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Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley

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City of Sorcery (26 page)

BOOK: City of Sorcery
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Magda thought,
We were lucky with the first fight, and Cholayna is one hell of a scrapper for her age! Nevertheless, there’s no way the four of us
-
even if Vanessa could be waked in time
-
we can’t kill off an entire village! We’ll die here
… But was that so, she wondered; now that the villagers knew the women would be no easy pickings, could they bargain for their lives? Looking at Camilla’s face, she knew the swordswoman would entertain no such notions; she was prepared for a fight to the death. What other defenses did they have?
They would probably rush them all at once. Magda was aware of pain now in her wounded arm, and her head was beginning to throb. The man Camilla had gutted began, unexpectedly, his terrible moaning again; Camilla knelt and quickly cut his throat.
Cleaning the knife on the dead man’s ragged coat, Camilla stood up, fingering her sword. Magda felt she could almost read her mind, knowing the mercenary’s code of honor. Camilla was more than ready to die bravely.
But I don’t want to die bravely
, Magda thought.
I don’t want to die at all. And I don’t want Cholayna’s and Vanessa’s lives on my conscience if I don’t! Is there any alternative
- ?
Then, with a dreadful sense of
déjà vu
, she saw a face peer round the door, as if they had returned to the very beginning of the fight.
Think, damn it, think! What good is it having
laran
if it can’t save your life
now!
A bandit rushed at her, knife upraised. She struck hard, felt him crumple away under her - but they were outnumbered. Desperately she reached out with her
laran
, remembering an old trick; suddenly seeing, like an image painted behind her eyes, the fireside at Armida, and Damon telling them about a battle fought with
laran
, long ago.
Jaelle! Shaya, help me!
Jaelle was fighting for her life with a bandit in a red shirt. Magda reached desperately, wove an image, saw the bandits recoil; above them in the barn a demon wavered, no Darkovan demon but an ancient devil out of Terran myth, with horns, tail, and a mighty stink of sulphur… The line of men broke and surged back. Then Jaelle linked with her, the minds of the freemates locking into one; and suddenly a dozen fanged demons armed with swords faced the bandits. The villagers faltered again, fell back yet again, and then with a howl, turned and ran. Some even threw down their weapons as they went.
Vanessa chose that moment to sit up. Staring about the barn with bewilderment, she saw the demons, emitted a strangled squeak and buried her head in the blankets.
The stink of sulphur still lingered. Cholayna ran quickly to Vanessa, urging her to get up. Camilla said, “That ought to hold them for a while! Not for long, though. Let’s get out while we can!”
Swiftly they scrambled to their horses, Vanessa still shaking her head and mumbling dizzily. Magda checked her bleeding arm. Nothing, she supposed to worry about; though blood was still oozing slowly from the cut.
If a vein was severed
, she told herself,
it would be a steady flow, and if the artery had gone, I’d have bled to death already
. She tore a strip from the bottom of her undertunic once she’d clambered into her saddle; she tied the tourniquet swiftly, anchoring it with her teeth to keep both hands free.
Clumped together on their horses, chervines on lead reins, they moved toward the door. Jaelle said, “Wait - ” and Magda felt the touch of her
laran
, “let’s make sure they don’t get in here for a good long time… “
Magda looked over her shoulder at the face and form of the Goddess, dark robe glittering with stars, jeweled wings overshadowing the dark spaces of the barn, her face haloed and her eyes piercing, sorrowful, terrifying. She did not envy the villager who tried to use that barn again, even for an innocent purpose. Where had she found the image in her mind? On the night of that first meeting of the Sisterhood?
They rode together out of the barn into the wind and blowing snow. A few villagers huddled together, watching them go, but made no move to stop them. Maybe they still saw the demons she and Jaelle had created.
All at once, Magda was fearfully sick and dizzy. She held to her saddle with both hands, trying to avoid falling from her horse. Her wounded arm - the same arm she had scraped raw in the fall, she realized for the first time - stung with pain, and her head throbbed as if every pulse of her blood were a separate stone hurled at her forehead; but she clung to the saddle, desperately. The important thing was to put as much space as humanly possible between themselves and that miserable, damnable village. She tried to hang on with one hand and pull her scarf over her face to protect her eyes a little from the stinging wind - without much luck. She bent forward, huddling her face into the neck of her jacket, riding in a dark nightmare of pain. She hardly heard Camilla’s voice at her side.
“Margali?
Bredhiya
? Are you all right? Can you ride?”
I sn’t that what I’m doing? Would it make any difference if I said I couldn’t
? she tried to say, irritably; but her voice would not obey her. She felt that she was fighting the reins, fighting the horse that would not obey her. Later she knew that she had fought and tried to hit Camilla when the older woman lifted her bodily from her horse and into her arms. Then Magda’s mind went dark and she fell into a dark dream of screaming demons pinioning her to a cattle-stall while a banshee-faced
kyorebni
tore with a fierce beak at her arm and shoulder; then it pecked out her eyes, and she went blind, and knew no more.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
She was wandering in the gray world; alone, formless, without landmarks. She had wandered there for a hundred thousand times a hundred thousand years. And then, into a universe without form and void, there were voices. Voices curiously soundless, echoing into her throbbing brain.
I think she’s coming around
. Breda mea, bredhiya,
open your eyes, speak to me
.
No thanks to you, if she is
. This was Jaelle’s voice, and it occurred to Magda in the formless grayness that the emotion which formed and inhabited and throbbed in Jaelle’s voice now was anger; right-down, gut-level, honest wrath.
You say that you love her so much, yet you do nothing to help

