one piece, that is."
Her last words were
accompanied by a sudden, mischievous grin, making it my turn to raise
brows questioningly. Bena would never joke about my staying unhurt,
even if she didn't know how much it would take to harm me. And then I
noticed that she was looking past me, and the answer became perfectly
clear.
"What the hell are
you doing in here!" a deep, angry voice demanded from behind me,
confirming a guess that had been a virtual certainty. "Chatting
with friends over tea wasn't part of our schedule."
"You're right, Your
Highness, she does deserve a good scolding," Bena promptly put
in, that look in her eyes increasing. "If you're the one she was
supposed to be someplace else with, she has no business visiting with
an old woman instead. Give it to her good."
"Bena," I
muttered warningly, but that did as much good as you would expect. I
was ignored completely—but only by her.
"Well?" my new
partner demanded again, coming around to my left. "Answer my
question."
"I'd say you've
already answered it yourself," I responded, not quite looking at
him. "But it doesn't matter, because I'm through here anyway.
Let's get to that schedule you mentioned."
"Just a minute,"
he said as I stood, one big hand coming to my left shoulder. "What
do you mean, I've already answered the question myself? I don't ask
questions I already have the answer to."
"I'm sure you don't,"
I said with a nod, glancing around the kitchen. "I must have
been mistaken, the way I often am. Let's just forget about it and get
on with what we're supposed to be doing."
"Don't accept that,
Bariden," Bena said suddenly as the hand finally began to leave
my shoulder. "She has a nasty habit of holding people at arm's
length by refusing to argue with anything they say, even if it's
wrong. You two seem to have gotten off on the wrong foot, and if you
continue to let her push you away it can only get worse."
"I'm sorry, Bena, but
you've somehow gotten the wrong impression," the man answered,
most of his impatience gone. "She and I don't have a personal
relationship, only
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a working one. She can
push me as far away as she likes, and I won't mind a bit. But you
really do have to excuse us now. Let's go, girl, and this time try
not to lose me."
Once again he strode away,
leaving me to wonder if that was the only method of walking he knew.
Bena, now looking upset, started to say something, but I took off
after my partner before she could get the words out. She deserved to
be upset for practicing out-of-the-blue matchmaking, and hopefully
whatever embarrassment she felt would keep her from doing it again
very soon. Expecting it to stop her for good would be living in a
dream world.
I had to use a minor
repulsion spell to get out of the kitchens without getting run over,
but Prince Bariden didn't have the same problem. He had more size
than Bena, but distributed it differently. Rather than being fat he
was just plain big, broad shoulders above a massive chest, thick
arms, wide, flat waist, muscled legs. He also had big feet, but I
suppose he would have looked funny with small ones. What he looked
was dangerous, something most magic users took pains to avoid. Maybe
it was the sword.
His broad stride led the
way from one corridor to the next, and although he never looked back
I was sure he knew I was following about ten feet behind. Mostly he
seemed to be involved in his thoughts, as though something were
bothering him. I wondered if it had anything to do with the problem,
and if he knew something I didn't. He finally turned into a corridor
in the guest wing, and stopped in front of one set of double doors.
"This is the
apartment where the first merchant was found," I was informed as
soon as I reached him. "It's as good a place to start as any,
even though too many people trampled through it before Master Haddil
closed it off. If we don't get anything here, we'll go on to the
others in turn."
"Don't step in yet,"
I said as he reached toward one of the doors. "I'd like to try
to get a body count first, and the setting of Master Haddil's
exclusion spell will be more than the tail end of it. It will also
let me know if anyone's been in here since the spell was set."
"I can see where that
last would be useful, but why a body count?" he asked with the
usual frown in his voice.
"What good will it do
knowing there were fifty people rather than forty?"
"If fifty people went
through that doorway and we can find the traces of fifty-one inside,
we then check the win-dows," I said, thinking about how to word
the spell. "If they weren't used instead of the door, we'll know
an entry or something else magical was used to get in. Finding traces
of something is easier when you know that that something was
definitely there."
"I hadn't thought of
that," he responded, the admission ungrudged and actually almost
neutral. "It's a good idea, so I'm glad you thought of it. Why
don't you look at me when you talk to me?"
The question seemed to
hold nothing but curiosity, but I have to admit I was surprised he'd
noticed. Right then I was still studying the double doors, so I
shrugged.
"You can consider it
a bad habit, if you like," I suggested, continuing on with that
habit. "You'd be best off ignoring it. Now let's see how
effective my spell is."
I raised my hands and
spoke the spell, causing the doors to do something they were capable
of but not usually required to do. Ail doors "know" how
many people pass through them, it just takes more than a simple
request to get the information. There was an instant of recollection
during the time period specified, and then the right-hand door began
to open and close. It did it seventeen times, hesitated a full five
heartbeats, then closed more fully with a click.
"Seventeen people
went in and out, but no one after the exclusion spell was set,"
I reported. "Now we can check that against the number of people
who were actually in the rooms."
He made a vague sound of
agreement and led the way in, using the key phrase Master Haddil had
given him to exempt us from the exclusion spell. It would have been
possible to enter even without the key, but it wouldn't have been
easy to start with and eventually we would have found it impossible
to stay. Even some unSighted could have managed to get in, but their
stay would have been a lot shorter.
The apartment's reception
room was a good size, large enough to accommodate at least two dozen
people comfort-
ably, more if it happened
to be necessary. The wall lamps had come on when Prince Bariden had
snapped his fingers, but they were the only source of light. There
was a closed door to the left and one to the right, lots of chairs
and couches and tables and wail paintings and knickknacks— but
no windows.
"The merchant was
found in his bedchamber, through that door," my partner said,
nodding to the left. "Let's count and separate the traces in
here, and then we'll have something to compare the ones from in there
to."
"First let's see
what's behind there," I answered, heading toward the door to the
right. "It's probably nothing but a guest lavatory, but it won't
hurt to take a look ..."
Looking inside showed
exactly that, a full lavatory including a porcelain bathtub. Why mere
would be a bathtub I had no idea, but walking closer showed it had
even been used at some time. A grayish residue partially circled the
drain hole, but the rest of the tub was clean. The sink was closer to
being spotless, as was the commode, both of which were emptied by
magic rather than piping. I could feel the trace of similar cleaning
spells around each of them, a trace the tub didn't have. Pipes
carried that water away ...
The lamp I'd turned on
suddenly went dark, which shouldn't have happened. When you light a
lamp with magic, it doesn't go out again for no reason. Realizing
that made me turn toward the doorway, and sure enough, the reason
stood there with folded arms.
"When I spoke to you,
you didn't seem to hear me," he said, faint annoyance back in
his tone. "Don't you think we have better things to do than
stand in small rooms staring off into space?"
"Sometimes I get
distracted," I half-apologized, feeling my cheeks grow warm. I
had been wasting time, wondering about cleanser residue while nine
people lay helpless and half-alive. I can be a real imbecile at
times, and it was just my luck that this particular time had had an
audience. I quickly headed out of the room, and my audience stepped
back to let me through the doorway.
"I'd appreciate it if
you could save being distracted for when you're alone," he said
as I passed him, doing a good
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job of making me feel
worse. "Do you know a spell for separating and identifying
traces, or do we have to construct one ourselves?"
"I know a spell,"
I answered, forcing myself to concentrate on what was at hand. "It
was developed by forensic wizards, so you don't have to worry that I
constructed it myself. It goes like this."
I spoke the spell I'd
learned just for the fun of it, adding the proper gestures at the
proper time. A rush of wind came, as though we stood outdoors, and
then the traces began separating under glowing numbers. Traces are
like delicate scents or light touches are to the physical, indistinct
but definitely there. I could sense the traces with my abilities as a
Sighted, and even tell one from another; what I couldn't do was get a
firm grip on them.
"But the numbers only
go up to eleven," Prince Bariden objected. "I thought you
said there were seventeen people involved."
"There were seventeen
instances of people going through the doors," I corrected,
carefully studying the traces under the glowing numbers. "That
could be seventeen individuals, or one person going in and out
seventeen times. I used this spell once just to see how it worked,
and I noticed that it was really efficient. Multiple traces are shown
under a single number, but they're separated by tiny black dots. Like
that one, under T."
"Two dots, which
means three traces," he murmured, now understanding what he was
seeing. "The next four numbers have one dot apiece, which means
two traces each. The last six have no dots, which means those people
came in only once."
"And the first, with
three traces, probably stands for the victim," 1 agreed. "You'd
expect the man who lives here to be in and out the most. There are
only three, because he wasn't here that long. The ones with two
traces are probably the servant who found the merchant, the healer
who sent for Master Haddil, and someone else, maybe another servant.
The fourth is definitely Master Haddil, since I happen to know his
trace well enough to recognize it. The rest—servants, most
likely, and maybe a couple of curiosity seekers."
"If it becomes
necessary, we can find out," he said, and then 1 felt the weight
of his stare on me, "You said you'd used this spell once before,
but I've never even heard of it. What could you possibly have used
it/or?"
"I—used it
because I was curious," I admitted, feeling the return of the
heat to my cheeks. "It wasn't/or anything, only to see how it
worked. Now let's do the same thing in the bedchamber, and see what
we get from there."
I strode off toward the
bedchamber without waiting for any sort of answer, fervently hoping
there wouldn't be one. I was beginning to feel downright gawky rather
than simply awkward, and I hated it. As soon as I found the guilty
party we were looking for, I'd get out of there as fast as possible.
The bedchamber wasn't
quite as large as the reception room, but it didn't miss by much.
Silk hangings decorated the walls, the furniture and the bed curtains
were color-coordinated, and the private meal-nook had armchairs at
the table. Like the first room, what it didn't have was windows,
which might or might not be helpful. That depended on what we found
in the way of traces, and there was no sense in not getting right to
it.
I spoke the spell a second
time, and after the wind had blown through got the sort of results
I'd been hoping I wouldn't. One person had three separate traces,
again probably the victim, Master Haddil had been in there twice, and
one other person twice. The remaining five had come in one time each,
but none of them looked very promising.
"We'll have to do
some deliberate comparisons, but I think we have a problem," I
told my partner. He'd followed me into the bedchamber, but hadn't
said anything. "Unless I'm mistaken, every one of these traces
has a match in the next room."
"If that's true, then
no one came through an entry," he responded, once again sounding
thoughtful. "That should mean the guilty party walked in through
the door, and is therefore someone whose trace we found."
"Not necessarily,"
I disagreed with a sigh. "If the culprit was sneaky enough, he
or she could have used a delayed spell. You speak it after you pass
someone in the hall, say, and it's designed not to work for another
three or four hours.
THG
Or, if the Sighted was
strong enough, he or she could have stood out in the hall and still
reached the victim. Since we don't know what was done, we also don't
know how close you have to be."
"Then what was the
point in counting traces?" he demanded, frustration thick in his
tone. "I thought you expected to learn something from it."
"I did learn
something," I answered with a shrug. "I learned that no one
used an entry to get into this room. If I can eliminate enough other
possibilities, whatever I have left will be the answer."
"1 just noticed
something," he said, and suddenly his hand was on my arm,
pulling me around to face him. "Not only don't you ever look at
me when you speak, if you're not paying attention you say T rather
than 'we.' I take it that means you see yourself working alone,
rather than as part of a team. Is there some particular reason I'm
being dismissed like that, or is it just that you don't happen to
like me?"
Frustrated anger carried
him all the way through the speech, but surprise at having his hands
on me made me look up directly at him. Obviously it wasn't his
intention to harm me, otherwise my warding would have flared blue and
thrown him back. My warding didn't flare at all, but suddenly he
looked thrown anyway. Light brows rose over pale blue eyes, and the
scowl that often twisted his broad, handsome face disappeared
completely.
"Hey, I'm sorry,"
he said at once, both hands releasing me immediately. "This
insanity has been getting to me, making me almost as crazy as whoever
is doing it. I didn't mean to frighten you."
"You didn't," I
answered with my own furious anger, having more trouble than usual in
keeping it from showing. He was staring down at me in the way I'd
seen so many times before, the way I hated more than almost anything
else. Abruptly I turned away and said, "Let's finish the
comparisons, and then we can get on to the next place."
He made a faint sound of
agreement, but that was all he said. Big, tough Prince Bariden of
Melen, folding up as quickly and easily as anyone else. I spoke a
spell to bring the bedchamber traces out into the reception room, and
once
SHAftON
there began comparing. But
most of me was running on automatic, my mind being too busy with
other things to cooperate.
Other things! I wanted to
scream and stamp my feet and break fragile glass items, but I'd
indulged the urge at other times and it hadn't done any good. I
happen to have been bom with very large, very dark eyes, and if I'd
been even a little less stubborn I would have changed my appearance a
long time ago. Someone had once said I resemble a frightened, wounded
doe when I look straight at people, and that throws them off
completely. Most, to their credit, I suppose, if they don't know
about my talent for causing catastrophe, immediately turn kindly and
concerned and anxious to help make things better.
There's another reaction,
of course, and I definitely prefer that one. I took a deep breath as
the last of the traces searched for their matches, knowing that
definite preference said a lot about my nature. Some people took one
look at me and immediately tried to take advantage, picturing me as
the shy, helpless son who could be walked over in complete safety. I
usually had fun with that kind, kicking their feet out from under
them even before they realized dieir mistake. What I didn' t have run
with was the first reaction, especially from people who felt bad
about "frightening" me...
"Well, it looks like
you were right," my partner said with a sigh. "There are no
unaccounted-for traces, so we know an entry wasn't used. That doesn't
leave us much to work with, even if it does eliminate a possibility.
Eliminating the rest won't be as easy if we can't figure out what
they are."
"We can make a list
later, after we've seen the other locations," I replied, waving
a hand to get rid of the traces. "If the second and third
victims were also merchants, their apartments shouldn't be far."
"No, you're right,
they're just down the hall," he said, his tone gentle and
reassuring. "Follow me, and I'll show you."
I followed him as
requested, but would have preferred doing it while pronouncing the
list of all those words you aren't supposed to use in mixed company.
Prince Bariden
TH€
Q7
was being very careful not
to frighten me again, and wasn't that comforting. I'd tried hard to
avoid the circumstance, but the Fates were still against me. And we
still had so much time we'd need to be in each other's company . . .
CHAPTGR TWO
W,
e checked traces in the
two merchants' apartments and then in those of the king's advisers,
but might as well have skipped it. Only two traces were to be found
in all five places, Master Haddil's and what turned out to be the
healer's. We finished with the sitting room all four of the Sighted
had been found in, and finished was the proper word. Nothing in the
way of a clue or suggestion came jumping up to present itself.
"That seems to be
that," Prince Bariden said after a long period of silence,
looking around the tan, brown, and gold sitting room. "We're out
of locations and out of ideas."
"Not yet," I
disagreed, wishing I had more hope for the success of what looked
like our last few chances. "I don't know about you, but I still
haven't seen the victims themselves. Since we know the guilty one
touched them in some way, maybe we can pick up part of a trace from
them. There are also one or two other things to be done, but first I
need to take a break and get something to eat. I'll meet you back
here in about an hour, and we can see the victims together."
The idea of having to look
at an unliving Hannar upset me, so I headed out of there even faster
than I normally would have. I was almost to the door when a big hand
wrapped gently around my arm, pulling me to a halt.
"Why are you always
in such a hurry?" my partner asked, the lighthearted look pasted
on his face almost making me flinch. "I was going to suggest
getting something to eat
28
TH€ HIDDEN REALTY 09
before we continued, but
you beat me to it. Why don't we have the meal together, and at the
same time get to know one another? I know you must have studied here
in the palace, but I don't remember ever meeting you before. I hope
you're not going to tell me we did meet?"
By then his expression had
relaxed, and the charming grin he showed looked almost natural. He
really was handsome when he wasn't frowning, but his newest reaction
was also one I'd run into before.
"No, we never met,"
I reassured him—unnecessarily, I would have bet. For one reason
or another, people don't often forget meeting me. "But before we
do all this getting-to-know-each-other, I have one question. What's
my name?"
His charming grin faltered
and he said, "I don't understand," but he sure as Hellfire
did. "You have to know your own name," he tried next,
obviously working to keep it light. "I'm sure you'll remember
once we get some food into you."
"I can remember
without the food," I told him, ruthlessly demolishing his new
grin. "What I'm trying to find out is if you remember, which I
don't think you do. You heard my name at least two or three times, so
come on. Tell me what it is."
"What makes you think
I don't remember your name?" he asked, now trying to play it
cool. "Have I been referring to you as 'Hey, you' without
realizing it? And what has your name got to do with our taking a meal
together? If we're going to be partners in this, we'll certainly eat
together more than once."
"I have this rule
about never breaking bread with people who can't remember who I am,"
I said, folding my arms as I looked up at him. "What tells me
you don't know my name is the fact that you took my arm to stop me,
rather than speaking to me as most people would. For all you knew I
could have hiked up the gain on my personal warding, but that still
didn't stop you from touching me. Would you like to claim now that
you didn't know I was a sorceress?"
"Is this the reason
you were so quiet for so long?" he countered, his face darkening
a bit under its tan. "Because when you finally do open up, you
do it like a steel bear
30
trap? Why are you acting
as if I tried to assault you? All I did was invite you to share a
meal."
"And all I did was
ask you my name," I pointed out, refusing to let him argue a
safer topic. "Show me I'm wrong in my beliefs, and I'll
certainly apologize."
"You don't give an
inch, do you?" he said, and the observation wasn't a compliment.
"Most men hate being put on the spot like that, and most princes
refuse to allow it. Are you so used to dealing with princes that
getting one mad is nothing new? Or do you just like hearing me say
you're right? Which, I'm once again forced to admit, you are. I know
I heard your name more than once, but for some reason it didn't stay
with me. So what happens now? Execution for the heinous crime of
being distracted by what we're working on? If so, go ahead and do
it."
The look hi those blue
eyes was completely steady, not even a comer of the charm showing. He
hadn't enjoyed admitting the truth but had done it anyway, and now
waited for what would come because of it. I usually make a habit of
encouraging honesty, but not to the point of stupidity.
"What happens now is
what I said before," I told him, ignoring the dramatics of his
speech. "I'm going to get something to eat, and I'll meet you
back here in an hour. Do enjoy your own meal."
I heard what sounded like
a growl as I turned away, which was just fine with me. His sudden
interest in sharing a meal with me was certainly an extension of his
initial reaction, that of a strong man wanting to protect a poor
little female. After the urge to protect seems to come physical
desire, but I'll be double-dyed in purple and pink if I know why.
Enough men had reacted that way to make me certain of it, so it must
have been a male thing. As if that was supposed to make me feel
happier about it.
I gloomed my way through
the halls and down a flight of stairs, then took the corridor that
led to my favorite hideaway. Not far from the kitchens is a small,
walled-in garden, one that no one from the royal family had ever used
while I studied with Master Haddil. I knew that because I'd used it
so often, and just then I needed its quiet beauty to help me out of
the deeps. I know men can't help acting like men, but having it
happen again and again is completely depressing.
TH€
31
If, just once, I could
find a different reaction . . .
I sat on one of the stone
benches with a sigh, then spoke the spell that created the food I
wanted. It all appeared on an oblong tray beside me, and the first
thing I reached for was the coffee. The last couple of hours hadn't
been particularly strenuous, but they had been wearying.
"I knew I'd find you
here," a voice said, and then Bena Aylie moved around from the
left toward the bench opposite mine. She still wore her long-skirted
brown dress and gray apron, and she stopped by the bench without
sitting. "I thought you were going to come back to talk to me
again? And what are you doing eating out here, when you could be
eating decent food in my kitchens?"
"One of the nice
things about this garden is that I don't have to fight my way in and
out of it," I said as I reached for the sandwich on the tray.
"And although this is later, it isn't the later I had in mind
for talking. This later is for eating excellent food and relaxing.
How did you know I was here?"
"Maybe I found you
the way Prince Bariden did earlier," she said, walking a few
steps closer to me as she frowned at what was on the tray. "How
excellent can that stuff be, if it wasn't made by one of my chefs?
And it wasn't, was it?"
"No, it wasn't,"
I agreed around a mouthful of sandwich, then chewed and swallowed
before adding, "Prince Bariden found me with magic, probably by
using a tracking spell. Since you aren't Sighted, I doubt very much
that you did the same. Don't tell me you had someone watching for
me?"
"All right, I won't
tell you," she agreed in turn, still giving cold disapproval to
my food. "I'd love to know how you can sit there calmly
poisoning yourself, when it would have been just as easy to get
something decent. That soup even looks funny."
"That's just the
distortion from the protective spell keeping it hot," I told her
after the next bite. "Why don't you taste it before telling me
how bad it is."
I banished the insulating
spell with a flick of my finger, then produced another spoon which I
held out to her. She sniffed in disdain, thinking about refusing,
then realized she had to put up or shut up. She accepted the spoon,
stirred the
contents of the bow!
twice, then brought the coated spoon to her mouth.
"So, you've taken to
lying," she pronounced once the spoon was out of her mouth
again. "I should have known you'd never settle for seconds when
firsts are so easily available. That's Lidiar's best vegetable soup,
which means it's the best anywhere. There are one or two chefs who
can almost match him, but no one anywhere is better. What about that
mousse?"
She bent again to take a
very small bit of my dessert pudding, then nodded with satisfaction
after tasting it.
"Even through the
residue of soup I know that taste," she said. "Nida's
mousse is famous on every civilized world in this sector, and the
only dessert chef better than her died ten years ago. Why did you say
you weren't eating from my kitchens when you were?"
"Bena, what soups was
Lidiar supposed to make today?" I asked without looking at her.
"And didn't I hear some place that Nida was supposed to be
married and away on her honeymoon around this time? Did something
happen to make her change her plans?"
There was heavy silence
from the woman standing over me, enough of it to let a bird in the
trees trill its pleasure and then be answered. It really was a
beautiful day, reminding me that I hadn't eaten picnic-style in much
too long.
"All right, I'm
asking for an explanation," she said at last, putting down the
spoon before returning to the opposite bench to sit. "Lidiar
made potato soup, barley soup, and beet soup today, and only those
three. Nida left on her honeymoon two days ago, and her assistants
wouldn't dare try mousse on their own—at least not yet. Where
did you get that food?"
"I got it where I get
most everything else," I told her, finishing the last of the
sandwich and reaching for the soup. "The last time someone tried
discussing this with you, you went for them with a rolling pin.
Talking about magic seems to give you indigestion."
"Nothing gives me
indigestion, and I don't happen to have a rolling pin right now,"
she gritted out, her annoyance with me growing. "You're right
about me not liking talk about magic, but we're also talking about
what my kitchens
TH€ HIDDGh
33
produce. Since you
couldn't have simply taken the food, I want to know how you got it."
"I got it by being a
magic user," I said, finally meeting that light-dark stare. "In
order to do magic, you have to describe something in the language of
spells. The more detailed a description you can give, the better the
hold you have over the object and the more strength you can bring to
bear.
"If I described that
stone bench you're sitting on as just a stone bench, I couldn't
affect it much because there's not enough description. If I described
it instead by saying it was Rangri marble and Tansan wood, five feet
long, three feet wide, and three feet high, I'd have a better grip on
it and could do more. But if I really wanted my spell to work, I'd
add that the marble came from the north side of the quarry, had a
fifth level density, had a blue-veined pattern two millimeters wide,
and so on, doing the same for the wood. Then I could make that bench
sprout wings and fly away if I liked. Do you understand that?"
"I understand that
you'd damned well better leave this bench alone," she stated,
glaring at me harder. "And if you have to put so much into those
spells of yours, why doesn't it take an hour to do each one?"
"Because the language
of spells is a verbal shorthand, one sound or gesture able to stand
for strings of words or phrases. Like tsp for teaspoon, only more so.
I don't know the abbreviations for pinch and dash."
"That isn't funny,"
she grated into my grin. "Only amateurs follow a recipe exactly,
and that's what this freak stuff sounds like to me. This first and
then that, and don't ever change it."
"Some of the stronger
wizards change it," I disagreed, reflecting that she knew more
about magic than she was willing to admit. It was true that spells
had to be spoken precisely the same to get the same results, but I
hadn't told her that. "Half of the ones who fiddle with changes
make big names for themselves, almost as big as those famous chefs of
yours."
"What about the other
half?" she asked, trying not to feel pleased at the thought of
all those artists under her wing. "Do they give it up and get
married and have children?"
34
SHABON GR€€N
"Most of them spend
the rest of their lives as three-foot, orange frogs," I said,
exaggerating only a little. "Or they disappear in a puff of
smoke one day, and no one ever sees them again. Changing spells
without knowing exactly what the change will produce is dangerous, a
lot more dangerous than changing a recipe. The worst a mishandled
recipe can do is make you throw up. A mishandled spell can literally
turn you inside out, or freeze you in one position for the rest of
eternity."
"And playing with
that sort of thing is what you do," she stated, suddenly pale
and indignant. "I knew I should have tried talking you out of
learning it, knew it mat first night we met. You have a lot less
sense than my kids had, so I never should have just let you go your
own way. I should have said somediing and kept on saying it—"
"Bena, please,"
I interrupted, refraining from reminding her that she had said
something, more than once. "Sighted who try to deny what they
are end up insane, and I do not do the sort of thing you mean. I'm
just a harmless sorceress who has no intentions of ever getting
involved with the dangerous stuff. I may be curious, but I'm not
crazy."
'That's a matter of
opinion," she returned, still not happy with me. "You don't
have to tramp through an entire mud puddle to get splattered;
stepping in one coiner of it is usually enough. And you still haven't
said how you got that food. Did you say a spell that caused Lidiar
and Nida to cook for you?"
"I don't do zombie
spells, even when using one would be practical," I responded,
making no effort to keep the stiffness out of my voice. "As a
matter of fact, I wouldn't use one even if they were legal. Have I
ever told you how much I appreciate your high opinion of me?"
"Okay, okay, you can
unbottle that tail," she grumbled, shifting her bulk on the
bench. "I didn't mean to insult you, and I apologize. So how did
you do it?"
"I Saw the
ingredients the first time I ate the various dishes, and have been
able to copy them ever since," I told her with a shrug. "Any
Sighted above magician and witch level can do that, and many probably
have. That's why the king's chamberlain tried to suggest that you
have the dishes protected by magic. Unless and until you do, every
magic
TH€ HIDD€M
35
user coming by can
afterward eat as well as the king. Or sell the recipes to anyone who
wants them."
"Sell my chefs'
recipes?" she demanded in horror, finally getting the big
picture. "To every shopkeeper and fishwife in the city? In every
city? Chalaine, I thought we were friends. Why didn't you tell me
this sooner?"
"I try not to tell
people things they don't want to hear," I pronounced, for the
second time holding her stare. "Not long after we met, you asked
me not to discuss 'freak stuff' with you. As a friend, I respected
that request Are you saying I was wrong to do it?"
"No," she
grudged after a short hesitation, shaking her head with a sigh. "No,
obviously I asked for it. Can you fix it so that this kind of thing
can't happen again? I don't mind you having the dishes, but a
stranger who would sell them—!"
"Ask the chamberlain
to have Master Haddil do it," I recommended. "Not only will
he do a better job, he has to have another wizard in this world who
maintains his spells when he leaves for a while. I don't, which means
the protection would disappear the minute 1 stepped through an entry
or a gate."
"I thought you
planned to be around for a while," she said, and somehow I got
the feeling the subject had been changed. "I mean, now that
you've met Prince Bariden and all... Didn't you like seeing how
attracted he was?"
"Attracted?" I
asked with a short laugh. "How can you say that with a straight
face? He told you himself he couldn't care less about me, and he
stuck to that until he got a really—fullface—look at me.
After that he wanted me to eat with him."
"I swear, I never
know how to take the things you say," she complained, looking at
me with brows raised. "Of course he was attracted, why else
would he bother to say he wasn't? Somebody would think you knew
nothing at all about men. So what are you doing out here instead of
being somewhere cozy with him?"
"Bena, how much time
do you spend with people who think there's something wrong with you?"
I demanded, suddenly all out of patience. "I don't mean people
who are concerned about you in general, but those who think of
36
SHARON
you as crippled? And I
don't mean handicapped, because that's not the same thing at all. How
much time do you give people like that? An hour, half a day, two or
three days at a clip? I'd really like to know."
"Chalaine, I don't
understand why you're angry at me," she said slowly and
seriously, no longer playing the archetypal matchmaker. "The
last thing in the world I want to do is upset you, but sometimes the
teasing gets out of hand. You've—never been this bothered
before."
"That's because I've
never been through so many disasters before." Her soothing
apology hadn't made me feel better, and I couldn't imagine what
would. "He started out by apologizing for frightening me, and
didn't even hear it when I said he hadn't. That was after he'd gotten
a good look at me, of course, and from then on there wasn't a harsh
word out of him. When we finished the first stage of our
investigation and he asked me to eat with him, / asked him what my
name was."
"Oh, don't tell me,"
she said, looking appalled. "He didn't know your namel No wonder
you're so out of sorts. Even being a prince doesn't excuse something
like that."
"He didn't think it
was a hanging offense, but I disagreed," I grumbled, putting the
soup bowl aside in favor of the coffee. My spell had specified that
the cup continually refill itself, so I didn't have to nurse it.
"Aren't there any men in the worlds who judge on something other
than looks? His eyes told him I was a wounded, helpless little thing
that needed to be looked after and protected, and he didn't enjoy it
when I refused to act that way. If I'd whimpered and limped a little,
he probably would have done handsprings."
"You know, that
doesn't sound like the Prince Bariden / know," she mused,
staring at my tray without seeing it. "When he was a boy, he
started to play at slipping into my kitchens without me seeing him.
If I caught him I would make him sit down and tell me about his day,
and then I noticed I was catching him more and more often. He didn't
seem to get on well with his brothers and sisters, but not because
there was anything wrong with him. He's a full-grown man now with a
reputation or two he'd be better off without, but he's never stopped
treating me decent."
TH€ HIDDEN
37
"Maybe that's because
you're almost as big as he is," I muttered, then looked at her
curiously. "What did you mean about a reputation or two? Has he
made himself notorious?"
"Only in a way,"
she hedged, then glanced at me and sighed. "Well, you can see
part of it for yourself, in that sword he wears. They had him
learning weapons from the time he was really small, but I don't think
they expected him to be as good with them as he is. He's been
challenged three times to serious fights, and answered all the
challenges personally. As a prince of mis kingdom he could have used
a champion, but instead chose not to."
"That's stranger than
you know," I said, my brows way up there. "Those who are
Sighted don't usually get involved in physical fights, not when using
magic is so automatic to mem. It would be like—oh, an ordinary
man trying to fight a duel while hopping around on one leg. If his
other leg wasn't tied to keep him from using it, sooner or later he
would forget and stand on it. Did the Prince forget and end up doing
something he shouldn't have?"
"He most certainly
did not," Bena huffed indignantly. "Bariden is an honorable
man, and he killed those three fair and square. He would never cheat,
not even if it meant losing. But he didn't lose, and that's what has
people talking. His oldest brother Trayden is heir to the throne, but
even though he's good with a sword, he isn't as good as Bariden.
People are afraid Bariden intends to challenge his brother once their
father is gone."
"And with him being
Sighted, they're also afraid they'll have an unopposable tyrant for
centuries rather than for a single lifetime," I summed up,
finally seeing the point. "None of them will consider the
possibility that he'd make a better king than his brother, because a
freak couldn't possibly be. What's the other crime he's accused of?"
"It's—not
exactly a crime," she grudged, and I had the feeling she'd hoped
I would forget about that second part. "Or maybe it is, I don't
think I know any more. He—has something of a reputation
with—women, like where they're always after him, you know?
He—usually lets himself be caught, but—not for long. /
say he's looking for the right woman, and when he finds her he'll
stop looking."
38
SHAROM cueen
"But in the meantime
he's forcing himself to have fun," I summed up a second time,
ignoring her gallant interpretation of not-so-gailant actions. Bena
tends to think the best of the strays she adopts, even if they happen
to be freaks. Or fast-living princes.
"Chalaine, he's a
man," she said with an exasperated sigh. "Men do things
like that, but not because they mean harm. Would you be happier if he
was a prim and proper virgin? Men tend to think virgins are special,
but women know better."
"Bena, I wouldn't
care if he also had bad breath, flat feet, and writer's cramp,"
I told her as clearly as possible. "He may be a man, but he's
one I don't care to know any better than I already do. If you're
looking for someone to pair him up with, look somewhere else. It
would eventually get to be annoying to have to remind him what my
name is."
She winced as though she'd
forgotten about that, but didn't get the chance to make any more
excuses. Just as she parted her lips a servant came rushing out into
the garden, and he looked frightened sick. Since I was the one he
headed toward, I knew something else had happened. I didn't yet know
what, but had the definite feeling I'd regret what I'd eaten ...
Bariden, third prince of
Melen, cursed himself silently as he watched the girl walk out of the
room and disappear up the hall. He hadn't been that clumsy with a
woman since the age of fifteen, when an older woman of nineteen had
let him know she was interested. He'd been nervous with his first
older woman, but only to begin with. As soon as he realized that all
women, young or old, responded the same, he'd been just fine.
Until about five minutes
ago. He ran a hand over his face, possibly in an effort to wipe away
invisible boot prints. She'd stomped him up one side and down the
other, and to say he hadn't expected it would be vast understatement.
Women just didn't talk to him like that, even if they weren' t very
happy.
"And how the hell did
she know?" he growled, still finding it incredible that he'd
actually forgotten her name. He didn't believe the explanation she'd
given him, about
THG HIDDGM
39
his touching her rather
than speaking. That was the sort of thing you thought of after you
already knew, and she hadn't been guessing. For a shy and quiet girl,
she was unbelievably sharp .. .
He felt the urge to go and
do something, but instead went to a comfortable chair, sat, and spoke
a spell for the meal he wanted. He'd been too busy to stop for lunch,
and then he'd been too distracted. Never in a million years had he
expected that old spell of his to work now, in the middle of chaos,
and certainly not with a girl who had almost drowned him the first
time they met. ..
Bariden shifted his sword
into the chair's slot, then reached for the wine he'd specified with
the food. What he needed right then was someone to talk to, but not
just any someone. Bena, for instance, would listen sympathetically
and then give him advice, but chances were good that the advice would
be wrong. She didn't understand magic, and therefore tended to
dismiss it—along with most Sighted. The unSighted didn't
usually have his kind of problem ...
He sighed when he realized
he had only one choice of whom to talk to, even though the
conversation wasn't likely to be pleasant. ReSayne was one of the
strangest entities he'd ever come across, and that was saying a lot
when you considered some of those he'd met during occasional trips.
ReSayne's people were somehow related to demons, but not in any way a
human would understand, he'd been assured. They called themselves
fiends and considered themselves better than demons, but again
refused to discuss in what way. There was a lot they refused to talk
about, but ever since he'd helped ReSayne—in some way he still
didn't understand—his problems weren't part of the refusal.
Bariden took a sip of wine
before replacing the glass on the tray floating in front of him, then
reached to his left hand with his right. Using his right little
finger, he pressed his left hand just below the wrist bone, an action
he wasn't likely to perform by accident. At the same time he said,
"ReSayne ... ReSayne ... ReSayne ..." as though sending out
some sort of message. After three repetitions, he stopped and went
back to his meal. The fiend would have heard him, and would come as
soon as possible.
4O
SHARON GR£€M
He was just about finished
with his duck a Forange with stuffing and honeyed yams, when the air
in front of him began to ripple. Fiends didn't use entries any more
than demons did, although they both used gates on a regular basis.
The rippling air began to swirl, and as it did, very bright rainbow
colors appeared. The colors grew bright enough to dazzle, and then
they settled down to simply float.
"Bariden, how could
you?" a smooth, light voice asked from the middle of the colors.
"Stuffing and yams with duck a 1'orange? A prince is supposed to
have style, not a lumberman's appetite. And how do you like my new
look? Isn't this nicer than thick blue smoke?"
"Absolutely,"
Bariden agreed, ignoring the comments about his taste in food.
"Flashy and gaudy are you, ReSayne. Do you by any chance have
some time to listen?"
"Bariden, dear boy,
why else would I have responded to your summons?" it said, and
then its voice went morose. "Although I dislike admitting it,
you're probably right about the gaudiness. I'll just have to think of
something else, but that's for later. Where are we, by the way? I can
feel the strangest spell on this room."
"That's an exclusion
spell, to keep people out," Bariden explained as ReSayne settled
down to a solid form. The form it chose, though, was that of a fancy
straight-backed chair, with cushioned seat in orange and two eyes in
the polished-wood backrest. The eyes were a bright leaf green, and
Bariden couldn't help thinking that his father would probably love
ReSayne.
"We have something of
a problem around here, but that's not what I need your help for,"
he continued. "There's this girl, and that spell I told you
about a couple of years ago, and the fact that things have been going
from bad to worse with every move I make. I never went through the
awkward teenager stage, but I'm beginning to think that's because the
experience was saving itself for now."
"That does sound
serious," the ReSayne chair said, bright green eyes blinking
thoughtfully. "Why don't you tell me about the girl and the
spell, and then we can get into what's been going wrong."
TH€ HIDCO
41
"I suppose I should
start from when she drowned me," Bariden mused, reaching again
for his wineglass. "She was one of those Summoned to help with
this problem we have, and she and I ended up being paired as
partners."
"She drowned you,"
ReSayne stated, and this time the eyes looked impressed. "She
must be a good deal more formidable than the females you usually
associate with. I hadn't thought it would be possible to find one
larger and stronger than you, but—"
"No, no, no, she's
not bigger than me," Bariden interrupted. "You can see how
well I'm doing even with explanations. She's about average height for
a woman, I suppose, and seems to be built fairly well. Her hair
is—auburn, I suppose you would call it, brown with a lot of
dark red. and it's long enough to reach her behind. She wears it
braided, to keep it out of the way, I guess, but I'd love to see it
loose. And her eyes, the biggest, darkest eyes I've ever fallen into
. . ."
"Bariden, if you want
to daydream, you'd be best off doing it alone," ReSayne's voice
came after a moment, bringing him back to the present. "If you
want to talk instead, it's more effective when you use words."
"Words, right,"
he agreed after clearing his throat. "You can see what kind of
shape I'm in ... At any rate, what she did was bring this big—bubble,
I thought—through the entry with her, and somehow it got away
from her. It went straight for Master Haddil, but he uses personal
warding. It bounced off his warding straight at me, but why would I
bother trying to avoid what looked like a giant soap bubble? Only it
wasn't a simple soap bubble. When it hit me it burst, and gallons of
water poured out of it all over me."
"I would have enjoyed
being there to see that," ReSayne chortled, its green eyes
narrowed with amusement. "And to have seen that very interesting
bubble. Was that when you discovered your bottomless fascination for
the girl?"
'"What I discovered
was the urge to mutilate," he answered, finding ReSayne's
reaction the expected one. "After I banished the sogginess I
ignored her, otherwise I might have been tempted to commit mayhem.
I'd parted company with my latest—female companion just the
night before, and as unpleasant as it had been, I was somewhat
SHAROM
down on women just then.
When I ended up paired with this one to work on our problem with no
possible way to refuse associating with her, my mood turned even
sweeter."
"But that obviously
changed," ReSayne commented, probably to hurry the story. "When
and where, not to mention why?"
"When we began
working together, I couldn't help noticing how sharp she was despite
also being very quiet. She knew what had to be done, and went ahead
and did it. But she hadn't once looked straight at me, not even when
she spoke to me, and that quickly became very annoying. After a while
I grabbed her, and forced her to look directly at me."
"And ended up being
thrown across the room by her warding," ReSayne concluded, the
green eyes all but nodding. "I could have told you that would
happen. How many times have I pointed out how foolish you're being
when you refuse to use warding of your own? Haven't I—"
"ReSayne!"
Bariden interrupted again, in no mood to be lectured. "Let's
save that argument for another time. The point here is that I didn't
set off her warding. It must be keyed to intent, and it wasn't my
intent to harm her. Instead, I got my first good look at her—and
that set off the spell with a vengeance."
"Now's the time to
refresh my memory about that spell," ReSayne cued him, not in
the least insulted over having been interrupted. That meant it
intended to return to the interrupted subject later, a realization
that made Bariden groan on the inside. The fiend never forgot
anything that involved lecturing, leading Bariden to wonder if it
took invisible notes ...
"Only a few years
after I began to study magic, a wizard came from another realm to
speak to my father." Bariden remembered the episode clearly,
more clearly than most things from that time in his life. "Master
Haddil was off doing something or other on one of the planes he
frequents, so the wizard, Tramfeor, felt it would be impolite to
visit long. But while he was here he spent some time talking to me,
asking about my life and my studies and such. I remember getting the
feeling he already knew the answers to the questions he put, but that
had to be my imagination. If
THG HIDDEN
43
he already knew the
answers, why would he have bothered to ask?"
"Some wizards are
like that," ReSayne assured him, the green eyes moving three
inches higher in the chair back. "They like to pretend that they
know everything, just to impress the people around them. If they did
know everything, they'd be fiends rather than wizards."
"Yes, of course,"
Bariden murmured diplomatically. "Well, his questioning got
around to how well I liked girls, so I told him. He didn't think it
was unusual that I'd already had more offers than I'd been able to
take advantage of, or that a lot of the giris had been encouraged in
their interest by their mothers. I was a prince, after all, and one
who was Sighted. Either of those things alone would have made me a
'catch,' but both together guaranteed that I would do exceptionally
well in life. When he said that, it made me feel very strange. It
hadn't occurred to me that the girls were more interested in what I
was than in what sort of person I was becoming."
"But weren't you all
barely more than children?" ReSayne asked gently, almost as
though it could feel the pain he'd experienced. "Children are
usually self-centered and shallow, or so I've been led to believe."
"No one past puberty
is still a child," Bariden stated, reaching again for his
wineglass. "Your basic personality is formed and set even before
then, and once your body changes you're fully adult. If you've
decided by then that what a person has is more important than what he
is, nothing short of getting kicked in the teeth two or three times
will change your mind. If anything can change your mind. Tramfeor
noticed how disturbed I was, and that was when he offered to teach me
the spell."
"Your dramatic pause
is very effective," ReSayne said as though it were complimenting
a toddler. "Now that I've noticed, do feel free to go on."
"It was a Spell of
Affinity aimed at the opposite sex," Bariden answered, almost in
a growl. ReSayne could be so damned annoying . . . "It's meant
to tell me just how well a particular woman will match with me, just
how seriously committed she's capable of being. Until now I've had
glimmers, small bursts of light when I looked into
44
9HARON
women's eyes. Some were
stronger than others, like the one with Miralia, the girl I just
broke up with. At first I thought she was the best match for me, the
glimmer was so strong. But there were certain things about her—Well,
let's just say she and I disagreed over a few matters I consider
important."
"Am I correct in
assuming the burst of light was stronger with the new girl than it
was with this Miralia?" ReSayne asked. "If so, I fail to
see your problem. As you felt it necessary to pursue the former
woman, now you must pursue the newcomer. You bipolar entities always
make things so difficult when they're really quite—"
"ReSayne,"
Bariden interrupted, knowing the fiend was getting ready to leave
again. "Whether or not to—'pursue' the girl isn't my
problem. The burst of light I got from her was so strong it almost
blinded me. Of course I want to get to know her better, but—I
did something really stupid, and now she doesn't want to know me.
Considering the fact that she's a Sighted, I thought you might be
able to help me figure out a way to—to get her to change her
mind."
Bariden all but muttered
the last of his words, which immediately put vast amusement into the
leaf green eyes studying him. ReSayne was enjoying itself, and wasn't
that outcome surprising.
"My dear boy, you
must really be desperate," the light voice purred while the
green eyes shifted leftward along the chair back. "For a human
of your experience to be asking help from a fiend—? Whatever
you did to annoy her must be of monumental proportions. I can't wait
to hear what it was."
"I—had to admit
I didn't know her name after hearing it three separate times,"
Bariden grudged. "Don't ask me why I didn't remember, maybe it's
the way women usually repeat their names for me over and over, to be
sure I don't forget. Somehow she knew all about it, and even
admitting she was right didn't help."
"Oh, Bariden,"
ReSayne said in shock, the green eyes wide. "Even a life-form
such as myself can appreciate a blunder like that. And with a female
Sighted? The woman must be truly remarkable if she didn't reduce you
to a pile of ashes on the spot. You'll certainly need every bit of
charm
HIDDGM
45
you possess to even begin
to make headway against that."
"I've already tried
charm, and it didn't work," Bariden said morosely. "If I
didn't know better, I'd think she was warded against it. For such a
pretty little thing, she's— well, like a meat grinder.
Completely quiet and harmless until you start to turn her handle. And
I sure as Hellfire turned her handle, but now it seems to be going on
by itself. What I need is a suggestion on how to get it to stop."
"Is that all?"
ReSayne said in a pooh-poohing tone. "Nothing easier, my boy.
Just do something for her that will outweigh the insult you gave. And
now that that's settled—"
"No," Bariden
interrupted immediately, before the fiend could change the subject.
"That isn't settled. Generalities I've been able to come up with
on my own. It's specifics I need some help with, like suggestions on
what I could possibly do for her. What is there to do for a woman
who's also a sorceress?"
"Bariden, the time
has come to speak plainly." ReSayne's green eyes stared
unblinkingly at him. "I'm aware of the fact that you have very
little experience in the actual pursuit of females. For most of your
adult life they' ve pursued you, which must certainly have had its
pleasant moments. Now, however, the effort has become yours to make,
and the first thing you do is ask someone else to solve the problem
for you. Is that what being a prince does to a human male? Turns him
incapable and dependent?"
Bariden was about to
heatedly deny the charge, but the quietly sober way the fiend had
spoken made him pause. ReSayne wasn't usually that serious, not
unless the point it discussed was more than somewhat important. And
now that he'd stopped to think about it, the charge was uncomfortably
true. When it came to—fighting his own battles with a sword,
say, he would have considered it cowardly to go running to others to
ask for their help. His current situation was harder and more
dangerous than a sword fight, but still...
"All right, I'm
forced to admit you've made a very good point." The words
weren't easy, but Bariden said them anyway. "If this is
important enough to be a problem, it's one I have to solve for
myself. I just wish you weren't also
46
WARON
right about how little
experience I have with pursuit. Even Miralia came to me, although she
did make me work for the privilege of sharing her bed. One problem
was that it never stopped being a privilege, never grew into
something we both looked forward to ..."
Bariden let the thought
trail off, at the same time gesturing away the tray with the remnants
of his meal. She'd accused him of being spoiled by all the female
attention he'd had, unable to appreciate the real, true gesture she
always made. He was nothing but an ungrateful boor, telling her she
ought to be behaving like his legion of trollops. If he didn't know
what a real lady of quality was like, he ought to find out before
accusing her of improper behavior ...
He hadn't been accusing
Miralia of anything, but her attitude had made him wonder if he was
being a boor. She'd walked away from him with her head high and her
body stiffly offended, and two hours later his mother had sent for
him. Somehow she'd heard about the exchange, and had lost no time in
telling him again what a disappointment he was to her. He'd listened
with jaw clamped shut to her usual lecture about how she'd never
dreamed she'd give life to such a sorry excuse for a man and a
prince, and then he'd left. Later, when Miralia had announced that
she was ready to listen to his apology, he'd told her he was still
trying to figure out what he'd done that needed to be apologized for.
She'd then informed him he needn't come back until he did figure it
out, and he'd agreed that that might be best...
"Was there anything
else you needed to discuss with me?" ReSayne interrupted his
thoughts, for once in a gentle way. "I am somewhat involved with
a project of my own at the moment, but since I'm already here, you
might as well take advantage of the fact."
"No, no, there's
nothing else," Bariden decided aloud with a sigh. "There
are some things I'd love to palm off on others, but I don't know
anyone stupid enough to willingly accept them. The one thing I might
eventually need your expertise for is this mystery I'm helping to
investigate. The lives and well-being of a lot of people are at
stake, and if we can't figure it out ourselves I'll need everything
you can offer. Hopefully your own project will be finished by then."
TH£ HIDDEN BGA1M
47
"Even if it isn't,
I'll probably be willing to be distracted," ReSayne answered,
and then the chair melted into a blue-gray cloud that had the same
leaf green eyes. "Your mystery sounds intriguing, and the moment
I have time I want to hear all about it. If my project is completed
sooner than anticipated, I'll come right back rather than wait to be
summoned. And I may even have a new look by then that will satisfy us
both. Good hunting with your problems."
Bariden nodded his thanks
as the fiend faded from view, deliberately making no comment about
the next possible new look. He had enough to worry about without
that; trying to anticipate what ReSayne might come up with would
drive him even crazier than he was right then. What he needed was
some solitary time filled with serious thought—
"Your Highness,
excuse me," a voice came from the hall. He looked up to see the
anxious face of a messenger peering in through the open door, but the
man didn't enter. For a moment Bariden wondered why, and then he
remembered about the exclusion spell.
"What is it,
Stollen?" he asked as he stood. Since there was nothing left to
do in that room, he might as well find someplace else for his
thinking. But when he walked out and pulled the door closed behind
him, Stollen looked only faintly relieved.
"Your Highness, it's
happened again," the messenger said in a strained whisper,
obviously trying to keep the word from spreading too quickly. Which
had to be why he'd waited for Bariden to reach him before speaking.
"Since you're one of those working on the problem, I've been
sent to bring you there. Master Haddil is unavailable at the moment,
but the healer has been sent for as well."
"Who is it this
time?" Bariden asked as he gestured for the other man to lead
the way. "And what about— my working partner. Has she been
sent for?"
"Yes, sir,"
Stollen answered even as he started off. "The sorceress Chalaine
was expected by Benatha Aylie, so another messenger is checking with
Bena first. If she isn't there, he'll have to search. And the victim
this time is Diri,'one of the maids who usually works in this part of
the house."
SHARON
Bariden was surprised to
hear that, but speculation would be more profitable when he reached
the scene of the occurrence. In the meantime, he took a moment to
really appreciate the messenger system his father had put into
effect. There were messengers scattered all over the palace, and
their job was to know the whereabouts of those people in the palace
who mattered. In normal times one of their number made the rounds
every couple of hours, gathering information from individual
messengers and collating it for a complete picture. If someone needed
someone else, it rarely took more than a few moments to locate mat
person ...
And just then they'd done
him more of a service than simply locating him. He smiled as his mind
repeated the name Chalaine, a name he really should have remembered.
He still didn't know why he hadn't, but he wasn't about to forget it
again. The investigation they were working on had to come first, but
after that...
By the time Stollen showed
him to the maid Diri's rooms, Bariden had lost a lot of his
satisfaction. Din had worked her way up to a quasi-supervisory
position, and for that reason had earned a small apartment of her
own. The two rooms were tiny compared to the major apartments, but
they were worlds better than the dormitory slots or shared cells many
of the other maids lived in. Din worked along with the girls she also
supervised, which meant it was hard to understand why she'd become a
victim. Could she have learned something important, and been silenced
before she was able to tell anyone?
"The healer is
already here, and so is the sorceress," Stollen told him in a
soft voice. The man undoubtedly knew that from the other messengers
standing outside the room, both of whom looked frightened. From
inside came the sound of sobbing, and when Bariden reached the
doorway he found out who was producing it. "That's the girl who
found her," Stollen supplied. "It wasn't like Dili not to
get back to work on time after lunch, but her girls thought she might
have needed to do something. When hours went by and they still hadn't
heard from her, one of the girls came looking. The messenger in this
section heard her screaming, and immediately sent for the circulating
supervisor."
THG HIDD€M
49
Bariden thanked Stollen,
then left him outside and went in alone. The tiny sitting room had
only a single easy chair, positioned opposite the doorway in the far
right-hand corner of the room. The crying girl sat huddled in it, her
face buried in her hands, clearly wanting to be as far from the
unmoving body to the left as possible.
Diri sat in one of the
four chairs around the small table to the left, an almost-empty cup
of something on the table in front of her. Her left hand rested on a
book and she seemed to be reading, but no book ever written could
absorb someone to that extent. The woman was barely breathing, and
when the healer, who was crouched in front of her, touched her arm,
it was as though he touched a statue.
It was then that Chalaine
appeared, from the doorway to the right that must lead to Diri's
bedroom. She glanced at him as she passed in front of the crying
girl, but she didn't speak to either of them. Instead she walked to
the center of the room and began to study the walls. For someone who
had wanted to see a victim, she was paying more attention to the
interior decorating than to Diri.
"Was there anything
out of place in the bedroom?" he asked, just to be saying
something. The paneled design the walls had been painted with was
intricate and more attractive than one would expect in a place like
that. Still, Bariden didn't enjoy the idea that Chalaine preferred
looking at if to looking at him,
."The bedroom is
neater than any pin ever made," the girl muttered, still staring
around. "It also has a design on its walls, but not separated
into panels like in here. Do you see anything . . . unbalanced in any
of these sections? There's something wrong, but I can't put my finger
on what."
Bariden started to demand
what a painted wall could possibly have to do with the mystery, but
that was the whole point. They hadn't been able to find anything to
do with the mystery, and for all he knew the answer was on the wall.
With that in mind he began to look more closely at the panels, trying
to compare each section with the ones to either side of it. He also
moved farther into the room, but hadn't taken more than two steps
before Chalaine made a sound of satisfaction.
5O
"That's the one,"
she said, pointing to the first panel beyond the far left-hand comer
of the room. "That section there is the one that doesn't match.
Can you see it?"
Bariden's view was blocked
by the stricken Diri and the now-standing healer who continued to try
to reach through to her. On top of mat, Chalaine was moving toward
the panel she'd singled out. In order to see what she was talking
about, he had to swing right before circling in behind Chalaine to
the left. At that point there was nothing in the way—and that
was when it happened.
Like a giant, invisible
hand, the compulsion reached out and grabbed him. He had to get to
that section of wall, and as fast as possible! Nothing could stop
him, nothing would stop him! Clouded by vast confusion and unyielding
determination, Bariden broke into a run. Having no real idea what he
was doing, he also failed to understand when Chalaine stepped
directly into his path. Her back was to him as she examined the wall
panel, but she didn't reblock the compulsion. It continued to pull
him, and he just kept running—even when he crashed into her,
sending her forward ahead of him—up to the wall—and then
through it—
CHAPT€R
I fell into something soft
when I went down, and it took a moment to realize it was also cold. I
was too dazed to understand immediately what had happened; I heard
the cursing from my right, and then a hand touched my shoulder.
"Are you all right?"
Prince Bariden's voice demanded, and then he was trying to help me to
my feet. "Come on, you can't just lie there in that, you'll get
frostbite. We've got to find our way back."
"Frostbite?" I
echoed, getting up only because he was doing the lifting. "Back?
What are you talking about? What happened?"
"I must have hit you
harder than I thought," he said, sounding savage. "Damn
that setter of traps. Here, take a quick look around and then we have
to get moving."
He helped me turn away
from him, and what I saw men made no sense. We stood in an open wood
at dusk, thick white snow covering the ground, new flakes falling
silently all around to add to them. It was also cold, very cold
despite the lack of wind. How could we possibly have gotten to a
winter wood ... ?
"I think it's safe to
guess what bothered you about the walls in Din's sitting room,"
he said from behind me. "There was an entry hidden just at the
surface at one point, and it distorted the pattern of painting just a
little. But it was also primed with a compulsion aimed at me,
demanding that I get to it as fast as possible. I remember starting
to run, and didn't stop even when you got in die way."
51
"Which made you knock
me through ahead of you," I added, finally remembering getting
shoved hard toward the wall. "I expected to be flattened, but
ended up flying through the air instead. But if we came through an
entry, where is it? I'm starting to freeze solid."
"I hope it's masked
rather man one way," he answered as I brushed snow off the front
of my tunic and breeches. "If it isn't, we'll have to call up an
entry of our own. Or you'll have to. I've never called up an entry,
and I understand you need certain coordinates."
"You do, but it isn't
a problem," I assured him. "I have the coordinates to a lot
of places, so you aren't as trapped here as you were obviously
supposed to be. But first I'm going to do something about these
clothes I'm wearing. It's too cold for summer lightweights."
I could see my breath as I
spoke, so I hurriedly added a warm-clothes spell to the speaking. It
was short and simple, which means the reaction came very quickly. The
spell carved itself into the air in glowing letters, overbright in
the dusk, and then the letters began to crumble from the bottom. Tiny
pieces fell the way the snow fell, and in no time at all the letters
were completely gone.
"Fantastic," the
prince muttered from behind me, his tone full of disgust. "This
place is sealed by someone with wizard strength, and no one's spells
will work but his. Apparently he wasn't taking any chances about my
knowing an entry spell after all. We'd better get to shelter before
we try to figure out what to do next."
"What kind of shelter
is there around here1?" I aske'd, my teeth already beginning to
chatter. I'd also wrapped my arms around me, trying to remember I
liked the cold.
"That way, through
the woods," he said, putting his hands to my arms to turn me.
Behind where he'd been standing I could see something that looked
like a house a short distance off. It was dark and looming rather
than well-lit and cheery, but we weren't in a position to be choosy.
"Then let's go,"
I said, pulling away from the delightfully warm hands that had been
touching me. I needed something warm just then, but Prince Bariden's
hands weren't it. He could save that for when he got back to his
horde of girlfriends.
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53
It wasn't possible to run
through the deepening snow, but the hurried shuffle I adopted brought
a small amount of warmth. My companion drag-trotted beside me to the
right, his left palm against his sword hilt, his eyes moving around
the woods we passed through. There couldn't be many beasts out
hunting in a snowstorm, but even one would be one too many. With that
in mind I added my own looking around, at the same time hoping snow
wasn't what mat world always had. If it turned out to be the norm, we
could run into any number of hunting beasts who considered it a
lovely day ...
Whatever the true
situation was, we finally reached the house without anything
attacking us. The thing was larger than it had looked at first, but
wasn't any lighter. Dark stone blocks made up what we could see of
it, with a heavy wooden door closing off access to the inside. I was
so cold by then that I didn't care what was inside. Even if it was
something dangerous that preyed on visitors, it would still have to
fight to keep from being kicked out of its lair.
Prince Bariden, his grim
expression saying he felt the same, gripped the metal knocker and
pounded on the door with it. The metal must have been cold to the
point of pain, but he pounded away as if he didn't care what he held.
But he used his left hand rather than his right, which said he knew
he might be leaving some skin behind.
I could almost hear the
sound of his knocking reverberating inside, a demanding
boom-boom-boom-boom that echoed around in emptiness. If no one came
to answer the door we'd have to try to break in, and I didn't even
want to think about that. There were no windows in view from where we
stood at the front door, and—
"Watch it,"
Prince Bariden said softly, at the same time stepping in front of me.
The large wooden door was beginning to open, with nothing to show who
or what was doing the opening. The hinges groaned rather than
screeched, and then—
"Come on in fast,
before you freeze," a light, friendly voice urged. "And
before / freeze, from standing near this open door."
I couldn't quite look over
the prince's shoulder, so I
54
SHAROM
moved to the right to look
around him. Standing in the doorway was a pretty blond girl about my
age, her smile matching the friendliness we'd heard in her voice. Not
exactly what we'd been expecting, but...
"Thanks," my
companion told her, then reached around to push me through the
doorway first. "We really appreciate this."
"For a minute I
thought you were alone," the girl said to him with a laugh,
stepping aside to let me pass. "It's been all pairs so far, but
you never know. I'm Janissa."
"Nice to meet you,
Janissa," he acknowledged with a smile, then helped her push
closed the door. "I'm Bariden, and my companion is Chalaine.
What did you mean when you said it's been all pairs so far? Where are
we, and what's going on?"
"We have no idea
where we are," Janissa answered, diverting me from marveling
over the fact that Prince Bariden had managed to learn my name. "We
also don't know what's going on, but we've found a theory most of us
like. As pure guesswork, it tends to give us something that makes
sense. Come on into our gathering room, and we'll tell you about it
after you've met the others."
She turned and led the way
toward the right, through a wide, dark hall that was lit by a single
torch. Everything around us, floor, walls, and ceiling, seemed to be
made of the same dark stone, without anything in the way of
adornment. It was a lot warmer inside than it had been out in the
snow, but that's not to say it was warm.
Janissa, wearing a long
dress of pale green and what seemed to be matching slippers, ignored
a shadowy doorway to the left in favor of the one beyond it. Soft
light came through that second doorway, and when we reached it I
could see there was a fireplace which added to the light and warmth.
Around the fireplace was an austere room of rigid comfort, a place
for someone to relax who didn't really enjoy relaxing. Stiffly rather
than deeply upholstered chairs, couches that encouraged sitting up
straight, small, sturdy-looking tables, nothing on the walls but
mostly empty torch sconces. No decorations, no frills, not even
carpeting on the stone floor. And five people sitting loosely
together, watching us walk in.
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55
"Everyone, this is
Bariden and Chalaine," Janissa said, stepping aside to gesture
at us. "It looks like our friend is at it again, and maybe this
time we'll get a usable clue."
"I certainly hope
so," one of the men said as he stood. "We haven't been here
all that long and the company is certainly congenial, but I'll be
happier if I'm free to go about my business. I'm Vadran, and this is
Wellia."
He was tall, brown-haired
and blue-eyed, and his very attractive smile seemed aimed mostly at
me. The woman beside him, introduced as Wellia, had the same brown
hair and blue eyes, but wasn't as tall. Her smile and nod seemed
intended more for Prince Bariden, which balanced the greeting. Vadran
wore black boots and trousers and a blue tunic, while Wellia was in a
dress and slippers like Janissa's, only in a blue like Vadran's
tunic.
"We were the
newcomers until you two arrived," a second man said, also
standing now. "That doesn't mean we're not just as anxious to
get out of here, an attitude you'll unfortunately be finding out
about for yourselves. This is Idara, and I'm Halad."
Once again Halad's smile
was for me, Idara's for Prince Bariden. These two were redheads with
dark eyes, and they were dressed like the others except that Halad's
tunic and Idara's dress and slippers were a reddish brown. The
pattern was absolutely clear, and then the last man stepped forward
to clinch it.
"I'm Kamen," he
said with a smile all for me. He was tall, blond, and green-eyed,
wearing a light green tunic that matched Janissa's dress. "Janissa
and I have been here the longest, so we tend to feel like the host
and hostess of the place. Why don't we take you two upstairs to find
the clothes that will have been provided for you? After you've gotten
past being cold and wet, we can exchange information over a meal."
"I think we'd rather
do some drying out by that fire," Prince Bariden said, all but
taking the words out of my mouth. "That way we can exchange
information right now, without having to wait. Kamen, you said you
and Janissa have been here the longest. Just how long is that, and
how did you get here?"
By then we were already on
our way to the fireplace, but
56
9HAROM GR€€h
Kamen didn't seem to be
bothered by having his suggestion ignored. He glanced at Janissa, and
then shrugged.
"By the day-and-night
cycle of this world, it's been about four weeks," he answered.
"As for how we got here, we're still not quite sure. Janissa was
simply walking from one of her houses to another by entry, and I was
on my way to Conclave. Pd called up an entry to take me there, but
when I stepped through I was ankle-deep in snow with Janissa only a
few steps away. When we spotted this place we headed for it, and
found the door open and inviting."
"Not inviting, but
better than the snow," Janissa amended. "About a week later
Vadran and Wellia came knocking, and a week after that Halad and
Idara. This week it seems to be your turn."
"We were all going
elsewhere and ended up here," the brown-haired Vadran said. "Not
only are we all Sighted, we each became one of a matched set. But you
two don't fit into that, and I wonder why. Is the game almost over,
or has the player simply decided to change the rules?"
"The game he means is
what goes on in this house," red-haired Idara said with a small
shiver. "I'm sure you've already discovered that your spells
don't work here, and that because of the wizard strength of whoever
set this up. He or she seems to want to watch us cope without the
help of magic, and that hasn't been easy. The player feeds and
clothes us and keeps us warm, but for everything else we're on our
own."
"Everything else
means the—things—this house is haunted with,"
brown-haired Wellia said with her own shiver. "They appear
mostly when you're alone, occasionally when you're with someone who
can't do much better than you. Then you have to drive the thing off
somehow, or else it will—disgust and nauseate you."
"But only if you're
female," Halad said, taking his turn. "If you're male the
thing will be out for blood or broken bones, which may or may not be
worse. The only real weapon in this house is that sword you're
wearing, Bariden, but even if the rest of us had the same it would
make no difference. I can't use a sword, and I doubt if Kamen or
Vadran can either."
"He's right about
me," Kamen admitted while Vadran
TH€ HIDDGM BOWK
57
simply shrugged and
nodded. "I never thought I'd need any weapon beyond magic, which
proves how shortsighted it's possible to be. But now that you know
about us, what about you two? As Vadran pointed out, you two aren't
matched. Did you know each other before you got here?"
"It so happens we
did," Prince Bariden answered, turning partially away from the
fire I was still drying myself at. "Chalaine and I were working
on a serious problem our realm has, and apparently the guilty party
was afraid we would get to the bottom of it. A new victim was made
for us to go look at, and the room was booby-trapped with an entry
and a compulsion. The compulsion forced me through the entry, and
Chalaine was accidently swept along."
"Which means one of
two things," I contributed, only glancing over my shoulder.
"Either our guilty party and your game player are one and the
same, or our guilty party simply happens to know about what's going
on here, and took advantage of it to get rid of us. At this point
it's a matter of pick the one you like best."
"But maybe we can
figure out which one it is," Kamen said, his green eyes suddenly
bright. "If two more rooms and sets of clothes have been
prepared, then you're expected rather than just tossed in. If they're
not, you weren't meant to be here."
"That only works one
way," I disagreed while everyone else commented or exclaimed.
"If no rooms are prepared, that means we were tossed in. If
rooms are prepared, that could mean the original spell on this place
allows for newcomers automatically. It doesn't have to mean our
guilty party is your game player."
"I hadn't thought of
that," Kamen said as he blinked, and then he produced a grin.
"But the thought occurring to me now is that we finally have a
real thinker among us. I have a feeling you're the one who will find
us a way out, Chalaine."
"Isn't that funny,"
Idara said, toying with a strand of her red hair. "I was just
thinking that about Bariden. I hope at least one of us is psychic."
"As long as it's not
psychotic," Halad said from beside her, looking amused. "This
place is enough to do that to
58
anyone. Why don't we go
upstairs and check out the room situation? If they have been provided
for, they'll at least be able to change for dinner."
"And it is getting
close to that time," Janissa put in. "if there isn't any
provision for them, we'll have to share what we get. Let's get
started now."
All six of them made
sounds of agreement as they began to move, drawing the prince and me
along with them. I would have preferred staying by the fire, and not
just because my clothes were still wet. That whole situation felt
really strange, even beyond the strangeness it was supposed to be.
Six magic users trapped in an unpleasant situation, and ail they'd
done was settle in? Granted they couldn't use their magic, but
still...
The group led the way left
out of the room, and only a short distance away was a wide staircase.
The steps were some sort of polished stone, hard to see in the
dimness of the single torch burning nearby. It was also colder away
from the fire, but that wasn't the only thing trying to make me
shiver. That house insisted on feeling deserted even with eight
people walking through it...
The staircase led to a
second floor that somehow gave the impression of being larger than
the ground floor. Corridors stretched left, right, and straight
ahead, and we were directed left. This corridor had occasional
candles burning in sconces on the walls, while the others had been
dark.
"The first two
bedrooms, to left and right, were given to Janissa and me,"
Kamen said with appropriate gestures. "The next two belong to
Vadran and Wellia, and the third set to Halad and Idara. If you two
have been provided for, the fourth pair will be lit."
The doors to the indicated
rooms were open, and I could see what was probably the light from
only one or two candles in each. I wondered if it was our fellow
captives who were so frugal with the candles, or if that was our
host's doing. And then I forgot the point as we reached the fourth
pair of doors.
"Well, so much for us
getting a useful clue," Kamen sighed. "These rooms were
dark, and now they're lit. One way or another you two have been
included in, so we might as well get you settled. This way, Bariden."
THe HIDDGM
59
He and the other men took
the prince to the left, and Janissa touched my arm before heading
right. I followed her into a fairly large chamber that was as
formally stiff as the gathering room downstairs, and just as spartan.
Against the far wall to the right was a large bed without canopy or
curtains, and farther right was a plain wooden wardrobe. A couple of
small tables held unlit candles in plain silver holders, utility
uncombined with any sort of beauty. To the left of the door was a
fireplace complete with fire, two uncomfortable-looking chairs set a
few feet away in front of it. Closer to the door on the right was a
washstand with basin and pitcher, and that was it as far as interior
decoration went.
"The inside door of
the wardrobe has a mirror," Janissa told me, walking over to
open it and prove the point. "You'll notice there's only one
dress and pair of slippers in here at any one time, but that's all
you'll need. When you take your worn clothes off put them in here,
and the wardrobe will take care of them,"
"But you have to take
care to change as quickly as possible," Wellia added. "The
longer you're alone, the better the chance that one of
those—things—will come after you. You can't avoid them
entirely, but there's no sense in making things worse."
"Easiest is being
with one of the men when it happens," Idara put in, checking
herself quickly in the mirror. "The thing always turns out to be
one that goes after them, so you don't have to put up with the
awfulness more than once hi a while."
"Don't the men mind
if you take advantage of them like that?" I asked. "I know
they're supposed to be big and strong and all, but dumping the whole
load on them doesn't seem fair. Even if they know all about it and
insist on doing it like that—"
"They do insist,"
Janissa interrupted with a smile. "They get their own benefit
out of the arrangement, so they don't mind at all. But dinner should
be ready soon, so you ought to get changed now. We'll be waiting
downstairs."
The other two added their
smiles to hers, and then all three left. The last one out closed the
door, but I just stood there for a moment wondering what hadn't been
6O
said. I would have bet
gold on the fact that there was something, and maybe even two or
three somethings. For people who had been dragged unwillingly into
some unspecified experiment, they'd adjusted to the situation awfully
fast and awfully well. . .
The clamminess of my
clothes reminded me rather quickly that I was there to change, so I
gave up on speculation for the moment and turned back to the
wardrobe. The dress hanging in it was dark brown trimmed with red,
not exactly my favorite color combination, but predictable. The
slippers matched perfectly, of course, so I took them and the dress
over to one of the chairs near the fire.
Once I was out of my own
things and into dry, I spread my wet clothes as close to the fire as
was safe for them. The wardrobe could have back anything it gave me,
but I didn't care for the idea of losing what I'd worn to that world.
When you have a choice, even in what clothes you'll wear, it's easier
to keep from going along with the demands of others. The six previous
victims of that trap might have settled in, but I had no intention of
doing the same.
With my wet clothes taken
care of, I went back to the wardrobe to check my new finery in the
mirror. The fit was perfect, of course, and even the colors didn't
look as bad as I'd thought. The dress was long enough to brush the
top of my slippers, was long-sleeved, and closed with buttons up the
front of the bodice. The material was very soft and rich-feeling,
like silk but without the slipperiness of silk. Most of the red trim
was lace, and—
I stiffened as I saw, in
the mirror, the figure appear behind me. It materialized out of thin
air, and its arrival was so abrupt it took me an instant to realize
what it had to be. I whirled around, needing to face it rather than
have it behind my back, but that did no good at all. I couldn't use
magic to get rid of it or defend myself, and the thing laughed when
it saw I'd remembered that.
The thing. Actually, it
was supposed to be a man, but not your ordinary, everyday type. He
was fairly tall but stood round-shouldered, as though preferring to
blend into the crowd rather than stand out. He was long-faced and
dull-eyed, but wore a smirk as though he thought no one else was as
good. He also had long-fingered hands, the sort
THG HtDDGh
61
that are constantly on the
move and just itching to touch you. He was dressed in a long and
belted maroon robe that was too dirty to look anything but repulsive,
and his very light-skinned feet were bare. AH of him was
light-skinned, fish-belly dead rather than simply untanned.
And then the look in his
flat, dull eyes changed, showing sly and crafty eagerness rather than
plain stupidity. I'd seen that look before, the one that said he'd
just realized I could be taken advantage of, and I hated it as much
as the rest. He was virtually made of what I detested most in a man,
and the thought of his coming closer made my skin crawl. If he ever
touched me it would be sickening . . .
The thing laughed again
and suddenly began to walk towarj me, shuffling along the bare wooden
floor in bare white feet. It was almost as though he'd waited to let
me get a good look before doing it, just to make it all worse.
Everything I hated in a man, looks and attitudes both .. . he knew
what I was thinking and feeling, and intended to use that against me
...
Anger flared beside
disgust, but even as I turned and ran toward one of the small tables
on my left, I couldn't help wondering what the point was. The
gameplayer's spell had created and sent the sort of man I'd never be
able to stomach, but according to what I'd been told it wouldn't harm
me. I had no interest in waiting to find out what it would do, but
that question was answered just as I reached the table.
"Where you goin',
pretty?" the thing asked in a thin, high-pitched voice,
condescendingly amused. "You can't get away from me, you oughta
know that, and I'm not gonna hurt you. Just a little snugglin' and
touchin' and a few kisses, and then I'll be gone. Until the next
time. Come on, be a good girl and stand still. The sooner we start,
the sooner I'll be done."
"You're done right
now," I muttered, reaching hastily for the heavy candle standing
unlit in one of the sticks. I noticed that when you mix anger with
disgust your hands shake, but I wasn't about to let that stop me. I
yanked the candle from its holder, accidently knocking the holder off
the table, but that didn't matter. If I had to throw it after the
candle, I'd just pick it up again.
The candle was heavy
enough to make a good impression
on anyone, so I took aim
for the composite man's head and threw hard. I was usually good at
hitting what I aimed at, and that time was no different. The candle
flew straight for the thing's face, smacked into it—and kept on
going! It— sank—into the face, and when it was gone it
left behind nothing but a dirty smirk and a laugh.
"Nice try, pretty,"
he said in a greasy way. "But now that you know you can't stop
me, why make trouble? Come on over here and let's get acquainted."
He'd paused a moment
earlier, probably to let me learn how useless throwing things was,
but now he'd started walking again. Rather than waiting for me to
come to him, he was doing the approaching. I wasn't afraid, exactly,
not when it wasn't something deadly coming at me, but_being
sickeningly repelled was almost worse. And the worst of it was that I
couldn't think of anything to do, nothing that would let me defend
myself...
And then I saw the thing
pause, his smirk wavering for just an instant. A peculiar expression
flickered on his face, and then he took a longer step before resuming
his shuffle and amusement. It was so odd I couldn't help but notice,
but for a moment I didn't understand. Why in the worlds would he do
that... ?
As soon as I looked down,
everything became clear. The silver candlestick, the one that had
been a victim of my clumsiness and had ended up on the floor—that
was what the thing had so carefully avoided! Good old silver, a magic
user's best friend! I wasted no time in reaching for the second
candlestick, got rid of the candle, then turned to the thing with my
newly found weapon in hand.
"What do you expect
that to do for you?" he tried to bluff, now forcing smirking
amusement even though he'd stopped again. "You feel the urge to
try another throw? Go ahead then, throw it and see what happens."
"I already know what
would happen," I answered, looking straight at him. "You
would avoid the throw rather man letting it hit you, and then I would
be without a weapon. If you're so eager to show you're not afraid of
it, just keep coming."
Frustration flashed
through those flat, dull eyes, an emotion he tried to hide, but then
he realized the game was up.
THG
63
I wasn't guessing about
the silver, and I wasn't warning him to keep away. If he tried to
come near me I'd bash him with the candlestick, and smile while I did
it. When you're not afraid to hurt someone they know it, even if
they're constructs.
"You think you're so
smart," the thing said sullenly, his good time ruined. "Well,
it so happens I didn't want to have anything to do with you anyway. I
don't like life-forms that cheat."
With that he disappeared
back to the nothingness he'd come from, possibly thinking he'd left
me feeling guilty. If the day ever came mat I felt guilty about
defending myself... I shook my head with a sigh, wondering how even a
construct could be that thick-skulled. I also wondered what the
gameplayer would try next, now that the first attempt hadn't worked.
