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Dragon's Bane

Page 29

by Dragon's Bane (lit)


  head felt clear and alert, without the numbed weariness

  she felt when she had overstretched her powers. She was

  aware, down to her last finger end, of the depth and great-

  ness of the dragon's magic, but was aware also of her

  own strength against him.

  Evening wind dusted across her face. The sun had sunk

  beyond the flinty crest of the westward ridge, and though

  the sky still held light, Deeping lay at the bottom of a lake

  of shadow. She was aware of many things passing in the

  Vale, most of them having nothing to do with the affairs

  of dragons or humankind—the skreak of a single cricket

  under a charred stone, the flirt of a squirrel's tail as it fled

  from its hopeful mate, and the flutterings of the chaf-

  finches as they sought their nighttime nests. Where the

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  Dragonsbane 231

  trail turned downward around a broken pile of rubble that

  had once been a house, she saw a man's skeleton lying

  in the weeds, the bag of gold he had died clutching split

  open and the coins singing softly to her where they lay

  scattered among his ribs.

  She was aware, suddenly, that someone else had entered

  the Vale.

  It was analagous to sound, though unheard. The scent

  of magic came to her like smoke on the shift of the wind.

  She stopped still in the dry tangle of broomsedge, cold

  shreds of breeze that frayed down from the timberline

  stirring in her plaids. There was magic in the Vale, up on

  the ridge. She could hear the slither and snag of silk on

  beech mast, the startled splash of spilled water in the dusk

  by the fountain, and Gareth's voice halting over a name...

  Catching up her skirts. Jenny began to run.

  The smell of Zyerne's perfume seemed everywhere in

  the woods. Darkness was already beginning to collect

  beneath the trees. Panting, Jenny sprang up the whitish,

  flinty rocks to the glade by the fountain. Long experience

  in the Winterlands had taught her to move in utter silence,

  even at a dead run; and thus, for the first moment, neither

  of those who stood near the little well was aware of her

  arrival.

  It took her a moment to see Zyeme. Gareth she saw

  at once, standing frozen beside the wellhead. Spilled water

  was soaking into the beech mast around his feet; a half-

  empty bucket balanced on the edge of the stone trough

  beside the well itself. He didn't heed it; she wondered

  how much of his surroundings he was aware of at all.

  Zyeme's spells filled the small glade like the music

  heard in dreams. Even she, a woman, felt the scented

  warmth of the air that belied the tingly cold lower down

  in the Vale and sensed the stirring of need in her flesh.

  In Gareth's eyes was a kind of madness, and his hands

  were shaking where they were clenched, knotted into fists,

  232 Barbara Humbly

  before him. His voice was a whisper more desperate than

  a scream as he said, "No."

  "Gareth." Zyeme moved, and Jenny saw her, as she

  seemed to float like a ghost in the dusk among the birch

  trees at the glade's edge. "Why pretend? You know you;

  love for me has grown, as mine has for you. It is like file

  in your flesh now; the taste of your mouth in my dreama

  has tormented me day and night..."

  "While you were lying with my father?"

  She shook back her hair, a small, characteristic ges

  tare, brushing the tendrils of it away from her smooth

  brow. It was difficult to see what she wore in the dusk—

  something white and fragile that rippled in the stirrings

  of the wind, pale as the birches themselves. Her hair was

  loosened down her back like a young girl's; and, like a

  young girl, she wore no veils. Years seemed to have van-

  ished from her age, young as she had seemed before. She

  looked like a girl of Gareth's age, unless, like Jenny, one

  saw her with a wizard's eye.

  "Gareth, I never lay with your father," she said softly.

  "Oh, we agreed to pretend, for the sake of appearances

  at Court—but even if he had wanted me to, I don't think

  I could have. He treated me like a daughter. It was you

  I wanted, you..."

  "That's a lie!" His mouth sounded dried by fever heat.

  She held out her hands, and the wind lifted the thin

  fabric of her sleeves back from her arms as she moved a

  step into the glade. "I could bear waiting no longer. I had

  to come, to leam what had happened to you—to be with

  you..."

  He sobbed, "Get away from me!" His face was twisted

  by something close to pain.

  She only whispered, "I want you..."

  Jenny stepped from the somber shade of the trail and

  said, "No, Zyeme. What you want is the Deep."

  Zyeme swung around, her concentration breaking, as

  233

  Morkeleb had tried to break Jenny's. The lurid sensuality

  that had dripped from the air shattered with an almost

  audible snap. At once, Zyeme seemed older, no longer

  the virgin girl who could inflame Gareth's passion. The

  boy dropped to his knees and covered his face, his body

  racked with dry sobs.

