âShavala? Wake up, Shavala.â
The voice slowly nudged her out of the darkness. She opened her eyes and found herself staring straight up at the sky. Her vision had returned to normal, no longer tinged with red. Zhailaiâs face hovered above hers.
The little dragon stuck its head between them and licked Shavalaâs cheek. Zhailaiâs gentle concern came through the tree bond, as did a sharper spike of anxiety from another source.
âWhat happened?â Zhailai said. âAre you all right? I was collecting mushrooms when the dragon came to find me. Itâs worried about you.â
âI think I did something I shouldnât have.â Shavala tried to push herself up but got distracted at the sensation of the wind blowing against her wings, causing them to billow out. No, not her wings. There was too much information in her brain. She could feel herself lying down and standing on all fours at the same time.
âWhat do you mean?â Zhailai asked, helping her to sit up.
âIââ Shavala was suddenly looking up at herself from the dragonâs height. Her vision started to go red again and she had to close her eyes. How could she speak when she wasnât even certain which thoughts were hers?
Like this, the staff said, helping her to buffer the bond, showing her how to hold it at armâs length. The feelings eased until they felt more akin to the normal tree bond. The staff explored the new connection in delight, examining the dragon in ways Shavala couldnât follow.
âShavala?â Zhailai prompted again.
âIâm sorry,â Shavala said. âItâs getting better now. How did you know he was worried?â
âHe?â Zhailai asked. âHow did I know? I â¦â Her eyes widened. âI felt it through the tree bond. What did you do?â
The spell had been successful. Not in quite the way Shavala had anticipated, but sheâd be able to communicate with the dragon nowâwithin the limitations of the tree bond.
If she wanted to go beyond that, giving up the protections the staff had taught her to separate her mind from the dragonâs â¦
She shivered, despite the warmth of the sun shining down between the saplings.
The tree bond would have to be enough.
#
Treya let go of the little girlâs forehead as the fever faded. âThere, youâre all better now,â she said. Turning to the childâs mother, she added, âThe coughing should go away by tomorrow, but if it doesnât, use some of the tea Sister Merill gave you.â
As the two left the room, Mother Yewen appeared in the doorway. âHow do you like our new house of healing?â the old woman asked, gesturing around. âWeâll have to reinforce it before winter comes again, of course, but itâll do for now.â
âYouâre keeping it, then?â Treya asked. They were in the refugee shelter which had been built in the chapter houseâs courtyard. The building was an eyesore, and sheâd expected Yewen to have it removed as soon as it was no longer needed.
âNow that the refugees are gone, it provides a place for the herbalists and chirurgeons to gatherâthe ones who arenât affiliated with any of the temples. And, perhaps, traveling healers, such as one of our own wayward daughters.â The woman gave her a pointed look.
âI donât think Iâll be able to come here very often,â Treya said. Leena had been willing so far, but the Sanvari woman couldnât keep up her current pace forever, and even after the road was cleared, it would take Treya nearly a week to reach Four Roads on horseback.
âAre things really so busy at that fortress of yours?â
âYou knew what would happen now that the dragon is dead, didnât you?â Treya asked.
âI suspected, but why donât you tell me about it? I delivered Corecâs proclamation to the council, of course, but beyond that, all Iâve heard is what you mentioned in your letter, and a few bits and pieces from Leena and young Nedley.â
âHow did people take the proclamation?â Treya asked.
âThere were complaints, but not as many as I suspected. It helped that he limited his claim to the dragonâs territory, but itâs still a great deal of land. Some of our citizens are muttering that it should be free for anyone, as it was before.â
âThere were too many people asking for our protection,â Treya said. âWe canât afford to watch over them all unless we tax them, and we needed enough land for anyone who comes.â
âI see,â Yewen said. âThat was not adequately explained in the proclamation. Who wrote it?â
âEllerie or Bobo, I think.â
âNot you? Youâve been through enough of the concubine training to contribute, and communication has always been the Ordersâ highest priority.â
Her tone suggested the words were more than just a suggestion.
âIâll try,â Treya said. âIâll do better.â Sheâd offered to help Corec with correspondence, but she hadnât fully considered what that would entail. Perhaps sheâd spent too much time looking down on the role of the concubines.
