"I'm not afraid of their bravos!" Hordred snapped. In the angry response, Garric caught a glimpse of the
man he must usually have been: tough and self-reliant, able to handle himself in a fight and well aware of
the fact.
Relaxing with a conscious effort, Hordred continued, "I wrote down the strength of the forces gathering
on Tisamur and the names of as many leaders as I could find. That's in the books I gave you."
He cocked an eyebrow at Liane; she nodded back. Hordred continued, "There's contingents from Haft
and Cordin, but the real danger's in the mercenaries the leaders've been hiring from all over the Isles."
Garric's face went hard. His formal title now was Prince Garric of Haft, Adopted Son and Heir
Presumptive to Valence III, King of the Isles. What he really was … one of the things he really was … was
Garric, the nineteen-year-old son of Reise the innkeeper in Barca's Hamlet on the east coast of Haft. The
only contact Barca's Hamlet and the borough around it had with the outside world was the Sheep Fair every
fall and in summer the Tithe Procession, when priests from Carcosa on the west coast rolled images of the
Lady and the Shepherd through the countryside and collected what was due the temple.
Garric was a peasant from Haft—and he was also the real ruler of the Isles, though the authority of the
central government didn't really stretch far from the capital here in Valles on Ornifal. If he didn't put down this
Confederacy of the West promptly, he wouldn't rule his birthplace even in name.
"The notes are in Serian shipping code," Hordred added. "Can you read that?"
"Yes, of course," Liane said, touching the travelling desk in which she'd placed Hordred's notebooks.
They looked like ordinary accounts, thin sheets of birchwood bound in fours with hinges of coarse twine. The
inner faces were covered in a crabbed script written in oak-gall ink.
"I should've stopped there," the spy muttered, sounding both angry and frightened. He clasped his
hands again unconsciously. "I thought, 'Let's see what the cult's part in it is. Let's learn about Moon Wisdom.'
''
He swallowed. "I got into one of the ceremonies," he went on, his voice dropping back to a whisper.
"There were over a hundred people in the temple, some of them from as far away as Ornifal. They each had
a symbol stamped on their forehead in cinnabar, a spider. I made a stamp for myself and nobody noticed
anything wrong. But…"
Hordred fell silent again. Garric moistened his lips with his tongue, and prompted, "What went on at the
ceremony, Master Hordred?"
The spy shook his head, trying to make sense of his memories. "We chanted a prayer to the Mistress of
the Moon," he said. "I didn't know the words, but I could follow well enough."
"Chanted words of power?" Liane asked, her face and voice sharper than they had been a moment
before. She understood that wizardry was neither good nor bad in itself; like a sword, the power depended
on the purpose— and the skill—of the wizard using it. But Liane would never forget the night that her wizard
father had prepared to sacrifice her for purposes he had thought good.
"No, no," said Hordred to his writhing hands. "Just ordinary speech, a hymn like you might hear at any
Tennight ceremony if you're the sort who wastes his time in temples. Only something happened, I don't
know what. I could feel something. And I thought I saw something in the air in the middle of the room, but
there wasn't anything there except gray. Nothing!"
He clenched his right fist as though to bang the table, but his arm trembled and he lowered his hand
instead.
"There wasn't anything there, but it's been with me ever since. Whenever I go to sleep."
Garric stood. The discussion made him uncomfortable. He was as religious as any other youth in
Barca's Hamlet. He dedicated a crumb and a sip of beer to the Lady and her consort at most meals, and
once a year he'd offered a flat cheese of ewe's milk to Duzi, the roughly carved stone on the hill overlooking
the meadows south of the hamlet. Duzi watched over sheep and the poor men who watched them; and if he
did not, if Duzi was only the scars of time on rock, well… a cheese wasn't much to spend on a hope of help
in trouble.