There were any number of unpleasant things to be considered, but
luckily I was diverted by a knock at the door. Hastily pushing aside
thoughts of true horror, still clutching the candlestick, I went to
the door and opened it.
"I thought I'd see if
you were ready to go down to dinner yet," Prince Bariden said
from where he leaned against the doorpost with folded arms. "Are
you expecting to need a candle, or are you just still mad at me?"
"It so happens you're
my second visitor," I said, stepping back to let him come in.
"The first was a walking collection of everything I dislike in a
man, who announced that we were going to kiss and touch and cuddle.
Now we know what the operating spell sends after female Sighted in
this place."
"Is it still here?"
he demanded, losing the casual air as he strode into the room and
looked around. "What did it do to you before it left?"
"I doubt if he was
going to do more than he said he would, but he didn't even get to do
that." I followed more slowly, wondering how much of his
agitation was on my behalf. A man who targets a girl wants to get to
her first, without someone else cutting in front "I accidently
discovered that the construct didn't get along with silver, and used
this candlestick to convince him to be on his way."
"Convinced him,"
Prince Bariden echoed with a snort
64
9HARON
of amusement, turning to
grin at me. "Saying that, you probably smashed him flat with it.
And you look like such a sweet, gentle little thing. As long as
you're sure he didn't hurt you."
"I told you, I don't
think hurting is part of what it's supposed to do," I said,
ignoring the fact that he looked genuinely concerned again. "Being
pawed and mauled by someone you can't stand may be nauseating, but it
doesn't qualify as traumatic for many girls above the age of fifteen.
No, that thing had another purpose, but I'm damned if I know what You
didn't have a visitor of your own?"
"Not even a
suggestion of one," he said with a headshake, now looking
thoughtful. He'd changed clothes too, and his tunic was a blue to
match his eyes. "Maybe the fact mat I'm armed kept anything from
trying."
"Unless your sword is
silver, which I doubt, I don't see that happening," I disagreed.
"The first thing I did was throw a heavy candle at my guest, and
his face simply swallowed it up. Cutting him into slices probably
wouldn't have worked either, not when he wasn't truly human. It's
possible he or something like him will try again, so I intend to hang
onto this candlestick."
"That you should have
to really bothers me," he said, the concern sliding toward
self-condemnation. "You ended up here because of me, and even
though I didn't do it deliberately, that doesn't stop it from being
my fault. I'd like you to know that I'm really sorry."
"Excuse me, but I
don't understand what you're apologizing for," I said, watching
as he turned away. "The compulsion on the entry was so strong it
dragged you to it and through, and it was my own bad luck I got in
the way. Or my own thickheadedness, for not being suspicious about an
entry being present when there was no sign of one at any of the other
scenes. How does any of that make it your fault?"
"The fact that I
didn't realize being partners with you would put you in danger,
that's what makes it my fault." He'd turned back to look at me,
to show just how unhappy he really was. "I should have
anticipated an attempt to get rid of me before I learned something
important, and kept you well in the background. The arrow can't hit
you if you
TH£ HIDDGN
65
aren't standing between it
and its true target."
"Ah, so you're the
only one they wanted to get rid of," I said with a nod, finally
understanding. "They weren't counting on my being drawn along
with you, or even following after if you went through alone. They
knew I would simply stay in the palace and putter around, getting
nowhere with the mystery once my invaluable partner was gone. Now I
see."
"Why are you taking
my attempt to apologize as a major personal insult?" he demanded
as mis time I did the turning away. "It's hardly likely our
enemy knows you, but he's certain to know me. If a trap was set, and
it was, logic would say it was set for me. And not just logic, since
you didn't set off the compulsion and I did. Would you be happier if
this was all aimed at you, and / was the one accidently dragged
along?"
"You're absolutely
right, I was just being foolish," I said, brushing at the skin
of my dress. "Now that that's settled, we ought to get
downstairs. If they're holding dinner for us, they could be as hungry
as I am."
I headed out into the hall
and after a brief hesitation Prince Bariden followed. He didn't say
anything else, but it felt as if he wanted to. Persorially, I was
sorry I hadn't just accepted his apology and let it go at that. He
was a prince, after all, so it was natural for him to consider
himself the most important person around. If our enemy didn't know me
our enemy wasn't as clever as we thought, but that was beside the
point. In the prince's eyes I wasn't important enough to be lured
into a trap, so why argue?
At the bottom of the
stairs I turned right, and a few doors down, also on the right, was
the dining room where our fellow victims waited. They sat at a table
set for eight, but one that could easily have held twelve. Again the
room was mostly dim, but two candelabra on the table would keep the
coming meal from being a mystery. What I could see of the room itself
said we were still going with stiff and formal, utility first,
comfort second, decorative a long way beyond third. When we entered,
the low conversation broke oft and Kamen rose to his feet.
"Glad to see you two
are all right," he greeted us with a smile. "Chalaine, your
place is here to my right, and
66
cueer*
Bariden, yours is to
Janissa's right at the other end. Once we get settled, the food will
start coming."
Without hesitation I moved
left toward his end of the table, and the prince did almost as well
going right. His very short pause might have meant he saw all the
women he would be in me middle of, and was savoring the largesse to
come. I silently wished him a hearty appetite, and took my place
without comment. Kamen, to my left, remained standing until I sat,
joined by Halad to my right and Vadran to Kamen's left, directly
across from me. Once I was settled, they resumed their own seats.
Prince Bariden had Janissa to his left, Idara to his right, and
Wellia directly across from him.
"Is there some
special reason you're carrying that candlestick?" Kamen asked
me. I noticed that his tunic was a darker blue than Prince Bariden's,
and so were his eyes. "Did you think you'd need to fetch your
own light in order to see what you were eating?"
"Not at all," I
answered, partially distracted by the platters of food mat were
appearing along the center of the table. "This candlestick is my
weapon against any future unwelcome visitors, so you can expect it to
be my constant companion. Dragging it around is a lot more pleasant
man what almost happened."
"Almost happened?"
Vadran echoed from across the table, exchanging surprised glances
with Halad and Kamen. "You mean one of the sendings came at you,
but you were able to stop it? How? Idara hit one with a chair, and
that did nothing but make it laugh."
"I discovered by
accident that it can't abide coming in contact with silver," I
told him, noticing peripherally mat me three women were also
listening. "That sort of an aversion is too basic to change, so
I'd say it will continue to work against any construct sent."
Peculiar expressions moved
across the faces of the men as they glanced at each other again, but
when it came to speaking one of the women beat them to it.
"What about the thing
sent at you, Bariden?" Idara asked from his right. "Were
you also able to chase it away with silver?"
"Since nothing was
sent at me, I didn't have the chance
reams
67
to try," the prince
answered, aware that all eyes were now on him. "If something had
been sent, I probably would have first tried to—"
"Nothing sent?"
"How can that be?" "What's going on now?" "I
don't understand."
The protests all came at
once, running together and almost drowning each other out. Some of
them even sounded indignant, so I decided it was a good time to ask a
few pointed questions.
"That wasn't the way
it was supposed to go, was it?" I asked all of them, drawing
their eyes. "We were supposed to have come down here shaken from
our first brushes with the moves of this—game. You were all
certain it would happen."
"What makes you say
that?" Kamen countered, looking at me in a very neutral way.
"It's true all the rest of us had almost immediate encounters,
but what makes you think we were all that certain it would happen to
you two?"
"One reason is the
fact that you left to let it happen," I obliged with a humorless
smile. "You just said you all had almost immediate encounters,
and yet the girls left me to dress alone, and you boys left my
partner. That means you wanted us to run into our respective
attackers, and were all ready with your own first move. Would you
like to claim there's no significance in this seating arrangement?"
The glances flickered back
and forth again, and this time the women were included. With them
ranged around Prince Bariden and the men around me, we were obviously
expected to involve ourselves in something having to do with the
opposite sex. Just what, though, was the next question to be
answered.
"Just what is it that
you think we're trying to force you into?" Janissa put from her
end of the table, a faint flush to her cheeks. "You sound as if
you suspect some—devious plot on our part, aimed at luring you
into our clutches. What are we supposed to be guilty of?"
"I'd say bad
judgment, if nothing else," I answered with a shrug, reaching
for a wineglass that was now filled. "You know you were all
brought here for a purpose, to do something whoever set this up
wanted you to do. With that in mind you should have noticed what you
were being
68
SHAROM
forced to do, and
understood that doing it was just plain cooperating with your
capture. How fast do you expect to be released if you behave the way
the gameplayer wants you to?"
"A lot faster than if
we resist," Idara stated, her own cheeks reddened. "And
resisting could have made things worse, so what good would it have
done? Those things could have been sent to do more than touch and
kiss us, and then what would we have done?"
"Maybe found out
sooner that silver will stop them?" I suggested, then watched as
all three women flushed darker. "Those constructs are stomach
turning, but they're not so bad that they'd make you desperate to
find something that would stop them. By cooperating with the desires
of the gameplayer, you denied yourselves the sort of state of mind
that lets you find a way out of an unbearable situation. It wasn't
unbearable, merely unpleasant, so you avoide'd it by accepting an
arrangement that wasn't all that bad. What I still don't know,
though, is what the men get out of it besides the obvious."
"I seem to be the
only one who doesn't understand what's going on," Prince Bariden
said when the silence descended. No one was looking at anyone else
any longer, and the air of discomfort was thick enough to feel. "What
sort of arrangements are we talking about?"
"I was told that the
constructs don't bother the women if they happen to be with the men,"
I answered, looking around as I spoke. "That would indicate they
usually sleep in pairs, since your time of greatest vulnerability is
when you're asleep. This seating was probably arranged to let us
choose our first partners, but it's unlikely nothing more than sleep
is involved. Of course, if I'm wrong I'll certainly apologize."
None of them spoke up to
say that I was wrong, and no one even seemed to remember there was
food on the table. They all appeared to feel horribly embarrassed,
which was perfectly ridiculous.
"All right, so you
all take turns sleeping together," I said, letting them hear the
annoyance I felt. "I realize no one ever does that sort of thing
anywhere else, but that's no reason not to talk about other subjects.
Like what additional benefit
THG
69
the arrangement has for
the men. Since they can still be attacked, what is there that adds
the urge to cooperate?"
"Don't you think the
easy sex is enough?" Kamen asked, now sounding and looking
angrily defensive. "That's all men think about, isn't it? What
other reason do we need?"
"Give me a break,"
I responded with a groan, aware of the same stares from the other two
men. "Even teenage boys think about more than sex. And what kind
of an experiment would this be, if half the subjects were going to
react in a completely predictable way? You do understand this is an
experiment, don't you?"
This time all the looks
exchanged were filled with surprise, which answered my question. They
hadn't even gotten that far in figuring things out, and suddenly they
were filled with actual interest.
"What sort of an
experiment could this possibly be?" Vadran asked from across the
table. "To see how quickly strangers will take to one another?
I'll admit I didn't like being forced to cooperate, but the choice
was between a painful beating from something I couldn't defend myself
against, or making love to one of three attractive women. I couldn't
see what playing stubborn would get me, so I went along with it."
"There's a part you
still don't know about," Halad said from my right, obviously
agreeing with Vadran. "Those things would still appear if there
was a woman with us, but seemed to be incapable of striking at that
woman. If we put her in the middle neither of us was hurt, and then
the thing would disappear. Could the experiment be to find out how
well we would learn to cooperate?"
"I doubt it," I
said with a headshake, finding that too simple an answer. "If
that was the aim, you would have discovered somehow that cooperation
was the key to getting out of here. Chances are the point is more
involved, like just how far you could be pushed before you stopped
being cooperative. Vadran mentioned that one of your choices was an
'attractive' woman. What would have happened if the next pair showing
up were a very handsome man and a rather plain-looking woman?"
"That's easy,"
Wellia said with a laugh from the other side of Halad. "We three
would have each done our best
7O
9HARON GR€€M
to be the one who welcomed
the man, which would have left one of our current companions with the
woman."
"And whichever one of
us was left with her would have a different choice to make,"
Kamen pounced, looking excited. "Making love to a plain woman is
still worlds better than getting kicked around, so we would probably
cooperate again. But what about the couples after that? What if
eventually the woman was not only physically ugly, but also had one
of those poisonous personalities? Would we be so used to compromising
by then that we would accept her without hesitation, having decided
that anything was better than getting hurt? If not, at what point
would we dig in our heels?"
"That possibility
would work for us as well," Janissa said, glancing at the other
two women. "If the new arrivals were a gorgeous woman and a
plain man, how long would any of us refuse plain when the only other
choice was nauseating? But the game would probably get more involved
after that, since nauseating would quickly be balanced by repulsive.
Maybe the constructs would start hitting us, too."
"None of which tells
us how we're supposed to climb out of this," Wellia said,
looking seriously disturbed. "I started out making the best of
an unpleasant situation, but this will get worse than unpleasant
before it's over. Once people get used to giving in to small
tyrannies, they find themselves giving in to large ones as well. If
the gameplayer is trying to find out the point I'll say no, then he
has what he wants. I'm now saying no, and I won't change my mind
again."
"Not even to keep one
of those—things—away from you?" Idara asked, her
face pale. "I don't like this any better than the rest of you,
but I'll take an ordinary man any day rather than a—a—Damn
it, we're still trapped here!"
"But maybe not for
long," Prince Bariden said soothingly, reaching to his right to
pat her hand. "Something someone mentioned gave me an idea, but
there's still one unanswered question. If everyone including Chalaine
had one of these constructs sent after them, why was I the only
exception? If a sharp edge was likely to stop them, there would
hardly be knives on this table as part of the settings. That means my
sword had nothing to do with it, so what did?"
THG HIDD€M
71
Everyone considered that
in silence, diverted from the first thing he'd said. I wasn't
diverted, but a possibility still occurred to me.
"Since all of you are
Sighted, does that mean all of you used normal warding before finding
yourselves here?" I asked. "No, the question isn't silly,
so please answer it."
"The question is
silly," Idara contradicted. "When ordinary people pay good
silver to have themselves warded, why would one of us do without when
the cost would be nothing? Weren't you warded?"
"Yes, I was," I
replied, seeing that every one of them agreed with her. "The
point here is that my partner wasn't, and that could be the answer.
The constructs are made to key on our warding, nauseating to female,
and attacking to male. Since we each warded ourselves, the work would
have our own individual trace."
"If you're serious
about his being unwanted, that must be it," Kamen said, once
again looking around at the others. "But wait a minute. How can
something created by magic get through our warding? The girls were
touched and we were hit and kicked, but that shouldn't have been
possible."
"You're confusing a
magical creature and the use of magic," Prince Bariden said
before I could respond. "Most warding protects you only from the
direct use of magic or an effect caused by magic. It won't stop a
physical attack from anything including a magical creature, not
unless you're so proddish you have it set specifically to do that. If
you do you won't be touched by anything including a heavy wind
without setting it off, and will probably leave a trail of
unconscious bodies every time you move through a crowd. Anything less
is just about useless, which is why I don't bother. Most people
assume I'm warded, which is just as good as actually having it"
"That makes a strange
kind of sense," Halad said as he blinked at the prince. "I'll
have to think about it once I'm home again, but right now I'd rather
discuss your earlier comment. Did you say you have an idea about how
we might get out of here?"
"I did, but before we
try it I suggest we have dinner," Prince Bariden responded,
reaching for one of the platters
CHARON
near him. "There's no
guarantee my idea will work, and if this food disappears again before
we eat it, we'll end up going hungry. We'll take care of this first,
and then see about escape."
Once again there were a
lot of glances exchanged and this time I joined in the effort, but
there was nothing to be done. Prince Bariden was giving all his
attention to the food, and unless we wanted to try to force him into
talking, pur only option was to do the same. A general movement
toward the bowls and platters told me which option the others were
going with, which was hardly surprising. Muttering under my breath
about the high-handedness of those with titles, I reluctantly did the
same.
Dinner was topped off with
coffee all around, the cups having a standard refilling spell that
any good Sighted host or hostess would provide. By that time the
prince was chatting lightly with the attentive women around him, and
the men at my end were talking desultorily among themselves. Not
being interested in conversation, I wasn't speaking to anyone. I'd
fallen into a dark mood over all the time we were wasting, and
couldn't seem to climb out of it again. What if Prince Bariden's idea
didn't work, and we were trapped there? How long would the stricken
left behind us be able to survive in me pale shadows they now lived
in .. . ?
"Now that we're
comfortably filled, I think it's time for an experiment of our own,"
Prince Bariden suddenly announced, beginning to rise from the table.
"If you'll all come with me, I'll explain what's needed."
Everyone hurried to follow
after as he headed for the hall, but I took a final swallow of coffee
before making my own way out. If Prince Bariden's idea didn't work,
what would there be left to try ... ?
"Okay, now that we're
all here, we can give it a try," the prince said when I joined
the group in the hall. "What we want is an entry out of here,
but, as Chalaine knows, I'm not familiar with entry spells. The rest
of you will have to pick a destination, and that's where we'll try to
go."
"I'd say our best
destination would be Conclave," Kamen offered above the comments
of some of the others. "That way we can report what was done to
us, and get some
TH€ HIDDEN
73
wizard strength on our
side. It won't help if we just go home, and then wake up tomorrow to
find we've been taken again."
"But how are we
supposed to go anywhere at all?" Idara asked with a worried
expression that was becoming familiar. "With the gameplayer's
blanket spell still working, none of our spells will do the same."
"None of our
individual spells," Prince Bariden corrected before anyone else
could add to the protest. "No single one of us is strong enough
to counter the gameplayer, but what about all of us together? If the
gameplayer had the strength of eight trained Sighted, would he still
be involved with silliness like this? Aren't there better things to
do with your time once you develop that much strength?"
The only proper answer to
his question was maybe, but none of us wanted to be the one to say
the word. Doubt can negate the strongest effort when it comes to
spells, and what we needed then was the greatest push we could
generate. Punching through a wizard's already-cast spell could be
tricky no matter what our combined strength, but that was hardly the
time to mention that point either.
"Well, all we can do
is try," Halad said, shaking his red-haired head. "If it
doesn't work we won't be any worse off, and if it does we're out of
here. Is there anyone besides Bariden who doesn't know the spell for
an entry to Conclave?"
There was a lot of looking
around, but no one spoke up to say they shared the lack. It was odd
to think that any Sighted could reach sorcerer strength without
visiting Conclave at least once in a while, but there was no real
time to think about that. The others were beginning to link hands,
the most effective way to increase the strength of a shared spell.
"Let's put the entry
into the doorway to the dining room," Prince Bariden suggested
as he took the hands of Janissa and Idara. "That way if it
doesn't work, we can all go back for dessert. Is everyone ready?"
A variety of nods answered
him, none of them as lighthearted as his comment about dessert was
supposed to make them. His linking hi would add a portion of his
strength to the effort even if he wasn't speaking the spell,
74
SHARON
so there was no sense in
waiting for some nebulous better time. He glanced around one last
time, then said, "Begin," the way a wizard instructor would
have. That gave us our benchmark and suggested rhythm, and we began
to speak the spell. The first thing you learn when you start to study
magic is the standardized way of speaking a spell. In later years you
develop your own personal style, but no one ever forgets what they
learned first.
The spell wasn't very
involved, and as we began together we finished together. There had
been something of a drag on the words as I spoke them and I suspected
the others had felt the same, but with the last syllable out there
was a—popping—of sorts. It was very much like your ears
adjusting to a change of altitude, and when we looked at the dining
room doorway there was a faintly glowing outline that hadn't been
there before.
"It's really there!"
Vadran shouted, turning to Wellia, picking her up, and spinning her
in a circle. The others were also laughing and jumping around, but
Prince Bariden was simply grinning. Idara paused to throw her arms
around his neck and kiss him, but for some reason that didn't ruin
his mood. As soon as she turned away to find someone else to kiss, he
chuckled his way over to me.
"Looks like we did
it," he commented over the yelling and whooping. "And I do
mean 'we.' You said something about mis not being an experiment about
cooperation, because then it would take cooperation to escape.
Hearing that made me wonder if you'd touched on something we weren't
supposed to see, and from that came the idea about combining
strength. Do you want to lead the way through the entry, or let
everyone else go first?"
"I think it's going
to be a matter of first come, first gone," I answered, nodding
toward the activity I'd been watching. "Kamen is about to lead
Janissa through, Vadran is right behind them with Wellia, and Halad
is bringing up the rear with Idara. If we don't get a move on,
they'll leave us behind."
I headed for the end of
the line with that, and after a brief hesitation the prince followed
me. Once again I had the feeling he wanted to say something, but that
wasn't the time for anything but the briefest conversation. Kamen and
TH€ HIDDGM
75
Janissa stepped through
the entry, Vadran and Wellia right on their heels, Idara alone
turning to gesture us after them before following with Halad. The
prince was beside me as I began to step through, but suddenly there
was a—crackling blur—and then—and men—
TH€ HIDDGN
77
CHAPTGR K)UR
A
ind then Bariden found
himself outdoors again, Chalaine beside him. Wherever they were it
was midaftemoon, and although the air was cool there wasn't a trace
of snow. There also wasn't a trace of the six people who had gone
through the entry before them, which was definitely not an
encouraging sign.
"If this is Conclave,
it's changed a lot since the one time I visited there," he
commented, looking around at the very ordinary countryside. Grass,
trees, sky, and sunlight, nothing threatening or even vaguely
sinister. A short distance away from where they stood was a dirt
road, fairly wide and looking fairly well traveled.
"I'd like to know
whose idea of a joke this is," the girl said in annoyance, also
looking around. "That crackling blur, just as we stepped through
the entry—it didn't happen for any of the others, or I would
have noticed. They ended up at Conclave, and we ended up—where?"
"Someplace there's no
immediate way back from," Bariden told her, having already
turned to examine the entry they'd come through. The thing was gone,
not the least hint of where it had been, nothing but a stretch of
meadow to be seen with woods just beyond.
"Great,"
Chalaine muttered, having turned herself to see that the entry was
gone. "Now we don't even have the choice of jumping back into
the frying pan if this turns out to be the fire. And I'm cold again."
Almost by reflex she spoke
a spell to replace her dress
76
with the boots, breeches,
and tunic she'd left behind, only in slightly heavier material.
Bariden understood the spell perfectly—and then blinked when
the clothing nickered into being. He'd enjoyed seeing her in a dress,
but that had nothing to do with his reaction.
"Hey, we can do magic
again," he said, then proved it by providing himself with his
own original clothing. "Now all we have to decide is whether or
not to try for Conclave again."
"You think we ought
to go straight back to the palace?" the girl asked, big, dark
eyes just brushing past him. "I thought the stop at Conclave
could be used for getting wizard-strength warding against future
compulsions, but I suppose Master Haddil could do that for us. But
first I'm going to get rid of my own warding. I didn't like what it
brought to me in that house trap, and I don't care to have the same
again."
"Wait," Bariden
said before she spoke the words and used a banishing gesture. "That
might not be the best idea right now. Why don't we wait to see what
happens next."
"What will happen
next is my creating an entry to take us out of here," she said,
looking around at the landscape. "What do you think will jump us
before I can do that?"
"I wasn't thinking
about something happening before," he answered, finding it
impossible not to stiffen against the taint impatience in her tone.
As though she were dealing with someone very young and not too
bright... "It was afterward I was considering. If the enemy was
prepared to stop us from reaching a destination decided on almost
randomly and what should have been unexpectedly, what will happen the
next time we try?"
She hesitated a moment,
obviously thinking, and then said, "Let's try it and see,"
before raising one hand and speaking a spell. Logic told Bariden she
was calling an entry into existence, but logic was the only one who
knew that. Nothing else seemed to notice, and all faintly glowing
doorways were conspicuous by their absence.
"I don't believe
that," she stated, glaring at a volume of air that should
obviously have contained more. "This has to be someone's idea of
a joke. How can magic work for everything but the calling up of an
entry?"
78
"A better question
would be, why is the enemy so determined to keep us away from the
palace?" Bariden suggested. "First we're forced out, and
now we're being kept from going back. Is there something scheduled
that we might stop if we were there?"
" 'We'?" she
said, for a moment looking straight at him. "I thought you were
the only important one in all this. Why has that suddenly changed to
we?"
"What would be the
sense in disallowing entries if I was the only one who was supposed
to be here?" Bariden was trying to keep his voice mild as he
explained his thinking, but the girl wasn't making it easy. Every
time she spoke to him, he felt like—"And why did that
compulsion have to be so strong? Instead of making me run, it could
have simply caused me to walk through the entry without fuss. That
way no one would have noticed until I was through and taken, and that
would have been the end of it. Not to mention the fact that the two
of us were diverted here by that last entry. Am I supposed to believe
it couldn't have been me alone just as easily?"
"We still don't know
what you're supposed to believe," she pointed out, a hint of her
favorite lecturing tone behind the words. "First you thought you
were the only one who counted, but now I've gained equal prominence.
Or almost equal. Never let it be said that I'd presume to think of
myself as being on equal footing with a prince. But I do feel honored
that I'm not being dismissed out of hand any longer."
"All right, that's
the last of it I'm going to take," Bariden growled, finally fed
up. "If you think you have any complaints against me, get them
said so we can clear the air. I don't like getting sniped at without
having the chance to strike back."
"You're right, I've
been unforgivably rude," she responded immediately in that
neutrally dismissive tone he was beginning to hate. "Just chalk
it up to my being a commoner, and try to overlook it. I'll make the
effort not to presume again."
"Not this time,"
he denied, grabbing her arm as she began to turn away. "You've
already had your last time of getting in the final word by insisting
on dropping the
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79
subject. You've been
snapping at me almost from the first minute we met, and I want to
know why that is. What have I ever done to you?"
"Shall I start with
the way you couldn't be bothered with remembering my name?" she
asked, those dark eyes now flaring at him. "Or is that a point
I'm supposed to have forgotten? Maybe I ought to go with the way I
was supposed to be so very flattered when you finally did notice me
and turned on the charm. Was I supposed to chuckle and enjoy the
attention, feel special because I'd soon be able to number myself
among your hordes of—female acquaintances? Imagine, me drawing
the attention of a prince! How lucky can you get?"
"So that's what's
wrong with you," Bariden said, finally letting her arm go.
"You're one of those reverse snobs. You should have told me, and
then I never would have bothered you."
"How dare you?"
she demanded as this time he began to turn away. "I am not a
snob, and you have no right to call me one. If there's anyone—"
"You're just like all
the rest!" he returned harshly, turning back to look at her with
memory of that other time. "All those oh-so-special Sighted I
met the one time I went to Conclave. 'Dear boy, a princel How quaint
and utterly amusing. Imagine, the boy's & prince. We'll have to
try not to let that make a difference.' You claim to be outraged over
the fact that I didn't remember your name, but isn't that only
because I'm a prince? If an ordinary man had done it, wouldn't you
have forgiven him by now?"
"Why—I—no,
I don't—" She stumbled over the words, her eyes wide and
confused, but Bariden wasn't finished.
"I think the answer
to that is, of course you would have. You would have understood it
wasn't done on purpose, and accepted an offered apology. And as for
my second crime, the one where I found myself attracted to you—that
was obviously a mistake. You see, some years ago I spoke a Spell of
Affinity aimed at women. I wanted to be sure that the woman I
eventually ended up with was someone who wanted me, not just a
prince. When I looked into your eyes and the glow of the spell flared
brighter than ever before, I tet it make me forget the fact that
you're one of them. Now
8O
that you've reminded me,
you can be sure I won't forget again. The first Sighted woman I tried
to get to know will also be my last. Right now I'm going to follow
that road to see if it leads any place useful."
Once again Bariden turned
away from the now silent girl, but not to walk to the road. As angry
as he was a little exercise would have helped to calm him, but just
then he preferred to retain his anger. He spoke a spell to create a
copy of his favorite horse, then walked over to the construct when it
appeared. It was less man the living original would have been,
limited to form and behavior only, but as a mount it was more than
adequate.
He climbed into the saddle
and headed for the road, making no effort to look back to see if the
girl would follow. She wasn't an ordinary girl, after all, she was
Sighted. If a sorceress wasn't capable of taking care of herself in a
place where her magic worked, no one was. There was nothing Bariden
could do for her that she couldn't do for herself, a circumstance
she'd managed to make very clear. And he'd been so worried about
pursuing her in the right way. For him there was no right way, not
even with the help of an Affinity spell. She looked at him the way
those other Sighted had, as if he were a freak, and that was worse
than anything unSighted women did. At least with them his being a
prince meant something positive, and his also being Sighted was
nothing more than unusual.
Bariden brooded for a
while as he rode along, and then he became aware of being followed.
The sound of another set of hooves came behind his mount's along the
road, which undoubtedly meant the girl had called up a horse of her
own. But she rode a few feet back, pacing him rather than trying to
catch up. Well, that was fine, probably even for the best. The less
they had to do with each other, the happier she would undoubtedly be.
When he'd left the meadow
he'd turned left up the road, as far as he could tell heading roughly
west. There had been no real reason to choose that direction rather
than the other, it was just better than standing still while thinking
about it. The landscape hadn't changed from ordinary woods around the
occasional ordinary meadow, but after a couple of miles there was
suddenly a meadow with grazing cattle. Along
TH€ H)DD€M
81
with the herd were three
boys with sticks and two dogs, all of whom were busy watching their
charges.
"There's no fencing,
and that herd looks too big to belong to a single farm or even two
farms," a quiet voice said from behind him to his right. He'd
stopped to look at the cattle, which had obviously given the girl a
chance to move closer. "I'd say we probably aren't far from a
town or city, and that's probably who the herd belongs to. Maybe
someone mere will be able to direct us to a gate."
"That would be
useful," he commented without looking at her, then touched his
heel to his mount to start it moving again. The sooner he got back to
where he'd come from, the sooner he'd also be able to get back to
important concerns.
As they continued along
the road the girl dropped back to the position she'd been in earlier,
which meant the ride for the next few miles was a silent one. After a
while Bariden wondered if he should have responded a little more
warmly to her attempt to start a neutral conversation, but eventually
decided it hadn't been called for. He didn't want any kind of
conversation from the girl, and as soon as he got back he would tell
Master Haddil he intended to work on the mystery alone. He didn't
need any more Sighted partners to—
"What in the name of
chaos—!" he exclaimed. The road had led around a tight and
heavily treed curve, and finally Founding that curve brought a
surprise. The trees ended abruptly no more than fifty yards ahead,
and after that the road ran between two grazing meadows directly to a
large town about a mile away. That part was normal enough, but the
rest—! Crowds of what looked like every man, woman, and child
from the town filled the two meadows, each group standing behind a
solitary figure on a small, raised platform. The two figures wore
long, dark gowns, and beyond the fact that they seemed to be looking
at him and the girl, Bariden could make out no other details.
"Can that welcoming
committee be for us?" Chalaine asked as she moved up again to
ride to his right. "If so, I'm not happy about the only way they
could have known we were coming."
"The enemy,"
Bariden agreed with a nod, watching carefully as they rode nearer to
those two gowned figures. "The
8Q THAROh
only one who could have
known we were coming is the one who caused us to be here. But maybe
this has nothing to do with that."
"Then I'd love to
know what it does have to do with," she muttered before falling
silent again. Bariden echoed that wish silently, but not with the
hope that they'd be able to ride on and never find out. They were
being watched too closely for that, and as they got within ten feet
of the two platform figures, the crowds behind those figures briefly
applauded. For all the worlds as if they were being welcomed to
something ...
"We greet two
travelers on the road to Lovaire," the figure to Bariden's left
suddenly intoned. "Do you come this way with a purpose?"
"Yes, as a matter of
fact we do have a purpose," Bariden allowed, trying to be
cautious. The figure who had spoken was male, with a long white beard
and matching hair, worn above a dark blue gown decorated with moons
and stars and other supposedly mystical symbols. Across the way to
the right was a woman, and although she wore the same sort of gown,
she had black hair with no more than two narrow streaks of white.
Both figures stood very still and tall, and the sternness of their
expressions reminded him of stock characters in a bad play about
magic users.
"And you, girl,"
the woman intoned next, her voice only slightly higher than the
man's. "Do you also ride the road to Lovaire with purpose?"
"Actually, we both
have the same purpose," Chalaine answered, looking the woman up
and down. "Don't you have anything better to do with your time
than stand around asking silly questions? Even if we were just
wandering, our purpose in riding this road would be to continue
wandering. Strange you should miss that, when even a—'guT—
didn't."
Her tone had been so even
and easy, Bariden was taken completely by surprise. Obviously
Chalaine didn't like to be called 'girl,' and didn't mind showing her
displeasure when it happened. Only—damn it, didn't she have
enough sense not to do something like that until they knew what they
were in the middle of? He had the very strong urge to shake her hard,
especially since the two people were
TH€ HIDD€M
83
drawing themselves up even
straighter.
"It would seem, then,
that a challenge has been given and accepted," the man said,
annoyance now heavy in his voice. "It matters not who challenged
and who accepted. Oily the outcome will be of concern, and that is a
foregone conclusion. Now we begin."
"Hold on a minute,"
Bariden said with one hand up, trying to keep trouble from starting.
He was a firm believer in defending himself if attacked, but things
got complicated when the person he was with instigated that attack.
"Wouldn't it be better if we talked about this first?"
Rather than answering in
words, the male figure raised both arms and muttered into his beard.
Bariden had enough time to see mat the woman was doing the same
without the beard, and then he was covered with all sorts of insects
and worms, flying, crawling, slimy, and trying to sting or bite.
Surprise and disgust made him immediately start to brush and slap at
the things, but that did no good at all. In desperation he tried a
banishing gesture, but that was just as useless. By then the things
were attacking his eyes, and trying to crawl into his nose and mouth.
He had no idea what he could possibly do next, short of destroying
the man in the white beard—
And then Chalaine spoke a
brief spell, and the things were gone as quickly as they'd appeared.
Bariden coughed while he tried to calm his mount; the horse construct
hadn't been bothered, but his rider's thrashing around in the saddle
had turned the beast skittish. A glance at the bearded man showed him
looking annoyed, but before any words came Chalaine spoke up.
"Now he and I are
both warded," she said, apparently addressing the woman as well
as the man. "Since your illusions will be useless from here on,
you ought to consider giving it up. If we have to suggest that again,
it won't be in words."
"That, young woman,
was magic, not illusion," the man returned coldly. "If you
don't know the difference, we'll soon teach it to you. Whatever
trickery you used to avoid the first lesson won't continue to protect
you for long."
He raised his arms for the
second time, and again the woman across the road did the same. The
people in the
84
9HAROM GR€€M
crowds were watching
almost breathlessly, some of them pointing and whispering to each
other. Bariden-could see food and drink sellers moving here and
there, their trays of wares suspended by straps over their shoulders.
If there had been tents, he would have sworn it was a fair...
"You warded me?"
he said low to the girl. "What made you think that would do it?"
"This time the attack
worked against you, but not against me." Her voice was just as
low, and for some reason she looked almost embarrassed. "When I
saw you trying to banish those things and not being able to do it, I
was sure they were illusions that warding would block. I'll remove it
again as soon as they finish with their—lessons."
Bariden nodded without
saying anything else, most of his attention on the robed and
gesturing two. They were still muttering what should have been
spells, but nothing was happening. Considering everything it was
possible to do even if someone was warded, he didn't understand that
He waited another pair of moments, and when mere was still nothing
happening he decided to ask the question out loud,
"Excuse me, but my
companion and I would like to know what you think you're doing,"
he said, turning his head briefly to include the woman in on the
question. "We didn't come here to sit and watch you wave your
arms in the air."
Everyone in hearing drew
in their breath in shock, a vocal reflection of the fury the man
showed. The woman, on the other hand, looked frustrated and faintly
frightened, which still told him nothing.
"Whatever it is you
hide behind guards your puny selves well," the man spat, his
anger all but regal. "But as we cannot touch you, so will you
find it impossible to touch us. In this instance, a draw is a victory
for our side."
"That doesn't
necessarily follow," Chalaine said mildly into the man's sudden
smirk. "And if this is a contest of some sort, we should be
getting a turn. Do we have to wait for some kind of signal, or are we
just supposed to go ahead and do it?"
"Chalaine,"
Bariden began, trying to keep her from starting something again, but
the attempt was too late.
THG
85
"Ignorant girl!"
the bearded man laughed. "Those who can, do without let. Those
who cannot, pretend to await permission. Need we ask which you are?"
"No need to ask,"
Chalaine responded immediately with a smile. "I'll be more than
happy to show you."
"Chalaine, wait,"
Bariden tried, but once again he might as well have been talking to
himself. She raised her right hand to point as she spoke a short
spell, and the wooden platform the man stood on obligingly
disappeared. He went down the four feet to the ground with a mump and
a yell, sprawling like a bearded sack of oats. The crowd immediately
erupted into laughter and cheering, and when Bariden glanced to the
other platform, it was to find it already abandoned.
"The woman took off
before I could make it her turn," Chalaine said over the crowd
noise when she saw the direction of his glance. "I love the
bully-follower mentality even more than that of the actual bully.
She's lucky she did leave."
"I wonder how lucky
we'll be," Bariden said, abruptly seeing the group of
official-looking people making their way through the crowd around the
bearded man. Some of them were richly dressed, but the larger number
wore what had to be guardsmen's uniforms. "If we get out of this
without being lynched, remind me to have a good long talk with you.
The topic of conversation will be, 'The better part of valor.* "
Bariden was sure she could
see how annoyed he was, but she didn't get the chance to argue or
protest or even to apologize. That group of people had reached the
roadside to his left, and it was them he had to pay attention to. Of
the four men who were well dressed, one stood alone in front while
the other three bowed.
"We offer the
greetings of Her Majesty Queen Lova, ruler of the city and realm of
Lovaire," the first man said with a polite bow of his own. "The
queen sends her congratulations on having won the yearly contest for
magicians, and bids the winners feast with her in the palace. The
privilege of leading you there is ours."
"Just a moment,"
Bariden said as the man turned to signal that horses be brought up.
"We didn't know this was a
86
contest for magicians, and
we aren't legitimate entrants. We happened along by accident, and
simply defended ourselves. We're looking for directions to the
nearest gate."
"Gate?" the man
echoed, while those behind him glanced at each other blankly. "Do
you mean the gate to the city? There are other, smaller gates inside,
of course, but—I can see that isn't what you mean. Can you
describe what you're looking for?"
"No," Bariden
said with a sigh. "At least not to anyone who isn't Sighted.
What about—" He looked immediately toward the bearded man
Chalaine had dropped to the ground, but he wasn't there any longer.
Like the woman, he'd disappeared into the crowd. Great. "What
about the man with the long white beard? If we could speak to him for
a couple of minutes, or anyone else who's a— magician ..."
"I'm afraid Am well
won't be appearing in public for a while," the spokesman said
with the headshake that had made Bariden's words trail off. "This
is the first time in five years he hasn't won the contest, and
humiliation will certainly keep him out of people's sight for a time.
He hasn't been very popular, you understand, not like the previous
holder of the office. I'm sure the lovely young lady will do much
better along those lines."
"The lovely young
lady doesn't qualify for this contest any more than I do,"
Bariden said as the man beamed at a startled Chalaine. "We
haven't been at magician level for years, so you'll just have to hold
your contest again. We offer our apologies for intruding, but we
really can't stay. There are extremely important matters waiting for
us back home."
"I'm sure there are,
but none of us can direct you to this— gate—you're
seeking," the man replied smoothly, tugging at the sleeve of his
brocade coat. "If you'll accept the queen's hospitality for just
a short while, we'll make every attempt to locate someone who can
help you. Amwell's apprentice, for instance, might be less difficult
to find ..."
This time it was the man
who let his words trail off, giving Bariden the chance to understand
he had no choice. It would be easier finding someone Sighted in the
city man at random in the countryside, and if they refused the
queen's
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87
invitation they might be
barred from the city. He didn't like the idea of having to go along
with even part of that game they'd stepped into, but there really was
no other choice.
"We thank you for the
offer of hospitality," he said at last, giving in as graciously
as possible. "And also for whatever assistance you can give to
help us on our way. The lives of innocent people could well depend on
our speedy return."
"The pleasure will be
ours, sir," the man answered with another bow. "I'm Nalkin.
the queen's Privy Aide. If you'll both follow me?"
This time die horses were
gestured over and mounted, and they began to make a procession toward
the city. The people in the crowds applauded and shouted and waved
things, but Bariden's glance at Chalaine said she wasn't seeing any
of it. The girl seemed lost in disturbing thought, possibly realizing
at last the full extent of what she might have gotten them into. If
she didn't, he'd certainly point it out when they had their little
talk ...
The ride to the city and
through it to the palace didn't take very long, and then we were
shown to guest quarters. Two of Nalkin's people took Prince Bariden
one way, while Nalkin and the fourth took me another. The guard
escort was left mostly outside the palace altogether, but there were
enough like them inside to keep the halls from looking empty. Nalkin
told me to ring for a servant if I wanted anything at all, and he
would be back to let me know what time I would be presented to the
queen. Then he and his friend bowed and left, finally giving me a
chance to be alone with my thoughts.
The apartment I'd been
given was a large one with other rooms leading off through arches
from the first, but I did no more than glance around before sitting
in a large, comfortable chair done in thick-napped white velvet. I'd
been doing a lot of thinking lately, but that wasn't to say I had
everything nicely worked out. I'd really put my foot in it, and this
time there was no one but myself to blame, not even bad luck.
I spoke a spell that gave
me a large cup of coffee, the refilling sort, then sat back with a
sigh. The argument Prince
88
Bariden and I had had
after coming through to that world—I could still hear him
calling me a snob, one of them, making me feel as though I'd helped
to beat up on someone who couldn't fight back. I now knew why he
never went to Conclave, or had bothered to learn the spells for
entries. Since he lived in the world he'd been bom into, he didn't
feel the need to search for one of his own. Or one where he'd be
likely to find other Sighted. The Sighted had hurt him badly, and he
had no desire to go looking for more of the same.
But he'd broken that rule
for me, and I'd responded by treating him just as badly as those
overblown idiots he'd met on his one visit to Conclave. He had been
wrong, though, in thinking I would have been understanding about his
forgetting my name if he hadn't been a prince. That sort of thing had
happened to me too many times with other men for me to laugh lightly
and dismiss it, but there had been no need to be that nasty.
I sipped at the coffee as
I crossed my booted ankles, determined not to get up and pace. I'd
spent the entire ride from the entry feeling horribly guilty, and my
one lame attempt to start a normal conversation hadn't worked. With
all that weighing on me it hadn't been hard to jump down the throat
of the first person to say the wrong thing, and that first person had
been the female magician-apprentice. Naturally, the jumping had just
made things worse, but before I could regret what I'd said, that fool
with the beard had sent his illusions after Bariden . . .
"Which, of course,
made me jump immediately to Bariden's defense," I muttered to
the coffee. "It's ridiculous to think the man needs me to
protect him, but I couldn't stand hearing him insulted. He just sat
there taking nonsense and abuse from the bearded fool, and I couldn't
stand it. I had to do something, so I made the fool look ridiculous."
But Bariden hadn't
appreciated that any more than anything else I'd done, not if his
promise about "having a long talk" meant what that sort of
thing usually did. I'd obviously put my foot in it yet again, but
then he'd done something that had distracted me from the guilt. In
the conversation with Nalkin he'd done all the talking and made all
the
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89
decisions, just as though
I wasn't there—or wasn't bright enough to be consulted.
I took another swallow of
coffee, aware of how strange annoyance on top of guilt felt. Or maybe
it was anger instead, I couldn't quite decide. Another memory that
kept bothering me and interfering was the one about the spell Bariden
had mentioned, the Spell of Affinity. Those things were supposed to
be really reliable when used properly, but that was also the problem
with them. Being told there's an affinity between you and the person
you're looking at only helps to increase your interest, not the
affinity itself. If you've gotten no more than a minimal glow,
chances are that's all you'll get. And telling minimal from best
possible is a matter of comparison. If most of the people you meet
show only a faint flicker, the first one to show up who could be a
fairly good friend looks in comparison like a sun flare ...
Which had to be what had
happened in my case. The man saw a stronger glow, one that said we
could conceivably become friends, and immediately jumped to the wrong
conclusion. He was looking for a woman he could trust enough to love,
but that wasn't likely to be me. I'd * always considered the idea of
royalty silly, the custom of If royal offspring even sillier. I mean,
if all you have to do to gain a title is be born, how important can
that title really be considered? Not to mention the fact that no one
like that could possibly find someone like me of interest...
"So there you are."
I looked up at the words to see Bariden coming in, through the door
left open by Nalkin. '- "Since we have the privacy here, we can
use it on that talk I mentioned earlier. You do remember what I
said?"
"I remember," I
conceded quietly, hating that all-business ". distance in his
voice. From what he'd said we could have been friends, but I'd ruined
the chance of that. So much for reacting by reflex instead of with
thought. Chalaine* you're a real winner. Action and reaction and
reaction and reaction.
"Good," he said,
taking a blue velvet chair near mine. "Then let's get right to
it. Do you have any idea what kind of trouble we might have now, and
all because you let your temper get the best of you? What do we do if
the queen
9O
9HARON
decides you now have to
take the place of that Arnwell? You did defeat him, so you might be
required to take up his duties. Do you think we can spend a year here
and not have it matter?"
"It would be more man
a year," I muttered to the coffee in my cup. "Arnwell went
undefeated for five years, which has to mean he was the strongest
around. I don't understand how that can be, but not understanding
doesn't change the fact that it is. Even if they held a competition
daily, it isn't likely someone better than magician level would ever
show up."
"That makes it even
better," he said, the anger in his tone gaining strength. "I'm
delighted to see that you're back to being analytical, but that
doesn't solve the problem. Since we aren't likely to find a gate very
soon without the help of these people, what do you suggest we do
next? Refuse to cooperate and forget about the gate, or agree to
cooperate, find out where a gate is, and then ignore it? Since you're
the one who got us into this, the choice ought to be yours as well."
I couldn't help noticing
that he hadn't listed lying and then running out as one of our
options, but that wasn't surprising. I had a feeling his word was
important to him, just as mine was to me. He was right about the
possibility of there being a problem, but the solution wasn't as
involved as he thought.
"Since I'm the one
who got us into this, I'm the one who'll get us out," I said to
the coffee. "If I have to give my word about staying here I'll
do it, and that will leave you free to use the gate. No sense in both
of us paying for what only one of us did, and I'm not likely to be
missed. And it isn't as if we were going to continue being partners."
"No, it isn't,"
he agreed after a very short pause, some of the edge gone from his
words. "But that has nothing to do with the fact that I'm not
about to leave you here. I don't believe in running out on people,
not even ones who don't think much of me. When we leave we'll be
leaving together, just the way we arrived." There was another
pause, this time a longer one, and then he said, "What did you
mean, that no one would miss you? Everyone has someone who would miss
them."
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91
"It isn't important,"
I answered with a shrug, shifting a little in the chair. "I
spend so much time alone, I suppose I've gotten into the habit of
thinking—Well, it really isn't important."
"I see," he said
after another moment, and then there was nothing. I felt so terrible
I wished he would leave, but couldn't manage to make the request
vocal. It seemed I was destined to do something wrong no matter what
I was involved in, and destiny isn't often comfortable or easy to
endure. There had been such hostility in his voice, and I'd earned
every bit of it.
"Look, I may have
been a bit too—intense—during those words we exchanged
after coming through the gate," he said at last. "I didn't
mean to make it seem like the end of the worlds, so there's no sense
in taking it like that. We got into this together, and we'll get out
of it the same way. All I ask is that you give me the chance to
smooth things over, without getting upset and doing something to make
them worse. I have a lot of experience in dealing with the people
around my father's court. There's not much sense in wasting it, is
there?"
I shook my head to agree
there wasn't, which was the best I could do. So he hadn't been
ignoring me during his conversation with Nalkin, he'd just been
trying to smooth things over before I could make them worse. That
wasn't hard to understand, in fact it was downright easy. If there
was one thing I could be counted on for, it was to make things worse.
"You know, it's just
come to me that we've been on the go for quite a while," he
said, now trying to sound encouraging. "The problem with moving
from world to world is that you think you should still be going
strong if evening hasn't come yet. We left evening behind when we
came through the entry, but we couldn't do the same with tiredness.
Why don't you get some rest while I do the same in my own apartment,
and we'll talk again later, after the feast."
This time I nodded, but I
still couldn't bring myself to look at him. For once his hesitation
didn't last very long; after a very brief moment he got up, and then
his footsteps were taking him out of the apartment. I waited until
the
door was closed, then
banished my coffee cup and went to look for a bed to lie down on.
Anything to keep from having to live with my thoughts any longer ...
Bariden closed the door to
Chalaine's apartment behind him, then just stood there for a moment
rubbing his eyes. When he'd first arrived he'd been all ready for a
fight, and that had left him totally unprepared for what he'd found
instead. He'd all but shouted at the girl and had blamed her for
everything that had happened—and all she'd done was agree with
him. She'd even tried to take the responsibility for getting
them—him—out of there again, and he was certain she
hadn't made the offer without really meaning it.
And the pain! When he'd
finally calmed down enough to notice, the pain and self-recrimination
she all but radiated had almost knocked him over. She hadn't waited
for him to blame her for what had happened, she'd already blamed
herself and had accepted the responsibility. Just as if things might
not have gone better if he hadn't been quite so patient with the
bearded and arrogant Arnwell...
"And not once did she
try to apologize for anything said between us," he muttered.
That point bothered him most of all, and not because he thought it
meant she had no regrets. Added to the fact that she hadn't once
looked straight at him, he was convinced she thought what had passed
between them was beyond apology. She'd often failed to look directly
at him, but not with such complete misery ...
Bariden sighed as he began
to walk back to his own apartment. He hadn't known it at the time,
but it looked like he'd made a bad mistake saying what he had to her.
She acted as if she were always blamed for things, and had long since
stopped arguing the accusations with a trace of truth, and simply
accepted and believed them. He'd called her a snob, and one of them,
and everything he'd felt toward those hateful people had spilled out
over her. And all she'd done was be angry over his having forgotten
her name—
"Damn," he
muttered, the idea suddenly coming to him. Was it possible he wasn't
the first to do that, or even the second or third? What would it do
to a bright, attractive woman, to have people constantly telling her
she wasn't
HIDDEN
93
important enough to be
remembered? She was so quiet and withdrawn, lots of people must have
found it impossible to do anything but overlook her. She was quiet
because people ignored her, and people ignored her because she was
quiet. Talk about reinforcing the bars of a prison . . .
Well, that tore it all the
way. He'd misjudged everything about the girl, even the point of how
badly he'd insulted her. He wondered how long it had taken her to
come around to being able to feel insult over that sort of treatment.
It had probably been years, and then he'd gone ahead and ruined it
all by Warning her for doing it. He'd proven she was wrong about why
he'd shown interest in her, and in her eyes that had made everything
she'd done wrong.
Bariden reached his rooms
in one of the blackest moods he'd ever experienced, and every bit of
his anger was aimed at himself. He closed the door behind him quietly
enough, but if he'd been anywhere else he would have slammed it off
its hinges. He'd started out determined to court a girl he'd made a
blunder with, and had somehow ended up doing little short of slapping
her in the face. It was hard to understand how he could have been
such a fool, such a clubfooted and club-mouthed idiot. He'd probably
ruined any chance there had been of something developing between
them, but it wasn't possible to simply shrug and forget it. His first
concern had to be the matter of getting them both out of that place
without starting a war, but his very next priority .. . right after
finding the way home ...
CHAPTER
I followed the servant
along the hall, feeling only slightly better after die nap I'd had.
I'd also had a bath and had produced some party clothes to wear, and
one of the girl servants had even shown up to brush my hair. Nalkin
hadn't had anyone wake me up to see the queen, because the queen had
decided to give me a few private minutes before the feast. I was
trying to work myself up to the point of feeling honored, but the
best I could do was wish I was home again. All alone on my own world,
with no one around to hurt or mess up...
"By the Diamond
Realm, will you look at you" a voice came, one I unfortunately
recognized immediately. "Chalaine, that must be one of the most
beautiful gowns I've ever seen, and you look incredible in it That
electric blue does the most wonderful things to your hair."
By then he was standing in
front of me, possibly still looking me over. From what I could see
he'd called up his own finery, including a dark blue wide-sleeved
silk tunic, cream-colored leather breeches and matching boots, a
jeweled swordbelt, and a golden medallion to brighten up the dark
silk tunic. I wore silver with my gown, earrings, necklace, and
shoes, and not just because I like silver better than gold. Ever
since I'd awakened, I'd had the strangest feeling about the things
that were happening to us ...
"Since we're both
going to the same place, I insist on being a proper escort," he
said, moving to my right to take my arm. He wrapped it around his own
arm which put
94
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his sword between us, and
then patted my hand. "We're ready to continue on now," he
said to the two servants, the unfamiliar one obviously having been
his. "Lead the way, and we're right behind you."
Our procession got under
way again, but I was too uncomfortable to do more than notice that in
passing. I had no idea what Bariden was doing, or why he was doing
it. Couldn't he understand that the less contact we had before we
parted, the happier I would be?
"Have I mentioned how
wonderful your hair looks brushed out loose like that?" he
murmured, fractionally tightening his hold on my hand. I'd tried to
slide my arm free of his, but he didn't seem to want me to do that.
"I've wondered how that auburn glory would look unbraided almost
from the first moment we met, and now I finally know. The wait was
worth it."
I held up the rather full
skirt of my gown with my left hand, certain I could hear a really
attractive grin in his voice. Under other circumstances I would have
commented mat it was getting kind of deep in that hall, but Bariden's
purpose in saying what he had couldn't possibly be the usual one. It
could be he was trying to show me what it might have been like if I
hadn't ruined things, but that seemed a bit much. No, most likely he
was trying to keep things going on a friendly basis until we got out
of there, pretending we were still partners. Which, of course, we
weren't.
"If there's dancing
at the feast later, I claim the first one with you," he said
next. "I haven't danced in a while, so I hope you'll forgive me
if I'm rusty. I'm sure you'll be much better, and—you do dance,
don't you?"
"Yes, I dance,"
I answered with a sigh. If friendly was what he wanted right then,
that's what he'd get. "I wonder how long it will take to find a
Sighted who knows where a gate is."
"It shouldn't be too
long, so we'll have to be patient," he murmured back. "Just
remember that the aim is to get both of us out of here, so don't be
too quick to promise things. And if discussions are necessary, try to
leave them to me. A good part of my education covered all the ways
it's possible to say things without committing to anything at all."
96
WARON
"Diplomacy on the
highest levels," I murmured back, deciding I needed to listen to
something like that. I had no interest in learning how to do it, but
knowing how it's done can help to keep it from being done to you.
Bariden made a sound of
agreement, but didn't say anything else. We'd moved into an area of
the palace that had more guardsmen stationed along the hall than any
other part we'd seen, which probably meant we were getting close to
the queen. Why she needed so many guardsmen I had no idea, especially
since Bariden's father made do with a good deal fewer. She might have
been in the middle of some sort of problem, and if so we'd probably
be hearing about it in just a few minutes.
Our guides turned a
corner, and when we followed we saw a set of ornate doors at the end
of the relatively short hall. In addition to the guardsmen to either
side of the hall, there were four more and a squad leader positioned
directly in front of the doors. When the squad leader saw us coming
he turned to speak to his men, and by the time we reached them they
were out of the way. Our two guides each opened a door, men stood
still to bow us past them.
A new guide was waiting
just a few steps away to take over, but this time it was someone we
knew. Nalkin was absolutely resplendent in plum-colored velvet
kneepants and coat, lacy white silk shirt and white silk hose,
gold-buckled, plum-colored leather shoes, and a heavy gold necklace.
The room was L-shaped with the shorter leg nearest the doors we'd
come in by, and once those doors had been closed behind us Nalkin
gestured us forward.
"Her Majesty is
waiting to meet you," he said softly when we reached him,
glancing toward the part of the room we couldn't yet see. There was
carpeting on the floor and silk drapes and a large mirror on the long
left-hand wall, but aside from that and a few lamps, the entry area
was unfurnished. "Do you need to be told the proper protocol
when being presented to royalty?"
"If it's standard
protocol, no," Bariden answered for us. "If Queen Lova
requires something special, you'll have to tell us what it is."
"The queen isn't one
for a lot of pomp and ceremony," Nalkin answered with a smile.
"A simple bow and curtsy
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will do when you're
presented, and if she wants anything else she'll tell you herself.
But don't worry about being imposed upon. What Her Majesty wants is
never an imposition. Follow me."
He turned and straightened
his coat before walking slowly toward the place where the rest of the
room would be visible, and Bariden and I exchanged glances behind his
back. What he'd said about the queen raised more questions than it
answered, most especially since Nalkin had looked only at Bariden
when he'd made his comments. It didn't take a genius to figure out
the most likely thing that Bariden would not find to be an
imposition, but there was no sense in jumping to conclusions.
Besides, Bariden was old enough to make his own decisions about
things like that. Even if we had become friends, it would still have
been none of my business.
"Your majesty, allow
me to present the Lady Chalaine and the Lord Bariden," Nalkin
announced from where he'd stopped to bow. "The lady defeated
Arnwell the magician in today's competition, and the lord accompanies
her. My lord and lady, step forward into the presence of Her Majesty
Queen Lova II of Lovaire."
Bariden and I moved
forward with that, and when we reached Nalkin's side we stopped to
bow and curtsy. Bariden's courtly bow bent him all the way forward,
so I was the first to get a good look at the queen. Since I like to
tell the truth whenever possible, I'll have to admit it was all I
could do not to stare.
Queen Lova sat in a fancy
chair that wasn't quite a throne, which stood on a two-step platform
that wasn't quite a dais. Her incredible gown was white silk and
lace, and diamonds glittered at her ears and throat and on three of
her fingers. Her hair was a bright, flaming red, worn long and loose
and topped with a slender, stylized crown of diamonds. Her face—how
do you describe a woman who turns every other woman no more than
pretty by comparison? Radiantly lovely? Unbelievably beautiful?
Inconsiderately unfair?
I knew it immediately when
Bariden got his first good look at her. The arm under my hand
stiffened, as though all of him was suddenly tightly braced against
involuntary
action. A glance at bis
face showed it expressionless, another dead giveaway. He stared at
die queen as though she were nothing more than another living
organism, but mat had to be his high diplomatic training at work.
"We welcome you both
to Our Court," Queen Lova said with a dazzling smile, her light
and beautiful voice a perfect match to the rest of her. "We also
offer Our congratulations to you, Lady Chalaine, for finding it
possible to defeat Arnwell. He was our Court Magician, but considered
the position more an excuse to take advantage of others man a
responsibility or duty to me right. You have Our thanks for ridding
Us of him."
A light pattering of
applause came after that, showing there were other people in the
room. Considering what the queen was like, it wasn't surprising
they'd gone unnoticed till then.
"We have been
considering means other man mere words to thank you for so valuable a
service," the queen continued, still smiling at me. "That
will require a private discussion between us, which we will certainly
have in the very near future. For tonight we need concern ourselves
with no more than feasting and merrymaking, which is just as it
should be. Lady Chalaine, We ask that you allow Lord Wimail to escort
you into the feasting hall, and now you may all retire."
There was a lot of bowing
and curtsying as the queen stood up after dismissing everyone.
Considering Nalkin's earlier hints I was surprised she hadn't said
even a single word to Bariden, and I got the feeling he looked at it
the same. The nonexpression on his face had turned peculiar, but then
I forgot about it as we were joined by someone else.
"Lady Chalaine,"
the man said with a smile and a bow. "I'm Wimail, and I've been
given the honor of escorting you to table. Allow me to offer my arm."
He was a fairly tall man
with dark hair and gray eyes, a man who was handsome and knew it. He
wore a green velvet vest, tight brocade trousers, green leather
boots, and a frilly gray silk shirt. He also wore a sword, but it was
hard to tell how much use the weapon had had behind all the gold and
silver and jewels.
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"And I'm Bariden,"
my former escort announced before I could take the offered arm of his
replacement. "I know customs differ from place to place, but
where I come from a man asks leave of a lady's companion before
trying to walk her away from him. Even if he's been told to do so by
his queen. That custom isn't observed here?"
"Only by the
pitifully uninformed," Wimail responded coolly, looking Bariden
up and down. "Since it's obvious no one has told you, allow me
to do the honors. I'm the one who usually escorts the queen to table,
which means you're expected to take my place even as I'm taking
yours. While you stand here telling me about quaint customs in
faraway places, Her Majesty stands unattended and unescorted. But
perhaps that's another custom from wherever it is you come, the
custom of ignoring queens."
"No, it's usually the
ill-mannered we ignore," Bariden responded, but more to me man
to a suddenly invisible-to-him Wimail. "Chalaine, I'll have to
ask you to excuse me. I've just learned there's a duty I'm expected
to perform, but I'll see you later. Think about what we discussed
earlier."
He gave me a proper and
unhurried bow before turning and walking away, heading toward a Queen
Lova who wasn't quite as unattended as Wimail had suggested. Most of
the men in the room were trying to get her attention, an effort
completely beyond understanding. After all, why would a man want to
be noticed by a woman who made other women look as attractive as tax
collectors?
"What a relief,"
Wimail said from my right. "As long as he took to leave, you'd
think he was being asked to attend someone's maiden aunt. As soon as
he gets around to escorting the queen into the feasting hall, you and
I will follow immediately. It's still my place to take the opposite
end of the table from her, and you'll be seated to my right."
I couldn't help noticing
that he hadn't glanced at me once while making that speech, which was
actually a great relief. I wouldn't have enjoyed fending off the
attentions of a man engaged in pouting over having been traded by the
queen for someone else. He seemed to think the substitution wasn't
likely to last long, and was therefore more annoyed than worried. For
myself I was already getting bored, not to
too
9HARON
mention hungry. If we
weren't given access to the food pretty soon, I'd have to supply my
own snack.
With nothing else to do, I
watched Bariden approach the queen. The men around her gave ground
reluctantly, stepping back only because they had no choice. When he
reached her he bowed and then said something, and she responded with
a dazzling smile. I wondered what he'd said, which made me toy with
the idea of speaking a spell that would let me hear their
conversation, then decided against it. What they said to each other
was none of my business, and I was supposed to be thinking about what
he and I had discussed earlier. I wasn't sure if that was supposed to
mean my not promising anything and letting him do all the talking, or
what he'd said about how I looked. After all, it could have been
either ... Sure it could.
There was only another
minute or so of small talk, and then the queen, on Bariden's arm, led
the way toward the double doors that were to the right of where she'd
been sitting. She was a tall, graceful woman who looked perfectly at
home on the arm of a strong, handsome man, and I had a feeling Wimail
was thinking the same. The second offer of his own arm was somewhat
less than courtly, and then we were all but hurrying after the
perfect couple in the lead. Servants opened the doors as they
approached, and the feast was finally and officially under way.
The dining room we entered
was enormous, and was already filled with what seemed like hundreds
of people. One very long table, glitteringly set, stood empty in the
middle of the room, but all the rest around it were filled. The
others were smaller tables, each holding no more than twelve people,
but were almost as richly set. When the queen entered everyone
sitting down stood up, and those already standing turned. Along with
the serving people they all bowed or curtsied, and I could feel
Wimail eating it up and just about expanding. Obviously when he
walked with or near the queen, he could pretend all that bowing and
scraping was directed toward him.
A gigantic crystal
chandelier hung over the middle of our table, its scores of candles
making sure everything put in front of us would be well illuminated.
Wimail seated me, then took his own place to my left at his end of
the table.
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Bariden had already seated
the queen, of course, and other men were doing the same for other
women before finding their own places. I'd always wondered why women
were supposed to be incapable of sitting down all by themselves, and
had never found anyone able to supply a definite reason. I might have
asked Wimail, but he'd started a languid conversation with the woman
to his left, who obviously admired him enormously, and it wouldn't
have done to interrupt.
"Some people are
endlessly fascinated by those who worship and adore them," a
soft voice murmured on my right. 'Trying to break into that
fascination doesn't pay, not when you stop to realize what you'll
have even if you happen to succeed."
I turned my head to look
at the man, who had gotten himself seated without my noticing. His
amused green eyes looked only at me, but mere was no doubt he'd been
talking about Wimail and the woman to his left. This man's hair was
very dark, probably black, and it was hard to understand why the
queen would have bothered with Wimail with him available. Handsome
was too mild a word, and standing up he would have been Bariden's
size.
"I, on the other
hand," the man continued, "prefer to exchange worship and
adoration. One-way worship ends up being boring no matter which side
you're on, but I haven't yet found a proper partner. I'm Lord
Naesery, by the way, and I already know you're the Lady Chalaine."
"Just Chalaine,
without the lady," I told Naesery with a smile he seemed to
deserve. "Where I come from, the single name has more
significance than almost any title could add. Not that there's
anything insignificant about a title. I mean—"
"No, no, it's quite
all right," he said with a laugh when I began to trip over my
own feet, the smile forgotten. "I know you were referring to
yourself, not to me. But even if you Had meant me, I wouldn't have
been offended. The truth of the matter is, I did nothing at all to
earn the title of lord. What fuss can you honestly make over a title
that wasn't earned?"
It was amazing to discover
that he felt the way I did, especially since he had the title. A
servant came by to
1OQ
fill our wineglasses,
offering a choice of yellow or white, which occupied us for the next
couple of minutes. Once the servant moved on it was time for a
subject-change in our previous conversation, and I knew just the one
I wanted to try.
"Tell me, Lord
Naesery," I said as he leaned back toward me. "Why is it so
many men indulge in this seating-of-women thing? Are we supposed to
be helpless, or do men just want us to believe we are?"
"Dear girl, the
proper answer is neither," he responded with a grin. "A man
would be an idiot to consider a woman like you, for instance,
helpless, but he still enjoys seating her. In general, it makes him
feel good to do things for a woman he finds attractive, even so small
a thing as that. It makes him feel like a man worthy of such a woman,
rather than like a lout coming begging with hat in hand. Or like a
thief, coming to steal what doesn't belong to him. It satisfies his
sense of the proper, without any belittling reflection on the object
of his solicitude. And I think I should add that my previous comments
cover just about every man but Wimail."
"I take it you don't
think much of him," I said with a laugh I couldn't hold back.
"Would I be prying if I asked why?"
"To be truthful, it's
mostly a personal and irrational dislike," he admitted with a
shrug. "I have this old-fashioned and narrow-minded view of what
a man's behavior should be like. If he decides to pair off with a
woman, for instance, it ought to disturb him that she makes a regular
habit of— entertaining—other men. He ought to have enough
pride to bow politely and walk away, leaving her to her multitude of
dalliances. To merely step aside each time and then go hurrying back
when she's through—it makes one think of a lapdog, and
distantly paints all men as shallow beasts without a trace of heart.
Aside from that and the fact the man has no personality or
intelligence, I have very little against him."
"Well, that's a
relief," I said with a grin of my own. "For a minute there
I thought you might not like him. Since I've started with intrusive
questions, I might as well add another—which you certainly
don't have to answer if
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you don't care to. Were
you one of those that particular— woman—dallied with?"
"I was supposed to
be," he answered with no self-consciousness or false modesty or
even self-righteousness. For such a young and attractive man, he had
the presence and ease of someone decades older. I might have
suspected he was a sorcerer or wizard who had simply changed his
appearance to one much younger than his chronological age, but
Naesery wasn't Sighted. Since it's impossible for someone of power to
hide it from someone else who's the same, I knew that as a fact.
"I was supposed to
be, but I declined the honor," he said, the words going the
least bit dry. "I've never been one to take a number and stand
in line, not even for fame and riches. I suppose it's just a basic
dislike of having my elbows jostled—or of command performances.
Are you wondering if your—companion will share the dislike? But
he hasn't been here long enough to learn about the lines, has he?"
"We had a small hint
before we were presented," I said, realizing I couldn't refuse
to answer a countering intrusive question. "But no, I wasn't
wondering that about my— companion. What he does is his
business, and none of mine. We barely know each other, and once we
get home we'll be going our separate ways."
"But in the meantime
you travel together," Naesery said, tills time musingly, those
strange green eyes considering me thoughtfully. "If I'd been
asked to bet on it, I would have thought he was bright enough to see
the riches under his nose. I'd love to ask what's wrong with him, but
1*11 ask instead how soon you expect you'll be free to leave. Unless
I'm completely mistaken, the queen has plans that include your
remaining here."
"It was highly
unlikely that she wouldn't," I replied with a sigh, not very
happy to have the possibility confirmed. "I'll just have to make
her understand that I wasn't trying to win her competition, and I'm
not free to give my time away as I please. Since the mistake was mine
I was willing to stay here and try to fix it, but I can't consider
that an option now. Bariden said he won't leave without me, and at
least one of us has got to get back."
1O4
9HAROM GR€€M
"Well, I'm glad to
see the man has some sense," Naesery said, faintly put out. "Any
man who would leave a woman behind is no man at all. Especially when
the woman is one like you. But if getting home is so important, why
aren't the two of you on the road there right now?"
"We would be, if we
knew where the proper road was," I said, leaning back to let
another servant put a small plate of cold fish and sauce in front of
me. Once we were both served I added, "What we need is something
called a gate, but to find it we'll also need someone like Amwell,
the former chief magician or whatever. Even his associate would do,
if she happens to be familiar with the countryside. Without help, it
could take us years to find one."
"Unfortunately,
Arnwell isn't likely to be available for a while," he replied,
picking up a fork with an even more thoughtful look. "He'll hide
out somewhere to lick his wounds, and if his apprentice hasn't
already found him, she certainly will shortly. Neither of them were
particularly popular, so they're probably in a place no one knows
about."
"If nothing else
turns up, tomorrow I might have to try to track them," I said,
lifting my own fork. "Assuming, of course, that the queen
doesn't have any violent objections. If she does, well, it could get
tricky."
We each gave our attention
to the food then, and it was really quite tasty. There isn't much you
can do with plain, cold fish other than supply a superior sauce, but
in this case the sauce was only a little above average. I could have
used magic to change it to something really worth eating, but that
sort of thing is tacky when you're someone's guest. There wasn't so
much that I couldn't finish it without trouble, so I forgot about
superior sauces and did just that. When I finished I noticed that
Naesery had done the same first, and was waiting to resume our
conversation.
"You know, I'm fairly
familiar with the countryside around here," he said as soon as I
put the fork down. "If you'd like to describe this gate you're
looking for, I might be able to tell you where it is."
"The gate we need
looks like a brilliant slit in the middle of the air, at least from a
distance," I responded with a smile. "If you're with
someone Sighted, when you get
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closer the slit expands
into a glowing curtain of light and that's your gate. If you're not
with someone Sighted, the slit stays just as it is and you don't even
know it's there. All you know is that you're uncomfortable in the
area, and can't bear to hang around even a little while. I appreciate
the offer of help, Naesery, but through no fault of your own you're
not equipped to supply it."
"I appreciate the
qualification, but the lack still smarts," he answered wryly. "I
find I'd very much like to be of help to you, you see, even if that
help takes you somewhere I can't follow. I enjoy the sight of your
smile too much to want to see it disappear, so I'll do some checking
around. If there's anyone capable of seeing that gate who has seen
it, I'll let you know at once."
At that point we were
interrupted again, by one servant taking away the remnants of the
fish, and two others with a cart offering a choice of four soups.
Naesery didn't seem disappointed that I wasn't able to thank him for
his offer, and in fact didn't even appear to notice that I hadn't.
Just as he hadn't yet put me in the position of needing to respond
somehow to his compliments. He seemed to be the most open and
easy-to-get-along-with man I'd ever met, even more attractive inside
than he was on the surface.
But that didn't mean I was
overlooking the possibility that the man had a purpose in offering
help that he hadn't yet mentioned. His words seemed to indicate that
he wasn't terribly fond of the queen or her favorite male partner,
but disapproval hadn't kept him from attending the feast in a place
at their table. The queen herself was seeing to giving Bariden reason
to hang around for a while; what better way to handle me than to
provide a very good-looking man who just happened to disapprove of
that extremely beautiful woman? And one who also wanted to help me to
get home. Wouldn't it be easier to depend on him rather than do any
poking around of my own ... ?
Thinking those thoughts
didn't quite ruin the soup I'd chosen, but that was only because
high-level politics wasn't as unknown to me as the queen probably
assumed. I'd had my share of it from a couple of different sources,
and had chosen to turn around and walk away before it all drove me
mad. It had gotten to be a habit to suspect everyone I met
1O6
of having ulterior motives
no matter what they did, friendly or cold. If they were friendly they
had to want something, and if they were cold they were trying to
manipulate me or impress someone else . . .
I broke off a piece of
fresh-baked honey bread and chewed with determinationr trying to
shake off most of those old feelings. It was hard to understand how
anyone stayed sane when they played those games all the time, or even
why anyone would want to play them. But so many people did, on almost
every human-populated world, and not only played, but enjoyed the
game. It seemed like such a waste of time, always maneuvering to gain
or prove something, never satisfied with what you'd already gained or
proved—
The sound of startled
exclamations pulled me out of my thoughts, exclamations that were
joined by a few screams of fright and shouts of distress. Looking
down toward the other end of the table I saw what was causing the
fuss—the sudden appearance of the magician Arnwell. He stood no
more than five feet away from the queen, and the way he stood said he
wasn't there to wish people a hearty appetite.
CHAPTER 9IX
T
he robed and bearded
Amwell stood with folded arms very near the queen, but she didn't
seem all that bothered. I spoke a quick spell to let me hear what was
being said even if they whispered, and found I'd acted just in time.
"I don't see my place
at your table, Your Majesty," Arnwell said in a voice that
grated like metal but was nevertheless very soft. He'd dropped that
pompous, overinvolved accent he'd been using, probably because no one
was likely to be impressed any longer. "Tell one of these fools
to get up and give me what's rightfully mine."
"My dear Arnwell,
that's exactly the point," Queen Lova responded just as softly,
satisfaction in her tone. "You no longer have a place here, not
that you ever really did. Treating those around you like dirt is fine
as long as no one is in a position to feel insulted. Once you slip
from those heights, however, you find that your plight brings
sympathy from an equal no one. You thought you were unbeatable and so
acted as you pleased, but now you have to live with the consequences.
You'll favor Us if you do that elsewhere."
With that she returned her
attention to her meal, but the magician wasn't ready to be dismissed.
Fury drew him up another inch at least, and he gestured with one
hand. Rather than bringing a spell into play, though, the gesture
proved to be a signal. At least a dozen of the servants standing
closest to our table uncovered or unwrapped crossbows rather than
food, and not one of them wavered with the least uncertainty.
1O7
1O8
"One of the
consequences of doing as you please, is the desire to continue doing
it," Arnwell said as soon as the gasps of alarm and outrage had
quieted. The queen had paled, but seemed determined not to shrink
back or cower. "Magic may be able to counter magic, but it can't
do anything at all against a dozen steel-tipped quarrels.
Negotiations concerning my place at your court have been reopened,
Your Majesty, and we'll get to the discussions as soon as I see to
another small matter first."
The smirk on the man's
face would have given one of the EverNameless the urge to hit him,
and I didn't have quite their level of patient self-control. But I
was curious about what Arnwell would do next, and since I'd already
taken care of the crossbows, there was no reason not to indulge
myself. As soon as the weapons had been uncovered I'd spoken a spell
to freeze every weapon in the room, and had felt a similar spell
locking itself into mine. Bariden's glance and very small nod said
he'd done the same and was also aware of my effort, which meant we
could both sit back and wait to see what cropped up.
"There's someone here
I've been looking forward to seeing again," Arnwell said,
stepping back to get a clear view of me without coming closer. "Give
a woman a few lessons and a way to protect herself against magical
attack, and she begins, to imagine she's almost as good as a man. I
was given public humiliation today by someone who isn't even fit to
lick my boots, but mat will change. By tomorrow she will be fit to
lick my boots, and will do so as publicly as she gave humiliation, or
she will be dead. Stand up and give me your decision now, you tart."
