Dangerous Waters (61 page)

Read Dangerous Waters Online

Authors: Juliet E. McKenna

Tags: #Epic, #Magic, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Wizards, #Historical, #General

BOOK: Dangerous Waters
6.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jilseth closed her eyes. Her wits were wandering again. How long before this giddiness subsided?

She felt a hand on her knee and opened her eyes to see Nolyen regarding her with concern. ‘Are you alright?’

Though he kept his voice to a murmur, Canfor shot them both a penetrating look from the far side of the room. Jilseth managed a serene smile. Let him make what he liked of that.

‘Do you need some water, or some wine?’ Sannin leaned forward. She was sitting on the far side of Merenel, who sat subdued beside Jilseth.

Who was the curly-haired magewoman more in awe of in this gathering? Sannin or Troanna? Jilseth couldn’t decide. But she mustn’t let these idle thoughts distract her.

‘No, thank you, madam mage.’ She forced a smile.

Curse them for their concern, well-meant though it was. Now everyone was looking at her; the pre-eminent mages seated round the table and everyone else in the chairs that loosely ringed the room. Tornauld sat on the far side of Nolyen with Herion at his other elbow. Galen and Ely sat opposite, flanking Canfor beside the Archmage’s white raven table.

For the first time that she could remember, the door to this sitting room in Planir’s tower was not merely closed, it was locked. The first nexus spell that the Archmage and the Masters and Mistress of Element had worked had been an impenetrable defence against scrying.

Then they’d used her shale magic to follow Corrain through the Forest and to find him in Halferan when the Mandarkin mage had translocated them both there. She felt a glow of pride at that.

‘Jilseth!’

She sat up straight. ‘Flood Mistress.’ Not that Jilseth wanted to answer questions from anyone but Planir. Not until she felt a good deal more sure of herself.

‘Are you recovered?’ Troanna’s manner was so stern that it was hard to tell if she enquired out of genuine concern or mere courtesy.

‘I am recovering,’ Jilseth answered carefully.

Not nearly fast enough for her peace of mind. If she was asked to work any magic or, worse, to join in a nexus, her weakness would be mercilessly apparent.

Rafrid turned in his seat. ‘This is the first time your magic’s outstripped your endurance?’

‘It is, Cloud Master.’ Jilseth couldn’t help a blush of embarrassment. Arrogant apprentices usually suffered such humiliations, and were the butt of jokes for half a season.

‘An unpleasant experience. I remember it well.’ Rafrid’s sympathetic smile offered her some comfort. ‘Don’t fret. Your strength will soon return.’

‘We can hope so. Not everyone is so fortunate.’ Troanna stripped such reassurance away.

Kalion drummed his fat fingers on the table. ‘It won’t be long before we get word from the Caladhrians. We should consider our response.’

‘Do you imagine they’ll be indignant that we plucked one of our own out of mortal danger,’ Planir asked pointedly, ‘while we left Halferan’s mundane populace to the corsairs’ mercies?’

‘There are limits to what even this nexus can do,’ Kalion snapped.

‘Quite so,’ Planir shot back, ‘as I have long pointed out.’

‘Enough!’ Troanna spoke before the fuming Hearth Master could reply. ‘You two can debate the wisdom of meddling on the mainland at the next Council meeting.’ Her relentless gaze returned to Jilseth. ‘Where you will have a great many questions to answer, madam mage.’

‘Flood Mistress.’ Jilseth braced herself. At least this unexpected gathering gave her a chance to test some arguments in her own defence. She only wished she could think of more.

‘That last spell which was your final undoing, that was blackblade?’ Troanna was hardly asking a question. Everyone in the room knew the answer.

‘It was,’ Jilseth said steadily.

Troanna shot a warning glance at Ely as the slender magewoman whispered to Galen. Ely froze.

‘How did you learn such a working and when?’

Jilseth hadn’t expected that. ‘I— that’s to say—’

‘I taught it to her,’ Planir said coolly. ‘In case of direst need, and that situation on the Halferan road surely qualified.’

‘The highest level of quadrate magic. Not easy in such circumstances.’ Rafrid turned to smile at Jilseth again. ‘Well done.’

Troanna ignored them both. ‘Your magic killed. What have you to say to that?’

Jilseth could see Canfor’s face hardening on the far side of the room. He didn’t like to see the Cloud Master praise any mage of different discipline.

‘Well?’ Troanna demanded.

Jilseth thrust the distraction aside. ‘I used my magic in my own defence as we have always been told is permitted.’

As Planir had insisted when he’d explained the deadly sorcery, his silence spell thrusting Zurenne away from the withdrawing room so that no one might overhear, in Hadrumal or Halferan. Why had he done that, if he truly had no qualms about Jilseth using such lethal magic?

