Storm Rising (37 page)

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Authors: Mercedes Lackey

BOOK: Storm Rising
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“Have a cup of tea,” Karal advised, before the last of the pages had hit the floor. He took a hot pad to seize the nearest kettle, pouring a fresh mug full and dosing it liberally with cream and honey. He brought it over to her and handed it to her with a smile he hoped looked encouraging. “I know you wanted to try for yourself, but that’s the same conclusion all the others, even the Masters like Master Levy have come to. Sun strike me, but they can’t even agree on when the breakwater will finally erode to the point where it doesn’t protect us anymore! They say it’s all too complicated for any human to calculate.”

She grimaced as she took the hot mug from him. “All right, Florian was watching me calculate through your eyes, and through him all the rest of the Companions that have any interest in mathematics were also watching. So what does
he
have to say?”

:Tell her what I told you the third time she went
through the calculations,:
Florian advised.
:That answer hasn’t changed.:

“He says that as far as the Companions can tell, the solution will have to involve Hardorn because we’ll have to put something in place beyond the existing breakwater. Some of them believe that we need to make a different kind of breakwater and some think we’ll have to do something new, but as the storms strengthen, we will have to move the protections outward. Others just have the feeling, too vague to be a ForeSeeing, that Hardorn will be involved in finding the next solution.” That was a surprising conclusion, coming from Companions, but it was a welcome one, as far as he was concerned.

And Natoli went a step further. “We might as well
talk
about what we’ve all been hinting at for the past week. Hardorn and the Imperials. We need them, and we all know it, so let’s start trying to figure out a way to get them without getting anyone in trouble or murdered.”

:The Son of the Sun isn’t going to like this, Karal.:
Altra switched his tail nervously and got up from his spot on the couch to pace over to Karal.

“What about you?” Karal asked him, looking down into his intensely blue eyes.

:In the abstract, I don’t object. I do not much like making allies of people who personally attacked my own charges, but in the interest of the greater good, it is probably going to be necessary. Solaris, however, will dislike such expediency.:

Yes, well, Solaris’ reaction was going to extend rather beyond “dislike.” But from the look on An’desha’s face, the news was fairly welcome to him.

“So, what about you?” he asked his friend.

An’desha sat up. “They have snow up to the eaves, monsters rioting through blizzards, they’re starving and freezing over there. Even Kerowyn isn’t urging any kind of confrontation with the Imperials,” he said obliquely. “You heard her this afternoon: ‘Let General Winter take care of them.’ And even Jarim agreed with her.
She
thinks that ‘General Winter’ is going to kill
them, I bet. The trouble is, a lot of innocents are going to die, too.”

“So, you’re saying—?” Karal prompted.

An’desha spread his hands wide. “Haven’t the people of Hardorn and the Imperials—even the guilty ones—been punished enough?”

Karal sat down at the desk that Natoli had abandoned and cupped his chin in both hands. “I know what you’re saying, and I know what Florian is saying, but I’ve got another problem here. I want to know what the Imperials are going to do if they’re desperate and feel they have nothing to lose? More assassinations? By Vkandis’ Crown, what
better
time could they strike but when Solaris is here for a meeting? How can we keep that from happening and at the same time keep them from using an opportunity to talk to us as one to strike at us?”

“By bringing them within our protections of course,” Natoli said firmly, sitting down beside An’desha in the spot that Altra had abandoned. “If they’re protected from the mage-storms, that should make them less desperate. What’s more, I think we need to work with
their
mages as well as with the ones from k’Leshya. The Masters all think we need an entirely new set of observations anyway, and a new set of outlooks on magic could be what we’re missing. It worked the last time.”

“All very well and good,” Karal pointed out, “but to get Imperial cooperation, we have to
find
someone with sense about the whole situation—someone who will think rather than react when we approach him. In point of fact, it will have to be someone high enough up in their ranks that we have a chance of negotiating with their leaders. So
who
do we find and
how
do we find him? I can’t exactly send in a messenger with a flag of truce!” He snorted at the very idea. “I can’t exactly send anyone anywhere! I don’t have any authority to do anything of the kind!”

