[13]
Crossing the Midlands took almost half the summer;
midsummer found Breaker in the foothills on the southern edge
of the plain, in a town called Dog Pole—a name no one could
explain. The local dialect was sufficiently different from the
language spoken in Longvale that Breaker was not entirely sure he
would have understood the explanation, in any case.
He had noticed as he moved
south that the names, for both towns and people, seemed to make
less and less sense. Some of them seemed little more than random
syllables, rather than descriptions. Most people used the
beginnings of true names for each other, as the people of
Greenwater had, but nicknames, often bizarre ones, were common; a
complete avoidance of true names, as in Mad Oak, was
rare.
He had always wondered what "Galbek" meant; he
now suspected that it didn't mean anything, but was just a
meaningless name given to a particular set of hills. That seemed to
be how these Southerners operated. Of course, he reminded himself,
he wasn't really in the South yet, but only just approaching its
boundaries.
Along his way he had heard
descriptions of several of the other Chosen—the handsome Leader,
the gossiploving Scholar, the mad Speaker, the short-tempered
Archer, the motherly Seer. The Beauty and the Thief remained
completely unknown; no one would admit meeting either of
them.
He had learned very little
about the Wizard Lord. Several people had told stories about the
previous Wizard Lord— Breaker had not visited Spilled Basket, where
he had made his home, but he had passed within about twenty miles
of it—or about others even farther back, but hardly anyone knew
anything about the present incumbent. The most common response to
questions was a shrug and a remark, "The weather's been
fine."
He wondered whether the Old
Swordsman's fears might have been completely baseless; certainly,
he saw no sign that anyone else suspected the Wizard Lord of any
sort of misbehavior. No one actually professed to like him, but
neither did they fear him. As far as Breaker could tell his journey
to visit the Wizard Lord at his home in the Galbek Hills was
largely pointless, but he was not inclined to turn back yet;
overall, he was enjoying the trip.
He had asked sometimes about
other wizards, as well, and had been surprised at how few reports
he heard about them. None seemed to make their homes in the
Midlands, or at least not in the portion of the Midlands he
crossed; a few vague tales and legends trickled in from the west
and south, but Breaker was unsure how much credence to give them.
He supposed wizards preferred the less-crowded parts of Barokan,
but it still seemed somewhat odd.
He had encountered hundreds
of strange customs and unfamiliar rites in his traveling, and had
become largely inured to them. People did what they had to to live
with the ler, and he was no longer surprised by any demands the
spirits might make. Appalled, sometimes, but not surprised. He
still had trouble believing that people would willingly live in a
community whose guardian ler demanded a human sacrifice every
spring, but he had encountered at least three such towns.
He had continued to follow
reports of the Scholar's presence, which had led him almost
directly south—he was unsure what to make of that, whether it was
merely coincidence or something else at work. He had gained some
ground; the Scholar had reportedly passed through Dog Pole in early
spring, no more than three or four months ago.
The Seer had also come this way not so very
long ago; he wondered about that.
All in all, he was enjoying
his journey, but found it worrisome that he was not learning more
about his own role in the world.
One morning he was sitting at a battered table
in Dog Pole's one and only public house, wondering whether he
should continue following reports of the Scholar's route
or
try to find his way directly to the Galbek
Hills, when the door opened.
He didn't look up at first;
he was trying to estimate how long it would take to get back to Mad
Oak if he took as direct a route as possible and only stayed a
night in each town along the way. If the snows didn't come early he
might take another two months to find the Wizard Lord's tower and
still be home . . .
"Swordsman?"
Startled, he looked up, his
right hand falling to the hilt of his sword. That had become a
completely involuntary habit, but one he could not break; he
suspected it was part of the magic his role entailed.
The speaker was a somewhat elderly man, rather
weathered-looking but still straight-backed and apparently
vigorous, clad in well-worn deerhide. "Yes?" Breaker said,
returning his hand to the tabletop.
"It's a pleasure to meet
you," the white-haired man said, holding out a hand; he spoke the
Midlands dialect, but with a thick southern accent. "I'm here to
take you to Tumbled Sheep."
Breaker blinked at him.
"What?"