Yewen nodded. âLetâs see,â she said. âWhat can we add to the initial announcement? A tax will be assessed to better protect those who settle in the region. The funds will be used to ⦠what? Maintain the roads and raise an army?â
âI think so.â Treya hadnât paid close attention to the details. Ellerie had gradually taken over the money side of things.
âYou should know. Half the concubines in town are trying to figure out how to reach Corec on behalf of their patrons. I have a letter from a granary owner suggesting heâll set a discounted price for the next year in exchange for regular orders, and another looking to purchase. I assume that oneâs planning for the future, and not for this season. Thereâs a horse-breeder asking whether Corec would be interested in a line of warhorses, though I canât imagine where the fellow got those from. Itâs not just men with concubines, either. Farmers are saying their workers are heading south, leaving them without enough hands to get the spring planting done, and two men have written to complain that youâre buying all the mules and driving up prices, and would you kindly stop.â
âIf you give me the letters, Iâll take care of them,â Treya said. She could still do that much, even if she hadnât figured out the rest of it yet.
âHe needs a real concubine,â Mother Yewen said. âA concubine must be able to speak with her patronâs voice, and a man will always be closer to a woman who shares his bed than to a hireling. If youâre not going to do it yourself, then convince him to come for a Presentation ceremony. Here, or South Corner, or Tyrsall. Somewhere!â
âIâll talk to him,â Treya said. Though about what, she wasnât sure.
Yewen gave her a skeptical look, but just said, âGood. Now, tell me whatâs actually happening down south.â
Treya sighed. âItâs hard to keep up with everything thatâs going on. Weâve got close to four hundred people already and more show up every day. Most of them are at Hilltop, but weâve convinced some to spread out to the two nearest villages to the east. The farmers donât mind being farther away, but they donât want to wait for us to survey the area. They all want to pick out their own land now, so weâve just got to point them to the right spot and hope it works out. Corecâs letting them claim what they think they can clear and plant in the first two years, and then weâll have to make up any differences at tax time.â
âDo you need anything from Four Roads?â Yewen asked.
âIâm supposed to ask Nedley to hire more carpenters and builders, but I also brought a request for you from Katrin and Nallee.â Treya handed over the message. âI agree with them.â
Yewen opened the letter and read through it. âInteresting.â
#
âThere, boy, see?â Gren said. The white-bearded trapper gestured to the fortress on the far side of the bridge. âItâs right where I told you it was.â
âI never said it wouldnât be, Grampa,â Ferd replied.
Razai had run into the pair on her journey south from Four Roads. Sheâd passed a dozen wagons along the way, traveling either in small groups or on their own, but Gren and his grandson were on horses and able to keep up with her. They could also handle themselves around a campfire, so she hadnât objected to their company.
From a distance, the fortress looked much as she remembered, other than the collapsed section of wall to the left of the gatehouse. The village seemed different, but it took her a moment to realize whyâthe wooden buildings in the northeast part of town were gone now, including the administrative offices the Matagorans had once used for coordinating trade between the locals and the trading houses. New structures had begun to take shape in their place.
âDonât sass me, boy,â Gren said. âThereâs good hunting around hereâor there was, back in the day. Always an adventure, dodging the soldiers. They didnât like me trapping near the keep, but they never caught me!â
âMmmhmm,â his grandson said.
âBesides, this place has history. Itâs the last remnant of Meftil from before she fell to the plague. The capital was down south, but they burnt it to the ground to kill the last of the sickness.â
âYesterday you said the Matagorans built the keep.â
âI ⦠I ⦠thatâs not the point, is it? Meftil may have fallen, but something still stands in its place. Doesnât matter who built it or when. You have no appreciation for the past. Weâre from here, you know. Meftil, I mean.â
âMmmhmm.â
Razai interrupted before Gren could launch into another diatribe. âAre we crossing,â she said, âor did you come all this way just to talk about it?â
The trapper grunted. âYouâre not much better than he is, young miss. Donât know that I trust that bridge, though. Came down here, oh, about twenty years ago and there was a big hole in it. Howâd they fix it already?â
The bridge did look odd, with one section of stonework appearing markedly different than the rest.
âYou came down when the dragon was living here?â she asked.
âIt didnât catch me, no more than those Matagorans ever did. I didnât stay long, thoughâsome things ainât worth the risk.â Gren might talk too much, but he wasnât stupid. He reminded Razai of Renny, as strange as that comparison was.
