Wirrin missed the desert. As pretty as the plains between Epatlok and Ahepvalt were, with all their long grass and winter flowers, Wirrin wasnât enjoying the easterly breeze coming in off the ocean. If Wirrin wasnât enjoying the breeze Yern, who had brought no extra clothes, was having a terrible time.
The rawhide backpack was done, not that there was much in it, but it certainly didnât do anything for the biting wind. Wirrin was thinking they should have crossed the Boclas back at the river divergence. There was a sheep farm on the far side of the river where Wirrin had worked for a while, more than a decade ago. They would probably have something warm to spare.
They could have cut across the fields toward Hekaulget, where they would have some goat or alpaca leather for warm clothes. But Wirrin wanted to avoid anywhere there might be mages on the way to Ahepvalt.
Yern, who was as hunched in on herself as she could get, wrapped in one of Wirrinâs blankets, and walking directly to her left to try to get out of the wind, complained. âCanât you just shoot a gazelle or something?â
âItâd take another few days to cure it,â Wirrin said. âYouâre dragging the blanket on the ground.â
âYeah, well itâs way too big,â Yern groused. âArenât you from the snow? Donât you have any warm clothes?â
Wirrin didnât think sheâd ever shared her clothes with anyone. It just hadnât occurred to her. Her winter jacket would be just about a dress on Yern, but it would probably be better than the blanket.
Wirrinâs winter jacket enveloped Yern more than the blanket had, hanging off her shoulders and drooping past her knees. But at least it didnât drag on the ground.
âStop laughing,â Yern glowered.
âStop being so small,â Wirrin smirked.
âIâm working on it. Itâs a slow process.â
âJust need to eat more,â Wirrin said.
âYou would know,â Yern muttered. âYou eat like youâve never seen food before.â
âEvery day is a new day,â Wirrin smiled. âIâve never eaten that meal before. Being stabbed in the lungs is hungry work.â
âI havenât been stabbed in the lungs,â Yern pointed out.
âIf youâre cold, you should eat more,â Wirrin said. âI used to only eat this much when I was in the mountains.â
âNow youâre a mage you have to eat more, is it?â Yern asked, a curious sort of frown taking over from the annoyance.
âMust do. Iâve been hungry since I found Mkaer,â Wirrin said.
âAll those new mages back home, they all started eating more,â Yern said.
Wirrin hadnât noticed, but she expected Yern was right. âSomething to do with Ulvaer, no doubt,â she said. âFiend of Hunger and all.â
âTheyâre all so hungry,â Ulvaer rattled. âThey need to eat. Nothing wrong with that.â
âUnless they eat everything at the hetavatok,â Wirrin thought. âOr everything they had stored back at your statue.â
âNo fear of that,â Ulvaer cackled. âThereâs always more food.â
Wirrin and Yern struck off the path to have lunch in a stand of trees. It didnât help the wind as much as Wirrin had hoped. Wirrin made Yern eat more than usual before they packed up and set off again.
Even if she looked ridiculous in Wirrinâs winter coat, Yern stopped complaining about the cold. It had really been her only complaint anyway. Yern was totally enamoured with the river, which was by far the biggest body of water sheâd ever seen. And all the winter flowers, green grasses, and crop fields were just as enchanting.
Wirrin was quite enjoying watching Yern have all these new experiences. She was barely even annoyed at how slow she still had to go, since it gave Yern enough time to gaze in absolute wonder at the world around.
Three days out from the river divergence, Wirrin and Yern were just passing the edges of Epatlokâs farmland on the far side of the river, tame fields giving way to tall grassland undulating in the wind.
Wirrin felt the barge coming down the river behind them. It felt very like something slithering over the ground, but less focused. Wirrin was just wondering if her range in water was the same as her range through the ground, when the barge started steering across the water, closer to the side she was on.
There was nothing coming the other way.
Wirrin pulled Yern off the road beside the river, into the drier plains on this side of the water. âSomeoneâs coming on that barge,â she said.
The barge in question was only just over the horizon behind them, obvious in the overhead sun. It looked like an ordinary barge to Wirrin, but she could think of no reason for it to cross the river like that.
Yernâs hand gripped the hilt of her sword.
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âDonât do that,â Wirrin said. âYouâre a threat if you have a weapon.â
âI could be a threat,â Yern grumbled.
âIf youâre a threat, youâre worth killing,â Wirrin said.
Yern let go of her sword hilt, but her hand hovered around it.
âTry to keep out of it, please.â Wirrin made eye contact.
Yernâs eyes were wide, but her jaw was set. She looked very small in Wirrinâs massive coat.
The Boclas was slower here, past the divergences at Louyava and Epatlok, but the barge was still much faster than Wirrin and Yern. There was no chance of finding somewhere to hide before it reached them. Wirrin just wanted to get further from the edge of the water, try to make it harder for someone to jump on her.
And jump was what someone did. Five mages, obvious in their thick robes, rode the barge down the river toward them. One put their hands on the shoulders of two others and they seemed to drift to the bank, like the way War mages moved. Another, separate, War mage drifted off the boat, landing closer to Wirrin. The last leapt, confident in their physical capacity.
