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By the time they had ridden along another long ridge, dropped through a swale and climbed another hilltop, his legs and thighs ached, and his shoulder and neck had stiffened again. His face burned worse than earlier in the day, and he was sweating despite the light breeze, although the wind was hotter and drier and irritated his face as much as cooled it.

The sun hung at midday, but slightly to the south, and their pursuers were riding down the ridge into the swale, not less than a kay behind them.

“We aren’t going to reach that next hilltop before the ones behind us catch us,” Ayrlyn shouted.

“Stop here.” Nylan reined up and staggered off the mare. His knees nearly buckled when his boots hit the dusty dirt of the road, and he grasped the saddle to keep his balance.

Sylenia had to turn her mount to avoid running Nylan down, and she glared at the angel.

Nylan ignored the look and handed the mare’s reins to the still-mounted Sylenia. “Hold these.”

“A stable boy I am not.”

“Dead is what we’ll all be if we don’t figure out how to stop the Cyadorans. You can help most by making sure the mounts don’t run off,” snapped the engineer.

The nursemaid’s head snapped back.

“If you would,” added Ayrlyn, handing her chestnut’s reins to Sylenia after dismounting. “Nylan is right, even if he’s a bit sharp.”

Sharp? Who wouldn’t be with more than fivescore Cyadorans forming up for a charge to obliterate you? The engineer tried to concentrate on reaching the order-chaos boundary layer beneath the soil, noting as his perceptions extended themselves that the power differential was less than the night before. Did it drop off that rapidly north of the Grass Hills? Or had they depleted it the night before?

“It drops off, I’d bet,” Ayrlyn answered the unspoken question.

“Great.”

“Not that much. There has to be plenty of power there.”

Nylan took a long and slow deep breath, trying to relax a little, trying to shut out the drumming of hoofbeats nearing from all directions. He didn’t have time to relax. He pushed his senses downward, reaching for the chaos/order boundary.

Ayrlyn’s thoughts touched his…. can’t go alone, but can follow…And he was aware of her warmth beside him, both physically and perceptually.

His perspiring forehead was coated with rivulets of sweat, yet he forced himself to be as gentle as possible, coaxing, nudging an inner order boundary around the small segment of the hill where the four of them stood.

“They near, angels!”

Trying to ignore Sylenia’s urgency, the engineer attempted to create an outer boundary, not caring if it felt wavery, tenuous. The inner barrier was the important one, and he and Ayrlyn eased dark order currents around them.

“Wadah, pease?” begged Weryl.

“Hush, child. Hush.”

“Wadah.”

Nylan forced himself to ignore Weryl as the sound of horses drummed louder. With a convulsive mental snap, he broke the “insulation” between the lines of order and chaos, holding on to the barrier around them as unseen white lines of fire, ugly red gouts of molten force and stone bubbled upward.

Dust puffed up in patches, and the ground heaved. Nylan went down on one knee, started to rise, then remained there as Ayrlyn knelt beside him and took his hand.

Whhhhssstttt!! EEEEEeeeee…Not only did fire flare from the ground, as a curtain of chaos flame rose around the four and their mounts, but a sulfurous mist/haze burned through his nostrils, and he almost gagged, dry mouth and all.

Whheee…eeeee…eeee…Horses screamed.

Nylan hoped Sylenia could control their mounts. He wished she’d dismounted, but forced his concentration back on the barriers that held back primal chaos from them, trying not to think about Weryl, continuing to focus on that insubstantial line of order between them and disaster.

Wheeeee…eeee…Another set of horse screams-more distant-rose above the rumbling and shrieking of released chaos.

A thin line of white force probed toward them, and Nylan could sense Ayrlyn bat it away as though it were an insect-once, and then a second time.

The ground lurched again…and again…and the fires that had exploded out of the ground screamed and slashed through Nylan’s skull. He swallowed, his eyes tightly closed, his mouth and throat dry, his chest tight, and his heart racing.

The engineer, despite both knees on the ground, felt as though he rode both the powerfluxes of a translating subspace ship and a horse of chaos simultaneously-all while being skewered by a surgically thin, high-grade weapons laser that was trying to flay every nerve he had.

Blackness-and angry whitened red-swirled around the engineer and around the healer, jolting them, fusing them, then yanking them apart. Heat welled up and past the order barrier, and Nylan’s face felt flayed by lines of fire, by dust that ground itself against his skin.

Whhheeeeee…eeee…The screaming of chaos rubbing against order barriers went on…and on…and on…

Almost instinctively, the two angels struggled to close off the rupture Nylan had created, pushing, pressing order lines back toward a smooth flow.

Balanced-they were balanced…all the way…Those were Nylan’s last thoughts as one hand grasped Ayrlyn’s and the other tried to keep himself from toppling forward onto ground heaving so much that dust rose everywhere.

Then he did pitch forward as the order/chaos rupture sealed, the barrier collapsed, and the backlash of both balanced forces swept over them.

CXXXII

The mage under the white awning staggered, then steadied himself on the portable white wood table.

“Something…terrible…terrible…” murmured Themphi, looking down at the shards of shattered glass on the white surface. Blood dripped from the gashes in his forehead, leaving watery reddish stains on some of the mirror shards and darker splotches on the chaos-bleached wood.

“What was it?” Fissar stood at his shoulder, proffering a dampened white towel. “The glass shattered. I could feel it.”

“It felt like another, a powerful one, yet it had the feel of the Accursed Forest, and it was closer, far closer-no more than a half-day’s ride to the east.” The white mage blotted away the blood gently, then stopped and extracted another sliver of glass from his hair above his right ear. “Go tell Triendar…”

“Ah…” stammered Fissar as he glanced from Themphi to the wiry white-haired mage who stepped in from the sunlight and under the shade of the awning. “Ah…ser…”

“Tell me what, Themphi? Why is your tent set up? And with what new magery were you toying? I could sense the order-chaos pulses from the marshal’s wagon.”

“None. No new magery. I sensed something…strange, and I set up the tent, just the roof part, you see, so I could concentrate. I was screeing the flank guard. They had encircled someone-no more than four riders. There was a flare of chaos, and my glass exploded.”

Fissar opened his mouth and then closed it.

The balding white-haired mage pursed his lips. “Perhaps Marshal Queras should know this. What happened to the flank guard?”

“I do not know.” Themphi felt sweat mixing with blood, and he carefully resumed blotting away both. “Except I do not think they survived. Neither did the young mage with them.”

Fissar’s mouth opened again.

“With that much of a chaos-order mix, I would think not. Do you have any idea what caused it?” asked Triendar.

“It acted like a mage, but it felt like the Accursed Forest…in a way.” Themphi handed the bloodied towel to Fissar so that he could work a tiny sliver of glass from his left hand.

“You felt that the Accursed Forest has destroyed those lancers?” Triendar frowned. “Even in the ancient times, the forest used animals, not the white forces directly.”