âThe bridge must be fine,â Ferd said. âPeople have been coming south for weeks. How else would they be getting over the river?â He clucked his tongue and his horse stepped out onto the bridge.
Razai followed him and Gren brought up the rear, muttering under his breath the whole time.
On the other side of the bridge, the road split, with one branch heading west and another to the south, and a smaller path leading up the hill.
The two men stopped at the crossroads, Gren eyeing the work going on in the village.
âWell, now, thatâs a bit busier than I expected,â he said. âWeâll just go along on our way. Iâve heard this new feller has soldiers tooâwouldnât want them finding out about me already. Itâs more fun if I make them work for it.â
âGood luck,â Razai told him. âWant some advice? If you see a wood elf, run the other way. They donât like trap hunting.â Shavala didnât, at least, and sheâd be somewhere around if sheâd ever returned from her trip home.
Gren cocked his head to the side. âWhy would an elf be all the way out here?â
âYou never know. The forest isnât that far away.â
âThe Matagorans didnât catch me, and neither did the dragon,â the old trapper said with a grin. âNo elf ever will.â He glanced down each branch of the road. âSouth, I think, for now. Letâs see what we can find.â He winked and waved, then headed down the Farm Road. Ferd shook his head and followed, giving the village one last, longing glance.
Razai took the path up the hill, careful to keep her horse and mule away from all the activity. She had to stop and wait as four men dragged a trimmed log over to one of the new buildings under construction.
When she drew closer the fortress, she found that someone had assembled a tall crane and pulley system right next to the broken section of the wall. As she watched, a group of workers began to heft a large stone block back up to where it belonged.
There were two soldiers near the front entrance of the gatehouse. They seemed to be watching the builders rather than actually guarding the place, but she figured she should ask before just going in.
âWhere can I find Corec?â she said. âMy name is Razai. Heâs expecting me.â
One shrugged, but the other said, âHeâs in the courtyard. Come with me.â
He led her through the gatehouse tunnel, though there werenât any actual gates to block the wayâthe rusted portcullises had been removed and were leaning against the inside wall. They found Corec at the eastern corner of the fortress, examining a jumbled pile of fallen stone near a partly collapsed lookout tower.
âIf she wants it, she can have it,â he was saying to a man in dusty work clothes. âThe walls are the priority. We can rebuild the tower with wood if we have to.â He saw Razai and gave her a broad smile.
âExcuse me,â he said to the worker, then came over. âRazai, welcome back. Ludlo, could you go find Harri to take care of her animals?â
The soldier nodded and trotted off.
âHarri?â Razai asked. âWhat happened to Nedley?â
âHe went to Four Roads for supplies. Heâll be back in a couple of weeks. Harriâs our new groomâNedâs a soldier now.â
Weeks? Razai had planned to get her pay and head straight out, but she couldnât ask someone else to relay her message to Nedley. Telling a man his brother was controlled by demon magic was the sort of thing that should be done in person. But two weeks of rest wouldnât hurt. Sheâd been on the road for a long time.
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
âIs there some place I can stay?â she asked. âI have a message for him from his brother.â
âOh, you found him? Nedâll be glad to hear that. We set aside a room for you in the keep in case you wanted to stick around.â
Razai grunted. âJust until Nedleyâs back, then Iâll be on my way.â
Corec nodded. âLeena told me about what youâd found in Larso. I didnât realize you were going to talk to Rusol yourself.â
âThe opportunity came up so I took it.â
âShe said you offered him a truce?â
âSomething wrong with that? Youâre the one whoâs always making excuses not to kill people.â
âNo, no, it was a good idea. But Leena said he didnât take you up on it?â
âNot yet. I thought he might, but then he realized youâd bonded me and he figured Iâd come to kill him. I had to dodge his guards on the way out.â
âWhat?â Corec said. âBloody hell, Razai! Why didnât you tell us about that before?â
âIâm telling you now, arenât I?â she snapped. At the time sheâd spoken to Leena, sheâd still been trying to figure out a way to avoid mentioning the incident at all. Where was she supposed to draw the line? Corec was paying her to gather information, but Rusol was her own blood. And then there was Vatarxis, watching over them all.
