“I’d better stay with the horses.” Mikhail’s voice broke Soterius from his dark thoughts. “They’re too valuable to drive off, and if we leave them here, they wolves will get them.”
“Lemus is the innkeeper,” Alle said. “He can send his hired men back in the morning to help with the horses. If you stay up here near the caves, you’ll have shelter before dawn comes, and Lemus’s men can be here at first light.”
“Much obliged, m’lady.” In the moonlight, Soterius could see that his friend’s complexion was almost ruddy, a testimony that he had fed well on the soldiers who had run for the forest. Alle lit the lantern and led them back through the twisting cavern passages. The caves seemed even colder than when they had set out, and Soterius’s hands and feet were numb.
It took two men to lift the stone slab that hid the entrance to the passageway.
The barn, warmed by the horses that waited there and sheltered from the wind, was a haven from the brutal cold outside. When the last of the soldiers had climbed from the passageway and the slab was again in place, Alle stood with her hands on her hips and looked at the group.
“There’s not room for all of you in the inn, so Lemus said he’d send out blankets. We’ll take the girl and the worst injuries inside for the healers, and I’ll send a boy out with some warm food and ale. Mind that you stay quiet. We don’t use this barn for customers, but the inn still gets some guardsmen, and you don’t need their attention!”
Sahila stayed with the men in the barn while Tadrie, still carrying the injured girl, followed Alle into the inn. Soterius helped the fighter with the leg wound, while the other refugee, gingerly supporting his injured arm with his good hand, declined help.
Lemus met them in the kitchen. He was a short man with the look of a clerk, whose long face and brown eyes appeared guileless. A perfect spy, Soterius thought.
“And?” Lemus asked.
“A rout!” Alle grinned. She slipped out of her cloak and ran a hand through her long hair. “Need a room for this one,” she said with a nod toward the girl Tadrie carried. “She was the only one they
could save from the captives. Have a couple of other injuries to tend, too,” she indicated with a glance toward the wounded fighters.
Lemus nodded. “Take the back stairs. I kept the third room on the left for you.
Keep your head down. We’ve got a couple of Margolan guardsmen in the common room tonight, and one of them took a room upstairs for the night.”
“Lovely,” Soterius murmured.
Alle went ahead to scout the hallway; the others moved as quietly as they could up the back stairs. She checked to make sure their room was empty, and then waved them on. Inside the room, Tadrie set the girl down on the bed. With a whimper, the girl curled into a ball, wrapping her arms around her knees.
Tadrie took a blanket from a peg on the wall and gently tucked it around her.
The two wounded soldiers found seats on a chair and a bench. Alle lit two lanterns and then she smoothed down her skirts and straightened her hair.
“I’ll send the healers right up. And I’ll bring up some stew and ale. I’d best go have a look at who’s in the common room, so that we don’t have prob-lems later. Wait here. Don’t go wandering around.”
“I’m too cold to wander anywhere.” Soterius leaned back against the wall and ran his hands up and down his arms to warm himself. Despite his heavy cloak he was chilled through. It would take time, even in the warm inn, for him to feel com-fortable again.
“Aye, everyone but Mikhail was feeling the wind tonight, I wager!” Tadrie replied.
Alle returned before long with a thin, hawk-faced woman, a pot of stew, and a pitcher of ale. Tucked into her belt was a large napkin filled with hard rolls.
Alle laid the food on the small table as the hawk-faced woman looked at the girl and the two injured men.
“This is our healer, Kae. She’ll take good care of your folks. Help yourself to the food—it’s warm. Lemus has sent more of the same out to the barn, so your men should be warming up!”
Kae quickly triaged the wounded, and started on the two soldiers first. Alle motioned for Soterius to step to the side.
“The Margolan guardsmen downstairs,” she whispered. “I don’t like the look of them. Lemus says they’ve been throwing their weight around, bullying the servers and threatening some of the customers. They’ve taken a room for the night, just a few doors down. Keep your head down—the older one talks like he’s spent time at Shekerishet. You don’t need to be recognized.”
Soterius looked at her, startled. “Oh, I know who you are, Ban Soterius. Captain of Bricen’s guard. And I’ll wager I wouldn’t be the only one. No one’s where they’re supposed to be these days. And even fewer are who they pretend to be.
