The vision was one Shavala hadnât seen before, but it had the sensation of great age.
She was in an elven village surrounded by a sparse forest. Only a few tershaya dotted the landscape, towering over the other treesâa mix of deciduous and evergreen. There were a dozen wooden huts scattered around, similar to those the dorvasta used for structures that were either too large or too heavy to be built up the trunks of the tershaya.
The visions always came from the point of view of the staff-bearer. In this one, her clothing was nondescript, but her handsâwhen she caught a glimpse of themâwere a manâs, though with the slenderness that indicated an elf. The staff had been carried by an elf in nearly every memory, but this elf seemed familiar.
Perhaps it was the hands, or the plain, almost primitive clothing, but Shavala was certain this was the first bearer of the staffâthe man whoâd claimed the still-green branch while a wolf, bear, and owl had looked on. Or the Wolf, Bear, and Owl.
The vision sped up as the staff-bearer spoke with the villagers. Shavala couldnât hear any of the words, but in the end, the people seemingly agreed to something heâd proposed, and the vision slowed back down to normal speed.
An elder stepped forward out of the small crowd. The staff-bearer greeted him and led him to a row of potted tershaya seedlings the villagers had prepared for planting. The elder chose one, and the two men carried it to an open spot where no trees were growing, then dug a hole using knapped stone tools. Had the events in this vision taken place before the elves learned to work metal?
After the seedling was planted, the elder held out his hand. The staff-bearer carved a gash into the manâs palm with a flint knife, and then the elder knelt and grasped the base of the seedling. The staff-bearer directed a trickle of magic into the young tree. It began to grow, doubling in size in a short time, a smear of the elderâs blood seeping into the bark.
This was old magic, from a time when Shavalaâs people had been more superstitious. The blood served no purpose, but stories said the early druids had used it in rituals to show their connection to the world around them.
The ritual may not have been real but the magic was, and the staff soon joined in to help, enhancing the spell and speeding up the growth. Its aid was much weaker than Shavala had seen before, as if the staff itself was still learning how to use its abilities.
Once the tree had grown to the size of a large sapling, the two men stepped back. The elder swayed, appearing dazed, and a younger woman came over to steady him.
The staff-bearer viewed the world through his elder senses, examining the treeâs roots as they continued growing out farther and farther until theyâd reached the root systems of the three nearest tershaya. The roots mingled and grew together, forming a single root-bond between the four trees.
Satisfied, the staff-bearer gestured to the woman. She helped the elder to sit, then went to retrieve a seedling of her own. The process began again.
The vision came to an end and Shavala awoke to the pre-dawn darkness, trying to understand what sheâd seen.
The staff hadnât given her a new vision in months. What was it trying to tell her? And why now?
In response, she saw another new visionâbut this one was of herself. She was telling Nariela and Zhailai how the nilvasta had lost the tree bond. The vision didnât include sound, but the others were standing in the same positions theyâd been during the conversation.
âWhat are you saying?â Shavala asked. âDid that memory have something to do with the tree bond?â
A flash of feeling from the staffâcontentment at serving its purpose.
It ignored her questions after that, so she slipped out of her bedroll and ate a travel bar made from nuts and fruit pressed with honey. The grasslands were a poor place to forage at this time of year, but sheâd brought enough trail rations to catch up with the expedition. If she was late in arriving, Leena had promised to check on her and bring more supplies.
Packing up the camp didnât take long. Shavala hadnât brought a tent, just setting up a rough shelter by stretching an oiled canvas between two bushes. She rolled up the canvas and her bedroll and tied them to her pack, then strapped her quiver to the side.
Grabbing the staff and her unstrung bow, she set off, following Corecâs direction in her mind. Sheâd made a game of it, trying to guess how much farther south she should angle her route to keep up with his progress day by day.
She was close now, though, so she aimed straight for him.
#
She reached the expedition the next day, passing by four men who were digging stinging nettle bushes out of the remains of the old roadway. They stopped and stared, apparently not having expected anyone to come from the south.
Beyond them, a row of wagons and carts were coming to a halt as they waited for the road to be cleared. Corec was at the front of the procession, wearing an odd-colored suit of armor. Leena accompanied him, and he leaned over to ask a question Shavala couldnât hear. The Sanvari woman shook her head.
âAll right, letâs take an early meal!â Corec shouted to the rest of the group. âCold camp. Weâll have hot food tonight! Nedley, your squad eats first, then go relieve the road crew!â
A small group of men groaned at that, but set their staff-spears and shields down and hurried to one of the larger wagons. Others assembled behind them at a slower pace.