"I'm a guide—I know every
road in the hills from here to Crooked Valley. I'm here to take you
to Tumbled Sheep— it's a village about fifteen miles southeast of
here."
Breaker frowned. "Who told you I want to go to
Tumbled Sheep?" He was tempted to remark on the bizarre stupidity
of naming a village "Tumbled Sheep," but restrained himself; that
would just prolong a conversation he wanted to end quickly. He
wanted this person to go away and let him think; he was in no great
hurry to go anywhere but home, and did not think Tumbled Sheep
sounded like a promising destination. He guessed the old man had
heard the Swordsman was traveling the area, and wanted to earn
himself a guide's fee and the enhanced reputation that aiding any
of the Chosen might bring. "The Seer," the guide said. Breaker
abruptly sat up straight, suddenly attentive. "What?"
"The Seer sent me to fetch you; she and the Scholar are waiting for you in Tumbled Sheep."
"The . . . They are? But how would they know I was here?"
The guide snorted. "There's a reason they call
her the Seer, you know."
Breaker had known, of course,
that the Seer had magical abilities, and always knew where the
other Chosen were, but somehow it had never occurred to him that
she would be using that knowledge to find him.
But he supposed it made
sense.
"Why do they want me
there?"
The guide smiled crookedly. "Swordsman, she
didn't tell me that, but she did say you might not remember right
away that you were looking for the Scholar, and if so, I should
remind you. Well, consider this your reminder—here's your chance to
talk to him."
That was true—but if they wanted to talk to
him, why hadn't they come to Dog Pole?
"But why Tumbled Sheep?"
"Because that's where they
are. They didn't tell me anything; they just sent me to get you and
bring you there."
"Oh." He supposed it was
perfectly reasonable for the Seer and the Scholar to want to meet
the new Swordsman— after all, as the guide had pointed out, he had
wanted to meet them. Simple curiosity was more than adequate to
explain their interest.
And thinking about other
possible explanations, he very much hoped mere curiosity was the
only motivation. He stared at the guide for a moment longer, then
rose. "Let me get my bag."
Ten minutes later the two of them marched past
a boundary shrine, out of Dog Pole, and into the southern
hills.
The rolling country was not as strange as the
flat plain of the Midlands, but in a way it was even more
disorienting to someone from the northern valleys; none of the
hills seemed to line up into ridges, but instead they thrust up
here and there, apparently at random—and every hill had its own
ler, of course, some of them visible as lights or mist or shadows,
like the ler of Mad Oak. The guide led Breaker along a winding,
circuitous route that dodged most of these, but he stopped in a few
spots to placate the local spirits; in one case this required a
libation from a wineskin he carried, at another he recited an
elaborately worded prayer, and so on.
In short, save for the odd
landscape, the journey was much like others Breaker had made in his
travels, and like those others it went smoothly, and late in the
afternoon, as the sun neared the western horizon, he and the guide
made an uneventful arrival in the town of Tumbled Sheep, which
nestled beside a river at the foot of an unusually steep hillside.
Breaker supposed that the hillside was connected with the silly
name somehow.
The guide paused at the
boundary shrine only long enough to kneel briefly, then led Breaker
to the largest building in town, a wooden structure with wide but
sagging porches on every side. Breaker was unsure whether it was a
public house, a community center like the pavilions in the northern
valleys, or a temple to the local ler, but whatever it was, several
people were sitting on the porches. They had been chatting quietly
when Breaker had first glimpsed them from well beyond the boundary
shrine, but someone had spotted the approaching travelers, and now
every eye was focused on them, every tongue still.
A month or two before that would have made him
unbearably nervous, but his travels had accustomed him to this sort
of reception—it was not at all unusual. He ignored the stares as he
followed the guide around to the north porch and up the two low
steps.
A woman rose at his approach, a woman roughly
his mother's age, but shorter and plumper, her hair gone
prematurely silver-gray. She wore a white cotton tunic embroidered
in red and gold, and a long green wool skirt, both worn soft with
long use; her hair hung to her waist. The top of her head barely
reached Breaker's chin, but she looked boldly into his eyes,
clearly not intimidated by his size. Her own eyes were green and
intense, her nose long and prominent; she was not smiling. She did
not look as if she smiled often.
