The Spellsong War: The Second Book of the Spellsong Cycle (13 page)

BOOK: The Spellsong War: The Second Book of the Spellsong Cycle
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The three string players bowed. Kaseth met her eyes briefly, and gave the faintest of nods, as did Palian. Delvor’s eyes were on the floor.

Once the door closed, guarded on the outside by Blaz and Lejun, Anna turned to the woodwind player. “I hope you didn’t mind, but it’s better that I’m the bad person. Then you can seem reasonable.”

“I have told him.” Liende shook her head. “The young, they do not understand.”

“No, they don’t,” Anna agreed, thinking of all the students she’d taught over the years, and how few ever truly understood the difference between adequacy and perfection. In sorcery, or music spells, competency was barely enough, and a mistake could be dangerous or fatal. “If you think he isn’t up to it, then send him away.”

“He might practice now,” the red-and-white-haired woman said with a short laugh.

“Or he might sulk and think we’re unreasonable,” Anna said dryly. She’d certainly seen that type before.

Liende waited.

“I’m going to need you for a building spell, the second one. How soon can you have that ready?”

The woodwind player frowned. “We have just started, and it is different with only four players. A week, perhaps?”

“All right.” Anna had hoped for a date earlier than that, but Liende seemed reasonable, and Anna hadn’t yet learned whether the player was one who was too cautious, or too optimistic, or relatively accurate in judging timing. Another thing she needed to learn.

And . . . she’d promised Secca a game of Vorkoffe.

Was there ever time for what needed to be done?

13

 

E
SARIA
, N
ESEREA

T
he brown-haired officer in the maroon uniform of a Lancer of Mansuur drops to one knee, and looks up to Rabyn. “Your grandsire the Liedfuhr has pledged us to your service, Lord Rabyn.”

“To my service, Overcaptain Relour?” asks the dark-haired youth, leaning forward slightly, and almost indolently, in the gilt throne chair.

“To the service of the Lord of Neserea, and the Protector of the Faith of the Eternal Melody,” answers the overcaptain, standing and turning to his left to face Nubara. “And, of course, following the counsel of the hand of the regent, Counselor and Overcaptain Nubara.”

“Of course,” echoes Rabyn, smiling broadly. “You are indeed most welcome here in Esaria, and I am certain that Overcaptain Nubara will ensure that you and all of your men are quartered and fed. Then, we must talk, the three of us, about the Liedfuhr’s wishes on how we are to defeat the evil sorceress of the east.”

“That is one reason why I am here, my lord. We await your pleasure, and that of the hand of the regent.” Relour bows, but not deeply. “By your leave?”

“By our leave.” Rabyn smiles again, leaning back in the gilt chair. “We are most glad to see you and your lancers, and we look forward to ensuring their use against our enemies.”

Relour offers a last head-bow before turning.

The doors to the winter receiving-chamber close behind the lancer commander, leaving Nubara and Rabyn alone.

“You may be lord and prophet in name, Lord Rabyn,” Nubara says quietly as he edges up beside Rabyn, “but
his lancers are a greater force than any single one you have left in Neserea.”

“Did you know that the Prophet’s Guard has seventy-score armsmen?” asks Rabyn, his tone guileless as he turns and looks at Nubara, his eyes wide. “That’s what Captain Gellinot told me yesterday. He is the cousin of the late captain—Zealor, was it?”

“Zealor is his cousin. Or was, until the sorceress killed him,” Nubara replies.

“Do you think he will make a good captain of the Guard?”

“He is loyal to the throne, and to you.” Nubara’s voice is smooth.

“Do you like him, Nubara?”

The Mansuuran officer laughs, softly. “Lord Rabyn, I have liked men who would have killed me, and disliked those who have given their life for me. Liking does not matter. Trust does. If you cannot trust someone, you must control them. You can like them, but never count on liking when blades are drawn.”

“You are wise.” Rabyn cocks his head to one side. “Should rulers like anyone?”

“You can like who you wish. Just don’t confuse it with trust.”

“Can we trust Overcaptain Relour?”

“He will do as he has been ordered by your grandsire. That you can count upon.” Nubara shrugs.

“And what are his orders?”

“We know he has been ordered to protect you and the borders of Neserea.”

