W
IND HOWLED ACROSS THE PLAINS OF VOLSAVAAR, FAR IN THE west of Asanion. Snow had fallen in the night; the wind had whipped it away by morning, bringing bone-cracking cold. Even in a mantle of magery, Merian shivered.
She sat astride a slab-sided mare, with Perel beside her and the lord of Kuvaar a little ahead, looking down into the cleft of a valley. There had been a city there ten days ago, set on a crag at a meeting of roads. The traders' route from inner Asanion ran westward here, crossing that from the north into the south, and fording the river that flowed from the mountains of gold and copper. It had been a rich city, rough-edged on this border of empire, but fat and prosperous.
Now it was gone. The land was scorched bare, the walls battered down. Towers lay in ruins, in a cawing of carrion birds.
“Every man of fighting age,” the Lord Zelis said. “Every woman able to bear a childâgone. All the dead are the old and the sick, and the children. Not one was left alive.”
“It's the same in Varag Suvien,” said Perel, “and in the Isles, and in lanonâwhole cities destroyed in a night, all across the empire.”
“Across the sea, too,” said Merian. “All shattered in the same way, and all in the night. This was the first, but a mountain fastness near Shurakan was nextâon the other side of the world. Then Ianon and Varag Suvien, half a thousand leagues apart, both on the same night. There's no pattern, nothing that tells us what will be next, or where.”
“They left traces here,” Zelis said. “Tracks that make no sense, and vanish within a bowshot of the walls.”
“Your mages? Did they find anything?” asked Perel.
“Nothing,” Zelis said. “The city was not warded. People here put little trust in mages; they reckon that strong walls and a trained army will be enough.”
“And in Ianon they reckon that there have been no such wars since the time of the Sunborn,” Perel said, “and in the Isles, mages are still shunned as changelings and drowned in the sea.”
“Whereas in the heart of the empire,” said Merian, “we were so flattened by the loss of our great Gates, and so broken by the blow to our magic, that we never took steps to keep the enemy from coming in through Gates of its own. It slipped through the gaps in such wards as we had, and caught us unawares.”
She sent the mare down from the top of the hill. The senel snorted and flattened ears and shied, but she was obedient enough. However reluctant she was, she did not spin and bolt.
Behind her, Perel said, “By your leave, my lord, your mages will meet in the morning in the holding. We'll see to it that there's no second attack here.”
“Then ⦠the Gates within the world are open for them? Not only for you?”
“We will bring them,” Perel said in a silken purr, “from the places to which they've fled. You will be protected, whether they will or no.”
“For that we thank you,” said Zelis.
Merian sighed as she rode down to the ruined city. The empire had been at peace too long. Mages waged no wars, knew no adversity. They had become toothless scholars, working their magics for no greater stakes than curiosity. What threats had come upon them had barely taxed their powers. Those few that rebelled, or that seized too much, seeking their own gain, had been put down before they could grow strong enough to offer a threat.
Now this great enemy came, and none of them was ready. She rode the snorting, shying mare through the wilderness of devastation. There was a reek of smoke and burning, but not of decay. What the fire had not charred to ash, the carrion creatures had picked clean.
She felt no magic, no power. Nothing. No lost souls wandered the ruins. If this had been but one spate of destruction, she might have looked for an invasion, the beginning of a mortal war. But it had struck everywhere, all over the world. It came from the other side of the stars.
This city had fallen the night after she dreamed of Daros. She had been hunting him again through dream and shadow, but the shadow had been too deep. It had rolled like cloud across the stars, blinding her eyes and her magery. Lost in it, befuddled by it, she had wandered until dawn.
Word of the destruction had reached Starios on the third day, after Vadinyas fell in Ianon. The lord there was royal kin, and his daughter was an apprentice mage in Starios: one of the youngest, but very gifted, to her father's great pride. She woke screaming, and screamed until her voice was gone. Not even the chief of healers could bring her out of the darkness into which she had fallen.
In desperation they had called for Merian. She was not a healer, but she was Sun-blood; she could bring light where no other mage could. She went far down into the child's darkness, and brought her back, leading her by the hand. Merian washed her in light, gave her the sun to
hold. Clutching it, speaking through tears, she told the tale of her kin and her people taken, the weak slaughtered, the land swept with lightless fire.
Then word came in from Volsavaar, from Varag Suvien, from the Isles. It was the same word, the same tale, without variation. The walls of the world were breached. The enemy had broken them down through Gates that owed nothing to any working of mortal mages.
Merian had come to Volsavaar first, because it was the first to be struck. She had come through the Gate within her, because it was swiftest and safest. No enemy had waited there, no darkness set to trap her. Yet she had felt the shadow, had known that if she tried to open a Gate from world to world, matters would have been otherwise.
She rode from end to end of that dead city, then back up the long road to the hill, where Perel and the lord of Kuvaar waited in silence. “You will do what needs to be done here,” she said to Perel. “I think I know where they will strike next.”
His eyes widened in the Olenyai veils. “Lady?”
He never called her by her title unless he was less than pleased with her. She chose to keep the title and ignore the displeasure. She turned to Zelis. “May I borrow this mare for yet a while?”
He bowed. He was baffled, but like all Asanians, he rested secure in one surety: she was the heir of the Lion, and was to be obeyed. She inclined her head to him, leveled a hard stare at Perel, and opened the Gate once more.
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It was early afternoon in Volsavaar, but the sun hung much lower in the sky in Anshan-i-Ormal. Merian's Gate brought her to the marches of the sea, to a wild and stony coast dashed by winter waves. A storm had blown off to westward; the sun was descending in a tumble of cloudwrack.