She held out a hand. "Hello,
Swordsman," she said. "I'm the Seer."
Behind her a man got to his
feet, a thin man of medium height with a graying beard and a
cheerful grin, clad in a long vest of brown leather.
Breaker accepted the woman's
hand and bowed to her. "I am honored," he said.
"Oh, nonsense. You're one of
the Chosen, I'm one of the Chosen—we're equals, and there's no
honor involved in meeting me."
Before Breaker could reply,
the thin man held out his hand and said, "Call me Lore."
Breaker released the Seer's
hand and turned to look at this other person.
He was midway between Breaker
and the Seer in height, his dull brown hair pulled back in a tight
braid, his face tanned but not heavily so; Breaker could not guess
his age, though he was sure that it fell, like his height,
somewhere between the Seer's and his own. His eyes were a soft
brown, and reminded Breaker of the puppy one of the bargemen had
brought along two summers back; unlike the Seer he was smiling,
though his grin seemed a bit tentative.
He wore a long, many-pocketed
vest over a tan blouse and brown denim pants—practical garb,
appropriate for most circumstances. And his grip was surprisingly
firm.
"You're the Scholar?" Breaker
asked. The man's healthy color, cheerful expression, and sensible
clothing hardly fit the stereotype of a man devoted to
learning.
"I am. I understand you're
from Mad Oak in Longvale?"
Startled, Breaker
nodded.
"Is the Mad Oak still
standing?"
"Yes, it is; it almost got me
when I left."
"As bad as ever, then? A
shame. And is Flute still in mourning?"
That was more than startling, that was
astonishing. Breaker glanced at the Seer, then said, "No, he's done
grieving. When I left he was courting Brewer's sister Sugar
Cake."
"Lore, that can wait," the Seer interjected
before the Scholar could ask any more questions. "We have more
urgent concerns."
Up until then, everything
they had said and done had been consistent with simple curiosity, a
desire to meet their new compatriot—but "urgent concerns"? That did
not sound so benign, and the Old Swordsman's words came back to
him.
Breaker glanced around, and realized that at
least a score of the residents of Tumbled Sheep were staring at the
three Chosen. The guide who had brought him from Dog Pole was
standing a few feet away, making a point of not staring.
That was hardly surprising; after all, seeing
even one of the Chosen must be fairly unusual, and to have three of
the eight gathered here, and to have one of those three speaking of
"urgent concerns" . . .
Breaker swallowed. These
people knew what the Chosen had been chosen for; they would
undoubtedly be guessing what could gather three in one place, and
probably guessing one thing.
Breaker hoped that obvious guess was wrong, but
he remembered the Old Swordsman's suspicions. The old man might
have been right—and if so, then Breaker would need to do something
about it. He might have to become the killer his mother had feared
he would be.
The old man had tricked him—but it didn't
matter. He was here now, and he had accepted his role, regardless
of whether he had been deceived about its nature.
"Should we be speaking out here in the open?" he asked.
"No," the Seer replied
immediately. "Just a moment." She turned to the guide, pulled
something from a pouch on her belt, and thrust it into the guide's
hand. He opened his hand and counted the coins.
The Seer did not wait for the guide to total up
his pay; she took both Breaker and Lore by the hand, one on either
side, and led them across the porch and into the
building.
It appeared
to be a public house, or perhaps an inn; there were several tables,
dozens of chairs, and a row of barrels along one wall in the main
room, but the Seer led them quickly past that and down a corridor.
She found
the door she wanted and opened it, ushering the two men into a small room where a narrow bed stood against either wall, a night-stand at the head of each bed, a pitcher and basin on each nightstand. There were no other furnishings, but a large rucksack stood at the foot of one bed, and shutters were closed over the window, leaving the room only dimly lit.
"Sit down if you want," the Seer said, gesturing at the nearer bed. "You must be tired after the long walk."
Breaker didn't argue—he was tired, and hungry, as well. He sat and reached for the pitcher.
It held a modest amount of water; he poured it
into the basin, then rinsed his hands and splashed a little on his
face while the Scholar settled on the other bed and the Seer placed
herself between them.
"Now," she said, "let's speak
frankly."
"About what?" Breaker asked,
wiping his face.
