“You mean Moonsong, the Adept?” Kethry glanced over at Jadrek, but the witchlight she was creating showed the Archivist already rolled up in a nest of blankets and hay, and sound asleep. “He said a lot of things.”
“Hai
âbut I'm thinking there's something that might be pertinent to Jadrek.”
Kethry nodded, slowly. “About Need extending her powers to those I care for. Uh-huh; I've been wondering about that. Jadrek certainly seems to be in a lot less pain.”
Tarma snuggled into the soft hay, sword and dagger within easy reach. Behind her, Warrl was keeping watch at the door, and Ironheart and Hellsbane were drowsing, having stuffed themselves with fresh hay. “He's not drugging himself as much, either. And ...”
Kethry settled into her own bedroll and snuffed the witchlight.
“And he's not the bitter, suspicious man we met at the Court,” she said quietly in the darkness. “I think we're seeing the man Idra knew.” Tarma heard the hay rustle a bit, then Kethry continued, very softly, “And I
like
that man,
sheâenedra
. So much that I think your guess could be right.”
“Krethes, vesâtacha?”
“Unadorned truth. I like him; he treats me as an intellectual equal, and that's rare, even among mages. That I'm his physical superior ... doesn't seem to bother him. It's just ... what I am. He'll never ride âBane the way I do, or swing a sword; I'll never be half the linguist he is, or beat him at chess.”
“Sounds likeâ”
“Don't go matchmaking on me, woman!” Kethry softened the rebuke with a dry chuckle. “We've got enough on our plate with tracking Idra, the damned weather, and the mage we've got on our backtrail.”
“So we
are
being followed.”
“Nothing you can do about it; my hope is that when he hits the Comb he'll get discouraged and turn back.”
Tarma nodded in the dark; this was Keth's province. She wouldn't do either of them any good by fretting about it. If it came to physical battle,
then
she'd be able to do some good.
And for whatever the reason, Jadrek was able to do with less of his drugs every day, and that was all to the good. They were making about as good a headway with him now as they would have been able to manage alone. And maybe ...
She fell asleep before she could finish the thought.
Â
Now they were getting into the Comb, and as Jadrek had warned, the Comb was no place to be riding through with less than full control of one's senses.
The range of hills along the Northern border called the Comb was among some of the worst terrain Tarma had ever encountered. The hills themselves weren't all that highâbut they were sheer rock faces for the most part, with little more than goat tracks leading through them, and not much in the way of vegetation, just occasional stands of wind-warped trees, a bit of scrub brush, rank grasses, and some moss and lichenâenough browse for the horsesâbarely, and Tarma was supplementing the browse with grain, just to be on the safe side.
It had been late spring, still winter in the mountains where Hawksnest lay, when they'd headed down into Rethwellan. It had been early fall by the time they'd made it to the capital. It had been late fall when they bolted. Now it was winterâthe worst possible time to be traveling the Comb.
Now that they were in the hills the rains had changed to sleet and snow, and there were no friendly farmers, and no inns to take shelter in when hostile weather made camping a grim prospect. And they no longer had the luxury of pressing on; when a suitable campsite presented itself, they took it. If there wasn't anything suitable, they suffered.
They'd been three days with inadequate camps, sleeping cold and wet, and waking the same. Kethry had dropped the illusions two days ago; there wasn't anybody to
see
them anymore. And when they were on easy stretches of trail, Tarma could see Kethry frowning with her eyes closed, and knew she was doing
something
magical along the backtrailâwhich probably meant she needed to hoard every scrap of personal energy she could.
Jadrek, predictably, was in worst case. Tarma wasn't too far behind him in misery. And sometimes it seemed to her that their progress was measured in handspans, not furlongs. The only comfort was in knowing that their pursuersâif anyâwere not likely to be making any better progress.
Tarma looked up at the dead, gray sky and swore at the scent of snow on the wind.
