Barbara Hambly - Sun Wolf 3 - Dark Hand of Magic

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THE DARK HAND OF MAGIC
Barbara Hambly
[19 sep 2002-scanned for #bookz]
[26 sep 2002-scanned for #bookz]
CHAPTER 1
Sun Wolf's capture, as Sun Wolf himself reflected at his execution, was sheer,
stupid ill luck, which Dogbreath of Mallincore would have told him was only to
be expected under the circumstances.
The arrow that brought him down took him high in the back from the shelter of
a pile of stones he'd have bet his last silver bit-which happened to be in his
pocket at the time-couldn't have hidden an emaciated coyote. He hit the sand
of the dry arroyo bed in a second's whirling disorientation and sickening pain
and the next moment got a gritty faceful of gravel, kicked up as his horse
bolted. His first thought was, So much for the King of Wenshar's guarding our
backs.
His second thought, through a descending curtain of gray weakness, was that,
if he blacked out, he was a dead man.
Hooves throbbed in the sand under his unshaven cheek. He made his good eye
open and, with odd, tunneled clarity, saw his partner, Starhawk, spur after
his escaping horse. It was like her, he thought detachedly, watching her lean
from her saddle to grab at the trailing rein, to go after the horse before
ascertaining that he still lived. They had been lovers for nearly a year, but
she'd been a mercenary soldier for eight, and knew precisely how long a ride
it was over the black granite mountains of the Dragon's Backbone to safety.
He knew who'd ambushed them, of course, and why.
Lying in the deep sand of the wash with an arrow in his back, he wondered why
he'd been under the impression that this wasn't the sort of thing that people
had to put up with after they became wizards.
Shirdar warriors, the fast-moving cavalry of the deep desert, were already
coming down the canyon wall, their horses springing down trails for which
goats would have demanded hazard pay. By this time of the afternoon, the
foothill canyons were drowned in dove-colored shadow, though the rim of sky
above was amber-hot. In the burnished light, the warriors' white robes
billowed with dreamy slowness. The Wolf knew he was going into shock and
fought to stay conscious and to keep his breathing slow and deep. He had to
fight, too, not to spring up and make a run for it. Besides making a target of
him-provided he managed to get on his feet at all-with the Hawk as far off as
she still was, it would only waste his strength. Long experience of being
wounded in the battles that he'd spent most of his forty years fighting for
other men's pay told him now that he had none to spare.
Healing spells, he thought belatedly. I'm supposed to be a wizard, dammit.
His mind fumbled at the words to call forth power and to slow the blood
welling stickily between the thick muscles of his back and the scuffed
sheepskin of his jerkin, but the pain of the wound itself clouded his mind and
made it difficult to concentrate. It was a very different thing from healing
others, totally leaving aside the fact that, when he'd worked healing-magic on
others, he hadn't had half a dozen irate warriors getting set to play cat's
cradle with his entrails.
Starhawk was riding back already, the captured horse on a rein, weaving and
ducking the arrows that flashed around her-a tallish, rangy woman in her late
twenties whom most men were blind and stupid enough to call plain. She still
wore the metal-studded green leather doublet of the King of Wenshar's guards,
in which she'd lately been employed; short-cropped hair the color of old ivory
whipped in strings across a face that was thin, cool, and marked with an old
scar down one cheek and a blackly recent bruise the width of a sword blade.
Their stay in Wenshar, southernmost of the Middle Kingdoms, had been brief but
wildly eventful.
Her distance to him shortened. So did the shirdar's. This was going to be
close. There was just time, he thought, if he could mount fast and unaided.
With two horses they should be able to hold that slim lead over the lizard-dry
mountains to the more settled lands of Dalwirin to the north, where the
shirdar dared not hunt.
Gathering his limbs under him, he reflected, with grim detachment, on what a
hell of a word "if" was.
It wasn't his wizardry, but thirty years of soldiering that got him on his
feet, breathless with pain as the arrow grated in the wound-a massive, tawny,
craggy-faced man with a broken nose that jutted like a granite cliff above an
unkempt gold mustache and a buckskin patch covering the empty socket of his
left eye. His right, under a long brow the same dusty hue as his thinning,
shoulder-length hair, was cold and yellow, a wolf's eye, gauging the
equidistant approach of rescue and death. He was perfectly well aware that the
pain of the arrow in his back was a mosquito bite compared to what the shirdar
would do to him if they took him alive.