“But not to support an attack on Defalk and the sorceress?”

“No.” Nubara smiles widely, but only with his mouth. “Not until your forces are stronger. And that will not be too long. Overcaptain Nitron reports that the Mittfels Foot is at full strength—”

“Why is he still an overcaptain?”

“Because he was the most senior officer who remained
loyal to your father and to you. And he did bring back not only his levies, but the rest of your forces.”

“Those who didn’t desert,” snaps Rabyn. “What about the Prophet’s Lancers?”

“Reforming is slower there,” admits Nubara. “Most of the senior officers remained in Defalk. Overcaptain Re-lour might be persuaded to lend an officer or two. . . .”

Rabyn frowns, then nods. “If you would ask him . . .”

“I’m sure he would be most pleased. Most pleased.”

“I’m hungry.” Rabyn gathers the green cloak around him and slips off the gilt throne.

14

 

E
ven with the candles in the wall sconces lit, as well as the lamp on one side of the writing-desk table, Anna’s quarters were dim, and the black etched rectangle on the stone outer wall, next to where her replacement scrying mirror hung, seemed to shift with the flickering light.

Anna moistened her lips. How long, how many seasons, or years, before she dared to use the mirror to see Elizabetta? Would a spell even work anymore? The last attempt hadn’t, and the heat and explosion had nearly killed her. Would another attempt, after a season or two, be any better? Would the reflecting pool she planned across the hall make it easier? Her eyes dropped to the redheaded child on the other side of the table, a brown woolen shawl wrapped around her narrow shoulders.

Secca looked at the two black stones in her hand, then at the game board with the intertwined lattices, and the grooved slots designed to hold the stones.

Anna glanced from the white stones before her to the
window, and the darkness outside the panes she’d installed a season earlier. Sorcery had some benefits. Then her eyes went back to the redheaded fosterling across the table from her. Secca’s hair was the color of Elizabetta’s, but her face was thinner, more intense, and her eyes were amber, unlike the green of Elizabetta’s.

Secca stared intently at the game board, then placed her stones in adjacent slots in the lattice at the edge of the board to Anna’s far left. “There!” She grinned.

Vorkoffe was similar to NIM or NEM—at least that was what Anna thought it was called. That was the box game Anna had played in college, where whoever got the most boxes completed won, but on earth you’d completed boxes with a pencil. In Liedwahr the object was to distribute stones by twos. Five stones completed a lattice. If you surrounded an opponent’s lattice, it became yours.

Tonight, Anna was losing, though she’d held her own recently.

Is that because your mind’s not on the game? Imagine that
. Winning or losing wasn’t that big a deal, no great gain or loss, but she hated to seem incompetent. Anna put her two stones on the board and completed the big center lattice.

“That’s wasn’t fair, Lady Anna.” Secca offered a hint of a pout.

“You’re pouting again.” Anna laughed. “Do you know that when I was your age . . .”

“I know.” Secca sighed. “You put your lip out so far that your mother said she could ride to town on it.”

Anna wondered if she were repeating herself too much. Early Alzheimer’s? Or stress? “I don’t want you to have that lip stuck out all the time.”

Secca completed a corner lattice. “There! You need be careful.”

“The way you’re playing tonight, that’s for sure.” Anna juggled the two white stones, looking at the ten-year-old who munched on a corner of the dark bread. Secca certainly hadn’t wanted to go home to Flossbend—
not at all, even with her father ill, and that tended to confirm Anna’s suspicions about Anientta.

Anna started a secondary lattice beside the center one by putting one white stone on each of the open side slots.

Secca shivered again.

Anna looked at her. “You’re cold.”

“I’ll be all right.”

Were her lips actually blue? The sorceress stood, and walked over to the hearth, where the wood was stacked, then back to the corner where the lutar lay on the chest. She began to tune the instrument.

“You shouldn’t do sorcery, lady.”

“Just a little spell.” Anna stepped toward the hearth, then began to sing.

“Fire, fire, burn so bright

in this hearth tonight,

burn well and warm and light

and have the chill within take flight.”

The hearth flared into flame, not a roaring blaze, but a warm glowing steady set of flames. Anna smiled to herself.

“Oh . . . you didn’t have to do that,” Secca said.