That beard’s not much of a disguise.”
Alle moved to help Kae with the healing, dutiful-ly fetching hot water and whatever ingredients the healer needed for her poultices. Soterius tore strips of cloth for bandages from a clean sheet Alle thrust into his hands. Tadrie stayed close to the village girl, talking to her in low, reassuring tones, like a father with a sick child. Soterius guessed that Tadrie’s wife would find herself with a new charge once the girl was well enough to travel.
After a couple of candlemarks, Kae finished her healing. The wounded fighters rested on pallets on the floor. After much coaxing and reassuring, the wounded girl permitted the healer to tend her wounds, and drank a mixture of herbs and warm wine that guaranteed her a peaceful sleep. When Kae finished, she washed her hands in the basin Alle provided and looked from Alle to Soterius.
“I’ve been to the village that girl came from,” Kae said sadly. “They were honest tradesfolk. They did nothing to deserve what happened to them. What she’s been through… I’ve healed her body, made sure she wasn’t with child, but there are scars I can’t fix. She needs a mind healer.” Kae’s hand tightened to a white-knuckled fist and shook against her skirt. “I’m glad you killed the ones that did that to her—saves me from break-ing my healers’ vows.”
“I killed their captain myself,” Soterius assured her. “He had it coming.”
“I’ll be back to check on them before dawn. They should all sleep well tonight, and feel no pain,” Kae looked back at her three charges. “On the other hand, they’re in no shape to flee if we get raided tonight.”
“I’ll stand guard,” Tadrie volunteered, patting the pommel of his sword.
“Come downstairs with me,” Alle said to Soterius. “Lemus has information for you from what he’s heard in the common room the last few nights.”
They were halfway down the narrow hallway when a loud voice sounded on the front stairs. The speaker was well into his ale.
“Margolan officer!” Alle hissed. The door behind her was locked, and they were too far from the back stairs to run without being caught. As the footsteps approached the top of the stairs, Alle fell backward against the wall, grabbing a handful of Soterius’s shirt and pulling hard against him. He lost his bal-ance, bracing himself against the wall with one hand on either side of her shoulders.
Alle reached up and pulled his head down, crushing his lips against hers. Her leg slid up and wrapped around his hip. She gave a shrug, letting her blouse fall provocatively from one shoulder.
“Someone’s lucky tonight!” the drunken man chortled as he and his companion started down the hallway. “How about coming to see us when you’re finished?”
Alle thrust out her hand, rubbing her fingers together as if to ask for coin.
“Poxy whore!” the man’s companion spat as they shoved past. The two made ribald remarks, laugh-ing at their own jokes, until they reached their room at the end of the hall and the door closed behind them.
Alle pushed Soterius away, straightened her blouse, and smoothed her skirt.
“Don’t let it go to your head,” she warned, and then flashed him a wicked grin.
“I figured it was better than killing them and having to clean up the blood. And we’ve all got to make sacrifices for the war—right?”
Soterius gave her a sour look that made her laugh. “C’mon. Lemus is waiting.”
After another candlemark in the kitchen, Soterius was finally warm once more.
His mind buzzed with the bits of information Lemus shared: overheard troop movements, rumors about Jared’s interest in an alliance with Nargi, and unsettling tales about soldiers in the cities sent to round up and eliminate dissenters. It was almost dawn when Soterius final-ly made his way back to the barn, and while he thought he might be too full of thoughts and wor-ries to rest, exhaustion won out, and sleep found him quickly.
next
contents
STADEN GAVE HIS whole-hearted permission for Tris to set up a Court of Spirits in the weeks before Winterstide. Word spread quickly, and Tris was aghast to see how many petitioners, living, dead, and undead, lined up to receive the blessing of the first Summoner to pass through the kingdom in years. Tris began the Court of Spirits just a few days after he returned from the citadel.
Within a week, the court was so crowded that Tris could not see all of the petitioners in a single day. Many camped out-side the palace wherever the guards would permit, awaiting their place in line. As Winterstide grew closer, both petitioners and spirits seemed to be filled with a new urgency to make things right before the solstice. Staden often watched from the back of the great room, shaking his head in awe at Tris’s ability to intercede between the living and the dead.