The horses were still fifty feet away when Starhawk's mount went down. Sudden
though it was, Sun Wolf thought the beast hadn't been shot-had only tripped in
some unseen pocket of the deep sand. But the result was the same. Starhawk was
flung clear as the horse somersaulted, dust and sand flying everywhere in a
yellow curtain. The lead horse skidded, balked, head up and eyes white, then
veered away like a startled gazelle. The Wolf made two steps of a staggering
run to catch Starhawk's fallen mount before it scrambled to its feet and
followed, then nearly fell himself. Around him the yells of the shirdar
bounced shrilly from the rocks as they drew near. Though he stood in the open,
they weren't shooting at him-a very bad sign. They knew he was theirs.
He glimpsed Starhawk's body lying like a broken marionette, twenty feet away,
unmoving in the sand.
Vision darkening and legs turning watery, he tried to remember some spell that
would get him out of this and failed. Magic was a newfound art to him, an
unknown and scarcely comprehended power that had blossomed, late and
agonizingly, barely a year ago. For most of his forty years, he had made his
living by his sword. As the mounted shirdar closed around him, he groped
blindly for his weapon, knowing what they'd do to him and determined, if
possible, to get himself killed in the ensuing fray. But he didn't have any
luck with that, either.
"She's coming around ... "
The voice was directly above her, Starhawk thought. Eyelids shut, she kept her
breathing slow, the deep breath of unconsciousness. The speaker was kneeling
beside her, at a guess. She could tell she lay on sand, likely still in the
arroyo. Dreams of pain and urgency-of the smothering heat of the King of
Wenshar's dungeons and the scorch of cherry-red iron inches from her flesh, of
splattered blood crawling thickly down the walls of a stone room-all flicked
away with the split-second wakefulness of a warrior's training, and Starhawk
struck straight up and silent at the man leaning over her, thumbs going for
his eyes, knowing this would be her only chance.
There was a yell, an oath, and strong hands grabbed her arms from behind. She
was dropping her weight and twisting like a cat at this new assailant-she'd
already known by the first man's speaking that there were more than one-when
her vision cleared.
She relaxed, then jerked disgustedly free of the suddenly slacked grip.
"If I knew you'd be in hell when I got here, Dogbreath, I'd have tried to be a
better person." She scratched the sand out of her hair, and took the waterskin
he offered her. The tepid fluid was ambrosia to her dry mouth.
The man who'd first grabbed her, accepting back the vessel and slinging it
around his shoulder again, responded gravely, "I always told you you should
have given more money to the Church." Then he grinned, bright black, beady
eyes sparkling in a tanned face between long, inky hair braided with ribbons,
and they embraced, Dogbreath of Mallincore thumping her happily on the back
while the others-dim shapes against a luminous channel of twilight sky-grouped
in around them.
"Believe me, I'll try it, you damn heretic." He'd been her sergeant in Sun
Wolf's mercenary troop when she'd been a squad-leader, later promoted to
squad-leader himself. Hugging the sinewy hardness of his rib cage was like
hugging a tree.
The fair-haired blond youth whose eyes she'd tried to gouge out upon awakening
held out one hand like a beggar. "You can give money to me," he volunteered
hopefully. "I was a choirboy in the Church back home."
"If those are your credentials, she's the wrong sex to be interested in you,"
retorted a stocky little woman named Firecat, getting a general laugh, even
from the members of the group who nominally worshiped the Triple God, and a
stone flung at her by the youth.
"That's okay, Choirboy, you can sing at my dinners anytime," Starhawk
promised, grinning, and the youth drew himself up and made a dignified
retreat. She turned back to Dogbreath, still kneeling in the sand beside her,
and her gray eyes hardened as she took in the lapis depth of the sky behind
his head. "They've got the Chief," she said simply, and in one swift movement
was on her feet and heading for the horses. She barely noticed how sore she
was from her impact with the ground; in any case it didn't matter. With the
shirdar you had to work fast. "Shirdar warriors, six of them ... "
"We saw the blood." Dogbreath strode at her side, the other two behind. "By
the tracks they took him out of here on foot on a lead-line ... "
Starhawk cursed dispassionately.
"It means they can't be going far," Firecat pointed out.