Since he'd raised his
voice in order to speak to me, no one but those around the edges of
the room had missed his speech. The silence surrounding us was
frightened and unsure, the people producing it as motionless as the
queen's guardsmen at their posts. Rushing forward probably would have
gotten the queen hurt or killed, so they stayed in place and chafed
at being helpless. Once again I wondered why everyone knew so little
about magic, but that wasn't the time to consider the point.
"Most people consider
me more dry than tart," I responded after a moment. "Of
course, you couldn't be expected to
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1O9
know that, so you'll have
to be forgiven. As for standing up, I don't see any need. I can give
you my decision from right here, which is: grow up. Only children
think they know it all, and children tend to get hurt when, in their
ignorance, they try to do what's beyond them. And get rid of that
stupid beard. Facial hair has never yet been able to increase
someone's ability to do magic."
Needless to say, Arnwell
didn't like any part of my answer. His rage grew so high his eyes
nearly left their sockets, and the stirring and sounds from the
people all around only added to it. They weren't quite laughing at
him out loud, but they might as well have been. The spoiled brat
Arnwell thought he was much too good to be iaughed at, and patience
wasn't his strong suit.
"Kill her," he
snarled, talking to his crossbowmen without looking at them. "Three
of you shoot her, and three more stand ready to shoot anyone else I
point to! Every one of them will be on their knees to me, that I
swear by the Highest Power! Shoot her rtowl"
"Don't get mad, they
are trying," I said as reasonably as possible. "Their
biggest problem is that I'm not letting the weapons work, and their
second biggest is the compulsion you have them under. Doing that to
people isn't very nice, but I seriously doubt if the point bothers
you. But if you don't release them, I can make it bother you."
With that I called up a
needle with a very sharp point, and let it tap at his hand. He howled
and jumped back, gesturing frantically to banish an illusion, but the
needle was no illusion. Those at magician level aren't yet able to
produce the real thing, so they rely a good deal on making people
believe whatever-it-is really is there. Banishing one of those
illusions is possible once you know what it is, but banishing the
real thing is a lot harder.
"You're not releasing
them," I mentioned, this time tapping at the hand he'd gestured
with. "If I have to say it again, that point will be made
somewhere other than your hand. You have the right to be as stupid as
you like, but you don't have the right to force others to join you."
"You can't do this to
me!" he screamed, face livid and mouth almost foaming. "I
am Arnwell, and in five years no one has even been able to approach
me! I was born to
no
be great, destined to
reach heights that lesser minds can't even dream of! You can't keep
me from my destiny, no one can!"
Then he screamed again,
this time wordlessly. Since I hadn't done anything I wondered why,
but a glance at Bariden answered the question. Very surreptitiously
he was using one finger to direct something, probably a needle like
the one I'd called up. From the way Arnwell choked and hopped around
I wasn't sure I wanted to know where Bariden was sticking him, but it
seemed to do the trick. Suddenly all those with crossbows jumped and
looked wildly around, and then began to throw the weapons to the
floor. Which, in turn, caused even more confusion. The guardsmen who
had been standing helplessly by tried to jump forward at once, but
they were all holding spears. With the weapons-spell still in effect
the spears were as good as bolted to the floor where the guards had
rested them, and the guardsmen were yanked back when they tried to
run forward. In the middle of all that bedlam Arnwell tried to slip
away again, but this time I was watching. He got all of two and a
half steps before I froze him in place, something he'd probably
thought I couldn't do. He'd clearly been trying to stay out of what
he considered my range, which only said something about his own.
"Okay, everybody
quiet down!" I said after speaking a spell to amplify my voice.
"Everything's under control, so mere's no need for hysterics. I
think you guardsmen ought to stand Arnwell up again, then take the
quarrels out of those crossbows. I can't release the spell on your
spears and swords until that's done, not when some of the crossbows
will go off when the spell is gone. That's right, he isn't going
anywhere."
Some of the guardsmen had
abandoned their spears to rush to the magician, but when they tried
to pull him out of the room he just tipped over. It took a moment for
them to understand that he was frozen, and couldn't escape even if he
wanted to. Two of them still stayed near him while the others went to
the crossbows. Then someone who must have been an officer started to
point to the servants who had produced the weapons, and it was time
to interfere again.
111
"No, don't arrest
those servants," I said in my still-amplified voice. "Arnwell
had them all under a compulsion, and they had no choice about obeying
him. I checked each of them before I spoke to Arnwell, and you can
take my word for the fact that none of them was here voluntarily."
The officer paused to look
to the queen, and she smiled and nodded her confirmation of the
order. Then her smile came to me and warmed, and I suddenly wondered
if I'd put my foot in it again. It was hard to see what could have
been done differently, but when people are very pleased with you
there's usually a reason. Although not necessarily one that you'll
like ... And there was also the question of why Bariden was hiding
his own magical ability. He would have been able to handle things
personally a lot more easily if the queen knew she could get what she
wanted from him as well...
"Allow me to be the
first to say how I admire your style of managing things,"
Naesery told me with a grin as soon as I leaned back. "You're
clearly a good deal more talented man the unfortunate Arnwell, not to
mention the possessor of a—sharper—sense of humor. And it
was thoughtful of you to catch him for the guard. They probably would
have found stopping him a bit more difficult."
"I think you know I
didn't do it just for the guard," I
replied after canceling
the amplified-voice spell. "I need
r to question him before
he's locked away in a dungeon
somewhere, and that
thought brings up a problem. He may
- only be magician level,
but an ordinary cell isn't likely to ; bold him for long. If nothing
else, he can put the nearest . -guard or jailer under a compulsion to
release him." ;"1 "The queen probably expects your
help with that," ; Naesery said, studying me with a faint smile.
"Whether or not you give it will be your choice, but I suspect
you'll
* end up doing whatever's
right. I couldn't help noticing that °v your first concern was
for those innocent servants Arnwell
used as dupes. Those with
power seldom worry about the 1 helpless and unimportant, and that's
a trait you share with
the queen. Whatever other
faults she may have, her people
are always her first
concern."
He reached for his
wineglass then, leaving me to won-v der if that made things better or
worse. It was somehow
112
easier to think of the
queen as a self-indulgent parasite, not a dedicated ruler who loved
the people of her country. I toyed with my own wineglass until things
settled down, and once all the crossbows were secured and most of the
guardsmen had returned to their spears, I removed the weapons-spell.
One spear still hit the floor with a crash, but none of the swords
went flying out of their scabbards. That meant no one had tried to
draw one, which kept the confusion from starting again.
The two guardsmen stayed
near Arnwell, but even though servants were bringing out food again,
no one tried to move the magician. I had the feeling Queen Lova was
keeping him there as a sort of object lesson, like hanging the
severed head of an enemy from your city gates. Whatever, the unending
stream of food and drink distracted most of those at the feast from
paying much attention. Naesery supplied pleasant, meaningless
conversation while we ate, making the meal even more enjoyable.
Right after various
desserts had begun circulating, the unintrusive background music
being played by the small orchestra changed to obvious dance music.
People at other tables stirred, as if they'd been waiting for that,
but no one got up or even looked like they were going to. And then
the queen rose, bringing all the men at our table to their feet, and
headed out to the clear area only a few steps away. Following her was
Bariden, who took her in his arms when she turned, and then the two
of them began to dance.
"They make a striking
couple," Naesery commented as I called up a cup of coffee. That
was the only thing not offered by the servants, and I tend to go into
withdrawal when I have to do without. "As soon as the queen and
her escort finish the first dance, everyone else will be free to
indulge. Will you do me the honor of joining me on the floor? Only a
very brave woman can qualify as my partner, which is, of course, the
only reason I chose you."
"Oh, of course,"
I agreed, matching his grin with a smile. "I'll be glad to
consider your proposal, but I'll need a few minutes to make a
decision. I hope you don't mind."
"Not at all," he
said with one brow high. "Please take as much time as you need."
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113
He looked as though he
wanted to ask questions, but we were no longer exchanging intrusions.
Which was a damned good thing, since I couldn't think of an
unembarrassing way to explain what I was waiting for. I supposedly
had a previous request for the first dance, even though I hadn't in
any way agreed to it.., it had probably just been a silly comment,
forgotten as soon as it was spoken, but still..,
The orchestra finished the
song it was playing, and the two dancers stopped to applaud the
musicians while everyone else applauded them. Then the music began
again, and while people rose to go out onto the floor, the queen and
her partner began to dance again. I took another sip of my coffee
before putting the cup aside, then smiled at Naesery.
"I've made my
decision," I told him. "I'd love to join you on the floor."
"The delights of
dealing with a brave woman," he said with a smile, standing to
offer me his hand. "You can always count on her to come through
for you. I promise I'll try to make this as painless as possible."
"As long as you don't
ask me for the same promise," I murmured, which made him laugh
as he guided me toward the dancing area. He put his arms around me
and we began to move to the music, which proved we'd both been
exaggerating our lack of ability. He was one of the best partners I'd
ever had, making me seem more graceful than I'd ever before felt. I
followed him easily through the steps of a dance I'd never done,
learning it quickly and pleasantly without once appearing awkward. I
was enjoying myself thoroughly, which made Nalkin's sudden appearance
beside us more than simply surprising.
"I hope you'll excuse
the intrusion, Lady Chalaine," he said with a bow. "The
queen has asked me to request your presence at a private audience.
I'm instructed to assure you Ihat it won't take long, and you'll be
free to return to the feast in just a little while. If you'll follow
me, I'll take you to where Her Majesty is waiting."
"If you weren't
offering to lead the way, I'd suspect you of wanting to get rid of
me," I said, not terribly thrilled to hear that my "private
audience" had been moved up. "To take my place dancing with
Lord Naesery, I mean.
114
9HARON Gte£N
Why has the queen decided
to see me tonight rather than tomorrow?"
"I'm afraid I wasn't
told that," Nalkin answered with an apologetic shrug. "It
may, however, have something to do with Arnwell and his disposition.
She's already had the body removed to the audience chamber."
I turned to see that tile
magician and his guards were indeed gone, which meant the audience
wasn't something I could refuse even if I'd been given that option.
If I had to I could follow to wherever they'd taken him, but there
was no sense in making unnecessary trouble. Besides, when you really
need to question someone, you're better off doing it as soon as
possible.
"Then we'd better get
going ourselves," I said, then turned to Naesery. "I'd like
to thank you for a wonderful time. I don't know if I'll be able to
get back, and if I can't I wanted you to know that."
"If you aren't able
to get back, then I'll see you at breakfast," he answered with a
bow that didn't take those eyes from my face. "When you're ready
just send a servant for me and I'll come to your apartment."
Well, at least he wasn't
inviting himself in for a nightcap before that breakfast, I thought
as I followed Nalkin across the feasting hall. Naesery didn't seem
prepared to let himself be avoided, but he also wasn't trying to
corner me. Or at least not very tightly. I wondered if he would turn
out to be another problem, men dismissed the question as stupid. What
else was there in those places but problems?
We left the feasting hall
by a side door, and followed a short corridor to the audience
chamber. Its door was decorated with two guardsmen to show that that
was the place, and Nalkin knocked softly before opening the door and
bowing me in. When he closed the door again he was still on the
outside, which made Queen Lova and me the only ones in the room. Not
counting Arnwell, of course, who stood frozen in midstep in the
center of the small,
cozy room.
"He used to hate it
if I used this place as an audience chamber for him," the Queen
said suddenly, her stare still on the magician. "He considered
it an insult, you see, mat I wasn't receiving him in a place as grand
as his exalted status
TrC HIDDCN
115
demanded. To tell the
truth, I began to fear my people and I would never be free of him.
Once he gained the place of Court magician, there was no dislodging
him from it. And I think after this year's contest, he planned to
depose me and declare himself king."
"A small amount of
power is usually worse than a lot," I commented, walking to a
large, soft chair covered in tile same flower pattern as the couch
the queen sat on. "Do you mind if I sit?" When she shook
her head I made use of the chair, then continued, "If he wanted
to be king, why didn't he just put you under a compulsion to marry
him? Then the whole thing would have become your idea,"
"A man who marries me
can never become anything more than the Queen's Consort," she
answered with a faint smile. "That's the law, and even I can't
change it. Besides, I'd made it quite clear to everyone in my Court
that I disliked the man intensely, and always would. If 1 suddenly
changed my mind and announced that I was marrying him, everyone would
have known his magic was responsible. And he wouldn't have wanted me
there, as a constant reminder that he'd stolen what he had. He wanted
to believe his brilliance earned him whatever he got."
"There's a big
difference between inborn ability and brilliance," I said,
joining her in looking at the man with the long white beard. Now that
I took the trouble to notice, it was clear he wasn't old enough to be
naturally white-haired. He must have used his appearance as window
dressing, then, or because he thought that was what he ought to look
like ... "It's never a matter of how much you have, just what
you end up doing with it. I need to speak to the man, Your Majesty,
before you put him wherever it is you're going to. He may very well
have a piece of information my companion and I need badly."
"I know," she
said, again with that faint smile. "Nalkin told me about it
earlier, and your companion danced all around the subject during the
feast. That's one of the reasons I asked you in here now, so that you
might speak to him before he's taken away."
"That was really very
thoughtful of you," I said, meaning the words exactly as spoken.
"A lot of people in your place wouldn't have bothered—or
would have conveniently
116
'forgotten.' What are the
other reasons you asked me in here?"
"I wondered how
quickly you would notice I said that," she returned with a wider
smile, finally moving her gaze from Amwell to me. "The speed
with which you did delights me, as I'd like to discuss mat first. Do
you mind?"
"I suppose my
questions for him can wait a little while longer," I responded
with a shrug, disturbed over her own question. It wasn't like a
queen, to ask if people minded
things...
"Good," she
said, leaning back on the couch. "Would you like something to
eat or drink before we begin? No? That's too bad. I've been trying to
work up the nerve to say what I have to, and could have used a little
more time."
Now her smile was on the
weak and nervous side, but I didn't cooperate by commenting aloud. I
didn't expect to like what she was about to say, but I stilt had to
listen.
"All right, then the
time has come," she said, visibly drawing herself up on the
inside. "I think I'd better start by explaining what you've
undoubtedly heard about my— bed habits. Before you make any
judgments, you ought to know that my physicians have told me there's
no more than a small chance I'll ever become pregnant. I've been
trying to utilize that one chance by—trying as many men as
possible, in the hopes that one of them will be virile enough
to—overcome my handicap. So far it hasn't happened."
Her beautiful face was a
shade or two less than perfectly calm and serene, but there was
nothing of self-pity showing. She'd been trying to do something about
a personal tragedy, but her efforts hadn't worked. I seriously
doubted if anyone other than her physicians knew what she'd just told
me, and that raised the question of why an exception had been made.
"You don't have to
ask," she said, that faint smile back again. "You want to
know why I've told you this, and I'll answer that in a moment. First
I'd like your opinion of Wimail, the man I've chosen for my permanent
escort. I deliberately let him escort you tonight, just so you could
meet him."
"Well, I was honored,
of course," I temporized, wondering just how far it would be
possible to go toward the truth, but she waved her hand with a small
laugh.
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117
"No need to be
diplomatic," she assured me. "I know just what Wimail is
like, and that's the point. He's in love with the idea of being my
usual escort, and nothing else bothers him as long as that continues.
Another man in his place would be hurt by what I've found it
necessary to do, and mat's why there isn't another man in his place.
It wouldn't be fair."
I suppose the abrupt
understanding was very clear in my expression; she nodded with
satisfaction, and then continued.
"Now for the question
of why I told you what I have, and its equally simple answer. I need
an heir, someone who will care as much about my people as I do, but I
no longer believe I'll be able to produce one. You already care about
people in general, and you have the strength to protect yourself in
ways that I don't. I want you to stay here and be my heir, and let my
people become yours."
Her smile had grown warm
and welcoming, something I concentrated on to keep the stunned look
off my face. After knowing me slightly for a matter of hours, the
woman wanted me for her heir? And, at the same time, was offering me
a home? If I could have doubted her I would have, but it just wasn't
possible. Instead I thought frantically for a moment, and came up
with something else to mention.
"This need for
protection," I said, for once letting myself think me way those
who play politics do. "A ruler who cares for her people
shouldn't have to worry about protecting herself, not when everyone
ought to love her for it. Is that why you have so many guardsmen
around, because not all of your people understand how deeply you
care?"
"If only my own
people were involved, the guard would be totally unnecessary,"
she answered at once. "It isn't them my advisers want to protect
me from, it's one or two of my neighboring rulers. They aren't quite
as popular with then-own people, so they have to find ways to
distract them. Like looking around for other realms to conquer, after
that realm's ruler has been—taken care of. If you wanted to
ride around and talk to people before making a decision, I'd have no
objection."
The clearly serious offer
left me with nothing to say, and what came before it explained why
the queen had
118
SHAROM
gotten involved with a
Court Magician to begin with. When powerful people are after your
head, you do what you must to counter their plans. I could see that,
all right, but still couldn't quite see myself settling down there. I
had responsibilities, after all...
"Please stop looking
so upset," the queen said with another of those warming smiles.
"I wasn't expecting an immediate answer, not from someone who's
so very much like me. You'd be faced with the need to spend many
years here, learning what to do before you took the throne when I
died or abdicated. Only then would your own rule start, and then
you'd have many more years of work before you handed things over to
your own heir. You'll have to think about it first, and while you're
thinking, you might as well ask Amwell those questions you have."
Yes, there was still that.
1 took a deep breath to steady myself, then spoke a spell that would
unfreeze the magician but still keep him under my control. One
syllable of the spell also required him to speak nothing but the
truth, which would save me some trouble. The man shuddered and
straightened, glanced at the queen, then turned to look directly at
me.
"The queen believes
you meant to depose her and make yourself king," I began, as
good a place as any to start. "Is that true?"
"Certainly,"
Arnwell answered immediately and unemotionally. "I was bom to be
great, and what greater tiling is there than to make yourself a
king?"
"I'd say to make
yourself useful," I couldn't help countering. "If you need
a title to impress people, it's only because you can't do anything
that would accomplish the same end. And while we're discussing it,
how do you know you were born to be great?"
"My mother told me,"
he responded. "Even before she found out I'd be able to do
magic, she knew I was destined for greatness. She made sure I knew it
too, and naturally never denied me anything. You don't deny people
who are going to be great, you know."
Queen Lova and I exchanged
glances, both of us probably thinking the same thing. Arnwell was a
spoiled brat, which would simply have ruined him if he hadn't been
TH€ HIDDGM
119
born Sighted. As it was,
things had been made a good deal worse...
"Arnwell, my
companion and I are looking for the nearest gate," I said,
dropping a subject it was much too late to do anything about. "Even
if there isn't one all that near, I still want its location."
"The nearest gate, as
far as I know, is in the west wall of the palace," the magician
replied immediately. "It leads to the west road out of the city,
and should be just a little nearer to this room than the north gate."
"That's not the kind
of gate I'm talking about," I said, wishing those under a truth
spell weren't so prone to taking certain questions so literally. "I
mean a gate that leads to other worlds, the glowing vertical line
that spreads out into a glowing curtain when you get near it. If you
grew up in this area you surely must have Seen one or at the very
least heard about one from someone who was also—a magician."
"That doesn't sound
familiar at all," Amwell replied, no trace left of that very
involved way of speaking. "I don't understand what you mean."
"I'm talking about
places that would be in the countryside," I elaborated, trying
to ignore the uneasy feeling I suddenly had. "No one would go to
those places unless they could See the gates, because they would be
very uncomfortable without knowing why. If you don't know much about
the countryside, give me the name of someone with your gift who knows
it better."
"I grew up in a small
village about ten miles from the city," Arnwell said with a
vague frown. "Since my mother worked to keep us fed, I was free
to explore the woods in all directions before I started my lessons
with the old woman who taught me magic. I can't think of anyone who
knows the area better than I do, and no one has ever mentioned
anything like what you're asking about. And the old crone who taught
me told me everything she knew."
"What's wrong?"
Queen Lova asked as I just sat there staring at the magician. "This
gate is obviously important to you, but I don't understand why. Where
is it supposed to lead?"
I shook my head without
answering, more than simply upset. It was hard to imagine a world
allowing magic having
1QO
no gates at all, but that
didn't have to be true. Its gates could be in remote, inaccessible
spots, places no Sighted had been, which would make them completely
unknown. That would explain the low level of magic users; without a
regular influx of Sighted from other worlds, the natives would be
working blind. With enough power a trained Sighted can do just about
anything, but first you have to know how to get enough power to
handle whatever your project is. If you try it without the proper
strength and control, its not working might convince you it wasn't
possible . . .
"I—need to do
some thinking," I said at last, the understatement of the
century. If that world didn't allow the creation of entries—which
it didn't seem to—and its gates were inaccessible,
then—then—"Do you mind if we speak again at another
time, Your Majesty? I really need to be alone for a while."
"No, of course I
don't mind," she answered with another of those smiles. "You
take all the time you need, and then send word to me. Whatever your
decision is, I promise I won't try to talk you out of it. And I hope
you've asked Arnwell everything you need to. I'm afraid this is the
last time he'll be available for questioning."
"Why?" I
couldn't help asking. "Where is he supposed to be going?"
"He's going on that
journey no one ever returns from," she said, weariness and
strain suddenly appearing in her expression. "He's a menace to
everyone around him, and right now the only thing holding him
harmless is your power. If he should somehow escape from that—For
the sake of my people, not to mention my own peace of mind, he'll be
executed as soon as we're finished here. He was ready to hurt or kill
anyone who opposed him, and I can't take the chance that he might
somehow get loose again."
My first urge was to argue
that decision, but then I closed my mouth without speaking. I'd been
about to say that Arnwell couldn't escape my spell, but that was true
only if I stayed in that world. If I somehow managed to find a way to
a gate and through, the spell would disappear as soon as I was gone.
That would free the man to go back to his original plans, which in
turn would create all sorts of havoc and hurt. No, if I couldn't cure
him of being the
product of a damaged
upbringing—and I couldn't—there was only one other
possible choice.
"There's nothing else
I need to ask him," I said, then returned him to the frozen
state. "He won't be aware of what's done to him, but that's for
my sake rather than his. He might have turned out all right if he
hadn't been twisted, but then again he might not. I'll—send
word when I've made a decision."
She smiled and nodded
without saying anything else, then rang for a servant to take me back
to my apartment. Three guardsmen waited for me to step out of the
room before they went in, but I preferred not to think about their
reason for being there. I had enough with the rest of what I needed
to think about, and barely even heard the music when we went past the
feasting hall. Party time was over for me, at least until I could
straighten out my thoughts.
Once I was back at my
apartment I dismissed the servant, changed my clothes, then sat down
in a chair with a cup of coffee. I couldn't remember ever being that
confused and uncertain, and the offer of a throne had very little to
do with it. Anyone who reaches my level of skill can find a world
somewhere and take a throne, whether or not the natives care for the
idea. As long as there's no one around who's better at magic, and
there are plenty of places like that, the throne is yours.
No, being a queen wasn't
that big a deal, but what went with it—that's what I was having
trouble with. Queen Lova wanted me—wanted me—and was
willing to trust me with the well-being of the people she loved. No
one had ever done that for me, offered me something that personally
important. She would name me her daughter, and I had no doubt she
would also treat me like one. A beloved daughter, someone to be proud
of, someone to show off to her friends and associates ...
I shifted around to pull
my booted feet up into the chair, automatically holding the coffee
still to keep it from spilling. What I needed was an impersonal point
of view, but it wasn't likely I'd be the one to supply it. I'd been
very young when my parents were accidentiy killed, but not so young
that I was unaware of my loss. And then being taken in by my mother's
cousin and her husband, supposedly because
1QQ
they wanted to raise me.
What they'd wanted was control of my very large inheritance, to add
to their own considerable wealth. When they discovered they'd have
access to it only when / was old enough to have access to it, they'd
taken out their disappointment on me. Nothing I'd ever done was
right, or worth their paying attention to, and certainly nothing to
compliment. If I hadn't had memories of my parents and the way it
should have been done ...
But memories hadn't
stopped the time with them from being a sentence served in a torture
pit. It had made things worse that neither they nor their children
were Sighted, especially when one of them began to treat me like a
cripple. The rest picked it up immediately, excusing me from things
at the drop of a hat because I wasn't—quite—as I should
be ... others had picked up the habit from them, until I actually did
feel almost incompetent. But I'd learned not to argue with them past
a certain point, which usually took away their looks of smug
satisfaction. Declaring yourself the winner of a battle doesn't mean
much if the other side simply shrugs and walks away.
But now I was being
offered the chance to get back what I'd lost, to be with someone who
wanted me in a place where I was needed. And it looked like I might
not even have a choice about staying. It could take years to find a
gate—assuming finding one was possible in the first place—and
by then whatever had happened in Bariden's world would be long over.
Our going back then would be just about pointless, or at least my
going back would be...
A knock came at the door
then, pulling me away from inner argument. Rather than getting up I
gestured the door open—and blinked in surprise.
"I hope I'm not
intruding," Naesery said, stepping inside and walking slowly
toward my chair. "I arranged to be told when your audience with
the queen was over, but when it was you didn't come back. I wasn't
going to bother you, but—Are you all right? Is there anything
wrong?"
He stood not five feet
away, the second handsomest man I'd ever seen, true concern in those
gorgeous green eyes. If I stayed he would be there too, a man who had
been immediately attracted to me. And wasn't I forgetting that
HIDD€N
123
it wasn't a question of
'if? What real choice did I have?
"I'm fine," I
answered with as much of a smile as I could produce. "As a
matter of fact something very not wrong has happened, and I'm in the
middle of thinking about it. Queen Lova has asked me to—stay
here."
"Marvelous!" he
exclaimed, breaking into a wide grin. "I was hoping she would,
but sometimes queens end up acting politically rather than
intelligently. Is there anything I can do to induce you to accept?"
By then he was crouching
in front of me, his right hand having come to take possession of my
left. As he waited for my answer he raised my hand to his lips—and
that was when another voice broke in.
"I'd apologize for
intruding if this door hadn't been left open," Bariden said, the
words even but very soft. I turned my head to see that he looked
straight at Naesery, and seemed to be speaking only to him. "I'm
Bariden, and I don't believe we've been introduced."
"I'm Lord Naesery,"
my first visitor answered evenly as he straightened, proving he was
Bariden's size. "Am I mistaken, or aren't you supposed to be
attending the queen?"
"I was the queen's
escort into the feast," Bariden answered, coming forward a few
steps before stopping again. "When she left my duty to her was
over, and now I'm here. If you don't mind, Lord Naesery, I'd like to
speak to Chalaine for a few minutes. Alone."
By the words themselves
you would have thought Bariden was asking permission, but his tone
killed that idea completely. The steel-hard near growl was an order,
and Naesery acknowledged that with a faint smile and almost
nonexistent bow.
"A gentleman always
accedes to the polite request of others," he said, for some
reason distantly amused. "I do indeed mind leaving, but shall do
so anyway. Lady Chalaine, please send a servant for me when
your—visitor—has gone on his way."
My bow was more than the
token Bariden had gotten, and then Naesery was striding past him and
out of the apartment. Bariden followed to close the door that was
left open for the second time, and then came back to crouch where
Naesery had been.
124
"I can't believe
you'd let a smooth article like that come anywhere near you," he
said then, those light blue eyes pinning me where I sat. "What
happened to the practical deductive sorceress I started this trip
with?"
"Lord Naesery has
been nothing but a gentleman," I muttered in answer, giving a
lot of attention to my coffee. That gaze looked more disappointed
than accusing, a reaction that made me very uncomfortable. "But
there's something I have to tell you, and it isn't good news."
"Go ahead," he
said after the briefest hesitation. "I also have news, but it
can wait another minute or two."
"The queen let me
question Arnwell before they—permanently settled the problem he
presented," I told him. What I didn't mention was that I'd felt
it when they executed him, a—loosening and freeing of the spell
I'd placed. Restraining the dead isn't necessary, and would take a
different kind of spell even if it were . . . "He told me he
didn't know about gates, and no one he knew had ever mentioned coming
across one. That would explain why they don't know more magic than
they do. No easy access to routine crossovers."
"I can see you've
decided most gates are out of casual reach," he said with a nod.
"That would be a logical assumption. Is that it?"
"Not quite," I
answered, wondering how he could take such upsetting news so calmly.
"The queen—wants me to stay here. She can't have children,
so she wants to adopt me as her heir."
"You haven't agreed
to that yet, have you?" he asked at once, and now he was looking
upset. "Chalaine, tell me you haven't given your word."
"I told her I'd have
to think about it," I said, leaning back from his intensity just
a little. "Why are you so bothered about that part of it? If
we're going to be trapped in this world, there are worse things that
could happen. Or were you picturing us taking off in search of a gate
across the entire face of this world?"
"I'm picturing us
checking out something I just heard about that's in this very
palace," he said, relief letting him relax again. "The
queen insisted that I stay with her for the first couple of minutes
of the second dance, and after that she thanked me and left. As soon
as she did I went looking
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for you, but you were
already dancing with someone else. It didn't take more than a minute
to decide I would cut in, but just before I started off to do it, one
of a pair of servants spilled something. The man who did the spilling
was just about horrified, and the two of them said something that
made me forget about dancing."
"What could they
possibly have said?" I asked when he paused, firmly refusing to
think about dancing. Of course he'd started looking for me as soon as
the queen was gone. He didn't yet know any other women here.
"What the girl with
him said was, 'Now you've done it. If you aren't sent to the Shunned
Room again, no one else ever will be.' And he came back with, Til
leave the job first, I swear I will! The last time I thought I'd die
before I got out! I can't go back there again, and I won't!* He'd
turned pale and his hands were trembling, and that turned me curious.
I suddenly had to know what the Shunned Room was."
"You can't mean you
thought it might be a gate," I said, trying to decide whether or
not I believed the same. "No one would build so much as a shack
around one, let alone a palace. And what about anyone coming through
it? Wouldn't these people have figured out what it was when Sighted
began to appear in the room?"
"I eventually ran
through all those arguments myself," he agreed with one hand up.
"I know just what you're saying, but I couldn't make myself walk
away and forget about it. I had to find out what I could without
making my interest too obvious, so I used a minor glamour and took a
walk through the kitchens. That way I didn't have to bother with
invisibility, but people still didn't notice me. What I found out was
that there's a stairway at the back of the kitchens leading down to
where the Shunned Room is. It's the only way to get to it."
"Why do I have the
feeling you haven't yet used those stairs?" I asked with
something close to suspicion. "And why did you need a glamour?
Has anyone here said you can't go anywhere you care to? You're making
it sound like they're our enemies, when most of them couldn't be
nicer. These people here care, Bariden—"
"Chalaine, please,"
he interrupted, taking my hand. "I'm not saying they don't, or
that they're not decent or fair.
SHARON
What you have to remember
is how we got here, and that it wasn't by accident. We can't assume
getting out again is simply a matter of finding that gate and going
through. If there's someone—or something—watching the
area, I didn't want to warn them by going to look at it alone. I've
already told you—if we don't leave together, neither one of us
goes. Will you use those stairs with me while we both have a look?"
The light blue gaze that
refused to leave my face was an underlining of his question, a
request that wasn't quite that easy to agree to. I'd been offered
something very special in that place, something I was reluctant to
simply walk away from, but I did still have our original problem to
consider... and the people who waited, neither alive nor dead, for
someone to help ...
"All right, I'll go
and take a look with you," I agreed, but reluctant was too pale
a word for the way I felt. I couldn't— quite—wish there
would be nothing at the bottom of those stairs, but—"What
will you do if we don't find anything? Take your horse and head for
the nearest mountains?"
"I thought you
understood that I wasn't going anywhere alone," he said,
straightening as I banished my coffee cup and rose. "If we don't
find anything and I can't talk you into heading for the mountains
with me, I'll have to stay here with you. If you're going to be the
queen some day, you'll need the right consort."
"You're volunteering
to help me find a man?" I asked, feeling my brows go up. "Or
do you just intend to turn thumbs down on anyone I find attractive?
Really, Bariden, that kind of help I don't—"
"Wait a minute,"
he said, his hand on my arm stopping me halfway to the door. "I
wasn't volunteering for anything but being the man. Am I wrong in
thinking you weren't even considering that?"
"Well, of course I
wasn't considering that," I said, for once looking straight at
him. "I know you have no real interest in me, so why would I put
you in an awkward position? I usually try not to embarrass people on
purpose."
"I feel as if I've
missed a large chunk of this conversation," he said, shaking his
head with what seemed like confusion. Personally, I was delighted it
was finally out in
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the open. "What do
you mean, you know I have no real interest in you? How can you know
something like that when it isn't true?"
"Hey, I wasn't trying
to say I didn't think you cared about me," I told him quickly,
finally realizing I must have hurt his feelings. "Since we're in
this together I know you feel a responsibility toward me, but that's
only because you're a decent man. It doesn't necessarily have to go
beyond that, and in this case it certainly doesn't. But it's all
right, I don't mind at all. If anyone understands how you feel, I'm
the one."
"How do you think I
feel?" he asked, glancing down at the hand I'd put to his arm
before bringing those eyes back to my face. "And is that why
this is the first time you've touched me in any way at all? Because
you believe I don't want you to?"
"Bariden, think about
everything that's happened between us from the first moment we met,"
I said with a sigh as I took back a hand that must have had a mind of
its own. "I'd have to be crazy to believe there could be any
interest on your part after all that, and I haven't quite reached the
crazy stage yet. If you disagree—or think you do—it's
perfectly understandable: that Spell of Affinity has you confused.
Take my word for it, you don't want to have anything to do with me.
If—when we get back, you'll see I'm right."
The deepening confusion in
his eyes was beginning to disturb me, so I smiled a reassuring smile
and headed for the door again. I suppose it would have been really
nice if a man like Bariden had found me of interest, but that wasn't
likely to happen. I hadn't "caused" much lately, but the
calm could hardly last much longer and once it was gone ... No, I was
much better off not even thinking about it, and so was he ...
The corridor outside my
room was deserted, but Bariden cast a glamour to cover the two of us
anyway. Explaining why we were wandering the halls could have been
awkward, and there was no need for us to make ourselves look foolish.
Bariden had gotten rid of his fancy party clothes just the way I had,
and there was, of course, nothing we had to take with us. The horses
we'd left in the palace stables weren't horses. If we did find a gate
and stepped
128
SHAROTi
through. the horses would
go back to the nothingness they'd come from.
Servants were still
hurrying back and forth between the kitchens and the feasting hall,
unbelievably with even more trays of food. I'd thought the meal was
over, but it looked like some people were starting all over again.
Any servants going by were careful to avoid us, but they also didn't
notice us as we made our way to the back of the kitchens. In one
corner to the left was a narrow set of stairs leading down, and most
of those in the kitchens avoided that area as well.
"Hope as hard as you
can," Bariden said as he led the way to the stairs. Those were
the first words he'd said since we'd left my apartment, and I still
wasn't sure if I agreed with the sentiment. Of course, I could always
find my way back there someday ...
The stairs were made of
stone, as though someone had chopped them into the bedrock the palace
rested on. They didn't look terribly new, but they also weren't as
worn as they could have been. The wooden hole they went down through
looked as though it had been built like that rather man added after
the rest of the structure, and mat was odd. If the room had been
built around the hole and stairs, then people had known it was there.
Why would anyone build over something that no one who wasn't Sighted
could stand to be near for long? And why leave an easy way to reach
mat something? Things just didn't make sense ...
I followed Bariden down
the relatively narrow stairs, noticing that he was moving slowly
enough to let me keep up with him easily. The steps ended about
twenty feet down, and we didn't have to make our own light. A torch
flickered on the stone wall to the left about fifteen feet ahead of
us, dimly illuminating the narrow corridor. Two people could have
walked abreast if they 'd really had to, but not comfortably. Bariden
continued to lead and I followed, senses sharp and defenses ready.
We couldn't have gone more
than ten feet past the torch when we came to an opening in the rock
to the right. I say opening rather than doorway because there was
nothing of a door, just a round-topped opening that was only just
high enough for Bariden to pass under. Rather than do that he
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199
glanced inside, then
turned to me looking very relieved.
"Once again the power
of hope does the job," he said with a grin. "Wizards will
swear there's nothing to the idea, but I've seen it work too often to
doubt. As specified, my lady, one gate ready to go."
By then I was standing
next to him, and didn't need the sweep of his arm to See the gate. It
hung in the exact center of the large stone chamber surrounding it,
the back parts a definite semicircle against the flat wall with the
opening. Rough stone benches were carved into the rounded parts of
the walls, and faint torchlight flickered against the bright glow of
the unopened slit. I stood there staring at it, one small part of me
completely unsurprised that it was there, and Bariden's hand came to
my left arm.
"Do you See that?"
he asked very softly, head up as though trying to get a scent from a
breeze. "There's some sort of spell on that room, but I can't
tell what it is. Rather than being hidden it's very plain, but I
don't recognize it. Have you ever Seen anything like it?"
"Now that you mention
it, yes," I answered, suddenly Seeing exactly what he was
talking about. 'The feel of the thing says it's a Spell of Volition,
and unless I'm mistaken it's aimed only at Sighted. And it isn't in
the room, but around the gate. Unless you really want to use that
gate, the spell won't let you activate it. Now isn't that strange . .
."
1 let the words trail off
as I tried to remember where I'd Seen a Spell of Volition before, but
the memory wasn't cooperating. It refused to come within reach of my
thought-fingers, no matter how far I spread them. And then I noticed
that Bariden was staring at me rather than at the gate with its
spell, his expression shadowed with worry.
"That means I can't
simply drag you through the gate behind me, doesn't it?" he
said, those light eyes showing the agitation he felt. "Damn it,
I knew this would be a problem, I just knew it. Now what do we do?"
I didn't have to ask what
he meant, not with all the times he'd insisted he would never leave
without me. I was about to suggest it again anyway, but a sudden
thought made me change my mind.
"Has it occurred to
you that the way things stand you might not be able to go through
either?" I asked instead,
13O
frowning at the idea. "I
mean, even if you agreed to go alone, your heart certainly wouldn't
be in it. Unless I'm mistaken, that would be enough to keep the gate
from opening for you."
"And would
incidentally explain why the Sighted of this world have never used
it," he said in surprise. "If you didn't know what it was
and what it would do, wouldn't there be at least a small amount of
reluctance about using it? Someone like Arnwell might have been
egotistical enough to try, but what are the chances an Arnwell would
ever listen to the problems of servants or casually visit the
kitchens? He may have spent five years in the palace, but he never
found out this place was here."
"A punishment place
for servants who mess up," I muttered, wishing more background
thoughts would come clear. There was something about that entire
arrangement that refused to make sense, but my analytical ability
seemed to be out to lunch. I knew something was going on, and not
knowing what had apparently helped me make up my mind.
"I don't like the
idea of being shown a gate neither of us can use," I said after
the pause to think about it. "That's a rotten trick to play on
people, especially when they're in a place they're not supposed to
be. I'm really beginning to want to get my hands on whoever is
responsible, but I can't do that if we don't get through the gate.
That means we will get through, and right mis minute."
I brushed past Bariden and
entered the gate chamber, holding my anger up in front of me like a
shield. The Spell of Volition flickered as I moved closer,
threatening to exclude me, and that got me even angrier. I was not
about to let someone use my own feelings against me, not now and not
ever. I marched up to the gate thinking about nothing but anger and
outrage, Bariden close behind me, and suddenly the gate flared into a
glowing rainbow curtain ... Had to move fast... get to it and through
... hold to the anger... forget about what was being left behind ...
Mother, it's been so many years, but I still miss you so terribly ...
if only 1 could have stayed Here ...
CHAPTER
B
ariden was all but
standing in Chalaine's footprints when the gate flared wide. Without
wasting an instant, he picked her up with an arm around her waist and
stepped into the gate, making sure if it closed it would be behind
them. He'd felt a flicker in the Spell of Volition, what had to be a
reaction to the girl's feelings. No matter what she'd said, she
really wanted to stay ...
And then he forgot about
that as Chalaine gasped, a reaction he wasn't far from himself. The
gate—on the inside diere were supposed to be a large number of
choices about where to go, the gleam of many worlds vying to take the
traveler's attention. This gate, though, was empty of all choice but
two, the world they'd come from and one other. The two of mem stood
there in the star-rush as long as possible, trying to find a third
choice, but there wasn't any. They had to move forward or go back, or
else they could be swept away into oblivion.
The girl struggled in his
grip, obviously wanting to be put down, and mat settled the matter.
If she decided to go back, he'd probably never get her through
again—or himself, either. Forward was the only way they could
go, something he knew without knowing why... One step would take care
of it, one step and then they could talk as much as they had to ...
He took that step, causing
the gate ahead of them to flare, and then they were through into the
world that held it. The darkness of night spread all around,
concealing the
131
132
details of their,
surroundings, but not the fact that they were outdoors. A few stars
shone in the sky overhead and crickets chirped contentedly, but there
was no moon to show them more.
"Put me down!"
the girl snapped, kicking at his leg in an effort to be released.
"You had no right to do that!"
"What I had was no
choice," he answered, finally releasing her. "I could feel
that spell about to push us out of the gate. And I think we now know
why the gate we came from doesn't have a constant stream of arrivals
from elsewhere. The only elsewhere travelers could come from is
here."
"And that's something
I've never seen before," she said with a hand to her hair,
turning to look at the gate. "I've never even heard of a gate
operating only between two individual worlds. What in Hellfire have
we been tossed into?"
"I wish I knew,"
he assured her, also turning to look at the gate. "It looks like
your average, ordinary gate—"
And then he stopped,
because what he'd said wasn't true. He was no more than a long step
past the gate, but it just hung there like a glittering vertical line
in the dark. With him that close—not to mention Chalaine's also
being there—the gate should have already spread into a
multicolored curtain. That it hadn't meant—
"It won't open from
this side," the girl said, completing his thought aloud. "From
the other side you have to really want to go through, and from this
side all the wanting in the worlds doesn't matter. Now I'm really
getting mad."
A glance at her face in
the limited glow of the closed gate confirmed that, showing her
tight-jawed and hard-eyed. Bariden wondered if real anger would make
her even more attractive than she was normally, then dismissed the
thought. Getting mad when you might have to protect your back at any
time wasn't smart, and they would be making enough mistakes by
accident. No sense adding to that on purpose. . .
"I'm going to put up
a shelter for us to spend the night in," he said, moving away
from the gate. "In the morning we can look around and see what
we've got this time, and then decide what to do."
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133
"If we get a choice
about it," she muttered, obviously not in the mood to be
soothed. "Which I doubt we will. The only time we get what we
consider a choice is when we're about to step into something where we
won't be allowed to change our minds. If I knew what this game was
about, I'd also know the best way to play it."
Bariden paused a moment to
construct his spell, then raised both arms and spoke it. A small
house appeared in the darkness, cheery light spilling out of its
windows. He hadn't let himself wonder whether or not his spell would
work, and now he didn't have to. Magic was possible for them in this
new world, and once that was proven he was able to turn back to
Chalaine.
"What did you mean,
if you knew what game this was you'd also know how to play it?"
he asked. "We do know what this is about, and it's no game."
"Then why do we have
to be constantly alert to make just the right move?" she
countered, glancing at him before heading toward the house. "The
one who started us on this trip is the enemy we were trying to
uncover, but wouldn't it have been simpler to kill us? If that first
entry had led to a plane where we would have been immediately
devoured, wouldn't he have been rid of us without all this nonsense?
How much good will this clever game do him if we find an exit off
this one-way road?"
"You're assuming
there is an exit," he returned, moving along with her as a nasty
thought occurred to him. "What if this 'game' you're talking
about is fixed, and there's no possible way we can win? The enemy can
be sitting somewhere with his feet up, watching us struggle and
laughing his head off."
"That's possible, but
not very likely," she disagreed with a headshake. "As long
as we keep finding ourselves in places where magic is allowed,
there's always the chance we'll also find a way to break out. We're
not amateurs, after all, and even the most powerful wizard alive can
accidently overlook something we See right away. No, someone is
definitely playing a game, and we're apparently expected to pick up
the rules as we go along."
"Rules," he
muttered, gesturing the door to the house open to let them step
inside. You tend to lose a lot of
134
WAROh GR€€h
points when you learn a
game by playing it, that and gold and sometimes even blood. Maybe it
would be possible to get a look at the rule book some time, even if
it were only one quick glimpse ...
"This is very nice,"
the girl said, stopping in the middle of the front room to look
around. "Not quite what one would call homey, but still very
nice."
"Thank you,"
Bariden answered, having no need to do his own looking around. He'd
put extreme luxury in the little house, including very thick
carpeting, wonderfully comfortable and oversized chairs and couches,
silk and jewels for decoration, diamonds for the lamps—he'd
even made two bedroom suites behind the sitting room, just to keep
the girl from feeling pressured.
"Only one thing seems
to be missing," she said, using a simple word and gesture to
summon a cup of coffee. "There, that takes care of it. And now
if you'll excuse me, I'm feeling really worn out."
"Chalaine, wait,"
Bariden said quickly, stopping her from going toward the suite door
on the right. "There's something I'd like to talk to you about
before you go to bed."
"Sure," she
answered with a small shrug, actually looking straight at him with
those dark and lovely eyes. It was the second time she'd done that,
maybe the third. Bariden didn't know why she'd stopped avoiding his
gaze, but he didn't actually care. He preferred to think of it as a
step in the right direction, and use it as the encouragement he
wasn't getting in any other way.
"Why don't we sit
down while we talk," he said, gesturing to a couch while he shut
the door. "I almost feel as if I'm making a pest of myself about
this, but I've never hked misunderstandings. You said something that
isn't true, and I want you to know it."
"What did I say?"
she asked with brows high, sitting to one side of the middle of the
couch. Bariden knew women well enough to know what that meant, and he
had no choice but to accept the boundary. The middle of the couch was
the point he wasn't supposed to move past, a no-man's-land if ever
there was one.
"You said I had no
real interest in you," he explained after sitting on his
couch-half and calling up his own cup
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of coffee. "You said
I only think I'm interested because of the Spell of Affinity, and I'd
be much better off without you. I don't happen to agree with any of
that, and I want you to know I intend to prove the truth."
"Really?" she
said with brows raised again, and then she smiled. "I'd love to
know how you expect to do that— without using black magic."
"You're really
convinced you're right," he said with all the disturbance—and
annoyance—he felt. "You think I'm kidding myself, and
you're just waiting for me to wake up and realize mat. What will you
do if I never wake up, and it suddenly turns out that you're wrong?
Refuse to change your mind and simply walk away, or act like a
grown-up and start listening to me?"
"But I'm not wrong,"
she said, so calmly and gently for what was actually stubborn
arrogance. "I happen to be right, which you'll eventually have
to admit. When mat time comes, don't worry that I'll be upset or
blame you for anything. I know how compelling ongoing spells can be,
even if they aren't supposed to behave like mat. When this is all
over, I promise that we'll still be friends."
Even if I give in to
temptation and strangle you? he wanted to ask that patient, superior
smile she showed. Then it came to him that she might be acting like
that on purpose, to "help" him get over his delusions
faster. Instead of groaning he swallowed down some coffee, which gave
her the chance to add something else.
"About my acting like
a grown-up," she said, this time looking at him with veiled
amusement. "I think I already am, but don't feel mat you have to
agree with me. Consider me a child as much as you like, I don't
mind."
Bariden studied her over
his coffee cup, frustration jabbing at him from all sides. Unless he
was mistaken she'd just confirmed his guess, and was definitely
"helping" him to get over his illusions. He'd never known a
woman who wasn't immediately ready to take all the advantage she
could, and now that he'd met one who thought about him as well as
herself—she was convinced his interest couldn't possibly be
real. If he managed to get out of that mess sane as well as in one
piece, it would only be because the EverNameless decided to take a
hand...
136
"You're not going to
talk me into your version of the truth," he said at last,
forcing his tone to be as calm and easy as hers had been. "I
will find a way to prove I'm right, and when I do I expect an apology
from you. A sincere apology."
"What happens if you
prove the opposite?" she asked after a sip of coffee. "Will
/ get an apology, or will it just be one of those things people never
talk about? Well, maybe we shouldn't talk about it."
The last of that was
mumbled before she hid most of her face with the cup again, back to
looking anywhere but at him. For a moment Bariden was confused, and
then sudden insight gave him the probable answer.
"I'm going to put
this badly, but I still have to say it," he told her, groping
for words that would not make things worse. "I know you didn't
want to leave that last world, but you did it to keep me from being
trapped. We won't know if leaving was the right thing to do until
this is all over, but I still want you to know how much your doing
that means to me. Whatever happens, I won't ever forget; if it makes
you feel better to blame me for forcing you through the gate, go
ahead and do it. I did force you, and you're entitled to at least
that."
Her answer was a nod of
sorts, something that said she'd heard him but wasn't prepared to
discuss the subject. And she still wasn't looking at him, which
goaded him into saying something else he'd been wanting to.
"And you can stop
being anything but yourself," he told her a bit more harshly
than he'd intended. "All that clinical patience and
understanding, watching your every word, never feeling or showing
anything real—For a very little while in the last world I got a
glimpse of the real you, and I liked what I saw. It's not likely to
kill either one of us if you start showing it all the time."
Now it was her turn to be
confused, but at least she was looking at him again. And then the
confusion disappeared, to be replaced with something else.
"So you want me to be
myself all the time," she said, surprisingly looking pleased
with the idea. "All things considered, that could be the best
suggestion either of us might have made. You did get a look at the
real me, but you must
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have forgotten about it.
Okay, you'll get what you asked for, but don't forget you did ask."
"Why do I feel as
though I'm facing a master swordsman while armed with nothing but a
practice weapon?" Bariden asked, very suspicious of her sudden
good humor. "That must be the expression predators wear just
before they start gobbling down their meal. What are you up to?"
"Me?" she asked,
dark eyes wide with one hand to her chest. "Whatever could / be
up to that wasn't the specific request of someone who ought to learn
to think before he speaks? You asked for the real me, so you're going
to get her. Unless you use this very last chance to be smart and
change your mind. You won't get another."
Once again she looked
straight at him, and Bariden suddenly knew this was one of the
reasons she usually refrained from doing it. A quick look into her
eyes made you believe she was soft and small and helpless; this
steady stare was a different matter entirely, one most people would
find themselves backing down from. Realizing that, Bariden felt more
satisfied than surprised, and he gave her a faint grin.
"I appreciate the
offer, but my image would suffer if people began to think of me as
smart," he drawled. "That means my request is not
withdrawn, so you keep doing whatever comes naturally. And this is
fair warning: soon I'll be expecting us to be doing those natural
things together."
"Of course you will,"
she answered dryly, then sipped at her coffee without looking away.
"It's too bad it will probably happen a lot sooner than
you—expect. Was there anything else you wanted to talk about?
I'm looking forward to soaking in that bath for a bit before I go to
bed."
So she'd listened to his
spell and knew he'd put a tub filled with hot water in her suite.
He'd half-expected to surprise her with that, then realized she'd
deliberately let him know she knew. Part of what her real self was
was Sighted, and she'd decided to rub his nose in it. Bariden was
tempted to be annoyed, but there was no sense hi going ahead with his
plans if he would be that easy to get to.
"No, that's all the
conversation I had in mind for tonight," he said, this time
giving her a smile. "You go ahead and do your soaking, but if
you need someone to scrub your back, give me a call. I guarantee you
won't be waking me."
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This time it was his turn
to use an unwavering gaze, but she broke it in the only way it can be
done without admitting defeat. If you aren't aware of someone's
Significant Look and fail to acknowledge its existence, there's no
contest to be defeated at. She took a long swallow of coffee,
banished the cup before rising, then gave him a vague nod and smile
before strolling off to her suite. No becoming flustered at overly
friendly suggestions, no rush to escape an uncomfortable
situation—Bariden had never seen anything to match it, not even
the smoothness of certain ladies at his father's court.
"You're going to make
this as hard as possible for me, aren't you," he murmured, now
staring at the door she'd closed between them. "Instead of being
soft and pretty and too quiet, you're going to be hard as blade
steel, brutally direct, and as unimpressible as an eighty-year-old
dowager empress. That's supposed to be your real self? I wonder who
you think you're kidding."
But maybe that was one of
the problems. If she saw herself like that, she'd expect him to do
the same. Even if she was just exaggerating what she considered
flaws, she'd still believe she was being nothing but honest. Getting
around that ought to be fun, at least as much as being used as the
target at quarterstaff practice ...
"Damn," he
muttered even more softly, banishing his cup before standing. By
rights he ought to be thinking about how many other girls there were
in the worlds, girls who would be more than happy to listen to
reason. Instead, he could feel his determination increasing,
accompanied by a wish that there was only a single bedroom. But it
wasn't just a physical attraction he felt, a regrettable truth that
intended to prove itself by not letting him quit. It was all of
Chalaine that he wanted, and in order to get her he was willing to
fight.
If he was allowed the time
to fight. Their enemy was obviously herding them toward something,
and Bariden had picked up the conviction that they would have to win
against the something or lose a lot more than a game. It hadn't been
too bad so far, but that was only so far and only for him. Chalaine
would not be likely to agree, which led him to wonder what tomorrow
would be like ...
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Rather than follow that
line of thought, Bariden dropped it and went to soak in his own tub.
And if he turned the water really cold, maybe he'd even be able to
sleep...
They had no trouble
getting an early start the next day, and that after a good breakfast.
Once again an entry spell had refused to register, as though no such
thing was possible rather than that someone stronger was disallowing
it. They both felt that meant something, but neither of them could
figure out what.
Bariden rode his
horse-construct quietly next to Chalaine's, trying to talk himself
out of being annoyed. The girl had used breakfast to tease him, and
he'd been too distracted with thoughts of what lay ahead to do more
than get caught.
"No, /'// make our
food." she'd told him when he offered to produce whatever she
felt like eating. "Men are never any good at doing things like
that."
She'd been so offhand
about it that he'd simply shrugged and let her call up whatever she
pleased. He was halfway through the incredibly tasty meal before he
realized that every single dish had originally been made by one of
Bena's chefs—her male chefs. At that point he also realized he
was being surreptitiously but carefully watched; although he wasn't
being laughed at on the outside, inside was another matter entirely.
I should have done more
than just glare at her, he told himself sourly as he watched the
uninteresting countryside go by. She'd played a practical joke on
him, probably as part of showing the "real" her, and he'd
responded as if he were half asleep. But what really annoyed him was
the fact that he didn't know how he should have responded, how she'd
been expecting him to respond. Talk about feeling as if you were
being tested and graded ...
"I wonder if it's a
coincidence that all these worlds are so ordinary," the girl
said suddenly. She'd been looking around at the wood the road wound
through, just as he had. "It probably isn't, but I can't think
of any sinister purpose for something like that. Can you?"
"No, and I've been
trying," he admitted. "We can't accept anything as a
coincidence in a place where we've
14O
been deliberately sent,
but unless our enemy is trying to bore us to death, I'm missing the
point."
"Maybe the point is
to throw us off guard," she suggested. "You know, let us
think there's nothing dangerous around, and then hit us without
warning. If that's it, it doesn't look like it's going to happen
here, but maybe up ahead, where the cleared land starts .,."
She let the thought trail
off, but he didn't add anything as he studied the area they were
approaching. The road left the woods only a short distance ahead, and
the cleared land was obviously growing crops. That should mean there
were also people up ahead, like in that village he could just see
beyond the nearest stretch of farmland. Communal fields rather than
individual farms could be good or bad, depending on how close the
nearest city was. They'd just have to wait and see ...
Their mounts were moving
at a brisk pace, which meant it wasn't long before the wood and even
most of the fields were behind them. The village was a good deal
closer, an ordinary village that looked mostly lived-in. Nothing
seemed too new or too clean, and nothing that was too old or badly
kept. Ordinary, everyday, usual—except for the fact that no one
was around the part of it they could see. "It certainly isn't
deserted," the girl said, obviously sharing his thoughts. "The
people aren't out in the fields we just passed, but maybe there are
other fields. Or maybe something's happening that's taking everyone's
attention."
Bariden saw it too, then,
the small amount of dust that seemed to be coming from the other side
of the village. And sounds, as if people were talking—or
shouting ...
"Let's take a careful
look," he told the girl, getting ready to move a little faster.
"And this time try not to start anything."
She glanced at him over
that but didn't say anything, and he chose to consider her silence as
agreement. Urging his mount to a slightly faster pace he pulled out
ahead of her, moving along the village street toward the dust and
muted noise. At least it was muted until the street curved around to
the left, past what looked like a smithy. Beyond it the open area was
filled with what must have been most of the villagers—and two
groups that didn't belong in a village.
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Bariden came to a halt at
the back of the crowd and dismounted, then began to make his way
through the people who were watching some sort of confrontation. One
of the groups that didn't belong was larger than the other, as well
as being all male. The smaller group was apparently being led by a
woman who was in the middle of speaking to her opponents even as
Bariden drew closer from behind.
"... can't keep
taking people to be his servants and slaves!" she said heatedly,
hands closed to fists at her sides. "These people don't want to
serve a sorcerer, and neither do any other villagers in this kingdom!
If my father wasn't dying, he'd take care of Halvin—! And why
would a sorcerer need servants anyway? If he's all that powerful, he
should be able to see to his needs himself."
"I don't think
there's any question about how powerful Halvin is," one of the
woman's opponents answered with amusement that grated. "The king
couldn't have matched him even on his best day, so what difference
does it make whether or not he's dying? My lord doesn't owe you any
answers, but if you must know, he doesn't need servants. He just
happens to want them, to save himself the trouble of having to see to
those needs you mentioned. You—"
The man's words broke off
as one of his own people touched his arm, and he moved his head to
the side to listen to the hastily whispered message. He and his group
numbered at least fifteen, and Bariden could see them around the
leftmost member of the woman's group. By the colors they wore only
seven men stood behind the woman, and, incidentally, between the
villagers and the more numerous intruders.
"I've just been given
a message that concerns you" the man continued, smiling
offensively at the woman Bariden hadn't yet seen. "My Lord
Halvin says you have one minute to get yourself and your escort out
of the way of his men, otherwise we're to add you to the number of
young girls we're to get. That way you can find out firsthand what
sort of serving he likes—when he decides to get around to you.
It's his habit to make use of the prettier ones first."
The men behind him laughed
out loud at that, a threat and an insult rolled into one. The woman's
escort stiffened
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in outrage, but the way
they were outnumbered left them very few options. All they could do
was stand mere and seethe, their own silence underscoring the
woman's, and then the man spoke again.
"That minute is just
about up," he said, now looking around at the woman's escort as
he loosened his sword in its scabbard. "If you don't intend to
move aside, my men and I have some bladework to do. Which, by the
way, we mean to enjoy. It's been too long since the last time anyone
was stupid enough to try to stop us."
He licked his lips with
anticipated enjoyment, and his eyes told Bariden the man wasn't
bluffing. He really was the sort who enjoyed killing, the sort who
loved to make people crawl and scream before he ended them. Well,
this was one time he was due to be disappointed, and if Bariden had
his way there would never be any other times. Softly he spoke a
freezing spell aimed at the fighters behind the man, and
when—surprisingly—it worked, he stepped out and moved to
face the spokesman.
"Stupid would be not
trying to stop you," he said, making no effort to look at the
woman. There would be time for amenities after the threat was taken
care of. "Lowlifes like you never stop on your own, you lack the
necessary intelligence. And if you want someone to use that sword on,
you now have me."
"Well, what do you
know, somebody who thinks he can play hero," the man growled,
his skin darkening with the anger of insult. "I really like that
idea, since my favorite hobby is making dead heroes. Come on, boys,
we'll start with this one."
He unsheathed his sword,
sneering when Bariden did the same, but the sneer didn't last long.
He'd been expecting to hear the sound of other swords being drawn by
his cronies behind him, and when he didn't he realized it
immediately. He threw a quick look over his shoulder, paling when he
saw everyone frozen in place, then looked back at the newcomer in
shock.
"That's right,
the—boys—aren't included in this," Bariden told him
with a lot of satisfaction. "It's just you and me, so why don't
you come ahead and make me a dead hero."
The man's fist closed
convulsively tighter on his sword at the same time that he swallowed
hard, a typical reaction of a longtime bully suddenly on his own. He
looked as if he'd be happiest just turning around and walking away,
but the way he licked his lips said he was thinking about something
that would not allow that. Then he forced himself straignter, and
made an effort to renew his previous sneer.
"Just because you're
holding that thing doesn't mean you know how to use it," he
said, obviously trying to convince himself. "In fact, it isn't
likely you can, not when you had to be the one to do that to my men.
You've got to be running a bluff, so I'm going to caH you on it."
By then the sneer was
real, and Bariden would have enjoyed shaking his head at the man's
stupidity. He'd managed to make himself believe Bariden couldn't use
a sword because he could use magic, and therefore would be vulnerable
to someone with even a small amount of sword skill. Even if that were
true, wouldn't Bariden then use magic to protect himself? The blind
spots of people who didn't know how to think ...
And then there was no time
for thinking, only for reacting. The man charged forward with a yell,
swinging his sword, obviously trying to drive his opponent back.
Bariden stood his ground and simply blocked the swing with his own
sword, the strength he put into the block also cutting short the
charge. The man started hacking at him then, a clenched-teeth attempt
to use his own strength, no technique evident in any of his moves.
Bariden blocked the first three swings, ignored the following feint,
then blocked the first backhand swing before beginning to reply.
And that was when the man
gave it up. Twice he just managed to block Bariden's attacks, each
time coming close to losing a body part, and then he hurled his sword
like a block of wood and ran. The thrown sword was easy to knock
aside; harder was not separating the man's backbone before he'd gone
a full two steps. If Bariden had believed in slaughter he would have
done it, but what was the point? Taking a coward in the back only
started you on picking up his bad habits ...
But three steps was still
as far as the man got. A red aura suddenly enveloped him and then he
burst into flame, his
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hair, his clothing, and
even his flesh. The sounds of terrified horror from the people behind
Bariden were drowned out by the burning man's screams, and all the
big man could do was stand there and watch his former opponent die
horribly. The flames were on the inside of a shell-like warding, and
even if Bariden had been able to break through, it wouldn't have done
the burning man any good. Even a wizard-level healer would have had
trouble with the results of that much burning...
The screams from inside
the shell lasted both too long and not really long at all, and when
they and the flames disappeared there was nothing left. Bariden heard
the whimpering of fear behind him, adding to the fury he'd begun to
feel. What sort of twisted animal did things like that, and for what
conceivable reason?
"He lost, so he
deserved to be punished," a light, unconcerned voice came from
the left, almost in answer to Bariden's thoughts. "If I allow
someone the honor of serving me, losing is not permitted, nor is
surviving the loss. Most men tend to fight to the death to avoid my
little punishments, but every now and again there's a fool who lets
his cowardice make him forget. At least this one won't forget again."
The man chuckled at his
little joke as he inspected Bariden casually, as though the much
bigger man was of minimal interest. He, himself, was very
interesting, but only indirectly because of what he looked like.
Slightly below average in height, dull brown hair and eyes, slender
to the point of skinniness—even the silks and jewels he wore
did nothing to disguise his complete lack of musculature and clumsy
movements. His facial features were beyond ordinary to the point of
boredom, and even his nose wasn't too large. Larger than average,
yes, but only by a little. Slightly wider forehead than average,
slightly weaker chin, slightly narrow-lipped mouth—all so
ordinary no one would look twice—except for the expression in
those flat brown eyes.
"I can't believe the
fool was actually running toward me," the man continued with
what sounded like annoyance. "He and I grew up together, and he
made my life unbearable until I was old enough to begin studying
magic. When I reached my current level of strength and began to
gather
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servants, I gave him the
choice of groveling at my feet and doing as I ordered, or dying
slowly then and there. Even if he hadn't broken one of my most basic
rules, I certainly wouldn't have protected him. Who are you, and what
are you doing trespassing on my territory?"
"Right now I'm
standing here trying to figure you out," Bariden answered,
resheathing his sword before folding his arms. "Many Sighted go
through the phase of wanting to be an absolute ruler, but it's so
easy to do once you reach a certain level it also quickly becomes
boring. After that they either go back to studying magic, or go out
among the worlds to find something that's really fun. Why are you
still wasting your time playing child games around herel"
Quick hatred flashed in
the man's eyes, immediately joined by other, less easily read
emotions. That reaction really made Bariden wonder, but before he
could start guessing with the clues he had, part of the answer was
given to him.
"That just goes to
show how much you know!" the man shrilled, having lost the phony
languidness he'd been speaking with. "I'm Halvin, and being
stronger than everyone else means I don't have to go back to
studying! And if being an absolute ruler is so easy, why doesn't
everyone do it? Because it isn't easy, that's why, not even for the
big and handsome ones like you\ You're jealous that I can do it and
you can't, so you're making up stories about other places to make me
feel bad. Well, it isn't going to work because I know better. There
aren't any other places, so I have to find my fun right here. Like
this!"
He spoke a quick spell and
launched something dark green at Bariden, something with a lot of
teeth that came at him already chewing away. He was caught enough by
surprise that the thing would have reached him before he could react,
either with a counterspell or by throwing himself out of the way.
Bariden took half a step back, braced for pain—but it didn't
happen. The thing struck the warding Chalaine had forgotten to
remove, and that was as close as it could come.
But that didn't stop it
entirely. Bariden looked down at the small monster that clung to his
warding at chest height, needing to watch it chew for a moment before
he
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WAROTI
understood what it was
trying to do. If he'd been unwanted it would have already chewed
through him, that was easy enough to see. The point that took some
thought was that the thing was now chewing at his warding, as if it
expected to be able to break through. Briefly Bariden thought that
interpretation must be wrong, and then it, with all the rest, gave
him the answer.
"You're no stronger
than sorcerer-apprentice, are you?" he said to Halvin, knowing
he was right. "You're standing there expecting mis thing to chew
through my warding, because it would be able to chew through yours.
And that's also why you haven't changed your appearance to something
more heroic, which I'll bet you mink you deserve. You're not yet good
enough to change yourself without making things worse, so you have to
settle for nothing but fancy domes and maybe the occasional illusion.
All of which also tells me why you haven't tried to unfreeze your
thugs. You haven't yet learned how to counter anything more complex
than basic spells."
"Stop trying to sound
as if you're better!" Halvin screamed, so furious he was almost
foaming at the mourn. "I 'm the strongest around here so you
can' t be better, do you hear me, you can't\ If I have to prove it,
then I will!"
He began to speak spells
men, one of which sent more green things with teem, one that produced
yellow and orange lightning bolts which tried to skewer Bariden. The
rest were too imprecisely spoken to become anything more than a
string of gibberish, but that didn't make the situation any less
dangerous. The people behind Halvin's target were stumbling back with
screams and shouts, certain that some of the lightning bolts would
attack mem instead, and someone could be hurt because of the panic
alone.
Which told Bariden he was
wasting time and maybe lives just standing mere. He banished the
toothy things and the lightning bolts with a single gesture, then
spoke the spell ReSayne had taught him not long ago. It seemed there
was a young wizard with a talent for unSeen magic who was coming up
with some interesting new spells, simple, elegant phrases that
accomplished what hadn't been possible until then. ReSayne had taught
him the spell, but since
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me fiend wasn't Sighted it
hadn't been able to invoke the power of it.
Bariden, however, was
Sighted, and fairly powerful for his level. The spell, which produced
a shimmering magic-resistant sphere around the person it was aimed
at, worked at once, cutting Halvin's ranting short. He looked around
wildly at the transparent bubble and tried to banish it, but he
wasn't strong enough to affect it. His next try was to break it with
a fist, and when he couldn't bring even one of his ineffectual blows
into contact, his frustration and hatred took over completely. Before
Bariden could explain exactly what me sphere was, Halvin spat out a
spell and, unfortunately for him, it was very precisely done.
Blue-white flames flared inside the sphere, contained and
concentrated, and me sorcerer-apprentice didn't even scream long, hi
a matter of moments the flames disappeared, no longer sustained by
the pile of ash mat had shortly before been a man.
"Stupid to the end,"
Bariden muttered as he banished me sphere with a gesture, turning
loose a brief stench of scorched flesh. "Someone should have
told him mat when you play games with fire, you have to expect to get
burned. But even if someone had told him, ne probably would have
refused to listen."
"You're right,"
a soft voice said from behind his right shoulder. "His sort
never do listen, they have to learn the hard way. I'd like to thank
you for risking yourself to protect people who are strangers to you.
It's the sort of noble thing my father always did when he was young."
By then Bariden had turned
and was looking down at her, the woman who had been trying to protect
the villagers when he'd arrived. She was a little taller than
average, and seemed to be slender but roundly built under her plain
but richly made white gown. She had bright red hair and green eyes,
but rather than making her beautiful, the combination gave her a
pixielike quality of quiet good humor and calm intelligence. And most
startling of all, her glow was as bright as the one he'd seen from
Chalaine!
"I'm Tenillis,
daughter of King Graff," she continued without the least sign of
boasting, her smile warm with the thanks she'd mentioned. "On
behalf of my father I'd like to welcome you to our kingdom, and
invite you to join
148
us at the palace for
however long you'll be here. If we don't owe you all the hospitality
we can provide at the very least, we don't owe you anything."
"I'm Bariden, and you
don' t owe me anything," he replied, responding to her smile
with one of his own. "If someone is causing trouble and you're
capable of stopping it, it's your duty to do so. If you can and
don't, you're directly responsible for whatever harm is caused after
that. I don't mind being responsible for the things I do, but I don't
like being blamed for the doings of others. And speaking of doing,
what would you like done with that lot?"
Bariden nodded toward the
heavies who were still frozen in place, and the girl Tenillis turned
her head to consider them.
"I think I'd like
them to be released two or three at a time so my guardsmen can disarm
them and put them under arrest," she said, needing very little
time to decide that. "Having Halvin's protection let them do
anything they cared to, and now it's time for them to answer for it.
One of the magistrates holding court in the municipal section of the
palace will take care of that, and all we have to do is bring them
in."
"Sounds fair to me,"
Bariden agreed, then waited while the guardsmen stationed themselves
around the first of the heavies. When they were in place he released
the surrounded men, waited until they were disarmed and bound, then
did the same with the next few. It wasn't long before the job was
done and Tenillis and her men were ready to leave, which meant it was
time to find out where Chalaine was. He hadn't seen her since he'd
taken the lead when they'd first entered the village, but the
dispersing crowd of villagers parted to give him the answer.
She stood alone holding
their two horses, silently watching people chattering happily in
relief as they headed for their homes. The faint smile she wore said
she was glad the villagers no longer had to fear for their lives and
safety, and it didn't matter that she hadn't had a hand in seeing to
that. The end result was what counted, not who would be taking the
credit for it, an attitude that surprised Bariden very little. As he
walked toward her, he realized he'd somehow known she would feel that
way ...
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"Very entertaining
show you put on," she said to him when he got close enough, her
expression downright bland. "Is that the definition I'm supposed
to use when you talk about staying out of trouble?"
"If you think back,
you'll remember I said I wanted you to stay out of trouble,"
Bariden countered, holding his reaction down to no more than faint
amusement. "I never said a word about me, so excuses are
something I don't have to look for. We've been invited to a palace
again, but this time without any promises of help. I would have
asked, except that the late Halvin answered the question in a way I
have to believe. You heard?"
"When he accused you
of lying about other worlds?" she asked with a sigh. "I
wish I hadn't, but unfortunately I did. Maybe there's a gate hidden
in this palace, too."
Now that was a thought,
one that made Bariden pause. What if there was ... ?
CHAPTGR GIGHT
If there is a gate in this
palace too, I don't know if I'll trust it enough to use it,"
Bariden said to Chalaine after a moment, taking his reins while he
frowned. "It's fairly obvious we're being herded, but without
the end being in sight I'm getting more and more nervous about
blindly stepping forward. There's no telling when the next step just
won't be there, and we'll—"
"Bariden, excuse me,"
Tenillis's voice came, and then she was standing there with them.
"We're ready to leave for the palace now. Is this someone I
should be introduced to?"
"As a matter of fact
it is," Bariden answered, watching the two women inspect each
other. The process was one most men preferred to stay out of,
considering that it often looked like a wordless challenge. Like
right then, for instance ... "Tenillis, daughter of King Graff,
allow me to present Chalaine, my partner and traveling companion."
"Be welcome in our
kingdom, companion of Bariden," TeniUis said with a smile and a
nod. "He's earned enough welcome for ten companions."
"So I saw,"
Chalaine commented, her own expression on the neutrally cool side. "I
can tell you're Sighted, but it feels as if you're totally untrained.
Is there any particular reason why that would be?"
"Just the best of
reasons," Tenillis replied with one brow raised. "No true
lady will involve herself with magic, not and expect to stay a lady.
It simply can't be done."
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"Oh, I know some who
have managed, but basically you're right," Chalaine returned,
and now there was a faint smile curving her lips. "The study of
magic requires a woman rather than a lady, one who understands that
it's worth occasionally getting your hands dirty. Few—ladies—
are capable of understanding that sort of truth."
"For which we praise
all the Powers that be," Tenillis replied with the same calm
smile. "Once you reach a certain level of intelligence, you know
mere are some things you don't want to understand. Like that old
saying goes, 'Only a fool seeks knowledge he's better off without.' "
"Personally, I think
it's the fool who lets other people decide what he is and isn't
better off without," Chalaine countered with even more amusement
in her smile. "But that's undoubtedly because I'm a woman rather
than a lady, and usually make it a point to test idiotic sayings like
(hat I haven't found one yet that wasn't meant to sway the
shortsighted into taking a dead-end road."
"Now, ladies,"
Bariden interrupted before me conversation turned into a fistfight,
then flinched when he realized what he'd said. Chalaine still wore
that infuriating smile, but Tenillis was beginning to look rather
upset. "Why don't we save this discussion for another time?"
he quickly tried instead. "Since we have all those men waiting
to be delivered to justice, we ought to get them taken care of
first."
"You're right, of
course," Tenillis said with a quick and grateful smile for him,
one mat warmed for no reason other than being there. "I'd almost
forgotten my father is also waiting, not to mention anxiously hoping
we were able to sway Halvin. He didn't want me to go, but there was
no one else to see to his duty for him. Please follow us ..."
She let the request trail
off after emphasizing the word "please," then turned and
hurried back to her escort As if she thought he might not follow, and
was begging him to change his mind. He turned his head to look at the
most likely reason she thought he'd be going elsewhere, and once
again Chalaine met his stare directly.
"What can I say?"
she asked with a shrug, looking not in the least embarrassed or
guilty. "That's the tamest excuse there ever was for not
studying magic, not to mention that it has to be someone else's idea.
People who let others decide
152
what's best for them
usually end up regretting it."
"But not always,"
Bariden felt compelled to point out, his annoyance rising again. "And
aren't you doing the same by telling her she's wrong not to see
things your way? If the way she's living her life satisfies her, what
right do you have to tell her it shouldn't?"
"I wasn't telling her
to change her life, I was arguing against an idea I don't agree
with," Chalaine answered quietly, all amusement, real or
pretended, now gone. "If you don't see it like that, there's
nothing I can say to change your mind."
She turned away from him,
ending the discussion by paying full attention to mounting up.
Bariden hesitated a moment before doing the same, choking down a
flare of anger. He hated the way she handed over the victory in an
argument, which invariably turned it into a loss that couldn't be
challenged. It also left him stuck with a position that he didn't
necessarily subscribe to, which was her interpretation of his
opinion. It was time for another talk about that infuriating habit of
hers, but not there and then. He wanted privacy for that, and time
enough to take as long as necessary ...
Tenillis and her escort,
each of them leading some of the horses Halvin's ex-henchmen were
tied to, were already on the road leading out of the village. The
procession didn't move very fast even when Bariden and Chalaine
finally joined them, but they didn't have all that far to go. Less
than five miles down the road was the palace they'd been told about,
definitely impressive but even more surprising.
