Authors: Anne McCaffrey,Jody Lynn Nye
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction, #Interplanetary voyages, #Space ships, #Life on other planets, #Interplanetary voyages - Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #People with disabilities, #Women, #Space ships - Fiction, #Women - Fiction
near the river. Observed only by a few green-balls, he ate
some raw roots from the supply that he had concealed
there in straw two nightfalls before. All the harvests had
been good this year. No one had noticed how many basket
loads he had removed, or if they had, they didn't remember. Their forgetfulness was to his advantage.
His hunger now satisfied, Brannel made his way back to
the cavern, to listen to the remarkable happenings of the
day, the new mage, and how the mage had been struck
down. No one thought to ask what had happened to this
mage and Brannel did not enlighten them. They'd have
forgotten in the morning anyway. When nights darkness
fell, they all swarmed back into the warm cave. As they
found their night places, Alteis looked at his son, his face
screwed as he tried to remember something he had
intended to ask Brannel, but gave up the effort after a long
moment.
a CHAPTER FOUR
At a casual glance, the council room of the High Mage
of the South appeared to be occupied by only one man,
Nokias himself, in the thronelike hover-chair in the center,
picked out by the slanting rays of the afternoon sun. Plennafrey realized, as she directed her floating spy-eye to gaze
around the palatial chamber, that more presence and
power was represented there and then than almost anywhere else on Ozran. She was proud to be included in that
number allied to Nokias, proud but awed.
Closest to the rear of the hover-chair hung the simple
silver globes of his trusted chief servants, ready to serve the
High Mage, but also guarding him. They were die eyes in
the back of his head, not actual fleshly eyes as Plennafrey
had imagined when she was a child. Ranged in random
display about the great chamber were the more ornate
globe eyes of the mages and magesses. In the darkest corner hovered the sphere belonging to gloomy Howet.
Mage-height above all the others flew the spy-eye ofAse-dow, glaring scornfully down on everyone else. Iranikas
red ball drifted near the huge open window that looked
out upon the mountain range, seemingly inattentive to the
High Mages discourse. Immediately before Nokias at eye
level floated the gleaming metallic pink and gold eye of
Potria, an ambitious and dangerous enchantress. As if
sensing her regard, Potrias spy-eye turned toward hers,
and Plennafrey turned hers just in time to be gazing at
High Mage Noldas before the mystical aperture focused.
At home in her fortress sanctuary many klicks distant,
Plenna felt her cheeks redden. It would not do to attract
attention, nor would her inexperience excuse an open act
of discourtesy. That was how mages died. For security, she
tightened her fingers and thumb in the five depressions on
her belt buckle, her personal object of power, and began to
draw from it the weblike framework of a spell that would
both protect her and injure or kill anyone who tried to
cross its boundaries as well as generate an atmosphere of
self-deprecation and effacement. Her magical defenses
were as great as any mages: lack of experience was her
weakness. Plennafrey was the most junior of all the mages,
the sole survivor of her family. She had taken her fathers
place only two years ago. Thankfully, Potria appeared not
to have taken offense, and the pink-gold spy-eye spun in
air to stare at each of its fellows in turn. Plenna directed
her blue-green spy eye to efface itself so as not to arouse
further notice, and let the spell stand down, inactive but
ready.
"We should move now to take over Klemays stronghold," Potrias mental voice announced. Musical as a hom
call, it had a strong, deep flavor that rumbled with mystic
force. On the walls, the mystic art of the ancients quivered
slightly, setting the patterns in motion within their deeply
carved frames.
"Counsel first. Lady Potria," Nokias said, mildly. He was
a lean, ruddy-faced man, not so tall as Plennafreys late
father, but with larger hands and feet out of proportion to
his small stature. His light brown eyes, wide and innocent,
belied the quick mind behind them. He snapped his long
fingers and a servant bearing a tray appeared before him.
The fur-face knelt at Nokiass feet and filled the exquisite
goblet with sparkling green wine. The High Mage of the
South appeared to study the liquid, as if seeking advice
within its emerald lights. "My good brother to the east,
Femgal, also has a claim on Klemays estate. After all, it
was his argument with our late brother that led to his property becoming... available."
Silence fell in the room as the mages considered that
position.
"Klemays realm lies on the border between East and
South," said Asedows voice from the electric blue sphere.
"It belongs not to Femgal nor to us until one puts a claim
on it. Let us make sure the successful claim is ours!"
"Do you hope for such a swift promotion, taking right of
leadership like that?" Noldas asked mildly, setting down
the half-empty goblet and tapping die base with one great
hand. A mental murmur passed between some of the other
mages. Plenna knew, as all of them did, how ambitious
Asedow was. The man was not yet bold enough nor strong
enough to challenge Nokias for the seat of Mage of the
South. He had a tendency to charge into situations, not
watching his back as carefully as he might. Plennafrey had
overheard others saying that it probably wouldn't be long
before carrion birds were squabbling over Asedow's
property.
"Klemay carried a staff of power that drew most
strongly from the Core ofOzran," Asedow stated. "Long as
your forearm, with a knob on the end that looked like a
great red jewel. He could control the lightning with it. I
move to take possession of it."
"What you can take, you can keep," Nokias said. The
words were spoken quietly, yet they held as much threat as
a rumbling volcano. Even then, Asedow did not concede.
Unless he was baiting Noldas into a challenge, Plenna
thought, with a thrill of terror. Not now, when they were
facing a challenge from a rival faction! Cautiously, she
made her spy-eye dip toward the floor, where it would be
out of the way of flying strikes of power. She'd heard of
one mage crisped to ash and cinders by a blast sent
through his spy-eye.