Leena saw Shavala first and pointed her out to Corec.
He grinned and strode toward her, pulling her into an awkward hug against the brownish-gray armor. Then he held her out at armâs length to look her over.
âIâve missed you,â he said.
âI missed you, too.â Her relationship with Corec wasnât quite romantic in the same way that Katrinâs was, but it was comfortable, and theyâd been apart for too long. âAnd Katrin. Leena said she stayed in Four Roads?â
âYes, sheâs ⦠well, I guess there are some things you donât know about. We found two children whoâd been orphaned by the dragon, and someone needed to stay to watch over them.â
âAnd you didnât want her here.â
Corec grimaced. âShe canât protect herselfânot from a dragon. The rest of us can fight back, but â¦â
Shavala laid her fingers on the back of his gauntlet. âI know. I would have told her the same thing.â
He let go of her shoulders, suddenly aware of the onlookers. âLeena said youâd be here today. The others will be happy to see youâespecially Sarette. Now that youâre here, the three of us need to talk about the plan. You know what weâre trying to do?â
âYou want to kill the dragon.â
âYes. Will you help us? I know you donât like killing.â
She gave him a sad smile. âItâs killed a lot of people. You have to stop it. I understand.â
Before he could respond, someone yelled her name. Treya was hurrying toward them, followed by Sarette and Ellerie.
Her sad smile became a real one as she greeted her other friends.
#
âSecond rank, up shields!â Cenric shouted. The five men in the back row lifted their silversteel shields up off the ground, holding them above the heads of the men in the front row to provide extra protection.
Sarette stood nearby, watching as the former red-eye drilled the infantry in close formation fighting with a spear-and-shield wall. Theyâd undergone similar training with pikes before leaving Four Roads, but the expedition had brought along staff-spears as backup weapons. The men carried the spears during the day, while the pikes, which were heavier, were stored in the nearest freight wagon to be retrieved when needed.
Sarette had approached Corec with her concerns about the men needing more training to work together. Heâd allowed it, but only for an hour each night, and no more than one night in three for each man. With the full days of travel, plus everyone having to take turns cooking, driving, and clearing the road, he was worried about the effect on morale if they gave the recruits too much extra work.
Sheâd divided the men into three groups, keeping the infantry together since they had more experience than the rest, then recruited Cenric to help with the training. Heâd been part of Larsoâs army when he was younger, before returning to Highfell to get married. When his father died, he hadnât been able to run the family farm on his own so heâd joined Rusolâs mercenary army after hearing about the higher pay.
Sarette had more experience than Cenric with a staff-spear, but as a stormrunner, sheâd learned to wield the weapon more like a quarterstaff. In trained hands, a staff-spearâs blade could either thrust like a spear or slash like a sword, and the weaponâs shaft could make crushing blows. The back of the blade had a hook that could catch an opponentâs armor.
It was a versatile weapon, but to use it to full effect required plenty of room to maneuver. It didnât lend itself well to formation fighting.
Staff-spears could serve as regular spears, but Cenric was better at teaching that style. Sarette had remained involved, thoughâthe extra training was her idea, and she wanted to see it through.
âKeep your spear up, Jenson!â she called out.
Jenson and Odis, two of the town guards from Four Roads, didnât have any real fighting experience, but Boktar and Corec had assigned them to the infantry anyway because they were big and strong and werenât very good with the siege weapons. Those two plus Rolf, a former armsman for Baron Greendale of Dalewood, were the weakest points within the frontline troops.
The other men whoâd been placed in the infantry unit were a mix of mercenaries and former soldiers, all of whom had at least a small amount of real combat experienceâthough most of the mercenaries hadnât fought in formation before.
âForward advance slow!â Cenric said.
The infantry moved together as one unit, keeping their shields in position. It was better than theyâd managed in any of their earlier attempts. The maneuver was one they hadnât practiced with pikes since they couldnât move while carrying both pikes and shields. To make an assault with pikes, theyâd have to leave their shields behind.
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âI think thatâs a good place to stop,â Sarette murmured. The cooks were nearly ready with supper, and the men would resent having to practice while the other recruits started on their meals.
Cenric nodded. âAll right, you lot, thatâs enough for today! Go get some food!â
The men set their shields down and stretched their arms and backs, chattering amongst each other as they split into small groups and headed to the cooking fires. They seemed excited about finally doing it right.
