Magic's Promise (38 page)

Read Magic's Promise Online

Authors: Mercedes Lackey

Tags: #Fantasy, #Epic, #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy - General, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Magic, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction

The sun was dropping inexorably toward the horizon; he had a pain in his side, and he was gasping for breath- and
still
he wasn't more than halfway to his goal. He stumbled against a market-stall; recovered; ran on. He realized with despair that he was
not
going to make it in time.

And candlemarks could count; could be fatal, given what he knew now.

It
was
only too possible that Tashir had done exactly what he'd been accused of; that he had been pushed too far by his father's ultimatum, and he had lost his hold temporarily on his Gift and his sanity. It was only too likely that he had unleashed power gone rogue and had destroyed his own home and everything and everyone in it.

Valdir stopped, unable to run any farther; clung to the corner of a building at a cross street, and watched the sun turn to blood, and sink below the horizon.

Taking with it his hope.

Valdir slipped into the Pig and Stick, keeping to the wall and the shadows as much as he could. He managed to get within touching distance of Renfry, and froze there, unmoving, in the shadows behind him.

He prayed that Renfry was about to finish a set, and that he had not just
begun
one. The tavern was hot, and he was sweating from his run. His side still hurt, and he wanted to cough so badly his chest ached with the effort of holding it back. Sweat ran down his back, and into his eyes. Odor of bread and stew and spilled ale made his stomach cramp up with hunger, and his eyes watered. The lamps flickered, and he gripped the wall behind him, as the room swam before his eyes.

Too long on too little. Oh, gods, keep me going!

Finally Renfry finished, and waved aside requests for more.

Not now, lads,

he said genially.

Not until I wet my throat a bit.''

He turned, and saw Valdir behind him. He started to say something - then took a second, closer look at him, and his eyes grew alarmed.

He picked up the gittern by the neck, and grabbed Valdir's elbow with his free hand. Without a single word, he propelled the unresisting Valdir before him through the door leading to the kitchen.

It was light enough in here, though twice as hot as the tavern common room, what with two fires and the brick bake-oven all roaring at once. A huge table dominated the center of the room; an enormously fat man in a floury, stained apron was pulling fresh loaves out of the oven with a long wooden paddle and putting them to cool on the table. There were two boys at each of the fireplaces, one turning a spit, one watching a kettle. A fifth boy was sitting on a stool right by the door, peeling roots.

Renfry pushed the boy peeling roots off his perch and shoved Valdir down onto it.


What's wrong?

he said,

And don't tell me it's nothing. You look like somebody seeing a death sentence.

Valdir just nodded; he'd already concocted a story for Renfry, and one that fit in with what he'd already told the man.

I've -

He finally coughed, rackingly; swallowed.

I've got to get out of here. Now. Tonight.

Renfry looked at him narrowly.

Wouldn't be that little matter of a song, would it?

Valdir just looked at him, pleadingly.

If Vedric finds out I'm here,

he whispered truthfully,

he'll probably kill me, You didn't tell me it was
Vedric
here.

“Vedric!”
Renfry exploded.

Great good gods, boy, you sure don't pick your enemies too carefully! Oh,
hell.”

He folded his arms and gazed up at the ceiling, brows knitted together so that they came close to meeting.

Let's see. First off, we got to get your things away from Bel. Huh ... got it!

He slipped out into the taproom and returned within a few moments.

I just paid that little sneak brat of the cook's to pinch your things. If
he
can't nip 'em, nobody can. Now - how much coin you got?

Valdir turned out his purse. There wasn't much. Renfry counted it carefully.

Tel!

he shouted into the chaos of the kitchen.

How much day-old bread and stuff can I get you to part with for twenty coppers? Be generous, the boy has to run for it.

The massive cook blundered over to their side of the big central worktable, peered at Valdir, and then at the tiny heap of coin.

Huh. Apples is cheap right now; got some with bad spots. All right fer the road, no good t' store. Bread, uh - got some I was gonna use fer stuffin'. Let ye have it all. Got some cheese w' mold all through. Mold won' hurt ye, just looks like hell an' tastes mighty sharp; people round about here don't care for sharp cheese. Skinny runt like you, hold ye least a fortnight.

Renfry gave Valdir a look brimming with satisfaction.

That'll get you across the Border, easy, and there's a Harvestfest going on over there right now. Boy with a voice like yours that can't get coin at a Harvestfest don't deserve t' call himself a minstrel.


Hey, 'Fry!

An insolent urchin slid in under Renfry's elbow, Valdir's pack and blanket in one hand, his lute in the other.

These whatcha lookin' fer?

Valdir snatched the lute out of the child's hand and held it to his chest, his eyes going moist.

Oh, gods - Renfry, I -

I
never dared hope for this much help from him. Never even prayed for it.

“Don't
you cry on me!

Renfry growled, cuffing his ear.

Just getting my competition out of town, I told you. Tel, here - pack up the boy's food.

He scraped everything but two small silver pieces off the table and poured them into the cook's hand. The handful of copper bits vanished into a pocket of the stained apron, and a hand rivaling Bel's for size and strength took the pack.

Now, listen careful, because I'm only going to tell you this once. You go down to the
west
gate. I know it's the wrong way, just circle around the city walls once you get outside. You ask for Asra. You got that?