Inside the great hall, many of the revenants could not be seen by anyone except Tris. These spirits lacked the power to show themselves except on the night of the Feast of the Departed—”Haunts” as it was called. Other, stronger spirits made themselves
Winter Kingdoms expected their loved ones to remain with them after death.
In Margolan, most households set out a plate with a token amount of food at the evening meal, inviting their departed loved ones to join them. Some of the more devout households even had a “spirit room,” a small box with miniature furnishings and tiny replicas of per-sonal items to entice family spirits to dwell alongside them in comfort and respect.
In the Winter Kingdoms, living with the dead was a daily occurrence; most gave it no more thought than they gave to fixing their meals or minding their trade.
Ghosts and the undead were a part of life, though it rapidly became apparent to Tris that many of life’s complications and tangled relation-ships extended even beyond death.
Women came to seek the favor of a departed moth-er or grandmother for advice. Husbands, sons, and brothers sought to make peace, beg forgiveness, or have a troubling spirit banished. Ghosts asked Tris to bear messages to their families, or carry word of some important thing left unsaid before the spirit’s death. Restless spirits sought redress and the help of a Summoner to make the final passage to the Lady. Even vayash moru came, seeking the spirit of some-one from their mortal past. Living, dead, and undead, they filled the audience chamber and the hallway beyond, waiting for Tris’s help.
It was a good thing that most spirits did not require the intervention of a Summoner to pass over, Tris thought. Most of the time, only those souls who wished to stay or were bound by tragedy or the guilt of the living remained behind. Among the living, those without an urgent need were con-tent to wait until Haunts to communicate with the dead. Most made offerings of ale and honey cakes around the small altar kept in every home, no mat-ter how poor.
Tris knew that the petitioners who were willing to wait for days to see him now were desperate in their need for reconciliation.
The next petitioner stepped forward, a man who was very much alive. He was in his middle years, with work-worn hands. Despite his weathered appearance, the man had a plain dignity about him as he tugged uncomfortably at his home-spun coat. “Your Highness,” he said awkwardly, attempting a deep bow.
“What is your need?”
“My name is Kelse, and I’m a freeman. My fami-ly owns a bit of ground a day’s ride from the palace. Please, sire, I need to speak to the ghost of my father.”
“And what is it you seek?” As the man spoke, Tris extended his mage sense, trying to gain not only the measure of the man, but also to sense whether any spirits lingered near him.
“My father was a cautious man. He put away some coins in a safe place, against a bad year. He was also a stubborn man. Last year, during the troubles—” Kelse’s voice caught. He took a moment to compose himself. “Last year, during the rains, our village flooded. Father died. We managed to save some of the barn and all of the livestock, but our planting stock is gone, and there’s naught to replace it. I need to find those coins,” he begged. “I’ve looked everywhere. Please, sire. I’ve nothing to feed my family with. If I can’t find the coins I’ll have to sharecrop, and I swore to my father I’d never be any man’s servant.”
As Tris stretched out his senses, he felt the tug of a spirit, and used his magic to enable the spirit to travel to him. Tris reached out his hand to where the farmer stood and concentrated on the dim pulse of the wraith, focusing his power to bring it closer and make it visible. Kelse gasped and Tris knew that he had succeeded.
There in front of him stood a thin man with a set jaw and a hard-bitten glint in his eye. Kelse sank to his knees, sobbing. “Your son wishes to ask for your help,” Tris said to the apparition. The old man’s ghost looked from Tris to his son.
“I’m sorry, Kelse. I should have told you long ago, but I was always afraid someone would fritter it away.” The ghost’s voice was distant. Kelse lifted his head, silent as the tears streaked down his cheeks. “Take the logs out of the fireplace. Sit where the logs would be, face the hearth, and lift a candle up above your head. There is a ledge above the fireplace open-ing. Reach all the way to the back. You’ll find five pieces of gold. It’s all I had. The Lady bless you, son. I didn’t plan to leave you like this.”
“I know, father. I know.” Kelse rocked back and forth in his grief. “Thank you,”
he whispered, both to Tris and to the ghost. “Thank you.”
Tris turned toward the old man’s ghost. “Would you go to your rest now?”