"Of course they're not going far, they're going to kill him the minute they
find an anthill big enough to stake him out on." Starhawk looked around as
another man came up-the Little Thurg, stocky and tough, with a round, open
face and blue eyes, dragging a couple of saddlebags.
"I found these. By the tracks they took the horses."
"Stuff the horses," Starhawk responded. "It's the books in those bags that the
Chief wants."
"Books?" Thurg looked disgusted and dismayed as
Starhawk continued to fire orders, tightening cinches all the while.
"Thurg, Choirboy, you stay here ... "
"The name is Miris, thank you," retorted the youth with mock dignity. She
didn't recognize him-he must have joined the troop after she and the Wolf had
left it, almost exactly a year ago. Had it really been that long? With them
around her, it was as if that year had never been.
"They've got a couple hours' start on us," she went on, gauging the four
warriors with a practiced glance, deciding which could best be spared from the
upcoming fight. "We have to catch up with them before sunrise ... "
"You're going to need more than two swords," Choirboy pointed out. "You'll
have to steal back the horses anyway, so why take an empty saddle when you can
take a fighter?"
"Because I don't want one of my men left here alone, afoot." The words "my
men" came easily to her-hers to command and to answer for. "There's still
bands of shirdar around, sonny-you won't like what happens when they show up."
Past the horses, she could see the dark patches of blood-soaked sand where Sun
Wolf had been cornered and she hoped to the Mother that blood wasn't all his.
Scuffed tracks led away down the wash toward the desert-hoof prints, stumbling
footprints, a dark dribble of gore.
"He's right, Hawk," the Little Thurg said. "I'll manage."
She stood for a moment, reins gathered in her hand, sizing up the pair of
them. She knew the Little Thurg well-tough, short, in his early thirties, with
ten years of campaigning gouged into his hard little face, and obviously the
better man in a fight than the yearling boy. But that cut both ways. If a
roving band of vengeful shirdar did show up, Thurg could, as he'd said,
"manage." Choirboy-obviously to everyone but Choirboy-couldn't.
"Right." With a curt nod she stepped up into the saddle. "Watch your back,
Thurg."
"What do the shirdar want with the Chief, anyway?" Dogbreath demanded as they
reined away down the canyon. "You don't get them coming in this close to the
Middle Kingdoms on the warpath."
"Long story. I'll tell you that after you tell me what in the name of the
Seven Torments you gruts are doing down here." The coarse, vivid slang of the
mercenary armies slipped easily back to her tongue, like the ache in her
muscles-in her soldiering days she'd seldom been without a bruise or two-and
the habit of thinking in terms of many instead of one. Yet in another way
these dusty, grimy figures in their iron-plated leather jerkins, their bits of
spike and chain glinting coldly in the light of the lemon-colored moon, seemed
specters of a dream, called forth from her thoughts by the most casually
spoken of words. "I thought the troop would be on the road back to Wrynde by
this time of year."
"That," Dogbreath said, "is also a hell of a long story. We been to Pardle Sho
on the sniff for you and found the King's Citadel twittering like a cageful of
finches-you ever kicked a cageful of finches? Hours of fun. Some pook there
said you'd gone to some lost city out in the desert, but halfway there we met
the King and he allowed as how you'd lit out north with half the shirdar in
the desert on your tails ... "
"The Chief is supposed to have croaked a shirdar lord." Starhawk bent from her
saddle to squint at the ground as they came clear of the canyon's shadows into
the heartbreaking, liquid brilliance of the desert moon. The tracks were
harder to follow now as the deep sand gave way to coarse gray pebbles that
crunched under the hooves. "He's supposed to have summoned demons. They made
pemmican of the poor bastard."
Leaning down, scanning the shapeless earth for the scuffy trail of unshod
hooves and the occasional dark blood spoor, she still felt the look that
passed between them over her head.
"He-he really did turn into a hoodoo, then?" The word Firecat used was merc
slang, with all its lower-class connotations of dowsery and love drops and
murder in the night. "Not that he offed that grut," she hastened to add. "But
I mean-they seem to think he could have."
"Yeah." Starhawk straightened in the saddle, and something within her cringed
from speaking of it to these friends who wouldn't understand. "Yeah, he's a
wizard."
