Patricia Briggs - The Hob's Bargain

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The Hob's Bargain
By: Patricia Briggs
SPRING
Rebirth
ONE
Changes are frightening, I thought, even when they're changes for the better.
From the doorway of my cottage I looked across the yard and garden to the barn
where my husband was harnessing our chestnut workhorse. My husband. Our
workhorse. I tasted the thought in my mind and smiled. Frightening, yes. but
exciting and wonderful, too.
The barn wasn't far from the house, but the distance was great enough that I
couldn't see the lacings on the harness or the faint, pale lines near my
husband's eyes where the sun didn't reach his skin when he smiled. But I could
see the horse cock an ear back, listening to Daryn's soft, slow voice. I could
see the wheat-gold of Daryn's hair, newly cut in honor of our wedding.
We'd been married all of a night, and though we'd been betrothed this past
harvest, I still couldn't quite believe it. I'd never expected to wed at all.
The morning was still chilly this early in spring. I drew my shawl more tightly
around my shoulders, hugging the warmth closer.
4
Daryn tied the traces to the croup strap high on the horse's rump so they
wouldn't drag the ground all the way to the high field where he'd meet his
brother and my father to continue the plowing they'd already begun. The muscles
of his back flexed under the wool shirt he wore as he pulled himself to the
chestnut's back in one smooth motion.
"Daryn . . . ," I called tentatively.
He saw me in the doorway and grinned. I smiled back with relief. When he'd left
the house, I'd been busy cleaning up after breakfast, pretending I fixed morning
meals every day when it had always been my mother's task. Near to thirty years
old, and I still couldn't make toasted bread without scorching it.
Cleaning had given me a reason for my red cheeks other than the embarrassment
that had first caught my tongue when I awoke in bed with him this morning and
worsened dismally with the advent of the blackened bread. I'd expected him to be
grumpy, as my father always was. I should have known him better than that: Daryn
didn't hold grudges.
He spun the horse on its haunches, a trick he'd taught it during the last year's
long winter months while I'd watched from my parents' house. If I half-closed my
eyes, I could almost see a warrior on his mount preparing for battle rather than
a landsman off to work. With a snort, the horse galloped to the small porch
where I stood, his heavy feet thundering on the ground like the great horses
from Gram's tales of ancient heroes.
Daryn was handsome enough to be a hero, perhaps some lost prince or noble. A
clever twinkle seldom left his eye, and good humor colored most of his
expressions -attributes all proper heroes should have. The muscles he'd earned
tilling the fields were no less impressive than those of a soldier, and probably
better than any prince would earn seated upon a throne.
Truth was, he was prettier than I, and the better part
5
of a decade younger. His age had worried me when Father brought him home last
fall. I should have remembered how shrewd my father was. Only an idiot could
have found fault with Daryn, and I hope I've never been that-or at least not
very often.
"Aren. my lass?" Daryn asked after a moment. I realized he'd stopped in front of
me some time ago, and I'd been staring at him without speaking.
I started to say something light and funny, something to let him know it was
shyness, not moodiness, that I felt, but the words stopped in my throat. A
familiar chill settled into my stomach. Not now, I thought desperately. I
reached out to his normalcy and warmth, gripping the cloth of his pant leg. and
hoped for the feeling to pass. When I closed my eyes against dizziness, I saw .
. .
. . . a winter lily, scarlet flower drooping and edged with brown, bobbing as
something dripped on it.
As an explanation of the dread feeling that choked me, it was a complete
failure. Most of my visions were like that. Later, after whatever event the
sight had warned of took place, I could nod my head to myself and say, "Oh,
that's what it meant." Not very useful.
If I had to be stricken with magic, I would rather have had something like
Gram's talent for healing, or my brother's knack for finding things-especially
because the consequences of having magic were so deadly. My brother had died for
his when I was thirteen.
He'd been in town with Father, trading fresh milk for leather to mend a harness,
when Lord Moresh's bloodmage saw him and spoke my brother's death sentence.
Quilliar had been fifteen, and he'd had a day to choose whether he would
apprentice to the bloodmage or refuse and be put to death.
If he'd chosen to become a bloodmage, he'd have learned to kill and torture for
power. After a while he'd have begun to go insane, as all the mages did in the
end-
6
some immediately, some after years of a gradual decline into madness.
He'd picked death, but not one delivered by the bloodmage. The bloodmages would
have used his death, his dead body, to power their magics. So my brother walked
into the middle of a snowstorm and found a place where his body would be safely
hidden for three days: enough time to ensure the bloodmage had no power from
him.
I couldn't tell Daryn I had the sight, though I'd had all winter to do it.
Caution learned so harshly would not drop from me after a few months of
exchanged confidences and growing love. After a night of being man and wife, I
would have trusted him with my life, but I couldn't risk losing the growing
softness in his eyes when he looked at me.
Looking into his eyes, I couldn't tell him what I'd seen.