âTheyâre getting better,â Sarette told Cenric.
âThis group is, but those spears would put them too close to the dragon,â he replied, frowning. âA spear wall is for fighting a war, and I didnât sign on for that.â
âTheyâll use pikes for the dragon. Practicing the spear wall is to improve their discipline and morale. I think itâs working.â
âI suppose.â
âBesides, after weâve dealt with the dragon, Corecâs going to want to hire some of the men for the long term. We might as well train them now and see which ones are any good.â
Cenric grunted. âHe wonât be the only Larsonian lordling trying to make a go of it in the free lands. Without their fathersâ money, most donât ever amount to much, but maybe Corecâs better suited for it than some. I didnât see any of the others volunteering to go after the dragon.â
âYou should join us,â she said. âHeâll need a sergeant.â
âNo. As soon as weâre done with the dragon, Iâm leaving. What does he need armsmen for in the free lands, anyway?â
Sarette checked to make sure none of the recruits were close enough to overhear. âThat day at Jolâs Brook wasnât the first time Rusol sent men to kill Corec. Weâre worried heâll try again, so we want to go someplace where no one else will get hurt. Close to Larso, but away from any towns or villages.â
Cenric stiffened. âWhy â¦â he started, then stopped to wet his lips. âWhy are they fighting?â
âWe donât know. Corecâs never met Rusol, and he left Larso years ago, but Jolâs Brook was the third time your friends tried to kill him.â
âDonât call them my friends!â Cenric said, his voice hoarse.
âIâm sorryâI just meant the mercenary army. The others that came were demon-controlled too, like your group.â Sarette hadnât been around for the other attacks, but sheâd heard the stories.
The soldier stared away, not meeting her eyes. âThatâs what was controlling us?â he asked. âThe voice was a demon? Not a wizard?â
âIt was probably a demonborn mage, but there may be wizards too. We think Rusol has been recruiting mages.â If he was a warden, that was almost certain. âThere werenât any attacks while we were in Cordaea, but now that weâre back, Corecâs worried itâll happen again. Thatâs why we came here.â
âIt had better not happen any time soon,â Cenric said. âI donât want any part of it.â He stalked off without another word.
Sarette couldnât blame him for his reaction. Jolâs Brook had been one of the worst days of her life, seeing the bodies of the dead villagers and then having to kill for the first time. Sheâd killed three of the red-eyes that day before Treya discovered they could be healed of the magic that controlled them. Three men who might have been as blameless as Nedley.
For Cenricâand Nedleyâit must be worse, knowing theyâd murdered those innocent people. Sarette grimaced. Nedley didnât like to talk about any of it. She should have known better than to bring it up with Cenric.
It was a shame, though. Good sergeants were hard to find.
#
âWhoâs up for sparring?â Georg asked as Ariadne joined the knights around their campfire for the evening meal. Only Sir Kevik was missing from the group. He usually ate with Corec, Ellerie, and Boktar.
Nobody took the older knight up on his offer. âTrentin, want to get your ass beaten again?â he said.
âIâll spar with you,â Ariadne offered. Corec wanted someone to keep an eye on the knights, but he felt doing it himself would just drive them further away, so the task had fallen to her. They didnât accept her as one of them, but they tolerated her presence.
âDonât be silly,â Georg said.
âI sparred Willem and Trentin,â she said. Sheâd won both matches.
Georg snorted. âSo you can fight boys. Thatâs not the same as facing a real knight.â
Willem scowled at the older man.
âTry me,â Ariadne said. âUnless youâre too frightened to face a woman?â
Georg just shook his head, not bothering to reply. âWhat about you, Osbert?â
âNo, but will you take another look at Ballista Four?â the bald knight said. âItâs still making that noise.â
Ballista Four fell under Ariadneâs purview. She listened in.
âYouâre imagining things, Ozzie,â Georg said. âI looked at it yesterday and it was fine. All the weapons creak while weâre on the road.â
âIt doesnât sound like the others!â Osbert insisted. âIt gets worse when the groundâs uneven.â
âI suppose it could be the cart rather than the weapon. Iâll need better lightâIâll look at it in the morning.â
âWill you show me what to look for?â Ariadne asked Georg.
The older man snorted. âWhy bother? Itâs clear you donât know anything about ballistae or catapults.â
âMy people had specialists for that. The Mage Knights are front-line troops.â
That could be considered an insult, suggesting Georg liked to hide in the rear ranks with the engineers, but before he could respond, Willem spoke up.