Corec visibly calmed himself. âFine,â he said. âFine. Itâs not good news, but he didnât like me anyway. I donât suppose this will make it much worse. Hopefully heâs realized you werenât trying to kill him.â He gave her a suspicious look. âYou didnât try to kill him, did you?â
âOf course notâyou didnât pay me enough for that. Did Leena mention the compelled troops? Itâs not just the mercenaries; heâs used compulsion magic on others as well. Some of his royal guard, at least.â
Corec nodded, then stopped. âWait, heâs the demonborn?â
Razai glared. âYou have a problem with that?â she asked. She had no idea how she was going to keep Corec and Rusol from going to war with each other, but she had to try.
âI have a problem with him,â Corec said. âThe men he was controlling murdered the people of Jolâs Brook. Ask Nedley how he feels about it the next time you see him.â His voice was firm.
Razai looked away. She didnât have an argument for that, and she couldnât think of any way to change the path her nephew was on. If Rusol had just listened to her, she could have convinced him to use his powers in more subtle ways and not do anything to attract any attention. As both warden and king, he could have done a lot of good for their people. But he hadnât given her a chance.
âYes, heâs demonborn,â she admitted, âbut passing as human. I donât know for sure if heâs the one casting the compulsion spells, but how many other demonborn mages can there be in Larso? Both groups avoid the place.â
âA bastard half-sibling, maybe?â Corec said. Then he shrugged. âIt doesnât really matterâitâs either him or one of his bondmates. Is there anything else you can think of that might help?â
âGive him a couple of the other wardens and heâll be more likely to accept a truce.â
âI wouldnât do that even if I could. Did he say why he dislikes the wardens so much?â
âNot to me. He doesnât even seem to know who any of them are. He was surprised by your nameâCorec. That it sounded Larsonian.â
Corec went still. âHe didnât already know my name?â he said.
âNo.â
âHe didnât know my name when he sent the red-eyes after me, but he does now? You told him?â
âI just said that.â
âWhereâs Leena? Iâve got to get to Larso.â Corec rushed off without another word.
Hells of my fathers, Razai thought to herself. Now what?
#
âHowâs this?â
Corec peered around the sun-dappled glade. âWhere are we?â he asked. The air smelled familiar.
Leena pointed east. âIf you look through those trees, youâll see the village.â
He moved to get a better view, but he still didnât recognize the place at first. Tarwen Village had grown larger than he remembered, with dozens of buildings heâd never seen before. Looking farther in, though, he found the familiar sweep of the templeâs roof, and a few of the taller storefronts along the main street.
âNo one saw you?â he asked.
âI had to walk into town to ask if I was in the right place, but nobody saw me teleporting. It only took three tries to find this spot.â
Corec nodded. âWhat do I do with these?â he asked, holding out the four copper coins Leena had given him. Sheâd taken them to Sanvar and back while heâd been donning his armor, but she hadnât had time to explain.
She looked him over, as if considering how to respond, then knelt down and tapped his right boot. âIf you want me to come get you before the three days are up, put the first coin in your boot. Leave it there until you can sense me waiting in this direction. If you want me to bring help, use the other coins. If all four are in the boot, Iâll bring everyone as fast as I can, but thatâs only two people per day, spaced out. Maybe more if I donât do anything else. Who do you want for two or three coins?â
Corec thought for a moment. He had no idea what sort of situation he was walking into. âFor two coins, Treya,â he said. Someone might need healing, and she could fight if needed. âFor three, Sarette if you can bring her back from Snow Crown. Otherwise â¦â Ariadne would be the next best choice, but she was in Snow Crown too. âBoktar.â
Leena counted out the options on her fingers. âLeave early, Treya, Sarette or Boktar, everyone.â
Corec nodded. âYouâll bring them here?â he asked.
âYes.â
âThen Iâll try to leave a note explaining the situation.â
âBe sure to use the coins in the order theyâre marked,â she told him. âIâll have to Travel somewhere close enough that theyâre within my range, and then itâs still a lot of Seeking on top of that, searching for very tiny differences in location. If I have to check all of them, I can only do it once a day, but if the first coin isnât in the boot, I donât have to check the others.â
Corec gave her a wry grin. âWhat if Iâm a prisoner and someone takes the coins?â
âKeep the coins and the boot near you at all times. If theyâre too far apart, Iâll send Razai to find out what happened.â
âI doubt sheâll want to mount a rescue mission. Especially since I forgot to pay her before we left.â
âIâll make her come,â Leena said, her voice curt. âShe should have told me. I should have asked better questions!â
âItâs not your fault. Itâs not hers, either. Not really. I thought Rusol already knew who I was. There was no reason to believe otherwise. I should have come back before now to check on things.â But the letters his father had sent hadnât indicated any trouble, so Corec had used the work at the keep as an excuse to delay his long-promised visit home.
