
steeds' necks stretched to full length so that they could threaten with green-streaked fangs. As did the
Valley dwellers, the Sarn Riders carried whips with dark lashes — but the force from those was not
marked by flame, rather by shadows. Shadows which could bite and tear and eat away the skin.
Simon shot, though he knew that there was little chance of his bolt dart going home. There was always
speculation that the Sarn Riders were not altogether material as this world knew that state of nature.
He was aware that Kyllan, Sentkar, and Yonan were drawing swords. And the swords forged in the
Valley had more than just a cutting edge to protect their wielders.
Denner had bent a bow. He was a famous shot, Simon knew, but an arrow against these devils was only
a shaft of little power. As had Simon, he coolly picked a target and shot.
A Sarn lash flicked skyward so fast it was a mere trace in the air, to catch that arrow. There was a burst
of bluish fire. Then a line of flame ran down the whiplash before its owner could throw it from him, and he
doubled in upon his mount. There was no sound to be heard, but Simon swayed a little in his saddle and
Keris nearly fell from his. For the cry which had tortured their minds was enough to shake them for that
moment. And both rider and mount were now gone.
Stolidly Denner made ready a second arrow. There were, Keris noted, only five of the arrows left and
he was sure that in their way they were more precious than many a name-famed sword.
Denner was out of Lormt, that fabled cache of forgotten knowledge. When the Great Turning had kept
Estcarp from invasion from Karsten to the south, the force of the magic so deliberately unleashed scored
the earth itself and brought down one of Lormt's towers and part of the girding walls. It was revealed that
the masonry, thought to be so solid, really covered a veritable warren of sealed rooms and passages, all
of which appeared to be crammed with scrolls, books, and chests of strange instruments for which there
seemed no use.
The scholars who lived like gray-backed mice within those walls — some for almost the extent of their
long lives — had been so overwhelmed by the extent of these finds that they thought of little else than
burrowing a way into the next unsealed chamber.
Duratan, once of the Borders and at the time of the Turning marshal and protector of these
knowledge-mad delvers, had built up a small force of his own. From second and third sons drafted from
the surrounding farms, and from drifting Borderers whose companies had been rent apart during the
Turning, and some oftheir sons in turn, he had brought into being a force which had easily reckoned with
outlaws and such. It was said openly that while the masters of Lormt sought so avidly for one form of
knowledge, Duratan gathered the remnants of another. He sought fabled weapons of the far past — or at
least such descriptions that they might be brought into being again. Thus had come Denners arrows,
Keris was sure. But they must be hard to make, since the man from Lormt rode with so few in his quiver.
Now the Gray Ones had slunk back among the mounds while the Sarn Riders were veiled in by
thickening mists. Those by the hillock prepared for attack as the riders of the Valley began a low buzzing
chant. When that creeping mist reached toward them it was stopped by the Valley magic, plowed up and
down, side to side, forming a rolling wall of fog.
Though they expected the Sarn Riders to burst out, there now was no change — save that the clouds
overhead were very dark; it might be well into evening rather than midday. It began to rain, huge drops
striking at them as if they were blunt-nosed darts.
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