Asra,

Valdir repeated, nodding.

West gate.


You tell him Renfry sent you, and you give him
one
silver. That's his standard bribe to let folks out after dark, and don't let him tell you different. Then when you get to the Border, you give the other to our lads. That'll get you past them. Valdemar folk don't give a hang about who crosses to their side, so long as you don't look like a fighter or a trader. Fighter they'd question, trader they'd tax. You got that?


One silver to Asra at the west gate, one to the Border Guards.


Good lad.

Renfry nodded approvingly.

Now belt that blanket around you under your cloak; you're going to need it, it's cold out there. When you get 'round the walls, you take the east road as far as the
second
farm on the right tonight. You stop there. There's a haybarn right on the road and the old boy that owns it don't give a hang if people sleep there so long as they don't build fires. After that, you're on your own.

Valdir was pulling his threadbare cloak on over the blanket when the cook returned with his pack bursting at the seams. He tucked the two tiny coins into his now-empty purse, slung pack over one shoulder and lute over the other, and turned to Renfry, trying to think of some way to thank him.

Renfry took one look at his eyes, and softened.

Damn. Wish you could have stayed a while,

he said gruffly, and suddenly pulled Valdir into a quick, rough embrace.

Now get out of here, before Bel comes looking for you.

Vanyel made the best meal he'd had in a fortnight of half a loaf, the cheese, and a couple of apples. Yfandes got the rest.

:Funny, how you seem to be able to find friends in the most unexpected places,:
she mused.
:Sometimes I wonder...:


Friends? What are you talking about?

he asked her, cinching the blanket pad in place, and pulling himself up on her back.

Gods.

He clung there for a moment, as another wave of disorientation washed over him.

:Never mind. Are you all right?:


I'll be fine. Just low on resources, and worn out.

Anxiety cramped his stomach a moment. He wouldn't have stopped long enough to eat if he hadn't found his legs giving out as he circled around the city to his meeting place with Yfandes. The shadows under the trees seemed sinister. The wind in the near-naked branches moaned as if in pain. He
had
to get back -

-
but the old man was one of those that died.
The thought kept nagging at him.
He must have loved that old man, given his reaction to Jervis. That wasn't feigned. I can't believe that he would have killed the only person he trusted, even in a fit of uncontrolled rage and fear.

Never mind. The important thing was to take this knowledge back,
now
- before it was too late. Before the same thing could happen at Forst Reach. It still might not have been Tashir who killed the Remoerdis Family, but he dared not take that chance.


All right, 'Fandes,

he said aloud.

Let's get
out
of here.

And she leaped out onto the moon - flooded road.

 

Eleven

If Vanyel had dared to Gate so close to Vedric Mavelan he
would
have. But he didn't; he didn't dare alert him to the fact that a mage powerful enough to Gate had been within the city.
If
the Mavelans were somehow behind the disaster after all, he would be a fool to alert his quarry. So he and Yfandes pounded into Forst Reach just after dawn-

To find everything as peaceful as when they'd left.

:I
told you,:
Yfandes said, in a maddeningly reasonable tone of mind-voice as she pulled into a tired walk.
:I
told you if anything had gone wrong we'd have
felt
it, the way we felt the first surge. Didn't I tell you?:

Visions of slaughter and mayhem melted, taking with them the fear that had strengthened and supported him. When they got to the stable, Vanyel just slid wearily off her back, vowing not to say a word.

Because if he did, he'd take her head off. He
hated
it when she said,

I told you so.

And he did not want to get into a fight with her, didn't even want to have words with her; she didn't deserve it.

Much.

He hurt; he ached all over, and he was half numb with cold. His legs trembled a little as he walked beside her into the stable, his boots and her hooves echoing hollowly on the wooden floor. He managed to get her stall open, and he spent as much time as he could leaning against something while he groomed her. There was, thank the
gods,
hay and water already waiting.


Get some rest,

he told her, fatigue dulling his mind and slurring his words.

I'm going to do the same.

He didn't remember how he got to his room; all he really remembered was leaving Medren's lute by the door, stripping his filthy rags off and dropping them on the floor as he staggered to his bed, and falling
into
the bed. Literally falling; his legs gave out at that point. He held onto consciousness just long enough to pull off the patched breeches and his boots, drag the blankets over himself and wrap them around his chilled, numb body; as soon as he stopped shivering, he was asleep, and oblivious to the world. At that point, Tashir
could
have replicated the massacre in Highjorune, and he'd have slept right through it.

He woke about mid-afternoon, still tired, but no worse than when he'd first arrived home. The filthy rags he'd worn were gone. Evidently one of the servants had come in and picked up after him, and it was a measure of his exhaustion that he not only hadn't woken, he hadn't even
heard
the intruder. He was not pleased with himself; carelessness like that could get him killed all too easily under other circumstances.

On the other hand, it means I'm obviously nowhere near as jumpy as I was, which is all to the good.

The first order of business was food and a bath, and stopping by the kitchen on the way to the bathhouse solved both at the same time.

But the
next
order of business - and one that made him wolf down the first decent meal he'd had in a fortnight practically untasted, and
while
he bathed - was a long talk with Jervis and Savil.

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