There is nothing I could have done. I am no
leronis,
I leave that to you
….
I have heard you say that before, Camilla, and I believe it no more than I did then. If it is your fancy, as it may well be your privilege, to say at all times that you were born without
laran
and to maintain it when it harms none but you, so be it; but with her very life at stake
-
Her life? Nonsense; the goddess be thanked, she breathes, she lives, she’s waking
- breda,
open your eyes
.
Camilla’s face came out of the grayness, pale against a clear, cold starry dark. Magda said her name shakily. Behind Camilla she could now see Jaelle; and then the fight and its aftermath came back to her.
“Where are we? How did we get away from - from that place?”
“We’re far enough away that it’s not likely they’ll come after us,” Cholayna said, somewhere out of Magda’s sight. “You’ve been unconscious for four or five hours.”
Magda raised her hand and rubbed her face. It hurt. Camilla said, “I am sorry, Margali - I had no alternative. You would not let me take you off your horse to carry you before me on my saddle - you seemed to think I was another of those creatures from the village.” She touched, tenderly, the sore spot at the point of Magda’s jaw. “I had to knock you out. While you were healing her, Shaya, couldn’t you have done something about that?”
“You don’t know anything about it.” Jaelle’s lips were still tight and she was not looking at Camilla.
Her fingers strayed to the narrow crimson seam of the knife scar along her own face. She said, “I have repaid you for this, at least.” Years ago Magda had discovered her own
laran
in helping Lady Rohana to heal it. Then she asked, “How do you feel?”
Magda sat up, trying to assess how in fact she did feel. Her head still ached; apart from that, she seemed quite all right. Then she remembered.
“My arm - the knife - “
She looked curiously down at her arm. It had been skinned raw in the fall, later laid open by the bandit’s knife, but there was only a faint pale scar, as if long healed. Jaelle had called upon the force of her
laran
to heal the very structure of the cells.
“What else could I do? I slept through most of the fight,” Jaelle said lightly. “And Vanessa didn’t really get herself awake until we were an hour outside the village; I don’t think she really believed there had been a fight until she saw your arm, Margali.”
“Was anyone else hurt?”
“Cholayna’s nose was bloodied, but a handful of snow stopped that,” Camilla said, “and one of the bastards cut open my best holiday tunic, though the skin was not much more than scratched under it. Jaelle’s ribs will be sore for a tenday where you squashed that bandit against her chest.” Magda vaguely remembered, now, trying to pull a bandit off Jaelle and cutting his throat in the process.
 
It was blurred, like a nightmare, and she preferred that it should stay that way.
“We were lucky to get out of there all alive and well,” Jaelle said. “Camilla, I owe you an apology.”
“Nine times out of ten you would have been right and the place as safe as a Guild-house,” Camilla said gruffly.
“And still you insist you have no
laran
?”
Camilla’s pale narrow features flushed with anger. “Drop it, Shaya,” she said, “or I swear by my sword, I will break your neck. Even you can go too far.”
Jaelle clenched her fists and Magda felt the anger again surging up in both of them, like tangible crimson lines of force woven into the air between the women. She strained to speak, to break the tension, but realized that she could hardly sit up, hardly manage a whisper.
“Camilla - “
Jaelle let her breath go. “Hellfire, what does it matter? You heard the warning, kinswoman, call it what you will. I don’t doubt it saved all our lives. That’s what matters. Vanessa, is the tea ready?” She set a steaming mug in Magda’s hand. “Drink this. We’ll rest here till it’s light enough to see our way.”
“I’ll stand guard,” Vanessa offered. “I think I have had enough sleep for a tenday!”
“And I will stand guard with you,” said Jaelle, sipping from another mug. “These three have a fight behind them, and they deserve some rest. We’ll offload the beasts till morning, too. Cholayna, is there any dried fruit?”
Cholayna gestured toward a saddlebag. “But you can hardly be hungry, after that meal - I didn’t think any of us would be hungry for three days!”
But Magda knew, watching Jaelle gnaw on dried raisins, the fierce hunger that succeeded the depletion of
laran
. Camilla took a handful of the raisins too.
“You girls stand watch. You missed the real fun,” she said, spreading her blankets beside Magda and Cholayna. Magda suddenly felt anxious about Camilla. She was not a young woman, and that had been a dreadful fight. And Camilla had been so worried about her that she had probably not troubled to look after herself. Yet she knew if she inquired, Camilla would make it a point of honor to insist there was nothing wrong with her.
Cholayna, lowering herself to her spread blankets, hesitated.
“Shall I cover the fire? It might show us up to - to anything that’s prowling in the woods.”
“Leave it,” said Jaelle. “Anything on four legs, the fire would scare them away. Anything on two legs - Goddess forbid - we might as well see what’s coming after us. I don’t want anyone - or anything - sneaking up on me in the dark.” She laughed, nervously. “This time Vanessa and I will do the fighting and let
you
sleep.”
BOOK: City of Sorcery
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ads

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