Rather than being high and
crowned with battlements, it was no more than three stories tall in
the center. To either side, however, it stretched on and on and on, a
single building rather than a number of buildings standing close
together. Bariden had never seen anything like it, especially the
absence of a defensive wall. The place seemed to be open to anyone
who wanted to enter, and quite a number of people were doing just
that. And here, closer to the palace, the fields were full of people
working.
They were less than half a
mile away from the city-palace, when a mounted troop appeared from
some lower part of the building to the left of what looked like a
main
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entrance. The troop was
more than large enough to help the guardsmen with the prisoners, and
in a few minutes all but two of their escorts plus prisoners were on
the way back to where the troop had come from. With most of the crowd
gone, Tenillis backed her horse to the place on Bariden's left.
"Father must have
seen us approaching, and sent extra guardsmen to help," she
said, glowing happily like a small girl. "I'm glad he already
knows things went well."
"If there were that
many men available, why did you ride out with only seven?"
Bariden asked, bothered as well as annoyed. "You could have been
badly hurt, not to mention captured or killed. With more men—"
"Bariden, that was
something / insisted on," she interrupted gently. "Even the
presence of every man in my father's guard would not have kept Halvin
from doing as he pleased, and the more there, the more who could die.
I took only volunteers, and none of them expected to return. If
father had been stronger, he would have looked at it your way. But
now that he is feeling strong enough, we can go straight to him—Oh,
Bariden, I hope you like him. I know he's going to like you."
Her smile drew him forward
with her as she began to move again, but not even a glance went to
Chalaine, who rode to his right. Bariden expected his—companion—to
comment about that, but all Chalaine did was urge her mount along
just in their wake. Silence probably wasn't a good sign, but there
was nothing Bariden could do about it. He'd have a talk with both
women later, pointing out mere was no reason they couldn't be friends
... Sure, no reason beyond an instant mutual dislike ...
Trying not to think about
being caught in the middle of a female free-for-all distracted
Bariden, so much so that the next thing he knew they were at the foot
of the steps in front of the palace. Tenillis was being helped off
her horse by one of the guardsmen, and only then did Bariden notice
that she rode sidesaddle. Like a real lady, and unlike Chalaine, who
was dismounting all by herself. That would be yet another point of
discord between them, he realized, seeing to his own dismounting. As
if it mattered what a woman wore and how she rode ...
154
The horses were led away
by the guardsmen, and Tenillis herself led the way up the stairs
toward the doors that were standing wide. Two guardsmen stood beside
these doors, and a glance around showed Bariden that the people
entering and leaving the palace were doing it through other doors.
This entrance must be reserved for the royal family and their guests,
and needed nothing more than a couple of duty guards to keep it
private.
That and a mild exclusion
spell. Bariden could feel it as he passed through the doorway, a
suggestion that anyone who didn't belong should find another way into
the palace. It didn't have enough strength behind it to affect anyone
with more power than the one who had cast it, but a fleeting look of
disappointment on Tenillis's face said she'd been hoping Chalaine
would have trouble. The words they'd exchanged must have really upset
her.
A servant appeared and
bowed to his princess, listened for a moment, men led the way toward
a wide set of stairs leading upward. At the top the servant switched
his bow to Chalaine and asked her to follow him, which she did after
a hesitation so short it could have been imagination. But she didn't
even glance at Bariden before walking away, not to mention saying
anything to him. He was about to do his own bit to change that, when
Tenillis took his left arm in both hands and briefly leaned against
him.
"Father doesn't have
the strength to meet more than one new person at a time," she
said with a sad smile. "If two were presented, he'd try to be
gracious to them both even if it harmed him, which it would. Tonight
we'll have a private dinner of celebration, just my family and a few
close friends. Father isn't allowed to attend things like that, so
your companion will be able to rejoin you then. Right now she's being
taken to a suite where she can rest and refresh herself."
"Tenillis, Chalaine
isn't your enemy any more than I am," he said, trying to make
her believe him. "I know you two got off on the wrong foot, but
it doesn't have to continue like that. Holding a grudge would be
foolish ..."
"Oh, I'm not very
good at holding a grudge," Tenillis said ruefully when his words
trailed off. He'd been thinking about Chalaine's ability when it came
to holding grudges ... "I'm
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sure she and I will work
out our differences in no time, for your sake if for no other reason.
My father's apartment is this way."
Her smile of encouragement
urged him to walking again, and this time she kept possession of his
arm. Bariden had thought about telling her that Chalaine wasn't
likely to be that easily convinced about differences, then decided to
keep the comment to himself. It would be nothing but borrowing
trouble, which he had no need whatsoever to do.
King Graff's apartment was
as splendid and large as a monarch's private quarters ought to be,
and seemed even more tastefully decorated than Bariden's father's.
But it was also quieter, and those who moved through the outer rooms
took pains to make no unnecessary noise. There might as well have
been a sign reading "sick room," right above a pointing
arrow; when Tenillis pasted a pleasant smile on her face as they
approached a set of closed doors, Bariden knew which way the arrow
would be pointing. As they reached the doors one of them was opened
from inside, and Tenillis passed through first and moved straight
ahead.
"Father, did you
see?" she asked gently but happily as she approached an
oversized four-poster. "The problem is solved, and our people
are safe again."
"Yes, my dear, I
certainly did see," a weak but steady voice answered from the
bed. "Bring the young man closer and present him to me."
At Tenillis's gesture
Bariden moved forward, and once he reached her side he was able to
see the man in the bed. The king had obviously been a big man, but
some wasting disease had taken the flesh from his bones and die
strength from his arms. The bright red hair around his sunken face
made it look even more pale than it was, but mere was still life left
in the sharp blue eyes. King Graff lay propped up on pillows with a
silken cover in blue reaching to his chest, but something about him
still said he was far from beaten.
"Your Majesty, allow
me to present Bariden, a most welcome visitor to your realm,"
Tenillis said with a smile. "Through his efforts alone the
sorcerer Halvin was defeated, and the land made safe once again for
your people."
"You are indeed most
welcome to Our realm, Bariden," the king's weak voice said with
true warmth, his smile
156
matching that of his
daughter. "It's been much too long since a hero walked these
halls, and it pleases Us to see another before Our death. Tenillis,
wait for the young man in the next room. We would have words in
private with him."
"Yes, Father,"
the girl said with a curtsy, then left with a parting smile for
Bariden. She also left without any attempt lo argue or even to
hesitate, which raised Bariden's brows somewhat. Even his sisters
didn't obey that wholeheartedly ...
"And now, Bariden, we
can speak man to man," Graff said once a silent servant had
closed the door behind Tenillis. "Because I was worried about my
daughter, I watched everything that happened through a vision sphere.
If it had become necessary, I would have used the sphere to send all
my remaining strength against Hatvin in an attempt to end him.
Whether or not it would have worked is another question."
Bariden nodded,
understanding the problem. Attacking someone through a sphere meant
for viewing is possible, but the attempt invariably drains the
attacker completely. If that attacker started out strong and healthy
he might survive, but it would still be quite a while before he got
his strength back. And if the person being attacked was too much
stronger, the attacker could conceivably give up his life and still
do less than lethal damage.
"So I think you can
imagine my delight when you stepped forward," the king
continued, grinning weakly. "And men when you proved to be
stronger than that emotional cripple—I was watching carefully,
you know, and I saw you step out in front of the helpless without
waiting to find that out. That you were stronger, I mean. You would
have fought Halvin even if he proved the stronger,"
"I don't like to see
people being taken advantage of," Bariden answered with a shrug,
faintly embarrassed. "And it's been my experience that there are
times when strength isn't the most important factor. No competent
sorcerer with imagination needs a flock of bullyboys to push ordinary
people around; there are ways to do that with magic that are a lot
more effective. If this Halvin was using them, either he wasn't all
that competent or he had no imagination. In either
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case, I had no real doubts
about being able to take him."
"You do a good job of
rationalizing an act of pure bravery and courage," the king said
with a chuckle. "If you're more comfortable like that, just keep
on doing it. I, however, prefer to look at it differently, which
brings us to the real reason I wanted to speak to you. As you can
see, I'm dying."
"If you like, I'll be
glad to see if there's something I can do," Bariden offered at
once. "I don't have anything like a talent for healing, but
maybe I can—"
"No, no, that's not
what I meant," the king interrupted with surprised pleasure.
"It's to your credit that you would make the offer, but even
someone with your strength could do very little to help me. This
disease has weakened my body on the inside, and the damage was
already beyond repairing by the time I first noticed that something
was wrong. My healers have been able to keep me free of pain, but
that's the best anyone can do."
"Anyone here"
Bariden muttered, disturbed that this brave monarch had no way to
reach a wizard-strength healer. The ravages of disease could be
repaired, but only by someone who had the strength and the skill. ..
"No, what I wanted to
speak to you about is something quite different," King Graff
went on, obviously having missed Bariden's muttered comment. "As
I said, I'm dying, but that won't be the greatest tragedy of my life.
What was infinitely worse was when my two sons were killed."
The man's face turned
really bleak, and this time there was nothing to say. Bariden had no
children, and therefore could only imagine what losing two would be
like.
"It was a stupid
accident that should never have happened," King Graff continued.
"But it did happen, and it took both of them. Shortly after that
this disease made itself known, and that was the end of all chance to
produce another heir or two. Tenillis is very dear to me, but she's
still a girt. What this kingdom needs is a man as heir."
"You can't be
serious," Bariden protested in shock. "I'm nothing but a
passing stranger, someone you don't know at all. And what about the
people of this land? How would they feel, having a sorcerer for a
king? It's not—"
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SHARON
"So you noticed that
you'd said something foolish," King Graff observed with a faint
chuckle when Bariden's words broke off. "They already know what
it's like to have a magic user for a king, and they love the idea. If
a king is capable of getting what he wants by magic, he tends to
leave his people alone to build satisfactory lives of their own. It's
been generations since someone of .my line hasn't been able to do
magic."
Hearing that made Bariden
stop and think. He'd never had any designs on his father's throne,
but that hadn't stopped the spread of rumors. Because he was better
than most with weapons, a lot of people were expecting him to
challenge his oldest brother for the throne once their father was
gone. And the belief that he would win had made even more people very
uneasy. After all, he was a highly competent sorcerer that they would
then be snick with as king. Who knew what he might decide to do to
them...
"Woman or not,
Tenillis is still your only remaining heir," Bariden said then.
"It would be very unfair to exclude her, especially after what
she tried to do earlier. And especially in favor of a complete
stranger you know nothing about. I could have done what I did just to
get you to make this very offer, to legitimize my takeover. If
nothing else, I do have more imagination than the late Halvin."
"Even most trees have
more imagination than he did," the king countered dryly. "The
only intelligent thing he ever did was wait until I was too sick to
stop him before starting his game of domination, and even that was
more cowardice than intelligence. But mat point alone disproves your
contention. If Halvin was able to do as he pleased, you certainly
could. A man's rule is legitimized if he takes over and no one is
able to stop him. Who around here do you imagine is able to stop
you?"
That was a question
Bariden couldn't answer, but the king gave him a moment to do so
anyway. When the moment was over, King Graff smiled gently.
"So, as you can see,
your objections are groundless— with the possible exception of
the one concerning Tenillis. I admit you have a point there, but the
matter could be rectified rather easily if you made Tenillis your
queen.
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Or don't you consider her
as attractive as she obviously considers you?"
"On the contrary, I
find her very attractive," Bariden muttered, remembering the
flash he'd gotten from her when they first met. The Spell of Affinity
said they would do very well together, and the way she asked for
things rather than demanding them seemed to support that. But still.
. .
"Why don't you take
some time to think about what I've said," the king suggested
gently. "Even if a man is capable of making snap decisions, he
shouldn't have to do it with the most important matters of his life.
Get some rest, take a slow look around, and tomorrow we can talk
again."
Bariden nodded, grateful
for the reprieve. He did need some uninterrupted thinking time,
especially in view of what Halvin had said before he died. If that
was the last world he and Chalaine would be able to reach...
Tenillis wasn't waiting
outside the sickroom as Bariden had thought she would be. She'd left
a servant there with her apologies and the promise that she would see
him later, along with instructions to show Bariden to his apartment.
The big man followed the servant without comment, and once he was
alone he sat wearily in a chair. The apartment was gorgeous, what he
could see of it even better than what he had in his father's palace,
but his mind was too agitated to appreciate it.
King Graff really wanted
him as his heir, without any sense of reluctance whatsoever. That was
what disturbed Bariden so deeply, that one major difference between
the king and his own father. King Agilar was a large, pleasant man
who enjoyed his children and loved them, but he wasn't Sighted. He
had never made any obvious difference among his three sons, but
Bariden had always had the feeling he was the one the king worried
about most. As if there were something wrong with Bariden, something
that couldn't be cured.
Or as if he couldn't be
completely trusted. His father had never said that in so many words,
but Bariden had gotten that feeling more than once. King Graff, on
the other hand, obviously trusted Bariden without question, or he
wouldn't have offered him his people and his daughter. It was so
tempting to think about staying in a place where you were
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not only needed but
wanted, really and truly wanted. A place that could become more of a
home than you'd ever known ...
He would think about that
for a while, just a little while . . .
The apartment the servant
showed me to was pleasant, but nothing like what I'd been given in
Queen Lova's palace. I thought about that as I looked around briefly,
then shrugged it off. This time it was Bariden's turn to play hero,
mine to simply tag along and get in the way. Most especially get in
the way. That girl Tenillis ...
I called a cup of coffee
into being, but rather than sit down with it I went back out into the
hall. There were no guardsmen posted at my door with orders to keep
me inside, and even the servant who'd guided me there was gone. That
meant I could go for the stroll I wanted without creating any scenes
or confrontations, a pleasant change I took immediate advantage of. I
had some thinking to do, but also had the definite urge to take a
good look around.
The hall I strolled
through was made of marble, into which nicely carved doors were set
to give the apartments privacy. But I'd already noticed that my
apartment wasn't all that lavishly decorated, and now saw that the
marble wasn't top quality either. There was no doubt that sweet,
ladylike Tenillis had told the servant where to put me, and it wasn't
likely to be anywhere near Bariden's apartment. That little
sweetheart had staked him out as her own from the first minute she
saw him, and had no intentions of letting me get in her way.
Which was something of a
laugh. I paused to sip at my coffee before turning left at a
cross-corridor, wondering if Bariden had told her yet that he and I
were just friends. Our last conversational exchange had seemed to
indicate he was ready to do just that, exactly as I'd said he would.
It had been easy to see he found the girl attractive, and she was a
princess, which matched his own station in life. The fact that /
didn't like her at all meant nothing, not as far as he was concerned.
I wasn't the one she was trying to catch.
A female servant came out
of a room and hurried past me, intent on whatever her errand was. Her
glance was very
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brief, only long enough to
show her I wasn't someone she had to be concerned about, and a moment
later even her footsteps were gone. There didn't seem to be very many
people in that part of the palace, which might or might not mean
something. I had been moving from corridor to corridor almost at
random, letting my vague urge to explore choose the direction. If and
when it led me to a dead end, I'd have no trouble finding my way
back.
And then I turned one
corner to see, about a hundred feet ahead, what looked like a
breezeway or a small, enclosed bridge. Rather than there being rooms
to either side of the corridor, there seemed to be large open
windows. Walking down there confirmed that, but neither view looked
out at the front of the palace. This was somewhere in back, then, and
the stretch was a bridge of sorts. It connected the palace proper
with a small building straight ahead, something that did not look
like a simple extension of the palace. A flare of curiosity sent me
on, just to find out what it was.
About twenty feet beyond
the bridge stood a door, but a very plain door without carving of any
sort. It was also unlocked, but I could detect a faint exclusion
spell, one that would certainly keep out any unSighted who came
calling. Someone who was Sighted, though. . . even the most untrained
novice would be able to pass with no trouble at all...
Which meant I was ail but
being invited. I sighed as I banished my coffee cup, wondering just
how credulous I was supposed to be. I'm not one of those who flatly
refuse to admit there's such a thing as coincidence, but there are
limits beyond which I stop swallowing. I just happened to get the
urge to explore, and then, by pure luck, just happen to come across
this door? Sure, of course, no problem. Any day of the week.
Rather than touch the
doorknob I gestured the door open, ready for anything to jump out in
attack, but not really expecting that anything. My suspicious mind
had come up with a different idea, and when, after a moment, I
stepped through, my suspicions were confirmed. Behind the door was a
railed walkway, something like a balcony that gave an observer a
clear view of a shrine. The building containing it was a simple,
three-storied structure without separated
162
floors or rooms,
spotlessly clean but also undecorated. Tbe idea of that, I suppose,
was to keep anything from competing with the glory of the only thing
it contained.
Which was, of course, a
gate. It hung in the middle of the air, almost directly opposite the
balcony I stood on, and the building had obviously been constructed
around it. I could have created a bridge from the balcony that would
have let me walk directly up to it, but what was the point? As close
as I was the gate still hadn't flared open, and once again I could
detect a Spell of Volition. If someone didn't really want to use mat
gate, they never would.
And that meant I now had
even more thinking to do. Not to mention hunting Bariden down to give
him the news. We were still being played with, and I didn't like it
even a little. But we also had a decision to make, and that would be
the hard part—for more than one of us ...
Bariden stood with a cup
of wine in his hands, glancing around the reception room. For the
moment he was alone again, but certainly not ignored. Tenillis's
ladies were in a cluster about twenty-five feet away, all but staring
at him as they whispered and giggled among themselves. They'd been
nervous about being presented to him, but none of them had let the
opportunity pass.
But they hadn't been the
only ones he'd been introduced to, nor the most important. When
Tenillis had come to his apartment to tell him about the reception
being held before dinner, she'd begged him to dress for the occasion.
Her idea had been to have some of her father's domes fitted to him,
and she'd been delighted when he proved he didn't need anyone else's
finery. The same outfit he'd created for Queen Leva's feast did the
job, and Tenillis had been glowing when she'd entered the reception
room on his arm.
And as soon as they
entered, he'd been presented to the queen. Tenillis's mother was a
strong, slender woman who obviously had her own opinions about
things, but she'd greeted him with such warmth and approval that
Bariden still hadn't gotten over it. And she'd compared him to her
late sons, saying he was so much like them that it was almost like
having one of them back again. After that,
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163
(he introductions to
members of the court had gone by in a blur.
"You seem to be
enjoying yourself," a gentle voice said from his right. "If
you are, I'm glad."
"It would be hard for
someone not to enjoy himself in this beautiful room," Bariden
answered, turning to a smiting Tenillis. "The only problem is, I
don't yet see Chalaine. You did send someone to tell her about the
reception, didn't you?"
"Of course I did,"
Tenillis answered at once, her green eyes making no effort to avoid
his. "She should be here any minute, and will even have enough
time for a drink before dinner."
"That's good,"
Bariden said, hoping she was telling the tram. He hadn't tried to see
Chalaine earlier, mainly because he couldn't think of what to say to
her. Or how to say what was necessary. After her, of course, it would
be Tenillis he would have to speak with, and after them the king...
"See?" Tenillis
said, sounding very pleased. "I knew I was right. Here she is
now."
Bariden looked up to see
the figure coming through the doors, tangentially realizing he wasn't
the only one watching the entrance. Everyone in the room seemed to be
staring, but not because the new arrival was that beautifully gowned.
She wasn't gowned at all, but still wore the domes they'd reached
that world in. As the only female in the room hi pants—and
travel-worn pants at that—the growing murmurs of comment
weren't ones of admiration.
"Oh, dear, she must
have disliked the gown I sent her," Tenillis said, now sounding
embarrassed. "I'm sorry, Bariden, I suppose I should have sent a
selection and let her choose. This is all my fault."
"I don't think so,"
Bariden answered, trying to keep the growl out of his voice. "What
you sent has nothing to do with what she has on. If she wanted to,
she could have—"
"Tenillis, this is
quite intolerable," the queen said suddenly, coming up on Ban
den's left. "1 realize that person is a companion of Lord
Bariden's, but there is such a thing as propriety. If someone can't
be bothered to dress properly for an occasion, they really can't
expect to be welcomed.
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165
I would very much
appreciate it if someone did something about this."
"I'm sure Lord
Bariden will speak to her, Mother," Tenillis said in a soothing
way, immediately picking up and using the title for him that her
mother had supplied. "I'd do it myself, but for some reason she
doesn't seem to like me—Oh, here she comes."
Chalaine had been looking
around, almost hesitating, Bariden thought. But as soon as she
spotted him the hesitation disappeared, and she headed straight for
him. Next to everyone else in the room she looked shabby and out of
place, and strangely enough that calmed Bariden's anger. If you're
simply trying to be difficult about something, why would you do it in
a way that made you look almost pathetic ... ?
"Bariden, we have to
talk," she said as soon as she was in speaking distance,
ignoring Tenillis completely. "I'm sure your new friends won't
mind if—"
"Chalaine, Lord
Bariden would also like to speak to your Tenillis interrupted
smoothly, her smile gentle and understanding. "It has to do with
the standards of polite society, and lying won't do you any good. He
already knows the truth."
"Really,"
Chalaine said, a flash of quickly suppressed anger in the eyes she
turned on the other girl. "And what truth is it that Lord
Bariden already knows?"
"He knows you refused
the gown I sent for your use," Tenillis answered sweetly. "I've
already admitted I should have sent a selection rather than just one,
but under the circumstances it was rude of you to refuse the offer.
Not to mention uncaring about simple civility. Very obviously, you
have no interest in fitting into this sort of life."
"Well, at least I
can't argue with your conclusion," Chalaine said, then turned
those eyes on him. "But I'd like to know what Prince Bariden
thinks about the rest of what you said. Especially since no one came
to me with any sort of gown. Or even told me the occasion was formal.
I was back in my apartment long enough for both."
"No, no, my dear,
that's Lord Bariden," Tenillis corrected, her smile having
turned pitying. "I realize you probably don't know one title
from another, and thinking up that
story you just told has
helped to confuse you, but—"
"No, my dear, it's
Prince Bariden," Chalaine corrected in turn, but without the
smile. "With all the truths you've exchanged with him, I can't
imagine how that one was overlooked. And I'm still waiting to hear
what he thinks about whose story is made up."
Once again her stare had
come back to him, but Bariden didn't mind. He knew exactly what he
wanted to say, but waited just an instant too long. Before he got the
first word out, Tenillis's mother took her turn.
"Tenillis, we should
have known this man was a prince rather than a commoner," the
queen announced, sounding more pleased than ever. "It was our
mistake that we judged him by—other things. This exchange has
been disgraceful as well as extremely distasteful, but at least it's
almost over. I know your brothers would have done the right thing,
just as Prince Bariden will. He may have—enjoyed—this
person's—company—in the past, but now he no longer needs
someone of her sort. After all, he now has—"
"And just what sort
is that supposed to be?" Chalaine demanded, now making no effort
to cover her anger. "Is it someone as mannerless as you, who
doesn't even have the decency to insult people directly? I'm standing
right here in front of you. If you have something to say to me, show
a minimal amount of good breeding and do it to my face."
"How dare you!"
the queen gasped in outrage while Bariden flinched. Luck had been
with him in his life until then, and he'd never been smack in the
middle of a potential catfight. Everyone knew a man in that spot had
no guarantee of survival, especially if he was foolish enough to try
interrupting. But something did have to be done to restore peace and
quiet, so he'd have to—
"How dare you speak
to me like that, you little slut!" the queen thundered,
instantly beyond outrage. "You march hi here like the intruder
you are, call my daughter a liar, and then insult me. Just who do you
think you are?"
"I don't just think,
I know who I am," Chalaine countered, apparently having regained
some control of herself. "What I am is someone who has earned
what she has, not someone who was given a magnificent title in
exchange for letting a man bed her. When I want to have fun, I
166
c&een
never accept payment.
Keeps my amateur standing intact, you understand."
Horrified gasps sounded
all over the room as the queen went white, proving they were playing
to a larger audience than four. In spite of himself Bariden was
tempted to let it go on, just to find out if anyone could top that
last statement. Had the situation been less serious he might have,
but that was no time to indulge a morbid curiosity. "All right,
I think that's enough from everyone concerned," he announced,
speaking loud enough to override anyone else. "You all started
out looking for my opinion and thoughts, but none of you has let me
get a word in edgewise. If you've changed your mind about wanting to
hear from me, just say so."
"Certainly not,
Prince Bariden," Tenillis assured him at once, her mother making
no effort to disagree. "I, for one, would love to hear what you
have to say."
Her smile of encouragement
was really warm, and she seemed to be diplomatically keeping herself
from taking his arm. A glance showed mat Chalaine was also waiting to
hear what he had to say, only not quite as happily. This was going to
start even more trouble, but there was no possible way to avoid it.
"Tenillis, there's
something about Chalaine you seem to be forgetting, and that one fact
changes everything," Bariden said, making no attempt to soften
his words. "She's a fully trained sorceress with the same
abilities that I have, which means she has no more need of someone
else's clothes than I do. And beyond that, if she'd decided to show
contempt for everyone around her, I think she would have dressed in
something really offensive, like a beggar's rags. Simply wearing her
original clothes would mean nothing."
"Bariden, what are
you saying?" Tenillis whispered, a hint of tears in her wide
green eyes. "You can't believe I would deliberately lie to you?
Not when knowing you has come to mean so much? I can see now that she
knows you so much better than I do, so well that she knew what you
would think. I should never have risked telling you the truth, but I
wanted nothing of lies to stand between us. Oh, Bariden ... !"
THG HIDDGM R€ALf19
167
With that she turned away
from him, ostensibly to hide her tears of pain. The queen's
expression had changed to one of pure sympathy, and Chalaine wasn't
showing anything but slightly raised brows. Bariden was willing to
give credit for an excellent performance, but beyond that he was
rapidly losing patience.
"Tenillis, your
second mistake is forgetting that I really am a prince," Bariden
said with exasperation. "At my father's court I grew up watching
things like this, and always wondered why grown men seemed to equate
tears with the truth. More often than not the tears covered something
else entirely, like a determined attempt at manipulation."
"Are you saying you'd
rather take her word over mine?" Tenillis demanded with a sniff
after turning back to him. "I've never had anyone doubt me,
especially not someone I cared about so much. Maybe you'd just rather
not hurt her feelings, and if that's it, then I understand. You're
not a man who would want to hurt anyone's feelings, but I really can
stand it more easily than other women. As long as I know what the
real truth is ..."
The look in her eyes
begged him while her tone went wistful, but apparently she'd
forgotten Bariden wasn't the only one listening to her.
"If it's the real
truth we all want, how about a truth spell?" Chalaine suggested
innocently. "That way no one's word has to be taken, and nothing
could be easier. You know how to do one, don't you, Bariden?"
"That's enoughr
Tenillis shouted, turning to glare at Chalaine. "I've seen
trollops like you before who think they know everything, but all
you're doing is wasting your time! You'll never be as good as a true
lady, no matter how long or hard you try! You're common dirt who
simply doesn't belong here, but you don't even have the decency to
leave! Why do you insist on staying where no one wants you?"
"As a rule, I don't,"
Chalaine answered with a faint smile, looking only at Tenillis. "And
if you're an example of a true lady, I thank the EverNameless for
whatever help they might have given in making me something else. I
hope you get exactly what you think you want."
168
9HAROM
And with that she turned
and walked away, neither hurrying nor dragging her feet. She was
heading for the door out, Bariden knew, but before he could take a
single step after her Tenillis was suddenly wrapped around his arm.
"Don't embarrass her
any more, Bariden, please don't," Tenillis begged, wide green
eyes filled with compassion. "We both know she doesn't belong,
so just let her leave quietly. I promise you everything will work out
much more smoothly that way."
"Work out for whom?"
Bariden asked flatly as he deliberately unwound her from his arm.
"I'm sorry, Tenillis, but if Chalaine doesn't belong here, I
don't either. I would have said that a lot sooner if you'd waited to
stage your production, and then all that acting wouldn't have been
necessary. But you are one of the best I've ever seen, so do accept
my congratulations on a fine performance."
And with that he walked
off, leaving a furiously indignant Tenillis to begin sputtering in
outrage. Whatever she had to say might have been interesting, but
Bariden was more concerned with catching up to Chalaine. There was
something she'd wanted to tell him, and with any luck at all her news
would save him from having to make a very painful decision .. .
By hurrying just a little,
Bariden reached Chalaine before Chalaine reached the first turn in
the corridor. When he stopped her with a hand to her arm she turned
blazingly furious eyes on him, so he quickly held up both hands in
surrender.
"Don't attack me, I'm
not a lady either," he pointed out, then grinned when she
immediately looked startled. "But you'll have to admit she
certainly is persistent. Someone else would have dropped the act
fifteen or twenty minutes ago."
"Are you trying to
say you didn't believe her at all?" Chalaine demanded, sounding
half-disbelieving and half-hopeful. "When I first walked up to
you ..."
"I was already
suspicious," he assured her, knowing she was mentally reviewing
his expression from that time. "I'll admit her story was good,
but it made sense only if it involved an ordinary woman. Using it
against a full sorceress canceled most of it out, but she didn't
understand
THG HIDD6N
169
that. And she kept
thinking she could make me believe her, even when I specifically
pointed out where she'd made her mistakes."
"A lot of men would
have believed her," Chalaine said, almost grudgingly. "It's
that air of sweet loving-kindness she projects. Most men would find
it hard to accept that someone like her would lie and manipulate—and
I had the impression you were very attracted to her. Unless I'm
mistaken, you have a thing for redheads."
"You're very
observant," Bariden admitted, starting them walking again. "I
do prefer redheads, and I did find Tenillis very attractive.
Especially when her father offered to make me his heir, and said I
could marry her to legitimize the succession."
"And you really
wanted to accept his offer," Chalaine said, staring at him so
closely that Bariden felt uncomfortable. "There's something
about this world that appeals to you more strongly than any other
place you've ever been. But you weren't expected to make a decision
on the spot, so you didn't."
"You're not
guessing," Bariden observed, suddenly seeing the point. "Is
that the way it went with you on the previous world?"
"Almost exactly,"
she agreed with a nod. "The only difference I can find is that
last time you happened to overhear a conversation that led you to
find the gate. This time I had the urge to take a walk and explore,
and surprise, surprise. Guess what was at the end of my random
stroll."
"I don't like the
sound of that, and obviously you don't either," Bariden said
with a frown. "This is the second time we've been brought to a
world, told there was no way to leave again, then shown almost at
once that there is a way. What kind of reason can there possibly be
for this insanity?"
"A complicated one,"
Chalaine said, her pretty face troubled. "I spent some time
thinking about this, and after a while I discovered I had a theory.
On the last world, thinking there would be no way to leave it, I
almost let myself accept what I'd been offered. It was all so
perfect, so much what I would have chosen if I'd had the chance.
17O
SHAROM
Not just a place, but a
place where I was needed and wanted by very special people."
"Just like here for
me," Bariden agreed, hearing an exact echo of his feelings in
her words. "Not the place, but the people."
"And then, with the
shock of rude awakening, you announced you had found a gate,"
Chalaine continued. "My first reaction was, well of course he's
happy he found a gate. He doesn't belong here, not the way I do.
There's no reason he can't use that gate alone, and I can stay here
and make a happy life for myself."
"But there was a
reason," Bariden pointed out. "I refused to leave without
you. Was that the way it was supposed to go, do you think, or did I
accidently mess up our enemy's plans?"
"I'd say most
eventualities were planned for," she responded with a sigh.
"Neither of us could have used that gate unless we were
absolutely certain we wanted to, so we both could have been stuck. Or
I could have refused to go, and you eventually got sick and tired of
hanging around and used it alone. If you had, you would have found
this world waiting for you without my being here to ruffle the
feathers of the lovely heroine. Under those circumstances, how long
would it have taken you to accept the offer you were made?"
"Probably about a
minute and a half," Bariden agreed, "But you believed me
when I said I'd never leave that world without you, and you were able
to get around that Spell of Volition long enough for us to use the
gate. That means you were still with me when we got here."
"And, I think, I was
supposed to be in the middle of blaming you for making me leave the
place of my dreams," Chalaine said, leading the way left up a
cross-corridor. Bariden wasn't certain about where they were going,
but he could guess. "If I had been blaming you, sweet Tenillis
would have looked like a breath of free air after a week of being
locked in a closet. You would have found her irresistible, and would
also have believed everything she said. If I managed to get to tell
you I'd found a gate, you'd probably decide I was trying to get even
for your having taken away my dream world by taking away yours. In
case
TH€ HIDD€h
171
you haven't yet guessed,
there's a Spell of Volition on this gate, too."
"I had a feeling
there would be," Bariden said with a sigh, then reached over to
touch her arm. "Are you sure you don't blame me for having made
you leave your 'dream' world? I know you didn't really want to go,
and if I hadn't insisted—"
"If you hadn't
insisted, I would have eventually gotten around to doing it myself,"
she interrupted, paying no attention to the hand on her arm. "Dream
worlds are fine to live in, as long as you don't have friends left
behind who badly need your help to regain their lives. I might be
able to talk myself into forgetting about strangers in need, but
friends are something else entirely. You weren't really the one who
made me leave that world, so why would I blame you?"
"A lot of people I
know would have done it anyway," Bariden muttered, wishing she'd
said something about wanting to be with him more than staying in a
dream. And she'd left the reception room without looking at him even
once, probably because she'd expected him to support Tenillis. She
still didn't believe he had any real interest in her, something that
made him want to put a fist into a wall in frustration.
"And now, with most
of the possible outcomes behind us, we have to consider what's ahead
of us," Chalaine said, apparently unaware of what he was
feeling. "That gate I just happened to find by pure luck and
accident—do we use it as we're obviously supposed to if we
don't stay, or do we try to find a gate a little more to our liking?
That's assuming there is such a gate, and we can find it in less than
two lifetimes, neither of which may be possible."
"I'm really tempted
to lose my temper and start destroying things," Bariden said,
glancing at the doors and walls they passed as his left hand
tightened on his sword hilt. "No matter what we do we're still
being manipulated, and the thought of that is making me furious. If
we use the gate so thoughtfully provided for us, we're doing exactly
what our enemy wants us to do."
"And if we don't use
it we could be stuck here, which is another thing the enemy obviously
wants." Chalaine's voice was filled with as much annoyance as
his had been,
17Q
telling Bariden she was
ready to do some destroying of her own. "All this anger and
frustration and indecision we feel can't possibly be a coincidence,
not when there's a Spell of Volition on the gate. I'd say we're
supposed to be in a turmoil, and possibly even disagreeing about what
to do. If we were, it would be more effective than locking us up."
"So we have to agree on what to do, and then go ahead and do
it," Bariden summed up. "We'll still be cooperating with
the enemy, but at least we'll be in agreement about it. Would you
like to toss a coin, or should we have some sort of contest where the
winner gets to decide?"
"I think what we need
to do first is cool off," Chalaine muttered, glancing at the
anger she could certainly see on his face. "If we're supposed to
be angry, then I for one don't want to be. We can stop to have
something to eat, talk the situation over, then do whatever we decide
to. And maybe you can talk me out of really wanting to go through
that gate."
"You have to have a
reason for what you just said," Bariden observed, actually
finding himself distracted somewhat from the anger. "I'd like to
hear what it is."
"My reason is as
follows," Chalaine said, stopping just short of a breezeway area
to look straight at him. "The more I think about this trap we've
been forced into, the more I want to find a way out of it the enemy
hasn't anticipated. The only way I can do that is to keep going
straight through the way I'm supposed to, while at the same time
keeping my eyes open. If there's the least little thing that hasn't
been covered, I'm willing to bet I can find it."
"What's wrong with
that?" Bariden was honestly puzzled. "I think it's a damned
good way of looking at this mess, and a lot better than simply
getting angry."
"But that's the whole
point," she insisted, looking up at him with those big, dark
eyes. "It's something someone of my temperament would be sure to
think of, so how do I know I'm not being manipulated into the
feeling? The enemy knows me well enough to have given me my dream
world; doesn't that mean he knows me well enough to encourage feeling
like this?"
"It's possible,"
Bariden allowed after a moment's thought. "In fact it's very
possible, but it isn't something I would
TH€ HIDDEN
173
worry about. The enemy may
have known you well enough to give you your dream world, but his
effort wasn't quite good enough to do the job. If he really knew you,
you wouldn't have been able to bring yourself to leave."
"I hadn't thought of
that," she answered with a frown, her stare now directed inward.
"He knows me somewhat well, but not well enough to really hook
me. And that should mean he's underestimating me, which in turn
should mean I have a better than good chance to find his mistake. How
does that sound to youT
"Not like a
rationalization, if that's what you were asking," Bariden
replied. "As a matter of fact, I was wondering why I wasn't more
tempted by this place than I actually was. One answer could be that
he doesn't know me that well either, and is therefore underestimating
the both of us. Or mistaking what will really touch us. In either
case, our chances of winning free look better now than they did five
minutes ago."
"Even with that Spell
of Volition in place," Chalaine agreed. "Since the gate is
just beyond that door up ahead, why don't we stop here to have our
meal? Or did you want to go straight through and stop once we're in
the next place?"
"I think we'd better
stop now," Bariden decided, eyeing the door at the far end of
the hall. "If we just keep going we might find ourselves in
another version of that first world, snow all around, no shelter, and
no magic."
"Good point,"
she agreed, then turned away from him, thought for a moment, then
raised one hand and spoke her spell. A table and two chairs appeared
in the middle of the breezeway, the table covered with a large number
of dishes. The chairs looked extremely comfortable, and when Bariden
made sure to seat her before taking his own place, he saw an amused
smile on Chalaine's face.
"Is something funny?"
he asked as he sat. "If there is, I could use hearing about it."
"It's nothing,
really," she answered with a shake of her head. "Just
something I discussed with Lord Naesery on the last world. It's pure
silliness, but I have something that isn't. Your comment about what
we might find beyond the gate has given me pause."
174
"Given you paws?"
he asked, immediately looking at her hands. Then it came to him what
she'd meant, and he started to laugh. When she looked at him
questioningly he explained the misinterpretation, which let her join
him in the laughter. Bariden found it a beautifully plose moment, but
Chaiaine must have been born without a romantic bone in her body. As
soon as she stopped laughing, she was right back to the original
topic.
"So far, we've been
through one world without magic and two worlds with it," she
said, holding up three fingers. "In the first world I was warded
and you weren't, and that worked out to your benefit. In the second
world you also weren't warded, but it turned out you needed to be.
Here, in the third world, the warding I gave you turned out to be
absolutely essential. Any guesses on how it will stand on the other
side of this gate?"
"Sure," he
answered, reaching for the pitcher filled with a cold soft drink.
"Either I won't be able to survive without warding, having it
will give me trouble, or I won't need it at all. Drink?"
"Yes, thank you,"
she responded absently as she nodded. "And you're right. The
next world will most likely be one of those three choices, but we
won't know which until we get there and then it might be too late. I
think we should do something about it before we go through."
"Like what?"
Bariden asked, replacing the pitcher and raising his now-filled cup.
"How can we know in advance what we'll—wait a minute. I
just had an idea, but you could be way ahead of me. Were you trying
to say you already know about variable warding?"
"I've never heard of
it," she answered with a frown. "What's variable warding?"
"It's something I
heard about from a friend," Bariden told her, seeing no reason
to mention that ReSayne was a fiend. "My friend is in touch with
a demon who spends its time with a young wizard, and the wizard's
specialty is unSeen magic. But the wizard also works with adapting
ordinary spells, and she came up with warding that does more than
simply vary in strength of response. Her spell for warding is like
not having any warding at all, unless you happen to need it. Then you
get only as much warding as
THG HIDDGN
175
you need, adapting and
varying according to circumstance, and it's also voluntary. If you
don't want your defenses set off, they won't go off."
"There when you need
it, not there when you don't, and not there at all if you don't want
it to be," Chaiaine summed up with brows high. "That sounds
like quite an improvement over automatic, preset responses, but why
would your friend tell you about it? You don't use ordinary warding."
"That's why my friend
told me about it," Bariden said with a smile. "My friend
thinks I should be warded, and doesn't understand why I usually don't
agree. But this sounds like the perfect time to try that spell, and
I'd like you to use it, too."
"Why?" she
asked, her big dark eyes showing faint puzzlement. "What do you
think is wrong with my normal warding? I do have it keyed to intent,
after all—"
"Which didn't help at
all in the first world," Bariden reminded her. "It brought
you something instead of protecting you from that something, and I
don't want that happening again. Unless, of course, you like the idea
of it happening again ..."
"All right, point
taken," she said, holding both hands up as she made a face at
him. "I doubt if I'd get that composite again, but the way
things have been going the next one would be worse. How does that
spell go?"
Bariden produced a piece
of paper and a stylus, then wrote out the spell while Chaiaine
removed her warding from him. He spoke the spell while she studied
what he'd written, felt something settling around him, then watched
her speak the spell. He wasn't able to detect anything after she was
through, but most warding wasn't visible to the naked eye anyway.
"How do we find out
if the spell worked the way it was supposed to?" Chaiaine asked,
obviously thinking along the same lines he was. "If I pick up
this cup of mousse and throw it at you, my lack of intent to do
serious harm might leave the warding unactivated."
"If you throw that
cup of mousse at me and it hits, we'll then be able to test your
warding," Bariden responded darkly. "And you won't have to
worry about any lack of
176
intent, that I promise
you. If you insist on thinking about mousse, forget about testing."
"Whatever you say,"
she responded with a heavy, theatrical sigh that didn't quite hide
the glint of devilment in her eyes. "Warding isn't supposed to
work against the nonmagical anyway, but if the spell turns out not to
work against magic either, don't forget who refused to talk about
testing."
Bariden muttered a
wordless response before joining her in helping himself to the food,
but he wasn't really annoyed. As a matter of fact it was all he could
do not to grin, but he didn't dare encourage her. He was absolutely
certain the new warding would not stop mousse thrown in fun, and he
didn't need to confirm it the hard way. The close, warm feeling
between them had come back, and this time Chalaine wasn't chasing it
away. He'd kick himself later if he did the chasing because of a
faceful of sticky pudding.
The meal was delicious and
the company silent but pleasant, but eventually it had to end.
Bariden wondered briefly why they hadn't been disturbed by anyone in
the palace, but wasn't in the mood to go back and find out. If he ran
into King Graff and was told he could stay even if it was Chalaine he
married rather than Tenillis... No, he was much better off not being
faced with that sort of temptation.
When they both stood,
Chalaine banished the table and chairs. Right after that she spoke a
spell, and when Bariden heard it he realized immediately that it was
an excellent idea. She'd turned her clothing variable, directing that
it be heavier in cold weather and lighter in warm, an idea she must
have gotten from the new warding spell. He realized then that he was
still in his reception finery, so he replaced it with his usual
breeches and boots, altered to fit the same spell.
It wasn't far to the door
that hid sight of the gate, and it wasn't hard to construct a bridge
from the balcony to the gate. As he followed Chalaine along the
bridge, Bariden concentrated hard on what he expected the next world
to bring. A way for them to break loose, of course, but also an
opportunity to get even closer to Chalaine, He needed a chance to
take her in his arms, and show her just what
TH€ HIDDEN
177
being near her did to him.
He visualized that as he moved forward, promising himself that it
would happen—and then the gate flared wide and let them enter.
This time neither of them
hesitated going through and, unsurprisingly, once again there was
just a single point for them to exit from. They stepped through the
new gate, Bariden, at least, expecting the same sort of countryside
they'd found until then—
But this time they were in
a city, specifically in a back alley, and not far away someone was
screaming.
CHAPTER MIM€
w,
herever that alley was it
stank, the smell so bad it even seemed to dirty the darkness around
us. And the air was cool enough to make my clothes thicken in
response, just the way they were supposed to do. But that scream made
me wonder if my new warding would be equally as effective, not to
mention making me aware of the heavy feel of magic in the air.
Somebody strong had been working in that city, and not just in one or
two places ...
"It's coming from
that way," Bariden said, and I suppose he gestured in the
direction he meant. It was too dark to see more than a thickened
shadow of him, and that despite the closed gate hanging in the air
behind us. Under normal circumstances I wouldn't have expected to
find even a closed gate in the middle of a city, but "normal
circumstances" said it all.
I saw Bariden's shadow
form begin to move toward the end of the alley, and followed along
with an unvoiced sigh. He was going looking for the source of that
scream, but would never consider it also looking for trouble. I
should have resented the fact that he seemed to believe it was all
right for him to do the things he didn't want me doing, but for some
reason I couldn't get angry. He was so—honest and open about
his opinions and prejudices,.. and he'd actually taken my side
against that Tenillis female. I still didn't quite know what to think
about that...
"Over there, past
that narrow intersection," he said, and this time when he
pointed I could see the gesture. The
178
179
buildings around us were
on a narrow back street and were mostly of old wood, but a couple of
them had torches in sconces not far from then- doors. What I could
see of the signs above the torches said the places were taverns,
definitely of the sleazier sort I toyed with the idea of creating
enough tight to let us see what was going on, but after a moment
decided against it If we were going to tell the world we were mere,
we'd certainly find a better time later on.
Bariden headed straight
for where the screams were coming from, and I was right with him. As
we got closer we could see five or six people standing around
watching something on the ground, and once we reached the group the
something turned out to be a man. He was screaming and rolling around
as though in a lot of pain, but even the dimness couldn't mask the
fact that there didn't seem to be anything wrong with him. His
clothes looked to be a shade better than average for that
neighborhood, his brown hair didn't reach much below his shoulders,
and at some time that day he'd been clean-shaven. But he was still
screaming in pain, and the next minute we found out why.
"Hey, Dal, what's
happening?" a female voice asked, and then two women came up to
the man apparently named Dal. The women were wearing low-cut gowns
with slits in the skirts as well as too much face makeup, and the man
was a hefty sort almost as tall as Bariden. He also wore a truncheon
tucked into his belt between leather trousers and a light cotton
shirt, and he shrugged at the woman's question.
"What's happening is
mat fool opened his mouth one time too many," he said, sounding
more disgusted man upset. "He came into the place about an hour
ago, and as soon as he had a drink hi his hand he started to ask
questions. How long has the king been a wizard? How many high-level
sorcerers does he have under him? Does he guard the palace only with
magic, or does he also have men stationed in some places? The only
thing he didn't ask about was the last time somebody came by to
challenge the king with magic."
"Or what spells the
king has set up to let him know when new challengers show up,"
the woman added, also
18O
in disgust. "But even
though he didn't ask it, he got part of an answer anyway. I bet he
thought he was too well warded for anything like that to happen, and
was real surprised as soon as he stepped outside."
"These down-country
fools are all alike," the man Dal said, shaking his head. "As
soon as they reach high-level sorcerer, they head for the nearest
city to challenge the king. They never understand how big a step it
is from where they are to wizard level. Or that those of us who live
here don't use nothing but permitted magic because that's the way we
want it. Maybe after spending the night screaming in pain he'll start
to understand."
"Isn't there anything
anyone can do for him?" Bariden asked, drawing the man's bored
attention. "I'm new here myself, and I've never seen something
like this. Can't anyone help him?"
"Only if they want to
share what he's getting," Dal answered with a glance for me.
"Touch him and you join him, and that means with hands or magic.
He's learning a lesson now that could save his life, and the king
doesn't want that lesson cut short. Without it the country kid might
just go ahead with his challenge, and then the king will have to
smear him. The king doesn't like smearing anybody he doesn't
absolutely have to. It's a waste of his valuable time."
"I see," Bariden
answered, and I, at least, could tell he didn't see at all. Giving
someone extreme pain simply for asking a few questions—the man
on the ground could have been thinking about working for the king
rather than challenging him, and he would have asked the same things.
If Bariden decided to try helping the man anyway, I knew I would back
him up without the least hesitation. But rather than do that he took
my arm, and we joined most of the other watchers in slowly drifting
away.
"We may have been too
hasty in simply stepping through that gate," he murmured after a
moment, the people we'd walked away with having taken off in their
own directions. "This place isn't going to be easy to accomplish
things in."
"Or pleasant while
we're trying," I murmured back, still able to hear the
screaming. It also seemed that certain of
HiDt>en
181
the stinks were following
us, as though delighted to have found places they hadn't spread to
yet. "Are you sure you don't want to try to do something for
that man? Maybe if the two of us work together—"
"Then the two of us
could get caught," he interrupted with a headshake. "If not
by that little trap, then maybe by another. I think you know me well
enough to believe I want to help that man, but fighting blind against
an unknown wizard's spell isn't the best way to do it."
Seeing the strained look
on his face and getting a glimpse of the anger hi his eyes told me
something else as well. Walking away from someone who needed help was
one of die hardest things Bariden had ever done, and also probably
die most painful. It was another couple of points to chalk up against
our enemy—as if we needed more things to blame him for.
"So what do we do
now?" I asked, looking around at the narrow street that was
taking us toward a wider one. "Leave the city, or stay here and
hope we can figure out where to go next without breaking a law? I
have no idea which would be the better move."
"Neither do I, but
since we're already here we should look around before leaving,"
he said. "We also don't know what it takes to get in and out of
a city in this world, and if we leave we may not be able to get back
in. Or, for that matter, they might not let us leave without trouble
in the first place. What we need is a room at an inn, preferably an
inn with a talkative landlord."
Now that sounded like a
good idea, at least as far as getting information on that world went.
I had my own ideas about where the next gate was, and also about
whether or not an entry spell would work. Those were two things we
really needed to talk about, but not out there on the street.
The wider street we
reached was the start of a better neighborhood, and more people were
out and walking around. Most of the women wore long dresses or
skirts, but every now and then there was one in breeches. The men
wore simple shirts and pants and coats, and quite a few had swords.
Those who were armed seemed better dressed than those who weren't,
and they didn't hurry quite as much. But
182
9HARON GR€€M
no one stopped to
socialize with anyone else, and a general mood of Hghtheartedness was
conspicuously absent.
Bariden spotted a place
called The Horseman's Inn and headed us toward it, but I happened to
look down the block and across the street. The establishment there
was called The Travelers' Hostel, but I hesitated a long moment
before pointing it out.
"I'm glad you saw
that," Bariden said when I did. "It's potentially exactly
what we're looking for, a place that will be used to strangers and
their questions. But—why are you looking so uncertain?"
"Because we can't
trust coincidence in this trap, and that's all we're running into,"
I explained, wishing I could take an end of my hair to chew. "As
soon as we got to this world, we happened to find a man who was being
punished for breaking a law. We wouldn't have known that that's what
was happening, except that someone standing around happened to
explain the situation to someone he knew. Now we're looking for a
place it might be safe to ask questions, and I happen to see an
establishment called The Travelers' Hostel. What do you want to bet
we'll find out everything we need to in there?''
"You mean everything
we're supposed to," he answered in disgust. "That isn't
quite the same thing, and you're absolutely right. We're being herded
in a specific direction, and as long as we keep following that
direction we don't have a prayer of breaking loose. Let's bolt to the
right instead, and see what happens then."
"They can solve that
problem easily by not having any rooms available," I said,
stopping his first step toward The Horseman's Inn. "In fact, we
might not be able to get a room anywhere but where we're supposed to
be. Why don't we try something that's not quite as straightforward as
trying to get a room."
"I don't know if I
trust that look in your eyes, but I can't see any way out of asking,"
he told me warily. "What have you got in mind?"
"It has nothing to do
with mousse, so you can relax," I reassured him with a grin.
"What you ought to remember is that we just saw something very
upsetting, and I'm a poor little female who's having trouble handling
it. After all, we
HIDD€M
183
haven't been in the city
long and therefore don't understand its ways, which means I really
need some place to sit down, and probably could use a fairly strong
drink ..."
"You know, I hadn't
remembered that," he said with a delighted grin, then suddenly
grew very concerned. "You poor little thing, you must be
absolutely torn up over having seen that awful sight. I think we have
to find you some place to sit down so you can pull yourself together,
and maybe even get you a bracing drink."
By then his arm was around
me to help hold me up, and I was so deeply touched by what I'd seen
that I really did have to lean on him. I also had a hand to my mouth,
but I couldn't quite manage to turn pale. It looked like I'd have to
settle for acting pale, and hope that did the job.
Bariden coaxed and urged
me through the front door of the three-story inn, and I clung to him
in perfect poor-tittle-thing fashion. The innkeep, a tall, thin man,
appeared almost magically in our path, and understood the situation
immediately. He led the way to the left of the door into his common
room, fussed in concern while Bariden got me seated, then sent a
serving girl for a pot of tea and some cups.
There were at least a
dozen other people in the common room, and four of the men and one
woman came over to see if they could help. Considering the atmosphere
of the city that was really nice of them, and Bariden handled it all
beautifully. When the innkeep asked what was wrong, he sighed and
patted my shoulder.
"We saw something
pretty terrible," he admitted, sounding open and honest and a
lot younger than usual. "I have to tell you, if she hadn't
broken down first, I might have done it myself. We've been dreaming
about coming to the city for years, maybe even being good enough to
earn a place with the king, but now that we're here—our first
day, and we have to see something like that."
I moaned a little to help
him out, privately pleased that he'd spotted the people in the room
who were Sighted. There seemed to be quite a few Sighted in that
world, and every one of them would have known us to be the same.
Mentioning that we'd hoped to take service with the king was a nice
touch, and might even encourage someone to
184
SHARON GK€€M
THG HIDDEN
185
tell us why it was or
wasn't possible.
"You still haven't
said what that was," the innkeep pointed out, his rather high
voice working to be soothing. "It couldn't have been a crime and
wouldn't have been an execution, so maybe it was an accident."
"No, it was a crime,"
Bariden hastened to assure the man, running a hand through his long
blond hair. "A man was rolling around on the ground and
screaming, and we came up to the crowd watching him in time to hear
something about his wanting to challenge the king. He was being
punished for that, but all he did was ask some questions. / was going
to ask some questions, but now I don't think I dare. All I want to do
is take service with the king, but what if someone thinks I mean to
challenge him? What would happen to me is bad enough, but what would
become of my woman? She and I mean to marry as soon as I've found a
decent position, and we were hoping she might be accepted too..."
He let it trail off,
wisely not suggesting we were certain I'd also be accepted into
service. Two young people from the country might be naive enough to
think a woman had as good a chance as a man, but that might not be so
in the big city. If the king was narrow-minded and old-fashioned, the
only sorcerers he would take into service would be male.
"You really are
newcomers, aren't you?" the innkeep said with an indulgent
chuckle. "And you have to be from the real boondocks if you
don't already know—Well, suppose I start from the beginning,
eh?"
Bariden and I both nodded
eagerly, encouraging his feeling of indulgent superiority. When
people feel they're better than you are, they don't often hold things
back. Everything they tell you shows how good they are, and people
who react that way want to look very good.
"To begin with, you
don't have to worry about the king's spell," he said, looking
back and forth between Bariden and me. "I'm not a magic user so
I don't know exactly how it works, but it always knows the truth. If
all you want is information, you can ask a million questions and
nothing will happen. If you're really after a challenge, one question
is all it takes."
"Intent!"
Bariden exclaimed in revelation, pointing at the innkeep. "I'll
bet that's what it is, intent. If all you want is information, your
intent is innocent. But if you've got something else in mind ..."
He let the words trail off
with a Significant Look on his face, letting the innkeep know he
really did understand. The thin man smiled like a proud and indulgent
father, and all but patted Bariden on the head.
"That sounds just
right," he told him in approval. "So you see, you and the
little girl have nothing to worry about on that score. Now, as far as
taking service with the king goes, you happen to be in luck there.
Once a week the king holds a competition for newly arrived magic
users, and the winners of the competition get to face one of the
king's sorcerers. If you win against the king's man, you
automatically get to take his place. But if you lose, you don't
necessarily have to go back where you came from. If you lose well
enough, you'll be taken in as a Sorcerer's Apprentice. Your luck
shows in that tomorrow is the day the competition is being held."
"That is lucky,"
Bariden agreed, duly impressed. "But mere must be an awful lot
of magic users coming to the city if they hold a competition every
week."
"There are usually a
fair number," the man said, this time looking to the others
standing around for nods of confirmation, which he got. "Not so
many that you'll be trampled in the crowd, but enough to make a
contest of it. But how many show up isn't the reason for holding the
competitions weekly. It costs a lot more to live here in the city
than it does out in the country, and the king doesn't want a bunch of
flat-broke magic users hanging around for a monthly competition.
Something like that would be bound to cause trouble, so the king
doesn't let it happen."
"The king sounds so
smart" I ventured timidly, but definitely in awe. "Now I
really hope I can take service with him. I'll be able to join the
competition tomorrow too, won't I?"
"You couid if you
wanted to, little girl, but in your place I would think it over,"
he told me, and now he was being paternally serious. "If a man
tries and loses, the worst thing mat can happen is that he gets sent
home in disgrace. For a
186
SHARON
girl, though, and
especially a pretty girl like you—if you're defeated by a man
who wants you, you have to stay with him and do whatever he says.
Even if it's something that won't let you call yourself a good girl
any more. Do you really want to risk that?"
The emphasis he put on the
word—not to mention his very ominous tone—almost made me
blink. But at least I didn't have to worry about answering. Bariden
did it for me, and in no uncertain terms.
"No, she does not
want to risk something like that," he announced, glancing at me
sternly. "She is a good girl, and that's the way she's going to
stay. But I don't understand. Why would men be allowed to leave, but
not women?"
"Come on, boy, think
about it," the innkeep urged. "When a man enters a
competition he's serious about it, and if he doesn't really qualify
he won't enter. Girls, though ... we know they don't mean to waste
people's time by trying for something they're not qualified to do,
they just tend to be prone to wishful thinking. This way you won't
find many of them entering as a lark, not when they're held to that
requirement if they lose. And you're a man, so you know how men hate
to do anything rough to pretty girls. This way they usually don't
have to."
It was all I could do not
to add that men also tend to hate losing to a girl, but I did manage
to keep my mouth shut. Bariden nodded with enlightened understanding
and agreement, though, then stood and put out his hand.
"I want to thank you
for helping me out this way, sir," he said with sincere gravity.
"No, for helping us out. They told us back home that city people
would never give us the time of day, but I'm happy to say you proved
them wrong. How much do I owe you for this tea?"
The serving girl had
finally brought out a pot and two cups, just in time for me to wish
we'd asked for something stronger. The innkeep, after accepting
Bariden's hand, smiled and shook his head.
"No charge for the
tea, boy, not when you'll be competing tomorrow," he said. "You
and the little girl drink as much as you like, and then you can head
back to wherever you're staying."
THe HIDDGM
187
"As a matter of fact,
sir, we're not staying anywhere yet," Bariden took the
opportunity to say. "Since you've been so nice, the least we can
do is take a couple of your rooms."
"You could if I had
any left, boy," the thin man said as he turned away. "Since
I don't, you can't. You and the girl enjoy that tea."
By that time he was
heading back to his counter near the door, and the other people who
had been listening had returned to their tables. Bariden sat back
down slowly, and his expression was carefully neutral.
"I'll bet there are
rooms at the other place," I murmured as I reached for the
teapot. "And it looks like we'll be able to check on that in a
very short while. If there are more than two cups of tea in this pot,
I'll eat the table."
"Since we're not
paying for it, we can't very well complain," he countered in a
mutter. "I'm just wondering what else we'll find in that other
place. Another helpful conversation between strangers, do you think,
or someone willing to tell us what to do as a favor?"
"Whichever it is, the
thing we'll have to watch out for is whether we're directed to or
away from the palace," I said, pouring tea for both of us. "I'd
be willing to bet it's to, but only if the rules haven't changed."
"You mean you think
the next gate is there, the way it's been in the last two worlds,"
he said, taking his cup but looking only at me. "The chances of
that are excellent, as long as the rules haven't changed. And in the
next place, we'll have to ask about gates in general. If we don't,
someone might notice."
I nodded my agreement with
that, and we drank our tea in silence. It didn't take very long to
finish it, but on our way to the door Bariden stopped near the
innkeep.
"I just wanted to
thank you again, sir, and wish you a good night," he said, then
turned back as though he'd suddenly remembered something. "By
the way, sir, I meant to ask mis earlier. If—I mean when—I
get accepted into the king's service, I will be able to keep my woman
with me, won't I? I mean, I can't just march off somewhere and leave
her all alone. They won't ask me to do that, will they?"
188
"I really don't know,
boy," the man admitted, scratching at his cheek as he thought
about it. "Those accepted into service live and train in the
palace, but—I just don't know. You'll have to ask when you go
to sign up."
Bariden thanked him for
the tenth or eleventh time, and then we were finally able to leave. 1
wondered what he'd been after with his question, but when we reached
the street I saw he was deep in thought. Rather than disturb a
process that might come up with an idea to get us back to where we
belonged, I decided to wait. I could always ask him about it later,
and he'd probably only been trying to strengthen his assumed
character anyway.
Walking down the block and
across the street brought us to The Travelers' Hostel, and by then
Bariden was back from the land of thought and paying attention. We
walked inside to find a fairly plain entrance area in yellow-brown
wood, with a counter to the back and a door in each wall to either
side. Just beyond the door to the right was a staircase leading
upward, and a heavyset redheaded woman in long skirts was just coming
down. Her dress was a dark yellow that might have been meant to match
the paneling, and when she saw us she smiled.
"What perfect
timing," she said, heading directly for an opening in the
counter. "I was hoping no one would have to wait while I was
busy upstairs. May I help you young people?"
"We need rooms,"
Bariden said, closing the door before leading the way to the counter.
"We're new in the city, and thought we should find a place to
stay before we did anything else."
"That was a very wise
decision," she said, reaching for a guest register. "With
all the people in town to watch the competition tomorrow—you do
know about the competition, don't you?"
"Whatever it is, I'm
sure we'll have time to find out about it tomorrow," Bariden
answered, sounding totally uninterested. "What we really need
right now are rooms."
"Well, I have to say
I thought you were already registered for the competition when you
walked in here," she said, pausing in her checking of the guest
register to get really friendly and chummy. "You are a magic
user, after all, and
189
magic users your age
rarely come to the city for any other reason. You see—"
"How do you know he's
a magic user?" I interrupted, not about to just let that pass.
"Are you Sighted yourself, and that's why you can tell?"
Since I knew she wasn't
Sighted, the question was far from idle. She hesitated a very brief
moment, and then she smiled winningly again.
"No, dear, I'm not
one of the lucky ones," she answered, then shifted her gaze back
to Bariden. "But I've come to know the look of them, and this
young man certainly has it. And I associate with so many of them,
I've learned more about magic and those who use it than most. That's
why I was saying—"
"If you know so much
about magic, then maybe you can answer a question for us,"
Bariden said, taking his turn at interrupting the woman. "Has
anyone ever mentioned how close the nearest gate is? And I don't mean
city gates. What I'm interested in are gates having to do with
magic."
"I've never heard
anyone mention anything like that," she answered at once, all
eagerness again. "If there was such a thing, the best ones to
ask would be the sorcerers at the palace. And if you happen to be
going there anyway—"
"Excuse me,"
Bariden interrupted again. "I know it's rude to keep cutting you
off, but the lady and I are really tired and would appreciate those
rooms. Tomorrow, after we've had a good night's sleep, we can all sit
down together and talk."
'Tomorrow at breakfast,
then," she grudged after a moment, trying not to look too
disappointed, then returned her attention to the register. She looked
through it, checked it a second time, then made a sound of annoyance.
"Bother! I didn't realize it, but I'm afraid there's a problem.
The afternoon clerk rented out more rooms than I'd thought."
"You're out of
rooms?" Bariden asked, exchanging a surprised look with me.
Personally I was more than surprised, since that wasn't the way we'd
expected the game to go.
"Not completely,"
the woman answered with a headshake. "There's still one room
left, and it happens to be a double. If you and the young lady know
each other well enough to
19O
travel together, maybe you
won't mind sharing a room for a night?"
The way she looked at
Bariden was mild and very bland, but it was perfectly clear the next
move was up to us. He glanced at me for the second time and I raised
my brows to show I didn't understand either, but that seemed to help
him make up his mind.
"If that's the only
choice we have, we'll take it," he said to the woman. "How
much do 1 owe you?"
"A silver piece,"
the woman answered, still playing bland. "That covers the room
and either supper and breakfast, or breakfast and lunch tomorrow.
Prices are always higher the night before a competition."
The woman really was
persistent, but Bariden ignored the dangling hook and reached into an
inside pocket of his swordbelt. The silver piece he produced was a
trade coin, blank except for the stamp of a tiny scale exactly in the
center of the obverse. That was supposed to tell anyone it was
offered to that it should be checked for full weight before being
accepted, but the woman didn't seem to know that. Or simply didn't
care. The coin disappeared after she'd given it no more man a glance,
and in its place she offered a key.
"Top floor, second
door straight ahead on your right," she said, this time with a
smile. "Rest well."
"Thank you,"
Bariden answered as he took the key, his arm around my shoulders men
guiding me toward the stairs. We kept silent as we climbed to the
third floor and found our room, and a moment later we were inside.
After Bariden snapped his fingers to light a lamp, we could see that
the room was slightly larger than average, with a big double bed, a
settle, and an armchair. The bed was to the right of the door, and
since it was a corner room, there were windows both opposite the door
and to its left. Beyond the bed on the right wall was another door,
possibly leading to a bathing room that would be shared with the room
next to ours. The dark yellow drapes and carpeting weren't exactly
shabby, the curtains and bed linen were almost white, and the quilts,
armchair, and settle were just short of a rich brown. Not exactly
luxury, but it could have been worse.
TH€ HIDD€M
191
"So now we know they
do want us to go to the palace," Bariden said after shutting the
door and glancing around. "And they don't want us in separate
rooms. Do you have any idea why that would be?"
"No more than about
why they also want you in the competition," I said, walking over
to the left to sit on the settle. "Unless you want to count the
expression that woman was trying to cover. When she said, 'rest
well,' it was almost as though what she really meant was, 'have fun.'
I find it very difficult to believe mat our enemy is trying to
matchmake. Maybe there's a law against unmarried people sharing a
room."
"And the woman just
forgot to mention it to us," Bariden said with a nod as he
removed his swordbelt, put it on a nearby table, and sat on the other
end of the settle. "But that doesn't make much sense. If some
official in this city decided to arrest us, who would bother to ask
if we'd really done something? And not just bother, but have the
nerve to?"
"And if they really
do want you in the competition, why make it impossible by having you
arrested?" I contributed. "For that matter, we could have
been taken as soon as we stepped through the gate, even though that
might have proven difficult. We are both strong magic users, after
all, so maybe they were just being cautious. Or maybe it's something
else entirely, and we can't see it because we really don't know
what's going on."
The whole situation was
annoying, and it needed a lot more than casual guesswork. It was time
for some serious analytical thinking, and I do that best with a cup
of coffee in my hand. As I'd done so often lately, I spoke the spell
to create one, wrapped my fingers around the handle when it
appeared—and men screamed with the pain shooting through my
hand. It was terrible, as though I'd picked up a small ingot of metal
hot from a forge, and it was all I could do to fling the cup away. It
hit just beyond one edge of the dark yellow carpeting and shattered,
splashing coffee in all directions.
"What happened?"
Bariden demanded, suddenly right next to me and reaching for my hand.
"Let me see that, Chalaine. Cradling it against your middle
won't do any good."
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GR€€M
Cradling the hand might
not be doing any good, but that was all I was up to just then.
Intense pain radiated out of it in waves, so strong it was making me
sick to my stomach. Tears had formed in my eyes, my throat seemed
capable of producing no more than moans and whimpers, and I couldn't
stop rocking back and forth. From the way the hand felt I really
didn't want to look at it, but Bariden refused to understand that.
"I said, let me see
it," he insisted, his tone harder than it had been. "I
can't do anything to help if I don't know what the problem is."
"The cup," I
whispered, struggling to be coherent through continuing agony.
"Hotter than Hellfire ... must have burned ... all the way in
... going to be sick ..."
"Chalaine, I'm not a
true healer," he said, right hand now against my forehead. "I
need a visual scan in order to do anything, so you have to let me
look at it. I promise to be as careful as possible, and you can close
your eyes. That's probably the best idea, so you go ahead and close
them. I'll do the looking for both of us."
At another time I might
have complained about being babied, but having a hand that feels
seared down to the bone can change your mind about a lot of things.
Rather than argue any more I did close my eyes, then let him move the
hand. He did it gently with his grip above my wrist, and then he was
silent for a moment.
"You're not going to
believe this," he said after the moment. "I thought your
spell might have been just enough off to cause too much heat, and
since I wasn't listening, it was perfectly possible. Now, though ...
Chalaine, there's nothing wrong with your hand. It isn't burned at
all."
He was right about my not
believing him, and before I stopped to think about it I'd opened my
eyes. From the way my hand felt it should have been ruined, charred
black all the way down through the red of exposed flesh and the white
of bone. Instead it looked just the way it always had, except for the
curl of fingers into a claw because of the pain ...
"That... isn't
possible," I whispered, fighting to clear my mind enough to
think. "The pain ... it's still there!"
193
The look in the light eyes
staring at me was pure confusion, liberally laced with frustration
and helplessness. There was nothing wrong with my hand but I was
still in agony, and there didn't seem to be a way to stop it. Then
Bariden's expression changed, and he turned his head fast to look
past me at the cup I'd dropped.
"Maybe—maybe
that's it," he muttered, and then he raised his own hand in a
banishing gesture. The broken cup and every drop of coffee
disappeared, and then—so did the pain! Oh, I still felt an
aching through my hand and arm, but that was just an echo of abused
nerve endings. As soon as they settled down ...
"What is going on
here?" I demanded weakly. "The pain has stopped, but I
don't understand what you did."
"What I did was make
a lucky guess," he said, urging me to rest my head against him
until I got some strength back. Strong pain can be exhausting, and he
seemed to know that. "Everyone keeps saying how many magic users
there are in this city, but business is still going on as usual. That
combination wouldn't be usual, unless there are some very special
circumstances. Do you remember what that man said, the one who knew
about the questions the screaming man had asked? It was something
about permitted magic."
"Yes, I do remember
now," I said with a frown, forcing myself to lean away from him.
There is such a thing as being too comfortable. . . "He also
said something about it not being the decision of the people in this
city to use nothing but that. There has to be a spell prohibiting
everything not authorized."
"And creating your
own food and drink has to be high on the list of forbidden things,"
he agreed, letting me go with what seemed to be reluctance. "The
unSighted here have to be able to make a living, and if the Sighted
provide for themselves in most things, that won't happen. Are you
sure you're feeling strong enough to sit alone?"
"In another minute or
so I'll be fine," I assured him, already gently flexing my
fingers. The muscles hurt from bracing so hard against the pain, but
that would be gone soon, too. "So when I called up that cup of
coffee, I was breaking the law. How did you know that banishing
194
9HARON
what I'd created would
also end the prescribed automatic punishment?"
"As I said, I didn't
know, I was only hoping." His smile was more relieved than
satisfied, and his hand came to smooth my hair. "We were told
intent makes the difference here, and it wasn't your intention to do
this hostel out of its rightful income. You simply made a mistake,
and correcting that mistake showed you'd learned your lesson. It
might not be as easy to get out of trouble a second time, but
apparently first mistakes are dealt with rather leniently."
"That wasn't my idea
of lenient," I assured him, feeling the urge to shudder at
memory of what I'd gone through. "But now I think I understand
why that woman who registered us didn't bother to check the silver
you gave her. If the coin wasn't up to full weight you would have
known it, and knowing it would have made your intention one to
defraud. If you didn't immediately fall down rolling and screaming,
you were obviously honest."
"I just thought of
something else," he said, even as he nodded his agreement. "The
warding we've got protecting us—either passive spells don't set
it off, or we're not as well protected as we expected to be. Right
now I'd rather not guess which."
"It's possible I'll
be warded against a passive spell next time, but I'd rather not test
the theory this second," I said, leaning my head back on the
settle. "I've never been in a place where magic users aren't
free to do whatever then-skill level allows, and I don't like it. I
also feel as if I'm not considered trustworthy enough to abide by
whatever rules this place has without coercion, and that I certainly
don't like. If someone had bothered to say something, I would have
ordered that coffee from the kitchen rather than calling it up."
"But not everyone has
your sense of right and wrong," he told me, leaning just a
little closer. "Magic users are just as good or bad as anyone
else, and a certain number of them would still do as they pleased no
matter what the rules were. And you forget we're supposed to know the
rules, even though we don't. You're not being considered
untrustworthy, Chalaine, no one alive would think of you as that"
TH€
195
The last of his words had
come out in a murmur, and the next moment his lips touched mine in a
gentle kiss. By rights I should have stopped things there and at the
very least pushed him away, but I suddenly discovered I couldn't do
it. I wanted him to kiss me, as much as I wanted to kiss him back,
and as soon as I did, his arms were around me. He pulled me close and
held me tight as we tasted each other thoroughly, but after a pair of
moments he pulled his head back to frown at me.
"I'm suddenly hoping
very hard that there are no laws against people who aren't married
sharing a room," he said. "What we discussed earlier about
being arrested— it's occurred to me that arresting people is
unnecessary, when breaking the law brings immediate punishment. I
don't know if I have the right to ask you to try."
"But we're already
sharing a room and nothing's happened," I pointed out, trying to
tease away the worry in those very light eyes. "Are you saying
you don't consider me worth taking a risk for?"
"I never said
anything like mat and you know it," he countered, now looking at
me with a sternness that was trying to slip into a grin. "If
that's what I was worried about, I'd make you sleep in the hall.
Which I may have to do anyway. At this point I'm fairly certain I'll
never be able to trust myself."
The urge to grin had left
him, just as if he were the only one involved. And he'd also let me
go, which was doubly annoying.
"Hasn't anyone ever
told you the facts of life?" I asked, sitting straighter on the
settle. "Making up a girl's mind for her is rude, whether you do
it by attacking her or by bowing out gracefully. Since I'd supposedly
be a full participant in whatever you originally had in mind, I'm
entitled to a say in whether or not we try it. Or am I just making
foolish assumptions, because your plans were based on solitary
actions?"
"Why are you angry?"
he asked in turn, part of my annoyance touching him as well. "Of
course you were a part of my plans, but that's just the point. They
were my plans, and I have no right to put you in jeopardy because of
them. And I thought women liked a man who considered
196
WAROM GK€€M
HIDDGM
197
them before himself.
You're making my concern sound like a crime."
"There's a big
difference between concern and unilater-ally deciding what's best,"
I returned, then realized I was wasting my time. "I know you're
probably used to being in charge of what goes on around you, but you
should have noticed by now that I've gotten used to the same thing. I
think we'd better call it a night and get some sleep. With the
competition being held tomorrow, it's bound to be a big day."
"All right," he
agreed, settling on that after starting to say something else and
changing his mind. "I suppose this isn't the best of times to
argue opposing philosophies. But we do have something that needs to
be discussed before we turn in. We'll head for the palace right after
breakfast tomorrow, and see if it's possible to get in without
becoming involved in the competition. Somehow, I doubt it."
"I have the same
feeling," I agreed reluctantly, moving to the edge of the settle
but not standing. "If everything happening is aimed toward that
competition, they'd hardly leave so big a loophole."
"And that means we
have to come up with a plan that will keep us together," he
said, leaning forward to stare down at his folded hands. "I
intend besting whoever I have to face even if that isn't part of
their plan, which means I'll end up being admitted to the palace.
What will we do if they try to say I can't bring my woman in with
me?"
"So that's why you
asked that innkeep the question," I said, finally understanding.
"You were anticipating a possible problem. But don't you see,
that shouldn't be a problem at all. I also intend besting whoever I
come up against, so I'll have my own invitation into the palace."
"What do you mean,
whoever you come up against?" he asked, raising those eyes to
look directly at me. "Since you aren't entering the competition,
you won't be coming up against anyone."
"Of course I'm
entering," I said with a small laugh. "I didn't press the
point with that provincial innkeep, but I'm not about to let childish
threats keep me from doing what I have to. For all I care, they can
threaten to saute me with onions if I lose. I don't intend to lose."