  "It's what you've always wanted, isn't it?" Jenny

  touched Gareth's hair comfortingly, and he threw his arms

  around her waist, clinging to her like a drowning man to

  a spar. Oddly enough, she felt no fear of Zyeme now, or

  of the greater strength of the younger woman's magic.

  She seemed to see Zyeme differently, even, and felt calm

  as she faced her—calm and ready.

  Zyeme uttered a ribald laugh. "So there's our boy who

  won't tumble his father's mistress? You had them both to

  yourself, didn't you, slut, coming down from the north?

  Enough time and more to tangle him in your hair."

  Gareth pulled free of Jenny and scrambled to his feet,

  shaking all over with anger. Though Jenny could see he

  was still terrified of the sorceress, he faced her and gasped,

  "You're lying!"

  Zyeme laughed again, foully, as she had in the garden

  outside the King's rooms. Jenny only said, "She knows

  it isn't true. What did you come here for, Zyeme? To do

  to Gareth what you've done to his father? Or to see if it's

  finally safe for you to enter the Deep?"

  The enchantress's mouth moved uncertainly, and her

  eyes shifted under Jenny's cool gaze. Then she laughed,

  the mockery in it marred by her uncertainty. "Maybe to

  get your precious Dragonsbane at the same time?"

  A week—even a day—ago. Jenny would have

  responded to the taunt with fear for John's safety. But

  she knew Zyeme had not gone anywhere near John. She

  knew she would have sensed it, if such magic had been

  worked so near—almost, she thought, she would have

  heard their voices, no matter how softly they spoke. And

  234 Barbara Hambly

  in any case, John was unable to flee; one deals with the

  unwounded enemy first.

  She saw Zyeme's hand move and felt the nature of the

  spell, even as sh
e smelled the singed wool of her skirts

  beginning to smoke. Her own spell was fast and hard,

  called with the mind and the minimal gesture of the hand

  rather than the labor it had once entailed. Zyerne stag-

  gered back, her hands over her eyes, taken completely

  by surprise.

  When Zyeme raised her head again, her eyes were livid

  with rage, yellow as a devil's in a face transformed with

  fury. "You can't keep me from the Deep," she said in a

  voice which shook. "It is mine—it will be mine. I've

  driven the gnomes from it. When I take it, no one, no

  one, will be able to contend against my power!"

  Stooping, she seized a handful of old leaves and beech-

  nuts from the mast that lay all about their feet. She flung

  them at Jenny. In the air, they burst into flame, growing

  as they burned, a tangled bonfire that Jenny swept aside

  with a spell she had hardly been aware she'd known. The

  blazing logs scattered everywhere, throwing streamers of

  yellow fire into the blue gloom and blazing up in half-a-

  dozen places where they touched dry weeds. Doubling

  like a hare upon her tracks, Zyeme darted for the path

  that led down into the Vale. Jenny leaped at her heels,

  her soft boots in three strides outdistancing the younger

  woman's precarious court shoes.

  Zyeme twisted in her grip. She was taller than Jenny

  but not physically as strong, even taking into account

  Jenny's exhaustion; for an instant their eyes were inches

  apart, the yellow gaze boring like balefire into the blue.

  Like a hammerblow. Jenny felt the impact of a mind

  upon hers, spells of hurt and terror that gripped and twisted

  at her muscles, utterly different from the weight and living

  strength of the dragon's mind. She parried the spell, not

  so much with a spell as with the strength of her will,

  Dragonsbane 235

  throwing it back at Zyeme, and she heard the younger

  woman curse her in a spate of fury like a burst sewer.

  Nails tore at her wrists as she sought the yellow eyes with

  her own again, catching Zyeme's silky curls in a fist like

  a rock, forcing her to look. It was the first time she had

  matched strength in anger with another mage, and it sur-

  prised her how instinctive it was to probe into the

  essence—as she had probed into Gareth's, and Mab into

  hers_not solely to understand, but to dominate by under-

  standing, to give nothing of her own soul in return. She

  had a glimpse of something sticky and foul as the plants

  that eat those foolish enough to came near, the eroded

  remains of a soul, like an animate corpse of the young

  woman's mind.

  Zyeme screamed as she felt the secrets of her being

  bared, and power exploded in the air between them, a

  burning fire that surrounded them in a whirlwind of tearing

  force. Jenny felt a weight falling against her, a blackness

  like the dragon's mind but greater, the shadow of some

  crushing power, like an ocean of uncounted years. It drove

  her to her knees, but she held on, sloughing away the

  crawling, biting pains that tore at her skin, the rending

  agony in her muscles, the fire, and the darkness, boring

  into Zyeme's mind with her own, like a white needle of

  fire.