Noldas was the only one who noticed her cautious
deployment and turned a kindly, amused glance in her
drones direction. She felt he could see her through its
contracting pupil as she really was: a lass of barely
twenty years, with a pixie s pointed chin and large, dark
eyes wide with alarm. Ashamed of showing weakness,
Plenna bravely levitated her eye to a level just slightly
below the level held by the others. Noldas began to
study a comer of the ceiling as if meditating on its relevance to the subject at hand.
'There is something stirring in the East," Iranika said in
her gravelly mental voice, rose-colored spy-eye bobbing
with her efforts to keep it steady. She was an elderly
magess who lived at the extreme end of the southern
mountain range. Plennafrey had never met her in person,
nor was she likely to. The old woman stayed discreetly in
her well-guarded fortress lest her aging reflexes fail to stop
an assassination attempt. 'Twice now I have felt unusual
emanations in the ley lines. I suspect connivance, perhaps
an upcoming effort by the eastern powers to take over
some southern territory"
"I, too, have my suspicions," Noldas said, nodding.
Iranika snorted. 'The Mage of the East wants his realm
to spread out like sunrise and cover the whole of Ozran.
Action is required lest he thinks you weak. Some of you fly
on magic-back at once to Klemays mountain. The power
must be seized now! Strange portents are abroad."
"'Some of you' fly to the mountain? You will not be of
our number, sister?" Howet rumbled from his comer.
"Nay. I have no need of additional power, as some feel
they do," Iranika said, an unsubtie thrust at Asedow, who
ignored it since she sided with him to attack. "I have
enough. But I don't want Klemays trove falling into the
hands of the East by default."
"One might say the same about yours," Potria said
offensively. "Why, I should claim yours now before your
chair falls vacant, lest someone move upon it from the
West."
"You are welcome to try, girl," Iranika said, turning her
eye fully upon Potria s.
"Shall I show you how I'll do it?" Potria asked, her voice
ringing in the huge chamber. The pink-gold sphere
loomed toward the red. Both levitated toward the ceiling
as they threw threats back and forth.
Plenna's eyes-eye view wobbled as she prepared for
what looked like another contretemps between the two
women. As Asedow yearned for the seat of Mage of the
South, Potria craved Iranika's hoard of magical devices.
Though Noldas was the senior mage in this quarter, Plennafrey had heard he held the seat only because Iranika
didn't want it. She wished she was as secure in her position
as the old woman. Plennafrey would have given a great
deal to know if old Iranika kept her place by right or by
bluff. If one was seen as weakening, one became an almost
certain victim of assassination, and one's items of power
would be gone even before the carrion birds arrived to circle around the corpse.
To achieve promotion in the hierarchy, a mage or
magess must challenge and win against senior enchanters.
Such battles were not always fatal, nor were they always
magical. Sometimes, such matters were accomplished by
suborning a mage's servants to steal artifacts that weakened
power to the point where the mage could be overcome by
devious means. Kills gave one more status. Plennafrey
knew that, but she was reluctant to take lives. Even
thoughts of theft and murder did not come easily to her,
though she was learning them as a plain matter of survival.
Another way to get promotion was to acquire magical
paraphernalia from a secret cache left by the Ancient Ones
or the Old Ones-such things were not unknown-or to
take them from a mage no longer using them. Plenna
wouldn't get much of Klemays hoard unless she was bold.
She was determined to claim something no matter what it
cost her.
The items of power that descended from the Ancient
Ones to the Old Ones and thence to the mages varied in
design, but all had the same property, the ability to draw
power from the Core of Ozran, the mystic source. There
seemed to be no particular pattern the Ancient Ones followed in creating objects that channeled power: amulets,
rings, wands, maces, staves, and objects of mysterious
shape that had to be mounted in belts or bracelets to be
carried. Plennafrey had even heard of a gauntlet the shape
of an animals head. Nokias bore upon his wrist the Great
Ring of Ozran and also possessed amulets of varying and
strange shapes. His followers had fewer, but all these artifacts had one feature in common: the five depressions into
which one fit ones fingertips when issuing the mental or
verbal Words of Command.
"Enough bickering," Nokias said wearily. "Are we
agreed then? To take what we can of Klemays power?
What we find shall be shared between us according to seniority." Nokias settled back, the look in his eyes indicating
he did not expect a challenge. "And strength."
"Agreed," the voice issued forth from Potrias spy-eye.
"Yes," boomed Howet.
"All right," Asedow agreed sourly.
"Yes." Plenna added her soft murmur, which was almost
unheard among the other equally low voices around the
great room.
Iranika alone remained silent, having had her say.
'Then the eyes have it," Nokias said, jovially, slapping
his huge hands together.
Plennafrey joined in the chorus of groans that echoed
through the chamber. That joke was old when the Ancient
Ones walked Ozran.
"How shall we do this thing. High Mage?" Potria asked.
"Open attack or stealth?"
"Stealth implies we have something to hide," Asedow
said at once. "Ancient treasures belong to anyone who can
claim and hold them. I say we go in force and challenge
Femgal openly."
"Ah!" Potria cried suddenly. "Femgal and the Easter-lings are on the move at this very moment! I sense a
disruption in the lines of power in the debated lands!
Unusual emanations of power."
"Femgal would not dare!" Asedow declared.
"Wait," Noldas said, his brows drawn over thoughtful
eyes. His gaze grew unfocused. "I sense what you do,
Potria. Dyrene"-he raised a hand to one of his minions
hovering just behind her masters chair. "You have a spy-eye in the vicinity. Investigate."
"I obey, High Mage," Dyrenes voice said. The young
woman was monitoring several eyes at once for Nokias, to
keep the High Mage from having to occupy his attention
with simple reconnaissance. "Hmm-hmmm! It is not