"Neither of us
intended to get trapped in a circuit of strange worlds, but it
happened anyway," he countered, his tone and stare a good deal
sharper. "What happens if you do lose, and you're forced to pay
the price? I think it's safe to say you won't be able to overcome the
spell that's designed to uphold that law, so what will you do?"
"What do you think?"
I asked with a snort. "If I can't get out of that stupid
penalty, I'll have to pay it. Since I'm not an innocent child it's
hardly likely to kill me, even if it turns out to be distasteful in
the extreme. But maybe it won't be distasteful, maybe Til like it. At
least I won't have a partner who's worried about breaking the law."
He stiffened at that, but
I wasn't sorry I'd said it. For a man who was supposedly so
interested in me, Bariden was awfully easy to discourage. It looked
very much as though he thought he should be interested, so that was
the way he acted even if he actually felt differently. He was doing a
good job fooling himself, but not quite as good fooling me.
"You also would not
have a partner who cared about you," he said very flatly after a
moment. "No matter how easy you try to make it sound, letting a
strange man use your body can't be a lark for any woman. But you
won't have to worry about it, because it's not going to happen. I'll
be the only one of us entering the competition, and we'll find
another way to get you into the palace."
"Really," I
said, getting slowly to my feet to look down at him. "And how do
you expect to stop me from entering? If I needed anyone's permission
the innkeep would have said so, and he didn't. Are you in the mood to
test out my warding after all?"
Rather than answering
immediately he also stood, which then made it necessary for me to
look up. Because of that he might have been expecting a lessening of
the belligerence I'd been showing, but if so he was disappointed.
I've never backed down from someone bigger than me in an argument or
fight, and I never will. Just to make sure he understood that, I also
put my fists on my hips.
"Do you have any idea
how tempting you make the thought of cold-blooded murder?" he
asked then, his voice nearly a growl. "No matter what I say to
you, you consider
198
SHAftOh GRGGN
it a personal insult or a
flat-footed challenge. Or a comment that can be ignored because
you're convinced I don't really mean it. How am I supposed to make
you understand that I don't want you to do certain things because I
care about you? I'm not trying to run your life, I'm trying to save
it!"
"Is that because
lifesaving is a hobby of yours, or because you don't believe I'm
capable of doing the job myself?" I countered at once. "Of
all the lame excuses there are, 'I'm doing it for your own good' is
the worst. Why don't you do us both a favor, and find someone else to
protect. I'm not the kind who appreciates that sort of thing."
I turned my back on his
frown of confusion and walked away, too upset to let that
conversation continue. Every time he tried to make it sound as if I
really meant something to him, all he proved was that he was doing
his duty to someone smaller and more helpless. If he'd really felt
anything for me he wouldn't have found it so easy to pull back after
that kiss, using me as an excuse for his worry. It was himself he was
worried about, which he wouldn't have been if things were the way he
claimed ...
I headed for the door that
should lead to the bathing chamber, silently cursing the attraction /
felt. If I didn't pay attention to what was happening we might never
get out of that trap, but all I could think about right then was
light blue eyes, blond hair, broad shoulders, muscled arms, a wide
chest—Thoughts going in that direction would never lead to
escape, and I suddenly understood why only one room had been
available. Too bad they hadn't realized what they were dealing with
where Bariden was concerned ...
I snapped my fingers to
light a lamp in the bathing chamber, then closed the door firmly
behind me. If—no, when I got out of there and found the one who
had done that to me, not even the possibility of his being a wizard
would save him. Or her. Or it. I sat down on the tile floor and
closed my eyes, intending to wait until Bariden was asleep before
coming out. It would be better if I stayed away from arguing with
Aim, but I pitied whoever I'd face in the competition tomorrow. With
the enemy out of reach I needed a substitute to practice on, to show
just how I felt about what was happening. And I would show it, no
matter
The
199
how skeptical my gallant
traveling companion continued to be...
Bariden stood staring
until Chalaine slammed the door to the bathing chamber, then he
closed his eyes and rubbed them with the fingers of one hand. He had
no idea what had just happened between them, except that it hadn't
been an example of the closeness he'd been hoping for. One minute
they'd been a step away from making love, and the next—
"I just don't
understand her," he muttered, sitting back down to let out a
long, slow breath. "How can it be a crime to care what happens
to her?"
Nothing in the way of
answers came in a blinding flash, which left Bariden exactly where
he'd been: floundering in confusion. If he'd ever refused to touch
Miralia because he was worried about her, she would have been
delighted. Chalaine had come down insulted instead, and had all but
drawn a line on the carpeting and dared him to step over it For such
a pretty little thing, she could be incredibly belligerent...
And it was obvious she
still didn't believe his feelings for her were real. Or was back to
disbelieving it. For a while things had gotten so much better, and
then they'd come through to that world. He'd sometimes wondered what
it would be like if most people were Sighted rather than not, but
hadn't managed to picture what it would have to be like. Laws against
unauthorized use of magic, laws to protect the unSighted and their
businesses, all of it brought about by wizard-strength spells. And
the wizard, who was also king, needing to protect himself from
constant challenges for his position...
That had to be why there
were also constant competitions, he told himself as he stretched out
his legs. Take the best coming forward and assimilate them, put them
in a position where they can either learn loyalty to the present
ruler, or be watched closely if loyalty was beyond mem. It wasn't a
life he himself would have enjoyed, especially if he were the king.
The need to decide what could and couldn't be done, what should and
shouldn't be allowed ... and who would or wouldn't be admitted into
service ...
QOO
"What reason could he
possibly have for making that rule about women?" Bariden
muttered, his gaze drifting to the door Chalaine had closed between
them. The innkeep's reason, that women didn't take competition as
seriously as men, was ridiculous. If anything, women who competed
took things more seriously, and any man who didn't understand that
usually ended up getting plowed under. Bariden could remember a few
he'd taken weapons training with; most of the women had worked harder
and had gotten to be better than most of the men they'd started with.
If it wasn't the same with magic, there wouldn't be as many female
wizards as there were.
No, there had to be
something else involved, and Chalaine was about to walk into it with
both eyes shut tight. She'd been told, in effect, to be a good little
girl and mind her own business, so naturally she'd immediately
decided to prove just how good a little girl she really was. She'd
done the same thing two worlds back against that magician, but here
the stakes were so much higher...
And there was nothing
Bariden could do to stop her, even if what he wanted to do was knock
her down, sit on her, and make her listen to reason. They were
dealing with someone who knew them, so her reaction might not only be
expected but actually planned for. He'd have to mention that
tomorrow, and hope she'd be calmed down enough to listen. Otherwise .
..
Otherwise she could end up
having no choice about giving her body to some stranger. Bariden knew
he'd never be able to stand by and just let that happen, not even if
it meant killing the other man to prevent it. No matter what she
claimed, the Chalaine he was coming to know would be hurt by needing
to do something like that, and he refused to let anyone hurt her. And
that was probably the reaction they were expecting from him, which
closed the circle nicely. And most likely into a noose, which would
then be around both their necks.
Bariden spent a few
minutes cursing softly, but it didn't do any more good than he'd
expected. They were headed ever more deeply into the trap, with
nothing in sight that could possibly be a way out. And he still
hadn't managed to convince one small girl that he really cared about
her.
THG
QO1
He was covering himself
with more glory every time he turned around, but he didn't know how
to stop it or change it. How did you make a girl believe you were
serious about her? Present her with a sworn statement to that effect?
Write bad poetry for her?
Bariden sighed as he
stretched out on the settle, leaving the bed for Chalaine to use. The
settle wasn't long enough for him, but he'd manage to make do. He'd
need as much sleep as he could get if he'd be competing tomorrow, and
there wasn't much doubt about that. He and Chalaine both . .. even if
he would have to kill someone if she lost. . . when all he wanted was
her, smiling at him and telling him she foved having his arms around
her... she was so different, so special . . . why, of alf the women
in the worlds, was she able to resist him so easily . . . ? Maybe
tomorrow he'd ask . . .
CHAPTER T€h
T
. he next morning had only
one thing in its favor: by having breakfast brought up to their room,
they avoided the conversation they were supposed to have had with the
redheaded woman. Bariden felt stiff from having slept on the settle,
and although Chalaine had been in the bed when he'd awakened, she
didn't look as though she'd had a much better night. They took turns
bathing before getting back into their magically freshened clothes—a
preset spell they'd both had the foresight to use—and for the
time they washed and ate, not a single word was exchanged. While they
were still at the table Bariden decided to change that and began to
speak, only to find Chalaine doing the same thing at the same time.
"I'm sorry,"
Bariden added at once to the confused silence they'd also begun to
share. "I didn't know you wanted to say something. Please go
ahead."
"I think there's a
law that requires me to insist that you go first," she told him
with a faint, wry smile. "In spite of that, though, I'm going to
accept your offer. What I have to say should be said first."
He nodded to encourage
her, but she paused to sip at her coffee before bringing her gaze
back to him.
"About last night,"
she said, sounding as though she were forcing the words out. "I've
been thinking, and I've come to the conclusion that I owe you an
apology. If I'd been the one who didn't want to have sex and you'd
made comments about the decision, I would have been up in arms
QOQ
THG HIDDCN
QO3
with outrage. The plain
truth is, it doesn't matter why you refused. I should have
accepted—and respected—the fact that you did, rather than
give you a hard time over it. I apologize, and promise not to let it
happen again."
"I don't believe you
said that," Bariden stated, feeling the next thing to stunned.
"There's not a woman anywhere who would look at it like that—!
Chalaine, this time you have to listen to me. Not taking you to bed
was one of the hardest things I've ever done, and if the choice had
been mine it never would have happened. If not for this stupid world
and the fact that we have to find a way out of it, there would have
been nothing for us to argue about. Or at least I hope there would
have been nothing."
He grinned in an effort to
lighten the heavy unhappiness he could see in her, but the smile she
responded with was still on the faint side.
"There probably
wouldn't have been arguing as far as the sex was concerned," she
answered, toying with a crumb on the table. "I think we find
each other physically attractive enough that we'd be satisfied. But
that's not to say we'd have nothing to argue about. I'm still
entering the competition today, and that's something I won't be
changing my mind about."
"Woman, you have to
be the stubbornest being in the entire universe," Bariden
growled, instantly filled with insult and outrage. "And you get
me so crazy, I don't even know which idea of yours to argue first. If
you did so much thinking, you should have spent some of it on our
situation."
"What's that supposed
to mean?" she began, obviously getting ready to bristle up, but
Bariden didn't care to be interrupted.
'To start with," he
plowed on, "I haven't taken a woman to bed for sex since I was a
boy. What I expected to do was make love, and with a woman who means
something to me. If all I wanted was sex, there are more than enough
women around willing to give it to me. I'm scarcely so hard up that I
have to take advantage of the woman I happen to be trapped with."
She parted her lips to
interrupt, but Bariden still wasn't ready to let it happen.
QO4
"In the second place,
you seem to have forgotten the discussion we had about the enemy
knowing us," he ground out. "We decided he doesn't know us
as well as he thinks he does, but how well does that have to be to
know how you get when you feel talked down to? If you're not expected
to enter the competition no matter what anyone says, there's nothing
in these worlds you are expected to do. Go ahead and argue that."
She hesitated a moment,
apparently considering what he'd said, then shook her head.
"Your idea is an
interesting one, but it doesn't hold water," she counterstated.
"Most of the time when people challenge me, either I ignore it
or else I agree with whatever they're using to start the argument.
That usually stops the disagreement on my terms, and leaves them with
a win that's as far from satisfying as you can get. Would you like to
tell me how that fits into what you said? It's not quite the same
point of view."
Bariden took his turn at
thinking for a moment, but what she'd said was true. Getting
belligerent wasn't her usual way of responding to things, which left
him with even more of a problem.
"Now I really don't
understand," he admitted, leaning back to frown at her. "I'm
as sure as I can be that your entering the competition is a trap, but
it doesn't fit in with the way you usually act. Even Bena mentioned
your habit of winning arguments by refusing to argue, so what's all
this supposed to mean? Could the enemy have been watching us, and set
this up in response to the new way you've been acting?"
"That would be giving
the enemy more credit than I believe he deserves," Chalaine
answered with a headshake, sipping at the last of her coffee.
"Personally I think I'm supposed to play it safe and not enter,
and only afterward would we discover that I wasn't allowed to enter
the palace with you. That would give us a good-sized problem, and one
we might not be able to think our way out of."
"Especially if they
have it set up that anyone accepted either goes along with them on
the spot or not at all," Bariden grudged. "That would
really set the icing, but it doesn't explain my feeling. If the trap
lies in your not
THG HIDD€h
QO5
entering, why do I stil!
feel so strongly that that's the last thing you should do?"
"Maybe because it's
the last thing you want me to do," she told him gently and
almost with pity. "Bariden, I'm sure you do care about me as a
companion in this mess, but you're trying to make yourself believe
your feelings go beyond that. You've told yourself you're a man who's
deeply interested in a woman, and what man in that position wouldn't
worry about the woman's safety? You seem to believe that the more
worried you are, the deeper your feelings have to be. Isn't it
possible that that's where any personal trap lies, in your reactions
rather than mine? Don't most people know how you prefer to think and
act with the women you become involved with?"
Her dark satin eyes
refused to let his go, at least until he answered her questions.
Bariden toyed with the idea of getting up, walking out, and finding
someone to get into a serious fight with, but that wasn't the time to
indulge in basic pleasures.
"All right, so maybe
people do know how I like to think about and act with women," he
allowed with no grace whatsoever. "That has nothing to do with
the fact that I'm not telling myself all sorts of fairy tales. I do
know how I feel about you, and all the gentle disagreement in this
world or any other won't talk me out of it. Without that main point
your theory falls apart, so where does that leave us?"
"Still chasing our
tails," she answered with a sigh as she stood. "Why don't
we take a break from it by asking some of the questions we need
answers to. If any of the answers don't turn out as expected, we may
find that loophole we've been looking for. And the next time using
personal magic isn't against the law, remind me to call up a
hairbrush. This braid has already put permanent knots in my hair, and
it can only get worse."
She threw the braid in
question over her shoulder, then headed for the door. Bariden, about
to offer to buy her a hairbrush, abruptly understood that she'd
surely refuse to allow that. They only had a limited amount of money
with them, and if they spent it on nonessentials and then couldn't
leave that world, they'd have no opportunity to make more.
<2O6
GReert
When you're forbidden to
call up a cup of coffee, you're certainly not going to be allowed to
produce gold or silver. Banden cursed that world under his breath—not
to mention what was proving to be a pitiful lack of foresight on
their part—and then followed her out.
They were able to leave
the hostel without running into the redheaded woman who was probably
the hostler, and once they were out in the streets the crowds quickly
swallowed them up. Even at that early hour it seemed as if the entire
city was awake and on the move, but the moving part didn't work very
well. Bariden's questions about the location of the palace got him
directions, but he and Chalaine had to fight their way through the
throngs to use them.
Once they got close enough
to their destination, the crowds started to thin. Only a handful of
people seemed to have business at the palace, and none of them were
Sighted. Bariden and Chalaine stood and watched for a few moments,
taking the time to study the square and blocky building. Most palaces
were like Bariden's father's, light and beautiful or dark and
beautiful, but at the very least beautiful. This palace, though ...
"It looks like it's
made up of nothing but dungeons," Chalaine remarked, almost
reading his mind. "Those five steps leading up to the central
doors may stretch all the way across the front, but they look more
like a barrier than a means of ingress. It's all so—gray."
"And a medium gray at
that," Bariden agreed in a murmur. "Maybe it's meant to
discourage people, to lead them to believe there's nothing inside
that anyone could possibly want. Magic users are as vulnerable to
suggestion as anyone else, so the effort would serve a double
purpose."
"Yeah, to keep out
all undesirables, magic users as well as thieves," Chalaine
muttered back. "I'm not welcome in there, and the feeling isn't
my imagination."
"No, it must be
another spell," Bariden agreed, still studying the large gray
edifice. "I feel the same thing, and there's no doubt to the
impression. I wonder if we'll be able to make it over to talk to one
of those guards."
Chalaine inspected the
four or five guardsmen visible from where they stood, as though
measuring the distances between them. The guardsmen were positioned
just in front
TH€ HIDDGM
QO7
of those barrier steps,
about thirty feet separating one from the next. Far enough apart to
keep them from having conversations, close enough for each of them to
support any of the others.
"We'll know if we can
make it over to them once we try," she answered, then turned a
little to take Bariden's hand. "You be the big, brave contest
entrant, and I'll be the poor little girl just tagging along to keep
you company."
"There's a chance
they might suspect something if we do it the other way around,"
Bariden murmured as he got ready to lead the way. "For some
reason most people refuse to think of me as a poor little girl."
The glance she sent him
said he wasn't amusing, but in full truth Bariden hadn't been trying
to be. He wasn't the one who had made the laws in that city, but
every now and then Chalaine treated him as if the entire situation
was his fault. He might have done the same if the situation were
reversed, but that didn't make unearned blame any easier to live
with. Bariden felt abused, and that wasn't something he enjoyed
having to deal with.
There was a wide stone
approach between the last of the shops and buildings and the place
where the guardsmen stood, and Bariden led Chalaine across it slowly.
The spell telling them they were unwelcome grew gradually stronger,
so by the time they reached the guardsman Bariden had chosen, they
were both sweating with effort. The easiest thing would have been to
turn around and go back, but then they would have had to do without
their answers. Chalaine's hand tightened its grip on his before they
were halfway there, but even when they reached the guardsman she
still hadn't said a word.
"Excuse me,"
Bariden said to the guardsman, fighting to act as if nothing was
trying to tear him into small pieces. "I understand there's a
competition that's going to be held today. Can you tell me where
entrants sign up?"
"Entrants sign up
right here, starting at two this afternoon," the guardsman
answered lazily, all but drawling. The look in his dark eyes said he
knew Bariden was suffering, an idea that was vastly amusing to him.
"Competition starts at three on the dot, and any not here have
to wait until next week."
QO8
SHARON GR€€h
"Three o'clock on the
dot," Bariden echoed with a nod. "And those entrants who
win the competition and are accepted into the king's service—they
can bring their fiancees into the palace with them, can't they? I
mean, if their fiancees have nowhere else to go?"
"Winners don't even
get to bring in wives, not until after they get through the first of
their training," the man answered after a short pause. He also
looked Chalaine over hi a way Bariden didn't care for, and then the
man grinned. "If you win and don't have anywhere to leave her,
come and see me. I'll take real good care of her for you."
"What about simply
visiting the palace?" Chalaine asked before Bariden could
stiffen all the way in insult. "Are there times when people are
allowed in just to look around and see where the king lives?"
"It's none of
anyone's business where the king lives, honey," the guardsman
answered, his eyes moving over her as he spoke. "But even if
people were allowed in, your boyfriend wouldn't be one of them. He'd
have to get past the spell first, and it gets a lot worse before it
gets better. If he really means to enter the competition, you'd
better get him away from here now. If you don't, he won't be in any
shape to so much as light a candle."
The man's expression under
his round metal helmet was bland, but his eyes were still showing
that enjoyment. He wore boiled leather armor with patches of ring
mail, a sheathed sword and dagger, and leaned on a glaive. His
attitude said Bariden's magic couldn't touch him, and Bariden's sword
wasn't even to be considered. Bariden thought he was wrong on both
counts, but before he could say so Chalaine tugged on his hand.
"Sweetheart, I'm sure
the nice man knows what he's talking about," she said in a voice
that proclaimed her to be young and not very bright. "If we want
everybody to see what you can do, we'd better get you away from here
now and to a place where you can rest. We've been enough trouble, so
let's go."
Her hand squeezed his with
the word "trouble," reminding him that they still didn't
know all about how the law worked in that place. If he did the wrong
thing he could trigger a
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QO9
protective spell, and that
might be the end of his effort to get into the palace.
But he couldn't just turn
tail and run away, not and still have any respect for himself. That
guard had been laughing at him ... Bariden straightened where he
stood and locked eyes with the man. All knowledge of what the
exclusion spell was doing to him was banished from his awareness,
leaving nothing but the central core that made him what he was. He
started at the guardsman, showing the man what sort of potential
opponent he'd been toying with, and the guardsman suddenly lost his
amusement. When the man swallowed hard, almost ready to retreat from
the stare, Bariden was finally satisfied.
"Thank you for your
help," he said softly with no inflection whatsoever, then turned
and led Chalaine away. It was all he could do not to run back to
where he'd be out of range of the exclusion spell, but he managed to
keep himself to the same slow walk he'd used approaching. Rather than
stop where they'd stood before, he continued on until they were
around the corner and only then did he pause to slump against a wall.
"I'll say,"
Chalaine agreed, matching his slump with her back to the same wall.
"They must change the range of that for the competition,
otherwise I can't imagine there ever being a competition. And I hope
you feel better now."
"Better about what?"
he asked, resting most of his weight on his right shoulder, which in
turn rested against the wall.
"Not better about,
better than," she corrected, looking up at him with curiosity.
"You and that guardsman both knew you couldn't make trouble, but
he still let you back him down. You didn't like it when he teased you
about looking after me, but after he backed down you seemed to feel
better than you had. Considering how much trouble we could have been
given, I also hope the effort was worth it."
"You're not by any
chance scolding me, are you?" Bariden asked, suddenly very
amused. "You must be forgetting I'm the one who does the
scolding, just as I've always been. I never had to be scolded even as
a child."
"A strange thing
happens when you stop being a child," she returned dryly,
folding her arms. "People change, only
Q1O
sometimes they're the last
to notice it. The way you behaved just now was not like someone who's
never even had a scolding. You just about threatened mat guardsman,
and you enjoyed doing it. Would you have enjoyed it as much if it had
caused us to be stuck here?"
"You are scolding
me," Bariden said with a laugh, suddenly realizing it wasn't for
the first time. Back home he'd always had to be so careful not to do
anything wrong, not even to do anything someone might possibly
consider wrong. He was a prince of a well-respected house, but too
capable a prince when you considered that he wasn't his father's
heir. The rumors about him had always been filled with fear, so he'd
had to go out of his way to be absolutely correct It would never do
to make people really afraid of him...
But that was just what
he'd done with that guardsman, and he'd done it on purpose. He'd
demanded respect and he'd gotten it, but the act of demanding had
felt better than the respect. It was a freedom he'd never been
allowed before, a freedom everyone else in the worlds seemed to take
for granted. Never mind what other people think, just go ahead and do
what's right. Rely on your own judgment and trust it...
"Would I have enjoyed
it if I'd caused us to be stuck here?" Bariden echoed her last
question with a smile. "No, I wouldn't have enjoyed that sort of
an outcome, but since it didn't happen let's not worry about it. And
I've decided you're absolutely right, you do have to enter the
competition. I still don't like the idea and you'd better make damned
sure you don't get hurt, but we've been given no choice. If we don't
get into the palace—legitimately!—and find that gate,
neither of us will stay out of trouble long enough to get an eventual
chance. We move fast, or we won't find it possible to move at all."
"If you're saying
that just to get out of a scolding, consider the effort a success,"
Chalaine told him with her brows high. "I'll admit I never
expected you to change your mind, but I'm very glad you did. It's
been clear from the start mat we have to cooperate to get out of
this, and cooperation between us hasn't been easy yet."
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011
"I have a feeling it
will soon become a lot easier," Bariden assured her, then pulled
her to him for a quick kiss to which she didn't have time to react
before he released her again. "And now you can take me back to
the hostel for the rest I'm supposed to be getting, which you'll join
me for. We have an appointment for this afternoon, and we don't want
to be late."
He grinned as he held up
his hand for her to take, and wasn't surprised when she ignored the
hand and simply started back to their temporary quarters. Her
beautiful dark eyes had gotten even wider than usual from the kiss
he'd given her, and she didn't seem to know how to react to what he'd
done. Well, that was all right. He'd gotten a very interesting idea,
more of a theory, really, but if he turned out to be right she'd have
a good deal more to be startled about. Yes, a good deal more, and
she'd never be able to say she hadn't asked for it...
When we got back to the
hostel we stopped in the dining room for coffee, Bariden's
suggestion, which was more like an order. I didn't argue, and not
only because I needed the coffee even more than usual. In less than
an hour the man had somehow changed, and I was still trying to figure
out in what way. And that kiss he'd given me—even the one we'd
shared the night before had somehow been mild in comparison...
"We'd better spend
some time thinking up individual strategy," Bariden said after
the coffee had been put in front of us and the serving girl had left.
"This time we'll be facing equals or superiors, so we'd better
be prepared."
"They'd better not be
much superior, or we'll be in trouble," I pointed out after
sipping from my cup. Strangely enough the coffee in that world was at
least as good as what I usually called up for myself, which was one
small high spot among a forest of lows. It didn't help all that much
to know I'd have what to drink if we ended up stuck there.
"I was once told by a
wizard that where magic is concerned, attitude counts almost as much
as skill," he answered, folding his arms on the table in front
of him as he studied me. "If you believe you have no chance
against your opponent you won 't have, even if you happen to be
better than him. Of
019
9HARON GR£€N
course, attitude won't win
a confrontation against someone with a lot more strength, but we
won't be facing that except, possibly, in the final encounter with
the resident sorcerers. But keep in mind that even there we have an
edge. Some people get lazy and sloppy when they consider their own
skill level in comparison to a novice. We're supposed to be the
novices here, so we'll be underestimated. Let's take all the
advantage of that we can."
I nodded to show I
understood what he was talking about, and in actual truth I wasn't
all that worried about whoever I would face. At Conclave you're
sometimes given the chance to measure yourself against the stronger
wizards, but not just for fun. At the end of the encounter the wizard
usually whaps you good, but you come away having learned something.
What I really had to guard against was being the fool who stepped
forward filled with ov^rconfidence. . .
"So there you are,"
a delighted female voice said, and then the redheaded woman was at
our table and sitting down. "For a while I thought you might be
avoiding me."
"After you've been so
nice to us?" Bariden countered with a smile, answering the coy
charge that had been aimed solely at him. "I'd never do anything
like that, at least if I could help it. The girl and I had to go out
early this morning, but now we're back and ready for that
conversation."
"And just in time,"
the woman said with a smile as she leaned toward him. "There's a
competition being held this afternoon that you have to enter,
otherwise your visit to this city will be over and they'll ask you to
leave. At least I'm assuming they'll ask you to leave. You are
sorcerer strength, aren't you?"
"Yes, it so happens I
am," Bariden agreed with raised brows. "But why would that
be the cause of their asking me to leave? Even if I miss the
competition, I don't have any plans to break the law."
"But that's just the
point," she said with a certain amount of anxiety. "If you
stay past the time of the competition without entering, you will be
breaking the law. People of sorcerer-level skill and higher aren't
allowed to stay in the city for more than a day and a night. If they
stayed longer they might make trouble, and the king doesn't like it
when people make trouble. Since you got here last evening, your
HIDDGM
013
day and a night is up this
evening. If you haven't entered the competition and won, you have to
be gone by then."
Bariden exchanged a glance
with me, probably thinking the same thing I was. The innkeep from the
night before had said something about how expensive it was to live in
the city for a week. He'd said that right after telling Bariden how
good his luck was, because he'd arrived the day before a competition.
He hadn't said anything about it being illegal for sorcerers to stay
in the city, and when you came right down to it, who else would be
entering the competition? Those with lesser skill would certainly
lose, so why would they bother? And the woman also hadn't mentioned
there would be another competition in a week ...
"I hope you don't
mind my asking this," Bariden said to her, "but why are you
so concerned? You don't know us, so why would you care if we did get
thrown out?"
"Now that's a
question with an interesting answer," the woman replied with a
sudden grin. "It also happens to be the reason I was able to buy
this hostel. There will be a lot of betting during the competition, a
lot of gold and silver changing hands. If you happen to know more
about a particular contestant than everyone else, the gold and silver
moves to your hand. The last time I felt this way about someone and
bet on him, I won enough to buy this place. This time I could make
enough to pay my taxes for a year and have this place redecorated.
But I'll only win it if you compete, because I know you'll win. Will
you believe me enough to take the chance?"
She was looking at him
with such earnestness it was difficult to (&sbelieve her, which
was obviously the way it was supposed to go. If we hadn't known she
was telling us only what she wanted us to learn . .,
"You know, all this
talk about a competition for sorcerers has made me curious," I
said, forcing her to shift her attention from Bariden. "What
exactly will my friend get if he does win? If it's good enough, I
might decide to enter myself."
"If you like wasting
your time, go right ahead," the woman said with a shrug and a
neutral smile. "What a man wins in the competition is a chance
to be trained to work with the king, the best place there is below
being
014
CHARON GReer)
king. A woman, though—the
king doesn't think much of women, so if one of them happens to win,
he rides her until she gets disgusted and leaves. Even if she doesn't
leave, she isn't taught much and doesn't ever move up in rank. I've
heard from one or two who tried it that a job as a chambermaid would
be a better deal. So what do you say, good-looking? Are you going to
make an effort to move into the palace?"
The last, of course, was
addressed to Bariden, and he smiled faintly as he leaned back.
"I'll have to think
about it for a while, but I'll probably go for it," he conceded.
"What time is this thing, and how do you register for it?"
"The competition
itself is at three o'clock, but you have to be there to register by
two," she answered, now excited as well as delighted. "I am
so glad you're being sensible, and just to prove it, I'll place a
small wager for you. It won't hurt you to have a few extra coins in
your pocket while you're training. You go upstairs now and get some
rest, and I'll have you called in time to eat lunch before you leave.
Come on, now, take that cup with you and go."
Bariden let her chase him
out of the dining room, and I, naturally, went with him. The room was
to the right of the front door as you enter, so we turned right again
when we left and went up to our room. As soon as we were inside
Bariden finished his coffee, put the cup aside, took off his
swordbelt, then stretched out on the bed.
"After spending the
night on that settle, I can use a couple of hours of comfort,"
he said, moving a little to maximize that comfort. "I'm also
going to be thinking about attack strategy, and you might want to do
the same. Unless you've changed your mind about entering."
His words weren't
precisely a question, but I still shook my head.
"Not after hearing
our friend with the red hair describe what a good deal it is," I
said as I sat in a chair. "Her entire attitude was calculated to
kill any interest I might have in competing, especially since I'm not
the crusading type. If someone makes it clear I'm not wanted
somewhere, I usually leave and don't go back. If we hadn't asked some
questions before listening to her, I probably would have
TH€ HIDDGN REALMS
215
shrugged and sat back to
wait for you to win."
"Which I probably
will do," he said, tucking his hands behind his head. "I
don't expect it to be easy, but if I show even moderate creativity I
should have very little trouble. At mat point we would be forced to
separate, something they've been trying to accomplish all along. Want
to bet that if I tried to refuse going into the palace alone, I'd
permanently lose the chance to go in at all?"
"I never bet against
a virtual sure thing," I said with a grimace. "Then we'd be
left with the choice of plowing through that exclusion spell, or
giving up and settling down here. I'm not too crazy about either
option."
"If there wasn't
important, unfinished business behind us, I doubt if I'd mind one of
those choices," he murmured, but when I looked at him sharply
his eyes were closed. "But why settle for just the cake when you
can have it and the icing as well? Get some rest now, and try to do
some thinking."
I didn't comment aloud on
what he'd said, but one point came clear immediately: with what he'd
given me to think about, I wasn't likely to get much rest
I ended up stretching out
on the settle for a while, but wasn't even nodding when the knock
came at our door. I opened it to find a housemaid bringing the news
that lunch was ready, and by that time Bariden was up and stretching.
The housemaid went back down and in a few minutes we followed her,
but lunch was very quiet. Bariden seemed lost in his thoughts, I
tried to avoid mine, and the redheaded woman was nowhere to be seen.
As soon as we were through
eating, we headed back to the palace. There were fractionally fewer
people in the streets, so we were able to get through them with less
trouble than that morning. I was also able to look around a little
more, specifically at the buildings and shops. For the most part they
were fairly well maintained, but it was obvious the maintaining was
done with elbow grease rather than magic. Which was, after all, in
keeping with the way tilings worked around there. Repairing your
building or shop with magic would put manual laborers out of work, so
magical repairs must be illegal. If a building fell because the
repair
016
wasn't done right, well,
that was a small price to pay for not needing to find manual laborers
a new line of work, wasn't it?
People were already
beginning to line up along me approach in front of the palace steps,
but they took care not to get in the way of anyone trying to sign up
for the competition. Two tables had been brought out and arranged
about ten feet away from each other, and two clerk-types sat behind
each one. The table to the right had a man in front of it signing
something, so Bariden led the way to the table on the left. The
exclusion spell had been withdrawn from the approach, so we had no
trouble getting over to it.
"I'd like to enter
the competition," Bariden said to the man who looked up first.
"What do I have to do?"
"Just give us your
name and sign the release," the man answered with a fault, cold
smile. "After that, whatever happens is up to you. Or to whoever
you're matched against."
The other man, seated to
that one's right, joined the first in smiling at the clever remark.
The two looked very much alike, thin, brown hair and eyes, ascetic
narrowness to their faces, long-fingered hands that were somehow more
threatening than graceful. I had the feeling they were constructs
rather than actual human beings, and that was perfectly possible.
Constructs have no choice about how they'll act and react, and
sometimes that's just what you want.
Bariden supplied his name
for the second man's list, then leaned over to sign the piece of
paper pushed forward by the first. I had an idea about the purpose of
that release, but didn't say so. If I was right, I'd find out soon
enough.
"I'm also here to
enter," I informed them as soon as Bariden was through signing.
"My name is Chalaine."
"A pretty name for a
pretty girl," the first man said with nothing of the
complimentary in his tone. "Entering the competition is your
right, as long as you thoroughly understand what will happen if you
lose. Do you understand?"
"If I lose, my
opponent wins me," I answered with a shrug. "But that's
something to consider only if I lose. And what happens if a woman
loses to another woman? If the winner isn't interested, is the loser
off the hook?"
The man I was talking to
actually went blank for a moment, telling me he wasn't a man. He was
a construct,
The
217
and as such couldn't
handle the silliness I'd thrown at him. Rather than handle it he
ignored it, at the same time producing another wintry smile.
"If you understand
what can happen, then you won't mind agreeing to it in writing,"
he said, sliding forward a fresh release form. "Once your
signature is on this there's no backing out, so consider what you're
doing very, very carefully."
"Can a man back out
once he signs one of these things?" I asked, reaching for the
stylus. "You didn't mention the point to Bariden."
"Men understand that
they're committing themselves completely when they sign their name,"
was the haughty answer. "Women often have trouble with the
concept, and that's why it's explained."
"Tell that one to
someone who'll believe it," I answered with a snort, tossing
back the stylus I'd finished using. "That release routine is
being used to make people uncertain and unsure of themselves, to
rattle them before the competition. It's a process of elimination
that has nothing to do with magic, only with how much confidence you
have. The men aren't told that because simply demanding a signature
is enough to reach the nervous ones. Women are told, but right after
emphasizing how much they have to lose. With them, it's that
combination you use for rattling purposes."
The construct's face went
blank again, then he picked up my signed release and gestured to our
left.
"The waiting area for
entrants is over there," he said in a voice that greasily
anticipated disaster for both of us. "You're committed now, so
all you have to do is wait for it to start."
Bariden took my arm and
headed us toward the indicated area, then murmured, "If that
last comment doesn't prove what you said, nothing will. I wonder how
many kids they send back to the farm with that routine."
"Most of the ones who
would do badly anyway, I would imagine," I answered in a
matching murmur. "Probably most of the ones with the greatest
amount of imagination as well. That last group is probably the one
the king wants to chase away. Get rid of those who could come up with
a
018
good idea for taking over,
and half your self-defense efforts see to themselves."
"You forgot to
include the women on your list," he said. "Get rid of most
of the women applicants, and you've gotten nd of the majority of your
most determined competition. Determined and ruthless. Look at that.
They seem to expect us to stand up for an hour."
I glanced at the large
square that was marked off with metal standards at its four corners,
and there was nothing else. Bariden had been right about our needing
to stand, but that wasn't what I was thinking about. When he'd
mentioned ruthless women, he'd sounded downright approving. Was that
the sort of women he really liked, ones who were determined and
ruthless?
If there was a more
ridiculous question I could have wasted my time with, the following
hour wasn't when I found it. Bariden and I were the first to step
into the square with the man from the other table right behind us,
but we didn't just stand there the way we were probably supposed to.
With one hand on his sword to keep it out of the way, Bariden folded
into a sitting position on the ground. I considered that the best
idea I'd seen in a long time, so I promptly followed his example. The
man who was our third hesitated for a moment, but then made it
unanimous by joining us.
Our numbers slowly
increased over the next hour, and those who made it to the square
followed our example by sitting down. A guard officer came by to
check his men at their posts, and for a moment I thought he would
come over and yell at us for not standing. Then he must have realized
who he was about to yell at—a large group of sorcerer-level
magic users who were being given permission to use their skill
freely—and abruptly thought better of the decision. The
incident was faintly amusing, but that was as good as it got.
"I estimate about one
out of every four changes his mind at the signing table,"
Bariden said abruptly, when the hour was almost up. "Since we
have almost twenty entrants here, they certainly don't hold these
competitions just for show. If the numbers today are typical, they
must almost have to beat them off with sticks."
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019
"If most of them
aren't going to be allowed to use their magic, why let them be
trained in the first place?" I wondered aloud. "Wouldn't it
be easier to deal with untrained Sighted?"
"If you were a
Sighted who wasn't legally allowed training, wouldn't you sneak
around or even run away in order to get it?" he countered. "The
Sighted have to be a very large part of the population, which means
they're needed to keep the kingdom running. If most of them disappear
in an effort to get what you've denied them, your kingdom becomes an
untenanted wasteland. You have no choice but to let them be trained,
set the strongest guard spells you can devise, then weed out the best
of the lot to keep them from setting up shop on their own. Or from
coming at you from a direction you're not watching. I wouldn't be
king here for anything you could name. It's a bigger trap than the
one we're in."
"I see what you
mean," I said, and I certainly did. The king would have to spend
all his time watching his back, and that after years of scheming to
get the throne. Anyone who considered that living had to have
something seriously wrong with them; to me it sounded like prison
with no chance of escape.
Another few minutes went
by with two more men joining our group, and then someone stepped out
from between the two tables and walked toward us. He wore silken
trousers and tunic in a silver and bronze, soft black ankle boots,
had light eyes and hair, and was Sighted. He did no more than glance
at the rather large crowd that had garnered, and stopped to speak to
us as though they weren't there.
'Today's entrants number a
round twenty," he announced in conversational tones, looking
around at us as he spoke. 'Twenty people who are sitting when they
should be standing. Do you intend to go through the entire
competition on your behinds?"
His voice sharpened with
the question, and two or three people actually started to scramble to
their feet. The rest were either smarter than those few, or somehow
keyed in to Bariden and me. He and I—and the rest—didn't
move, and the newcomer was amused.
QQO
"A promising group,"
he commented, looking around again at everyone but those who had
stood. "A delightfully promising group. I'm Sarvallo, and we're
ready to begin. Follow me."
When he turned and walked
away we took our time standing, which means at least half the group
was up and after him ahead of us. Bariden didn't seem any more
worried about that than I was, even though the morning's sunshine had
turned to clouds. If it started to rain before the competition got
around to us, then we would have to compete soaking wet. Anyone who
used an umbrella spell would most likely be wasting strength they'd
need.
The man called Sarvallo
took two sheets of paper from the nearer table, waited until everyone
was gathered around him, then started calling off names. The people
he called were directed to the right of the group, to positions
marked by two of the constructs who had been registering entrants. As
soon as a pair was in place facing each other, the constructs moved
to the next position, which was invariably four feet away and ten
feet apart. With twenty entrants there were ten pairs, and I was the
only woman. I was called first to face a husky black-haired stranger
who grinned, and a few moments later Bariden was called to face a big
blond like himself. Obviously people hadn't been called in the order
they'd registered, but whatever order had been used was totally
obscure.
"And now you're all
in position," Sarvallo said when the last pair was stationed,
strolling to the middle of the ten-foot gap. "I think you
already know how this competition works, but I'll cover the important
points briefly. There can be only one winner from each pair of you.
That one will go on to the next stage of the competition, and the
other will go home. Those of you who lose are forbidden to enter
another competition for a year, after which you may try again. The
same rules do not apply to the lady among you, but she's already
aware of that."
My opponent grinned even
wider at that while others chuckled, which made me give in to a very
nasty urge. Instead of ignoring the comment and the reactions it had
brought, I looked at the black-haired man facing me and let a small
smile curve my lips. As a matter of fact I
HIDDEN
001
locked eyes with him,
letting him see how little the added threat bothered me, and his grin
faded slowly away.
"All of you are ten
feet distant from your opponent," Sarvallo went on. "This
distance is more or less arbitrary, but the maintaining of it is not.
Each of you will be allowed one step back from your present position,
but a second step will be the equivalent of outright defeat. You
won't be penalized for forward movement, at least not by us. By now
you should know what happens if the person you're engaged with is
stronger than you and you're too close to them."
What he meant was
"splashing," a backlash of your own spell bouncing off the
warding of your opponent, a nasty surprise for those who don't know
about it. Your own warding may be up to protecting you from the
product of your own magic, but a lot of people never think to include
that in their warding spell. I knew exactly what Sarvallo was talking
about, but an awful lot of the people around me looked blank and
worried.
"When the signal to
begin is given, you'll do well to begin at once," Sarvallo
continued. "Your opponent will certainly be doing so, and there
won't be stopping for any reason after that but winning or losing.
"Also, it's now
necessary to point out something entrants occasionally miss. When you
signed your name after entering this competition, you were
specifically giving your swom word to strive to the best of your
ability to win. If any of you entered just to be able to say you
competed, with no intentions of doing your utmost best, this is your
chance to leave. If you don't you'll be bound by your sworn oath, and
any attempt to break that oath will be harshly punished. After the
punishment will come permanent expulsion from the city, but by then
you probably won't care. Does anyone want to withdraw?"
There was a very small
amount of foot-shuffling, but no one took the opportunity to leave.
That meant we'd now given our sworn words, but with this group the
gesture seemed unnecessary. If I'd ever seen a bunch of people more
eager to get on with it...
Sarvallo nodded without
saying anything, then turned and headed for the left side of the
lines. That had to mean we
WARON
were ready to start and,
in spite of everything, I could feel my shoulder muscles tightening.
Bariden and I had to win, or we could end up spending the rest of
very long lives in a place we would quickly grow to hate even more
than we already did. We had to get out, we just had to ...
CHAPTER eievo
B
ariden watched Sarvallo
walk past him, but in full truth he was watching his opponent more
carefully. During his time in the last few worlds he'd noticed a
tendency in himself to hesitate when it came to using magic in
combat, a tendency he never showed with weapons. That had to be a
result of the disapproval his ability in magic usually produced in
the people around him, but the time for diplomatically soothing
people's fears was over. If he didn't start using his skills in the
right way, the mistake could end up being fatal,
And he also had to push
away all worry about Chalaine. Hesitation had never been one of her
problems, and she was as capable as anyone he had ever met. That in
itself didn't stop him from worrying; only the admission that he
couldn't help her worked the trick. Along with what would happen if
she won and he didn't. He had an idea about what was ahead, and a
suspicion that if he didn't do exactly right they would both be lost.
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo called as he reached the sidelines and turned again toward
them. Some of the people near Bariden twitched, but no one actually
attacked by mistake. Most of them were so keyed up, they'd expend
every ounce of their strength in the first few minutes of the combat.
After that they'd be vulnerable to anything including heavy
breathing, and might even get knocked out of the competition by
accidently coming in contact with something from the combat next to
them. Weapons practice had taught
QQ3
Bariden when to conserve
his strength—and when not to. He'd play it as it came, for once
trusting completely in his overall ability.
"Begin,"
Sarvallo suddenly announced, and more than half the entrants
immediately did just that. Spells were muttered or shouted with'or
without gestures, lightning and thunder flew and crashed, and in one
instance the ground even shook. Bariden, ignoring what was going on
around him, noticed that his opponent was doing as he was and simply
watching. The man seemed ready to defend against anything thrown at
him, but wasn't attacking immediately himself. It could be worse than
bad luck if Bariden's opponent had also thought out a plan beforehand
...
But then the man's
expression changed, and Bariden knew he'd hit good luck rather than
bad. The man, like him, was big and blond but, unlike him, had seemed
to be hoping his opponent would be one to waste his strength in
immediate, all-out attack. When he realized Bariden wasn't going to
be that foolish, his face twisted with fury, disappointment, and
frustration, and he immediately launched his own first attack.
Which wasn't bad as that
sort of thing went. A dozen daggers came flying at Bariden, living
daggers with eyes which attacked by themselves. If they couldn't
reach him they were supposed to drive him back, and the attempt might
have worked with someone else. But Bariden's wizard-formulated
warding was not about to let anything magical reach him, and it had
been years since the last time he'd given ground when attacked with a
weapon. He waited only long enough to be sure the warding was
effective— with Chalaine's safety in mind rather than his
own—and then it was his turn.
Bariden's opponent was
already beginning to speak another spell when Bariden spoke his, a
variation of the enclosing spell he'd defeated Halvin with on the
previous world. Rather than being invisibly enclosed with his own
magic, the man found himself trapped with a swarm of angry
construct-bees and wasps. The enclosure was a lot like warding:
almost impossible to banish or get through because its actual shape
was hidden in invisibility.
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The man yelled, swinging
his arms as he tried to drive the insects away rather than banishing
them, a reaction Bariden had been hoping for. It's easy enough to
stay cool and in control when "magical" things come at you
in a contest between sorcerers; you are, after all, braced against
that sort of thing. But when it's everyday insects coming at you
instead, habit overcomes training and you sometimes act without
thinking. Bariden's opponent acted without thinking, and that was
what lost him his place in the contest.
Still yelling and swinging
his arms, the man did the only thing his unreasoning mind told him he
could: he retreated from the stinging, buzzing onslaught, just as he
would at any other time. When the retreat proved successful and the
attack suddenly stopped, he was extremely relieved—until he
realized why the attack had stopped. His retreat had taken him three
paces back from his original position, which was more than enough to
disqualify him. His opponent, Bariden, stood with folded arms, calm
in his victory—at least on the outside.
Inside, the victorious
Bariden was almost afraid to look to see how Chalaine had done. What
if she hadn't won? What if she now belonged to a total, uncaring
stranger? What if she hadn't survived to belong to anyone at all . .
. ?
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo said from all the way to my left. As if anyone there wasn't
ready. Another trick to rattle the entrants, and my black-haired
opponent almost fell for it. He pulled himself back just in time, and
even from ten feet away I could see his skin darken in embarrassment.
I'd seen what he'd almost done, and the tightening of his jaw said
he'd make me pay for having that knowledge. What had happened wasn't
his fault or Sarvallo's, but mine, and what a new, unexpected
reaction that was.
At another time I might
have sighed over once again being blamed for something that wasn't my
fault, but right men I was too angry to sigh. It had finally come to
me that letting people blame you without cause made you responsible
for the entire situation. Refusing to speak up in your own defense
made you an idiot rather than a martyr, a coward rather than a brave
but silent soul. And taking what
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SHARON GR€€M
people felt like dishing
out wasn't good for them either. How were they supposed to grow up,
if you didn't help to discourage them from childish ways?
"Begin,"
Sarvallo said at last, and brother, was I ready. My opponent opened
his mouth and raised his right hand, but I was already speaking the
spell I'd decided on. It was an idea I'd gotten from what had
happened to Bariden two worlds back, with the magician Arnwell. My
black-haired opponent suddenly found himself under attack by pink,
hand-sized monsters that were almost all teeth, the nasty little
things clinging to him the way Halvin's monsters had clung to
Bariden's warding in the last world.
But some of my monsters
were beginning to chew through my opponent's warding, something mat
shocked him away from offense and into defense. His banishing gesture
got rid of less than a quarter of the things clinging to him, and two
or three additional gestures didn't improve on that The things stayed
right where they were, a beautiful rosy pink conglomeration of teeth,
voracious appetites, and nastiness, and millimeter by millimeter got
closer to the man underneath the warding.
Which meant it wasn't long
before the man panicked. He screamed as if imagining those teeth
beginning to chew on his flesh, and began to jump around and brush at
himself in an effort to get free. For a minute I was certain he would
understand what I'd done and come back at me in attack, but it didn't
happen. He jumped around, flapping and screaming, and then my
monsters were gone and it was over. He'd moved beyond the two-step
limit, and had been immediately disqualified.
But just then I didn't
think he minded that. He took a moment to make sure all the monsters
were gone before he wilted where he stood, still not understanding
that he'd been in no danger whatsoever. Most of the monsters I'd sent
at him had been illusions, along with a smattering of
monster-constructs. He'd been able to banish the constructs, but just
as Bariden hadn't been able to banish an illusion without knowing it
for what it was, neither had he. Part of the illusion had been the
monsters' seemingly eating their way through his warding, which made
him believe I was enough stronger mat my monsters could actually do
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something like that. It
had never occurred to him that a sorceress would use illusion like a
mere magician, and that was what had made the idea work like a charm.
With my own competition
over I was able to look around, which showed me that more than half
of the contests already had their winners. The majority of those had
people stretched out on the ground, whether unconscious or dead, I
had no idea. My first concern was Bariden, and even as I sorted him
and his opponent out, the other man began to yell. He jumped around
flapping his arms very much like my opponent had, and men he had
flapped himself out of bounds. I hadn't had time to see what Bariden
had done to him, but apparently we'd both gone for forced defeat
rather than blood.
After Bariden's win, there
were only two more contests that didn't yet have a winner, hi one of
them the two men were fighting for magical control of a giant,
two-headed axe, each man standing in his place with fists clenched
and sweat covering him. The axe hovered between the two, quivering as
it inched first mis way and then that, tilting a fraction forward,
and then the same fraction back. As someone who had once been silly
enough to try that sort of thing at Conclave, I knew it couldn't go
on much longer. When you're up against someone of equal strength in a
thing like that, it's no longer a matter of how much you can put into
the effort, but how long you can sustain it.
The man on the far side of
my line lost his concentration first, and then he lost the chance to
ever try again. When no one is mere to control whatever the two magic
users are contesting over, the object goes flying toward the one who
lets go first. I looked away just before the axe edge connected with
the center of the man's face, pretended I didn't hear the chopped off
scream, and didn't look back again.
By that time the last
contest was over, with one of the two having been forced out of
bounds by nothing but the other's strength. The loser had apparently
wasted his own strength early on, and had run dry at the worst
possible time. But at least he was still alive, which a number of
other losers definitely were not.
"We'll now have a
short intermission," Sarvallo announced from his place to the
left, sounding as though we'd all been sitting through a concert. "If
those of you
008
who were victorious will
wait over here, we'll soon have the area cleared for the
competition's next round."
He gestured to a place on
his right, the same place we'd waited for the competition to start,
then walked off toward the constructs who had registered us. Rather
than watching him any longer I made my way over to Bariden, who stood
waiting for me rather than heading for the waiting area as the others
were doing. "You have no idea how glad I am to see you still in
one piece," he said as I reached him, his arm going around my
shoulders. "Obviously your warding stood up all right."
"My warding didn't
get a chance to stand up," I told him as we walked, trying to
ignore that arm around me. "As soon as the word was given I
jumped first, and my opponent wasn't able to get it together again.
How about you?"
"My opponent managed
to get the first spell spoken, but I've always preferred being best
to being first." His amusement was real, and his light eyes
twinkled as he looked down at me. "At least I can report that
the warding worked just the way it was supposed to, which was the
main point worrying me. After that first time, though, there was no
longer a need for it."
"So now we've won the
privilege of facing some of the higher-ups," I said, stopping
with him in one corner of the waiting area. The day was slowly
getting darker and darker, but so far there hadn't been any rain.
"Obviously, we've reached the place where we have to change
tactics. Our next opponents won't be ones we can play games with."
"I think you're more
right than you know," he answered quietly, then gestured with
his chin. "It looks like at least one someone kept close tabs on
the contest."
Both of the things he'd
said were strange, but when I turned I understood the second. Four of
the men on the ground had someone bending over them, but the other
three were simply being carried away. So three of the ten who were
defeated had also died, proving those people weren't wrong for trying
to discourage entrants. If Bariden and I had cared less about who we
stomped over, it could have been five dead ..,
"At least if you
survive, you get to be attended by a healer," Bariden murmured
from behind me. "That's more
HIDD€h
009
than some places would
allow you. I still can't say I like this world, but there are things
about it that could be a lot worse."
"There's one thing
that isn't worse," I said, turning back to him. "I haven't
been able to try an entry spell, and now that I probably would not
get zapped for trying, I can't afford to risk it. If the king happens
to be watching, and he just might be, he could keep us from using the
entry and simply use it himself. If he has anything really special
arranged with his corps of sorcerers, he could do a lot of damage in
trying to take over before he's stopped."
"I hadn't thought of
that," Bariden said with a frown. "It must be hard to
expand to other kingdoms on this world, where you would have to go up
against another wizard and his group already ensconced and waiting.
No, you're right, we can't afford to hand over an unsuspecting world,
and that's assuming your spell would work. If it doesn't, it could
still bring us a lot of unwelcome attention. We'll have to stick with
the plan and find that gate."
"Assuming it is in
the palace, and hasn't been moved to the top of a mountain or the
bottom of an ocean," I muttered, but too low for him to hear. I
was getting more bad feelings about that situation the longer it
continued, but there wasn't any way to hurry it.
This time we stayed on our
feet while they cleared the combat area, but no one in our small
group said anything. The watching crowd took care of making any
comments, and they seemed more in the middle of critical discussion
than in simply watching a spectacle. I had the distinct feeling that
even dying had to be properly done, otherwise the crowd would deduct
points ...
"All right, you may
come forward again," Sarvallo announced when the last of the
wounded was gone and the one patch of blood cleaned up. He was back
to where he'd stood originally, and held a single piece of paper. "As
you can see we had a rather large turnout today, and none of the
contests produced two defeated rather than one, as sometimes happens.
For that reason we're invoking the appropriate rule, and there will
be one more contest between you entrants before you're permitted to
face a palace sorcerer."
Q3O
The only comments came
from the watching crowd, and even they weren't surprised. If the
other entrants weren't protesting, that meant the rule wasn't
brand-new and just made up. But I still didn't like it, not when it
meant even more of a delay, and I glanced at Bariden to share the
feeling. Only then did I notice that he wasn't sharing the feeling,
and in fact looked as though he'd just been proven right about
something. I wanted to ask what that something could possibly be, but
Sarvallo was continuing.
"We'll do this just
the way we did before," he said, gesturing toward the two
waiting constructs. "When you hear your name, go over and take
the indicated place."
The first two names were
the two men who had deliberately killed their opponents, and neither
one looked very happy about the match. I had just enough time to
decide the arrangement was very fitting, and then it was my name
being called. I walked out to the second position on the same side
I'd been before, facing the palace, and then came the really bad news
I'd been half-anticipating all along.
"Bariden,"
Sarvallo called, sending my companion to the place opposite mine. My
first urge was to demand someone else to face, but one look at
Bariden's expression kept me quiet. Somehow he'd known we'd end up
facing each other, and he didn't seem unprepared. As a matter of fact
he looked downright calm, which got me even crazier.
"You stupid fool,"
I growled under my breath while others were called out to their
places. "Don't you understand that if you lose to me, you can't
come back for a yearl And I can't simply stand here and let you win.
I gave my word to try my best, and that would hold even if there
wasn't a wizard-strength spell backing up the demand. How in hell can
you stand there looking satisfied?"
He didn't answer me, of
course, and not only because he hadn't heard me. Looking at him, I
got the distinct feeling he wouldn't have said a word in explanation
even if he could have. I couldn't understand that—until I
happened to remember the special condition attaching to a loss of
mine. But that was ridiculous. Bariden would never—I mean, even
if he won, he would never—
"All right, get
ready," Sarvallo said, heading for the sidelines to my left from
the outside this time. No threats
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231
or theatrics, not with the
children already eliminated, and not even a dig at me. Great.
Equality at last, and just in time to let me flatten the one man I
could least afford to do that to. Not that I had a choice. If I
didn't do my best to reach him, everybody would know it If I did do
my best and beat him, he would be barred from trying again for a
year. I couldn't even really hope that he would best me. Aside from
the fact that I didn't want to have to serve him, what real chance
could he have against someone who had spent all that lime at
Conclave, learning tricks he'd never heard of? The future looked
bleak and downright hopeless—and it didn't help in the least
that he looked totally confident.
"You may begin,"
Sarvallo said abruptly from his place to the left, and I had no
choice but to do exactly that. Bariden had proven to be very
one-track in his outlook, keeping physical doings with physical, and
magical doings with magical. The best strategy against him would be a
combination of the two, and one that would leave his warding
unactivated. Magic and magical things would never get through, but
things only created by magic ...
I was surprised to see
that he was already speaking a spell when I began mine, but jumping
in first shouldn't help him. My spell was short and relatively
simple, demanding the creation of a pit under his feet and a heavy
stick to follow. Falling into the pit would throw him off balance,
hopefully enough to let the stick knock him out before he knew it was
coming. He'd wake up with a headache and possibly a twisted ankle,
but with healers ready and waiting to help, it wouldn't—
I had just enough time to
notice mat he wasn't falling ' in the pit, and then everything went
black.
Bariden watched Chalaine
collapse to the ground with mixed feelings, the strongest of which
was relief. His spell had made sure she wouldn't be hurt when she
collapsed, so it was all over and neither of them had been hurt.
Thanks to pure inspiration on his part, and a large chunk of luck.
Being careful where he put
his feet, Bariden stepped off the invisible platform he'd created.
One gesture banished the platform, the pit it had saved him from, and
the stick
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9HARON
that was undoubtedly
supposed to have knocked him unconscious. The inspiration had come in
when he'd remembered the wooden platform Chalaine had banished from
under the magician Arnwell. Deciding she would do the same with the
ground under his feet meant he was betting everything on a hunch, but
the risk had paid off. He'd not only been able to protect himself,
his own attack had been able to reach her.
He walked over to where
she lay, deeply asleep and finally out of it. Their enemy had been
trying to play cute again, but this time Bariden had been able to
anticipate the major trap. It was certain Chalaine had more
experience using magic against other magic users, and Bariden was
well known to be reluctant when it came to attacking women, even in
practice. With that oath binding her to try her hardest, she was the
one who should have logically walked away with the victory. Bariden
would then be barred from the palace for a year, but she would not
have had the choice of joining him. Her last opponent would have been
a palace sorcerer, without doubt a man who was considerably stronger.
After that she would belong to him, and Bariden would have had to
choose between walking away quietly or deliberately trying to break
the law.
But now that problem was
settled, and in a way that made him smile. He'd won the contest with
her fairly, even though she might not think so. Half of his spell had
gone to creating an invisible platform to protect him; the other half
had created a very special vapor, literally under Chalaine's nose.
There were times when healers had patients with serious wounds, and
it was necessary to put those patients to sleep either before or
after the healing. The vapor used was standard among healers, but
very few others knew about it. Odorless and colorless, it did its job
quickly, thoroughly, and without later side effects. Since it was
only produced by magic, not magical itself, Chalaine's warding hadn't
been able to stop it from appearing an inch in front of her face.
Bariden had learned the spell the time he'd been seriously wounded in
a fight, and he'd never forgotten it...
"Well, that makes the
numbers more manageable," Sarvallo announced, and Bariden looked
up to see that
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233
the other contests were
also over. The two men to his left, who had been the first to be
placed, were both down and could very well be dead. Bariden hadn't
been paying much attention to them, but he had the impression they'd
both developed a technique where most of their strength was
momentarily concentrated into a pinpoint attack. The pinpoint was
meant to thrust through an opponent's warding by sheer overload, and
from there go on to thrusting through the opponent. Since Bariden's
warding was designed to counter that sort of thing, he wasn't about
to spend time worrying about it.
Of the three other pairs,
only one of each two was still left standing. One of the three on the
ground was only sitting, but he was a good four feet back from his
original position. That meant there were four left who stood
victorious, with one slightly more victorious than the others.
"Your win, my friend,
seems a good deal sweeter than the others," Sarvallo said to
Bariden with a suggestive grin. "I wonder why that is."
"I can't imagine,"
Bariden answered with the satisfaction showing only in his eyes. "But
I'd prefer that no one tries to wake her until this is completely
over. I'll wake her myself then, and she'll be fine."
"Oh, I'm sure,"
Sarvalio agreed dryly, then pointed to the table Bariden and Chalaine
had signed up at. "You can put her there until this is all over.
There's still one more contest, you realize."
"Yes, I'm very much
aware of that," Bariden agreed just as dryly, then bent to lift
Chalaine in his arms. Even unconscious she weighed so little, and
that was the closest he'd ever held her. As soon as the nonsense was
over, he'd have to change that.
The table was a good, safe
place to put the girl, and Bariden stood beside her until the rest of
the defeated were taken or helped from the area. By then four men had
come out of the palace, men wearing silk outfits containing more
silver than bronze. If that was an indication of rank, then they were
higher—and presumably more skilled— than Sarvallo, who
wore more bronze. They stopped at the bottom of the steps and waited,
so unconcerned they almost looked bored.
034
"And now for the last
of it," Sarvallo said to Bariden and his three fellow finalists.
"In this segment you aren't expected to win, only to show how
close you can come. If you do win you have immediate acceptance, but
it would be foolish to count on that. Not only are these men more
advanced in their training than you, but they haven't just been
through two contests that drained at least part of their strength.
Just do the best you can, and those who make the best showing will be
accepted."
Bariden felt the urge to
ask who would make the decision on that, but the answer was too
obvious—not to mention inflammatory. As he listened to the
names being called— the palace sorcerers going first, of
course—he worried at the conclusions he'd come to. If the
finalist in his place was supposed to be Chalaine, the sorcerer
chosen to face her should be keyed to her. The flaw in that reasoning
was the possibility that they'd anticipated her losing, and had sent
someone designed to best him as well. If so, then the man would be
easily able to cope with anything Bariden tried.
But if he dwelled on that
possibility, Bariden might as well concede the match even before it
started. All he could do was his best, and stick with the plan he'd
already formulated. If it didn't work, he'd hopefully have time to
think of something else. If not—well, no sense borrowing
trouble.
Bariden was the third
finalist called out, and the man he faced wasn't quite his size. But
he was close as well as broad-shouldered and graceful, and the
sorcerer reminded him very strongly of that Lord Naesery from two
worlds back. Now that was strange—Suddenly Bariden was more
angry than puzzled. It was Chalaine who was supposed to have stood in
his place, and she'd been in the process of developing feelings for
the man Naesery. Of all the low, underhanded things to do to ensure a
win over somebody ...
"Get ready,"
Sarvallo called, once again standing to the left of the lines, but
the warning was wasted on Bariden. He was more than ready, and when
the word "Begin" came sooner than it had before, he did
just that.
The palace sorcerer wasted
no time raising his right hand and speaking a spell, but Bariden was
ahead of him. His
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first spell was something
special, conceived from what he'd learned about the young female
wizard's work. Since he was using her spell for warding, he'd decided
a spell using his opponent's strength to bolster that warding would
work very nicely. Should work nicely . . .
And it did! The sorcerer's
first spell sent magical winds designed to blow him back from his
place, magical winds rather than the real thing created by magic. It
was likely the man hadn't used real winds because they would have
caused harm among the spectators, but whatever the reason it still
worked in Bariden's favor. Rather than blow him and his warding back,
his warding absorbed the strength from the wind and used it to anchor
him firmly and easily in place. It worked so well that even his hair
wasn't ruffled.
The palace sorcerer
frowned when his spell did nothing, obviously not understanding.
Since the first stroke was supposed to be the last, it seemed he
didn't have any follow-up spell ready and waiting. Bariden, however,
did, and it was specially geared to an opponent with greater
strength. As a matter of fact, it was based on his experience with
hand-to-hand combat, something most magic users weren't familiar
with.
Like the man he was now
facing. He smiled when he saw Bariden speak a spell without anything
happening, and then he raised his hand for the second time, spoke his
own spell, and added a capping gesture. Now that was a mistake,
Bariden thought as he felt his magical strength being drawn on
sharply—just before the palace sorcerer was flung back a good
five feet with a final flash causing him to lie motionless. The final
flash was the capping gesture, of course, a mistake the sorcerer
would pay for with a pounding headache when he awoke.
But Bariden was too
gleefully pleased to spend time commiserating with his former
opponent. His spell had worked perfectly, even though the sorcerer
had thought it hadn't worked at all. He'd arranged it so that when
the sorcerer attacked, his own attack was turned back against him
with Bariden's strength added. That sort of thing wasn't hard to do,
but with magic you generally didn't have the time to do it. Bariden
had hoped that his presence rather than Chalaine's would throw off
his opponent's timing enough
236
9HARON GR€€M
to give him the
opportunity, and that was just the way it had worked. Luck was really
with him on that world, but only because he'd been able to anticipate
the enemy. Their next move would have to be to leave that world as
quickly as possible, otherwise . . .
"Well, I'm really
impressed," Sarvallo said, and Bariden looked around to see that
the ostensible director of the competition wasn't the only one who
had been watching. The other three palace sorcerers and one of his
fellow contestants were still in condition to pay attention. Of the
final two, one was out cold or dead, and the second was down on one
knee, retching hard with his arms wrapped around himself. Briefly,
Bariden wondered if retching was considered a win or a loss.
"Today is definitely
a day to remember," Sarvallo went on, his eyes glittering with
something very like pleased possess!veness. "Three new sorcerers
accepted, when I can't remember the last time there were as many as
two. If we can keep this up, we'll have the Eastern kingdom
outmatched in no time. As soon as the third of your number has been
eased by a healer, Tinsin will show you to your quarters and
familiarize you with the laws of the palace. There aren't many, so
you should have no trouble remembering them. Again, my
congratulations."
His bow was on the ironic
side, and then he was gone up the steps as one of the three palace
sorcerers came over to take his place. At the same time a healer went
over to the man who was retching, but not to the one stretched out.
That meant he was dead, and only had to be carted away. For something
called a "competition," the contests were a very rough
game.
"Who does she belong
to?" the man Tinsin asked, gesturing toward Chalaine with his
chin. "I'm hoping it was the entrant / defeated."
"Sorry, but she
belongs to me," Bariden answered with a calm smile. "Does
your comment mean that if I hadn't had a definite win against my
opponent, he would have ended up with her? Even though I was the one
who actually defeated her?"
"Of course,"
Tinsin agreed with a shrug and a grin. "If being in the king's
service didn't give a man the best of it,
THG HIDD6M
237
why would he go through
what you and these others just did in order to qualify? It looks like
you'll enjoy being one of us right from the start."
Bariden was surprised by
the man's friendliness, but a moment's thought gave him a possible
reason for it. Aside from the fact that he and the other two were now
members of the same elite group, they were also scheduled to begin
advanced training. If simply studying magic eventually brought
everyone to the level of wizard, there would be thousands and
thousands of wizards rather than just a few hundred. No one knew what
limited one man or woman to magician level while others climbed
easily to sorcerer, but the limitation grew more stringent the higher
you went. Only a very few would go on to become wizards, and Tinsin
wasn't taking any chances. If Bariden or one of his fellow newcomers
happened to reach wizard level while he didn't, he wanted no bad
memories standing between them. Which, Bariden had to admit, was a
rather wise move on his part.
In just a few moments, the
third of their number was sufficiently healed to join them. Bariden
picked up Chalaine again, and then Tinsin led them into the palace.
It was the place they needed to go, but just getting inside was
hardly likely to give them the rest. The first thing Bariden had to
do was get Chalaine to some place safe, and then he would start
searching for the gate ...
CHAPTER TWGLVie
"... wake up,"
the voice said softly and gently. "Everything's all right, so
it's time for you to wake up. Come on, Chalaine, open your eyes and
talk to me."
"Why can't I talk to
you with my eyes closed?" I mumbled, curious about the point. "I
don't talk with my eyes,
so—"
"That's a good girl,
that's right," the voice said patronizingly, beginning to get me
angry. "You try to talk to me, and I'll help you to sit up."
That was when I became
aware of the arm behind me, forcing me up from the nice, comfortable
thing I'd been lying on. I really didn't care for that—any of
it, in fact— and for some reason my warding wasn't working, so
I spoke a spell to take care of it. Since I was feeling very vague
for some reason, I spoke the spell slowly and carefully. I know I did
it right, but all it accomplished was to cause the voice to chuckle.
"You don't really
want to do that to me," it said, sounding amused. "And if
you did, you'd have something of a problem. I was told to tell you
your magic won't work in here, not with the king's spell actively set
against you in particular. You lost the contest, so now you're mine
to do with as I please."
I didn't like the sound of
that at all, but the voice was beginning to seem familiar and
memories were fighting to come within reach. I felt I had to do
something, so I forced my eyes open.
038
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What I saw then was a
surprisingly comfortable-looking chamber, a lot larger than the last
room I could almost remember being in. There was a good deal of
darkwood paneling offset by wall hangings in bright red silk, two
windows to the left with sheer gold curtains, and a heavy wooden door
to the right that was beautifully carved. Straight ahead the wall was
interrupted by a wide hearth of Hght-gray stone, where a smail fire
crackled pleasantly. At least four chairs of brown, red, and gold
cloth, plushly upholstered, were scattered around the room, and a
small table with two small, comfortable chairs stood to the left,
between the hearth and the bed.
Bed. That's what I was
sitting on, a big bed that felt incredibly comfortable, with a red
silk cover under my folded legs. I had an impression of gold silk
sheets and pillowcases without really seeing them, and the arm that
held me up was attached to someone on my left. By then I knew who the
someone was, but the rest insisted on staying hazy.
"What happened?"
I asked Bariden, having a lot less trouble getting the words out.
"Where are we?"
"Good, you're coming
out of it," he said, no longer sounding amused. "If I'd let
you sleep it off you wouldn't be feeling this confused, but I wanted
you to be awake. Where we are is in my quarters in the palace, just
where we hoped to be. I'm one of the three who were accepted."
"Three out of
twenty," I muttered, putting a hand to the back of my head as
the memories finally started to return. "That wouldn't be bad if
all the rest of the seventeen had lived to try again. But you still
haven't told me how we got here. The last thing I remember is—"
"Probably blacking
out," he finished when I didn't. His arm was still around me,
and when I tried to shift over and sit alone, his usual cooperation
wasn't there. The arm stayed firmly around me, his big hand curved
gently around my right bicep.
"I knew they were
going to set us up against each other," he said, satisfaction
heavy in his voice. "And they expected you to win, because you
have more experience with confrontations even though they were only
practice. I may not go to Conclave, but I still have some idea about
Q4O
what goes on there. If
you'd won, they would have had us exactly where they wanted us."
"But instead we're
where we wanted us," I said, twisting around to look at him.
"And I lost, even though I was trying not to. Would you like to
tell me how you accomplished that!"
"By being prepared,"
he answered, his grin too gleeful to be considered smug. "Just
as I was prepared against the palace sorcerer who would have defeated
you if you'd won against me. Aren't you going to thank me for saving
you from a fate worse than death?"
"As soon as I'm sure
I have been saved," I said, trying to dent his grating good
humor. "For some reason, it doesn't quite feel like it."
"Can't imagine what
would make you say that," he said, finally taking his arm back
even though the grin had widened. "I have to leave soon for the
tour they're going to give us of this part of the palace, so we'll
have to continue our discussion later. Right now I want you to know
mere's a meal for you, and it's waiting on the table over there. Once
you're feeling steady enough, you can get up and eat it. But don't
try to leave this room. You're not allowed to walk around
unescorted."
"Are they afraid I'll
wander into a place that's sacred to men?" I asked as I watched
him stand, more than a little annoyed. "And what if I don't feel
like eating? Won't I get my gold star if I don't finish everything on
my plate?"
"Chalaine, I'm the
one who wants you to eat, and I'm the one who wants you to stay put."
At another time he would have sighed as he told me that, but his
sighing days seemed to be behind him. Right then the words were a
statement rather than an admission, and he made no attempt to avoid
my gaze. "I know you're not happy about the position you're in,"
he continued, "but that can't be helped. We'll be out of here as
soon as possible, but until then you have to do as I say. I don't
want you missing any meals, and I don't want you wandering around
among sorcerers without magic of your own. And there's one more
thing."
He walked over to the
small table on the left, where I could now see dishes and things,
then turned back to me with one of the things in his hand.
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241
"Here's the hairbrush
you wanted," he said, showing it to me before putting it back.
It was a simple thing of yellow-brown wood and white bristles, almost
looking handmade. "After you eat you can brush your hair, but
don't braid it again. I've been looking forward to seeing it flow
free again, the way it did at Queen Leva's feast. I'll be back as
soon as the tour is over."
And he stared at me for a
good half minute before going to the door and leaving, quietly
pulling the beautiful carved wood shut behind him. I took my turn
staring at the door, afraid to wonder what my expression was like.
I'd known I wouldn't want to lose a contest in the competition to
him, but I'd had no idea how hard I should have tried to avoid it.
That wasn't the same Bariden I'd entered the trap with, and the new
him was downright—daunting.
"He's the first man
ever to get over worrying about how fragile I must be, and now he's
going to make me pay up," I said out loud, telling the room some
truths I had just noticed. "Even if it means putting off
leaving, he's going to make me pay up on that loss. And something
tells me it doesn't matter that I can't do magic right now. He would
have made the same decision even if I were fully up to strength. Just
as I was when he defeated me."
And that, of course, was
the worst of it, along with his new attitude. It hadn't been hard
keeping a distance between me and my temporary companion, but the
same didn't hold true for this new version. He wasn't going to allow
that distance, and the cold truth was I no longer wanted it either.
Right from the start I'd found him handsome and attractive, but now
...
Now he was no longer stiff
and formal, or deliberately charming. He was sure of himself and
comfortable in that certainty, and hadn't said a word about trying to
make me believe his intentions. He'd let me know what those
intentions were without words, and they were purely physical.
Which proved what I'd been
saying all along. I blew a long, slow breath out as I pushed my hair
back with both hands, then made the effort to get up. There wasn't
even a hint of dizziness as I got to my feet, showing that whatever
he'd done to me had worn off completely. I went to the door and tried
it, but even though it wasn't locked it refused to
Q4Q
9HAROM GB€€M
open. He'd backed up his
orders with magic, showing just how well he'd gotten to know me. But
not as well as he would get to know me ...
"Damn it, this
isn't/air!" I muttered, hating the way his blind stubbornness
was backing me into a comer. It was physical attraction he felt,
after all, and once his curiosity was satisfied I'd certainly become
just another name on his list. Back in the hostel I'd momentarily
forgotten that, but his drawing away had reminded me. He was curious
enough to want to try me, but not enough to risk getting zapped for
it.
But now he was free to do
as he pleased, and his new personality was strong enough to guarantee
it. I'd never be able to refuse him because I didn't really want to,
and that was the mast annoying part. Of course, my interest wasn't
pure lust, nothing but prurient curiosity, the way his was. Mine was
based on a lot more man that...
I left the door and walked
to the table, looking for and finding the cup of coffee I'd hoped
would be there with the food. I sipped at it for a moment, feeling my
thoughts squirming around, then had to admit there was no way out. I
usually tried to be truthful with myself even if it hurt, and this
was obviously going to be one of those times. Okay, Chalaine, say it
straight out, and you can keep on pretending you're a real grown-up.
Right. I sat down in a
chair and stared into the coffee, just to distract myself from how
embarrassed I felt. Most of my very noble interest in Bariden was
physical, just as his was in me. In its proper place there's nothing
wrong with good, honest lust, as long as you can admit that's all it
is. And as long as you don't try to take advantage of someone because
of it. The way I'd tried talcing advantage in the hostel room ...