:Perhaps just as a point of beginning we could scry and try to find someone of sense?:
Florian suggested diffidently.

“Florian says we should scry to see if we can find anyone who might listen to us. How we’re supposed to do that with no target and over such a huge distance, I have no notion,” Karal relayed, trying not to sound as if he thought the idea was completely lunatic. “Qualifications of ‘authority and good sense’ seem a bit vague to hang a scrying spell on.”

“Well,” An’desha said slowly. “As for the distance part, there’s a perfectly good way to boost the power of a scrying-spell, and that’s to use the Valdemar Heartstone. I’d have to ask for permission, but if I’m careful who I ask, I think I can get it. I
am
an Adept, if rather unpracticed. I think I can manage a simple scrying spell.”

:Tell him to ask Talia to ask Elspeth and he will get permission,:
Florian said with authority.
:Rolan and Gwena both agree.:

Karal relayed that information. “Are you going to use the kind of spell that makes a picture anyone can see and sounds anyone can hear?” he asked hopefully. He’d always wanted to see a scrying, but Master Ulrich had never used that kind of spell.

“It’s the only one I know,” An’desha replied ruefully. “It takes a lot more energy than the kind that works like Far Sight, but I don’t have a choice since I don’t know that one.”

“I’d prefer it even if you did have a choice,” Natoli replied, tucking her hair back behind her ear. “With others watching, you have extra sets of eyes and ears to catch what you might miss.”

An’desha smiled. “True. Right, well, that’s how we’ll have the power.”

:As for a target, why don’t you use the Imperial arms?:
Altra said, unexpectedly.:
You’re not likely to find that anywhere except in the quarters of someone with authority, either on the wall or on documents—we already know from Kerowyn’s spies that they’ve taken the arms off their uniforms.:

“Using the Imperial arms as a target—that’s what Altra suggests. Can you do that?” he asked An’desha.
“Then we can just observe people to see if they fit what we need.”

An’desha looked blank for a moment. “Well, I don’t know why I couldn’t. Given that, we can decide how we speak with our chosen contact once we actually have him.”

:I’ll
find Talia for you.:
Florian “vanished” from Karal’s thoughts for a moment. Karal discovered how agreeable it was to be able to use the varied abilities of Companions; normally they would have had to go in search of Talia, but through her Companion Rolan, they were able to “ask” her to come to them in Karal’s suite. They couldn’t convey anything in detail, however, since Talia, unlike most Heralds, did
not
have Mindspeech. Rolan could only “send” an image of them and convey a sense of need.

When she finally arrived on Karal’s doorstep, she wore an expression of faint annoyance overlaid with curiosity. “I hope this is more important than what I was doing,” she said without preamble as Karal let her in.

“I think so, Sun’s Ray,” he said, calling her by her priestly title. She raised an eyebrow at that, but permitted herself to be coaxed into accepting a chair and a mug of tea. “Natoli will explain what we’re up to, and I hope we haven’t overstepped our authority.”

Ulrich used to say that it is easier to apologize than get permission. I hope he was right.

Natoli did explain, not only their conclusions but the reasoning leading up to them. Talia listened patiently, nodding from time to time, until Natoli was finished.

“You’ve come perilously close to overstepping your authority,” Talia told him, “but you succeeded in staying
just
on the right side. I’ll ask Elspeth, and honestly—I think she’ll agree with you. She’s become more pragmatic since the mission into Hardorn after Ancar and Hulda than I gave her credit for being.”

“I think it was traveling through Hardorn, seeing how the people were suffering
then
, and knowing that it must be worse now,” An’desha suggested. “She might not be in line for the throne anymore, but you
can’t remove the sense of responsibility that you trained into her.”

Talia smiled faintly. “One hopes. Well, let’s see what can be done—and I have a suggestion for a place where you can do your scrying. Directly above the Heartstone chamber is a room that mirrors it exactly, right down to having a crystal sphere in the center of a table. You could use that, and it’s shielded to a fare-thee-well. We’ve used it for FarSeeing in the past.” She put her mug down on a side table and stood up. “I’m beginning to think that the Queen ought to recognize you lot as a working entity; I’ll have a word with her about that as well. You’re all adults, you’re all responsible, and you’re all coming up with ideas, if not actual solutions. We ought to grant you enough authority that you can test out some of your ideas without constantly coming to one of us.”