âWhere are you from, Ariadne?â the boy asked.
âVan Kir,â she said. âI doubt youâve heard of it. Itâs a long way from here, in Cordaea.â A long way in time as well as distance. The nearest kingdom, Bancyra, seemed to have inherited the name, but Bancyra was not Van Kir, even if it had been built on its ashes.
Georg shook his head. âAnd in Cordaea, The Lady has knights? Why? Sheâs the goddess of families and children.â
These people had assigned characteristics to their new gods that seemed almost random. Hera had never married or had childrenâsheâd been too busy fighting a war. And what did Iris have to do with the sea, or Boreas with the weather? The others, at least, reflected something of what Ariadne knew of the old wardens. Demea had spent much of her life improving crop yields, so perhaps it was fitting that Demesis was the Goddess of the Harvest. Did that mean the people had once known her true identity? Or had they created legends from half-remembered stories?
âMy order doesnât follow any of the gods,â Ariadne told him. âAll I said was that she was at my raising ceremony.â
âYouâre claiming she was actually there?â Georg asked, narrowing his gaze. Apparently he thought sheâd been speaking metaphorically before.
âOf course. So was Bear.â
The knight threw his hands up in exasperation. âBear? Bear! Bloody hell. Iâm not going to deal with your nonsense tonight. Just eat and stop talking, will you?â
She hid her grin. Half the fun of the task Corec had given her was in annoying the two older knights.
They all returned to their bowls of stew except for Sir Osbert, who was staring out at the rest of the encampment. âI donât like being bunched up like this,â he muttered. âWe donât have enough ballistae to catch the dragon in a crossfire. We should have twenty more at least.â It wasnât the first time heâd made the complaint.
âThatâs not the plan,â Sir Cason reminded him. The quiet knight rarely weighed in with his own opinions. Heâd never given any clue about whether he approved of what they were doing or not.
Georg spat on the ground. âDepending on magic is foolish. Osbertâs right. We need more weapons spread out in a wider area, and more soldiers. A dragon will always reach at least one of the groups before you take it down. How are we going to fight it if it kills us all because weâre too close together?â
He was referring to the methods the Knights of Pallisur used to fight dragons without magicâbut the knights only knew their own ways. Bobo had read more accounts than they had.
âTreyaâs fire protection spell will only reach so far,â Ariadne said.
âOh? And is there a protection spell against getting stepped on? What about one for being eaten?â
Osbert grimaced at that.
âKeep your voice down,â Trentin warned. âDonât let the men hear you.â
Georg snorted. âWhat does it matter? Weâll all be dead soon anyway.â Yet, despite his words, he hadnât abandoned the expedition. Either he didnât care whether he lived or died, or he was more optimistic about their chances than he wanted to admit.
Ariadne said, âIâm sure Corec would be willing to follow your plan if youâll pay for twenty more ballistae and this army you want to hire. Of course, youâd have to find an army available to hire.â
âI donât understand why our armyâs not coming,â Willem said. âWith all those new mercenaries King Rusol has brought on, why canât we spare any men? Weâre not at war, and weâve got over a hundred ballistae waiting back at the fort. The parts for them, at least.â
âLetâs not question His Majestyâs decisions,â Osbert said sharply. âThereâs trouble in the north, with the barbarians and Blue Vale. The armyâs needed there.â
âThen why send us out here on our own?â Willem asked. He was young enough that he was sometimes swayed by the older knightsâ constant complaining when Kevik wasnât around to put a stop to it.
Georg barked a laugh. âPaperwork. The field marshal and Sir Noris probably didnât bother to talk to each other, and Noris doesnât know what the situation is like out here. Besides, I think Kevik misread the message. He says weâre supposed to help out however we can, but Noris probably just meant helping with the refugees.â
That was a new theory Georg hadnât mentioned before. Did he actually believe it? Sometimes he was contrary just to be contrary.
Willem pondered the idea for a moment. âWill we get in trouble for being here?â he asked.
âNo,â Cason put in, giving Georg a pointed look. âWeâre just following the orders we were given. If there was a mistake somewhere, it doesnât fall on us.â
The worried campfire talk amongst the knights was nothing newâit had been happening since the expedition left Four Roadsâand it didnât take long before they dropped it and moved on to something else.