But since I was into being
honest, I also had to admit that that incident still bothered me. The
good thing about lust is that sometimes it leads to a deeper
relationship, one based on more man simple physical attraction. That
wasn't likely to happen with Bariden, not when the only thing we had
in common was that Spell of Affinity, but where was the harm if I
already knew that? Wouldn't it be perfectly all right to simply
indulge myself a little ... ?
HIDDGN
Q43
This time I took a good
swallow of the coffee, trying to drown self-disgust. Maybe / knew the
truth of things, but there was a chance Bariden was still kidding
himself. Even if it wasn't likely it was still possible, and ignoring
it wouldn't be fair. Could I simply sit back and have some fun while
he told himself he was beginning the greatest love story of the ages?
Not if I ever wanted to be able to look at myself in a mirror again,
not when it couldn't possibly become any sort of love story for me.
Bariden and I came from two different worlds, and once we were out of
mat trap we'd go back to them ...
Which meant it was up to
me to say a good, firm no and stick to it. I leaned forward to rest
my arms on the table, wondering how difficult Bariden's new
personality would make that decision. I'd have the strength of
knowing I was doing it for his own good, but would that be enough? If
it wasn't I had reserves of stubbornness to call on, not to mention
the question of how we would get out of there. And what precautions
to take before stepping through any gate. Every new world we went to
posed a different problem, and so far we'd just been reacting to
them. Wasn't it time to try to anticipate what would happen next, and
maybe get a jump on it? At that rate we'd never get out of the
trap...
I spent some time thinking
about what we'd gone through and what might be ahead, finally using
the food to help me fight off depression. Every time we stepped
through a gate things got worse instead of better, but we hadn't had
a choice about stepping through. And we still didn't have a single
clue about how to break free. At that rate the only thing we had to
look forward to was a dead end, one where mere would be no more gates
and no other way out If we didn't find our own road before then ... I
threw my fork aside and sat back, no longer interested in anything
but the self-refilling coffee cup. Or maybe something a little
stronger. Too bad mere wasn't anything ...
After a few minutes of
silent brooding I noticed the hairbrush, which in turn brought memory
of the order I'd been given. Even if I'd been in the mood to follow
orders I wouldn't have followed that one, but my hair was badly in
need of brushing. I'd use the brush to get rid of the knots,
244
9HARON GR€€M
and then rebraid it. If
Bariden wanted to see hair flowing free, he could look at his own.
It took some effort to get
my hair brushed out, but I wouldn't have used magic to help even if I
could have. I wore my hair long because I liked it that way, and
didn't even mind how it picked up knots. Brushing it smooth and
shining was a physical therapy for the mind, a time when all you have
to concentrate on is repetitive movements of your arm. You can be as
violent or as gentle as you have to be, and eventually you slip into
a lake of calm and simply float there.
I finally found the lake
and did some floating, but time was passing and I didn't know how
much of it I had. Bariden could be back at any time, and I certainly
didn't want him to think I was encouraging him. I put the brush aside
with a sigh, reached to my hair and separated it into three long
sections, then—
Then discovered that the
three sections flatly refused to be twisted around each other. At
first I thought I was just being clumsy and tried again, but after
the third try there was no longer any doubt. That miserable son of a
diseased she-dog had set a spell, just as he had with the door. Now
that I'd unbraided and brushed my hair, it was impossible to braid it
again.
I'm sure students of human
nature find it fascinating how fast it's possible to go from easy
calm to raging anger. For myself I noticed no time elapse at all, or
maybe I was just too wild to notice. Whatever, I had just begun to
stalk back and forth across the room when the door opened, and the
fungus-rotted bastard himself walked in. A slow grin creased his face
as soon as he saw me, and that was the absolute end. I headed
straight for the table, snatched up the brush, then threw it at him
as hard as I could.
When it comes to targets,
I have a better than decent eye because I practice. Unfortunately,
what I practice isn't throwing by hand, and Bariden is awfully fast
for a man his size. He ducked before the brush could hit him smack in
the face, and then he had swung the door shut and was charging at me.
Refusing to be discouraged or intimidated, I reached for a serving
bowl heavy enough to do some damage, but couldn't quite get it into
position for the throw. I was only
TH€ HtDDGN RCALN9
945
half turned back when
Bariden reached me, and then he had one hand on the bowl and an arm
around my waist. I kicked and struggled but still lost the bowl, and
then he had both hands free to defend himself.
"I see you discovered
at least one of the spells I used to anticipate problems," he
grunted, having more trouble than he'd probably expected in holding
me still. "You'd better stop struggling so hard, or you might
set off my warding."
I told him what he could
do with his warding—folded up square so that it was mostly
corners—and then tried harder to kick him. I'd never used
language like that in my life, which meant I'd had no idea how good
it would feel. Somewhere in the back of my mind I expected Bariden to
be furious at being spoken to like that, but when he finally managed
to lift me off the floor he was laughing!
"I never believed a
woman could be even more beautiful when she was angry," he
chuckled, still trying to control my struggles as he carried me to a
couch. The armless and backless piece of furniture let him plump me
down easily, and then he was using his body as well as his hands to
keep me down. "Don't you want to hear about what I saw on the
tour?" he finally added.
"All I want to hear
is that the gate is right outside and we'll be using it in the next
five minutes," I growled back. "If that's not what you have
to say, I'd rather fight."
"You've really
changed, and I love it," he murmured, moving my wrists up above
my head so that he could start to kiss my neck. "If you'd rather
fight, then let's fight."
"I'm not the one
who's changed," I ground out in desperation, finding it
impossible to free myself. Those big hands of his were closed around
my wrists, his leg was keeping both of mine still, and his lips—!
"And this isn't my idea of fighting! Let go of me, you miserable
coward."
"If it's cowardly to
want to keep from getting mangled, then I'm a coward," he
answered with a grin. "And are you sure this isn't fighting?
I've always thought of fighting as fun, and I'm certainly finding
this fun."
"You're not funny"
I stated, no more than an inch away from blushing. "I don't want
to be held down, and I don't
246
want to be
kissed—especially not by someone who's an overbearing dictator.
If you like to give orders so much, go find someone who's willing to
take them."
"But I have that
someone right here in front of me," he said with one brow
raised. "Aren't you the one who insisted on entering the
competition, saying you would take the consequences if you lost? In
case you missed the point you did lose, and to me. If nothing else,
that gives me the right to hand you as many orders as I please."
"Then go ahead and do
it," I answered with the best shrug I could manage. "I may
have said I'd take the consequences, but I didn't say how I'd take
them. If you're wondering what that means, you're in the middle of
finding out."
"I don't think so,"
he came back, not a trace of anger or annoyance showing. "How
you define things doesn't matter here, something I tried to explain
to you yesterday. I was finally forced to agree that you had to
enter, but that doesn't change the fact that you would have done it
even if it wasn't necessary. I'd like to hear you admit you were
wrong."
Once again I couldn't help
noticing how calm and steady he was. And he hadn't let me go even if
he had stopped the kissing. I squirmed around on the inside, having
die usual trouble admitting I might be wrong. I'd had to be hard and
certain for so very long, uncaring about the opinions of others to
keep those opinions from cutting me open. Now . ..
"All right, I was
wrong," I muttered, all but dragging the words out. "I was
annoyed with the stupid system they have here—and with you—and
never stopped to consider that it might be a more subtle trap than
what I was anticipating. But I don't understand why I did that. What
I should have done was ignore all of it, stand aloof and refuse to
bite the dangling hook. Taking the hook with the intention of pulling
the fisherman in isn't at all like me."
"You say that only
because you can't see how much you've changed," he disagreed,
finally releasing my wrists. "I remember thinking, when this
first started, that I'd have to have words with you about the way you
refused to discuss things. It was a habit of yours that really got to
me, but we never had those words because you stopped doing it. What
you started doing instead was challenging people who
TH€ HIDDGN
Q47
tried to put you down,
demanding that they prove what they said or take it back. In my
opinion that's a much healthier habit, but you let it take you too
far. There are times when it is smarter to let things go by,
especially when you don't know for certain what answering their
challenge will bring."
He touched my face gently
and then stood up to stretch, leaving me with something troubling to
think about. I hadn't noticed myself changing, even though the time
period covering the change was no more than a matter of days. During
those days we'd both been affected, but why should that have
happened? I sat up slowly, trying to decide what the revelation could
possibly mean, but there were so many considerations and variables...
"Are you ready to
hear what my tour was like?" Bariden asked, and I looked up to
see him holding a glass of wine. "They also supplied us with a
selection of polite snacks, afterward explaining we were responsible
for providing our own meals and other requirements. A fully
functioning sorcerer ought to be able to call up just about anything
he can think of, and that was our primary gain: as long as we're in
service with the king, we're exempt from most of the prohibitions the
rest of the populace has to live with."
"That must help a lot
in keeping the palace budget down," I said, getting to my feet.
"Not to mention giving new recruits an incentive to behave
themselves in order to keep what they've gained. What are the
prohibitions you're not exempt from?"
"The first one is
obvious," he answered, watching me move to the table to retrieve
my coffee. There was a second glass of wine standing there, but I no
longer wanted the something stronger I had earlier. "Any effort
to plot against the king will get you bounced immediately. There's
also a schedule where those here who do well in their studies can
legally challenge the king. That, I think, is to keep groups from
forming, where everyone supports a particular candidate. After all,
why support someone else when you could easily have a chance of your
own?"
I nodded as I sipped,
reluctantly admitting the wizard-king seemed to know what he was
doing. Giving your underlings permission to challenge you brought
them at
948
you one at a time, making
them easier to handle than if they showed up in a group. And giving
them something important to lose—full and free use of their
abilities—also had to make any but a completely determined
challenger think twice. Yes, the man did seem to know what he was
doing.
"The second thing we
can't do is produce our own gold and silver," Bariden continued.
"If we get a vacation from our studies and want to spend part or
all of it in the city, we have to ask for money to be issued to us.
The king doesn't want a lot of extra coinage being spread around,
driving up the prices of things, and if we break that rule we get
burned the way you were over that cup of coffee. The third and last
major rule is, no one harms anyone in the city. They're all under the
king's protection, and he will protect them even from one of his
own."
"Now that's
interesting," I said, leaning back against the table as I
considered the point. "A wizard doesn't need anyone's support to
be king, let alone the people he rules, but this man is still careful
of his subjects. I wonder why that is."
"I have the feeling
that taking care of his people is something he needs," Bariden
answered, gesturing with his wineglass. "Playing king feeds the
need for power most people have, but usually the power need is
matched by selfishness. Why would I care if the multitude is
starving, as long as I have mine? Also, my not starving while they do
proves how much better I am. But this king has the strength and
ability of a wizard to take care of any power craving he might have,
so he doesn't need the incidentals. That alone would give him
people's fear, but what he seems to want is their respect and love.
It seems to be part of human nature to want what you don't have, to
struggle for what everyone says is impossible to get."
"Which would explain
why he hasn't cast a general 'love-me' spell," I said with
another nod. "The emotion would be false, and so would be the
satisfaction. No struggle, no pleasure from achieving the impossible.
Of course, he could just be playing fair and taking his job as king
seriously. I don't like thinking he might be, but it is possible.
What, if anything, did that tour show you?"
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249
"This wing is where
newcomers and the least powerful of the residents live," he said
after finishing his wine, also coming over to put the glass on the
table. "In the middle of it are chambers for practice and
instruction, where those who are stronger than you help you to learn.
There are also a couple of gathering rooms meant for relaxation, and
every week the two sorcerers who have made the most progress in
learning are each responsible for redecorating one of them. The one
we got to glance into had diamond walls, ruby ceiling and floor,
sapphire tables and sconces, and chairs made of solidified clouds. We
were also told that that one was the less imaginative of the two."
"I should hope so,
since even / couid do better," I scoffed, then pulled myself up
short. They used games to encourage people to learn, and I had no
business responding to the lure of it. Not only didn't they want me
to join in, I had no intention of staying around even if they
suddenly changed their minds.
"One corridor leads
to the next wing of the palace, where those of higher ability live,"
Bariden went on. "We weren't allowed to do more than look up the
corridor from our end, and were warned not to try to go farther,
either alone or with a friend or two. Anyone caught where he doesn't
belong is taken care of by those who do belong in the invaded
territory. We were told we would not be seriously or permanently
hurt, we would only wish we had been. If we disbelieved that, we were
invited to try it for ourselves and see."
"Which should do a
better job of keeping you out than the most bloodcurdling of
threats," I said. "And also make you work that much harder,
so you can walk up that corridor because you've earned the right."
"That's the way my
brother newcomers seemed to take it," Bariden agreed, folding
his arms. "They looked at that corridor the way a beggar looks
at a gold coin, and afterward didn't even seem to see the two
guardsmen stationed in front of a door just past that corridor. The
door they guarded was in our wing of the palace, but Tinsin, our
guide, never said a word about it."
"If I didn't remember
what happened in the last two worlds, I'd say it couldn't be that
easy," I commented,
Q5O
trying to decide whether
to feel relieved or suspicious. "Were the guardsmen Sighted, or
did the door have any complex spells on it?"
"No to both, at least
as far as I could tell," he said, looking no happier than I
felt. "And, predictably, the set-up doesn't make any sense. Why
have guardsmen in a palace filled with sorcerers? The weakest man
here would have no trouble getting past them, so why not just spell
the door and forget about guards? A wizard's spell could make it
impossible for anyone to even see the door, let alone go through it.
The only answer I can think of is the obvious one."
"That someone wants
to make it easy for us to get through the gate that must be behind
the door," I grumbled in agreement. "But even that doesn't
make any sense. What if we'd done the wrong thing, and both of us
weren't here in the palace? Did they expect one of us to go on
through and leave the other behind?"
"That would depend on
whether we were still together, wouldn't it?" he countered,
those very light eyes thoughtful. "What if one of us had stayed
on one of the previous worlds, and the other had gone on alone? Or
what if one of us was killed in that competition? The survivor would
have to go on alone, or else settle down here for life."
"But—the logic
of that thought doesn't hold," I said, even more disturbed than
I had been. "At least, not the way it should. If they were
trying to trap me into belonging to someone else, why would they make
it possible for me to get to the gate? And even with two alert
guardsmen, it would be possible. I've been trying to figure out what
they can be after, and this just makes the whole picture muddier."
"Tell me about it,"
he muttered, running an annoyed hand through his hair. "None of
it makes any sense, and especially not running straight for that
gate. People are still awake and moving around in this wing, so we'll
give them enough time to settle down and fall asleep. In the meantime
we'll get as much rest and nourishment as we can, and also see if we
can come up with an alternative to using the gate the way we're
obviously supposed to. If there's a way out of this trap, obediently
following the bread crumb trail isn't it."
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251
"But refusing to
budge can't be the way either," I fretted, hating the idea of
spending any more time in that place. "Why don't we get
ourselves to the gate, and then we can argue about whether or not to
go through? That way—"
"No," he denied
quietly, dismissing the suggestion without a second thought. "Where
guards are posted, guards are also relieved. If we're found there at
the wrong time we'll have to go through, assuming no one alerts the
king and he makes it impossible. We'll do our waiting here, where I
can relax and enjoy it."
He turned then and raised
his arms, but I heard nothing of whatever spell he spoke. Obviously
I'd been cut off from magic completely, even to the point of not
being able to hear it. That added even more to my annoyance, but then
Bariden's spell manifested and I was distracted by the surprise.
A wall of gray mist had
formed, with an archway standing open and inviting in the middle.
Beyond the archway I could see lots of green forest around a pool
being fed by a waterfall, soft green grass leading like a carpet from
the archway to the pool. I was certain Bariden hadn't created an
entry to another world, but what had he done ... ?
"Part of that is
illusion, but part isn't," he said, almost in answer to my
unspoken question. "Let's go make use of it, and you can see if
it's possible to tell which is which."
He put his hand out to me,
those light eyes showing an expression I couldn't define, and that
made me uneasy.
"Make use of it how?"
I asked, staying right where I was. "And won't they come down on
you for spreading out beyond the limits of your assigned quarters?"
"But I didn't spread
out beyond my quarters," he answered, now looking amused as well
as pleased. "That's one of the illusions. And what else would
you do with a heated waterfall and pool but take a bath? Come on"
"I had a bath this
morning," I began, suddenly knowing I didn't want to join him,
but that was as far as I got. Two steps brought him back to me, and
then I was being pulled toward the arch by one hand. I tried to get
loose—or even simply to hang back—but there was nothing
to grab onto or to pry Bariden's hand open with, and then—
Q5Q
And then I was through the
archway and stark naked. It didn't help that Bariden was just as
naked, and in fact made things worse. If I'd had the choice—about
anything at all—Damn it, this just wasn't fairl
"Give me my clothes
back this instant!" I demanded, using both hands in an effort to
stop the hulk who was pulling me toward the pool. The grass under my
feet was like satin, something I had no desire at all to think about.
. . "Damn it, Bariden, let me go and give me my clothes back!"
"It's too warm in
here for clothes," he answered without turning, and also without
slowing. "You'll get them back when we leave, and by then
they'll have refreshed themselves. Let's swim a little, and then we
can rest on the grass."
"I won't!" I
insisted, for once in my life wishing I weighed more. "If you
drag me in there I'll just climb right out again, so why waste the
effort? Let me go now, and—"
"Chalaine," he
said with a sigh, then turned back to look down at me. "Why are
you going through these motions? I disappointed us both last night
because I felt I had to, but those reasons don't hold any longer.
You're trying to refuse because you're still upset with me, and I
can't blame you for that. But once I begin to apologize properly,
you'll change your mind. Let's just wait until then, and if you don't
like it, then you can say something. Is it a deal?"
By that time my jaw was
practically down to my toes, and I honestly couldn't decide what I
most wanted to say first. Of all the incredible egotists I'd ever had
the misfortune to associate with, Bariden took first prize without
competition. My trying to refuse him was just going through the
motions, and as soon as he made the effort I'd change my mind?
"Do you know what you
can do with your deal?" I finally got out, glaring up at him
with the beginnings of explosion. "You can—what in
Hellfire are you grinning at?"
"You," he
answered, reaching out one big hand to stroke my hair, his amusement
increasing. "All I brought you in here for is to swim and relax,
but you were so obviously expecting me to attack you—or do you
a big favor—that it was painful. That's why I decided to put
the big favor into
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253
words, just to get it out
of the way. I'd like to apologize properly for disappointing you last
night, but first you'll have to say you're ready to listen. Until
that happens, let's go and get wet."
The hand that was still
closed around mine pulled me after him again, but this time I
couldn't think of anything to say. Part of me was very embarrassed
over having misjudged him, but another part was wondering if I really
had. Maybe that speech he'd made had been a deliberate attempt to get
me angry enough to calm down, so to speak, but did that mean his
intentions were nothing but honorable? At one point me answer would
have been yes, but after the way he'd changed ...
The pool of water began
only a couple of inches below the bank, and the man who was beginning
to make me paranoid didn't give me the chance to climb in alone. He
took me by the waist and just about dropped me in, and while I was
still squeaking in surprise he joined me. The surprise came from the
fact that the water was warm, deliciously warm, even though it looked
clear and cold. It was that perfect temperature for soaking, and was
deep enough there to almost reach my shoulders.
"I liked the view
better on the bank, but we've both earned a little pampering,"
Bariden said from behind me. "There are a coupie of underwater
ledges opposite the falls, so if we get tired of swimming but don't
want to get out, we can stretch out there. Aren't you sorry now that
you made such a fuss?"
"No, I'm not," I
answered over my shoulder, bending my knees to let the water lap
higher. "And while we're discussing the landscape, I'd like to
know what made you come up with this. The last time you spoke a spell
to produce accommodations, it turned out to be a modest little house
with nothing in the least exotic. This, though ..."
I let the words trail off
as I looked at the falls, a misty cascade that fell from a good
hundred feet up. The sound of it was only a whispering shush flowing
through bright sunshine and the chirping of birds, making the whole
thing a delight to every sense I had. An undertone of tinkling seemed
to be calling me to play, and I had never felt so welcome in my
entire life.
254
"When I called up
that house, it was still the old me," Bariden answered in a
murmur. "Magic was like a weapon or a tool, to be used only
under strictly defined circumstances and only to the extent that was
absolutely necessary. Since then I've learned that magic is like any
other skill— wasted when limited by anything but common sense
and honor. There's no shame in being what you were born to be; the
shame is in failing to be that something because those around you
can't be the same. Let's swim over to the falls and check on the
temperature change I incorporated."
He moved through the water
on my left, already swimming and glancing at me as he went past. I
began to follow without comment, but not because I didn't know what
to say. I kept getting the feeling I was completely out of control,
and that had nothing to do with not being able to do magic. Bariden's
entire attitude ...
There was no gradual
change in water temperature as I neared the falls. What I swam in was
warm right up to the place the falls reached it, and only directly
under the falls was it cold. The water was also deeper there and as
far as I could tell the bottom was a long way down. Bariden glided up
and splashed me with cold falls water, so after screeching I returned
the favor. The splashing went on even after we moved away from the
falls, and some time during that period the laughing started. Because
of the laughter we both ended up swallowing a good deal of water, but
after the first gulp I didn't mind at all. What I seemed to be
swallowing was a light, sparkling white wine, definitely chilled, and
the best vintage I'd ever tasted.
There came a time during
the horseplay when Bariden surged through my water attacks to capture
me. He tried a couple of times without being able to break through
the barrage, and had to retreat with ringing laughter. The third
time, though... Don't they always say, "Third time lucky?"
It had never occurred to me to ask who the lucky one was supposed to
be ...
I was laughing when those
massive arms closed around me, and he was grinning in triumph. That
deliciously warm water lapped at our bodies, trying to coax us into
tasting more of it, but I suddenly felt as if I'd already had more
than I should have. Looking into those very blue eyes was
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making my head spin, and
then he pulled me close and kissed me. His lips tasted of the wine,
and small runnels flowed down both our faces from our hair, and his
hard, naked body felt so good pressed up against mine, and—
"Bariden, stop,"
I mumbled as soon as I could, my hands spread out against his chest
and arm. His lips didn't want to let the kiss end, and mine ...
"Bariden, this is nothing but lust we're feeling. It wouldn't be
fair to—to—let it make us take advantage of each other."
"Why not?" he
countered in a murmur, one of his hands in my hair, the other moving
over my bottom. "If we're both taking advantage, we're also both
getting it. What's wrong with that?"
"There's—everything
wrong with it," I groped, trying to remember the very clear
reasoning I'd used when I'd decided to stay away from him. "It
just wouldn't be right, so we can't let this go any further."
"All nght, then we
won't," he agreed easily and comfortably, his lips and tongue
moving to my neck. "We'll just go on with this and nothing
else."
I gasped as he licked the
water-wine from my skin, still being held in those arms, still
pressed up against him. The water would have floated my body away
from his if he'd let it, but he was holding me too tight for that.
There was no bottom under my scrabbling toes, nothing but Bariden's
legs and calves, but I had the feeling he was touching bottom. I also
had the feeling I was about to drown, and being in water had nothing
to do with it.
"You can't be
serious," I finally managed to protest, my fingernails
undoubtedly digging holes in him. "You can't just—keep on
doing this\ You have to let me go."
"I'll let you go if
you can tell me you're not enjoying it," he murmured, his lips
at my face and ear. "But you have to tell the truth, Chalaine,
otherwise you won't be able to say it. Tell me truthfully that you
want me to stop, and I'll let you go immediately."
I parted my lips to say
what I had to, ignoring the way my eyes had closed in response to
what he was doing— and the words wouldn't come. Part of me did
want him to stop, but it was a very small part and had nothing to do
with how I felt. I wasn't enjoying what he was doing, I
256
9HARON GR€€h
was melting into a puddle
of mush from it, and the mush had been forbidden to He. He was in
complete control of me, and all I wanted to do was relax and enjoy
it.
"You bastard," I
whispered, pulling him closer with my arms around his neck so that I
could bite his ear. By rights I should have ripped it from his head,
but all I could do was close my teeth with exquisite care. His cheek
against mine was the smooth softness that came from being freshly
shaven, and his groan of pleasure set the water around me to boiling.
"That's been
suggested, but the contention can be positively disproved," he
mumbled. "My being a bastard, I mean. Licking my ear like that
won't do you any good. I promised not to go on to anything beyond
this, and I won't break my word. If you want anything more, you'll
have to release me from the promise."
I couldn't curse him out
that minute, not when he immediately kissed me again. This time the
kiss was more intense than I knew was possible, so much so that it
took a while before I realized that at some point we'd stopped being
vertical. I was still mostly underwater but had been put down on my
back, with my head raised slightly as if on a cushion. Those ledges
he'd mentioned when we'd first come through the arch, half a lifetime
ago... Bariden's body pinned me to the soft, form-fitting surface,
only part of his weight negated by the lift of the water.
And he was ready, as ready
as I, but was still doing nothing but tormenting me. When his lips
left mine to move to my right breast, I was finally able to say
everything I'd wanted to. I cursed him roundly, expecting it to make
me feel better, but I might as well have been pronouncing the
alphabet. I didn't want to release him from his promise but he was
forcing me to do it, in the most low, mean, underhanded way there
was. No threats, no pain, just the most exquisite pleasure—how
was I supposed to stand up against that!
I held out as long as I
possibly cquld, but there's a limit to what any human being can take.
Bariden must have paid attention to every woman he'd ever had sex
with, noticing what reached them and what didn't, practicing the
positive until he'd completely mastered it. The mush I'd melted
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257
into had no chance against
him, and finally I had to admit it. I whispered my release against
his promise, found it necessary to say it again to make it audible
and at least partly grammatical, and then got a surprise.
"Thank you," he
whispered back, those blue eyes holding to me with more than desire.
"I was about to die from wanting you, and now you've saved my
life. The only thing I can do in return is make sure you don't regret
your decision, not now and not ever."
He kissed me again, but
this time the kiss was a sharing unlike anything I'd ever
experienced. I realized I kept thinking that, that almost everything
I felt was a first, just as though there was more than lust between
us. That was ridiculous, of course, but as my fingers slid through
the long, soaken strands of his hair, I began to wish it wasn't. He
moved me as no man ever had before, touched a part of me I hadn't
even known was there. I knew he'd never belong to me permanently, but
would it be so wrong to enjoy what he gave while I did have him?
Wasn't a small slice of the pie better than no taste at all? Even if
it left behind nothing but crumbs ...
Another man would have
been desperate to get on with it, but Bariden was still producing
firsts. He stood on the ledge while lifting me into his arms, then
carried me to the bank and a bed he produced with a snap of his
fingers. We were both also instantly dry, showing that his original
spell had been prepared for all eventualities. I was tempted to be
annoyed over that, the proof of his certainty that he'd get me, but
then he put me down on the bed, and all annoyance vanished. He was
sharing another of those kisses, the kind I'd never get enough of
even if I lived forever.
I think I half-expected
the actual sharing of sex to be an anticlimax, so to speak, but once
again I was wrong. If I thought I was mush to begin with, I learned
what boneless really meant as soon as he entered me. I moaned and
kissed him and tried to touch him everywhere, but his heavy stroking
quickly drove me into a state of pure sensation. I knew nothing but
that I didn't ever want it to stop, not even after I fell from the
cliff twice in rapid succession. He had me completely, his to do with
just as he pleased, and it pleased him to take me higher than
258
even the EverNameless
could have gone. It was incredible, indescnbable—and when it
finally ended, we ended it together.
He kissed me one last time
before withdrawing, then lay beside me to hold me in his arms. I
needed very badly to sleep right then, but even as I snuggled up
against his chest I reminded myself sternly about what I had to do.
Keep it light and unimportant, let him know it was fun but no more
than that. Head off all need for eventual embarrassing good-byes, an
effort that will be more than worth it. Once you get back it will be
completely over... don't forget diat. . . never forget. . . never. ..
CHAPTGR THIRT€€N
B
'ariden awoke to find
Chalaine still sleeping, and the way she snuggled against him brought
a smile to his lips and the oddest feeling to his insides. He thought
about that feeling for a moment, trying to define it, then silently
laughed at himself. The feeling was one he'd never had with a woman
before, not even those women he'd considered special. What he felt
for Chalaine said he never again wanted to wake up without her being
there, safely and lovingly beside him. He'd known from the first that
she was different, and now he also knew he loved her.
And he would tell her that
as soon as possible. This time she couldn't disbelieve him, not after
what they'd just shared. He shifted more to the side so that he could
put a hand to her back, needing to feel the softness of her skin
again. That stubbornness of hers had almost kept them apart; if he
hadn't counted on her feelings from last night to resurface ...
"What are you looking
so satisfied about?" a sleepy voice asked with a yawn. "Aside
from the obvious, that is."
"I was just thinking
how much I love your skin," he answered her with a smile. "And
your hair. And your entire body. At this point, I might even be
forced into admitting less than total dislike for
your—singlemindedness. The wait was definitely worth it."
"Well, obviously sex
does make some men expansive," she drawled, looking up at him
with a teasing smile. "But it was fun, I'll give you that."
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9HARON GR€€N
"Lovemaking, not
sex," he corrected her without amusement. "I thought we got
the difference between the two settled yesterday, but the point is
worth repeating. When I take you in my arms it's to make love to you,
not to have sex."
"If you insist,"
she capitulated with another yawn, not quite as convinced as Bariden
wanted. "How much longer until we go for the gate? Or have you
thought of something else we can do?"
"No, I haven't
thought of something else, and not for lack of trying," he said,
diverted from the previous topic. "I'm forced to admit that the
trap is narrow at this point, making us go the way they want us to.
If we try to stand still and look for another way out, the one ahead
of us could be permanently closed off."
"I hadn't thought of
that," she admitted with reddish brows high. "We're only
assuming there's another way out, and that we'll find it if we look.
At this point there might not be an alternative, and by refusing to
move on we could be permanently trapped."
"Which, despite the
position I've earned, I wouldn't care for," Bariden said,
running a finger across her flat middle. "When the time comes
for me to settle down somewhere, I want the location to be my choice,
not someone else's. And to answer your earlier question, we still
have a couple of hours before what I hope will be the best time to
try for the gate. Let's rinse off, and then we can sit down to a
meal."
"Why not?" she
said with a shrug, stretching hard before sitting up. "The thing
that still bothers me, though, is that we don't know why we're being
put through this. I have a feeling that if we did know, we'd have the
answer to a lot of other questions as well."
"Questions like
what?" Bariden asked, watching the way her body moved as he got
out of the bed. And that auburn hair, sliding around her arms to
frame her in silken glory...
"We've already
discussed some of them," she fretted, unaware of his
appreciation as she followed him to standing. "Like, why are we
here? If someone wanted to get rid of us to keep us from finding out
what was done to the
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stricken people and by
whom, it would have been easier to kill us. Why go to all this
trouble instead, and gamble on our not finding a way out? But at
least we know one thing for certain: this trap was prepared for both
of us, not just you alone. Do you see that now?"
"At this point I'd
have to be blind not to," Bariden answered with a nod. "We
discussed this once before, but now there's no doubt. Most of what
we've gone through was aimed at both of us, but I've just thought of
something. What if the only reason we're in this trap is to prove
we're not better than the enemy? I mean, what if he's unstable enough
to want to prove his superiority in everything over everybody? That
would be the reason we're still alive, even though, objectively
speaking, it's such a bad idea."
"I don't know if I
like the sound of that, or hate it," Chalaine returned, hugging
herself as if against an inner chill. "On the one hand, those
who are mentally unstable are prone to overlooking things that fall
into one of their twisted blind spots. That would mean we had a
better chance of breaking free, but only if the enemy has enough
blind spots. If he doesn't, there could be something really horrible
waiting for us at the end of this."
"Let's not start
thinking that way," he cautioned, pulling her into his arms to
hold her close. "If there's a Spell of Volition on this next
gate the way there was on the previous ones, dreading what might be
ahead of us could trap us here. I prefer to believe that we'll win
against whatever's thrown at us, which is what has to be our enemy's
major nightmare. If, deep down, he wasn't afraid we really were
better, he'd never have set this up in the first place."
"Which should also
mean that, given the chance, we'll be able to figure out who he is
when we get back," she agreed, raising her head to look up at
him. "With that in mind, let's get this show on the road. The
sooner we get back, the sooner we'll have the chance to meet him face
to face."
"Now that's what I
call incentive," Bariden agreed, then joined her in heading for
the pool. Five minutes would do for his part of the face-to-face
encounter, five satisfying and really pleasant minutes ...
They swam briefly to wash
the sweat away, then got out and headed back to his actual chamber.
As they passed
262
SHARON
under the arch of mist,
his spell returned their clothes to them, fresh and sweet-smelling
and better than new. He eyed Chalaine as he banished their unusual
bathing room and got ready to call up a meal, and she eyed him right
back.
"Why are you looking
at me like that?" she asked, having already brushed at and
straightened her clothes. "And if you don't mind, I'd like to
braid my hair."
"But I do mind,"
he answered, looking at her with his head to one side. "And I
was just wondering why you shouldn't be wearing skirts, at least for
the meal we're about to share. The one time I saw you in a gown I
loved it, but there hasn't been a chance for a repeat of that. What's
wrong with right now?"
She parted her lips to say
something in immediate answer, then paused to study his expression.
She'd obviously noticed he hadn't done much pushing over the fact of
her loss to him in the competition, nothing like what someone else
would have done. All he'd really asked for so far was to see her hair
unbraided, and now to have her in a dress. Considering the fact that
they'd be leaving after their meal, there would hardly be the time
for it to get any worse.
"What's the sense in
arguing?" she asked at last with a defeated little sigh, looking
away from him. "You're the boss here, and I'm just a worthless
slave. Go ahead and do whatever you like, you know I can't stop you."
For an instant Bariden was
shocked to learn what she really felt, but then he was brought up
short by sudden suspicion. Chalaine hadn't even thought that way when
she was still refusing to argue with people; now, with the change in
her personality, it was completely out of place. And in a strange way
it seemed familiar, almost as though she were conceding defeat with a
definite purpose in mind ...
Bariden made a soft sound
of annoyance, aimed mostly at himself but not entirely. Of course
what Chalaine was doing seemed familiar, it was a variation of her
original tactics. Telling him to go ahead and do as he pleased was
supposed to make him do the exact opposite, from shame if nothing
else. He didn't want to be known as a bully, after all, and what else
would taking advantage of a poor, helpless slave
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263
be considered? If he were
a real man he would forget about pressing his unreasonable demands
...
"You know, I really
like the way that sounds," he told her after his momentary
hesitation, letting enthusiasm flow in slowly but definitely. "Yes,
I'm the boss and you're the slave, and I can do anything I please. I
do like it, so let's make it a little more obvious."
His spell was only a few
syllables long, and when he added the gesture all her clothes
vanished. Despite the fact that they'd just spent a few hours being
equally as naked, she squawked and immediately tried to cover herself
with her hands. Bariden grinned, knowing there was a big difference
between being naked with someone and being naked alone, and she
looked up at him with embarrassment flushing hotly in her cheeks.
"Damn it, that wasn't
funny!" she growled, a miniature fury looking daggers at him.
"And this isn't the skirts you were talking about."
"So I liked your idea
better," he answered with a shrug, his grin full as he inspected
the loveliness she had no hope of hiding. "Drop your hands and
turn around slowly, just to give me a good look at my slave."
"Bariden," she
began with furious warning, then seemed to notice ail of his
expression. He was joking only up to a point; beyond that he was
totally serious. She'd tried to force him to do things her way, tried
to get out of paying anything at all against her loss. She'd been the
one taking advantage, but Bariden was never going to be taken
advantage of by a woman again.
"All right, you win,"
she conceded, not the words she'd originally intended to use. "I
wasn't playing fair, and you caught me at it. I apologize sincerely,
and won't ever do it again. Can I have my clothes back now?"
"In a minute,"
Bariden murmured, unable to take his eyes from her. "I love
looking at you any time, but this time is better than most. Take your
hands away and turn around slowly."
Her cheeks reddened again
with the knowledge that a simple apology wasn't going to do it, and
there was nothing she could base a protest on. He had the right to
finish any game she started—if he could—and they both
knew who
264
SHAROM
had started that one. They
also knew he was proving his ability to finish it, for him, at least,
in the most pleasant way possible.
It took a moment before
she was able to drop her hands, and strangely enough it didn't seem
to be embarrassment any longer that was bothering her. She kept her
eyes on him as long as possible before she turned, then quickly moved
her head the other way to get him in sight again. That magnificent
auburn hair swept around with the movement of her head, and the fact
that she watched him while he looked at her was too much for Bariden.
The two steps between them disappeared without notice, and then he
had her in his arms.
"By the EverNameless,
I've never loved so much about a woman," he breathed, burying
his face in that hair. "I wish I were a poet rather than a
prince. Then I would have all the words I'm only able to grope for.
Chalaine, I—Do you know how much you mean to me?"
"I wish I didn't,"
she murmured in response, then immediately looked up at him to banish
his confusion over so strange an answer. "What / would like to
know, though, is if there's enough time for something besides a meal.
I would really like you to—make love to me again."
That hadn't been a problem
since the instant he'd banished her clothes, and he couldn't imagine
when it would be a problem. He kissed her rather than answering in
words, banished his own clothes, then joined her in bed. This second
time was even better than the first, but at the end of it they
weren't exhausted. It was more like exhilaration that Bariden felt,
and the only thing he regretted . was that they hadn't the time to
swim again. He freshened them with magic instead, less satisfying but
more thorough than bathing, then dressed them and called up a meal.
"I was hoping you'd
forget about skirts, but after seeing this I'm glad you didn't,"
Chalaine said, examining herself in the full-length mirror standing
in one comer of the chamber. "I've never worn anything in silver
lace, most especially not anything as delicately lovely as this. If I
spill something from the meal on it, I'll probably kill myself."
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"I'm glad you like
it, but there's no need to go that far," Bariden answered with a
chuckle from beside the table. "Come and sit down and don't
worry about it. If anything spills, I won't have any trouble cleaning
it up."
"But right now I
would, and that's made me think," she said, turning away from
the mirror to walk slowly over to the table. "Except for that
one brief time on the first world, I've never been in a position
where I couldn't reach my ability at all. In fact, that time in the
first world—and in this one before the competition—aren't
the same at all. In both those instances I was constrained from using
a skill I still had, but now I can't even hear it when you speak a
spell. The experience is totally different."
"It has to be like
losing your eyesight or your hearing," Bariden said with a frown
as he seated her. "I should have realized sooner that you would
be suffering, but at least it won't be for much longer. As soon as
we're through eating, we'll be heading for the gate."
"That's not what I
meant," she said, watching him take his own place at the table.
"At first I was furious at being cut off so completely, but then
it came to me that our ability with magic has been a handicap as well
as a strength all along. Using magic keeps getting us into trouble
even when that trouble looks like a benefit, and having the ability
to use it has kept us from thinking. Aside from the new warding we're
using and the variable spell I put on my clothes against unexpected
weather extremes, when have we taken any precautions before stepping
through a gate?"
"We haven't,"
Bariden agreed, sipping at his coffee as he considered that very
excellent point. "We've been assuming we'd be able to handle
anything that came at us, simply because we're magic users. I
remember thinking back at the hostel that it had been stupid of me
not to be sure we had a good supply of gold and silver coins before
coming to this world, but I forgot all about it. If you hadn't said
anything I would have stepped through the next gate, supremely
confident that my magic would take care of anything that came up."
"So it behooves us to
do some thinking now" she said, peeking under one plate cover to
see what the dish was. "Silver and gold isn't the only thing we
could have used
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on this world, and
probably won't be what we need on the next. What we need to do is
think for a while, and then make a list."
That was the most sensible
suggestion he'd heard in a long while, so he joined her in thinking
while they ate. He would have preferred a good wine with the meal
rather than the coffee he'd provided, but they'd need clear heads for
tackling the gate. And coffee did help when he needed to think, a
fact that proved itself when they began to make their list. More than
one good idea was put down, and when they were through he sat back to
consider the results.
"Silver and gold in
modest but adequate amounts, to form as soon as we step through the
gate in order to avoid problems here," he read off to Chalaine.
"A change of clothes for each of us. Food in concentrated form
that will last a week, the same with water. A miniature tent that
will grow to full-size when exposed to the air, fully insulated
against heat and cold. Emergency medical items. Automatic healing
spell, automatic strength-gathering spell—which may or may not
work—and a spell that sends greater magical strength used
against us back in the face of the one using it. Anything else you
can think of?"
"Not at the moment,"
Chalaine said with a headshake, nevertheless looking bothered. "That
should cover us whether we can use magic or not. But I have the
feeling we're still overlooking something, even though I don't know
what it can be. The magical ability of those around us has increased
from world to world, you know. Next time we could be utterly and
completely outclassed."
"Or we could be back
to the beginning, where we outclass everyone else," Bariden
pointed out. "There's no way of knowing until we see the place
and ask a few questions, and anticipating anything in particular
could be a mistake they're hoping we make. On the other hand—"
"On the other hand we
could spend the next year coming up with guesswork," she said
after taking a deep breath. "You're absolutely right, and
worrying about it will only make us reluctant to use the gate. That
is, it might make you reluctant. For my part, I can't wait to get out
of here."
"And I certainly
can't blame you," Bariden remarked, watching her take a final
swallow of coffee before pushing
THG HIDDGN B€ALW
Q67
the cup away. "If I
were a slave the way you are, I'd be just as eager to be on my way."
"Aren't you ever
going to let me forget that?" she asked, the color rising
faintly to her cheeks again. "No, your grin says you aren't, so
don't bother answering any other way. Maybe next time /'// get to be
the boss, then you'll know for sure how a slave thinks."
She glanced at him from
under those long, dark lashes, but there wasn't anything of a threat
in her expression. She seemed to know that even if he was put into a
position where he had to obey her, the results would never be the
same as they were there. And Bariden would never have to be ordered
to give her pleasure, not when that was all he wanted to do for the
rest of both their lives. He'd never get tired of the incredibly
wonderful feel of her in his arms .. .
"I think we'd better
get to it," he said after clearing his throat and rising.
"Another five minutes of conversation, and I will be reluctant
to leave. Do you need anything right this minute?"
"Aside from my
regular clothes and that hairbrush, no," she answered, running
her hand over the silk lace of her gown for a final time. "I'll
miss this, but once we get back I can always recreate it. Okay, go
ahead."
Peripherally Bariden
thought there was something odd about what she'd said, but most of
his attention was on the spells he was ready to speak. First he
changed their clothes, making his as variable as hers, and then he
produced the physical part of their list. Last, and separately, he
spoke the spells they were taking with them, spells he fervently
hoped they wouldn't need. What they did need was to be out of that
trap, but so far they hadn't spotted the necessary opening in their
prison walls ...
"Okay, I'm all set,"
Chalaine announced once she'd put her new hairbrush into the pack
holding the rest of what they were taking. "And I'm also the one
who gets to carry this pack. If we have to defend ourselves
physically as soon as we step through the gate, you're the one we
want to be unburdened."
Bariden was reluctant to
agree to that, but he had no choice. If he played the gentleman and
insisted on carrying
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the heavy pack, the
gesture could end up producing disaster. He nodded as he watched
Chalaine heft the thing, made sure it wasn't too heavy for her, then
led the way out into the hall.
When he and the others had
toured the area earlier, there had been a good number of men moving
about the wing. Right now the corridors were as deserted as he'd
hoped they'd be, with the only sounds of life coming from the nearest
gathering room. The room, halfway down a cross-corridor on the left,
was quickly behind them, and then they were moving through the soft
whisper of empty silence.
It wasn't long before they
found themselves approaching the room with two guardsmen in front of
it. The guardsmen watched incuriously as Bariden moved closer, but
they found Chalaine of enough interest to study her carefully. Not
that it really mattered. As soon as Bariden was near enough to be
certain the two weren't being guarded by magic, he froze them where
they stood.
"Now we go in,"
Chalaine muttered, shifting the pack she carried in her arms. "And
I think a couple of backstraps would be useful on this thing."
"Once we're inside,"
Bariden muttered back, moving between the two guardsmen to open the
door. "You first."
Chalaine moved past him
quickly and without comment, and Bariden followed the same way.
Inside was a large, undecorated room of gray stone, not even windows
breaking up the blankness. The only thing it held was the gate, the
glowing slit clearly surrounded by a Spell of Volition. Big surprise,
Bariden thought, turning to close the door, and then he saw what was
a surprise.
"She looks like she's
been waiting for a while," Chalaine remarked as he finished
closing the door. "Aren't you going to introduce us?"
"Not until I get my
own introduction," Bariden commented in return, studying the
woman. She stood in the near comer to the left of the door as you
entered, a position that had kept her out of sight until they were
inside. A tall and slender blond, she stood with all the grace and
confidence of a born warrior. She wore the sort of breeches, tunic,
and boots that Chalaine favored, but hers were in very light colors,
including the fawn boots. Her face was no more
TH6
269
than pretty, but her gray
eyes held depths that most eyes didn't.
"Since I have the
advantage of you, I'll perform the introductions," the woman
said with a faint smile as she took one step forward. "I'm
Darmillanne, and you're Bariden and Chalaine. I've been looking
forward to meeting you two."
"Since we've been in
this city for just under a full day, that's interesting,"
Chalaine said, setting the pack on the floor at her feet. "Would
you like to tell us why you consider us so fascinating?"
"I think I can answer
that in part," Bariden said with sudden inspiration.
"Darmillanne is Sighted, and I think what she forgot to mention
is that she's also the king. Am I wrong, Your Majesty?"
"You know you're not
wrong," Darmillanne said with amusement while Chalaine frowned.
"And I liked the way you put that. Nothing about 'king' being
the wrong title because I'm a woman. Most people would be too
thickheaded to understand that as ruler of this place, I can call
myself anything I damned well please."
"Not to mention that
it's more politically expedient and saves you a lot of trouble,"
Chalaine added with a nod. "Men fight under the banner of a
king, but they fight to protect a queen. The difference there is one
of attitude, and lets them believe the queen would be helpless if
they didn' t fight for her. When it's a bunch of ambitious sorcerers
you have under you rather than fighting men, letting them know you're
a woman would have them challenging you every five minutes. Most men
have this strange idea that they're better than a woman."
"So I noticed quite a
while ago," Darmillanne answered with a soft laugh. "My
predecessor had that kind of blindness, which suited me just fine,
but it also gave me an idea that let me cut down on the worst
competition I could face. It usually gives me a chuckle that no one
yet has figured out my unreasonable attitude toward women—except
for you, Bariden."
"I had occasion to
think about the matter," Bariden replied with an easy shrug.
"And now that I see the way you move and gesture, I find myself
with another suspicion. Was that you disguised as a man named
Sarvallo
Q7O
SHAROM
earlier today, directing
the competition? I have the strongest conviction ..."
"You are good,"
Darmillanne said, her nod accompanied by an approving smile. "Yes,
that was me, sizing up potential competition even as I accepted them
into service. And before you ask, I don't use what I learn to defeat
them if and when they challenge me. Real challenges are what keep me
on my mental toes, making me constantly work to improve my skill.
Without them I'd get fat, lazy, and sloppy."
"But you don't allow
challenges from just anyone," Chalaine said, deeply attentive to
what they were being told. "When we first got here, we saw a man
screaming and writhing on the ground. . ."
"One of them,"
Darmillanne said with scom and a gesture of dismissal. "There
are enough of that sort that it makes me tired. Whoever that Sighted
was, he was more interested in stealing than in challenging. I don't
blame people for wanting to be king—after all, once I was one
of them. But there's a legitimate way of putting yourself into
position to challenge, where you first qualify for service. Those who
want something for nothing have no patience for doing things the
right way, they just want the goodies without earning them. Without
proving they deserve them. They'd take the privilege without doing
the job."
"So that's what you
teach those in your service," Bariden said, seeing more of the
whole picture. "A sense of responsibility to go along with
earned rights. If you're ever defeated in a challenge, you want it to
be by someone who won't think of himself as an interloper. He'll know
the place he won is his by right, and will therefore value it rather
than strip it just to satisfy overwhelming greed. He'll take your
place, but he'll also keep doing your job."
"Which takes a lot
more work than most people seem to realize," she said, one hand
moving up to rub at her neck. "More than / realized before /
took over. Afterward, I spent some time wondering if my win hadn't
been just a little too easy ... He'd been king a long time, and he
always looked so tired and bored . . . Well, none of that matters
right now. What does matter is why I'm here, engaged in a pleasant
conversation with two strangers who have been sneaking
THG HtDDGN
271
around my palace and
freezing some of my guardsmen. Anyone care to make a guess about
thatl"
She looked back and forth
between the two people standing in front of her, and Bariden
exchanged a blank glance with Chalaine. The question she'd put was
the one that had been bothering him since he'd first caught sight of
the woman, and it looked like it was about to be answered.
"No guesses?"
Darmillanne said after a moment, less of that too-bright friendliness
in her expression. "Since there are also no time-wasting
protestations of innocence and ignorance, you've earned a small
reward. Have a seat, and help yourselves to the refreshments."
Her spell to produce
chairs and cups of coffee was simple, clear, and spoken loudly enough
for Bariden to hear every syllable. He considered that a generous
gesture of reassurance from a wizard who had more strength than he
did and knew it. As a matter of fact they both knew it, so he sat and
lifted his cup as soon as the king and Chalaine were seated. Refusing
a wizard's hospitality wasn't recommended for continuing good health.
"Now then, the reason
I'm here," Darmillanne continued. "It goes back to the time
I first became king. I developed the Sarvallo disguise to let me move
around anonymously, telling people that Sarvallo was my most trusted
servant. Since 'he' was heavily protected by magic even against
physical assault, I could wander as I pleased. When I was offered
bribes to tell people about the new king, I accepted the bribes, then
made it up as I went along. Since I made no effort to keep the
different stories straight, people soon noticed and disgustedly
stopped wasting their silver and gold."
She grinned with real
amusement at that, and Bariden couldn't help chuckling. Someone with
a strict sense of duty would have steadfastly refused the bribes, but
the woman had a sense of humor instead. And intelligence. Happily
taking people's money and giving them nothing in return stopped the
bribes faster than all the refusing in the universe would have done.
"At any rate, I
wandered," she went on. "What I paid most attention to was
the people and how they were taking the shift in power, and in the
process I stumbled across
something very odd. In the
newcomers1 wing there was a guarded door, and although I must have
passed the place a hundred times, I'd never before noticed either the
door or the guards. I considered going in and looking at whatever the
room held, but first I went to visit my guard commander.
"The man was
incredibly officious, but I finally pried loose the information he
had. It seems that that room had been under guard for years and
years, longer even than the commander had held his post. His orders
were to keep the door under guard, and never report the fact even to
the king. No one was allowed inside the room, but I had the feeling
the man had once taken a look out of sheer curiosity. When I pushed
him he admitted it, but said it really didn't matter. The room was
completely empty, and looked as if it always had been."
She paused to take a sip
of her coffee, and Bariden suddenly guessed that she'd supplied it
for their benefit. The way she drank it said it wasn't her favorite
beverage, but telling her story distracted her enough that she didn't
mind.
"After that I was
even more curious, so I went back to my apartment and started a
methodical search of my predecessor's records. He kept a daily diary,
bless his soul, and that was when I discovered he'd been chosen to
take over for the ruler before him. Not that he wasn't powerful, you
understand. Thousands of men must have tried him in his day, but none
of them had even come close to victory.
"But because he'd
been chosen, he'd also been given some information that a successful
challenger would have missed out on. He was told that once he became
king, he might come across a room he'd never noticed before. If he
did, he was to ignore it, not try to look inside or do anything to
change the situation as it stood. The guards on the room were to be
left where they were, and under no circumstances were they to be
replaced by a sealing spell. His diary said he tried searching the
palace for the room, but apparently he never got to the newcomers'
wing or thought to check with the guard commander. After a little
while he forgot about it, and never mentioned it again."
TH€ HIDDGh
273
At that point Bariden
exchanged a glance with Chalaine, and the king picked up on it
immediately.
"You seem to have
something to say," she observed, again looking back and forth
between them. "Whatever it is, I want to hear it."
"I think Chalaine and
I were reacting to what you said about the king being forbidden to
replace the guards with a sealing spell," Bariden told her
slowly. "She and I had been wondering about that, specifically
because this wing is filled with sorcerers who couldn't be stopped by
unSighted guards. Part of our question is answered if no one but the
king can see the door or the guards, but the rest of it remains."
"Like why you two can
see it," she said, resting her chin in her palm and her elbow on
the chair arm. "I doubt if that's the part you meant, but it's
the one I'm most interested in. But tell me first why you think the
guards were there. That is part of what you know, isn't it?"
"It's more of a guess
than knowledge," Bariden admitted with a sigh. The king was a
damn sharp woman ... "We think there are guards on the room
because we'd have no trouble getting past guards, even without using
magic. A sealing spell on the room would be another matter entirely."
"And wouldn't have
been so easy to spot," Chalaine said suddenly, pointing at
Bariden. "You might have dismissed a sealed room as a place
someone wanted kept private, but guardsmen in the middle of
sorcerers' quarters—You'd have to be dead to miss that."
"You're saying you
two were meant to find this room, and without any trouble."
Darmillanne saw the point at once, her tone now sharper. "Tell
me why, and also who arranged this. Not to mention exactly what it is
you're supposed to do in here. And stop looking at each other like
that. If you believe I'll let you get away with telling me only what
you think I ought to know, you've never dealt with a wizard before."
Bariden had to consciously
keep himself from looking at Chalaine yet again, a gesture that would
have been futile as well as stupid. She couldn't give him permission
to speak any more than he could give it to her, and they both knew
<274
SHARON
THG HIDDEN
275
how important keeping the
secret was. There was no way to judge how much damage they would do
by telling the full truth, and—
"Wait a minute,"
Chalaine said, then looked directly at him. "Are you feeling
what I am? That it would be disastrous to tell anyone what we're in
the middle of? That grim look on your face says you are, so I have a
question. Why would it be disastrous?"
"That's easy,"
Bariden answered with a snort. "It's because—well, it has
to be because—I mean, it stands to reason—"
Only then did Bariden
notice the blank wall, the empty place where a good, logical reason
for keeping silent should have been. Up until then it had made sense
not to announce to the world that they came from a different world;
when people don't know about other worlds—as most of the ones
they'd met didn't—they have a tendency to look at
self-professed strangers oddly, to say the least. But this was a
wizard now questioning them, and you don't try to keep secrets from a
wizard, not if you enjoy life without pain...
"Damn it, somebody
set a compulsion," he growled, feeling really stupid. "They
took our natural sense of caution and intensified it, and we never
noticed. Or at least I didn't."
"I don't think they
expected us to be questioned by a wizard," Chalaine said,
looking as annoyed as he felt, but also grimly satisfied. "And I
also doubt if we were supposed to pick up the information we just
did. This arrangement isn't new, it's been here for years and years
and years. That probably means we aren't the first to take this trip,
and won't be the last. Doesn't that tell us something?"
"It's time you told
me something," Darmillanne interrupted, but with less impatience
than a moment ago. "Start from the beginning, and don't leave
anything out."
Bariden still felt an
overwhelming reluctance to discuss the forbidden topic, but Chalaine
seemed to be doing better against the compulsion. She began with the
problem they'd been working on, described how they'd been pulled into
the trap, then listed the various worlds and their problems. Once
she'd gone through it to the end, she added,
"And I think I have
my competition loss to thank for being able to shake off the
compulsion against talking. My own strength is most likely supporting
the compulsion, but being cut off from that strength has weakened the
compulsion's grip. It's still there, but it doesn't have the original
choke hold."
"Fascinating,"
Darmillanne breathed, now staring at the closed gate on her left and
Bariden and Chalaine's right. "Other worlds, other kingdoms with
different people and needs. And your world, where gates to other
places are commonplace and plentiful. Absolutely fascinating."
"You haven't told us
yet how you knew we would be here," Bariden mentioned in a
casual way. It might help to know that, some time in the future.
"I set up a very
simple spell in the corridor outside," the king answered without
taking her eyes from the gate. "Everyone who came through here
ignored the door and its guards, so none of them could be the ones
meant to enter. My spell watched for someone who noticed the door and
its guards, and when that someone appeared, I knew it immediately. I
waited here for hours, but it was worth it. I now know what that
beautiful thing is, and in general how it works. What you haven't
told me yet is how you get around whatever spell is on it."
"Don't you want to
know first if you should try to get around it?" Chalaine asked,
the words very deliberate. "I have the feeling you've been
waiting for years for someone to come looking for this gate, but
since you didn't know what it was, you couldn't think the problem
through in a rational way. Right now you're seeing our world, with
all those plentiful gates, lying beyond this one. The fact of the
matter is, it isn' t, and going through may not even be a step in the
right direction. It's the only step Bariden and I can take, but it
could well turn out to be a dead end we're being herded to. Is that
really what you want to leave all this for?"
Darmillanne's head turned
back fast, and the look she gave Chalaine was narrow-eyed and
suspicious. Chalaine returned the stare calmly, showing nothing
remotely like guilt or embarrassment, and that annoyed Darmillanne
even more.
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SHARON
"You're assuming I
have decided to leave, which doesn't happen to be so," she said
at last, her own words very neutral. "Just because I want to
know how to do it, you can't assume I will. For one thing, I'd first
have to decide whether to choose a replacement for myself, or just
put someone in temporary charge until I got back. You did say that
all the gates you passed through were two-way?"
"Absolutely,"
Chalaine lied without changing expression. "But wouldn't you
very first have to find someone strong enough to maintain your spells
here while you were gone? Once you step through a gate, any
unmaintained spells you leave behind will immediately cancel
themselves through lack of your talent to draw on. I've never had
that problem myself, but I'm not a wizard. Those from our world who
are wizards do have the problem, but don't often have trouble with
it. There are enough of them that they can call on each other for
help any time they need it."
A peculiar expression
passed across Darmillanne's face, and Bariden had to fight to keep
his own face straight. Chalaine was doing a very thorough job of
ruining the king's unspoken but fairly obvious intentions, and all
without arguing or refusing to tell the woman what she wanted to
hear. She'd lied about the gates being two-way, but that was only
commonsense self-protection. If the king had heard they were one-way,
she would have been certain she was being lied to. Bariden would have
bet gold that Darmillanne was seeing her sudden dreams of empire
building crashing down, most especially after that comment about how
many wizards there were and how well they cooperated.
"I think it's time
Chalaine and I got moving," Bariden said then, putting aside his
coffee cup. "Since we don't know what's waiting for us, we'd
like to be as fresh as possible when we face it."
Darmillanne hesitated,
then said, "Very well. I now know everything you do, except for
the one question you still haven't answered. How do you get through
the spell?"
"That's relatively
easy," Bariden answered, standing as Chalaine did the same after
retrieving the pack. "If you really want to go through the gate,
it will open for you.
TH€ HIDDGN ROW
277
Here, you can watch us
doing it, and then you'll know what to expect."
Darmillanne hesitated a
second time, and Bariden didn't have to tell Chalaine to hurry in
order to take advantage of it. Any minute the king could decide she
didn't want them out of reach if she thought of any more questions,
and they would end up settling down on that world whether they liked
it or not. He and Chalaine moved toward the gate together, the sound
of the king standing up coming clearly from behind them. She'd pushed
her chair back; was she going to—
And then whatever words
might have been spoken were turned into a gasp as the gate flared
wide. Darmillanne couldn't have seen that sight before, and it gave
Bariden and Chalaine the seconds they needed to move directly into
the gate. An echo of sound followed, as though someone might be
shouting behind them, but magic alone can't get past the barrier. The
only visible gate was a single step away, and they took that step ...
This time we were indoors,
with what looked like a smallish and deserted hut enclosing the gate.
Once we were out the gate closed, and a glance showed it seemed to be
embedded in the back wall of the hut. I put down the pack I was
lugging with a sigh of relief, and turned to look at Bariden.
"I don't think she'll
be following right behind us," I told him as he watched the
gate. "Even if she's angry enough to want to, the reasoning part
of her mind will have enough doubts to keep the gate firmly closed.
As a matter of fact, at her level of greed she may never get it to
open again."
"I know she's
ambitious, but greedy?" Bariden said, looking at me with one
brow raised. "What makes you think that?"
"I thought it was
obvious," I said with a shrug, wondering how he could have
missed it. "Ambition may make you kill for what you want, but it
doesn't make you want everything there is to have. Once she was king
she also mingled as one of the boys, making sure there was nothing
she didn't know about and therefore couldn't control. Overseeing the
competition was part of that, and I'll bet gold she was there
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SHARON
to eliminate anyone who
looked like they might grow to real strength. Those entrants who put
everything they had into attack—their efforts should have
canceled each other out, but you said it killed them both. Using
magic isn't like using physical weapons, and that shouldn't have
happened."
"I hadn't realized
that," he said, now looking disturbed. "I thought she was
fairly decent, even though I didn't trust her not to stop us.
Ambition would lead her to want to expand her kingdom, but—what
about the personal challenges she answers, and all those laws that
showed concern for the people?"
"Personal
challenges," I echoed with a sound of disgust. "How hard is
it to make someone believe he's ready when he really isn't?
Especially when you're keeping tabs on him while disguised as someone
else? All those freely allowed personal challenges were another way
of eliminating competition before it turned into something she might
not have been able to handle. She didn't use them to keep her on her
toes, she used them to keep her on her throne."
"And the laws?"
he asked, speaking calmly and quietly in the face of my anger. I'd
been able to keep my voice down, but not my emotions.
"Those laws, except
for one, weren't hers," I stated, knowing it beyond doubt. "They
were established—or continued—by the king she eliminated,
and were most likely being maintained by her strength without her
knowing it. My best guess would be that she was being groomed to
eventually take the throne, but decided that 'eventually' was taking
too long in coming. Instead of waiting her turn, she ambushed her
mentor and took everything on the spot."
"Was that why she
looked so startled when you talked about maintaining other people's
spells?" he asked with sudden surprise. "I thought—Well,
I didn't think she was first finding out she was maintaining without
knowing it. But she did mention that her predecessor had been chosen
and trained by the king before him. Legal succession was the rule
before her, but hers wasn't the same. How did you figure all that
out?"
"The one law she put
into effect told me," I said, now glancing around the hut.
Packed dirt floor, rough wood walls, cut grass roof—architecture
at its finest. "That rule
HIDD€N RCALTO
279
about what's done with
women who compete and lose is hers, a pastiness contrived through
spite and fear. She said she wasn't underestimating other women the
way she'd been underestimated, but the word she should have used was
trust. She'd been trusted, and had used that to stab people in the
back. She didn't mist other women not to do the same, so unless they
were basically incompetent, she made sure they lost. The men were
free to come back and try again—after all, they were
manageable—but she didn't want her most feared competitors to
do the same. I realized the law was hers when she didn't say a word
about it to me. She knew I'd lost, but wasn't in the least
concerned."
"If that's true, then
we have her to thank for saving us some trouble," he said
slowly, apparently considering what he'd been told. "We were
certainly supposed to face each other in the competition, but under
the old rules one of us would have ended up barred from the palace
for a year. The only thing that saved us was that law, which let me
bring you into the palace when you lost. Without it—I don't
know what we would have done, but it wouldn't have been as easy as
what we did do."
'Then—maybe we were
meant to go in a different direction," I said, suddenly worried.
"We saw nothing of the countryside at all, and didn't even ask
someone besides the hostler any questions. What if we weren't
supposed to get through this gate, but another one in a place we
wouldn't find unless we left the city?"
"I'd say it's a
little late to be worrying about that," he answered, taking a
step back toward the gate we'd come through. "This gate is just
like Hie others, and it isn't opening even with me right on top of
it. What you said to the king about all the gates being two-way—it's
too bad it wasn't true."
I stared at him and the
unopen ing gate, a sinking fear twisting my insides, and that's when
we heard the shouts and screams coming from outside ...
CHAPTER fOURT€€M
B
ariden ran out of the hut,
and I was right behind him. Obviously there was a more immediate
problem than whether or not we should be where we were, and stepping
out of the hut showed it to us. The day was dark and cold, middle to
late afternoon, the cutting wind saying a weather change was
definitely on the way. It had been cold in the hut too, I realized,
but we'd been too distracted to notice . . .
And those people who were
screaming and shouting were far too busy to notice. There were quite
a few of them, men, women and children, but their six male attackers
were armed while they weren't. Some of the men were trying to defend
themselves with sticks or hoes, but those don't do well against
swords. The six attackers were laughing while they chopped down
everyone around them including some of those trying to run, and
acting as if they had nothing to worry about. Not five feet away from
the hut we'd been in was the probable cause of that attitude. A man
lay on the ground covered in his own blood, clearly dead or dying.
Beside him was a compound bow and a quiver of arrows, the one arrow
that had been in his string tangled up with the bow. The man seemed
to have had the only weapon there, and the attackers had evidently
taken care of him first.
"At least they're not
in armor," Bariden muttered, and his sword was already in his
hand. "You stay back out of it, Chalaine, and don't try using
magic unless they come at you over my body. We still don't know the
rules in this place."
<28O
281
He glanced at me with
more—expression—than your usual glance contains, and then
he was running toward the very uneven fight. Six to one is terrible
odds, but he was probably hoping he was good enough to take a few of
them out before they could make their numbers count. I itched to try
a freezing spell—and would, if it looked like he was about to
be bested; waiting until he was down was an absurdity only a man
would think of. I would use magic as and if I had to but, happily,
there was something else to try first.
The downed man's bow was
spattered with his blood, but at least the string hadn't been cut. I
stepped around him carefully but quickly, retrieved the quiver and
then the bow, withdrew three arrows from the quiver, then renocked
the arrow he hadn't had a chance to loose. No one else had gone for
the weapon, of course, not when touching it would bring the six
attackers down on the toucher with swords swinging. Terror tactics
designed to minimize resistance . . .
But just then the six men
were being distracted from their tun by Bariden's approach. Everyone
including them wore what looked like homespun made by an amateur, and
their swords had apparently seen better days. Bariden shouted
something I couldn't hear as he ran, and those men with sticks and
tools fell back away from the ones with swords. The attackers had
stopped laughing as they looked at the newcomer, and one or two were
snarling in outrage. The rest, though ... did those expressions mean
they already counted Bariden's clothes and weapon theirs ... ?
"Guess again, you
slime," I muttered as I drew the nock back to my ear. Three of
the six were coming forward to meet Bariden straight on, but the
other three, two to the left and one to the right, were circling
around in an effort to get behind him. The wind whipped my hair
around in gusts, me worst kind of wind where arrows are concerned,
but I'd loosed under conditions like those before. The front one of
the two on the left first...
Carefully timed between
gusts, the arrow flew straight and true, right into the chest of the
man I was aiming for. Hearing his scream and seeing his blood was
more upsetting than I'd thought it would be, but 1 couldn't afford to
let squeamishness distract me from helping Bariden. I nocked
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SHAROM
another arrow from the
three I held with the fingers of my left hand, shifted aim, then took
out the attacker sneaking around on Bariden's right. I was reaching
for a third arrow when I suddenly noticed what was going on with the
fight, and the sight stopped me still with my jaw hanging.
That problem I usually had
with causing things to happen—I hadn't seen any evidence of it
in quite a while, but now it was back with a vengeance. The first man
I'd shafted had apparently stumbled backward, but not to simply fall
down. He staggered into the man behind him, the other one on that
side trying to flank Bariden, and the two had tangled up and gone
down together. The one on the right, also with an arrow in his chest,
had spun around rather than staggering or falling, and his sword had
chopped into one of the three men facing Bariden. That one was
clutching a bleeding middle and staring disbelievingly at the wounded
man who had chopped him, and then he added the icing. With a vicious
thrust he put his sword into the man who had accidently wounded him,
and the two fell to the ground together.
Which left only two
opponents for Bariden. I blinked at the way that had happened,
wondering why the twisted talent was suddenly working/or me rather
than against. Not that I was complaining. We needed all the help we
could get, and the thing couldn't have chosen a better time to
appear.
The two men left were
suddenly less eager to face Bariden, but he gave them no choice about
it. He brought the fight to them with such speed that they had to try
attacking in turn, and that became their final mistake. He slashed
open the one on his left and caught the other with his backswing, and
the two began to crumple to the ground together.
The last one of the six,
the one to Bariden's far left who had gotten entangled with the first
man I'd shafted, had made it back to his feet. He'd begun to run in
with his sword raised high while the previously last two were still
unhurt, but his timing was terrible. He reached Bariden seconds after
he'd dealt with the two, just as Bariden turned to him with sword
extended. He ran onto Bariden's blade as though he'd hit a brick
wall, but the big man he'd tried to attack wasn't thrown off balance.
The move had been
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carefully calculated to
take out the last of the six, and when Bariden jerked his sword free,
the fight was over.
It took a few seconds for
the people huddling out of the way to begin moving naturally again,
and when they did they went first to those of then- own who had been
hurt. Too many of the bodies on the ground were beyond help, but some
would survive their wounds and recover. Here and there a man or woman
cried quietly above someone who hadn't been so lucky, and the very
quietness of their mourning sent a shiver through me.
"Hurting the helpless
is a cowardice I've never been able to understand," Bariden
muttered as he came up to me, his expression savage over the waste of
innocent lives. He must have cleaned his sword without my noticing,
since it was already back in its scabbard. "And considering this
wind, that was incredibly good shooting. I had no idea you could use
a bow so well."
"Archery is my
nonmagical hobby," I said with a shrug, wondering if he'd
noticed the rest of what had happened. "It takes a lot of
practice to gain the proper grace of style, not to mention hit what
you're aiming at, but it's worth the effort. But to tell the truth,
it's never been worth quite as much as it was today."
"I'm just glad you
made that effort," he said with a gentle smile, putting an arm
around my shoulders. "I might not have survived this if you
hadn't. And we'd better get you inside out of this cold and nasty
weather. I can see how you're shivering—"
His words broke off as he
looked down at me, but I was already with him on that. I was
shivering because of the cold, but I shouldn't have been. The
variable spell on my clothes should have kept me warm, but it didn't
seem to be working. Bariden's expression said he was just realizing
his own clothes weren't adjusting to the weather, but before either
of us could say anything, a small group of people approached us.
"Please ... we need
to ask you . .." one of the women said, all but trembling with
fear. "Did you do that for yourselves ... or for us?"
Bariden and I exchanged a
glance, not quite sure how to answer. The woman who had spoken—thin
to the point
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of gauntness, her
ankle-length dress faded to a washed-out brown and white, she stood
with two other women just like her. Behind them were others, and the
men among them were trying to hide the presence of sticks and hoes.
"We did it for us and
you both," Bariden answered carefully, looking around at them.
"If people don't stand together when they're attacked, no one is
safe. Who were those men, and what did they want here?"
"They were from the
next village over," one of the men supplied while the women just
hugged each other in relief. "They must have heard that we lost
two of our fighters, and the other three were out trying to get the
two taken swords back. What they wanted—why, what would they
want, if not our food and blankets and prettier women? What else is
there to want?"
There was no easy answer
to that, not when you looked around at the village. A scattering of
primitive huts, a dirt street, struggling fields beyond the farthest
huts—for people who did nothing but scrabble to survive, what
else was there?
"Will you—will
you stay to protect us until our own fighters get back?" another
man asked. He had brown hair and eyes, unlike the first man who was
blond, but the two were as thin as the women. "We'll share with
you the way we do with our fighters, and you can even have one of the
empty huts. There are other villages around here besides the one
those six come from . . ."
He let the words trail off
as his eyes begged us, the same way the eyes of all of them begged.
Even with the six swords they'd gained they were helpless, at least
until some of them were trained to use the weapons. Beside me Bariden
stirred, undoubtedly bothered by such naked need, but I couldn't wait
any longer to ask the most important question.
"But how can you
possibly need protection?" I blurted, more upset than I'd
realized. "You're all Sighted, every one of you. Why can't you
use magic to protect yourselves?"
"We're not from
around here," Bariden added hastily as they all stared at me as
though I were crazy. "We don't know anything about what's
happening here, so you'll have to tell us. And don't worry, we will
stay to protect
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you until your fighters
get back, so please—tell us what's going on."
"Don't know how
anybody could be that much of a stranger," the second man
muttered while the first rubbed his face with a grimy hand. "It's
the same for everybody . .. Well, I guess it doesn't matter, even
though I hate saying it out loud. We're just as good as them, we all
know that, but they got to their power first so we're out of luck.
They say the truth is we can't do what they do, that we're just not
up to it, but the truth we know is that they need somebody to look
down on if they're going to feel special. That's why they force us to
live like animals, scraping out an existence and accepting their
handouts."
"Kam means we can't
do magic because they won't let us," the first man said while
the second fought to control his anger. "They claim they haven't
done anything, but even if we get a spell and try it, it doesn't
work. Whatever we do has to be done by hand, the slow, hard way,
while they— they all live like kings. Can't you see it just by
looking at their city?"
The man's gesture was as
bitter as his words, and we turned to the right to see what he was
talking about. Just beyond the hut we'd come out of there was a
sparkling haze of sorts, something that suggested a kind of visible
warding. We could see through it easily enough, but walking through
was probably impossible.
But what there was to see!
It was close enough that it seemed to stretch into forever, a city
the likes of which I'd never even imagined. The buildings looked as
if they were made of pastel crystal and precious jewels, and each was
the size of a small palace. Lacy walkways extended between some of
the buildings, and the land between them and us looked like
exquisitely cared-for gardens. Even as I watched, a small party of
people rode beautiful horses out from one of the palaces and turned
left, I couldn't hear their laughter even though I could see it, and
their clothes were magnificent creations in all the colors there are.
They looked as though they were heading out for some exercise and
maybe even a picnic, but I didn't have to wonder where their picnic
basket was. When they got where they were going, they would create
whatever they wanted.
286
"Twice a year,
midwinter and midsummer, they give us handouts," the first man's
voice came from behind us. "Blankets and cloth mostly, along
with tools and seed for planting. And extra food, things they didn't
have to grow or raise in order to have. They claim they can't give us
everything, that we have to work to make lives of our own and
anything else we might want, but why should we have to? They don't
have to, so why should we?"
"Because watching us
crawl and struggle makes them feel good," the second man said,
answering what should have been a rhetorical question. "They
keep us from what ought to be ours, and expect us to believe it isn't
them doing it. Well, if it isn't them, who else could it be? We sure
as hell aren't doing it to ourselves."
I turned away from the
sight of magnificence that was totally beyond reach, and Bariden
reluctantly turned with me. The small group of people near us were
all agitated, some as furious as the two men who had spoken, the rest
miserable to the point of tears. One man seemed to be crying from
frustration, and I could understand exactly how he felt.
"Is it possible to
get into that city?" Bariden asked, one hand nibbing at his
neck. "Do they hire servants from any of the villages, or come
out on any sort of a regular schedule?"
"Why would they need
to dirty their city with servants like us?" the dark-haired Kam
asked bitterly. "They have magic to do what has to be done, no
lower life-forms needed or wanted. None of us ever go in, and they
don't come out. When it's time for the handouts, the things just
appear."
"Like magic,"
the blond man added, the words very flat. "We've got to go and
bury our dead before the skies really open up, but first I'll get you
some blankets and food. These three huts are empty, and you can have
your choice among them. You keep that bow, girl. There isn't a man
here who can use it half as well as you do."
The conversation was
breaking up because it had started to rain, a light drizzle that
might keep up for the rest of the day, or turn into a true downpour.
The crystal city beyond the mist had been bathed in golden sunshine,
something I'd seen but hadn't really noticed.
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"Chalaine, go back to
where we left the pack," Bariden said quietly. "I'll be
with you in a minute."
I picked up the quiver of
arrows before getting in out of the rain, then turned in the doorway
to see what Bariden was up to. He had his dagger in his hand as he
walked toward the six bodies we'd made, and when I saw him bending
over the first of the men I'd shafted I was able to turn away. He was
retrieving the arrows I'd probably need next time, and although I
knew it was necessary, the very thought of it made me sick.
It didn't take long before
he joined me in the hut, but by then I'd managed to get a fire going.