The silence was awkward, as if she'd admitted he'd suddenly developed a
romantic attachment to boys, something they would at least have encountered
elsewhere. They'd heard it last spring, when she and the Wolf had returned
from Mandrigyn and the horrors of the citadel of the Wizard-King Altiokis, but
she knew they hadn't really believed it then. And why should they? For as long
as any of them had been alive, no wizard had dared risk murder by the Wizard-
King by revealing himself; for at least three generations, fewer and fewer of
the mageborn had lived long enough to pass their teachings on.
They knew he had changed. He'd been in their winter camp in Wrynde for a week
or so before Ari, the troop's new commander, had led that band of killers
south to the newest war, and he'd been very quiet then, still dealing with the
fact that he would not, after all, be their commander, their Chief, anymore.
Even the most disbelieving of the troop would admit that more had befallen him
than the loss of his left eye and the breaking of his voice, of which now
little more was left than a scraped, metallic rasp. In his remaining eye, cold
amber under the long tufts of brow, was the haunted look of one who has leaned
drunk over a ditch to vomit and found himself looking straight down to the
bottommost depths of hell.
But knowing that he had changed, and believing what he said he had changed
into, were different things.
It was clear to Starhawk from the reactions of her friends in the troop that
they did not realize that she, too, had changed. But that, she reflected, was
probably just as well.
Choirboy's puzzled voice broke into her thoughts. "If he's a hookum," he
asked, "why can't he just make the shirdar all disappear?"
The same thought had crossed Sun Wolf's mind.
How long he'd been walking he didn't know; the moon had set, but through the
feverish blur of pain and semi-consciousness he kept a wizard's ability to see
in darkness, though some of the things he was beginning to see he knew weren't
real. Poison on the arrow, he thought groggily; toadwort or poppy, something
that would cloud the mind but not kill.
That, too, was a bad sign.
Other shirdar had joined the men who'd captured him; now and then he seemed to
emerge from a black tunnel of hazy agony to find the night freezing on his
face, the air burning the wound in his back, and all around him those white-
robed riders who never spoke. He'd fainted once, and the shirdar had whipped
their horses to a gallop and dragged him a dozen yards before stopping to kick
and flog him to his feet; he was fighting hard not to faint again.
Think! he ordered himself blurrily. Yirth of Mandrigyn taught you rope-
breaking spells, dammit ... But the words of them couldn't rise through the
pain and the dull buzzing in his ears; only Yirth's face, dark and ugly, with
hook nose and brown birthmark and the glow of those jade-green eyes as she'd
taught him spell after spell on the single night he'd spent in her teaching,
patterns of power sketched in the air or on the floor; words whose sounds
bridged the gap between Nothing and Something; healing, illusion, scrying,
weatherspinning ...
And how far do you think you'd run if you could remember one? he demanded
grimly. At the moment he was perfectly well aware that the rawhide rope that
dragged so excruciatingly at his wrists was the only thing holding him up.
He tried to think like the wizard he now was instead of the warrior he had
been for the whole of his life. Summon fire ... confusion ... steal a horse
... And the warrior in him asked cynically, And which one of these gruts are
you going to talk into helping you mount?
Yirth's image melted, blended in his delirium with that of Kaletha of Wenshar,
the only other teacher he'd been able to locate in a year of seeking, coldly
beautiful in the dappled shade of the public gardens where he'd seen her
first. Then that image, too, darkened, changed before his eyes to blood
splattered on a mosaic floor, to screams in darkness, and to the chittering of
the demons of Wenshar ...
He must have fallen. In the drugged black deeps of exhausted unconsciousness,
he became aware that he wasn't walking anymore, but lay on his back, stripped
to the waist, flesh cold with the bitter chill of the desert night and crying
out with a hundred abrasions, as if he'd been beaten with hammers of flint.
In his dreams he could feel the horror in the ground.
He had always dreamed vividly-his father, he remembered, had beaten him when
he'd caught him in daytime reverie, trying to recapture the colors of the
previous night. Since the ordeal of the Great Trial whereby the magic born
into his flesh, the magic he had all his life denied, had blossomed in a rose
of fire, his dreams had been clearer still.
He lay on the ground, cold sand gritty beneath his lacerated back and arms,
the blood of the arrow wound still seeping thickly into the earth. His arms
and legs were spread out, and he couldn't move, though whether this was
because he was still unconscious or because he was tied that way he didn't
know. By the utter silence, he knew it was the hushed hour preceding dawn,
before the hum of insects wakes the desert. The smell of dust and blood filled
his nostrils, and another smell that sent his mind screaming at him to wake
up, wake up! as if his bound flesh could feel through the earth on which it
lay what was beneath it.