"Aren?" he asked, concerned. "Is something wrong?"
"No. No, just be careful." I released his leg and stepped back. I hugged myself
as if it would help keep my mouth from telling him everything. I wrestled with
my conscience, finally deciding that if whatever happened was catastrophic, I
would tell him about the sight-punishment for being too selfish to tell him now.
He grinned at me, not seeing the seriousness of my warning. "I'll keep my feet
out from under the plowshares and be back at dusk after a dangerous day of
plowing fields with your father and Caulem."
The warmth in his eyes kept his speech from being patronizing. He took my words
as an expression of concern, perhaps the implied apology for my moodiness this
morning that I'd meant to give him when I'd called him over.
Well, my foreseeing was not exact, predicting small harms as well as great.
Perhaps someone would twist an ankle today or cut themselves on a sharp rock.
Maybe it would rain. I hoped it would rain.
7
I set the worry to the back of my mind and kissed him when he leaned down. "See
that you do," I said.
When I patted his cheek with a motherly hand, he grinned suddenly. He gave me a
warm look and turned his head to bite my forefinger gently. I ducked a bit, not
wanting him to see the heat in my eyes. He wrapped his hand around a strand of
my hair and tugged me close again. This time his kiss left me too breathless to
talk, sending the dark warning from my heart as if it had never been.
The horse shifted, pulling us apart.
"Don't fret so much, Aren," he said, and his voice soothed me as it did any of
the other beasts he used it on. "You and I'll do very well."
He kissed me again and set the gelding up the path to the field before I
recovered enough to speak. He knew I watched him, because he pulled the big
horse into a controlled rear just before he rode out of sight. The harness was
more hindrance than help in riding, but Daryn sat the horse easily. He blew me a
kiss, then horse and rider plunged forward and were lost in the trees.
I shut the door of the cottage and looked about. Daryn had built the little
house himself, and each joint of wood and brush of whitewash showed the care
he'd taken. There was a loft for our bed, and the kitchen was set in its own
nook. I'd helped to sand the wooden floor (along with everyone else in both our
families), and I'd woven the small green rug that covered the trapdoor of the
cellar which would keep our food cool during the summer. There wasn't much
furniture. Daryn promised that when next winter came, he'd build more.
Possessively, I ran my hand over the wooden back of my grandmother's love-seat.
Everyone in the village knew there was a strain of magic running in my father's
family. That hadn't stopped my sister's wedding. There weren't so many folk
around that a taint to the blood kept people from forming alliances,
8
not when it was properly buried a generation or so back. My brother's death
brought shame to the forefront: there were no families who would have me after
that.
If anyone had found out I was mageborn, they'd have killed me. By the One God's
sacred commands, mages are an evil to be eliminated, and since Lord Moresh's
great-grandfather's conversion, everyone in Fallbrook followed the teachings of
the One God. Death to mages was more popular than some of the other edicts.
I still had nightmares about the old woman who was pressed to death by her
family when I was five or six. They'd used a barn door and piled it with stones
until she was crushed beneath the weight. I wasn't there when it happened, but
the stones still stood. When I passed them, I always tried not to see the
remains of the barn door underneath the heaped mound of rock.
Like my brother, I'd still prefer such a death over what a mage would do to
me-which was just as well, for I wouldn't be given the choice of apprenticeship.
All bloodmages were men.
I stayed away from town when Lord Moresh and his bloodmage were in residence.
Fortunately, Fallbrook was neither his only nor his most important holding, so
he was seldom here. This year there'd been a war someplace and he hadn't come at
all.
I'd expected Quilliar's death to leave me an old maid no matter how hard I tried
to appear mundane, but fourteen years had been enough time for memories to fade.
My father needed someone to take over the land he held. My sister Ani's husband,
Poul, had as much land as he could work. So Father traveled north to Beresford,
which was even smaller than our own Fallbrook, and found Daryn and his younger
brother Caulem, tenth and eleventh sons of a farmer with only a small plot to
divide among his children. So Caulem and Daryn came to my father's house last
fall to help with the harvest.
9
Neither old memories, the pall of the sight, nor the equally dismal
embarrassment of burning the toast this morning could rob me of my happiness for
very long. The past was gone: Quilliar's death was unchangeable. When I went to
the fields at midday with food for the men, I'd warn my father to be careful.
Though Ma tried to pretend I didn't have the sight, Father would give proper
weight to it. Tomorrow I would do better with the toast.
I looked around the cottage for something to do until lunchtime, but there
really wasn't anything. We hadn't been living there long enough to get much
dirty. My earlier fit of cleaning had taken care of our few morning dishes.
I pulled out the quilt I was making for my sister's baby. After years of
barrenness, Ani was preparing for the birth of her first child in late summer.
As fast as I sewed, I might get it done by the child's twelfth year. Even so,
the rhythm of sewing was familiar and relaxing.