The smoke hole in the center of the roof looked like it had been
chopped through rather than planned for, but there was a wooden rain
shield over it that kept out all but a fine mist. It was starting to
rain harder, which meant I was glad a woman had already run in,
dropped a pile of blankets and a small cloth package, and immediately
run out again.
"I'm glad you knew
how to do that," Bariden said, putting the two arrows he'd
retrieved near the quiver before coming to stand near the fire. "I've
never had occasion to do it by hand, and I was picturing us shivering
in the damp."
"A Sighted friend of
mine goes camping out as his hobby," I answered, carefully
feeding a larger piece of wood into the fire. There was a pile of
wood in one corner of the hut, and despite the musty smell it gave
off, I was glad it was there. "He took me with him once, and
insisted on teaching me how to do this. He said it couldn't hurt to
have the knowledge, and one day might even come in handy. I haven't
touched the pack."
He looked at me as I
straightened, obviously feeling the same reluctance I did about
checking on our "preparations." It was all we had, a
representation of what we'd thought we'd learned, a last hope I
couldn't bring myseif to seek the truth about.
"The longer we put it
off, the worse it will be when we do look," Bariden said after a
very short hesitation. "And we already know the gold and silver
is useless. When not having a blanket or food can mean your death,
you don't give those things away for shiny but valueless pieces of
988
metal. But there has to be
something we can salvage."
He went to the pack and
opened it, and it turned out he was right. The extra sets of clothes
he'd provided were all right, and so was my hairbrush. The medical
items still included bandages and a small jar of ordinary salve for
cuts, but the cream to accelerate healing had disappeared, as had the
lotion for pain. The bars of concentrated food were there, but Banden
took one small taste and spit it out. Without the flavor of a
magnificent meal, the stuff had to taste like sodden paper. The small
jug of water was just a jug of water, and would not be refilling
itself. The miniature tent was nowhere to be seen, and certainly
wouldn't have worked even if it had been there.
"Everything depending
on magic is gone, but what was created by magic isn't," Bariden
said where he crouched beside the pack, his expression thoughtful. "I
wonder if that means anything."
"It means we've had
it," I supplied, turning away to walk to the doorway and look
out at the rain. It was falling really hard now, and the dark of the
clouds had merged with the dark of approaching night. As a landscape
it made me shiver with chill, but as a picture of what our future
would be like, it was perfect.
"I don't know how you
can stand there and watch mud being created," Bariden said,
coming up behind my right shoulder. "You seem to have a thing
for water—which reminds me of a question I kept meaning to ask
you. That day we met for the first time—why were you carrying
that giant ball of water?"
"I was in the middle
of an experiment when the Summons came," I explained with a
faint smile of memory. "It had occurred to me that in most
places people put out a fire by throwing buckets of water on it, one
at a time. Sometimes, if there are enough people and buckets it's two
or three at a time, but that's still horribly inefficient. If they
had spheres of water available instead, spheres that contained five
to ten gallons of water each, everyone could grab a sphere and throw
it... instead of running back and forth lugging buckets ... or
yelling for help from a Sighted ..."
His left arm came around
my shoulders when it was clear I couldn't go on, and then I was
turned around and
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held tight to his chest
with both arms. He made soothing, comforting noises as he patted my
back, but if he thought I was crying he was wrong. I was feeling too
desolate and defeated to cry, too much like someone at the dead end
of a long and unpleasant road. I rested my cheek against his shirt
without saying anything, only thinking about all the effort and
planning we'd wasted.
"Look, I know how you
feel because I feel that way, too," he said after a moment. "If
there's a next gate out of this place, it ought to be in one of the
palaces in that incredible city. Right now we can't get in there, but
tomorrow we might suddenly find a way in. You're not going to give up
when we might be only one more step from home?"
"Those might-he's
should answer your question," I said, moving myself away from
him and out of his arms. "We 'might be' only one step from home,
but we might also be a thousand steps from it. Or too far away even
to count the steps. I'm sick and tired of this game, and I don't want
to play any more. Even looking at that is beginning to bother me."
He knew by that I meant
the closed gate in the wall, and I wasn't joking. I was tired of
being led from one world to the next, chasing the dangling carrot of
eventual escape. We weren't going to escape, and it was time we
admitted it.
"I don't happen to
agree," he said, and I heard him closing the door and pulling in
the latchstring. "That gate hanging there is sticking its tongue
out at me, and I've never taken that from anyone. I'm good and sick
of this game too, but I won't give up until I win. The only reason
you're not seeing it the same is because you are tired, which means
you need to get to bed early for a good night's sleep. Tomorrow
you'll hate the sight of that gate as much as I do."
"If so, then I'll
move to one of the other empty huts that man mentioned," I said,
going back to the fire to put on another piece of wood. "Continuing
to struggle is just what's expected of us, and I refuse to keep on
doing the expected. If whoever-the-enemy-is doesn't like it, I have a
suggestion about what he can do with himself."
"By the EverNameless,
you're even stubborn when you're depressed," Bariden came back
with exasperation. Then he
Q9O
was in front of me again,
those blue eyes shadowed as he looked down at me with folded arms.
"And what if / don't like it? Are you going to tell me what to
do with myself?"
"Why not?" I
countered reasonably, folding my own arms. "I know you've come
down in life, but that's no reason for me to discriminate against
you. And I think I'll move tomorrow even if Sight of the gate doesn'
t bother me. If you're going to be busy making plans, you won't want
to be distracted by depression."
He studied me silently for
a moment, then said, "We can discuss that tomorrow. Right now
it's time to think about bed, but don't let your thinking dwell on
details. It won't be pleasant for us here, or even particularly
comfortable, but we will survive. And we'll win, Chalaine, we will
win. Even if you doubt everything else in this world, don't doubt
that."
He turned away from me
then to walk to the side of the hut, bent down, men straightened with
what looked like a long, lumpy sack in each hand. The thin sacks
seemed to be about three feet wide, and when he got them back to the
fire he shook them one at a time, apparently trying to distribute
their contents evenly. When he had them side by side near the fire,
he headed for the pile of blankets the woman had brought.
"The people of this
village pay well for protection," he commented after picking up
the blankets and looking at them. "One old and two relatively
new for each of us. But after the deaths from that attack, they
probably have blankets to spare. It's too bad we can't say the same
about beds. I've never slept on a straw-filled pallet, but people do,
so I'll manage. Now, let's see ..."
He took the two old,
frayed blankets, folded them in half, then placed one on each of the
sacks. After that he spread out two of the newer blankets one on top
of the other, then the final two as a sort of doubled, turned-down
cover. I stood there silently and watched him, feeling more depressed
by the minute. Pallets, those lumpy sacks were pallets, and we were
expected to use them instead of beds.
"We can't afford to
sleep in our clothes, not when the refreshing spell won't be working
any more," he said,
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reaching to his swordbelt
to remove it. "We'll let them air out overnight, and if it isn't
raining tomorrow we'll find out where clothes washing is done. After
that we'll have fresh clothes as often as we can wash the worn set."
He set his scabbarded
sword down on the ground near where he would sleep, then sat to
wrestle his boots off. I continued to stand where I was, totally
opposed to cooperating with that particular inevitable in any way at
all. Adapt and survive? For what reason? To give the enemy more fun
as he watched our useless struggle?
"Chalaine, you aren't
getting undressed," Bariden said, the reminder gentle. I looked
up to see that he was standing again, his tunic off and draped over
his boots. All he had on was his leather breeches, and suddenly a
previously dismissed idea popped up again.
"Damn it, that fool
is matchmaking," I growled, annoyance coming to join depression.
"First there was only one room at the hostel, then I had to stay
in your quarters in the palace, and now this. He must have been
having a grand old time watching, but the show is over. I'll be
damned if I perform for a fool."
"Hold it,"
Bariden said before I could turn away in anger. His tone was still
calm, but not quite as gentle. "That statement doesn't fit the
facts, and I think you know it. Didn't we agree that the results of
your competition loss were due to the king's spell rather than
anything done by the enemy? That single room at the hostel was
probably meant to distract us from effective planning, after which we
would have walked into the competition unprepared. Here—didn't
you say yourself there are two other empty huts available? Where can
deliberate manipulation possibly come in?"
"Just because it
isn't easy to see, that doesn't mean it isn't there," I answered
with almost no hesitation at all. "Everything else that's been
happening is manipulation, so why shouldn't this be? If you enjoy
doing everything the enemy wants you to, go ahead and do it. I don't
enjoy it, so I won't."
This time I did turn away,
and even walked to the hut wall behind me. I could hear the sounds of
rain outside, but without windows I couldn't see it. It was chilly in
the hut away from the fire, but it was also stuffy with the door
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closed. I hated that
world, more than any of the others, more than anything I'd ever
experienced—
"Chalaine, stop it."
Bariden's voice came from directly behind me, gentle again but strong
with certainty. "The way you're acting has nothing to do with
the enemy, and not even with these primitive conditions. You know
what's really bothering you, so why don't you say it?"
I looked down at hands
that were shadowy blobs in the darkness, feeling how close he was. He
must have gotten his feet filthy, walking shoeless on that dirt
floor. . .
"Chalaine, say it,"
he repeated, those big hands coming to my upper arms. "Refusing
to admit the truth doesn't stop it from being the truth. Say it out
loud so we can bom hear it."
"I don't want to
belong to you," I stated in a very low voice, fighting to keep
from trembling. "This world is made for that kind of an
arrangement, and you're taking advantage of it without a second
thought. You're too big for me to fight without magic, so you think
you have it made. But I hate the whole idea, so I want you to wnmake
it."
"I see," he
said, the words at long last uneven, his hands dropping away from my
arms. "You don't want to belong to me. I thought it was
something else, but this isn't the first time I've been wrong. And I
certainly didn't mean to make you feel that you were being taken
advantage of. Since you hate the arrangements I've made, allow me to
make different ones."
I heard him move back
across the floor, there were sounds of activity, and finally there
was silence. After a moment of that I looked over my shoulder, and
the new arrangements he'd made were very obvious. His pallet and
blankets were still in the same place, but mine had been moved to the
near side of the fire. Bariden lay in his blankets with his back to
the fire—and to me—and all conversation seemed over for
the night.
Which was just as well,
since I had nothing more to say. I went to my pallet and straightened
it a little, then sat down to pul! off my boots. The rest of my
clothes would have to stay on, since I had no intentions of sitting
up all night just to feed the fire. Once it went out the hut would be
really chilly, and the blankets would never—
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I put my face in my hands
to be certain I made no sound, my back to the fire and to the man I'd
offended. Deliberately offended, despite the kindness he'd been
showing me. He'd been going to make me sleep beside him and once
there would certainly have made love to me again. But I couldn't let
him do it, not when one more time would have forced me to admit I was
in love with him. He loved my hair and my skin and having me in his
bed, but I loved him. The two things weren't at all the same, and the
difference would have killed me.
Was killing me. I slid my
hands down to my mouth, freeing my eyes to stare at fire shadows on
the wall. Chances were excellent that we were trapped on that world
for good, and once Bariden was able to admit that, he'd probably
insist that we marry. But I didn't want him because he had no other
real choice, because we shared knowledge of a far different life. He
wouldn't have understood how I felt and would have insisted, and I
wouldn't have been able to refuse. I did want to belong to him, but
only where he chose me above all others, not where he settled for the
only available choice.
So I'd ended everything
before I said the wrong thing, choosing loneliness over reluctant
acceptance as I had many times before. And it would turn out to be
the right choice, especially if we stumbled over a way to get out of
there. Once we got back, Bariden would be relieved not to have a
blurted confession of love on his hands. He'd be able to go back to
his old life with no complications blocking his path, and I'd be able
to go back to mine.. .
Our pack lay on the floor
not far from my pallet, so I stretched to it, slid the hairbrush
free, then sat again to brush my hair. First thing in the morning I'd
move to another hut, and then I'd sit down to do some serious
thinking. There was something wrong about what had happened to us
with this last gate, and if I could put my finger on the point it
might work to get us out of mere.
But just in case it
didn't, I'd say nothing about it to Bariden. I'd loved the way he'd
kept trying to make me feel better, the wonderful strength and
determination he'd shown. It was all so much a part of the total him,
the man I'd remember for the rest of my life. He deserved the best,
and as much as I hated to admit it, that wasn't me.
294
SHARON
I was even too stubborn to
settle for something I wanted desperately, not unless it was on my
own terms.
The brush I held slid
through my hair, now that most of the tangles were gone. Its handle
was smooth to my fingers and palm, and holding it that close almost
let me taste Bariden's trace. He was the one who had made it, after
all, so his trace would always be part of it. It was as much of him
as I would ever have, and probably more than I deserved. What a fool,
to fall in love with a man like that, and then refuse to settle . ..
I sat there until the fire
died, brushing my hair while quiet tears streamed down my face, and
then I went to sleep.
Bariden walked slowly
through the village, pretending he was thinking, in reality trying
not to think. Most of the men and women and older children were out
in the fields, trying to get as much done as possible before it
rained again. The older men and women still in the huts had their
hands full with the very young children, half of whom apparently
hated the mud, the other half wanting to play in it. They nodded to
Bariden but otherwise ignored him, and that suited him perfectly.
And that was just about
the only thing that did suit him. The sky was low and gray with the
threat of more rain, the wind was colder than the day before, the
ground was almost pure mud, and none of the huts he'd glanced into
held more than the one that was currently his. Pallets with blankets,
small piles of dirty clothes scattered around, a few pots and pans,
the occasional tool... As if all those people had just moved in,
rather than having been there long enough at the very least to have
put in the crop that was almost ready for harvest.
And that magical city,
beyond the shielding mist! Every time he caught sight of it he felt
the urge to pick up a rock and throw, fueled by the fervent hope that
he would somehow hit a crystal wall and shatter it. Beyond the mist
it was sunny and looked warm, and the grass glistened with the drops
left by a pleasant shower. No mud, no poverty and misery, just beauty
and the wealth of luxury provided by a power denied to him and those
around him . . .
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Q95
Denied, lots of things
were denied. Bariden stopped and stared at the thick forest beyond
the edge of the poorly cultivated fields, remembering the most
important thing that was being denied him. I don't want to belong to
you, she'd said, sounding as if she were talking about slavery. It
had been obvious something important was bothering her, and he'd been
so sure he knew what it was. She was being forced to admit that she
loved him, just as he'd already spoken of his own love. Once she said
the words there would be nothing left to stand between them, and even
that world would be beautiful...
But the words she'd said
hadn't been the ones he'd expected, and when he heard them the world
came crashing down instead. He'd been so hurt he'd fallen back on a
refuge of childhood and had sought escape from life in sleep. He'd
awakened that morning already searching for what he might say to her,
but it turned out he didn't have the chance to say anything. She and
her few possessions were already gone, moved to the empty hut two
huts from his.
"Not even next door,"
he muttered to the distant forest and not-distant-enough clouds, "She
wants to be as far away from me as she can get, even if it's only
another twenty feet. And there's nothing I can do about it."
Which wasn't strictly
true. As he turned and started back to his hut, he admitted silently
that it was a matter of nothing he would do. As she herself had
pointed out, he was big enough to carry her back to his hut over his
shoulder. Neither she nor anyone else would be able to stop him, but
the idea left something of a bad taste in his mouth. If the woman you
held in your arms didn't want to be there, you were cheating yourself
as well as her. Without the deep, intoxicating pleasure of mutual
desire, you might as well use your hand. Only inexperienced little
boys didn't know that...
And besides experience,
Bariden had enough stiff-necked pride not to want anyone who didn't
want him. He would feel like a beggar with hat in hand if he went
after her, even if he was capable of dragging her back. He usually
ignored people who didn't care to know him—even in his position
there had been a few—and he would do the same now. The very
same. Even if he couldn't stop loving her.
096
SHARON
Time passed without notice
while Banden wandered around, but his attention kept coming back to
the mistlike warding that blocked access to the magical city. In an
effort to know what the warding was like, he tossed a few rocks and
sticks at it. Everything thrown went into the mist cleanly, but
didn't come out again on the other side. It would probably exclude
living beings rather than absorb them, Bariden guessed, but both
exclusion and absorption would be automatic. What he needed to do was
get the attention of someone inside, someone who would bring him and
the girl through the warding. Once they had access to the crystal
palaces, finding the gate would be no harder than it had been up
unti! then.
But, assuming he could get
someone's attention, what could he possibly say to make them want to
allow two intruders inside? He could tell the truth about their
situation, but would that be enough to make those high-living Sighted
cooperate? If it wasn't, what would be enough?
Bariden pulled his pallet
to the door of the hut and sat on the end of it, looking outside at
the mud and trying to think. His biggest problem was lack of
sufficient detailed information, but he wasn't likely to get what he
needed from the villagers. They were so involved with hating the
people beyond the mist, they didn't want to know any details about
them.
And while he thought about
the villagers, he might as well consider what he could do for them.
With their fighters away they were just about helpless, but there
were now six swords in the village not being used. He could start to
train the men in small groups when they came in from the fields,
teaching them the feel of a real sword in their fists but training
them with practice weapons. It would be hard for them to work all day
and then practice, but he could keep the sessions relatively short
and still give them the basics. Since it would work toward preserving
their lives and the lives of their families, they would be more than
willing.
An older woman came by
with two cloth-wrapped packages, one of which she handed to him
without comment. She took the second to a hut to his left, where
Chalaine sat in her own doorway looking everywhere but at him. With
the way the huts were set in a curve he could see her easily,
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but looking would have
been a waste of time. He looked instead at the food that was wrapped
up in the cloth, but in a way that was worse. The small chunk of
unidentifiable meat was boiled, and so was the unpeeled potato. The
cut of bread was almost as hard as the rocks he'd thrown to test the
warding, and didn't even look as appetizing. He hadn't tasted what
they'd been given the night before, but somehow he knew there would
be nothing of seasoning or artistry used in the cooking. In order to
stay alive he would have to eat the food, but the experience wasn't
one he was looking forward to.
It took Banden a while to
get around to the food, and then it took effort to swallow it and
keep it down. He distracted himself with thoughts of what he would
teach the villagers first, and eventually became absorbed m setting
up a schedule. The day dragged on and on, but at least it didn't rain
again. Some older children drove a small flock of sheep past his hut,
and then the villagers were back from the fields.
Bariden decided to give
the men a few minutes to relax before he chose the first ones he
would train. He felt bored and impatient from not having done
anything all day, but it wasn't the same for them. While he waited he
toyed with the idea of suggesting the men might be able to set up a
rotation in the fields, giving him different groups of men to work
with for short periods during the day. That would let all of them be
trained in the fastest time possible, and—
He broke off the thought
at sight of the men approaching, what looked to be almost every man
in the village. Here and there two or three argued desultorily, an
exchange of words rather than a prelude to physicality. The rest
looked interested or satisfied or annoyed, but they weren't coming to
speak with Bariden as he'd thought they were. Without even a glance
in his direction they approached Chalaine's hut, and stopped about
five feet from it.
"What can I do for
you gentlemen1?" Banden heard Chalaine say as he got to his
feet. Part of the crowd was blocking his view of what was going on,
and he had the definite feeling he'd soon find that a problem.
"We heard you weren't
with the fighter any more, so the untended men drew lots," the
man named Kam answered.
098
SHAROM GR€€h
He seemed to do a lot of
the village's talking for it. "Riss here won the draw, so you'll
go with him. The rest of us came along so you'd know the drawing was
official. Go and get your things now, it's getting close to
suppertime."
"That's no problem,"
Chalaine returned with a shrug, rising to her own feet. "Since
I'm not going with him, it doesn't matter what tune of day it is. Was
there anything else?"
"Of course you're
going," Kam said with a smile as most of the men with him
chuckled. "Women aren't allowed to live alone, not as long as
there's a man who wants them. You'll go to Kiss's house as is proper,
and you'll tend to him. If you don't, you won't eat."
"That's your idea of
a threat?" Chalaine asked with a snort of ridicule. "After
tasting what I was given earlier, it sounds more like a major favor.
Why do you people live like this? There's not a stick of furniture in
any of these shacks, those fields are planted so sloppily half the
ground is wasted, and you keep grass-destroying sheep instead of
cattle. To top it off you make no effort even when it comes to what
you put in your bellies, so what da you do to make life better? Or
don't you want it better?"
"How can it be better
when we're denied what should be ours by right?" Kam demanded,
he and the others no longer amused. "Those thieves in the city
have stolen our rights, and all we have to call our own are our
houses! How much sweetness is a life like this supposed to provide?"
"Life isn't supposed
to provide the sweetness," Chalaine countered, looking around at
all of them. "Life provides the opportunities, and it's your
taking advantage of the chance that turns the trick. There's a big,
thick forest less than a mile from here, with all the wood anyone
could want. Why aren't you using it to make chairs and tables and
beds, and maybe even real houses with windows? Just because you can't
use magic, that doesn't mean you can't use sweat. Why—"
"Enough!" the
man who had been pointed out as Riss shouted, one hand in the ah- and
the other over an ear. "I don't want this woman any more, not
when she shows the world how stupid she is. Taking her into my
house—house, stupid woman, not shack—would be more
trouble than any
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299
possible pleasure I might
get. If anyone else wants her, it's fine with me."
Bariden watched the other
men in the crowd mutter and shuffle, but none of them stepped forward
to claim Chalaine. It wasn't necessary to guess to know why that was,
and now that their business with her was finished, he had his own to
discuss with them.
"Kam, I'd like a word
with you," he called, and all the men seemed glad of the
opportunity to walk away from a distasteful situation. Most of them
just turned in his direction, but Kam and the blond man who had
spoken the day before made their way through the others to stand in
front of him.
"I've got an idea I
think you'll like," Bariden said when he had everyone's
attention. "Those six who came attacking your village yesterday
weren't very good with their swords, and if they're typical of the
fighters around here, your troubles are over. I can teach you men
enough to be able to protect yourselves in a very short time,
especially if you take turns working in the fields and working with
me. I'm ready to start this afternoon, so who wants to be in the
first group?"
Bariden looked around,
intending to count the number of volunteers before deciding on class
size, but there wasn't a hand in sight. And not only that, but they
were all looking back at him as if he were out of his mind. The only
explanation he could think of was that they hadn't understood him,
but before he could rephrase what he'd said, Kam held up a hand.
"Two fools speaking
out on the same day," Kam stated, his other hand over an ear.
"No wonder they didn't stay in the village where they belonged.
If they weren't fighters, we wouldn't want them here either."
"What's so foolish
about learning to defend yourself?" Bariden demanded while the
other men made sounds of agreement with Kam. "Do you like it
better being helpless?"
"When our fighters
are here, we aren't helpless," Kam said in a
patiently-explaining tone. "They fight for us, and we're
perfectly safe. That's what fighters do, you know, in return for not
having to work in the fields. If we have to
3OO
SHAROTI
work in the fields anyway,
why would we want to learn how to fight?"
"And if we did all
learn to fight, who would he left to feed us by working in the
fields?" the blond man put in, almost as patient. "The
women can't do it alone, otherwise they would already be doing it.
The oldsters can't, because then we'd have to cook and care for the
brats ourselves. Do you understand now how foolish you were being?"
"That's not what I
understand, but I still withdraw my suggestion," Bariden said,
knowing when he was just wasting time. "And since it's starting
to rain again, you'll probably want to get back to your—houses."
It wasn't just starting to
rain it was beginning to pour, and that roused the villagers somewhat
out of their slowness of movement. They still didn't hurry, though,
and Bariden couldn't stand it. He stepped into his own house, kicked
the pallet out of the way, and slammed the door.
"Of all the stupid,
useless, closed-minded fools ever created—!" he fumed,
then had to turn and open the door again. He still didn't know how to
start a fire, and with the door closed it was too dark to see
anything. Of course, with it open his floor would soon become a sea
of mud, but what difference did that make? He was already floundering
neck-deep, and in more than mud.
"We've got to get out
of here," he muttered, staring out at the rain. "There has
to be a way to reach the people in that city, some way to get their
attention. Assuming they're willing to give their attention. What if
the handouts they provide twice a year satisfy their sense of
responsibility to those less fortunate? What if the only difference
between them and these people is that they can do magic?"
The thought was downright
sickening, and there were enough things in that world to turn
Bariden's stomach. He turned away from the door to pace the room,
remembering that Kam had said it was almost suppertime. Now that was
a prime example of stomach-turning if ever there was one, and if he
wanted to avoid it he'd better start thinking. So, how do you attract
the attention of someone who has lots of experience ignoring unwanted
overtures .. . ?
"Excuse me," a
quiet voice said from behind his back. "Do you mind if I come in
for a few minutes?"
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Bariden turned to see
Chalaine just outside the hut, standing in the pouring rain rather
than stepping inside without permission. If any girl in the universe
ever needed a keeper . . .And then he remembered how she felt about
him.
"For a few minutes,
no," he allowed, working to keep his tone cool and uninterested.
"What can I do for you?"
"I was wondering if
you were still as anxious to leave this place as you were yesterday,"
she said as she stepped inside, one hand pushing back her sodden
hair. She hadn't rebraided it, and it hung in dark strands against
her equally sodden tunic. "If you are, I think I know where the
necessary gate is."
"So do I,"
Bariden answered. "In that unreachable city beyond the mist. And
I'm not as anxious, I'm beyond climbing walls. Those people are—Go
and light a fire before we get into this any more. If you just stand
there and shiver, you'll end up with pneumonia."
Bariden all but growled
the last two sentences, having had no intention of saying them but
finding the words popping out anyway. Chalaine looked like a
half-drowned cat, and one who couldn't quite meet his eyes. He
couldn't stand seeing her like that, shivering from the cold and wet.
He couldn't put his arms around her, and he couldn't build a fire ..,
and he couldn't find their way out of that place ...
Rather than let the list
of couldn'ts build any higher, Bariden watched Chalaine build the
fire. She went and did it without comment, using wood from the comer
and some sort of small metal device that was near the wood. She
opened the metal device, used it to make scraping noises, somehow
produced a tiny flame in the bottom of the box, then transferred the
flame to a slender stick before blowing it out in the box. Small
branches had been put in the fire circle first, and setting the
slender stick under them soon had them alight. As soon as the fire
had definitely caught, Chalaine added a larger cut of wood, then went
to replace the metal box beside the wood pile.
"Here, wrap this
around you until the fire gets a little hotter," Bariden said,
handing her a blanket before going to close the door. "Now, did
you mean you know where in the city the gate is? That won't help us
much if we can't find a way into the city."
3OQ
SHARON
"No, that wasn't what
I meant," she answered, already wrapped in the blanket and
sitting near the fire—and still not looking at him. "We
have to start a little farther back, specifically with the last
world. From what we learned, it was guaranteed that one of us would
lose the competition and end up needing to leave the city. It
wouldn't have been possible for the one who was accepted into service
to sneak the other in secretly, not with wizard-strength magic to
fight. Either one or both of us would have had to leave."
"Both of us,"
Bariden decided as he sat on the other side of the fire. "If we
were still together, and we were, we wouldn't have let ourselves be
separated. We both would have left the city and—what? Found
another gate?"
"I think so,"
she agreed, fiddling with one corner of the blanket. "The gate
we were supposed to find, one that would take us deeper into the
maze. But we reached this one instead, and it led to what looks like
a dead end. Those people out there will never have more than they do
right now, because they flatly refuse to work for something that
others get with magic. They'll spend lifetimes stealing from and
killing each other, all the while staring hungrily through the mist
at what will always be beyond their reach."
"And I have the
feeling those inside the warding are no better," Bariden said,
watching the hungry flames lick at the wood. "The least they
could have done was make the barrier solid so no one could see
through, and also stop feeding their vanity with twice-yearly
handouts. If you want to help people you teach them how to help
themselves, you don't make them dependent on you. But you said this
looks like a dead end, and that means you don't think it is. If so,
where do we go from here?"
"Not into that city,"
she said, reaching one hand out to warm it near the flames. "If
we spent our time concentrating on a way to get in, we'd be no better
than those people out there. I had no idea where we would go—until
mat conversation of a few minutes ago. Didn't anything about it
strike you as odd?"
"Everything about it
was odd," Bariden returned dryly. "Especially that gesture
of refusing to listen to something by covering one ear. I'd love to
know where they got that."
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3O3
"Probably from the
same place they get everything else, the Sighted in the city,"
she said. "But that wasn't what I meant. These huts they all
live in—those people got me so annoyed I called them shacks,
and the one named Riss went to great pains to correct me. To them
it's a house they return to, even without windows, furniture,
plumbing, or amenities. A house, not a hut or shack."
"And?" Bariden
prompted. "I can see that means something to you, but I'm still
drawing a blank. What do you think it means?"
"Well, actually, it's
stretching a point," she admitted, glancing up at him and then
quickly away. "If a place is a man's house, it's also usually
his home. A lot of people use the two words interchangeably, and,
well, have you ever heard that saying about what a man's home is
supposed to be?"
"A man's home is his
castle," Bariden said slowly with dawning understanding. "Or,
to match our current needs, his palace. This hut was given to me when
we got here, so it can be considered my palace. And my palace has a
gate!"
"But one that won't
open for us," Chalaine pointed out, dampening his excitement.
"As I said, I think I found the gate we want, but we still don't
know how to make it work. That's the next thing we have to think
about, and I came here to tell you so we'd both be working in the
proper direction. I appreciate the blanket and the fire, but now I
ought to be getting back—"
"Don't move,"
Bariden interrupted, pointing a finger at her while his mind raced
furiously. "Give me a minute to think."
She settled back looking
puzzled, but that was all Bariden noticed. He was too busy putting
certain clues and hints together, and when he was through his
excitement had doubled.
"That's got to be
it," he said with a laugh, raising his head to look at her
again. "It was all right there, but I let myself be misdirected.
If this doesn't teach me not to assume, nothing ever will."
"Assume what about
what?" Chalaine asked, still looking puzzled. "You don't
mean you have the answer?"
3O4
WAROM
"At this point it's
only a guess, but it's one I'm willing to bet on," he responded
with a nod. "Now it's your turn to think back, to the time we
got here. We discussed the king and her machinations, then heard the
attack going on outside. We rushed out and ended the attack, learned
that the villagers are all Sighted, then were told no one outside the
warding mist is allowed to do magic. When we came back in here we
also discovered that what had been produced by magic was still in our
pack, but what depended on magic wasn't. We'd already noticed that
the gate wasn't opening for us even though mere was no spell of any
sort on it, so we decided we knew what we were up against."
"Where does 'decided'
come into it?" she asked, those dark eyes forgetting to avoid
him. "We did know what we were up against, from matching it to
what we saw and were told."
"And was that a truth
we made any attempt to prove or disprove?" he countered. "These
villagers are Sighted, so when they said magic was forbidden to them,
we believed it. After all, there were a lot of Sighted in the
previous world who were constrained from using most of their talent
by a single wizard. There seem to be a lot of wizards here, so why
shouldn't it be possible that all magic is forbidden?"
"Are you saying—"
she began, frowning in confusion. "What are you saying?"
"I'm saying think
about our major source of information," he told her, leaning
forward a little. "Those people out there are hopeless cases,
unwilling even to learn enough about weapons to protect their lives.
They said they got a spell from the Sighted behind the mist and tried
it, but it didn't work. Chalaine, does being Sighted guarantee that
if you speak a spell it will work?"
"Of course not,"
she breathed, now a picture of revelation arrived. "If you try a
complex spell without having first learned the basics, you can't put
the necessary strength into it. Without strength and training the
complexity will overcome simple inborn ability, and nothing will
happen. And those people out there are too stupid and lazy to have
bothered with the basics. They'd expect to be able to do magic just
by waving their arms!"
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3O5
"And we didn't try
our own hands at it because of the situation in the last world,"
he agreed somewhat grimly. "You called up a cup of coffee
without thinking, and paid for it with a lot of pain. That kind of
thing tends to make you nervous, not to mention overly cautious. We
were told we couldn't do magic here, so we simply took their word for
it."
"Making those
villagers absolutely right about one thing," she growled. "They
called us fools, and we are. Or at least I am, but I'm willing to
change and learn."
She sat up straighter and
spoke a spell, and suddenly she was no longer huddling into wet
clothes, soaked to the skin. All the rainwater had been banished, and
a cup of hot coffee had appeared in her hand. Bariden spent no time
watching her take the first, groaningly wonderful sip; he spoke his
own spell, which brought him a turkey sandwich as well as a cup of
coffee.
"So once again we
tripped over our own natures," Chalaine said at last while
Bariden was occupied with wolfing down the sandwich. "I didn't
try a spell because of that episode with the coffee, and you didn't
try one because in your position you're used to not using magic. What
else are we doing to blindfold and hobble ourselves?"
"We're still
assuming," Bariden supplied after he'd swallowed and had a sip
of coffee. "It didn't help that my previously cast spells were
canceled when we came through that gate, but maybe in the end it
helped enormously. There's still one assumption tripping us up, I
think, but this part of it is my guesswork. What did we do in other
worlds that we didn't do here?"
"I don't know,"
she groped, making a vague gesture with one hand. "Get ourselves
invited to a fancy meal?"
"Since we got the
fanciest available here, I'd say no," he answered with a brief
smile. "What we did on ail previous worlds was ask about gates,
and try to call up an entry. We passed on the entry pan in the last
world for a reason. If you hadn't been afraid the wizard-king might
be listening, you wouldn't have decided against trying."
"And here I didn't
try because I believed I couldn't do magic," she said with a
nod. "Does that mean you think it might work? Even though it
didn't work anywhere else?"
3O6
"One of the questions
that occurred to me was why it didn't work," Bariden said. "If
magic in general worked, and it did, why wouldn't an entry spell
work? And how can there be gates linking only two worlds? Everything
we know about gates insists that it's the points from multiple worlds
that brings them into being. Two points alone might start the
process, but other points would then be drawn in. How is it we keep
finding nothing but what ought to be impossible? And as two final
questions, why were the spells I prepared canceled as we came through
this gate, and why won't it open for us? There's no question about
our being able to do magic, so why won't it open?"
"Logic would say
there's only one possible answer," she replied slowly, staring
at the gate. "If it looks like a duck but doesn't walk, quack or
swim like a duck, chances are it's something else. These aren't gates
we've been using, they've only been made to look like gates. That
means they're probably entries instead, but I still don't see it all.
How does that help us?"
"It helps if my final
guesswork tucks in," Bariden responded, almost heavily. "When
you told me the way out has been under my nose all along—Well,
I jumped to certain conclusions. The first was that these aren't
gates, and that's why specific spells didn't come through with us the
way they would with a real gate. We were supposed to believe our
magic was useless here. Then came the part about why entry spells
didn't work, when these were almost certainly entries. Could it be
that entry spells do work, but only in a few, specific places?"
"Why, of course!"
Chalaine exclaimed, her large, dark eyes even wider. "There are
planes that are very hard to reach, where connecting up an entry
takes hours or sometimes days. One reason for that is supposed to be
the lack of—amenable entry sites, you could call it. Only
certain points of those planes will accept the creation of an entry,
so you have to wait until your spell connects up with one. If you
were on the inside looking out instead, you could go through to any
part of your own world, but only by using one of those limited
points! Bariden, you've done it! You've found the loophole that will
get us out!"
HIDDGN R€AIM
3O7
"I certainly hope
so," Bariden muttered, all excitement and pleasure strangely
gone. "Why don't you try an entry spell on the indicated point
to let us know for sure?"
"In a minute,"
she answered, banishing her cup and jumping to her feet. "First
I have to get something I left in my hut. I'll be right back."
He watched her race out
into the rain without understanding, then dismissed it all with a
shrug. As soon as she got whatever it was she wanted to take with
her, they'd find out if his guess was right. It was stupid for part
of him to wish he was wrong, something that would continue to keep
them there together. He already knew how she felt about him, and that
wasn't likely to change no matter how long they spent in that world.
They'd both be better off at home, where distance would let him
pretend to forget...
"Okay, all set,"
she announced as she came back in, needing to banish water damage
again. "Keep your fingers crossed."
"Isn't that a gesture
the unSighted believe will prevent magic from affecting them?"
Bariden asked as he got to his feet. "What good do you expect it
to do MS?"
"As much good as it
does them, which is to say, at least it supplies hope," she
responded. "And we'll need every bit of help we can get,
considering the strength of the one we're up against. Here goes."
She raised both hands and
spoke her spell carefully, but it wasn't necessary for either of them
to hold their breath. The false gate flared wide instantly, inviting
them to step through, which they did. Side by side, partners in
adventure, strangers in every other way ...
"Well, it's about
time!" an indignant voice announced, and then Bena was bustling
up to them. Chalaine's entry had brought them to his father's palace,
in the corridor outside the kitchens. "Do you two have any idea
how frantic everyone's been? First you disappear into nothing without
a word to anyone, and you stay away for an entire day. Now you come
back out of nothing without the least warning, scaring a body—"
"An entire day?"
Bariden protested. "I don't know what kind of clock you use,
Bena, but for us it was a lot more than a day. Are you sure that's
all it's been here?"
3O8
"It's probably a
matter of different flows," Chalaine said before Bena could
answer. "A day here can equal a tenth of what's experienced
elsewhere. But that's not in the least important right now. We were
in the middle of an investigation when we were forced off the scene,
but now we're back. Let's get that cleared up first."
"Cleared up how?"
Bariden demanded, suddenly feeling left behind. "When we were
dragged out of here, we had no idea what was being done or who was
doing it. What do you imagine has changed?"
"Only one thing,"
Chalaine said, turning to look straight at him. "I had an
entire, uninterrupted day to think. Since I started from the very
beginning, I now know who the enemy is."
CHAPTGR
T
he chamber wasn't very
large, but there was still plenty of room for those of us who
occupied it. It had taken a couple of hours to get the interested
parties together, and I'd made sure to use the time wisely. Once the
preparations were complete I'd gone out to the garden near the
kitchens to wait, my feet propped up and a cup of coffee in my hands.
Bena came by to offer me something to eat, but I had no interest in
food. All I wanted was for that farce to be over, and then I'd be
able to go home. Home ...
At the moment there were
eight of us sitting around a conference table, plus a group of
guardsmen positioned around the chamber. Those last were there
because of Bariden's father's presence, and King Agilar had brought
four of his advisers. Along with me, Bariden, and Master Haddil, that
made the primarily involved eight.
"... and that's how
we managed to get back," Bariden was saying, the end of his
report on what had happened to us. He'd been shocked to hear I knew
who the enemy was, but the reaction had worn off by the time we
gathered in his father's meeting chamber. He also hadn't pressed me
for details, knowing he would hear all about it soon enough.
"Just the fact that
you are back, and safely, would be enough for me, Bariden," King
Agilar said warmly, his smile looking real. "I'd sooner lose my
kingdorft than one of my children."
The man was tall and
slender with light brown hair and blue eyes, a good deal less
imposing than you would
3O9
31O
SHARON
expect a king to be. In
point of fact he seemed more gentle than anything else, and it wasn't
possible to doubt what he'd said.
"Thank you, Father,"
Bariden answered with a warm smile of his own. "Your support has
always been my greatest source of strength. But getting back safely
wasn't the only thing we accomplished. Chalaine says she knows who's
behind the trouble here, and I'm certain she does. If she hadn't been
sure, she wouldn't have said anything at all."
"An admirable
quality, Lady Chalaine," King Agilar said with another smile,
moving those mild blue eyes to me. "I'm sure everyone here is
just as eager to hear your thoughts on the matter as I am."
"Not everyone, Your
Majesty," I said with no amusement at all. I was also no longer
looking at Bariden, who sat opposite me to his father's right. I was
to the king's immediate left, and two of the advisers shared my side
of the table. The other two were next to Bariden, leaving the end of
the table opposite the king for Master Haddil.
"Not everyone wants
this problem solved, Your Majesty, at least not yet," I said.
"People are nervous about what's been going on, but they haven't
gotten panicky yet. The best time to come up with a solution would be
once the panic did set in, which would make the revelation more a
miracle than simple good fortune. There are two other teams of
sorcerers working on this. Does anyone know how they're doing?"
The king seemed surprised
at the question, but he didn't ask why I wanted to know. Instead he
looked in Master Haddil's direction, and that worthy cleared his
throat.
"As far as I know,
the other two teams haven't discovered anything at all," he
said, speaking to everyone rather than just to me. "Of course, I
haven't had any reports from them since yesterday, so that could have
changed by now."
"Could it have
changed far enough that they've also gone missing?" I asked
next, immediately drawing his gaze. "What I mean is, do you know
for certain that they haven't been snared the way Bariden and I
were?"
"No, I don't know
that for certain," he answered slowly, his stare thoughtful. "Do
you?"
TH€ HIDDGM
311
"Not for certain, but
it's a good bet," I returned, then looked at the king again.
"None of those four struck me as the brilliantly deductive kind,
but even they could get lucky and trip over something obvious. But
the main reason they would be gone would be as a blind, to cover the
disappearance of Bariden and me. If only he and I were tossed into a
trap, someone might start wondering why."
"But the why would be
obvious," one of the advisers on the other side of the table
protested. "You might have gotten too close to the truth, which
is in fact what did happen. How else would it have come to you?"
"It so happens it
came to me because I had an entire, boring day to sit through, and
nothing else to do but think," I told him. "If I'd been
left here—well, if I'd been left here I would have come to the
same conclusion, but that's the point I'm trying to make. Prince
Bariden and I were gotten rid of because we were both determined to
get to the bottom of the mystery, because we were capable of doing
it, and because we were investigating here, in the palace, where the
answer happens to be."
"You're saying one of
the people close to me is responsible," King Agilar said after a
moment of silence from everyone. The statement surprised me, but it
shouldn't have. A stupid man wouldn't have been capable of creating
such a happy, prosperous kingdom.
"That's exactly what
I'm saying, Your Majesty," I agreed, then turned to look at my
former teacher. "Isn't that right, Master Haddil."
This time the silence was
thick and shocked, since my inference couldn't have been any clearer.
Master Haddil returned my stare without expression for a moment, and
then he smiled.
"You can't possibly
mean I'm responsible, child," he said, completely unworried.
"Not only is the suggestion ridiculous, it makes no sense.
Considering the damage the problem is doing to my reputation, I'm the
one suffering most here after the victims. And if I were responsible,
why would I be so foolish as to bring in others to investigate? Why
run the risk that one of them would find me out?"
"Let's discuss the
foolishness of bringing in others first," I said after sipping
at my coffee. "Wouldn't someone who
312
WAROh
was making no headway on a
problem, but who refused to ask for help, look even worse? It was
something you had to do, so you went about making the necessity work
for you. By inviting in your four best students first and turning
them into victims, you accomplished two things. The first was,
obviously, getting them out of the way before they could discover you
were the guilty party. The second I was there to see for myself, and
it did an incredibly efficient job."
"It discouraged
others from getting involved," Bariden said suddenly, snapping
his fingers. "Of course! I was there too, and when the people
Summoned heard that the four best among them had fallen victim, most
of them turned around and went home."
"After that
performance showing how distraught their teacher was, how could they
be expected to do anything else?" I agreed. "Only six of us
were left to look into the matter, but four of the six didn't count.
They were self-centered or ineffective nonentities, who would waste
their time on dead-end leads without ever noticing they weren't
getting anywhere. They'd be too busy feeling important, and trying to
make themselves look important."
"And the last two?"
Master Haddil prompted, apparently nothing more than interested. "If
four of the six didn't count, presumably the last two did."
"The last two were
the most dangerous," I obliged him, shifting in my comfortable
chair. "One of the two was a prince of the kingdom, determined
to catch the miscreant for his father's sake. The other was a very
close friend to one of the sorcerer victims, a sorceress who was
considerably more effective than most people believed. Those two
would need special treatment, and they got it."
"By being thrown into
a trap," Master Haddil said with a nod, but I shook my head.
"It started well
before that" I said, and there were sounds of surprise around
the table. "In point of fact it started a little while before I
was Summoned through the entry. You located me and saw what I was
doing, Master Haddil, and it gave you a really good idea. When your
entry appeared in my workshop, there was a very subtle spell on it
twined around the general Summoning. I was to come at once, but was
specifically not supposed to drop everything first. In
TH€ HIDDGM RGAIM
313
point of fact, I was
compelled to bring what I was working on with me."
"Don't tell me!"
Bariden blurted, and I nodded without looking at him.
"Yes, that whole
episode with the sphere of water was a set-up," I confirmed. "I
was compelled to bring it with me, tripped as I came out of the
entry, and the sphere was knocked out of my hands. I remember
thinking everything would be all right when Master Haddil's warding
destroyed the sphere, but that didn't happen. Master Haddil's warding
bounced it, straight at a sorcerer who wasn't warded and also didn't
know what was in the thing. Believing it was nothing but a very large
soap bubble, he let it hit him."
"Are you accusing me
now of having so atrocious a sense of humor that I play practical
jokes?" Master Haddil asked mildly. There was a hint of
amusement behind the calm of his stare, but I didn't share the
feeling.
"That was no joke,"
I told him, meaning the words in every possible way. "It was
another plan with more than one purpose, basically meant to sabotage
the investigation. I was made to look and feel like a self-conscious
twit, Prince Bariden was made to look like an incompetent idiot, and
the two of us got off on the worst possible foot. You knew from the
start, you see, that he and I would be paired as partners for the
investigation."
"He rigged the spell
on the tiles," Bariden growled, coming to the obvious
conclusion. "He said the spell would produce the best pairings
possible, but he had the spell already prepared. He didn't speak it
where we could hear it."
"Probably because the
spell demanded the worst possible pairings," I agreed. "He
had already given you a reason for disliking me, but he isn't the
sort to leave things to chance. He also arranged for me to have a
similar reason, and the spell must have been very simple. He just
made sure you would not hear my name any of the times it was
mentioned, and also gave you no opportunity to ask what it was."
"By the
EverNameless!" Bariden roared as he glared at Master Haddil, a
very appropriate choice of words. "No wonder I couldn't remember
what it was. I never heard it! And I'll bet he also made sure you
noticed."
314
"He didn't have to,"
I said grimly, sending my own glare toward the wizard. "He knew
me well enough to know I'd notice, that's why he did it in the first
place. He was hoping we'd spend our time arguing and accusing rather
than being productive, but it didn't work out like that. He kept an
eye on us, of course, and when he saw me find the clue that would
eventually lead to his discovery, he hurriedly arranged that trap."
"So you think you
have more than pure guesswork and imagination?" Master Haddil
asked pleasantly. "If so, by all means, do continue. I can't
show everyone how wrong you are until I hear everything you have to
say."
"Oh, you'll hear it,
all right," I told him dryly. "What I found was an odd
residue in the bathtub of the guest bathing room of the first victim.
Since the merchant hadn't been in the apartment long, I wondered why
it was there. He had his own bathing chamber, and he hadn't yet had
the opportunity to have guests. It couldn't have been left over from
a previous guest, not when the queen's Chief Housekeeper is known to
inspect empty apartments on a regular basis. If everything in the
apartment isn't perfect, whoever is responsible for not having done
his or her job is dismissed.
"So the residue meant
something significant, but I was distracted before I could realize
that consciously. The memory came back to me while I was doing all
that thinking, and suddenly everything fell into place. Someone had
tried to get rid of the substance down the drain of the bathtub
rather than down the sink or commode, because the bathtub is emptied
by pipes and the other two are emptied by magic."
"My goodness, that
argument would convince everyone in the kingdom of my guilt,"
Master Haddil commented soberly. "I wonder if I should confess
now, and save people the effort of actually accusing me."
"Jumping in before I
can explain what I mean won't distract anyone, Master Haddil," I
said as quickly as possible. "These people aren't so stupid as
to let you divert them before they can hear all of it. If my
accusation won't hold water, they'll know it once I've finished."
The wizard's expression
was completely neutral, but he couldn't be very happy. Two or three
of the king's advisers
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315
had been one breath away
from supporting his ridicule, but what I'd said kept them silent. To
interfere now would be to acknowledge oneself as stupid, and none of
them cared to do that. It would be better to sit there and listen,
and declare me wrong once I was through.
"So a drain was used
that didn't depend on magic while two that did weren't," I
continued. "The problem was to figure out why that was, and it
took some skull sweat before I did. Finally, though, I realized that
to dump a substance down a magic drain causes all of that substance
in range of the spell to be disposed of. If you've got grease of some
sort on your hands, for instance, and some of it dripped on your
clothes, and got on the doorknob, and maybe even spilled on the floor
both inside and outside of the bathing room—all of it, every
bit, would be cleaned up by the spell as soon as you deliberately
tried to clean up some of it. That's the reason for having a spell
like that, rather than a plain, ordinary drain. And here in the
palace, I'll bet the range of that spell is wider than it would be
anywhere else."
"I still don't
understand, Lady Chalaine," King Agilar said, looking disturbed.
"If the substance was an important clue, wouldn't the person who
left it want it cleaned up completely? Why try to get rid of it in
the first place, if you don't want to be rid of it entirely?"
"You'd want to get
rid of it in the first place because that's what was left after it
had been used," I explained, trying to be as clear as possible.
"You would not want all of it cleaned away, though, if there was
a chance the person you used it on would be carried close enough past
the bathing chamber that he was in range of the spell. That would
cause the substance to also be cleaned out of him, and he would no
longer be frozen in place by some sinister, unknown malady. Then all
your plans would be ruined, and you would have wasted your time. And
before anyone argues the point, the commode spell works differently
from the sink spell, but works on ingested substances."
This time there was a
commotion rather than silence, all four of the advisers trying to
speak at once. Bariden seemed to understand completely, the king
looked really
316
WARON GR€€M
disturbed, and Master
Haddil raised his voice to drown out the advisers.
"I think—"
he shouted over the gabble, then went on more quietly when the four
gabblers settled down. "I think that sounds very clever, but it
doesn't quite fit all the facts of the problem. When the healer was
called, he couldn't find any trace of a drug that might have been
given to the victim. He tried a general banishing of all noxious
substances, and that didn't work either. How, then, could there have
been anything given to the victim for the drain spell to clean away?"
"That's easy," I
answered, and all the attention shifted back to me. "The drug
was protected by a spell, to make sure it wasn't banished. The healer
couldn't find it or get rid of it because it was protected by the
strength of a wizard."
"But that's still no
reason for me to use the bathtub," Master Haddil countered, and
all eyes and heads swung to him. "If I called the stuff up and
protected it, I could have banished the unused portion just as
easily."
"Not in that
apartment you couldn't," I disagreed, bringing the heads and
eyes back. "You knew there would be people poking around in
there, and one of those people would be me. I expect you learned
about the forensic sorcery I'd been dabbling with, and knew that if
you used magic in the apartment, I'd be able to tell. You also
couldn't afford to take the unused portion with you. If even one
grain of it spilled where it shouldn't, I might have been able to
trace it to you with a general match and search spell. Those were two
of the procedures I was going to use if the investigation hadn't been
abruptly cut short. The only thing I don't understand is why you
didn't include me in the first group of four. Or were some of them
into forensic sorcery too?"
This time when the heads
swiveled back there was no easy answer from him, not even a sneering
denial. The silence lasted about six heartbeats, and then King Agilar
stirred.
"But why would he do
such a thing?" the king asked, almost plaintively. "He's
lived and worked at my Court for so many years ... This is all beyond
belief and understanding!"
THG
317
"Your Majesty, over
the last year or so I've heard occasional rumors coming out of this
kingdom," I told him gently. "As prosperous and peaceful as
this place is, people have been wondering why you need such a
powerful wizard as Master Haddil. He's never gone out of his way to
be friendly with your townspeople—or anyone else—so many
of them would be happier if he went elsewhere. After all, when a
wizard isn't involved with protecting you, he's probably occupying
his time plotting against you . .."
King Agilar's expression
showed brief impatience with so ridiculous an idea, but he didn't
miss the reactions of his advisers. The two I could see easily and
clearly flushed with embarrassment as they avoided looking at Master
Haddil, showing they, at least, believed that sort of nonsense. Those
to my left might have done the same thing, and if they did it would
hardly be unexpected.
"In this instance me
rumors were almost right," I continued. "Master Haddil is
comfortable here, or for one reason or another doesn't care to leave.
You've supported him up until now, but the day could very well come
when you're persuaded to give your people peace of mind. Rather than
wait for it to happen and then try to change your mind, he came up
with a crisis that would demand his continued presence. The crisis
would get worse and worse, other magic users would fail to find an
answer or get taken themselves—and then he would finally crack
the thing and revive the victims. The nefarious enemy would remain a
mystery, and that would also require mat he remain. After all, if he
left, the evil genius could decide to strike again ..."
By then everyone's
attention was on Master Haddil, who studied me silently with a finger
to his lips. His gray eyes appeared thoughtful, and then he sent me a
faint but deliberate smile.
"You've changed,
Chalaine," he commented, just as though we were in the middle of
an ordinary conversation. "You used to avoid arguments and
confrontations with the very first sign of disagreement. Now you
continue on in your newfound aggressiveness, making things up to
support your stance. Your need to show the universe that you're
somebody has you creating fantasies—"
318
9HARON
"They're not
fantasies, and she isn't lying," Bariden interrupted with a
growl, his light eyes cold. "She's a woman talented beyond the
ordinary, but she doesn't believe in making herself look good at
someone else's expense. You won't get out of this by casting doubts
on your main accuser. If you're all that innocent, prove it by
snowing us where she made her mistake."
"I can show you one
mistake rather easily," Master Haddil replied with that same
smile, while I tried not to think about the way Bariden had defended
me. A reaction left over from our time as travel companions, surely .
. . "If I were guilty, as everyone at this table now seems to
believe, I would be a guilty wizard. Two of you have sorcerer-level
strength, but I'm sure you know that means very little. Don't you
think it's a mistake of the first magnitude not to take that into
consideration?"
Master Haddil's pleasant
expression didn't change, but you couldn't tell that from the way the
king's four advisers froze. They were in the midst of accusing a
fairly powerful wizard of misconduct, and they suddenly knew they'd
never do anything that stupid again. Not that they might not want to,
but they'd never be able to ...
"But I did take into
consideration the person I was accusing," I said, speaking as
calmly and quietly as he had. "That's why I went to Conclave
while this meeting was being arranged, and explained my conclusions
to them. They decided there was enough evidence to question you under
a truth spell, which will settle matters without confusion or doubt.
If you think I'm bluffing, try speaking a spell."
By then he was looking
startled and unsure, as though he hadn't been expecting that
particular move. Some people did tend to underestimate me, but I
hadn't thought Master Haddil was one of them. Whatever, he suddenly
got to his feet and spoke a freezing spell aimed at everyone in the
room, but the final gesture did no more than the words. His ability
was being restrained by wizards his strength or stronger, then-
channel into that world established earlier by me. I couldn't use the
strength I'd arranged for, but it was more than clear they could.
HIDDG1
319
When everyone understood
Master Haddil was being restrained, they all jumped to their feet and
began shouting. Most were demanding that the guards arrest him, and
the king was trying to get everyone calmed down. I'm not all that
fond of bedlams, so I left my own chair and slipped out of the room.
Not only wasn't I needed any longer, I really didn't want to stay.
But as I walked down the
corridor I had to push away impatience, stemming from the fact that I
couldn't yet leave that world. I was the one maintaining the link for
the Conclave wizards to reach through to Master Haddil, and if I left
he would be free again to do as he pleased. The representatives from
Conclave would be there as soon as they decided who should go, but
until then I was stuck. Well, there was always that small garden as a
place to wait, and I was already heading in the right direction. When
they didn't need me any longer, they would let me know.
I was about halfway to my
destination and had just turned a corner, when I saw a group of
palace ladies approaching from the other direction. They were the
usual sort of high-nosed females who thought they were worth
something just because their fathers were, the kind whose male
counterparts usually started a fight with someone who was guaranteed
not to fight back. Normally I would have turned around and gone a
different way just to make sure there would be no trouble, but right
then I wasn't in the mood.
And, to cap my decision,
one of the beautifully gowned young ladies of station had spotted me
and was staring. To turn back then would have been to retreat, and I
hadn't even retreated from facing down a wizard. Granted, it hadn't
been a very satisfying tune, nothing like what I'd been looking
forward to. Master Haddil and I had never been close, but he had also
never refused to teach me what I needed as quickly as I could handle
it. Bena thought his criticism of me had been harsh, but in actual
truth it had been only as hard as it needed to be. And there had
never been a moment's pity or unnecessary condescension ...
"You there, girl,"
I heard in commanding tones, which brought me back from the fringes
of guilt. "I want a word with you, so stop where you are."
3QO
The young lady of station
addressing me seemed to be the leader of the group, all six of them
just enough older than me that they could play woman to my "girl."
Their gowns were silk in various pastel colors, a very pale yellow
for the one who was speaking. She also had red hair, green eyes, and
a beautiful face, but not enough sense to see that I wasn't in the
mood to take nonsense.
"But / don't want a
word with you" I pointed out mildly as I continued to approach
their group. "And even if I did, I don't make it a habit to talk
to people from ten feet away. Not unless I think they might bite. Do
you ladies bite?"
'Those who oppose us find
that we do," the redhead answered, stepping directly into my
path. "But in your case, we simply didn't care to be dirtied.
Your sort never has known enough not to approach people you don't
belong with, but this time you've really overstepped yourself. Why
don't you save yourself the eventual embarrassment and go back to
your own kind."
"My own kind," I
echoed with brows high. "And overstepping myself. Do you have
any real meaning hidden in that nonsense, or is this simply something
you tell everyone you see? If it is, you must be very bored."
"Only those without
breeding get bored," the redhead countered, her tone still even
despite the flush beginning to color her cheeks. "And those who
play stupid aren't always playing. I'm Lady Miralia, the betrothed of
Prince Bariden. If you think you've made a laughingstock of me by
disappearing with my fiance for a day, you're very much mistaken.
You're the one who's the laughingstock, for letting him take
advantage of whatever tiny amount of virtue you might have. I'm the
one he loves and the one he means to marry, and I want you away from
him now. I don't mind if he dallies a bit until the wedding, but I
will insist the woman be someone of quality. You, my girl, simply
don't qualify."
Her five cohorts smirked
from their places around and behind her, silently echoing everything
she'd said. I'd felt a stab from what I'd been told about Bariden,
but nothing like what it would have been if I'd let myself be stupid
about him. It looked like everyone in the palace knew he and I had
been gone together, but this specimen in front of me didn't
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321
care about the reasons for
it. She probably considered the problem we'd been working on nothing
more than a lame excuse for sneaking into bed. The Lady Miralia
reminded me of that princess Tenillis, who had been so eager to clear
me from her path to Bariden. The main difference here was that I had
no interest any longer in arguing possession of his attention.
"Do you have any idea
how embarrassing it is for me to stand here and watch you make a fool
of yourself?" I asked, long practice letting me keep to the
mildness. "Not only isn't there anything of consequence between
Prince Bariden and myself, you've just announced you're not woman
enough to satisfy the man you expect to marry. I hadn't known that
sort of frankness was required from someone of your exalted station."
There was an immediate
burst of snickering from Miralia's audience, and I didn't think it
was aimed at me. The same thought must have occurred to the redhead;
she flushed even brighter, and stiffened with humiliation.
"How dare you!"
she hissed with great originality, the words venom-covered. "I
know the point is probably beyond you to understand, but I am not a
slut like you! When I marry I'll be dressed in white, and that's why
I say nothing about my fiance's dallying. Actions that are fit for a
man are not fit for a woman, but obviously you've never been taught
that."
"Different people
learn different things," I observed with my own originality.
"For instance, you seem to think virginity is something special,
probably for the same stupid reason everyone else does, but you've
missed a couple of points. Back in the days when savages sacrificed
virgins -to their gods, it wasn't just girls they used, but boys as
well. That means if the idea is valid, it should go for men as well
as women."
"That has nothing to
do with—" she began impatiently, but I wasn't through yet.
"But the idea isn't
valid," I plowed on. "You have to remember these are
savages we're talking about, but they were only backward, not stupid.
On ordinary occasions they sacrificed chickens and ducks, moved up to
a lamb or sheep only when they had to, and used a young bullock only
if
3QQ
the situation was dire.
They didn't hand over their best right from the start, not when
handing it over might jeopardize their survival. That's why, when
they absolutely had to use humans, they usually offered virgins."
"But that proves that
virgins are special," one of the other girls objected, obviously
caught up. "The savages were giving purity and importance to
their gods."
"The savages were
giving unknown quantities to their gods, pretending they were
important," I corrected. "They needed a lot of children if
their tribes or clans were going to prosper, but they had no
knowledge of medicine and certainly no trained healers. Babies died
for many reasons back then; some were born dead, some died right
after birth, and some were too sickly even to survive infancy. The
most valuable possession those men had was a woman who bore strong,
healthy babies, a woman who wasn't barren or weak. If they were
seriously interested in giving their best, they would have given one
of those women, not an untried child of about nine or ten."
"Now that's too
much," another of the girls protested, highly indignant. "All
the books show virgin sacrifices as young women, not little girls.
And if children were so important to those people, why would they
kill one?"
"Because, in their
eyes, girls of that age were young women," I said, ignoring
Miralia's attempts to break into the conversation. "A girl
became a woman as soon as she passed through puberty, and shortly
thereafter she was paired with a boy who had survived his manhood
testing. If she didn't have her first child by the time she was
twelve or thirteen, it was only because she came late to puberty. The
male virgins were of the same sort, boys who hadn't yet changed and
survived the rites of men. After all, why waste a warrior and hunter
who had already proven himself?"
"None of that means
anything at all!" Miralia finally got in, the opinion inflexibly
firm. "We don't come from savages, and our families believe
firmly in the purity of women. It's a tradition that's been carried
on for centuries—"
"It's a joke that's
been carried on for centuries," I interrupted again.
"Specifically a man's joke. If a giri has no experience when she
marries, her husband doesn't have to worry about whether or not he'll
be as good as the others
TH6 HIDDEN
303
she's tried. Rather than
needing to develop an effective technique, he can get away with
minimal effort that still satisfies Him. Lazy is what they are, that
and little boys who think that size is what really matters ..."
I was only half-serious
about that particular part of it, but Miralia picked up on the wrong
half. Seeing my amusement made her think I'd been pulling
her—chain—the entire time, and that got her mad.
"Thank you for
explaining to us why you take to bed with every man you meet,"
she pronounced, the look in her green eyes malicious. "The
practice must be utterly fascinating to those who study the rutting
of animals, but we find it sickening. Just make sure that the next
bed you crawl into doesn't belong to Prince Bariden, and I'll never
need to lower myself by talking to you again. Is that clear?"
"What if it isn't?"
I asked just to be difficult, my head to one side. "You're a
silly child who thinks she has the right to tell other people what to
do, but what if I decide to ignore you? What do you imagine you could
possibly do?"
Her immediate sneer said
she was judging me by what I looked like, and because of that
believed I was helpless. She wasn't able to see the stubborn hurt
inside me that was beginning to create a great anger, and probably
wouldn't have cared even if she could. How she had missed the fact
that I was a sorceress I didn't know, but it was beyond doubt that
she had. Her sneering red lips parted to speak whatever threat she
had ready, but someone else's words beat her to it.
"Chalaine, hold on, 1
have to talk to you," we both heard, and by the tune I turned,
Bariden was just about up to us. It looked like he'd been moving
fast, probably because he had an unanswered question about Master
Haddil.
"Bariden, have you
been running!" Miralia demanded with vast distaste from behind
me. "Keeping low company has obviously taught you low habits,
but we'll break you of them soon enough. You may kiss my cheek in
greeting."
If I'd been Bariden I
would have told her what she could kiss of mine, but all he did was
stop and frown at her.
"Miralia," he
said, just as though he hadn't seen her before she spoke. "What
are you talking about? And what are you doing here?"
324
SHA8ON GR€€M
HIDD€M
325
"It so happens I was
on my way to find you," she answered, smiling now as she moved
past me to stand right in front of him. "Since we're going to be
married, it's only right to greet you properly when you get back from
a trip. I really did miss you, darling."
And then she put her arms
around his neck and kissed him. I knew she was going to do that, so
as soon as it started I turned away and strode off through the line
of her followers. They were too busy sighing romantically to notice,
and once I got past I spoke a spell to make sure I couldn't be
followed by the use of magic. A brisk walk got me to the next
cross-corridor quickly, and once I turned the corner I ran. Running
isn't at all a low habit, not when it can get you away from someone
you never want to see again for the rest of your life.
Bariden was so surprised
by Miralia's kissing him, that for a moment he stood frozen. Then,
realizing it was more shock than surprise, he tried to end it.
Miralia had never kissed him like that, not in bed and certainly not
in front of people, but the death grip she had around his neck was
hard to break. It took some effort to pry himself loose without
hurting her, and by then he was good and annoyed.
"Miralia, stop it!"
he told her sharply, holding her by the arms to keep her back from
him. "What in the worlds has gotten into you?"
"Nothing but love,
darling," she answered with one of those pleased laughs that
always meant she'd gotten her way about something. "Don't you
think I have the right to kiss my fiance?"
"Since when are we
supposed to have gotten engaged?" he asked with a snort. "The
last / heard, you didn't care to see me again until I apologized for
something I hadn't done."
"Oh, that was just a
silly little misunderstanding," Miralia laughed again. "You
know you love me, and everyone else knows it too. That's why they
were so delighted when your mother announced our engagement this
morning. She's throwing a party for us tonight, and—"
"She announced whatT
Bariden shouted, refusing to believe his ears. "My mother—!
She had no right to do anything like that!"
"Of course she did,
darling," Miralia cooed, now preening herself. "She is the
queen, after all, and as a dutiful son you must obey her. I still
haven't decided exactly when I want the ceremony to take place, but
she and I will discuss it and decide together. Now . . ."
Suddenly, Bariden was
looking around rather than listening. It wasn't Miralia he'd run
through the halls trying to catch up to, and he cursed when he found
Chalaine gone. It wasn't surprising that she'd walked away when
Miralia began her nonsense, but—Abruptly Bariden was jolted by
a horrible thought.
"Miralia, be quiet!"
he growled, interrupting the silly girl in midbabble and putting
instant insult on her face. "I want to hear that you didn't tell
Chalaine this fairy tale about our being engaged. Let me hear you say
you didn't tell her!"
He was gently shaking her
by the arms, but from the way Miralia reacted, he might as well have
been beating her with a stick. She gasped in horror and tore herself
free from his grip, then glared long-bladed daggers at him.
"How dare you treat
me as if I were one of your common playthings?" she hissed, so
outraged her pale skin flushed crimson. "I have no idea who or
what a Chalaine is, but if that's the name of the creature who was
just here, you can be certain I told her the truth! You and I are
engaged, Bariden, but that won't save you from having to pay for the
way you just humiliated me. Oh, yes, you'll pay, all right.
You'll..."
By then Bariden was
running up the corridor, too sick inside to waste time worrying about
Miralia's spite. He'd made up his mind to get it all out into the
open with Chalaine, to ask her why sometimes it seemed she returned
his love, but other times there was nothing from her. He'd promised
himself not to drop the subject until he was satisfied he had all the
answers, but when he'd turned around in the conference chamber once
everyone had stopped yelling, it was to find her gone. He'd hurried
after her, tracking her with magic as he had once before, and he'd
finally caught up—
3Q6
WARON GR£€h
But not before Miralia had
made everything a thousand times worse. Bariden was cursing under his
breath as he reached the cross-corridor, but the words that usually
acted as a release for his anger did nothing when Chalaine was
nowhere in sight. It was as though she'd turned invisible—
which was perfectly possible—or had disappeared in a puff of
smoke—which shouldn't have been possible. He didn't even know
which way she'd gone—
"Damn fool," he
growled at himself, then spoke the tracking spell again. Finding her
the first time had canceled it, so it just needed to be revived.
Wildly impatient, he waited for her footprints to glow to life along
the floor, waited ... waited ... then was forced to notice that the
spell wasn't working. He spoke it again, just to be sure he hadn't
made a mistake in his hurry, but there was no mistake. No mistake, no
footprints, and no Chalaine. She must have done something to keep him
from following her again...
From halfway up the
corridor behind him, Bariden could hear Miralia shrilling something,
probably demands. At one time he would have gone back and tried to
calm her down, but right then he wouldn't have cared if she shrilled
the palace into a pile of pebbles and rubble. Without even turning to
look at her, he headed up the corridor toward a stairway that would
take him to his apartment.
Once in his own apartment
he threw himself into a chair and called up a cup of wine, and that
was all he could think of to do. His mind raced around madly with the
need for action, the need to win against opposition as he had in the
trap, but there was nothing to get a grip on. What he wanted was to
find Chalaine, but how in the name of the Diamond Realm was he
supposed to do that? She'd used magic to keep herself from being
tracked or traced, and if he tried to find her by ordinary searching
it could take years. Even if she didn't move from wherever she
currently was. In a palace the size of that one, someone determined
to stay lost would never be seen again.
Even with the system of
hall messengers. Chalaine didn't have to let herself be seen by any
of them, and that would neutralize them completely. Bariden banished
the wine and called up a brandy, then drank it down with a speed
THC
3Q7
that would have horrified
his old manners teacher. He needed the jolt the brandy would give
him, something— anything!—to clear his thinking. He
refused to give up on the idea of searching, but how in hell was he
supposed to find her... ?
"Ah, Bariden, how
delightful to see you again," a voice said, and then a very
large white rose appeared, hovering just above the floor. The
long-stemmed rose was fresh and beautiful, but it also had two green
eyes that inspected Bariden with amusement.
"ReSayne, is that
you?" he demanded, then shook his head. "No, forget that,
of course it's you. Who else would come visiting as a flower."
"Well, I did say I
would be back once my experiment was finished, and I also said I'd
have another new look." ReSayne didn't raise its brows, but only
because it didn't have brows. "Is something wrong? You seem even
more agitated than the last time we spoke."
"A lot has happened
since then," Bariden muttered in answer, running a hand through
his hair. And then he stopped to stare at the fiend. "Now isn't
that strange. I didn't mink of it even once, and I should have. I
wonder ..."
"Do you mean a lot
has happened with the problem you were working on?" ReSayne
asked, its green eyes concerned. "I'm available to help with it
if you still need me, and I'll wear this beautiful new form. It's so
tiring when people run screaming at the sight of me, but no one runs
screaming from a rose. That's one of the mam reasons I chose it. Tell
me what your problem involves."
"The problem's been
solved," Bariden said, still faintly distracted. There was
something that didn't fit, something strange... "Chalaine and I
were forced into a trap to get us out of the way, but we managed to
get free again and she figured out who was responsible. Master Haddil
is in custody now, waiting for the arrival of wizards from Conclave
to confirm his guilt. They'll also be able to cancel his spell on
whatever drug he fed the victims, and then the healer will be able to
banish it and restore them. Everyone is certain he visited the
victims in person in order to drug them, and once they're able to
speak they should confirm that."
328
"Then why are you
acting so out-of-sorts?" ReSayne asked, hovering fractionally
closer. "You said the name Chalaine—That isn't by any
chance the female you were so interested in, the one who needed to be
pursued? You can't possibly have failed with her when you were so
successful with everything else."
"Why not?"
Bariden asked sourly. "Between her and Miralia, I'm beginning to
feel completely outnumbered. One refuses to believe I love her, and
the other doesn't care if I do as long as everyone thinks I do. Love
her, that is. It's past time that I put my foot down about a few
things, but I have to start with Chalaine and I can't. She's hiding
somewhere in this overdecorated pile of stone, and I can't find her."
"And if I recall
correctly, you said she's a sorceress," ReSayne commented. "It's
very difficult to find a sorceress who doesn't want to be found,
but—Exactly how many sorceresses are there in the palace just
now?"
"As far as I know,
only Chalaine," Bariden responded, sitting up straight. "Do
you think you can find her, ReSayne? For me it would take years, but
for a fiend—! Just find her for me, and I'll do the rest."
"I'm pleased to see
you now have the proper attitude toward personal problems," the
ReSayne flower said with satisfaction. "Knowing you must handle
things yourself is the first step toward success—"
"ReSayne, save the
lectures and homilies for later!" Bariden said impatiently, now
on his feet. "Can you or can you not find her?"
"It's not a question
of can, but of have," ReSayne replied with a sniff. "I know
how upset you are, Bariden, so I forgive your total lack of good
manners—All right, all right! You needn't interrupt me again!
You may or may not know that when I seek for a human, I follow their
trace through—well, you have no word for that. Let's just say I
follow their trace, and when I arrived here in the palace I was
startled to seemingly find you in two places at once. Of course I
realized immediately that the stronger trace was you, and the other
simply something you'd produced. But I was curious, so I went to see
what that something was."
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309
"Something I'd
produced?" Bariden echoed with puzzlement. "But that isn't
possible. I always banish anything I happen to call up, so no one
will find it and get upset. But what can this possibly have to do
with Chalaine?"
"The item with your
trace was a plain, uninteresting thing," ReSayne continued,
almost as though it hadn't heard Bariden. "Made of yellow-brown,
unpolished wood, it's what you humans call a hairbrush. The young
female sorceress was sitting on a stone bench and using it on her
hair, long, dark hair with red all through it. And she had dark, sad
eyes . . ."
"Yes, that's
Chalaine!" Bariden shouted, wishing he could grab the fiend and
shake it hard. "Please, ReSayne, tell me where she is!"
"Locations in human
terms are difficult for me," ReSayne responded soothingly. "I
promise you, Bariden, I am trying. The female sat in a small garden,
spatially close to that very large place of substance
experimentation. You must know the one, where substances of different
sorts are put together with many others, and then subjected to heat
in one fashion or another? The results of the experiments are almost
always taken away, to be disposed of ritual-ly, I think, considering
the intricate workmanship on the containers used. I've never
understood why they produce such large samples with each experiment—"
"The kitchens!"
Bariden pounced with a yell. "She's in a garden near the
kitchens! ReSayne, I owe you!"
And then Bariden was
racing out, incidently banishing the brandy in his system as he went.
He'd need a clear head for what he intended, and now that he knew
Chalaine was in one of two places .. .
The first garden he
checked, beyond the far side of the kitchens, was empty. He'd pretty
much expected that, since only he and the gardeners seemed to know it
was there. It was the second garden his hopes were pinned on, but
when he reached it he didn't hesitate out of fear that it might be
empty. Needing desperately to know, he stepped out—and there
she was. Just as ReSayne had said, sitting on a stone bench all the
way to the left, Chalaine was brushing her hair with her back to the
doorway. The movement of her arm was slow and automatic, as though
her thoughts were
330
SHARON GR€€N
on something else
entirely. Bariden closed the distance between them quietly, then
cleared his throat.
"That's right, it's
me again," he said when she turned quickly and those big,
beautiful eyes widened even more. "I did say I wanted to talk to
you, but you disappeared. Do you mind if we have our talk wow?"
"How did you find
me?" she demanded as he moved around her to sit on the other end
of the bench. "And if you have any questions about what happened
with Master Haddil, just save them for later. Right now I'd rather be
alone."
"Finding you wasn't
hard," Bariden lied, "and what I want to talk about has
nothing to do with Master Haddil. It has to do with us, and it won't
wait until later. Chalaine, you and I have gone through a lot
together, and I think I'm entitled to a frank answer. Can you sit
there and say with complete truth that you don't have any deep
feelings for me? You and I are more of a team than I'd ever dreamed
would be possible with a woman, and I can't bear the thought of
losing that. Actually, I can't bear the thought of losing you, but I
know I'm about to. What can I do to keep it from happening?"
"I'd say everything
possible has already been done," she answered, staring down at
her hands and the brush they held. "You're back where you
belong, and as soon as the wizards from Conclave get here I can go
back to where / belong. I don't find teamwork with a married man very
appealing, especially since the problem we teamed up for has been
solved. And I don't have to guess how your new wife will feel about
having me around. She doesn't approve of that sort of teamwork, and
very frankly neither do I."
"Chalaine, I'm not
engaged," Bariden said forcefully, ready for the point. "My
mother and Miralia got together, and they decided they wanted an
engagement. I was through with Miralia even before I met you, but
she's determined to marry a prince. For my part I want a woman who
doesn't care what I am, only who I am. A woman like you."