"About the Wizard Lord, of
course. You're traveling around Barokan looking for information
about him, aren't you? You're on your way to visit him, to see
whether he might need to be removed?"
Breaker shook his hands dry,
then turned to face her. "How is it," he asked, "that you two know
so much about me and my home and my intentions, when I know nothing
about you?"
The Seer and the Scholar
exchanged glances.
"I'm the Seer" the Seer said.
"I always know who and where all the eight Chosen are, and where
the Wizard Lord is, and whether he's watching us. Which, I am
pleased to say, he is not, just now. He's eating his supper, and
not worrying about us."
"I wish / were eating
supper," Breaker muttered to himself.
'They'll be serving here in
half an hour," the Seer replied. "We'll eat then."
That was heartening news. "I still don't
understand how you know these things," Breaker said.
The Seer gave him a look, one
he had gotten from his mother on occasion, a look that clearly
meant he was being stupid.
"I'm the Seer" the Seer
repeated. "It's my magic—I know where all Chosen are just as you
know how to use a sword."
"I had to learn to use a sword," Breaker protested. "How do you learn knowing things you can't see?"
The Seer scowled at him. "All right, fine—it's
not the same, but it is my magic, as one of the Chosen. I always
know where the nine of us are, and more or less what condition
we're in, though I usually have only a vague idea what we're all
doing. And sometimes I see other things, as well. So I know who you
are, and where you've been. Is that clear enough?"
"I suppose it is," Breaker
conceded. Then he turned to the Scholar. "But how do you know about
the Mad Oak, or about Flute?"
"That's my magic," the Scholar explained. "I learn things—and I don't forget them. I never forget a true story, any true story. It's not just the old tales and legends I remember, it's all the stories I've ever heard, and it doesn't matter whether it's how the first three Chosen slew the first Dark Lord, or how a girl from Mad Oak almost ran away with a guide from Willowbank, but changed her mind at the last minute when she realized he was so scared she could smell it."
Breaker blinked. "Oh." He frowned as he thought
this over. "Only true stories? Do they have to be entirely true? I
mean, what if someone gets a few things wrong?"
"I remember the true parts of
every story I hear, but I can forget the lies and exaggerations and
embroidering. For some stories that doesn't leave much—with made-up
stories sometimes I only remember what the tale told me about the
author, and not a word of the story itself." He smiled. "It's not a
very useful sort of magic as a general thing, but I enjoy
it."
"But you said the first three Chosen slew the
first Dark Lord—my mother said there were eight Chosen, just as
there always are, and the Dark Lord killed six of them."
The Scholar shrugged. "Your mother was wrong.
There were only three then—the Swordsman, the Seer, and the Leader.
The Dark Lord killed the Leader, and the other two survived. The
Council of Immortals chose a new Leader, and added the Beauty after
that. Your mother probably only heard that two survived, and
assumed that meant six had died."
"How do you know it was my mother who was wrong, and not your version of the story?"
"Because I'm the Scholar. It's my magic." "But. . ."
"How do you know what your opponent is going to do before he does it?" the Seer interjected.
"Oh, because you can see his muscles tense, and his eyes adjust, and his weight shift," Breaker said.
"And how do you know how to
see and interpret those signs, and do it so quickly that you can
counter every move? Have you had years of training to learn
this?"
Breaker was at a loss for a
moment, then yielded. "All right, it's magic," he said. "But I
still think my magic makes more sense than yours."
"It's more like ordinary
human skills, certainly," the Scholar agreed. "My magic was created
hundreds of years later than yours, when the wizards of the Council
had learned greater subtlety and finesse."
Breaker resented the
implications in that, but before he could think of a reply the Seer
said, "Fine, that's all settled, then—you appreciate each other's
magic. Now, could we get down to business?"
"I assume," Breaker said,
"from your summoning me here, and saying we had urgent matters to
discuss, that the Wizard Lord has done something unfortunate. I
haven't heard anything about it; everyone I've spoken to seems
satisfied with him. Still, he must have done something. What is it?
When did it happen?" The Seer and the Scholar exchanged
glances.
"It's not that simple," the
Scholar said.