Troanna shook her head. ‘You could have saved your own neck by translocating away.’

‘I wasn’t sure I had the strength or focus to achieve a translocation.’ That was the honest truth, much as Jilseth hated to admit it.

Troanna continued as if she hadn’t spoken. ‘Instead you gave those Caladhrian swordsmen a magical means to kill. What will that mean for Hadrumal’s reputation on the mainland?’

‘It should enhance it,’ Kalion growled, ‘and not before time.’

Jilseth wasn’t sure if the Hearth Master was defending her or not, given his scathing look at Planir.

‘You think we should arm all the Caladhrians thus?’ the Archmage challenged him.

‘I think we have reached the point where doing nothing no longer remains an option,’ Kalion replied angrily.

‘By your leave?’ Troanna scowled at the two men. ‘Jilseth?’

She had no choice but to answer the Flood Mistress. All she could think of was another question. Didn’t that mean she’d already lost the argument? She pressed on.

‘What of Hadrumal’s reputation, if I had used my magic to flee and left Lady Zurenne and her daughters to be slaughtered?’

Too late, Jilseth realised she was echoing Planir. That didn’t endear her to Kalion, judging by his expression.

Troanna raised her eyebrows. ‘You would rather we had left you there?’

‘Not at all.’ Jilseth managed not to point out that she’d scarcely had a choice in the matter. She had been senseless at the time.

‘If the barons of Caladhria’s parliament challenge our actions in rescuing Jilseth, we can point out that she left the Halferans much better equipped to defend themselves,’ Rafrid observed. ‘With the blackblade bespelling their weapons.’

‘What of this? What if that?’ The Archmage snapped his fingers and a stone appeared from nowhere to fall into the scrying bowl. ‘You understand ripples, Troanna. They proceed in predictable patterns only until something else interrupts them. It’s not fair to demand answers of Jilseth when none of us knows what will happen next.’

‘To be precise, until we know what this Mandarkin mage will do next.’ Rafrid nodded agreement. ‘Which will interest the Council far more than any mainlander baron’s outrage.’

‘Shannet will tell you to kill him and be done with it. I’m forced to say I must agree.’ Even so, Troanna couldn’t hide her dislike of the frail old magewoman. ‘Your rights and duties as Archmage extend over all those using wizardry in Caladhria or any other land once part of the Old Tormalin Empire.’

Kalion nodded. ‘The Solurans cannot dispute it. Archmage Trydek secured that agreement from every Soluran Order.’

‘I cannot share your confidence, and I have easily as many acquaintances across Soluran wizardry,’ retorted Planir. ‘Half of the Orders listed in Trydek’s Decree have vanished into the mists of time, to be replaced by another score or more since. None of their Elders have signed any such agreement or even know of Trydek’s Decree, as likely as not.’

Rafrid nodded. ‘They’ll acknowledge Hadrumal’s authority over our own mageborn. There can be no argument there. But do you think any Order will stand idly by and let us discipline one of their own?’

‘I cannot think of anything that will unite Soluran wizardry faster,’ Planir said flatly, ‘and the last thing we want to see is an Archmage in Solith with a tower overlooking the Lake of Kings.’

Despite her persistent light-headedness, even Jilseth could see that Planir’s words were weighted with particular meaning for the Element Masters and Mistress. It was some consolation to see that Canfor, Ely and Galen had no more idea than she did why that was so significant. Nor yet Tornauld and Nolyen, Herion, Sannin or Merenel.

Rafrid was looking beyond the table to those other seated wizards. ‘Do we want any Soluran Elder to assume that he has similarly free rein over Hadrumal’s mages, if one of us strays within reach?’

Planir shook his head. ‘I would be failing in my duty as Archmage if I allowed such a precedent to stand.’

Kalion waved an irritated hand. ‘This mage is of Mandarkin. The Solurans will be delighted to see him dead. We all know that.’

‘Do we know what Mandarkin wizardry’s enmity might mean for Hadrumal?’ Rafrid answered his own question. ‘No, we don’t, Hearth Master, and I for one would like to know a good deal more about these distant mages before we risk that roll of the runes.’

Kalion would have replied but Rafrid silenced him with a curt shake of his head. ‘I don’t want to hear only from our Soluran friends. With all goodwill, they cannot be impartial. Hatred for Mandarkin is bred in Soluran bone.’

Troanna wasn’t listening. She snapped her fingers and the scrying bowl glowed green. ‘These mages of The Order of Fornet. They were pursuing this Mandarkin. Shall we give them leave to hunt in our dominion? Then we won’t encroach on Soluran sensibilities.’

‘Letting them do our dirty work for us?’ Planir grinned before looking more serious. ‘That is an option we’d do well to consider.’