It was the last who shouted to Wirrin, a golden heart gleaming in the sunlight. âWirrin, weâre not here to fight.â
The other use of moving away from the river was that it put all the mages close to the water. Where the barge was dropping anchor and slowing down.
âStay here,â Wirrin instructed, staring down at Yern.
âFlesh is not trustworthy,â Ulvaer rattled.
âBe very careful, Wirrin,â Mkaer rumbled.
Wirrin stared at Yern until the girl nodded and looked away.
âIf youâre not here to fight, what do you want?â Wirrin called back, moving closer, away from Yern. Her hand rested on the handle of her knife.
âWe want to talk,â the Flesh mage called.
Wirrin rolled her eyes. âI got that much. What do you want to talk about?â
Aside from the two War mages, the other two wore flower pendants.
âDo you all want to talk?â Wirrin asked. âOr do Vonaer and Azavaer have some reservations?â
The Flesh mage flinched. âYou shouldnâtâ¦â He took a deep breath. âWe all have reservations. But you have clearly achieved something previously unheard of. It is better to understand than not.â
Wirrin pressed her lips together. âHave any of you tried?â she asked. âSurely you can speak to one of your other Gods and ask?â
The Flesh mage clenched his jaw. âNone of us have tried,â he said. âItâsâ¦â
âItâs not the done thing?â Wirrin smiled. âYou donât talk to the others? Pick one and thatâs it? I wonder why it was unheard of.â
âOur mages would speak to the others at altars quite often,â Naertral burbled. âIt was often easier to find an altar than a mage, if we wished to communicate.â
âExcept for Ulvaer,â Mkaer rumbled.
âSymbols are so uninteresting,â Ulvaer rattled. âMy people are my symbols.â
âYou couldnât speak to each other at an altar?â Wirrin thought.
âNo,â Mkaer rumbled. âOnly after we had been joined to you could we speak to each other.â
âThe others would not agree to it,â the Flesh mage said.
âThen Iâm not the one you need to talk to, am I?â Wirrin said. âEither your Gods agree to disregard Vonaer and Azavaer or you speak to them, surely?â
The Flesh mage flinched again.
Wirrin stepped closer.
âCareful,â Mkaer rumbled.
âDo you know your Godâs name?â Wirrin asked.
âItâs not my place,â the Flesh mage said, through clenched teeth.
âDo you want me to tell you?â Wirrin asked.
The Flesh mage grabbed her around the throat. A wave splashed over the two growth mages and splattered the robes of one of the War mages.
âAzavaer could save them,â Wirrin rasped. âWill you?â
She could feel the blood beating through the mageâs veins. Could feel his heart beating evenly. He was full of water. That was interesting.
He let go.
âYou two stop that,â Wirrin called, hoarsely.
The plants stopped moving behind her.
âWhat can I do for you that you canât do for yourselves?â Wirrin asked. âHow I got to be here doesnât matter, surely?â
âIf it were so easy, you would not be the first,â the Flesh mage said.
âUlvaer, do you think you could convince some of your mages to go to the swamp?â Wirrin thought.
Aloud, she said: âEven if I tell you how I did it, what use is that information? You wonât do it, will you?â
âA brand new phenomenon is interesting,â the Flesh mage said.
âItâs better to know how to prevent it happening again, perhaps,â Wirrin said. âIf you donât know how it works, youâll be stuck with the fear itâll happen again. Maybe next time, itâll happen to someone more motivated.â
âYou seem motivated, Wirrin.â
âThink what I could have done with the element of surprise, back in the south,â Wirrin said. âIf I really were motivated. Perhaps Iâm like you: interested.â
The Flesh mage stared at her, jaw working.
âIs it time to fight, do you think?â Wirrin asked.
âHave I said how much I like you, Wirrin?â Ulvaer cackled.
The Flesh mage grabbed Wirrin by the throat. Water seeped through the skins of the three mages sheâd doused. Wirrin grabbed her knife and did her best to stab the Flesh mage in the neck.
Instead of being stabbed, the mageâs neck split before the point of the knife, opening to let the blade through suddenly empty space. The mage grabbed her arm and suddenly Wirrin couldnât move her hand.
Sand blasted up between Yern and the remaining War mage. Wirrin couldnât speak to tell Yern to run, not that it would have done any good.
The mageâs flesh was solid in a way that none so far had felt. The water that lapped around his ankles could find no purchase. Ulvaerâs magic felt like eating butter, unpleasantly soft and yielding. It could not press its way into the mageâs flesh, reach all that water waiting to be dried up.
A stone passed through a hole in the mageâs forehead, completely missing his flesh. He stared at Wirrin. âYou will tell us, Wirrin.â
Wirrinâs lungs stopped working. That may have a good thing. It meant she couldnât keep arguing with him. Her whole body flopped as if her bones had suddenly disappeared.
Yern was doing her best to bite the mage who had grabbed her. Her sword was laying on the ground several metres away. The last thing Wirrin managed to do before she blacked out was send a shower of stone shards after the War mage. He was out of the way before they left the ground.
âThat was fun,â Ulvaer cackled.
âEasy for you to say,â Mkaer rumbled. âYou have more mages.â
âIf he meant for her to be dead, sheâd be dead,â Naertral burbled.