The new conversation was about the horse Willem wanted to buy, a topic that came up on a near-daily basis. It seemed to annoy Georg, who stood abruptly.
âAll right, you want to spar?â he said to Ariadne. âLetâs get this over with. First to five points.â They normally went to ten.
He stalked over to his tent to retrieve his shield and helm. Everyone was still wearing their armor and sidearms in case the dragon attacked by surprise, but Ariadne had to go retrieve her helm before she could face off against the older knight. The others gathered nearby to watch.
Georg started off in a defensive position, waiting for her to make the first move. Her first few attacks were tentative, probing his defense. Despite his age and bulk, he moved his wood-and-metal heater shield quickly, seeming to know where she was going to strike before she did.
When heâd had enough, he batted her blade out of the way with his shield, then rapped the flat of his sword against her side.
âOne!â he said, a smirk on his face.
The knightsâ sparring rules favored Georgâs fighting style. A strike against an opponentâs armor counted as a hit despite Ariadneâs mirrorsteel plate being nearly impervious to normal weapons. Yet, when she struck his shield it didnât count, even though she could have hacked it to pieces if sheâd used a spell to strengthen her blade.
She stepped back and watched him, but again he waited for her to attack. His shield was on his left side, so she darted to his right, but he anticipated the move, swinging his body around and slamming the shield against her shoulder. It knocked her off balance before she could tap her blade against the backplate of the silversteel cuirass he was wearing. It didnât quite fasten together completely over his bulk, but he wore his old mail underneath.
She missed, and while she was catching her footing, he struck with his weapon. âTwo!â
On her next attempt, she feinted as if going to his right again, but then planted her foot and spun around to his left just as he swung his shield. Her mirrorsteel was lighter than the plate armor he was familiar with, allowing her to change directions quickly, and she caught his shield side undefended.
âOne!â she said, stepping back out of reach.
He growled and rushed at her, moving faster than sheâd expected from a man his age. He forced her back with an odd pattern where he alternated blows from his shield and sword. It left him open half the time, but she couldnât take advantage of it while being forced to defend herself. He managed to strike her armor before she could attempt an attack.
âThree!â he said. This time, he was the one who stepped back to catch his breath.
She managed to score against him twice more before he won the bout. Sheâd watched the knights spar before, but it seemed there was a reason Georg never lost a match. He was a better fighter than Boktar. Better than Corec, if Corec wasnât using enchanted weapons or magic.
âHah!â Georg said. âI knew you werenât a knight.â It didnât matter that sheâd done better against him than Willem or Trentin usually did. They were still his brothers in arms, and she wasnât one of them.
âLetâs have another go,â she said.
ââWhy bother?â he asked. âYou lost. Youâre not going to do any better next time.â
âI was holding back.â
The gloating smile slipped off his face. âWhat?â
âI had to see if you were any good before we sparred for real,â she said. âI wouldnât want to hurt an old man by accident.â
âI donât believe you.â
âThereâs an easy way to know for sure.â
âFine,â he spat, and readied himself.
Sheâd started from farther away this time and sprinted at him. It would normally be an odd move, since it allowed him time to prepare a defense, but as she ran, her combat spells snapped into place.
Just before she reached him, she blinked in and out, reappearing behind his back and rapping her blade against his helmet. âOne!â she said, then flickered away again out of his range.
âWhatââ he started to say as he caught sight of where sheâd ended up, but she blinked again and tapped his side.
âTwo!â She disappeared just as he swung his shield through the spot where sheâd been.
She ran at him again, and this time, to give him a chance, she didnât blink away. He swung his sword, but she twisted out of the way, her enhanced speed and agility allowing her to avoid his attack.
As she passed him, she struck, hitting the back of his shoulder. âThree!â
âWhat are you ⦠? You canâtââ
âFour!â
He yelled and charged straight at her. She waited until the last moment and then dodged to the side, kicking the back of his knee as he went past. He tripped and fell to the ground, rolling over onto his back to look up at her as she pointed her sword down at his chest. She summoned flames to line the blade.
âFive,â she said, not bothering to touch him with the weapon.
She stepped back and let the flames dissipate. The other knights were all staring at her wide-eyed. âAnd thatâs why weâre going to fight the dragon with magic,â she told them. âWe donât need an army.â
Theyâd seen Sarette fly during the training drills, and theyâd seen her summon lightning, but they didnât truly realize what it meant. They didnât understand the impact magic would have on the fight.
Perhaps the personal demonstration would help.