Leena gave a brief nod, but it was clear she was still angry. âIâll see you in three days if everything goes well,â she told him.
âThank you,â Corec said. Heâd tried to avoid sending her into Larso, where magic was prohibited in most regions, but the news that Rusol had only recently learned his identity was too worrisome to ignore. Before leaving, Corec had verified with Razai that she hadnât mentioned his surname, but with news of the dragon getting out, it wouldnât take long to connect Corecâs name to his family.
At least, out of all of them, Leena was the best able to avoid trouble. It was unlikely Rusol had any forces in the area able to stop her, if they even knew who she was or what she could do.
After she left for the keep, Corec headed for the village on foot. It took him fifteen minutes to reach the outskirts. The new buildings heâd seen from a distance turned out to mostly be homes, but they were poorly constructed, as if put together in a hurry. They werenât sturdy enough to withstand the depths of winter in the mountains.
The few people out and about were wearing clothing which appeared to be hillfolk in origin, but Corecâs father had never allowed the hillfolk to settle in the valley before. They were likely refugees from the dragonâwhen the creature had attacked the hills, people had fled in all directions. Some had ended up in Four Roads or Dalewood, but others had gone into the mountains. Some of those, it seemed, had made it as far as Tarwen Valley ⦠and, for a change, Ansel hadnât turned them away.
The new neighborhood was small, and it didnât take long for Corec to reach the old part of town. Here, the villagers wore more traditional garb. Most stopped and stared as he passed. It was rare to see a man wearing plate armor in Tarwen Village, especially one without a horse. A few faces seemed vaguely familiar, but not enough for Corec to put a name to them, and no one gave any indication of recognizing him. He hadnât been back in years, and had rarely spent any time out in the village during his infrequent visits.
The manor house was near the center of the village. There were no guards posted, but that was normalâAnsel had never needed his soldiers for protecting the family home. A few of the armsmen were likely somewhere in the village keeping the peace, while the rest would be on patrol around the barony or watching the border crossings.
Corec knocked on the heavy door. It opened a moment later, Mr. Melvin standing on the other side. He looked much older than Corec remembered. The butler stared quizzically at first, but then his eyes widened in surprise.
âYoung Master Corec!â he exclaimed. âCome in, come in! I didnât recognize you.â
âThank you, Mr. Melvin.â Corec stepped into the mud room. âI trust everything is well with you?â he asked, slipping into the pleasantries heâd learned in his youth.
âI canât complain, canât complain. Your fatherâs after me to retire, but if I do, whoâll watch over things?â Melvin wasnât acting as if anything was out of the ordinary. Perhaps Corecâs worry had been for nothing. Then the butler shook his head. âBut you! The stories theyâre telling out in the villageâthe dragonâare they true?â
âThat depends on the story, but itâs dead now, if thatâs what you mean.â
âCorec?â a womanâs voice called out from another room, then more loudly, âCorec!â Isabel rushed in and grabbed Corec in a hug, then stepped back and slapped his arm, wincing and holding her hand after it bounced off his vambrace. âWhat did you think you were doing trying to hunt down a dragon?â
He gave her a hug in return. âSomeone had to do it, Isa. I was already there, so â¦â
âYou could have died! What would Moira think if something happened to you?â
âI didnât do it aloneâI had plenty of help. There were fifty of us, including a squadron of knights.â
Isabel blinked and took a moment to compose herself. âYou were with the knights? Did they take you back?â
âI doubt they want me back, and I wouldnât accept it if they did.â
âBut why not? You could come home!â
Melvin cleared his throat. âIâll go fetch tea, shall I, my Lady?â
âYes, thank you, Mr. Melvin.â
As the butler walked away, Corec considered how to respond without hurting Isabelâs feelings.
âThere are other things I need to do,â he said. âI have friends in the free lands, and weâre fixing up an old keep there. Iâm getting married soon.â
âMarried?â Isa said, her face lighting up. âWho is she?â
âHer name is Katrinâsheâs a bard. I met her out east.â
âA bard? I didnât know women could do that. Sheâs educated, then? Highborn?â
Anselâs arrival saved Corec from having to answer.