Merian rounded on Perel. He had slipped through the Gate behind her, as sly as a shadow. “Do you crave exile, too?” she flashed at him.
His golden eyes were bland. “I have no gift for calming children.
Ushallin will come in the morning and hold yon mages' hands. She will explain to them, with far more tact and diplomacy than I would ever be capable of, that unless they perform the office for which they were trained, they will be stripped of their power and whatever wealth it may have gained them, and sent home in disgrace.”
“A penalty for which you may set the example.”
“I don't think so,” he said. “I was born a mage, cousin, but I was bred and raised an Olenyas. I'm of more use here, guarding your back, than herding mages in Volsavaar.”
She hissed. “I am cursed with disobedient men. Stay at my back, then, and don't get in my way.”
He bowed with correctness so punctilious that it skirted the edge of insolence. She turned her back on him, the better for him to guard it, and rode along the headland to the place that was calling her.
She was not a prophet; she had little prescience. But she had seen a pattern in the cities that fell, a shape in the web of lesser Gates that crossed this world. The shadow had struck in the gaps, in outlands, where mages were weak. But there was more to it than that.
“And that is?”
She did not turn to face Perel. Her thought had shaped itself where he could catch it if he wished. “Strength,” she answered him.
She could feel his puzzlement, his brows raised under the headcloth. “Mages are weak here,” he said. “Wards are feeble or nonexistent. Where is the strength?”
“In mortal hands,” she said. “Strong backs, Perel. Fertile wombs. If you were taking slaves, what would you look for? Where would you go?”
“Where magic is weak,” he said slowly, “and men and women are strong. To the outlands of empire. But howâ”
“They have to strike here tonight,” she said. “The tide of the lesser Gates, the turning of moons and starsâit's centered in this place. They'll break through just ⦠here.”
She paused on the edge of the headland. A sea-city crowned the promontory. There was a harbor below, a sheltered circle, full now with
ships moored or drawn up against the aftermath of the storm. The walls were high and strong, topped with towers; she saw the gleam of metal, helmet and spearpoint. A chain protected the mouth of the harbor, breaking the storm-surge and, in gentler weather, keeping out invaders and pirates.
There were no wards on walls or harbor. She sensed a spark of magery here and there: a healer, a soothsayer, a seller of love-charms and pretty potions. Its temple of the Sun was tiny and deserted, its priest too ancient to perform the rites. The greater temples of the city were dedicated to the sea-gods, and those fostered no orders of mages.
This was a proud city; she might even have called it arrogant. As she rode through its gate, she took note of the strength of its guards, tall robust men with fair skin and sea-colored eyes. They raked those eyes over her, stripped her naked with them, and grinned approval, but they neither knew nor feared her. Perel in her shadow attracted more notice. They took count of his weapons, recalled a legend or two of black-veiled warriors from the distant east, noted that he was no taller than a boy of twelve summers, and dismissed him as they had her.
She would not waste either power or temper on hired brawn. She took the straightest way through the city, which was somewhat convoluted: there were three walls, with gates at different points along them, to slow the advance of invaders. The citadel rose high in the center, a tower of iron and grey granite, with a banner flying from its summit: gold sea-drake on scarlet.
There were a good number of people in the streets, and most seemed well-fed and well-muscled. Women did not go armed, but all the men did. She saw children everywhereâmany naked in the winter's cold, but seeming impervious to it.
The gate of the citadel was open like the gate below. Its guards were just as arrogant and no more inclined to offer courtesy to a pair of yellow-eyed foreigners. They were, however, more wary. They barred Merian's way with spears. “No riding-beasts in the citadel,” they said. “No weapons, either.”
Merian shattered their spears with a flick of the hand. “I will speak with your lord,” she said. “Bring me to him.”
They were not fools. She was glad to see that. They knew a mage when they saw one. “You will wait,” said their captain, and with somewhat of an effort: “Lady.” As he spoke, one of his men departed at the run.
She did not have to wait overlong. During that time, Perel amused himself by honing each of his swords, then the daggers he carried about his person. He was on the third when the guardsman came back. The man's face was pale. “He says for you to go down to the city and wait, lady. He'll summon you when he can.”
“Indeed?” said Merian. “How lordly of him.”
She rode forward with Perel behind her. The guards, loyal to their lord, tried to bar her with their bodies. She flung the Sun in their faces. While they reeled, blinded, she rode through the gate and into the courts of the citadel.
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The lord was in his hall, entertaining a goodly gathering. She recognized at least one notorious pirate, and would have wagered on a dozen more. The lord himself, she knew slightly: he had appeared in court some years since, to be confirmed in his demesne and to swear fealty to her mother as regent. He was a large and handsome man, a fact of which he was well aware. His black hair was thick and curled in ringlets, mingling with his great black beard. There were rings of gold in his ears and clasping his heavy white arms; a massive collar of gold lay on his wide shoulders. A jewel flamed on each finger; he was belted with plates of gold crusted with sea-pearls.
The roar of carousal died as she rode into the hall. She had brought the Sun with her, and a fire of magic that sent guards and servants reeling back. She halted in front of the high seat and looked into the lord's startled face. “My lord Batan,” she said. “Your city is prosperous. I applaud you.”
“You are bold, lady,” he said. He grinned. “I like that. Here, come up. Sit with me. Adorn us with your beauty.”
She held up her hand for him to kiss. He froze at sight of the Sun in it. She watched the race of thoughts across his face, and arrested it with a cool word. “I am not here for dalliance. This city will be dust and ash by morning. Would you save it? Then listen to me.”