They, too, were waking.
In dreams he saw them, blackish-red clots like dark raspberries in the winding
night of their tunnels, huddled together and stupid with cold. As big as a
man's thumb, they were like armored horses with their malignant eyes and
dangling mandibles-tunnels, chambers, the caverns where bloated queens sat
dully squeezing out eggs. The distant sun was already beginning to warm them.
He smelled the acid of their bodies, as he knew they smelled his flesh.
With desperate effort, he wrenched his mind free of sleep. The blurry haze of
the poison had lessened, which meant the pain was sharper, and with it the
nauseated weakness of shock. Above him the sky was black opal, save when he
turned his head to see where the blue turned to violet, the violet to pink,
and then amber where it touched the cool citrine of distant sand. Moving his
head again, he saw his own right arm, stretched from his shoulder to the
rawhide strips that bound his wrist to a stake in the ground. A foot beyond
his fingertips was an anthill four feet across, its top nearly the height of a
man's knee.
He nearly threw up with horror. There were two others visible beyond it;
raising his head, a movement which sent renewed shoots of agony down every
screaming muscle of his body, he could see another between his spread-eagled
feet and others beyond that. It must be the same around on his blind left
side.
For an instant shrieking panic swelled in him; then the calm that had gotten
him out of a hundred traps and ambushes in his years as a mercenary commander
forced the horror away. Calmly he closed his eye, and began sorting in his
mind everything Yirth of Mandrigyn had told him, as if he had all the day
before him, item by item ...
And the spell was there. A spell of slipping, of loosening, of the fibers of
the uncured leather growing damp, gathering moisture from the air, stretching
gradually ...
The breathless air warmed where it touched his naked belly and chest. He
opened his eye to see that the sky had lightened. As he felt the rawhide that
cut the flesh of his right wrist loosen a little, his glance went beyond it to
the crown of the hideous hillock, and he saw the gritty sand glow suddenly
gold. Each pebble, each grain, of the filigreed pit edge of its top was
feathered with the long black crescent of a tiny shadow where the first
sunlight hit it. The pebbles moved and shifted. Stiffly, an ant crawled forth.
Sun Wolf's concentration failed in a second of horror, and he felt the rope
bite again into the bleeding flesh. Like the clenching of a fist, he clamped
his mind shut, forcing himself to think only of the spells of undoing, of the
dry air turning moist on the leather, of oily knots sliding apart ... It'll
never work in time ...
Other ants were moving about on the mounds now, big soldier ants, bulbous
bodies an inch and a half in length, mandibles dangling from heads like
shining coffee beans. Sun Wolf fancied he could feel the spiked tickle of
their feet on his bare flesh, twisted at his bonds in panic, and felt the
rawhide tighten again as the spell's slow working slacked ... Not now, pox rot
it ... !
His mind groped, slid. It would take too long; they'd scent his flesh in
moments ...
But what would it smell like?
It wouldn't work for long-he was too weak, the pain of his wounds too
insistent, and if he blacked out again he was dead-but in a split second of
clear thought he called to his flesh the searing illusion of heat, poison,
fire, burning oil, anything, and threw it around him like a cloak at those
tiny, vicious, mindless minds. Dust, smoke ... that's what they'd smell ...
the crackle of flames where he lay twisting frantically at the ropes that held
him pinned over their tunnels ...
He saw the ants-and there were quite a lot of them-hesitate and draw back.
He knew he couldn't keep it up, couldn't maintain the illusion and work spells
on the ropes at the same time. A wave of sick weakness clouded his thoughts,
and he fought to keep them clear, fought both the pain and the panic he could
sense tearing at the edges of his concentration. Either would kill him; if the
ants actually started on him he'd never keep his thoughts clear ...
Blood, he thought; the juices of sweat and terror; meat sugary-sweet for the
tasting ... He had never tried a double illusion like this, but it was that or
wait for the single spell to outlast his physical ability to remain conscious.
