
and other creatures also occupied their niches, each species believing itself
to be the dominant force. Stile made it a point to get along as well as he
could with all creatures; such detente was much more important here in the
frame of Phaze than it was in any nonmagical frame. And he genuinely respected
those other creatures. The werewolves, for example, had helped him to discover
his own place here, and the entire local pack was oath-friends with Neysa.
They galloped west across the terrain where Stile had first encountered Neysa;
it was a spot of special significance for them both. He reached around her
neck to give her an invisible hug, and she responded by twitching ear back and
rippling her skin under his hands as though shaking off a fly. Secret
communication, inexpressibly precious.
To the south was the great Purple Mountain range; to the north the White
Mountain range. There was surely a great deal more to Phaze than this broad
valley, but Stile had not yet had occasion to see it. Once he had dealt with
his enemy and secured his position, he intended to do some wider explorations.
Who could guess what wonders might lie beyond these horizons?
They moved west for two hours, covering twenty miles. This frame used the
archaic, magic-ridden units of measurement, and Stile was still schooling
himself in them. Twenty miles was roughly thirty-two kilometers in his more
familiar terms. Stile could have covered a similar distance in similar time
himself, for he was among other things a runner of marathons. But for him it
would have meant a great effort, depleting his resources for days; for these
animals it was merely pleasant light exercise. Unicorns could travel twice
this speed, sustained, when they had to, and faster yet for shorter distances.
Now the sun was descending, getting in their eyes. It was time to graze.
Unicorns, like horses, were not simple running machines; they had to spend a
good deal of their time eating. Stile could have conjured grain for them, but
actually they preferred to find their own, being stubbornly independent
beasts, and they rested while grazing. Neysa slowed, found a patch of bare
rock, and relieved herself in the equine manner at its fringe. This covered
any sound Stile might make as he dismounted. Then she wandered on, grazing the
rich grass, ignoring him though she knew exactly where he was. She was very
good at this sort of thing; no observer would realize that an invisible man
was with her, and the rock concealed any footprints he made.
Stile had brought his own supplies, of course; the Lady Blue had efficiently
seen to that. No sense requiring him to make himself obvious by performing
unnecessary magic to fetch food, apart from the general caution against
wasting one-shot spells. He would sit on the rock and eat, quietly.
Stile levered himself down, careful not to put strain on his knees. Knees, as
he had learned the hard way, did not readily heal. Magic might repair them,
but he could not operate on himself and did not as yet trust the task to any
other Adept. Suppose the Adept he asked happened to be the one who wanted to
kill him? He could get along; his knees only hurt when flexed almost double.
He could still walk, run and ride comfortably. His former abilities as an
acrobat had suffered, but there was still a great deal he could do without
flexing his knees that far.
After grazing, Neysa came to the edge of the rock and stood snoozing. Stile
mounted her, as she had intended, and slept on her back. She was warm and safe
and smelled pleasantly equine, and there was hardly a place he would have
preferred to sleep-unless it were in the arms of the Lady Blue. That, however,
was a privilege he had not yet earned, and might never earn. The Lady was true
to her real husband. Stile's double, though he was dead, and in no way did she
ever mistake Stile for that other man.