Kethry urged Hellsbane up beside her partner when the trail they were following dropped into a hollow between two of the hills, and there was room enough to do so. The mage was bundled up in every warm garment she owned; on the saddle before her the Archivist was an equally shapeless bundle. He was nodding; only Kethry's arms clasped about him kept him in the saddle. He had had a very bad night, for they'd been forced to camp without any shelter, and he'd taken the full dosage of his drugs just so that he could mount this morning.
“Snow?” Kethry asked unhappily.
“Hai
. Dammitall. How much more of this is he going to be able to take?”
“I don't know,
sheâenedra
. I don't know how much more of this
I'm
going to be able to take. I'm about ready to fall off, myself.”
Tarma scanned the terrain around her, hoping for someplace where they could get a sheltered fire going and
maybe
get warm again for the first time in four days. Nothing. Just crumbling hills, overhangs she dared not trust, and scrub. Not a tree, not a cave, not even a tumble of boulders to shelter in. And even as she watched, the first flakes of snow began.
She watched them, hoping to see them melting when they hit the groundâas so far, had always been the case. This time they didn't. “Oh hell
fire
. Keth, this stuff is going to stick, I'm afraid.”
The mage sighed. “It would. I'd witch the weather, but I'd do more harm than good.”
“I'd rather you conjured up a sheltered camp.”
“I've tried,” Kethry replied bleakly. “My energies are at absolute nadir. I spent everything I had getting that mage off our trail. I'd cast a
jesto-vath
, but I need some kind of wall and ceiling to make it work.”
Tarma stifled a cough, hunched her shoulders against the cold wind, and sighed. “It's not like you had any choice; no more than we do now. Let's get on. Maybe something will turn up.”
But nothing did, and the flurries turned to a full-fledged snowstorm before they'd gone another furlong.
“We've got to get a rest,” Tarma said, finally, as they gave the horses a breather at the top of a hill. “Jadrek, how are you doing?”
“Poorly,” he replied, rousing himself. The tone of his voice was dull. “I need to take more of my medicines, and I dare not. If I fell asleep in this coldâ”
“Right. Lookâthere's a bit of a corner down there.” Tarma pointed through the curtaining snow to a cul-de-sac visible just off the main trail. “It might be sheltered enough to let us get a bit warmer. And the horses need more than a breather.”
“I won't argue,” Kethry replied. “I can feel âBane straining now.”
Unspoken was the very real danger that was in all of their minds. It was obvious that the snow was falling more thickly with every candlemark; it was equally obvious that unless they found a
good
campsite they'd be in danger of death by exposure if they fell asleep. That meant pressing on through the night if they didn't find a secure site. This little rest might be the closest to sleep that they'd get tonight.
And when they got to the cul-de-sac, they found evidence of how real the danger was.
Huddled against the boulders of the back was what was left of a man.
Rags and bones, mostly. The carcass was decades old, at least. There were no marks of violence on him, except that done by scavengers, and from the way the bones lay Tarma judged he'd died of cold.
“Poor bastard,” she said, picking up a sword in a half-rotten sheath, and turning it over, looking for some trace of ownership-marks. “Helluva way to die.”
Kethry was tumbling stones down over the pitiful remains; Jadrek was doing his best to help. “Is there any
good
way to die?”
“In your own bed. In your own time. Hereâcan you make anything of this?”
Â
Jadrek dug into his packs while the women were occupying themselves with the grisly remains they'd found. He was aching all over with pain, even through the haze of drugs. Worse, he was slowing them down.
But there was a solution, of sorts. They didn't need him now, and if the weather worsened,
his
presenceâor absenceâmight mean the difference between life and death for the two partners.
So he was going to overdose. That would put him to sleep. If they
did
find shelter, there would be no harm done, and he would simply sleep the overdose off. But if they didnâtâ
If they didnât, the cold would kill him painlessly, and they'd be rid of an unwieldy burden. Without him they'd be able to take paths and chances they weren't taking now. Without him they could devote energy to saving themselves.