"It started years ago," the Seer said. "About five years ago, in the third or fourth year of the Wizard Lord's reign. I saw him kill several people—not with my own eyes, but with my magic. I couldn't see any details, but I knew he had killed people—I didn't know exactly how many, or who they were, but he had killed. I could feel it. So I went to the Leader and told him—that's my job, after all. And I spoke to two wizards from the Council of Immortals, as well. And they all asked me to please not say anything about it yet— there was no point in starting a panic if the Wizard Lord was behaving himself, and no reason to warn him that he was discovered if in fact the Chosen would have to remove him. So I didn't say anything more, and then Boss came back and told me that it was all right, that the Wizard Lord had merely been doing his job, wiping out a group of rogue wizards who were organizing to overthrow him and destroy the Council. These wizards supposedly intended to set themselves up as overlords of Varagan . . ."
"Of what?" Breaker interrupted.
"Varagan—oh, Barokan. In my
native tongue we call it Varagan. At any rate, the Wizard Lord said
that he had killed a group of rogue wizards, and of course that's
his job, and Boss and the Council had investigated and it was all
in order. So that was fine, and I didn't worry about it anymore.
The Wizard Lord had done his job, just like in the old songs. The
next time I saw Lore, here, I told him about it—I thought he should
know, as one more item for his collection of facts and stories. And
then we went our separate ways, and I forgot about it for
years."
Breaker glanced at the
Scholar, who shifted on the bed and grimaced.
"And then last year old Blade
went looking for a replacement—the Old Swordsman, I mean. I knew he
was doing it, and I knew he found you and trained you, and I didn't
think much of it; he wasn't a young man, in fact he was the oldest
of us all by a few years, and if he wanted to pass on the talisman
and retire, that was his business. I wanted to say farewell,
though, and wish him well, so I met him on his way home to Dazet
Saltmarsh this past spring, after he had lost the duel and you had
become the new Swordsman. We chatted a bit, and then went our
separate ways—but he mentioned that he had some doubts about the
Wizard Lord. He knew he could speak freely to me, since I always
know when the Wizard Lord is listening, so he told me that it
wasn't anything specific, and that he'd told you about his worries,
as well."
"Yes, he did," Breaker agreed.
"I thought he was worrying
about nothing—after all, the Wizard Lord has been in power for
eight or nine years now, and nothing dreadful had happened, so far
as I knew. So I wished him well, and he went west, and I came
south. And then just recently, I saw you were coming this way, and
realized you were following Lore, so I found him and told him you
wanted to meet him."
"That was just a few days ago," the Scholar
added.
"And I thought it would be nice to meet you, too, so we settled in
together to wait for you, and we talked, as people will . .
."
"I wanted more stories," the Scholar interrupted. "I always
do."
The Seer's expression suddenly changed. "And you know, I think
that's a lovely sword the Old Swordsman gave you, but wouldn't
it be nice to have a new one, made to fit your own hand? Isn't it
awkward, fighting with someone else's sword?"
"What?" Breaker said.
"The Old Swordsman had a
sword made for him, you know—he went to the best swordsmiths, right
under the cliffs in Winterhome, and had them make it just the way
he wanted."
"Yes, he did," the Scholar
agreed, nodding vigorously. "He told me the whole story."
Breaker was not sure what was
going on, but he was bright enough to play along. "Wouldn't that be
expensive, though? I'm just a barley farmer, after all—I don't have
much to trade."
"Oh, but you're one of the
Chosen," the Seer said. "I'm sure the armorers would be honored .
.."
She stopped in midsentence and let her breath out in a rush. Then she turned and deliberately stamped on a spider that stood on the floor by the corner of Breaker's bed.
"I hate it when he does
that," she said. "Wouldn't you think someone who's ruling all
Varagan would have better things to do with his time than spy on
us?"
'The Wizard Lord was watching us?"
"And listening," the Seer confirmed. "Through that spider."
Breaker stared at the gooey smudge on the floor.
"As I was saying," the Seer
continued, "the two of us were waiting here for you—we both wanted
to meet the new Swordsman. And we talked, and we discussed the Old
Swordsman's worries, and I mentioned that incident with the rogue
wizards five years ago, when the Wizard Lord had killed people for
the first and last time."
"And I didn't remember a word
of it," the Scholar finished.