‘There’ll be those on the Council who’ll object,’ Rafrid warned him.

For the first time, Kalion agreed with the Cloud Master. ‘Those who’ve got wind of his magic. There’s a good deal there that we’ve not seen before.’

‘Very good, Hearth Master,’ Planir approved.

‘What?’ Kalion looked bewildered.

Planir raised a quizzical eyebrow. ‘Those who’ve got wind of an air mage’s magic?’

‘This is hardly the time for levity,’ Troanna said testily, ‘and a weak joke is hardly improved by having to explain it.’

As far as Jilseth could see, Kalion hadn’t even realised he’d made a jest. He smiled belatedly, unconvincing.

‘I must confess,’ Rafrid admitted, ‘I’m curious to know how that Mandarkin scryed for the Caladhrian’s home by using his blood.’

‘And how he tied that into translocating them both straight there,’ Planir was equally frank in his curiosity. ‘There was earth magic in that working, I’m sure of it.’

‘It certainly wasn’t pure fire.’ Kalion was drumming his fingers again.

Jilseth was seized by a longing for the Soluran spell that snapped bones. Just the tiniest fracture in one of the Hearth Master’s fingers would stop his cursed tapping.

She folded her own hands in her lap and looked down. When this abominable exhaustion passed, she really hoped she would feel less bad-tempered.

‘I wonder who’ll be the first in the Council,’ Rafrid speculated, ‘to suggest we offer the Mandarkin sanctuary.’

Jilseth reckoned Canfor was ready to oblige well before the Council met. He was looking at the scrying bowl with an avid expression somewhere between desire and impatience.

To be fair, he wasn’t the only one. She looked at the mages sitting respectfully silent around the four at the table. It would be no challenge to find a nexus in this room who’d haul the Mandarkin straight here, whether or not he wanted to come.

‘To learn all we can of his lore? Isn’t that one of our foremost duties to our office?’ With a rueful shake of her head, Troanna noticed, for the first time apparently, that she was still wearing her gardening apron. She stripped it off and bundled it in her lap, muttering under her breath.

‘What will the Soluran Orders make of that?’ Rafrid threw the question out not expecting an answer.

Kalion smacked his hands down on the table. ‘What are we going to do?’

‘Why do we have to do anything?’ Planir’s reply was as immediate as it was predictable.

Rafrid barely managed to interrupt the wrathful Hearth Master. ‘The Aldabreshin may yet solve our problems for us.’

‘What?’ That distracted Kalion from his perpetual argument with Planir.

Rafrid nodded at the scrying bowl. ‘That Mandarkin mage has just slaughtered an entire corsair band. As we know full well, the Archipelagans consider the only good wizard is a dead wizard, and preferably skinned alive for good measure. You don’t think they’ll pursue him?’

‘Who’s to tell them what occurred?’ Kalion wasn’t challenging Rafrid. He looked thoughtful.

‘There’s every chance some stray raider was lurking in that village,’ Rafrid pointed out. ‘He’ll be running for the shore like a fox with his tail on fire.’

‘So unless he has the wits of an addled egg, this wizard will take himself back to Mandarkin and that will be an end to it.’ Planir didn’t sound too hopeful.

Nor did Rafrid. ‘Only if someone warns him about the Aldabreshin and their flensing knives.’

‘Then they have to catch him,’ Troanna said drily, ‘without another boatload of men dying.’

‘He won’t be in any hurry to leave.’ Kalion shook his head emphatically. ‘Not when the Caladhrian barons’ parliament will offer him wealth beyond imagining to sink every raiding galley plaguing their coast.’ He glared at Planir. ‘Which is why, Archmage, doing nothing no longer remains an option.’

His assertion hung in the air.

‘That is a distinct possibility,’ Planir acknowledged. ‘Do you think they will summon a special sitting of the parliament?’

‘Have they done that inside a generation?’ Rafrid frowned.

‘Of course they will.’ Kalion had no doubt of it. ‘With nearly eighty days before the Autumn Equinox? Not even the most hidebound lord will protest when they learn a mage is on hand here and now to save the year’s harvests and to put an end to this corsair menace for good.’

For the first time, Planir looked at Jilseth. He smiled. ‘It seems you have further business with Lady Zurenne and Halferan’s concerns.’ He glanced around the table. ‘I cannot think of a better way to learn what the Caladhrian parliament intends, and to discover what this infuriatingly persistent Captain Corrain has promised his new ally.’

Other books

Hot Poppies by Reggie Nadelson
The Broken Forest by Megan Derr
Controlling Krysta by Sinclair, Lyla
Mismatch by Tami Hoag
Slate by Nathan Aldyne
Dance of the Bones by J. A. Jance
Hello Devilfish! by Ron Dakron
The Map of Love by Ahdaf Soueif