âCorec,â his father said, no expression on his face. âWelcome home. When the stories came, we thought we might finally see you, but Iâd hoped you would send a messenger first so we could prepare.â
âYou donât need to go to any troubleâIâm only here for a few days. I arrived sooner than I thought I would, so there wasnât time to send word ahead.â
Ansel nodded. âAnd you came alone? You didnât bring this betrothed of yours, or your concubine?â
âTheyâre busy back at the keep, but now that weâre in the free lands, Iâll bring Katrin to visit when I can. Treya isnât my concubine, though; sheâs just a friend.â
Isabel gave a little sigh. âJust a friend? I was hoping it was more.â The news of the betrothal seemed to help blunt her disappointment.
âIâm sorry for the misunderstanding,â Corec said. âI should have been more clear in my letters. Maybe you can meet her when thereâs a chance.â
âWell, when is the wedding? Youâll have it here, wonât you?â
âHere?â Corec said in surprise. âAhh, we havenât really talked about that, or about when itâll be.â
Isabel gave him a look he couldnât interpret. âYouâre betrothed, and you donât know when or where youâre getting married? What does your Katrin think?â
Corec hesitated. âI donât know?â he said. âI figured weâd probably hold the ceremony at the keep, but thereâs been so much to do, we just havenât gotten around to figuring it out.â
She sighed and shook her head. âTake off your boots and your armor and come to the sitting room for some of Mr. Melvinâs tea. Weâll discuss plans for the wedding. Someoneâs got to.â
âIsabel,â Ansel started, âIâm not sure now is the best time for this.â
âWhen else will we do it?â she asked. âWho knows when weâll see him again? If we donât decide on a date, heâs liable to go off and get married without us.â
#
âYouâre looking well,â Ansel said. Heâd finally managed to extract his youngest son from the wedding discussions, inviting him to his study for a brandy and a private conversation. âWhen I received the message that your arrival would be delayed by the dragon, I didnât realize you intended to take it on yourself.â
âWe didnât have much of a choice,â Corec said. âLarso and Matagor refused to send help, so we had to handle it on our own.â
He no longer reminded Ansel of Moira. The tall young man sitting before him was practically a stranger, and had little in common with the boy Ansel had sent away from home when he was only ten years old.
The last visit had been ⦠five years ago? Had it really been so long? Priest Calwell had threatened to have Corec imprisoned for practicing dark magic, and Corec had offered to kill the man if he tried.
Ansel had reacted poorly, shouting at Corec in front of the entire family until the young man stormed out, leaving a week earlier than planned. After having a few days to calm down, Ansel had written to the capital to demand that Calwell be reassigned, but by then it was too late. Corec stopped visiting home after that, making excuses about the caravans running all winter long.
âWe?â Ansel asked.
âMy friends and I, and the men we recruited. I only led the expedition. My friends paid for itâthe people I went to Cordaea with.â
He seemed to be trying to shift attention away from himself, but his name was attached to too many rumors for Ansel to believe he was still just a caravan guard. What had changed? After being expelled from the knights, Corec had spent years shying away from any real responsibility, yet now he was leading a small army against a dragon?
âThese friends of yours,â Ansel said. âYour letters didnât say much about themâjust that you had to go to Cordaea for a job.â
Corec hesitated for a moment, as if deciding how much to say. âThereâs a historian, Lady Ellerie diâVallaâshe was searching for an old city there. We signed on to accompany her.â
The name Ellerie didnât mean anything to Ansel, but diâValla was familiar.
âThe Terevassian royal family?â
âSheâs related. And she was with us when we fought the dragon.â
Ansel nodded. âAnd the others?â
âMy friends are mages,â Corec said in an even tone. âI didnât think youâd want to hear about it.â
âYouâre consorting withâ!â Ansel clamped his mouth shut, forcing himself to stop talking. The Church was clear about the dangers of magic, but with Isabelâs urging, Ansel had tried to accept that his son hadnât had any choice in being born a mage. That had been easier with the Corec he remembered from five years ago, whoâd been embarrassedâor even ashamedâabout the matter. The Corec of today was almost flaunting it. Why would he seek out other mages on purpose?
Perhaps the more outlandish rumors about the dragon were actually trueâthe stories about fighting it with lightning and other magics. Stories that most of the townsfolk were too afraid to mention within Anselâs hearing.