At midday I folded the blanket and set it aside with a smile and a pat. I was
not the best seamstress, but this blanket was going very well. Ma said it was
the simplest pattern she knew, and even I couldn't ruin it. Stretching the
stiffness of a morning's stitchery out of my shoulders, I started for the cellar
to prepare a meal.
I slid the rug aside with my shoe and tugged the trapdoor open. A haunch of salt
pork awaited me on one of the shelves. Sliced onto some of Ma's bread, it would
make a good meal.
I'd already taken a step down the ladder when I heard a commotion outside.
Hooves thundered, and a male voice shouted something I couldn't quite make out.
Horses at this time of year were bad news. Good news could wait until planting
was over. I started toward the door.
"Check the barn," rumbled someone. I didn't know his
10
voice, and his accent was odd. "See if they have any horses."
I'd just been ready to call out a welcome, but that stopped me. Bandits, I
thought. We hadn't had robbers for a long time. Even though the King's Highway
passed through Fallbrook, we were isolated on the outskirts of civilization.
The sound of boots on the porch shook me from the stillness of shock. I pulled
the rug across the outside of the trapdoor and held it in place with one hand as
I climbed down the ladder. I let the door close almost completely before
releasing the rug and pulling my fingers out. I hoped it would conceal the door
from a cursory search: it had no lock or bar to keep anyone out.
I heard a crash that might have been the cottage door opening. Daisy, our milk
cow, lowed in alarm from the barn. I hunched in the corner of the small cellar
behind a barrel of flour. Boots thudded dully on the floor above me. I couldn't
tell how many people there were, but certainly more than one.
I remembered the big butcher's knife sitting beside the ham, and I scurried out
of my hiding place to get it. I wished Quilliar had shown me how to fight with a
knife when I'd asked him, but he'd been growing increasingly conscious of the
differences between boys and girls. He told me to ask Father, knowing it would
be useless.
Wood splintered above me. and I ducked, certain they'd smashed through the
floor-it sounded like someone had thrown our bed from the loft. The floorboards
were new and tight. I couldn't see through them to assess the damage the thieves
were doing, but they couldn't see me either.
I heard them laughing, and I scuttled back behind the barrel. I hoped they
wouldn't think it odd there was no meat in the house, or they might start
looking for it. Maybe they wouldn't notice the hollow sound of their boots on
the floor.
11
Who'd have thought the sight had tried to warn me of danger? It never had
before. I hunched down against the earth floor, and something more than cold
began to seep in my bones.
Magic. I knew what it had to be, thought I'd never felt it before. The ground
began to glow dimly, sullen red with small bits of gold here and there. As I
watched, the bits of gold began to grow bigger and the red duller.
I worried for a moment that the raiders would see it, or that they'd caused it
somehow, but the force of the emanation soon drove all thoughts of raiders from
my head.
My body vibrated from contact with the earth. Power wrenched through me, making
it hard to breathe. Did the bloodmages feel this way as they stood over their
victims? By all rights I should have been terrified, but the sweet taste of
magic prevented fear from touching me.
Red was woven over the gold in layers like a giant woven cloth, holding the gold
back.
I stared at it, and suddenly knew what it was I saw.
Magic hadn't always been wrestled from pain and death. Once, so long ago the
memory of it had disappeared except for Gram's tales told in secret on dark
winter nights, one mageborn child to another, magic had been a joyous thing
summoned from the earth. But jealous bloodmages had bound it until no one could
use the wildling's power.
Beneath the red blanket, gold magic called to me, singing tenderly in my soul.
Something snapped, and one thread of red came unbound. Then another.
Layer by layer the bands of red were being torn away, and the power of it lifted
me off the ground. I hovered a fingerspan off the earth as one by one the angry
red cords gave way. When the crimson ties broke, I could feel the corrupted
touch of bloodmagic pull in places I'd never felt before-like a hair caught deep
in my throat. It didn't hurt, but I could feel it all the same. The blood
12
cords pulled me by their ties to the land of my birth, until I saw . . .
. . . a tower, dark with the force of the mage within. He called the magic tied
to the land. I felt the strength of him like the heat of the smithy forge.
Madness lurked in the heart of his call, adding its strength to his purpose.
Then the vision was gone. With it went the last of the binding spells of the
bloodmages. I felt them go-as any mageborn native to this land would have. For a
moment the floor glowed brilliantly gold, then the light traveled up the walls
摘要:

TheHob'sBargain By:PatriciaBriggs  SPRINGRebirth  ONEChangesarefrightening,Ithought,evenwhenthey'rechangesforthebetter.FromthedoorwayofmycottageIlookedacrosstheyardandgardentothebarnwheremyhusbandwasharnessingourchestnutworkhorse.Myhusband.Ourworkhorse.Itastedthethoughtinmymindandsmiled.Frightening,...

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分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:293 页 大小:483.6KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-22

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