“You’re cold. I could tell that.” Sparkles flashed before Anna’s eyes.
One little spell? I can’t even do a spell to warm a child?
Wanting to scream in frustration, instead she turned so Secca couldn’t see her face and carried the lutar back to the chest, setting it down gently, despite her trembling hands.

“I wish . . .” Secca shook her head.

Anna slipped back to the table, with the game laid out upon it, and eased into her chair, trying not to sit heavily, trying not to show the lightheadedness. Slowly, she reached for the bread and broke off a chunk.

Secca sat up straight in her chair. “Are you all right, Lady Anna?”

“I’ll be fine.”

The redhead reached for the pitcher and, standing on tiptoe, refilled Anna’s goblet.

“Thank you,” Anna said after she swallowed the mouthful of bread. She reached for the goblet.

“Would the cheese help?” Secca’s voice was small.

Anna had to smile at the concern. “I’ll have some in a moment.” She took a swallow of the water. “The fire does feel good.”

“I like fires when it’s cold,” answered the little redhead, in a voice that reminded Anna all too much of Elizabetta.

“So do I.” Anna put a small chunk of cheese into her mouth, wondering how much she’d have to eat to dispel the lightheadedness.

15

 

A
fter a last vocalise, the regent and sorceress cleared her throat. She looked down and studied the drawing of the reflecting pool. Then, the sketch in hand, she stepped from her chambers into the corridor. Lejun and Giellum straightened as she appeared. The five waiting players shifted from one foot to the other on the stone floor tiles in the dimness of the corridor, holding their instruments loosely.

Anna walked past the players, her boots nearly silent on the stones, to the open doorway. She glanced through the squared arch to the piles of granite and limestone resting on the floor stones of the empty chamber that had once been used for guests—or relatives of the lords of Defalk.

With a nod, she turned to Liende. “Are you ready? The second building song?”

“We are ready, lady.” Liende’s voice was firm, if low. Kaseth, as lead string player, stepped back even with the others. Anna recognized Palian and the thin-faced Delvor. The other, a young woman, she did not. All four players lifted their instruments.

Anna hummed, more to herself, took a last look at the sketch to fix the image of what she wanted in her mind, then nodded.

The four violins began, then the woodwind, with the smoothness of practice.

Anna began the spell.
Strophic again
, a small voice in her thoughts reminded her.
But aren’t all spells with more than one verse strophic?
She forced her mind to the job at hand, and the words and melody, simultaneously holding the mental image of the reflecting pool.

“Shape this pool in solid granite stone.

Ensure its reflection for me alone.

Smooth the base, and let it shine,

when the water holds this sorcery’s design . . .

“Let the water be; let it see.

Keep from others this pool to be . . .”

A small tremor shivered through the liedburg, and a cloud of dust swirled up, obscuring the former guest room.

Anna staggered slightly, feeling some energy leach out of her, but she straightened immediately. Sorcery was definitely easier with players, and when it was Clearsong. She bowed to Liende.

“Thank you, Liende, Kaseth, Palian . . . all of you.” She forced a smile, then stepped forward into the room, looking at the circular pool that rose smoothly from the floor to a height not quite waist-high. The stones were smooth and polished, almost black, although they had been more of a reddish brown when rough-stacked on the floor, and there was no sign of any joints between them.
Now she wouldn’t have to worry about the heat of far-seeing blistering her mirrors. The water might boil, though, she realized. In time, she might even be able to sneak a look across the worlds at Elizabetta.

Not for a long time
. She shook her head and studied the reflecting pool.

The basin, about a yard and a half across, was filled with silvered water that gave a nearly perfect reflection of her as she looked down. Anna frowned, and so did her image. Her face remained too thin, and her eyes, though not sunken, were too dark.

A whispering rose behind her, in the corridor.

“. . . where did she go . . .”

“. . . stepped inside and vanished . . .”

The sorceress took a deep breath. Once again, whatever she’d done had been more than she had anticipated. Slowly, she turned and left what had become her scrying room.

“See!” Delvor closed his mouth sheepishly as Anna stepped through the doorway. He brushed back the lank brown hair from his forehead.

“I didn’t mean to surprise you,” Anna said. “It turned out just fine.” She smiled. “We’ll be doing more spells now. Building spells, mostly, I think. Thank you.”

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