Now he was almost to the crossroads. Once there, he would have to find somewhere to wait, either until the lancers returned, or to rest. He hoped they would. He couldn’t count on walking all the way back to the Great House, not with his ribs the way they were.
Kharl settled behind the hedge around the meeting house, in a corner invisible from any of the windows, although no one was inside the place. He was soaked, muddy, shivering, and flushed.
Just as full twilight had descended over the crossroads area, and Kharl was gathering himself together to begin walking again, he heard mounts. Cautiously, he peered out. It took him a while to determine that eight riders in yellow and black approached the crossroads, one leading a riderless mount. Charsal was not among the riders.
Kharl rose from behind the low hedge. “Over here.”
“Ser mage?”
“It’s me.” Kharl tried not to wince or limp as he made his way toward the riders.
“Weren’t sure you’d be here.” The speaker was an older guard, one Kharl recognized by his face, but not by his name.
“I managed. Undercaptain Charsal …?”
“Wizard got him and Zolen with a firebolt … Tiersyn got burned, sent him back to Commander Norgen with message.”
Kharl swallowed silently.
“You get done … what you needed, ser mage?” The lancer rode led the mount for Kharl closer.
“It’s done.” Kharl had to lever himself into the saddle with his right arm and hand. Even so, his vision was blurring, and his head was light once more as he tried to steady himself on his mount. He had to grasp twice for the reins extended by the other.
“You wounded, ser mage?”
“Injured,” Kharl replied. “Had some of the rebels chasing me. Stupid. Fell and smashed my side. Ribs.”
“We’d better get moving.” The squad leader shook his head. “That’s war. Gets you in ways you’d never think.”
Kharl had to admit that the squad leader was right. He held on to the reins and tried not to lurch in the saddle. He would ride back, even if every sway of the mount sent another wave of pain through his chest.
VIII
Kharl sat on a stool in his sitting room at the Great House, stripped to the waist, while a healer finished binding his chest. On the table was a small tray which had held the good dark bread and cheese, and a cold fowl breast. There was also an empty pitcher of ale and an empty beaker. He had eaten while he had waited for the healer. The food and ale had helped.
“How bad …?”
“You’re a mage. Can’t you tell?” asked the gray-haired Istya. “I’m a poor healer at best, and I can even feel some of it.”
“I’m a very ill-educated mage. Healing’s something I don’t know too much about.”
“You keep getting banged up like this, and you’d better learn, ser mage.”
The heavy cloth did seem to help, and Kharl thought that he could probably speed the healing some by infusing some order into the injured ribs.
“From the bruising, and chaos there, I’d say you cracked two ribs. They’re not out of place, but you get hit there again, and they could splinter, maybe go right into your lungs. Mages aren’t supposed to be fighting like lancers.”
“I was doing the best I could. I didn’t do it as well as I should.” Kharl had refrained from explaining what had happened in detail. He’d said that he’d been trying to get back to Great House, and he’d been chased by lancers and fallen and hit a boulder. Tripping over a root and his own boots was hardly noble-or smart-especially when lancers were getting slain by sabre, crossbow, and firebolts.
“Better not do it again, ser mage.” Istya straightened. “That should do it. Don’t be getting the binding wet.”
“Yes, healer.”
After Istya left, stepping out past the pair of guards now stationed outside his door, Kharl eased himself back into the chair, most carefully. Despite the long day and the darkness outside, he wasn’t ready for sleep, and he hadn’t yet talked to Hagen.
Charsal’s death bothered him. Kharl hadn’t thought that the white wizard could have gotten that close or that he’d been strong enough to throw a firebolt from a distance. Had he exposed Charsal unnecessarily by suggesting that the lancer ride slowly at first? Were firebolts that easy for chaos-wizards? Even Kenslan had said that the white wizard chasing Charsal and his half squad hadn’t been that strong.
Kharl knew life was not fair, but he wondered about how a weak white wizard could create so much damage. It seemed to be such an imbalance, but was it? So long as his strength held out, he could block anything the wizards he’d encountered could throw, and against any single white wizard he was probably stronger than one of comparable power in a one-ononesituation, but the chaos-wizard could spray destruction against scores, and Kharl could not. That was balance … of a sort.
At the sound of voices, Kharl’s head turned toward the door.
Thrap. “The lord-chancellor, ser.”
“He’s more than welcome,” Kharl called back.
The door opened, and Hagen stepped into the sitting room, closing the door behind him.
“Kharl.”
“You’ll excuse me if I don’t rise.”
“Don’t fret about it. I’m sorry I was late getting up to see you, but Lord Ghrant had some concerns.” Hagen looked at Kharl, propped up carefully in the armchair. “You have this habit of creating havoc, then getting injured.”
“I didn’t plan it that way.” Kharl started to shake his head, then stopped at the warning twinges. “I tripped over a root and fell on a half-buried boulder because I was trying to make sure I didn’t get seen by lancers who were chasing me.”
“Might I ask why they were chasing you?”
“Malcor and Kenslan are dead.”
“I thought-I hoped-it might be something like that. Lord Ghrant will be happy to learn of the deaths, especially of Malcor’s. That will help … some.”
“Some?” Kharl could sense more trouble.
“While you were gone, Vatoran escaped. Three of the guards were killed-one by a firebolt.”
Kharl wanted to sigh, but he was afraid it would hurt his bruised ribs too much. “So … while I was after the lords, their wizard came in here?”
“From what we can tell, he had a squad dressed in the uniforms of the personal guard, and they killed the guards who challenged them.”
That didn’t speak very highly of the defenses of the Great House, but Kharl let that pass. “I overheard a few words between Malcor and Kenslan. They had sent a newly arrived wizard out. Kenslan called it a fool’s errand. Malcor said that it was necessary to make sure that their plans were not revealed. Oh … and they both had been talking to Fostak. He was the one who made sure they got another wizard. You can’t do anything about him, can you?”
“If we did, the emperor would have our envoy in Cigoerne killed or imprisoned.”
Kharl did sigh. What was he supposed to do? What was anyone supposed to do?
“You can’t be everywhere, Kharl,” Hagen added. “They have more mages than we do.”
“We’re different kinds of mages. That’s the problem. They can spray chaos at a number of people. Mostly, what I can do is defend.”
“You defended Malcor and Kenslan to death?” Hagen raised his eyebrows.
“What I did is really a perverted way of using order. It works, but only against one or two people at a time, and I can’t do much else.”
“Something like what happened to Guillam?”
“In a way,” Kharl said tiredly. “So far as I know, not that I know much about it, it’s not something that very many mages have figured out.” He paused. “Is there any good news?”
“Norgen managed to ambush Vatoran’s third and fifth companies with his two companies. Between that and your disorganization of the rebels’ leadership, we may have enough time for the nearer companies under Casolan to reach Valmurl before there’s an attack on Valmurl or the Great House.” Hagen looked to Kharl, then stood. “You need some rest. This revolt is going to last longer than anyone thought, and we’ll need your skills.”