He swallowed the bitter herb pellets quickly, before they could catch him at it, and washed away the bitterness with a splash of icy water from his canteen. Then he pressed himself up against the sheltered side of Kethry's mount, trying to leech the heat from her body into his own.
Â
Kethry took the sword from her partner, and turned it over. The sheath looked as if it had once had metal fittings; there were gaping sockets in the pommel and at the ends of the quillions of the sword that had undoubtedly once held gemstones. There was no evidence of either, now.
“Poor bastard. Might have been a merc, down on his luck,” Tarma said. “That's when you know you're hitting the downward slideâwhen you're selling the decorations off your blade.”
Kethry slid the sword a little out of the sheath; it resisted, with a grating sound, although there was no sign of rust on the dull gray blade. Tarma leaned over her shoulder, and scratched the exposed metal with the point of her dagger, then snorted at the shiny marks the steel left on the metal of the sword.
“Well, I feel a little less sorry for him,” Kethry retorted. “
My
guess is that he was a thief. This was some kind of dress blade, but the precious metal and the stones have been stripped from it.”
“Have to be a dress sword,” the Shinâa'in said in disgust. “Nobody in their right mind would depend on
that
thing. It isn't steel or even crude-forged iron. You're right, he must have been a thiefâand probably the pretties were stripped by somebody that came across the body.”
Tarma turned back to her inspection of her mare's condition, and Kethry nodded, shoving the blade back into its sheath. “You're right about this thing,” she agreed. “Metal that soft wouldn't hold an edge for five minutes. Damn thing is nearly useless. That pretty much confirms it. The departed wasn't dressed particularly well, I doubt he'd have much use for a dress-sword.” She started to stick the thing point-down into the cairn they'd builtâthen, moved by some impulse she didn't quite understand, put it into her pack, instead.
There was something about that swordâsomething buried below the seeming of its surface, something that tasted of magic. And if there was magic involved, Kethry thought vaguely, it might be worth saving to look into later.
Neither Tarma nor Jadrek noticed; Tarma was checking Ironheart's feet, and Jadrek was pressed up against Hellsbane's side with his eyes closed, trying to absorb some of the mare's warmth into his own body.
Tarma straightened up with a groan. “Well, people, I hate to say this, butâ”
Kethry and Jadrek sighed simultaneously.
“I know,” Kethry replied. “Time to go.”
Â
Darkness was falling swiftly, and the snow was coming down thicker than ever. They'd given up trying to find a campsite themselves; Tarma had sent Warrl out instead. That meant they had one less set of eyes to guard them, but Warrl was the only one who stood a chance of finding shelter for them.
Tarma was leading both horses; on a trail this uncertain, she wanted it to be
her
that stumbled or fell, not the mares. She was cold to the point of numbness, and every time Hellsbane tripped on the uneven ground, she could hear Jadrek catching his breath in pain, and Kethry murmuring encouragement to him.
Tarma was no longer thinking much beyond the next step, and all her hopes were centered on the
kyree
. If they didn't find shelter by dawn, they'd be so weary that no amount of will could keep them from restingâand once resting, no amount of foreknowledge would keep them from falling asleepâ
And they would die.
Tarma wondered how many ghosts haunted the Comb, fools or the desperate, lured into trying to thread the rocky hills and falling victim to no enemy but the murderous weather.
She half-listened to the wind wailing among the rocks above them. It sounded like voices. The voices of hungry ghosts, vengeful ghosts, jealous of the living. The kinds of ghosts that showed up in the songs of her people, now and again, who sought only to lure others to their deaths, so that they might have company.
How many foolsâhow many ghostsâ
A white shape loomed up out of the dusk before them, blocking the path. A vague, ivory rider on an ethereal silver horse, appearing suddenly and soundlessly out of the snow, like a pallid harbinger of cold death.
“Liâsa'eer!”
Tarma croaked, and dropped the reins of both horses, pulling the sword slung at her back in the next instant, and wondering wildly if Goddess-blessed steel could harm a hungry ghost.