Like a smell he twined this new illusion around the ropes that held his
outspread hands and feet, and shut his teeth hard on a scream as the ants
swarmed greedily forward. They would eat the rawhide, he told himself, they
would not touch his flesh-they thought his flesh was fire-his flesh WAS fire-
it was the rawhide that was his flesh ...
He closed his fists and turned up his hands as much as he could, though the
merc effort of that made his arms shake with weakness. Ants clotted the
rawhide ropes on the stakes in threshing, glittering blobs. They kept a few
inches from the backs of his knuckles, and from his heels, as if his flesh
were in fact the fire he projected. If he could keep it up ...
There was a shrill cry of rage, and the muffled thunder of hooves in the
ground. The shirdar, he thought, in some floating corner of his awareness. Of
course they'd stayed to watch from a safe distance. He moved his head, slowly,
holding his concentration on the double spell, his whole body drenched now
with sweat in the dawn cold.
The riders whirling toward him seemed to come in a slow-motion bellying of
white cloaks, shouting with fury, lances raised. He thought detachedly that he
probably wouldn't be able to maintain his concentration on either spell with
three spears in his belly; death would take almost as long with them as
without. But he held to the spells anyway, weirdly fascinated with the merc
technique of it, as if these weren't going to be the last few seconds of his
life, too taken up with his concentration as the nearest warrior raised his
spear ...
The rider's head snapped back, his body contorting as an arrow appeared
suddenly in the middle of his breast, red blossoming over the white of his
robe. Sun Wolf thought, The Hawk must not have been killed. He couldn't care,
couldn't let himself feel joy or fear or anything else which would distract
him from a mental exercise he only barely understood. Dizziness swept him.
Ants swarmed all around him now, racing back and forth over the pale earth or
crawling in heaving swarms on the ropes and stakes, centimeters from the backs
of his hands. Other hooves shook the ground under his back, but he dared not
break the tunnel of his vision, the wordless images of the spells ...
Hurry it up, damn you, Hawk!
Someone screamed, a death cry of agony, at the same moment the ropes parted.
Sun Wolf rolled over, shaking, aware again of the scores of open cuts, the raw
flesh of his wrists and the shredded wounds on his knees beneath his torn
breeches, aware of the cracked rib he'd gotten in Wenshar, the swollen, dust-
clotted hole where the arrow had been pulled out, and the half-healed demon
bites-another souvenir of Wenshar-on his hands. He tried to stand and fell
immediately, his mind plunging toward unconsciousness. The ants swarmed
forward.
Fire, he thought blindly, fire all around my body ... Just a few seconds more,
damn it!
Starhawk saw the flames roar up in a wall around the Wolf's fallen body and
thought, Illusion. She hoped to the Mother it was an illusion, anyway. She
drove in her spurs and yelled to Choirboy, "It isn't real ... !"
It looked damn real.
Beside her in the din-the shirdar she'd shot was still partially alive, buried
under a shroud of insects and screaming like a mechanical noisemaker-she heard
Choirboy yell, and from the tail of her eye saw the panic in his face at the
sight of the flames.
"It's not real, dammit!"
But panicky uncertainty had claimed him. The youth hauled on the reins,
dragging his horse to a skidding halt among the ants. Starhawk felt her own
mount veer at the sight and heat of the blaze and lashed it brutally with the
quirt, driving it straight toward the shimmering wall. Choirboy's horse reared
and twisted as the ants, fully aroused now and covering the sandy knoll in a
seething blackish-red carpet, poured up over its hooves and began tearing the
flesh of its fetlocks. Choirboy screamed again as the frenzied animal flung
him; then the Hawk saw no more, her own mount plunging through the pale circle
of flame.
She hauled rein with the Wolf nearly under the hooves. The heat beat upon her
as if she'd ridden into a furnace, and she didn't dare dismount. The flame
seemed to pour straight up out of the ground, as if the dirt itself were
burning. She screamed, "Get on your feet, you stinking oaf! You waiting for a
goddamned mounting block or something?!"
Reeling like a drunken man, Sun Wolf half rose. She grabbed a flailing arm,
nails digging hard enough to bring blood from the bare and filthy flesh-she
could only spare one hand from the dithering horse's rein. She pitched her
voice as she'd pitch a battle yell over the greedy roar of the flames, the
screaming and yells of the shirdar up among the rocks. "Get your arse in the
goddam saddle or I'll goddam drag it out of here!" Through the bloody curtain
of his ragged hair she could see that his one good eye was closed, his face
white as a dying man's beneath a layer of grime. Somehow he got a bare foot in
the stirrup and heaved; she hooked her arm under his shoulder and hauled with
all her strength, dumping him over the saddlebow like a killed pig. Then she
drove in the spurs and plunged for the hills, the circle of surrounding fire
sweeping after them like the head of a comet trailing flame, leaving no burn
upon the ground.