That last had Karal staring at her with an open mouth for a moment.

“Don’t get too excited,” she said, with a slight hint of a smile. “It won’t be a great deal of authority. But you have a fair amount on your own, you know. You and An’desha are aliens on our soil, and do not necessarily have to answer to any authority in Valdemar for your actions so long as you don’t break any major laws.” She put the mug down decisively. “Now, if I’m going to catch Elspeth alone, I have to go now. I’ll send you word through Rolan and Florian.”

She walked to the door, and Karal opened it for her again, but just before she left, she turned and looked at him with a peculiar, penetrating stare. “You are something of a puzzle, young priest,” she said at last. “You are the only person I have ever encountered that has a Companion speaking with him who was not also Chosen. I wish I knew why.”

“So do I, Sun’s Ray,” he said fervently. “I would sleep better at night if I did.”

Inside the scrying room, it was as silent as a cave. Even noises from outside were muffled to the point of vanishment. An’desha settled into his seat, now softened with a
down cushion, brought by the ever-practical Natoli who could not see any reason why the four of them needed to get numb behinds from the hard benches when there were plenty of cushions kicking around in the Palace storerooms. The others took their places at equal distances around the table—in Altra’s case,
on
the table, licking his back fur—and waited expectantly for him to begin the spell.

Their initial few attempts had ended in nothing more exciting than warehouses and a few barracks, for the Imperials might have taken their embroidered arms from the tunics of their uniforms, but they still had their battle banners displayed prominently in their barracks and the Imperial mark burned into the sides of crates. One or two had even begun murals including the arms on the walls as well. The trouble with this spell was that once it was set on a target, you couldn’t move the point-of-view more than a foot or two from the target without starting over, and he couldn’t do that more than two or three times a day. The spell might take most of its energy from the Heartstone, but it still required his personal power to control it.

“You know—I’ve got an idea. You might try the arms in the form of a seal,” Natoli said after some thought. “That might at least get you a place where we can see a clerk in the headquarters. Then you can shift your target to him and set the spell again; sooner or later he’s bound to go to someone in authority.”

An’desha made a gesture of helplessness. “That sounds like as good an idea as any; we certainly haven’t made any other progress.”

“We wouldn’t say that,” Karal objected, speaking for both himself and Altra. “You found Shonar and the Imperial Army—and you didn’t catch on to something over in the Empire itself. That’s not bad for not having a specific target.”

An’desha smiled faintly, and flexed his hands to warm up the muscles before he placed them palm-down on the table in front of him. He stared at a point a little above the crystal ball in the center of the table,
and reached for the weighty power seething below him, embodied in the Heartstone of Valdemar.

There was no way of describing just how it felt to him, to seize this incredible energy, a force both ordered and chaotic, and with a rudimentary consciousness of its own. Were other Heartstones like this one? If so, no wonder Falconsbane had wanted to learn the secrets of constructing them! Nodes were powerful, even deadly, but this Heartstone was a hundred times more powerful than any node he had ever encountered. Linking himself in with it was similar to walking the Moonpaths, in that he found himself “somewhere else”; this “somewhere,” however, was a crystalline structure thrumming with ordered power. Once there, he was possessed of the strength to do just about anything he chose, if only his control could hold up.

That was the real key, control, and it was what required so much of his own strength.
If I were riding an unbroken warsteed that happened to like me, and had decided to permit me to sit on her back, it might be like this. There is a sense that at any moment I might be thrown and trampled. “Ordered” does not mean “tame.”

Once he had the reins of power in his hands, he dropped his gaze into the crystal itself, setting the patterns and sigils written only in the invisible fire of magic to burn about it. He knew the moment it was all complete; the ring of power fused into an unbroken whole, and the “setting” sat empty, waiting for the target object.

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