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“How strong a hold?”

“The closer you are to her, the stronger it will be.”

Lynan started shaking, and Korigan held him even more tightly.

“Your people will not let her take you, Lynan. I promise you that.”

Her breath was warm on his cheek. In the half light of the brand, her eyes were as golden as her skin. For the first time he found himself thinking of the Chett queen just as a woman, and for the first time in a long time he felt real human desire stirring in him.

There was a commotion outside. Korigan pulled away from him just as the flap to his tent opened and one of his bodyguards entered. The man looked at both of them with something like curiosity.

“Your Majesty, I’m sorry to interrupt—”

“You’re not interrupting anything,” Lynan said too quickly, and stood up. He remembered to keep the blanket in front of him. “What is it?”

“It’s the clans, my lord. They’re gone.”

Makon’s face was white. “Three main clans—the Horse, the Moon and the Owl—and four lesser.”

“How did they leave without us hearing them in the night?” Lynan asked.

“Easy enough to do,” Korigan answered. “They had days to maneuver their herds to the edge of the sooq. They have probably been sending detachments away for the last week.”

“How many warriors have we lost?” Kumul asked.

“At least fifteen thousand,” the queen answered glumly. “And they are only the clans who have publicly separated from us. Many others will be thinking along the same line.”

“But why?” Lynan asked. “What made them do it now?”

“They have probably been planning this for some time,” Korigan told him. “They had to wait until winter was almost over so that there would be some grass growing for them in their own territory, and they had to move before you gave the command for the army to move out.”

“Kumul, how many of your lancers were from the missing clans?” Lynan asked.

Kumul shrugged. “I am not sure. Perhaps two hundred out of a thousand.”

“And the Red Hands?” Lynan asked Makon, who commanded them in the absence of his brother Gudon.

“None have gone,” Makon said proudly. “The Red Hands are sworn to protect you above all else.”

“The loss in troops isn’t that great, then,” Lynan said, more to himself than the others.

“It is the loss in morale that concerns me,” Korigan said. “The longer we wait here, the more chance dissension will spread.”

“Let me go after them,” Kumul said angrily. “I’ll bring the clan heads back, and their clans will follow.”

“You could not do so without violence. They will obey Lynan, but not you, and certainly not me now.”

“Then I will go—” Lynan started.

“You cannot,” Korigan said firmly.

“A king cannot chase his subjects, your Majesty,” Ager added. “You would lose respect and authority.”

“They have been very clever about it,” Korigan said. “They have not disobeyed any command. They just left before a command could be given them.”

Lynan sighed heavily. “We have no choice. To keep the rest of the Chetts behind me, we must move the army now.” He turned to Makon. “Spread the word among all the clans: their remaining levy is due today.” He then turned to Kumul. “Get your lancers together, all that are left. They will take the van. Let the clans see what we have built.”

The two men nodded and left, glad to have something to do. Lynan faced Korigan and Ager. “Ready your people. We leave the High Sooq today.”

“Do you travel with the White Wolf clan?” Korigan asked.

“For a while. The army will march east, and I will lead it.”

“I will come with you,” Ager said quickly.

“You are a clan chief now,” Lynan said. “You have other responsibilities.”

“I will come with you,” Ager repeated, more firmly. “I will bring as many of my warriors as the clan can spare. The remainder will take the herd to our spring feeding grounds.”

Lynan nodded, not willing to argue, especially when any extra warriors would be welcome. “Thank you, my friend.”

Ager smiled and left, leaving Lynan with Korigan.

“It seems to me that I am always forced into action by the actions of others,” he told her. “It would be nice to take the initiative once in a while.”

“If you act quickly enough, you will regain it,” Korigan said confidently. “No one could have predicted that Eynon, Piktar and Akota would move their clans away so soon. We will not make the mistake of trusting them again.”

“Ah, but that’s the hard part,” Lynan said. “We will have to if the Chetts are to stand together, and it is only by standing together that any of us will withstand the storm that is coming.”

Lasthear came to Jenrosa. “I must ride, and you must come with me.”

Jenrosa obeyed without hesitation. The two women skirted the main part of the sooq and rode to the top of a hill. From there they could see the clans starting to disperse, and in the center the gathering of Lynan’s army.

“My people have never seen anything like this,” Lasthear said. “Your prince has wrought greater changes than he knows.”

“Are you afraid?”

Lasthear laughed. “I am always afraid.” She touched Jenrosa gently on the arm. “That is the nature of our calling. We see, hear, and smell things no one else can, and that brings us knowledge. Knowledge is fear.”

“I don’t understand. I always thought knowledge freed us from fear.”

“Some knowledge, no doubt,” Lasthear answered ambiguously but did not continue.

“Why did you bring me here?”

“To help in a seeking.”

Lasthear opened a leather pouch attached to her saddle and withdrew an eagle’s feather. “For seeing far,” she explained. Then she withdrew something round and leathery. “A heart from a karak boar, for strength.”

Jenrosa blinked. This was too close to shamanism to make her feel comfortable, but she said nothing. Lasthear held the feather and dried heart in her hand. She muttered a few words and her hand was surrounded by a faint yellow glow. When she took her hand away, the objects remained suspended in midair.

Now that’s something the theurgia never knew, she told herself. Shamanism or not, this works.

“Now we cast,” Lasthear said. “I want you to say what I say.”

Jenrosa nodded, and as Lasthear recited her incantation, Jenrosa repeated the words; some of them were familiar, some not.

The objects started to smoke, then they burst into flame. The color of the flame changed from yellow to blue, and still Lasthear recited, and Jenrosa repeated.

“Now concentrate on the heart of the flame,” Lasthear said. “We will see what we can see.”

Jenrosa did as she was told. Almost immediately she saw a vision of a land not dissimilar from that around the High Sooq, but then she noticed some differences. The grass was greener, not so damaged by the winter. There were mountains in the background. And there were buildings, like those around the lake, and like those at...

“The Strangers’ Sooq,” Jenrosa said.

“Yes. But why are we drawn there? Keep concentrating.”

The vision seemed to rotate as if the plane of the earth was revolving beneath them. Jenrosa noticed there was a figure in the middle, and wherever the figure went they seemed to follow.

“A Chett,” Lasthear said. “Not very tall.”

“Gudon!” Jenrosa cried with certainty.

Lasthear looked at her with surprise. “Yes, I think you are right. I did not see that.”

Then Gudon looked up at the sky, directly at them.

“He senses us,” Jenrosa said.

“No, he senses you,” Lasthear said with awe. “Your casting is powerful indeed.”

“What do I do?”

“The magic must be showing him to us for a reason. In your mind, tell him what has happened here.”