Fifty feet farther on, the fire flicked suddenly out of existence, and she
knew Sun Wolf had fainted.
In the rocks Dogbreath and Firecat joined them, leading four shirdar horses in
a string. The Hawk glanced back swiftly at the teeming knoll and Dogbreath
shook his head and gestured with the bow on the back of his saddle. She
shivered, but knew he was right. He and the Cat had been busy in the rocks
dealing with the rest of the shirdar. By the time they'd been able to get to
Choirboy-running, rolling, tearing frenziedly at the gnawing carpet of ants
that had already eaten out his eyes and ears and brain-shooting him was all
they could have done.
So the ants, she supposed, if no one else, had done well out of the day. A
philosopher might take that as proof that the Mother did look out for the
humblest of Her creatures, and that it was an ill wind indeed that blew nobody
good.
That was one reason she'd become a mercenary instead of a philosopher-the
other, of course, being that the pay was better.
This isn't right, Sun Wolf thought, pulling himself stickily from the darkness
of fevered sleep. He'd left the troop with Ari, left them for good ... He was
a mage now. He had to find a teacher, had to find his destiny ... find what he
should have gone looking for twenty years ago ... Hadn't he?
But they seemed so real-Dogbreath cross-legged by a fist-sized fire built in
the shelter of black granite boulders, sharpening a dagger, and Starhawk's
silhouette crouched against the blazing desert stars. Somewhere close by a
horse whickered, and distant, liquid, unbearably hurtful, coyotes cried in
lonely chorus at the moon.
Had he left them? Or was he, in fact, still their commander? Was this that
hellish desert summer they'd fought the armies of Shilmarne of Dalwirin back
and forth through the passes of the Dragon's Backbone? Had he just been
wounded and dreamed it all-the horrors of Altiokis' Citadel, the scorching
birth agonies of magic within him ... Starhawk saying she loved him?
Maybe none of it had ever happened, he thought, sinking again into the fever's
shroud of many-colored pain. Maybe he was still commander of these people,
fighting small wars for pay and for whatever loot they could steal. Maybe he
had never really felt that power kindle deep fire in his flesh.
Starhawk's cool voice said something about it being time to ride on, if they
wanted to get over the passes before the shirdar gathered for another attack.
He heard the light scrunch of her boots and turned his face away, so that she
would not see him weep.
He woke clearheaded, indoors, this time. He heard the groan of dry wind in
wooden eaves, the scratchy rattle of pine boughs against the wall by his head,
and the petulant bang of a poorly fastened shutter. Musty straw, cooking, and
woodsmoke-an inn, he thought, opening his eye. Opposite the bed where he lay,
he saw an open door and, beyond it, the carved railing of an indoor gallery
and high ceiling rafters dyed amber with firelight from a hearth somewhere
below. Then he moved his head and saw Starhawk, Firecat, Dogbreath, and the
Little Thurg grouped around a crude table across from the foot of his bed.
"Raise you two."
"Come on, I saw you take three cards ... "
"You gonna see me or sit there whining about it, you sleaze-eating heretic?"
"You should talk about heresy! I'll see you and raise you, you pox-ridden
antisubstantiationist tart ... "
"I bet you say that to all the girls ... "
"I've got better things to do than throw good money after bad ... "
"Who dealt this mess?"
Gear was heaped under the table around their feet. He saw his sword, which
they must have picked up in the arroyo, his boots, and the battered saddlebags
containing the books of the Witches of Wenshar. He waited until Starhawk had
gathered up her winnings, then said, "I thought I'd have to be pretty far off
my head to hallucinate something that looked that much like Dogbreath."
They crowded around his bed-Starhawk carefully pocketing her money before
leaving the table-all talking at once. Over Thurg's head he met the Hawk's
eyes, cool and gray and enigmatic as always, but deep in them he read what
she'd die before saying in the presence of others, her shy pleasure at seeing
him once more himself, if not precisely on his feet. Idiotically, his heart
did a little flip in his chest.