Asking about Corecâs companions had seemed like a safe way to learn more about Corec himself, but now it would just make things worse. The last time theyâd argued, Corec had disappeared for five years. If Ansel allowed it to happen again, this might be the last time he ever saw his son. He needed a new topic of discussion.
âYour earlier letter,â he said, âwhy were you so concerned about trouble if you were to visit? Do you mean from the new priest? Heâs not like Calwell.â
âHas anyone come around looking for me?â
âNo. Why? Are you in some sort of trouble?â
âIf so, itâs not through anything Iâve done. What about Rusolâs mercenaries? Are they still causing problems?â
âThatâs King Rusol, and no. There werenât any big problems, just little complaints when the hillfolk mercenaries were passing through the valley on their way to Telfort. Some things went missing, there were a few scufflesânothing serious.â Ansel shrugged and gestured in the direction of the new enclave at the edge of the village. âNow weâve got hillfolk living here.â
âHow did that happen?â Corec asked. âYou never wanted them around before.â
âI couldnât turn them away in the middle of winter.â
Corec nodded. âAre they going to leave now that the dragonâs dead?â
âI donât know. This group hasnât caused too many problems yet. If they want to stay, Iâm willing to work something out. What does that have to do with your question?â
âProbably nothing, but what about Rusol? Have you heard anything unusual about him? Or the people around him?â
Ansel frowned. âWhy not just tell me what it is you want to know?â
âThis is important,â Corec said. âCan you think of anything strange?â
Ansel thought back to the times heâd met the new king.
âI suppose you could say the mood at the coronation was off,â he said. âSome of the western lords are still pining for Prince Rikard, and everyone was dismayed about King Marten dying so youngâthey were both quite popularâbut thatâs no excuse for the things they were saying about King Rusol. Heâs a quiet young man, but I rather liked him. Why are you asking this? Is someone threatening him?â
âDid you notice anything else?â
âThere was something odd. The kingâs motherâMartenâs concubineâdied the night of the coronation. It was quite a coincidence coming so soon after Martenâs death, but it couldnât have been an assassination attempt; she was struck by lightning.â Ansel stopped to consider the rumors heâd heard about the dragon. âUnless ⦠are you saying a wizard is trying to kill His Majesty?â
âNo. Iâm saying heâs trying to kill me.â
âWhat?â
âHeâs sent his mercenaries after me three times. The last time, we were able to take prisoners. They confessed, and told us who was responsible.â
âWhat are you talking about? Why would the king want to kill you?â
âI donât know. Iâve never met him, and this is the first time Iâve been to Larso in years.â Corec paused, looking thoughtful. âWell, I donât know why he tried to kill me before, but now he knows that I know heâs demonborn and a mage. I imagine heâs not happy about that.â
Ansel scowled. âDonât be absurd. I donât know what sort of rumors youâve heard about the king, but theyâre not true.â
âYou need to take this seriously,â Corec said. âHeâs using magic to force his mercenaries to obey him. The last group he sent murdered dozens of innocent people.â
âIâve met His Majesty,â Ansel said. âHeâs not a mage, and heâs certainly no demonborn. I would have seen it.â
âYou didnât know I was a mage,â Corec pointed out. âAnd not all demonborn have horns and fangs. Some can pass as human.â
âIâve never known you to be a liar before,â Ansel said. Heâd hoped to mend his relationship with his son, but these wild accusations didnât make any sense.
âAnd Iâm not lying now!â Corec snapped. âItâs why weâve taken that keep in the free lands. Weâll be able to handle any smaller forces he might send, and heâll have a hard time justifying a larger force. I sent a ⦠messenger who offered him a truce, but if he doesnât accept it, we have to be prepared.â
âThis is nonsense. King Rusol isnât a mage, and heâs not trying to kill you. You say someone attacked you? Fine, Iâll believe you, but it wasnât the king. If youâre sure they were from the mercenary army, perhaps they were a group of deserters.â
A look of frustration crossed Corecâs face. âJust listen to me for once, will you?â he said. âI know for certain that Rusol is a demonborn mage. With news of the dragon getting out, heâll know my name soon, if he doesnât already. That will lead him to you.â
âAnd what, exactly, do you think heâs going to do about it?â
Corec sat back in his chair. âI donât know. Maybe nothing. Itâs been over a year since the last attack, but that was before he found out I knew what he was. You have to be ready for anything.â