  The weight of the shadow faded. She felt Zyerne's

  nerve and will break and got to her feet again, throwing

  the girl from her with all her strength. Zyeme collapsed

  on the dirt of the path, her dark hair hanging in a torrent

  over her white dress, her nails broken from tearing at

  Jenny's wrists, her nose running and dust plastered to her

  face with mucus. Jenny stood over her, panting for breath,

  her every muscle hurting from the twisting impact of

  Zyeme's spells. "Go," she said, her voice quiet, but with

  power in her words. "Go back to Bel and never touch

  Gareth again."

  236 Barbara Hambly

  Sobbing with fury, Zyeme picked herself up. Her voice

  shook. "You stinking gutter-nosed sow! I won't be kept

  from the Deep! It's mine, I tell you; and when I come

  there, I'll show you! I swear by the Stone, when I have

  the Deep, I'll crush you out like the dung-eating cock-

  roach you are! You'll see! They'll all see! They have no

  right to keep me away!"

  "Get out of here," Jenny said softly.

  Sobbing, Zyeme obeyed her, gathering up her trailing

  white gown and stumbling down the path that led toward

  the clock tower. Jenny stood for a long time watching her

  go. The power Jenny had summoned to protect her faded

  slowly, like fire banked under embers until it was needed

  again.

  It was only after Zyeme was out of sight that she real-

  ized that she should never have been able to do what she

  had just done—not here and not in the Deep.

  And it came to her then, what had happened to her

  when she had touched the mind of the dragon.

  The dragon's magic was alive in her soul, like streaks

  of iron in gold. She should have known it before; if she

  had not been so weary, she thought, perhaps she would

  have. Her awareness, like Morkeleb's, had widened to

  fill the Vale, so that, even in sleep, she was conscious of

  things taking place about her. A shiver passed through

  her flesh and racked her bones with terror and wonder-

  ment, as if she had conceived again, and something alive

  and alien was growing within her.

  Smoke from the woods above stung her nose and eyes,

  white billows of it telling her that Gareth had succeeded

  in dousing the flames. Somewhere the horses were whin-

  nying in terror. She felt exhausted and aching, her whole

  body wrenched by the cramp of those gripping spells, her

  wrists smarting where Zyeme's nails had torn them. She

  began to tremble, the newfound strength draining away

  under the impact of shock and fear.

  Dragonsbane 237

  A countersurge of wind shook the trees around her, as

  if at the stroke of a giant wing. Her hair blowing about

  her face, she looked up, but for a moment saw nothing.

  It was something she'd heard of—that dragons, for all

  their size and gaudiness, could be harder to see in plain

  daylight than the voles of the hedgerow. He seemed to

  blend down out of the dusk, a vast shape of jointed ebony

  and black silk, silver-crystal eyes like small moons in the

  dark.

  He could feel my power nearing its end, she thought

  despairingly, remembering how he had turned on her

  before. The terrible, shadowy weight of Zyeme's spells

  still lay on her bones; she felt they would break if she

  tried to summon the power to resist the dragon. Wrong

  with a weariness close to physical nausea, she looked up

  to face him and hardened her mind once again to meet

  his attack.

  Even as she did so, she realized that he was beautiful,

  as he hung for a moment like a black, drifting kite upon

  the air.

  Then his mind touched hers, and the last pain of
>
  Zyeme's spells was sponged away.

  What is it, wizard woman? he asked. It is only evil

  words, such as fishwives throw at one another.

  He settled before her on the path, folding his great

  wings with a queerly graceful articulation, and regarded

  her with his silver eyes in the dusk.

  He said, You understand.

  No, she replied. / think I know what has happened,

  but I do not understand.

  Bah. In the leaky gray twilight beneath the trees, she

  saw all the scale-points along his sides ruffle slightly, like

  the hair of an affronted cat. / think that you do. When

  your mind was in mine, my magic called to you, and the

  dragon within you answered. Know you not your own

  power, wizard woman? Know you not what you could be?

  238 Barbara Hambly

  With a cold vertigo that was not quite fear she under-

  stood him then and willed herself not to understand.

  He felt the closing of her mind, and irritation smoked

  from him like a white spume of mist. You understand, he

  said again. You have been within my mind; you know what

  it would be to be a dragon.

  Jenny said. No, not to him, but to that trickle of fire

  in her mind that surged suddenly into a stream.

  As in a dream, images surfaced of things she felt she

  had once known and forgotten, like the soaring freedom

  of flight. She saw the earth lost beneath her in the clouds,

  and about her was a vaporous eternity whose absolute

  silence was broken only by the sheer of her wings. As

  from great height, she glimpsed the stone circle on Frost

 

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