"We been hunting you all around St. Gambion's barn, Chief," Thurg was saying.
Firecat added, "Be a hell of a thing to catch up with you just in time to see
you get et by bugs."
"Yeah, I thought that myself." He struggled to sit up, shaking the long hair
out of his face.
Under a bandaged pad of dressings, the wound in his back hurt like a mother-
in-law's bite, but it was the scouring sting of poultices, no longer the burn
of poison. From the feel of it, he could tell it wasn't serious. A whore long
ago had once given him worse with a pair of scissors.
"But"-Dogbreath grinned, perching tailor-fashion on the end of the bed, his
mad eyes sparkling-"odds were damn near even we would."
"What the hell is that supposed to mean?"
Starhawk tossed him a shirt. It was his last spare from the saddlebags,
patched, frayed at the cuffs, most of the points missing, and stained faintly
with somebody's blood. They'd probably got the innkeeper's wife to patch it-no
mercenary he knew, with the exception of himself, had any idea which end of
the needle the thread went through. In the past year of traveling with
Starhawk it had been he who had mended her shirts-a hell of a thing in a grown
woman who'd presumably been raised right. He rubbed his eyepatch, readjusting
the set of the leather over the empty socket.
"And what the hell are you doing here anyway? I thought Ari would be halfway
back to Wrynde by this time of year."
"Ari sent us, Chief," Dogbreath said, the wicked sparkle fading from his dark
eyes. "We're in trouble, all of us-we need your help bad. We can't be certain,
but it's looking more and more like some wizard's put a hex on the troop."
CHAPTER 2
"It started with little things." Dogbreath shrugged and gestured helplessly
with big, knuckly hands. Never a dirty man, Dogbreath was invariably ragged;
under the dingy leather of his iron-plated doublet lurked a sweater that
looked as if it had been knitted by a wittol on hashish, over which the grimy
and horrifically parti-colored dags of a court coat's sleeves hung like
rotting kelp. "Stuff happens-it always happens, any campaign, you know that,
Chief. But this time ... "
"Where are they now?"
"Vorsal."
Sun Wolf swore, with considerable variety and feeling.
It wasn't that he felt any shock over the siege of Vorsal. He'd been expecting
trouble there since its hereditary Duke had defied the economic leadership of
Kwest Mralwe and started weaving and exporting local cloth via Vorsal's own
small but excellent harbor, instead of selling the fleeces to the great
merchant houses of Kwest Mralwe. When anyone, let alone some two-by-three
principality like Vorsal, crossed the richest cloth-trade monopoly in the
Middle Kingdoms, war was strictly a matter of the King-Council's earliest
convenience. But for Ari and the mercs to still be there this late in the year
...
"Does he know how close the rains are?" Sun Wolf rasped, appalled. "What the
hell's he been doing all summer? God's Grandmother, the Hawk and I between us
could take that town in two weeks with a troop of nuns and a performing dog
act!"
"It's not that easy, Chief." Dogbreath drew up his knees and wrapped his long
arms around them, his simian brow puckered as he tried to marshal thoughts he
was uncertain how-or if-to express. "I never believed in all that garf about
hoodoos," he continued after a moment. "I mean, yeah, I laid out a dozen
summer nights watching for the fairies when I was a kid, and all I ever saw
was the older kids canoodling in the woods. But now they say you-you've turned
into some kind of hoodoo, and there might be others-wizards, witches-hoodoos
who've been on the bunk all these years, coming out now Altiokis the Wizard-
King isn't around to snuff 'em. And damn if I know what to believe."
Through the open door, voices drifted up from the common room below the
gallery, the innkeeper's wife's raised in exasperation above the chirping
giggles of her assorted offspring. This close to the coming of the winter
storms, few travelers were on the road. Sun Wolf guessed the woman wouldn't
摘要:

THEDARKHANDOFMAGICBarbaraHambly[19sep2002-scannedfor#bookz][26sep2002-scannedfor#bookz]CHAPTER1SunWolf'scapture,asSunWolfhimselfreflectedathisexecution,was\sheer,stupidillluck,whichDogbreathofMallincorewouldhavetoldhimwaso\nlytobeexpectedunderthecircumstances.Thearrowthatbroughthimdowntookhimhighint...

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