"I'm sure you can
find lots of women like me if you start going to Conclave more
often," she said, beginning to get to her feet. "The
Sighted you met when you were young are jerks, but many Sighted
aren't. If you give them a,chance,
THG
331
I'm sure you'll find that
out for yourself. As for me, I'm too stubborn to settle for less than
exactly what I want. I'm sorry, Bariden, but that doesn't happen to
be you."
"Why isn't it me?"
he demanded, also getting to his feet, hope crumbling to dust in his
hands. "Chalaine, I love you more than life. Why isn't it me?"
"What did you say?"
she asked as she looked directly at him, startiement widening her
eyes again. "I thought I heard—No, it must have been my
imagination—or wishful thinking."
The miserable female
actually began to turn away from him again, but now he knew what the
problem was. If he'd had the time he would have cursed himself for an
idiot, but instead he took her arm and pulled her back to him.
"I said I love you
more than life," he repeated, looking down into those big,
beautiful eyes. "Didn't you hear me when I told you that before,
or did you simply not believe it? Right now I want to know if you
feel the same, but I warn you ahead of time: if I hear an answer I
don't like, I'm damned well going to ask again after I speak a truth
spell."
"Don't you have to
know the truth before a truth spell can make you tell it?" she
whispered, raising a hand to touch his cheek with gentle fingertips.
"Isn't it possible that what we feel for each other is just
physical attraction, nothing but plain ordinary lust? Think, Bariden,
and then tell me how well we'd fit into each other's lives. I spend
most of my time alone, studying and living on empty worlds, changing
that only when I go to Conclave. You, on the other hand, are a
prince, used to being at your father's Court. You'd want to stay here
rather than come with me, but—can you _ imagine what everyone
would think and say if they learned you were getting involved with
someone like me? You'd feel defensive and embarrassed, and after a
while—"
Bariden had just started
to interrupt her, knowing what she said wasn't true, but he was
interrupted in turn. Chalaine had undoubtedly avoided the hall
messengers on her way to the garden, but he hadn't seen any reason to
do the same. A really good reason had just come out, though, and was
clearing its throat in a way that wasn't going to stop until its
presence had been acknowledged.
33Q
"All right, Ordran,
what is it?" Bariden snapped, knowing the older man never gave
up until his message was delivered. "Say what you have to, and
then go and make sure I'm not disturbed again."
"Forgive me, Your
Highness, but part of that command isn't possible," Ordran
answered, calmly pleased rather than upset. The man had never hidden
his dislike for the third prince of his king's House, and although
Bariden didn't know why he was disliked by the man, he now found he
didn't care. His days of trying to be pleasant to obnoxious old
messengers were over.
"Well, spit it out!"
he growled, and had the satisfaction of seeing Ordran's smugness
fade. "If you can remember the message, just deliver it. /'//
decide what is and isn't possible."
"I beg your pardon,
Your Highness, but it's the queen who decides," the messenger
returned stiffly, apparently trying to work up the nerve to be nasty.
"Her Majesty your mother commands your immediate appearance in
her reception room, and I'm to escort you there. Without delay."
"And if I do delay,
you'll make sure she knows about it," Bariden said, annoyance
mounting quickly to anger. "Too bad, man, but you won't get the
chance to tell on me. It so happens I want to see her as well, and
now is as good a time as any. Come on, Chalaine, this involves you
too."
He took the woman he loved
by the hand, and led her past the startled messenger and back into
the palace. He'd always gone out of his way to avoid confrontations
and harsh words with his mother, but she'd finally pushed things too
far. He'd force himself to say what she deserved to hear, and then
he'd—he'd—
He didn't know what he
would do, but that didn't matter. As long as he had Chalaine beside
him, all the universe would be his for the taking. And he would have
her beside him, no matter who tried to keep it from happening ...
CHAPTGR
\—.verything was
happening too fast, but I couldn't seem to make it slow down. First
Bariden finds me when I would have sworn it was impossible, then he
actually says he loves me, then he goes trotting out dragging me
behind him ... If I didn't know better, I'd think the EverNameless
were into bad practical jokes ...
I finally got the chance
to catch my breath when we reached the queen's reception room, or at
least its anteroom. No one ever just walked in on the queen, and
there was a fussy official at a desk in the large anteroom to make
sure of that. His face wore that expression common to all ascetics
and most petty tyrants, the expression that says you're beneath their
notice so don't even think about making a fuss. A large number of
people were sitting on the elegant chairs the room contained, and
they all looked up when the official at the desk did.
"Ah, Prince Bariden,"
the official said, grudging the acknowledgment. "I expected you
much sooner than this. The queen commands that you await her pleasure
out here, and she'll see you in your turn. You—Just a moment!
Where do you think you're going?"
By that time we'd finished
crossing the anteroom, and it was obvious where we were going.
Bariden had no intention of waiting around for his "turn,"
a decision that delighted me. From what I'd seen in the last few
minutes, if that was the way they treated a prince around there, he
would have been better off being a commoner.
333
334
WAROM
The double doors ahead of
us were cream trimmed with gold, with matched footmen to either side
of them looking confused. They weren't supposed to open the doors
unless the fussy official gave his approval, but that was the queen's
son heading for them. Not knowing what to do kept them rooted in
place, so I made the decision for them. A flick of my finger opened
the doors without their help, and the next moment we were through
them.
It would have been nice to
have had a minute or two to think about what I was getting into, but
one glance around the queen's reception room said I wouldn't be
getting it. There were a couple of dozen guests in the room and
almost half a dozen servants, and all of them turned to stare at us
as we passed. The smiling group around the queen in her thronelike
chair stopped smiling at our abrupt appearance, as did the queen
herself. Bariden's hand tightened a little around mine, but he didn't
stop until we were right in front of them.
"Mother," he
said with a bow, ignoring everyone else— including the
redheaded Miralia, who stood to the queen's right. "I was told
you wanted to see me."
"What I wanted,
Bariden, was for you to wait like a gentleman until you were given
permission to enter," the woman answered in frigid tones.
Blond-haired and blue-eyed, most people would have considered her
beautiful, especially with her gown and jewels. Outer beauty has
never impressed me much, though, which meant the king's pleasant and
friendly homeliness was much more attractive to me than she could
ever be.
"Sorry, Mother, but I
haven't the time to waste sitting around in your anteroom,"
Bariden answered, sounding bored already. "If you think there
aren't enough people out there, find someone who has nothing better
to do. If that was all—"
"No, that was not
all!" the queen snapped, thrown off-balance by his answer, but
not about to let him walk out again. "I don't know what's gotten
into you, but you will watch your tone with me. And it so happens you
do have something to do with your time, and that's preparing for your
upcoming wedding. Your bride and I will see to the most important
details, but there are any number of things
TH€ HIDDGN
335
perfect for your attention
since they can't possibly be ruined. Knowing your memory, I've had a
list prepared and written down."
"You expect me to be
absentminded about my own wedding?" Bariden asked with a light,
ridiculing laugh while I seethed. If that stupid woman insulted him
one more time ... "No, Mother, my wedding day is something I'm
really looking forward to, since that's the day my beloved and I will
become one. And wasn't that generous of my mother to volunteer to
help with the details, Chalaine? She's so good at this sort of thing,
you'll have nothing to do."
He put an arm around my
shoulders and hugged me warmly, pretending he didn't hear the
concerted gasp from everyone watching. The queen went pale while a
flushed Miralia lost her smirk, but the battle wasn't over. Bariden
had dropped his hornet's nest, but no one had really been stung yet.
"What can you
possibly be talking about?" the queen said at last, scrabbling
inside herself for firmer footing. "You know very well the woman
you'll be marrying is Miralia, so why ever would you mention another
name? Really, Bariden, someone with so miniscule a sense of humor as
you, should know better than to joke in public. It's always taken the
wrong way. Since I announced your betrothal myself this morning, I
should know who your bride is."
"You should, Mother,
but apparently you don't," Bariden said, sounding more
aristocratic than the biggest snob I'd ever met. "Miralia and I
parted company days ago, an action recommended by the healer I
consulted. He said the nights I spent in her bed were putting me in
danger of frostbite."
Miralia's mortified "Oh!"
was drowned out by the laughter from our audience, and this time it
was the queen's turn to flush. She was losing ground rapidly, so she
grabbed for the first point in sight to stop the slide.
"For shame, Bariden!"
she cried, leaning forward with both hands on the arms of her chair.
"You find it amusing to admit to taking a maiden's virtue before
turning your back on her forever? No son of mine has ever been such
336
WACOM GR€€M
a cad, nor will one ever
be! You will honor your unspoken obligation to a lady in proper
marriage, and I'll hear no more on the subject!"
"But surely you'll
tell me who this maiden is that you mention," Bariden
immediately pounced, giving her no chance to follow through on her
dismissal. "Such lofty sentiments should never be wasted, most
especially not on a woman who wasn't a maiden. If she had been, I
wouldn't have touched her."
Miralia was beet red,
obviously wishing she could fall through the floor, and trying hard
not to look in my direction. Considering the conversation we'd had, I
didn't wonder why. Those who make the most noise about virtue are
usually trying to hide the fact that they believe they have none of
it, or wish they had none. I now knew which Miralia was, and in a
little while so would everyone in the palace. But if I expected that
to finish things, the queen had other ideas.
"And I say she was a
maiden, and you did despoil her!" the woman stated, ice forming
on every word. "Will you call me a liar, Bariden? I'm your
mother and your queen. Will you shame yourself even further by
disputing my word? I think not."
The woman was back to
feeling triumph, since even without looking at him I could tell
Bariden wasn't prepared to go that far. It must have cost him a lot
to do as much as he had, and being basically honorable was proving a
terrible handicap for him. He'd never be able to call his mother a
liar no matter how rotten she was being to him— but he wasn't
standing there alone.
"Honestly, Bariden,
your family must live in the dark ages," I said with a laugh,
immediately drawing the queen's glare. "Haven't they ever heard
of a truth spell? Why bother wrangling over who's lying, when
everyone can know for certain? It only takes a minute, after all..."
"Don't you dare!"
the queen shrieked when I lifted my hand, the color coming and going
in her face. "I should have known you were a freak, for like
calls to like, doesn't it? You both make me sick, and I curse the day
I ever gave life to someone so undeserving of it! You've been nothing
but a shame and a disgrace to me, Bariden, and—"
THC HIDDEN
337
"Bullshit!" I
stated, cutting into her tirade with sudden insight. "For a high
and mighty queen, you're a real fool. J Don't you think everyone can
see that it isn't shame but envy eating at you? Bariden was born with
an ability you think you should have had, and all this time you've
been blaming him for your lacks. You should be ashamed of yourself
for putting your son through that kind of hell, but I don't think
you're capable of it. You have to be sensitive and intelligent in
order to feel shame."
"That's a lie!"
the queen finally managed, one hand to her breast. Her face was still
mottled, but her eyes showed the truth. "I am not envious, how
could I be? Who would want to be a freak, when they could be a queen?
And he's my son, so the ability must have come from me\ That counts
even more than—than—"
"Sorry, lady, but it
doesn't work like that," I said, feeling no more pity for her
than she'd felt for Bariden. "Wizards have studied the matter,
and they tell us that if a woman carries the sleeping seed, all her
children are born with it. If only one or two of the children show
talent, it comes from the father. The only thing you gave your son is
his hair and eye color. AH the rest, including his goodness, comes
from his father."
Bariden's arm tightened
around me at that, but the queen didn't notice. She slumped back in
her chair, and there was still nothing to show she felt ashamed.
Bitterness now twisted that outwardly beautiful face, and I could see
she'd never accept what I'd told her. She'd decide at last that I was
lying, and would spend the rest of her life feeling cheated of what
she considered her due.
"Get out of my
sight," she muttered at last, looking at neither Bariden nor me.
"It sickens me to have to see you, and I never want to do so
again. Get out!"
"I feel really sorry
for you, Mother," Bariden said quietly. "Now that I
understand, I can finally feel sorry for you."
He took my hand again, and
we walked out through absolute silence. To their credit, most of the
men and women in the room looked sympathetic, but not for the queen's
position. Miralia had stood frozen beside the woman she'd thought
would make her a princess, and she hadn't looked
338
SHARON
sorry for anyone but
herself. Her plans had probably included goading Bariden into
challenging his brother for the throne once their father was gone,
and now she would neve*, be a queen either. I usually approve of
ambition in people, but not at the cost of other people's lives and
happiness.
"What now?" I
asked Bariden once we were out in the hall. "You ought to tell
your father about this, just so he knows and can be prepared."
"I have the feeling
my father already knows," Bariden said, nibbing the back of his
neck with one broad hand. "It must be the reason he always gave
me so much love and understanding. He knew I would never get it from
my mother. I've always felt he knows a lot of things he doesn't talk
about, including the fact that this blowup had to come sometime. The
only part of it I regret is what I had to say about Miralia. I
shouldn't have had to humiliate her in order to defend myself."
"You wouldn't have
had to defend yourself if she hadn't tried an ambush," I
countered. "You can't jump out in attack at people, and not
expect the possibility of getting whacked yourself. She has nothing
to complain about, and you're just being a sweet but softheaded
idiot."
"Well, at least you
added 'sweet,' " he said with a short laugh. "If I have to
be thought of as an idiot, that's the kind I prefer."
"It was my pleasure,"
I said with a matching smile. "We aim to please, but I do have
to repeat: now what?"
"Now we get married,"
he answered, putting both arms around me but not pulling me close.
"You asked me a lot of questions before we were interrupted by
my mother's spite, and now I'm going to answer them. Can it be a
physical attraction we feel for each other? Sure it can, because mat
attraction is there, but you're not the first pretty girl I've ever
been involved with. Can you honestly say you've never associated with
a man who was considered handsome?"
I was forced to shake my
head at that, since lying would have been a waste of time. One look
at Hannar—my former lover and current friend who would soon be
unfrozen—and most women melt into a sizzling puddle. And Hannar
hadn't been the first—or the best.
THe HIDDGM RGALM9
339
"So that takes care
of the physical," Bariden continued after my headshake. "You
also asked how people would react if I announced I was getting
involved with you, and I saw the answer to that just a few minutes
ago. Most of the men in that room had naked envy on their faces, an
expression that stayed there even when they learned you were
Sighted."
"Then I'm glad I
didn't look," I mumbled, beginning to feel very cornered.
"Strange men and naked expressions ..."
"Stop that," he
scolded gently. "You wanted the truth, and you're getting it.
The last objection you had was about where we would live, and the
answer to mat is, I don't give a damn as long as we're together. It
probably won't be here, not after that scene with my mother, but
we'll find a place to suit us both after the wedding."
"Bariden, stop saying
that," I objected, one step away from squirming. "You still
don't know what you're getting into with me, so we can't jump into
marriage. We'll live together for a while, and then, if you manage to
survive—"
"Chalaine, we have
lived together for a while," he counterobjected, but without the
squirming. "I refuse to spend years or decades waiting for some
nebulous 'something' to happen to me. What in the worlds are you
afraid of?"
"I'm not afraid, and
it isn't nebulous," I insisted, finding it was possible to be
even more uncomfortable than I'd been. "Hannar wasn't worried
either, but if I hadn't thrown him out he wouldn't have lived long
enough for us to be friends. I—have an effect on people I
associate with, especially Sighted people, and they tend to have ...
accidents. Like you with that sphere of water, when we first met. And
believe me, that's only the mildest of examples."
"That's not right,"
he said with a sudden frown. "Don't you remember, it—"
"Excuse me, Your
Highness," a voice interrupted, but this time it was a
respectful voice. "I regret the intrusion, but I have a message
from the king."
Bariden turned his head to
look at the second messenger to bother us in less than two hours, but
his reaction wasn't
34O
CHARON
the same as it had been
with the first.
"That's all right,
Stollen, I understand. What's the message?"
"His Majesty asks
that you attend him in his private audience chamber," the man
Stollen answered. "He also asks that it be as soon as you find
convenient, since there's still one part of your joint problem
remaining unresolved. He said you would know what he meant."
"I think I may know
even more than that," Bariden murmured, his expression
distracted. "Thank you, Stollen. Please tell my father that I'll
be right there."
The messenger bowed and
then took off, but Bariden stood where he was, obviously thinking.
Since his arms were still around me I couldn't quite think of it as a
waste of time, but I was suddenly curious.
"What could he mean
by saying one part of the problem is unresolved?" I asked. "With
Master Haddil caught and the mystery solved, what could be left?
Maybe he's talking about a different problem, one you and he have
privately."
"No, it's the same
problem," he answered with a headshake that banished his
distraction. "It must be time to clear up all those loose ends,
the ones I've just begun noticing. I'm glad they didn't wait until I
began tripping over them. Come on, Chalaine, let's go get our
answers."
"What answers?"
I demanded as he took my hand and led off again. "And who are
'they'? Bariden, answer me. Who are 'they'?"
He didn't answer, but
after just a few minutes I no longer needed him to. A guardsman
admitted us to a small, comfortable room done in leather and polished
wood, obviously the private audience chamber we'd been told about.
The king was there, sitting in an ordinary, high-backed chair
upholstered in butter yellow leather, and one of those with him was
Master Haddil.
Bariden felt Chalaine
coming to an involuntary stop at sight of Master Haddil, but he'd
been expecting the wizard to be there. He got Chalaine moving again,
guided her to a deep leather chair and into it, then turned to bow to
his
THG
341
father. King Agilar waved
away the courtesy, and gestured to the chair next to Chalaine's.
"Just make yourself
comfortable, Bariden," he said in his plain, warm way. "We've
dispensed with formalities for the moment, so we can just get on with
it. Between you and Chalaine, you should know everyone here."
"I know Tramfeor,"
Bariden said, nodding to the wizard as he sat. It had been years, but
of course the man hadn't changed at all. Black hair, light eyes, a
ready smile, and a tali, athletic body . .. "Chalaine, Tramfeor
is a wizard I met a long time ago, when I was still a boy. Master
Haddil was away from the kingdom then so he didn't stay long, but he
did spend some time talking to me. He's also the one who gave me the
Spell of Affinity."
Chalaine's startled glance
told him she was already heading up the right path, only a short
distance behind him. Master Haddil was looking comfortable and
pleased, which was another thing he'd expected. The fourth man, a
Sighted, was someone he didn't recognize, but evidently Chalaine did.
"And I know
Addadain," she said, indicating the small, frail-looking Sighted
who had light brown hair and gray eyes. "He's a wizard I met at
Conclave years ago, who decided to unofficially adopt me. He let me
test myself against his strength whenever I learned something new in
the way of combat magic, and never took it easy on me or let me get
sloppy. He would even listen to my troubles occasionally, and showed
superhuman restraint by never telling me what to do about my
problems."
"That wasn't
restraint, that was cowardice," the small Addadain answered with
a laugh, his voice hardier than his appearance. "Suggesting
things to a woman isn't quite as dangerous as offending a demon or a
fiend, but all too often the results become exactly the same."
"Speaking of fiends,
aren't we missing someone from this group?" Bariden asked while
the others chuckled. "ReSayne was a large part of this, so
shouldn't it be here?"
"You seem to be
catching up to us rather quickly, Bariden," Tramfeor said, his
light eyes filled with approval. "Yes, ReSayne should be here,
and it is. Would you like to join us more obviously, my friend?"
34Q
SHARON
"I suppose I might as
well," ReSayne's voice came with a sigh, and a section of the
brown, yellow, and blue carpeting suddenly showed two leaf green
eyes. "I had the feeling he was already beginning to understand
when he ran out to find the female, but I might have been wrong.
Since he showed no surprise at all when he walked in here, it's clear
I wasn't."
"I met ReSayne a
number of years ago," Bariden explained to Chalaine alone, no
one else appearing surprised at the fiend's presence. "It told
me I'd done it a favor, and was therefore beholden to me. I tried
several times to find out what the favor could possibly have been,
but never managed to get an answer. What I did get, though, was a way
to call it if I had a problem or found myself in trouble. Hearing
that, you should be asking the same question I asked myself when
ReSayne popped up again right after we got back."
"The question being,
why didn't you think to call it when we were trapped in that cycle of
worlds," Chalaine supplied promptly with a nod. "Could the
answer possibly be related to the reason you didn't know my name?"
"You mean something
like a selective forget-spell?" Bariden replied with brows high
and eyes wide. "So that even when I mentioned the special
warding spell a—'friend'—had taught me, I couldn't
remember I was able to contact that friend no matter where I was?
Why, Chalaine, whoever could have done that to me?"
He noticed out of the
corner of his eye that she joined him in looking silently toward the
three wizards, but most of his attention was on them. Tramfeor
shifted in his chair and cleared his throat, Addadain brushed at
invisible lint on his blue trousers, and Master Haddil—Master
Haddil— grinned then laughed out loud.
"These last few days
have been more fun than I've had in ages," the wizard said
without the least shame, casually smoothing at his yellow robe. "Once
this is over, Your Majesty, I really will have to see about finding a
temporary replacement for myself. The last decades made me dull and
stiff without my realizing it, but now it's time to revive. When I
return, I'll be the same fun-loving fellow I was in your father's
day."
TH€ HIDDGh RGALW
343
The king did nothing but
nod agreement and try to hide his amusement, and that was beyond too
much. With a growl, Bariden started to get out of his chair, but
Tramfeor stood faster and waved him back.
"Now, now, let's not
lose our tempers and start something we'll all regret," he said
to Bariden, then turned to look at his brother wizard. "Please,
Haddil, try to remember how you would feel if all you saw was what
had been done. Until these young people are told why they were put
through Hellfire, their anger is more than justified."
"If they had any idea
how successful they've been, they would be stiff-necked with pride
rather than anger," Haddil returned, then waved a hand. "But
you're right, of course, Tramfeor, and I apologize for my outburst.
Go ahead and tell them what we've been up to."
"For that I'll have
to start some years back," Tramfeor agreed, turning again to
Bariden and Chalaine. "In those days we had two problems, and
since we didn't yet know the same solution would serve bom, we
handled them separately. Since I was the one involved with you,
Bariden, I'll start with you."
Bariden watched wordlessly
as the wizard went back to his chair, but his mind clanged with
everything he had to say. He'd listen to their explanation, but if he
wasn't fully satisfied afterward, their being wizards might not save
them...
"The problem brought
to my attention concerned a young Sighted prince in a predominantly
untalented kingdom," Tramfeor went on once he'd gotten
comfortable again in his chair. "If he'd been an ordinary boy we
would have convinced his parents to allow fostering, and his foster
.parents would have been carefully chosen Sighted. As it was, the
suggestion wasn't even made to his father. There was no Sighted king
available, and the boy had a right to grow up as the prince he was.
"So a careful eye was
kept on him by the Court wizard, who also helped to train his talent.
He became altogether too good with mundane weapons, but that
shouldn't have mattered. What mundane weapon, after all, could
possibly equal the skilled use of magic? It struck me as nothing more
than odd, and I stepped in personally only when I
344
9HARON
was told about the young
man's attraction for the fairer sex. It would never do to have some
ambitious young untalented lady claim his heart, and then use him and
his gifts to gain advantage for herself. With that in mind I gave him
the Spell of Affinity, expecting that he would begin to visit
Conclave on a regular basis, and there discover that Sighted women
had a much greater affinity for a man in his position.
"Unfortunately,"
and Tramfeor's sigh was heavy, "the young man developed a strong
dislike for Conclave and didn't visit at all, not to mention on any
regular basis. He also did almost no traveling, preferring to remain
at his father's Court. His studies in magic progressed, however, and
he was provided with a confidante he might discuss things with. His
close association with humans was virtually nonexistent, and ReSayne
proved to be perfect. The young man had little trouble being open
with a fiend, and occasionally even took its advice.
"But by men our
problem was growing critical rather than resolving itself."
Tramfeor got to his feet and started pacing, his brow wrinkled in
concentration. "The young man should have already been going out
among the worlds, testing his strength as a magic user, deciding in
what direction to follow life first. Instead he stayed resolutely at
home, rarely used his considerable magic talent, and was unhappy in
the extreme. To make matters worse there were rumors in the kingdom,
whispered fears that he meant to challenge his eldest brother for
their father's throne. In such a matter his brother would have to
face him personally, and everyone knew the elder prince would have no
chance even if magic wasn't used. There was that unimportant point
about his ability with mundane weapons, you'll recall...
"And so there was a
heated debate at Conclave, among those of us charged with protecting
Sighted and unSighted alike." Tramfeor's sigh was lighter this
time, and he stopped to gaze at Bariden. "Some members of our
group insisted that you be removed immediately from this kingdom,
told that you would not be permitted to take over, and then sent on
your way. Those of us who thought we knew you best disagreed,
insisting that you had no intention of taking over, and where in the
worlds would you be sent on your
THG HIDDGD
345
way tol Another, smaller
segment had a suggestion there, one that quieted us all and made us
think. But before we came to any definite decisions, Addadain stepped
forward with his own problem, and described how it impinged on ours.
Addadain, would you be so good as to continue?"
The small, frail-looking
sorcerer stirred in his chair, but made no attempt to get up as
Tramfeor had. Bariden noticed that Chalaine also stirred, but he
didn't reach out a hand to her as he wanted to. What Tramfeor had
said about his being such a problem—he'd had absolutely no
idea, and now that he did, he wasn't sure how he should feel . . .
"My part of the story
starts years ago too," Addadain began, his mild gray gaze on
Chalaine. "I was asked to make the acquaintance of a young
visitor to Conclave, a girl who came on a regular basis but who
rarely mingled. Before I approached her I was told a few things, and
what I heard I didn't like. The girl had lost her parents at an early
age, both of whom had been Sighted. But her mother had been the first
in her line to be Sighted, and therefore had a large mundane fortune
from her family. For that reason the mother's cousins claimed
immediate custody of the girl, greasing their way through the courts
with gold. They had their eye on increasing their fading wealth by
taking control of the girl's fortune, the only way some unSighted
find it possible to prosper. When the girl's father's people found
out what had happened, they tried to make arrangements through
Conclave to have the girl fostered with one of them. The cousins,
however, visions of gold and property dazzling them, refused to even
consider the idea."
"And they also never
told me anyone had made the offer," Chalaine put in, anger in
her voice. "Not even after they found out my mother had
protected me from being robbed blind."
"Yes, a nasty,
vindictive lot," Addadain agreed, his gray eyes sharing her
anger. "And we, being bound by our own rules, were forbidden to
interfere—at least overtly. Privately we made sure you had
someone capable to begin your training in magic, but it wasn't
possible to protect you from the venom of those who blamed you for
their poor planning and jealousy. Isn't it too bad their nastiness
produced a result that turned around and bit them."
346
Addadain grinned, enjoying
the thought of whatever he referred to, but Chalaine stiffened in
silence. She wasn't happy about whatever had happened, but Bariden
could see that Addadain hadn't noticed.
"The result I'm
talking about was the stimulation of a rare—offshoot talent, I
suppose you could call it—in their victim," Addadain said
to his audience with a measure of quiet satisfaction. "I think
everyone here is familiar with the concept of an accident-prone,
someone who falls into every accident and mishap that comes past. The
young girl's offshoot talent was to bring out that condition in
others, so that if someone slipped on a wet floor, say, they didn't
simply recover their balance or fall down. In trying to recover their
balance, their windmilling arms would knock down treasured vases or
lamps, or send an expensive, carefully prepared meal to splatter on
the floor, or ruin the balance of someone standing next to them. If
they fell there was usually a cascade of things that went with them,
and the fall itself was both painful and embarrassing. The girl's
guardians took as much of that as they could, then agreed to let her
go to Conclave just to get her out of range for a while.
"And that should have
helped immensely, but it didn't," Addadain said, borrowing one
of Tramfeor's sighs. "At Conclave the girl discovered mat
Sighted were even more susceptible to her talent than mundanes, and
also that she had no real control over when the talent exercised
itself. She even began to learn Hellfire combat, and there was never
a problem. But just let someone pass a joking remark, and there was a
good chance that someone would not make it away from Conclave
undamaged. It didn't happen every time, mind you, but at least as
often as not."
Now Chalaine was staring
down at her hands, a slender, unmoving figure carved out of misery.
So that was what she'd been worried about, Bariden realized, the
terrible threat she'd been trying to warn him against. He reached out
a hand to stroke her hair, forcing himself not to say anything. The
wrong words could only make things worse, and he didn't yet know what
the right ones were.
"And, of course,
since gold attracts gold but problems attract complications, there
was another dimension soon
The
347
added to the trouble,"
Addadain continued. "The girl became a pretty young woman, and
the young men at Conclave quickly noticed. The unfortunate part about
that was the young lady's seeming air of helplessness and
vulnerability, which made the young men react in one of two ways.
Either they tried to take advantage of her innocence, or they
immediately became concerned and protective. With two reactions one
should have been better than the other, but in this case one was as
bad as the other.
"To begin with, our
young lady's background had left her neither innocent nor helpless.
Those who tried to take advantage of her learned that rather quickly,
and I don't think I have to go into details about what happened to
most of them. But most of those who tried to be overly protective met
a similar fate. Our young lady had developed a strong attitude of
independence, and being smothered was something she couldn't accept.
For a short while you wouldn't believe what a disaster area Conclave
turned into ..."
Addadain shook his head,
not in the least amused, and Tramfeor apparently shared the feeling.
They both must have been there to see it, Bariden thought, and that's
why they know it wasn't something to laugh at.
"Well, the ripples in
probability caused by the young lady's talent had to be allowed to
settle down, so I arranged for her to study with Haddii,"
Addadain went on. "It was something she had already decided on
for herself, having once met Haddii at Conclave. It was time for her
to change teachers anyway, and the greatest benefit to the
arrangement was that Haddii did his teaching here, in King Agilar's
palace. The young lady would finally get away from the family she'd
been forced to live with, and would also attend .Conclave only when
her study schedule permitted it. It seemed ideal, and Haddii jumped
at the chance to take her on. Haddii, it's now your turn."
"Obviously,"
Master Haddii agreed, still comfortable. "When I heard about
Chalaine's unusual talent I wanted to study it, and when I finally
met her to talk to for longer than five minutes, I also wanted to
teach her. She obviously had a large amount of potential, and was not
only willing, but eager to train it. She was nervous when I
interviewed her and just short of unsure of herself, and I decided on
the spot
348
9HARON GR€€N
to do nothing to calm her.
I wanted to see her special talent come into play, you understand,
and so couldn't afford to become friendly with her. That might have
inhibited the talent, and I was confident I could protect myself from
any overly serious consequences. After all, I was a wizard, and
Addadain seemed to have no trouble coping . . ."
Master Haddil's expression
had turned wry, causing Addadain and Tramfeor to chuckle. So it
hadn't been as easy as he'd expected . . .
"No, Prince Bariden,
it wasn't as easy as I expected it to be," Master Haddil
confirmed, reading Bariden's expression. "I hadn't known, for
instance, that Addadain had been chosen to comfort and companion the
girl because he seemed to have a resistance to that sort of thing.
And he and Chalaine had grown close, an added factor in the matter of
his protection. I had neither of those two factors working for me,
and I'll never forget the time I first encountered the talent I
wanted to study—head-on. And if you laugh out loud, Chalaine,
you have my solemn promise that I'll turn you into the ever-popular
frog. An orange and purple frog."
"Oh, be a sport,
Haddii," Tramfeor urged while Addadain laughed and Chalaine
choked trying not to. "I never heard that story, and I'm certain
Bariden hasn't either. How about you, Your Majesty? Did you hear
anything about it?"
"I'm afraid I saw the
results, and I'd really dislike being turned into a frog," King
Agilar said as he fought not to grin. "It might be best if we
dropped the subject and moved on."
"Just remember what
curiosity did to the cat," Master Haddil warned Tramfeor, more
than a little amused himself. "Oh, all right. It was the most
unbelievable thing, and I was totally unprepared. We have a really
great artist living in this kingdom, and she'd asked me to do her a
favor. She'd come across paints on an artifact from a dead world, and
was so taken by them that she was desperate to try them in her work.
She promised to pay me with a painting of my own if I examined the
composition of the paints and made some for her, so I gladly agreed.
I already had one of her paintings and treasured it...
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"Well, I'm sure you
can guess what happened. I examined the paint and produced buckets of
every shade I could See or extrapolate, completely forgetting that
I'd scolded Chalaine that morning for being less than perfect in a
lesson. The scolding had been deliberately severe and unjust because
I hadn't seen hide nor hair of the talent I wanted to study, and I
was growing impatient. Did I mention that the paints were indelible
dyes of the consistency of glue, that while I was working I was
brought the four large, very delicate feather pillows the queen
wanted me to reinforce with magic, and that the messengers bringing
the pillows didn't know they were opening my workroom door to
Princess Efria's four cats who were being chased by Prince Trayden's
two wolfhounds?"
"No, oh, no,"
Tramfeor begged, holding up both hands as he laughed so hard the
tears flowed down his face. "Please, no more! I can't stand it!"
"I think I did hear
something about that," Bariden remarked, privately delighted
that Chalaine had gotten even for being treated unfairly in such
an—interesting— way. "Everyone wondered why you
didn't simply banish the mess, and so did I."
"Banishing isn't very
easy when your mouth is full of feathers, your hands are glued to
your worktable, and there's bedlam raging all around," Master
Haddil answered dryly. "I was covered head to toe with paint and
feathers, and the messengers were completely involved with trying to
chase the dogs and cats out of my workroom. If King Agilar hadn 't
happened by, wondered what the uproar was about, then had the good
sense to send for my most senior apprentice .. . Well, as I say, I'll
never forget the time." . "Bariden happened to be away from
the palace that day, attending some sort of mock battle the kingdom's
troops were staging," Addadain put in, his eyes sparkling. "I
remember we eventually checked up on that, just to be absolutely
certain."
"Certain of what?"
Bariden asked, feeling confused. "You didn't think I was
involved in that? Not that it wouldn't have been a classic case of
comeuppance ..."
"Now, now, Your
Highness, I paid for my mistake," Master Haddil scolded mildly.
"The last thing I need is for
350
you to feel you must
avenge the injustice done your lady. And as for the thing we wanted
to be certain of, that's a very important part of the story. You see,
Chalaine's talent reached me a number of times over the years, and
although only the first instance was so very spectacular, there was
no doubt about the other times. 1 conferred with Addadain on a
regular basis, and almost by accident we discovered the one thing
those few but definite instances had in common: every time, for one
reason or another, you were gone from the palace."
"What could that
possibly have had to do with it?" Bariden asked, exchanging a
confused glance with Chaiaine. "We didn't even know each other
at the time, so it has to be a case of incredible coincidence."
"It wasn't,"
Tramfeor stated. "They found out because I'd stopped by to speak
with Haddil about you, and I had a list of your activities over the
past year supplied by ReSayne. I wanted to be sure Haddil realized
how infrequently you left the palace, but seeing the dates made him
realize something else entirely. He kept complete records of his
incidents with Chalaine's talent, and the two lists matched exactly.
The only times he had trouble were those times you were away from the
palace."
"But—that
doesn't make any sense," Chaiaine protested while Bariden simply
stared. "Even Addadain was affected once or twice, and if he
hadn't convinced me he firmly believed I wasn't responsible—Are
you saying you think Bariden somehow—cancels out the effect I
have on people?"
"There's no doubt
about it," Addadain reassured her with a smile. "Haddil and
I conducted a few experiments, and the point was proven conclusively.
As long as Bariden is around, no one has to worry about accidents."
"Ha, you see?"
Bariden told her, really delighted now. "I knew you were wrong
when you used mat sphere-of-water example to prove how dangerous it
is for me to be around you. Don't you remember that you yourself said
Master Haddil staged the incident? Since you can't have it both ways,
and I happen to believe what you said about Master Haddil, they're
telling us the truth. As long as I'm around, you don't have to worry
about causing people problems."
THE HIDDEN R€ALM9
351
"But that isn't
entirely true," Chaiaine said, frowning in disagreement. "I
distinctly remember seeing that miserable talent work while we were
still in the trap. It was in that last world, when I used a bow while
you went after those six swordsmen by yourself. Or didn't you notice
that two arrows knocked four of them out of play almost immediately?"
"Yes, I noticed, but
I was too relieved to worry about it," Bariden admitted with his
own frown. "You like to think something like that will happen if
you're badly outnumbered, but it rarely does. When it not only
happened but actually saved my life, I refused to ask the gift to
open its mouth."
"Why didn't someone
tell me that happened?" Master Haddil suddenly demanded of
Tramfeor and Addadain. "That's absolutely marvelous! Don't you
understand what it means? It means that instead of completely
canceling out the ability, Prince Bariden may be holding it still
long enough for Chaiaine to begin to exert control over it! If that
proves to be true, it will add enormously to their assets for what
they'll attempt."
"Haddil, they haven't
agreed to attempt anything yet," Tramfeor warned after no more
than a glance at Bariden. "Let's finish the preliminaries, and
then we can get on to the rest. Really, Bariden, we aren't doing it
this way just to annoy you. You first have to understand what's
involved before you can make decisions."
"That isn't entirely
true," Bariden felt compelled to comment in what was almost a
growl. "If I become convinced we're getting a runaround, I can
decide I've heard enough and ask Chaiaine to leave with me. After
that you might compel us to stay, but you can bet we won't go along
with whatever it is you have in mind."
"And yes, it's become
obvious that you do have something in mind," Chaiaine said,
clearly backing him up. "But if you take much longer in getting
to the point, we'll be too old to go along with you."
"No wonder they did
so well," Master Haddil commented to his brother wizards. "They
immediately present a united front to opposition—All right, all
right, I'm getting on with it! Now where was I? Oh yes, the
discovery. Well, once
359
WAGON
we were certain Bariden
could keep the worlds safe from Chalaine, we took the obvious next
step. We didn't know why Bariden was able to do what he did, but we
wanted him to do it permanently from then on. So we arranged
'accidental' meetings between the two of you, in the hope that nature
would then take its course."
"But we never met,"
Bariden protested, then looked at Chalaine. "At least I don't
remember our ever meeting. Please don't tell me I just nodded in
passing and then kept going."
"If you did, then I
must have done the same," Chalaine assured him, then looked back
to the wizards. "Unless the meeting was a disaster, and you made
us forget it."
"No, there was no
need to arrange for any forgetting," Master Haddil said, taking
his turn at sighing. "Every single arrangement we made fell
through, and you can't imagine how maddening it was. If you were
available, Prince Bariden, something came up that kept Chalaine
occupied. If you were available, Chalaine, Prince Bariden got caught
up. At one point the two of you were a single room apart, and the
combined efforts of three determined wizards were unable to bring you
together. We tried again and again and again, and then Chalaine was
through with her studies and left. Now that, my friends, is more than
simple bad luck. Something was telling us it didn't want you two
together."
"At that time,"
Tramfeor added hastily, undoubtedly noticing Bariden's expression.
"We were so upset and confused that we went beyond Conclave to
the Hidden Realm, and applied for a consultation appointment with one
of the Elder Ones. We can discuss this here because die room is
sealed, and King Agilar has allowed us to render him incapable of
repeating anything he hears. I'm sure you two know who the Elder Ones
are, even though no one ever speaks of them."
Bariden nodded as he
exchanged a glance with Chalaine, seeing that she also showed
agreement. All Sighted knew about the Elder Ones, but also refrained
from ever discussing them. Most wizards lived a very long time and
then died, but every once in a while there was a wizard who didn't
die. He or she kept learning and learning, and one
TH€ HIDDEN
353
day they were admitted to
the ranks of the Elder Ones. It was said quite clearly that you just
had to be able to do one particular thing, and your admission was
automatic. What that one thing was had never been mentioned to or by
anyone, but once you reached a certain level it was supposed to be
obvious.
And the Elder Ones didn't
hide out, or indulge in esoteric pastimes for their inferiors to gasp
at in awe. The joke of the Hidden Realm was that it was easily
accessible to every Sighted, and if you wanted an appointment you put
your name on a list. In a few days you were told, by messenger
sphere, when to show up and at what time, and when you got there you
spoke to one of the Elder Ones. It was said they looked like the most
ordinary people except that they were nicer and more pleasant, but
the power they must be able to wield . . . ! If the thought made a
Sighted too nervous to want to consider it long, no one in the
universe wanted the untalented to find out about them. Safer to start
a rumor that the EverNameless were on a rampage ...
"We were given an
appointment with the Elder Ones, but we couldn't make ourselves stop
fretting," Tramfeor went on. "We'd been so certain we had a
solution to Chalaine's problem, even though we couldn't see how the
arrangement would do Bariden any good—aside from the obvious,
of course. We had to wait months, and the worst part was the message
that came along with the appointment information. It said, 'Do
nothing further,' and couldn't have referred to anything but the
joint project we'd been working on. That meant the Elder Ones already
knew all about it, and might even have their own interest in the
matter."
"By the time the
appointment rolled around, we were all but quivering wrecks,"
Addadain said with a grin, taking up the narrative. "It wasn't
too farfetched to assume we'd been messing in something the Elder
Ones had a finger in, and we had no idea how they would take it. The
consultation room was pleasant but ordinary, and before we had a
chance to sit at the table, a woman entered through another door. She
was small and slender and quite lovely, and her smile put us
immediately at ease."
"She wasn't that
small," Tramfeor contributed, "but she
354
was definitely beautiful
and very gracious."
"She wasn't small at
all," Master Haddil added his own, "but she definitely had
an air of artistic beauty."
"At any rate,"'
Addadain recaptured the floor with the phrase, "we sat and
presented our problem. We also apologized if we'd intruded in
something she or one of the other Elder Ones had been involved with,
but she laughed and brushed the apology aside.
" 'After all,' she
said, 'how could you possibly have known? And if we can't make things
go the way they should no matter who interferes, we don't deserve to
be directing. And that's all we're doing, just directing certain
scenes to make the action flow more smoothly, which will make the
play a success.'
" 'Play?' I echoed.
'Are you saying we should consider life a play?'
" *Not at all,' she
returned with a smile. 'That's just a handy conceit some of us use,
to make it easier to understand what we're doing. Nothing in life is
inevitable, but some outcomes have a higher probability than others.
And some outcomes are more beneficial to everyone, high probability
or not. If you can trace an event far enough into the future, seeing
its impact on everything involved with it, it's sometimes possible to
know whether that event is generally good or generally bad. If you
and all your confreres agree on one or the other, you might then want
to make sure that event does or doesn't occur. But you never jump
into the action, and you never take your eyes off the future. If
something unexpected happens, and all too often it does, that can
change everything.'
" 'I don't think I'd
care to get involved with something that complex,' I told her,
meaning every word. 'Is that what we were interfering with, a
beneficial change of the future?'
" 'Oh, goodness, no,'
she answered with a laugh. 'This is just a small segment of
probability, a side trail that will affect only a small number of
people. Ignoring the situation would move it into the mainstream and
cause a few unpleasant occurrences, so we're directing the action
into the best probable path. There are no guarantees of happy
solutions on that path, but it does keep the major players
THG
355
out of mischief on the
mainstream path.'
" 'How much of it are
we permitted to know?' I asked, and she smiled again and told me. I
think she smiled because of the way I put my question, assuming she
had the right to know things I didn't. The truth of the matter, which
I finally saw after thinking about the interview, is that she has the
ability to see things I don't. If I were to develop the ability I
could see them too, and 'right' doesn't enter into it anywhere."
"Which is fine for
philosophical discussions, but not for explanations," Master
Haddil said firmly, then looked at Bariden and Chalaine. "We
were told you two may not be the best possible match for each other,
but finding anything better would be harder than looking for that
needle in its haystack. You'll be happy together for the rest of your
lives, and so forth, but first the two of you needed proof about
that. And you needed to show what you're made of, if you were going
to have a chance at what the Elder Ones had to offer."
"And that's why we
all dreamed up that little charade," Tramfeor took over. "If
you two managed to get together after a start like that, even you
would have to admit you were meant for each other. King Agilar's help
was invaluable, of course, and he understands fully what's at stake.
Haddil did all the dirty work, first providing victims and then
scaring off most of the help he supposedly needed so desperately. You
and Chalaine were guaranteed to stick with it, Bariden, so all we had
to do next was toss you two into that trap."
"Before Chalaine
discovered who the main culprit was," Master Haddil put in with
a chuckle. "I went to incredible extremes in order to cover my
tracks, but Chalaine has picked up more forensic sorcery than I've
had the time for. I was very proud of you, my dear, when you
reconstructed everything so neatly, then refused to let me make you
feel unsure of your conclusions. The ability to figure out what's
going on is all but useless without the courage to present your
conclusions against opposition."
"And now we're up to
mat trap itself," Bariden said while Chalaine smiled wryly at
Master Haddil's compliments. "If we were tossed in there to get
to know each other rather than
356
to keep us out of the way,
why were all those worlds so— strange and complicated? And why
more than one world to begin with? A single room with no way out and
nothing to divert us would probably have gotten us together a lot
sooner."
"Well, getting you
together wasn't the only purpose of setting you on that circuit,"
Addadain admitted, smoothly picking up the next part of it. He'd
called up a cup of something for himself, as had Tramfeor and
Chalaine, but Master Haddil was sharing the wine that had been put in
front of King Agilar by a servant before they'd started talking.
Bariden considered joining Master Haddil and his father in sampling
the wine, but mentally shook his head and called up coffee instead.
That discussion was far from over, and something told him he couldn't
afford to be anything less than completely alert.
"And we had nothing
to do with creating or accessing those worlds," Addadain
continued. "That part of it was arranged by the Elder Ones, for
purposes we don't completely understand. The arrangement tested you
in some way, tested each of you individually as well as together, and
we had no way of judging good from better. All we could do was supply
one of us to help out."
"And that one was
ReSayne," Bariden said, then enjoyed seeing their surprise,
including the fiend's. The green eyes in the section of carpeting had
been following the narration closely, and now rose up into the air
surrounded by gray-blue smoke.
"How in the worlds
did you know that?" ReSayne demanded, one step short of
outraged. "My performances were perfect, and even the Elder Ones
said so!"
"Your performances
and transformations were perfect," Bariden allowed, feeling only
partial amusement. "It was your ego that stuck out like a
bandaged thumb, both before, during, and after the fact. You couldn't
tell me what you were doing but you still wanted me to know, so you
waved a bunch of clues under my nose. I still don't understand why
you did it."
"I did it because
we're Mends, and even though the deceptions were for your own good, I
didn't feel right about lying to you." ReSayne spoke quietly and
without affecta-
THG HIDD€N REALTI?
357
tion, something Bariden
had never seen it do before. "I've gotten to know you better
than most fiends do humans, and I couldn't bring myself to betray you
completely. If what I did helped ease your mind at all... did you
figure it out before or after you came back?"
"After," Bariden
answered, wondering if the fiend was finally being honest, or simply
manipulating him again. "The key to it was the lame way you gave
me directions to where Chalaine was after I lost her trail. All that
roundabout description of the kitchens, as though a fiend would have
no idea what the area was or what it was used for. Was I supposed to
have forgotten that the first thing you did when I summoned you at
the start of this, was criticize my eating habits? If you know enough
about food that you know what should or shouldn't go with duck a
1'orange, how can you not know about kitchens?"
"And what were the
clues that told you ReSayne was involved in the circuit?"
Addadain asked while the fiend simply looked amused.
"That part of it was
very subtle," Bariden said sourly. "The first time it
showed up after my summons, it was surrounded by the gaudiest clash
of colors I've ever been blinded by in my life. When I mentioned
that, ReSayne gave in immediately and changed itself to a chair. At
the end of the conversation it promised to think up something new for
the next time we met, and sure enough, when I got back it showed up
in the form of a giant rose.
"That was when I
realized I hadn't remembered in the trap that I could call ReSayne,
and that thought triggered another. All those things, the gaudy
cloud, the chair, the rose—all of them had still had two bright
green eyes. We'd come across a lot of redheads in the trap,
supposedly because I have a liking for redheads, but there had also
been a lot of people with odd green eyes. Male and female people,
different worlds and different attitudes, but still that same green.
It's probably the only thing ReSayne can't change about itself."
"Damn it, I just
realized something," Chalaine said angrily, glaring at the
fiend. "That Lord Naesery, who showed such interest in
me—Naesery is an anagram for ReSayne! I was being ardently
courted by a fiend in man's clothing!"
358
SHAROh GR£GN
"Ardently courted,
yes, but not won over," ReSayne pointed out quickly in a
soothing tone. "As a man I found you immensely attractive,
Chalaine, but it was perfectly clear you felt only a moderate amount
of attraction in return. When it came to competing with Bariden,
there was simply no contest. If Lord Naesery had been really
important to you, you wouldn't have left him behind and continued on
at another man's side. Truthfully, I was glad that you did. Bariden
is important to me, and therefore so is the woman meant to be his."
"And then you became
Princess Tenillis, and tried your hand with me," Bariden said
when it was clear Chalaine couldn't argue the fiend's point. "The
Elder Ones must have made you seem Sighted, somehow, just to fit the
part. You were probably also the hostler in the next-to-iast world,
but I don't believe I spotted you in the last one."
"That's because I
wasn't in the last one," ReSayne confirmed, pleased smugness
back in its voice. "You two were supposed to have been forced to
leave the city after Chalaine won against you, where you would have
been directed to the 'gate' leading to the next world. There was a
whole string more of next worlds, but you surprised us by winning and
reached the 'gate' that led to a dead end."
"So that arrangement
with the female king was something that threw off your plans,"
Chalaine said, leaning forward. "But if those worlds were
supplied by the Elder Ones, how did an independent character manage
to show up?"
"It isn't quite that
simple," Addadain put in when ReSayne looked perplexed around
the eyes. "Those worlds weren't created by the Elder
Ones—quite—and they never claimed to have full control of
them. They could slip ReSayne in where they wanted it, and for all we
know it was taking the place of real people, but—the details
weren't something they felt we should know."
"But one thing we do
know is that you made it to the dead-end world sooner than you were
supposed to," Tramfeor said, capturing Bariden's attention. "The
circuit worlds are a test course the Elder Ones use for their own
purposes, and I understand that only once before did anyone think
their way out of the dead end with so little to go on. A number found
their way out by accident, but all the rest
TH£
359
eventually had to be
rescued. The Elder Ones were very pleased."
"So what did it win
us?" Chalaine asked in a very neutral tone. "A pat on the
head and an 'attaboy,' or a prearranged honeymoon in the world of our
choice? And while I'm asking, what gave them the right to test us in
the first place?"
"Chalaine,"
Master Haddil began in a warning tone, but the girl wasn't listening.
She was up on her feet and staring at Addadain, apparently addressing
her comments to him.
"The Elder Ones
aren't gods and we aren't their followers," she said, just as
though she hadn't been interrupted. "They had no more right to
test us than you three had the right to decide what man I should pair
up with. If life was too difficult at Conclave with me there, you had
the right to ask me not to come back. You had no right to consider me
a problem to be solved, like your own private puzzle or mystery. I
sat here and listened to everything you had to say, and now I don't
care to hear any more. If Bariden and I won a gold star for escaping
from that trap, take my half back to the Elder Ones and tell them
where I'd like them to put it."
And then she turned and
was heading for the door. Bariden swallowed a squawk and jumped after
her, having no idea what the problem was but not about to let her
disappear again. He reached her before she made good on her getaway
and pulled her into his arms, but she stood there square and blocky,
as if he were a stranger accosting her on the street.
"Chalaine, what's
wrong?" he asked softly, stroking her beautiful, thick hair. "If
you want to get out of here we'll leave together, the way we should.
Walking out on me as well as them would be—"
"A setback for their
plans?" she interrupted harshly, looking up at him. "You
heard everything I did, Bariden. How can you stand there and ask me
what's wrong—when you should see it as clearly as I do?"
"Are you saying you
think I'm not being allowed to see something?" he asked, her
disturbance immediately arousing his suspicions again. "Tell me
what it is, and if it makes no sense when it should ..."
360
SHAROM
"Prince Bariden,
please!" Addadain called from his chair. "I think I know
what she's talking about, but she's wrong. If you two will just come
back to your seats—"
"Think about it,
Bariden," Chalaine urged, those dark eyes staring up at him
intently. "They wanted us to get together, because you have some
ability that puts a damper on my erratic talent. They wanted it,
remember, and now you can tell me the reason you first got interested
in me."
"Why, it was because
of that Spell of Affinity—" Bariden began, then stopped
when her meaning hit him. "The Spell of Affinity that Tramfeor
taught me, and Tramfeor is one of them. But that was years ago, and
their nonsense doesn't stretch back that far. Not to mention the fact
that I know how I feel about you."
"Do you?" she
asked, much too coolly for his peace of mind. "Or do you know
how they want you to feel? The pleasure of winning a woman you're
blindly in love with could be what you're getting out of the bargain,
just as I'd be getting stability in my life. How long ago that spell
was first given to you doesn't matter, not when they can reach you
through it and not with the Elder Ones involved. I don't know what
any of them are after now, but whatever it is, I'm not interested.
Whether or not you are is for you to decide."
She moved out of his arms
and headed for the door again, and Bariden just stood there and
watched her. Could she be right, and what he felt wasn't really what
he felt? There had been so many games played with them that they'd
known nothing about. .. how many more were there that they never
would find out about... ?
"Chalaine, wait,"
he said, stopping her with her hand on the knob. "Maybe what you
suspect is true, and maybe I'm just being a fool, but—I can
remember every step of the way from attraction to love. You're
everything I've always wanted in a woman, and you're even what I
didn't know I should want. You're the perfect companion for trouble
or fun, someone who can surprise and delight me, someone I miss
terribly when she isn't there. If what I'm feeling isn't real, tell
me what is real and how I should be feeling. After all the time we
spent together, tell me what you think it should be."
THG HIDDGM
361
Bariden didn't hold his
breath as she stood on the verge of walking out of his life forever;
if she left, the pain would be so great he'd no longer have a life.
He'd studied magic long enough to know what could be done with it,
and it simply wasn't possible for any spell to make him feel like
that. His love for Chalaine was as real as anything could be, and he
had to make her believe that.
"Chalaine, I can't do
this alone," he said to her back, her slender form motionless
with indecision. "I've gotten too used to having you there to do
it with me, whatever the 'it' happens to be. I know by now that you
love me, so you don't have to worry about saying it. What I do need
to hear, though, is that you believe in my love. It isn't just lust,
or someone else's suggestion, or even the Elder Ones using the Spell
of Affinity to reach me with magic. It's a man's true love for a
woman, but it won't be anything if you don't stop looking for reasons
to doubt it. Without you it's a pile of cold ashes, but it's all I'll
have left if—"
He broke off as she turned
and raced back into his arms, hugging him so fiercely she actually
almost knocked him over. He quickly folded his own arms around her,
saying a silent thank-you for any help the EverNameless might have
supplied. He'd intended talking for as long as she stood there,
hoping to reach through to her, but he'd been running out of what to
say. Another minute and he would have started babbling and repeating
himself...
"It's nice to see at
least one of them has good sense," ReSayne's voice came, dry as
usual. "You'd think a man trying to convince a woman of his good
intentions would remember something important about the spell that
was supposedly making him want her."
"Like what?"
Bariden immediately demanded, swinging around to face the fiend
without releasing Chalaine. "I swear by the Edge of Chaos,
ReSayne, if you make things worse again, I'll—"
"Now, now, you can't
threaten a fiend, Bariden," ReSayne scolded him primly. "It's
not only unheard of, it's silly. I was just going to remind you that
your Spell of Affinity found 'Tenillis' at least as attractive as
Chalaine, but that didn't stop you from leaving Tenillis snuggling up
to thin air while you went chasing after Chalaine. One of the things
36Q
9HARON
the Elder Ones wanted to
know was if you would do that, and you did."
"Why would they want
to know that?" Chalaine demanded, also without letting Bariden
go. "What difference would it make, when all they wanted was for
him to neutralize me?"
"No!" Addadain
said before the fiend could answer. "That—nonsense, as
Bariden correctly called it, was our idea, Haddil's and Tramfeor's
and mine. The Elder Ones want something else, but it can only be done
if you two really want to be together. They were the ones who kept
you from meeting earlier, when we tried to arrange it, because the
time was wrong. Neither of you was ready to make a commitment, not to
each other, and not to something worth dedicating your lives to."
"And you wouldn't
have learned anything from the test situations," Tramfeor
contributed, on his feet but still near his chair. "They were
testing to see not only how you handled the challenges, but whether
you were capable of learning to adapt. In a very short time you both
changed significantly, but more through interaction with each other
than from any other cause. You supported each other up the face of
the mountain, and in that way both of you reached the top."
"And I've had
personal proof of that," King Agilar said gently to Bariden,
only the second time he'd spoken. "Haddil cast a spell that let
me watch you with your mother, and rather than being overwhelmed by
outrage and hate, you felt sorry for her. It's always been my most
fervent wish that you would someday understand the sickness that
twisted her so cruelly, the sickness of envying her own son. She'll
pay for what she's done to you by spending a very lonely old age; I'm
sure you know her sickness tainted her relationship with all her
children, and now not one of you can even force yourself to feel
close to her."
"She may have been
trying to get around that with her effort to pair me with Miralia,"
Bariden said, pitying the woman who had never been a real mother to
him. "Miralia is another one who wants what she's told she can't
have, and she must have been hoping they would grow to be close. I
doubt if she realized that one of the things Miralia
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363
probably wanted was to be
queen."
"Which wouldn't have
happened even if you manage to make yourself a king," Tramfeor
said, much too casually. "Your queen will need to be a very
special someone, a woman who'll be able to support you in every way."
"And what's that
supposed to mean?" Bariden asked flatly, knowing better than to
believe Tramfeor was talking about his father's realm. "I have
no interest in being a king, and if Chalaine had wanted to be a queen
she would have said so. We don't yet know what we'll do with
ourselves, but we have plenty of time to decide."
"Maybe not as much as
you think," Tramfeor returned, and this time there was no
apology in his manner. "You two make a more formidable pair than
you realize, and the time has come for you to hear about it. There
isn't much more, but we'll appreciate it if you go back to your
chairs to listen."
Chalaine looked up at
Bariden with silent questioning, not quite sure if walking out would
be the right move, but he wasn't any more sure. He thought about it
for a moment, and then shrugged.
"Just because we
listen doesn't mean we have to agree," he pointed out. "If
there's anything you don't like, say the word and we'll both be
gone."
She nodded her acceptance
of the arrangement, and they walked together back to the chairs.
While they did, the wizards exchanged looks among themselves. They'd
all wanted Bariden and Chalaine together, but hadn't anticipated the
sort of team they made. Now they were in the midst of finding out,
and the team might not be as easily handled as they'd expected.
"What you two have
the potential of doing together is another factor that made the Elder
Ones keep you apart," Tramfeor said once they were seated. "They
needed to know more about it before they made any decisions about you
two, and apparently investigations of that sort take time. When they
finally decided to set everything in motion, that potential was the
first thing they tested. Do you remember liie first world, and the
house where other Sighted were already trapped?"
"Of course,"
Chalaine answered. "They weren't doing
364
SHABON
anything but accepting the
situation, and we changed that. Did they, at least, make ft back to
Conclave?"
"To Conclave, and
from there to the Hidden Realm to report," Tramfeor said,
surprising them both. "They watched the two of you very closely,
and were impressed no end. To begin with, you each noticed how
attractive the members of your opposite sex were, but there was no
interest beyond that even when you were encouraged to find some. That
was incidental, of course, to the main point, the presence of
constructs to make your lives miserable. The first thing you did,
Bariden. was refuse to let one approach you."
"That's ridiculous,"
Bariden scoffed. "I didn't even know the things were around
until Chalaine told me, and then we decided I wasn't visited because
I wasn't warded. How could I have refused to let one approach me when
I didn't even know they were there?"
"That's what the
observers couldn't figure out after they tried to send you one,"
Tramfeor countered, folding his arms. "Each of them tried in
turn, but none of them could do it. And then there was Chalaine, who
did nothing to stop the thing from appearing. All she did was change
its composition to make it vulnerable to silver."
"I did not!"
Chalaine yelped, looking as shaken as Bariden felt. "I noticed
the thing was vulnerable to silver, and simply used the fact against
it. It isn't possible for Bariden and me to have done what you claim.
That world had an inhibiting field backed by someone with a lot of
power, so we couldn't have used magic even if we'd wanted to."
"I think you're now
beginning to understand why the observers were so impressed,"
Tramfeor said, looking back and forth between them. "Neither of
you should have been able to do anything at all, but both of you did
anyway. And then, when it came to escaping from the place, you joined
together and forced an entry into existence."
"We all forced that
entry," Bariden corrected, but Tramfeor simply shook his head.
"No, the others
deliberately refrained from adding their strength," he said, and
Bariden wished he could disbelieve him. "They wanted to be able
to study the two of you longer, but when the entry appeared they
couldn't refuse to use it. One of the Elder Ones was alerted by the
presence
TH€ HIDCO
365
of the entry and was able
to shift the two of you into the circuit worlds, otherwise you would
have escaped then and there."
"Tell them about the
time in the next-to-last world," Addadain suggested, while
Bariden and Chalaine looked at each other in confusion. "What
they did when Chalaine's hand was being burned for calling up a cup
of coffee."
"Oh, yes, I almost
forgot about that one," Tramfeor said with a nod of thanks to
Addadain. "The wizard king of that world was putting a lot of
strength into her law spells, to make sure no Sighted got away with
breaking one of them. The pain and sense of being burned to cinders
was supposed to have lasted for at least an hour, but you, Bariden,
refused to accept that. You—somehow—linked with Chalaine
despite the pain that had destroyed her control, and—somehow—
ran the spell to its end. Banishing the cup Chalaine had created
should have done nothing and did do nothing. It was the combination
that accomplished its purpose, but only by achieving the impossible."
"I don't understand
what any of this means," Chalaine stated evenly, but still
groped toward Bariden to clutch his hand. "What, if anything,
are you trying to tell us?"
"We're trying to tell
you that you're not ordinary magic users, either separately or
together," Addadain said slowly, taking over in a very serious
tone. "The Elder Ones have some theory about the repression you
both grew up with, and how it affected your abilities in unexpected
ways. Mixed in is something about the fact that both of you are from
relatively new lines as far as being Sighted goes, and the new isn't
completely like the old lines we're familiar with. We three don't
understand it ourselves, but that's why the Elder Ones were watching
you. They spotted the signs early, and watched to see where they
would lead you."
"That somewhere
turned out to be here, listening to what we have to say,"
Tramfeor resumed, giving Bariden the impression he and Addadain
needed each other's support. "The fact is you two aren't the
first to develop in this way, and two of your predecessors got
together to accomplish something that shouldn't have been possible.
By the time the Elder Ones noticed it was too late to stop them with
anything less than direct intervention, and that's one thing
366
they won't do unless the
alternative is to let the universe blow up. Anything with lesser
consequences has to be handled by us, the superior beings people call
wizards."
"Only in this
instance not so superior," Addadain said, for the first time
sounding bitter. "The Elder Ones told us we would be out of our
depth in this problem, but we had to lose one of our number before we
believed it. The problem involved more than a question of strength,
and strength is all we have. You two have the more, which is why
you're being asked to take this on. Your performances in the circuit
worlds led the Elder Ones to believe you have a good chance against
those we don't, at the very least an even chance. If you win, you'll
be king and queen of a realm that very badly needs the help only you
can give."
"And if we lose,
we'll no longer be a potential problem to anyone," Bariden said,
just to show that the point hadn't gotten past him. But the rest of
it—! "As far as that goes, you people can't afford to let
us stay together if we refuse to try, can you? We'd be too much of a
potential threat, but not as hard to stop and separate as
our—'predecessors.' We haven't been together long enough to
learn everything we can do, or how to accomplish it voluntarily. If
we don't agree, we'll be forced to go our separate ways."
"Yes, but you won't
know that it's being done," Tramfeor said, refusing to avoid
Bariden's gaze. "It will be as if you two had never met, and you
never will meet again. We won't let you suffer if you have to refuse,
but we don't want to suffer either. We can't afford to let two people
like you walk around uncommitted."
"Now I know why there
are three wizards in this room," Chalaine muttered darkly.
"Someone's afraid one or two won't be enough. Giving us the
choice of risking our lives or living them alone is a really lousy
thing to do."
"But that's not the
choice you're being given," Addadain disagreed, finally rising
to come and stand beside Tramfeor. "If we have to separate you,
you'll be compensated by meeting people each of you will like well
enough to spend your lives with. It won't be love, but neither of you
will be unhappy or alone. So that choice you mentioned is this
instead: stake your lives and ability in an effort to help people who
really need it while you help yourselves, or accept
THG HIDD€h
367
a life of quiet,
unexciting satisfaction with no remembered regrets. The choice really
is yours, and whatever decision you make won't be argued with."
Bariden saw Chalaine turn
to look at him, and his expression couldn't have been as neutral as
he'd been trying to make it. Her own expression showed she knew
exactly what he was thinking, which caused her to blow out a small
breath of resignation.
"Okay, so I'm totally
outnumbered," she said. "You've already made up your mind,
and you want to go for it. But just like in the trap, either we both
go or neither of us does."
"Which is the way it
should be," Bariden said, stroking the hand that still held his.
"We're a team, and a team always acts as one. Would you really
want to live the quiet life, even if we were allowed to stay
together? When there are people in trouble, people only we can help?
We'd be fighting for a place to turn into home, and what better thing
is there to fight for?"
"Shorter hours for
more pay?" she offered, but her heart wasn't really in it. "Oh,
all right, you've got me again. I had a taste of the quiet life, and
even the addition of congenial company wouldn't do much to change my
opinion of it. Where's the dotted line where we sign our lives away?"
"Not so fast,"
Bariden interrupted before the three wizards broke out into cheering.
"Since everyone else has conditions, I've decided to put forward
one of my own. If we lose against our opponents, Chalaine, you and I
won't have anything more to worry about. But if we win we get to
start our own dynasty, and I want to be prepared for that. A king and
his queen need to be married, and I want to see to that first thing.
Do you agree, Father?"
"Absolutely,"
the king of that realm said immediately, his delighted amusement
visible only in his eyes. "If you give certain women the chance,
Bariden, they'll hem and haw and drive you crazy with delays. Your
Chalaine strikes me as one like that, so get it put into the general
contract before she develops cold feet and backs out."
"You really are
ganging up on me," Chalaine announced indignantly, but glancing
around showed her five men chuckling without the least sign of
sympathy. "Well, just remember
368
SHAROM
it took five of you to
make it work. And no, Bariden, you don't have to say it again. I
agree too."
"I was hoping you
would," Bariden said with a grin as he kissed the hand he held.
"I can't expect to use any talent I have against the one who
helps me to have it. So, gentlemen, what happens now?"
"First we attend a
wedding, and then you two leave on a rather unusual honeymoon,"
Tramfeor said with his own grin. "We'll try to give you some
appropriate wedding gifts before you go, but the Elder Ones sent a
message that they feel will do you more good. The message is, 'Get to
know your neighbors.1 "
"What kind of a
message is that?" Chalaine asked, her distraction saying she was
already thinking about it. "Chances are any neighbors of our
opponents are also under their heel. .. unless they've made an
alliance for some reason ..."
"Maybe the alliance
they made is with puppets, people who don't belong where they are,"
Bariden mused, also drawn into the question. "If that's true,
there may be others around who are trying to get back what was taken
from them unfairly. That would give us allies, and even the slightest
edge is better than none. Yes, that definitely has possibilities. .
."
"You know, I'm
hungry," Chalaine announced. "If we're going to think about
cryptic messages, I want something to eat first. And a bath, I
definitely want a bath, but first I need something to eat."
"Allow me,"
Master Haddil said at once, coming to join his brother wizards where
they stood. "The bath you'll have to see to for yourself, but
I'm prepared to create us all an incredible meal. Does anyone have
anything special they'd like included?"
"How about chocolate
mousse?" Chalaine asked with a lazy grin for Bariden. "I
understand it's traditional for cases of ganging-up-on ... or ought
to be ..."
"Forget it,"
Bariden tried to say with a growl, but found himself laughing
instead. Life with Chalaine was going to be incredible, and he
couldn't wait for it to start. Maybe they ought to start it right
after the meal, so he could take care of Chaiaine's bath. And with
that in mind...
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369
"No mousse, but what
about whipped cream instead?" The others seemed to have no idea
what he meant, but
once again Chalaine knew
exactly. Her laugh rang out along
with his, and then she
leaned close.
"We'll discuss it
later," she promised, brushing his lips
with her own. "In my
version of a bathing room. I think
you'll like it."
Think? Bariden laughed.
There was no think about it.
As soon as we finished
eating Bariden excused the two of us, then dragged me off through the
halls. The King called after us that he intended to see to the
wedding preparations personally, and would recruit Bena to help him.
I sighed as I thought about all the teasing I'd get from Bena,
especially after I'd given her a hard time for matchmaking between
Bariden and me. That was one point I'd never live long enough to hear
the end of...
"And here we are,
finally at my apartment," Bariden announced, hustling me inside
and closing the door behind us. Then he muttered a spell I didn't
quite catch, and turned back to look at me with a grin. "Now let
someone try to come in to interrupt us. If they do, I guarantee they
won't just be from the you-know-who, they'll be one of them in the
flesh."
He meant the Elder Ones,
of course, which immediately brought to mind thoughts of the Hidden
Realm. The past days had been chock-full of hidden realms—not
to mention surprises—and we still had at least one hidden realm
ahead. And our hidden talents, which made us even more different than
we ever would have guessed. But this time we weren't different and
alone, which made all the—difference—in the worlds.
Wherever we went we'd be going together, and we'd do our damnedest to
make the place ours. There had been a few comments during the meal
about the kingdom we'd be heading for, but no one had even come close
to mentioning where it was. I wondered if any of them knew ...
"Are you regretting
your decision already?" Bariden asked, and I looked up to see
that he'd guided me into his bedchamber without my noticing. Talk
about your subtle hints.
37O
VHAROM
"I'm trying to make
myself believe that I actually promised to marry you," I
answered, for the first time really looking him over. Thick, longish
blond hair, clear, light blue eyes, shoulders wide enough to strain
the cloth of his tunic, trim waist, long legs, firmly muscled arms,
incredibly handsome face ... "You must have caught me in a weak
moment, when I was thinking about what nicely rounded buns you have."
"Hey, that's supposed
to be my line," he protested indignantly, but a grin shone from
his eyes. "And I'm about to come down all insulted. Is my body
the only thing you want me for?"
"Absolutely," I
agreed, moving close to slip my arms under his and circle that body.
"You'll be nothing but a sex object to me, kept only as long as
you can satisfy my depraved lusts. In a little while, two or three
hundred years at most, I'll probably toss you aside for a newer
model."
"You'd better make
sure first that your newer model is better than average with a sword
and magic," he countered, and there was a hardness to the words
despite his continuing amusement. "I like to think of myself as
a generous man, but the one thing you won't ever find me sharing is
my woman. The point is nonnegotiable, so you'd better mink about
whether or not you can accept it."
"Do you really want
me to be your woman?" I asked, feeling the strangest tingle at
the idea. "I know I'm far from worthless, Bariden, but you—"
"Hey, none of that!"
he interrupted to scold, locking his hands together behind my back as
those blue eyes looked down at me sternly. "It's enough that I
feel that way about you. There isn't anything I can give you that you
can't get for yourself or from another man, and that includes this
muffling or neutralizing I do for your special talent. Master Haddil
was careful not to say it in so many words, but I'm willing to bet he
believes you're already on the way to controlling that talent by
yourself. All you needed me for was to start the process, and that's
been done."
"But that isn't
true," I protested, seeing he was serious. "What I can or
can't do for myself doesn't matter. What does matter is that you are
the only man to consider, because you're the man I love. Granted, I
know a lot of
TH€
371
men who are better looking
and have much better bodies, but—-"
"Hey!" he said
again in outrage, but the emotion wasn't real. The beautiful smile in
his eyes was, and that was what counted. "Do you want me to take
up wife beating even before you're my wife? A woman who's about to be
married shouldn't consider any man better than her future husband,
not in any way at all. That kind of talk is completely inappropriate,
and I don't want to hear it again."
"Yes, Bariden,"
I agreed meekly, snuggling up to him to hide my grin. "I promise
you won't hear that kind of talk again."
"And I don't want you
thinking it, either," he added dryly as his arms tightened
deliciously, proving he was really getting to know me. "You have
more deviltry in you than ten fiends and demons put together, but
don't think I'll let you get away with indulging it. You'll be a good
girl with me, and you'll behave yourself."
"Yes, Bariden,"
I said again, just as meekly, then deliberately moved in his arms. "I
think you'd better let me go now. If I'm going to be a good girl, I'd
better find an apartment of my own. Proper behavior is a lot easier
for me when you're not around."
"You little brat,"
he growled, men suddenly let me go but only to scoop me up in his
arms. "For that you deserve to be ravished, and I'm here to see
to it. You didn't know I'm the best ravisher in the kingdom, did you?
You thought I was only fair-to-middling at it, so you took a chance
in the hopes of getting away with it. Now what have you got to say
for yourself?"
"Oh, please, sir,
please don't ravish me," I wheedled, banishing my clothes with a
gesture before sliding my arms slowly around his broad neck. "I'm
a poor, helpless little girl creature, and I didn't realize who I was
dealing with. If you don't ravish me, I'll never do this sort of
thing again."
"Well, that settles
that" he decided aloud while I kissed his face and ear and neck,
then he headed directly for his bed. "For the sake of my future
married life, your fate is sealed, poor little girl creature.
Ravishment, here we come."
37Q
9HARON
"That's, 'poor,
helpless little girl creature,' " I murmured, taking a moment to
get rid of his clothes. "And how cruel you are, to ignore my
pitiful pleas ... Say, how do people manage if they aren't magic
users? I mean, this clothes thing. Do they really have to wait while
they take things off piece by piece?"
"I'll show you how
it's done next time," he promised in a murmur, putting me down
on the bed and immediately joining me. "With some practice and
imagination, it can be a lot of fun ... but not as much fun as you,
my beloved woman. Are you sure you really do want to go through with
this?"
I knew he wasn't talking
about making love, so I reached up with a smile to stroke the worry
out of his face.
"Yes, my love, I
really do want to go through with it," I assured him with full
truth. "We both need a place that's ours, not to mention
somewhere we can find out exactly what sort of—'new' people we
are, and I have a feeling that won't be all there is to it. Those
worlds that they call the circuit—they weren't just arranged at
random, and we were supposed to have learned something from them. If
we learned the lessons well enough, we should find them of value at
some point."
"If we learned them
well enough, and if we can figure out what they were," he
agreed, then leaned down to kiss me briefly. "One thing I did
learn, though. There's a time for thinking and planning, and a time
for the more important things in life. Guess which time we're up to
now?"
"I can't imagine,"
I answered, pulling him down on top of me. "How about a teeny
little hint."
He gave me more than a
hint, and believe me, it wasn't teeny. The hidden realm waiting for
us would have to wait a little longer, would wait until we took care
of the more important things in life. But after that. . .
HARON GREEN grew up in
Brooklyn and discovered science fiction at the age of twelve. A
voracious reader, she qualified for the school library medal, but
didn't get it because the librarian disapproved of sf. ("If you
want to press the point," she writes, "you could say that
Lucky Stair, Space Ranger, got me in trouble in junior high school.
It would be the literal truth.") Later, she earned her B.A. at
New York University, where she got rid of an unwanted admirer by
convincing him that she was from another planet.
Currently Ms. Green lives
in Nashville, Tennessee, with her cats and her Atari computer. A
prolific writer, she is the author of over twenty books, including
The Far Side of Forever, the Terrilian Warrior series, Lady Blade,
Lord Fighter, the Jalav series, and Dawn-Song and Silver Princess,
Golden Knight, which are currently available from Avon Books. When
she's not at her computer, she is engaging in one of her diverse
hobbies: Tae Kwon Do (in which she has a purple belt), knitting,
horseback riding, fencing, and archery.
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