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"That is despicable!" Vrell said.

"Esper was an ishaw. I met her in Armonguard when her husband was looking to buy a bow for sport."

"Who is Esper?"

"My wife."

Vrell sucked in a sharp breath. "I did not know you were married, Sir Caleb."

"You didn't ask."

Vrell paused to consider this. "Where is Esper now?"

"In Armonguard with Tyra. Tyra is Inko's wife."

Inko's wife? How sad to have your husband gone so long. Vrell wanted to hear how Esper came to be Sir Caleb's wife and not the Cherem man's ishaw. Then about Tyra and Inko.

"Achan, what do you think of Cherem's ways?" Sir Gavin asked.

Vrell waited, imagining Achan would be as horrified as she, but he did not answer.

"Achan?"

No answer.

"Light!" Sir Gavin called from the front of the line.

Vrell's horse stopped. Orange torchlight fizzed behind Vrell, illuminating Achan's slumped form on Scout. He must be sleeping. She hoped his mind hadn't drifted too far.

Ahead of Achan, Sir Gavin loosed the rope tethering the horses and reined his horse about. He rode alongside Scout, reached out, and grabbed Achan by the scruff of the neck. "Achan? Speak to me, lad."

Vrell could see Achan's left eye, open and glassy in the torch light. Her breath hitched. He seemed stunned or-dare she think it? — dead.

Sir Gavin gripped Achan's face in both hands. "Come out of this man, black spirit! In the name of Caan, the Son God of Arman."

Achan arched his back as if snow had gone down his shirt. A horrible screech flew from his lips, a sound Vrell knew he could never make.

Her pulse raced and she prayed. Arman, please protect Achan from this affliction. Protect him from Darkness.

Achan's body began to dissolve, slowly shrinking in the saddle like a mound of watery black mud. Vrell screamed. The mud took shape, slowly forming a large bird with a rat's face.

A gowzal.

The bird flapped its long, webbed wings, beating its foul stench over Vrell in bursts of air. Achan's horse reared. Sir Gavin gripped the animal's reins as the gowzal flew away.

Vrell's horse danced about and snorted. She held the reins tightly. "It is okay, boy."

"Eben's breath!" Sir Caleb said from the back of the line. "Where is the prince?"

Sir Gavin scanned the dark land. "They must have taken him while we slept."

"But we were being on watch, Gavin," Inko said. "How could we have been missing such a thing?"

Sir Gavin sniffed. "'Tis my fault for not speaking to him this morning. I should've been more cautious."

"It's not been more than a few hours," Sir Caleb said, "but they could be anywhere."

"I've called to him with no success." Sir Gavin blew out a breath in a whistle. "Will you all try?"

Vrell sought Achan's face, the scars on his cheeks, his wide grin. "He does not answer."

"Nor me," Inko said.

"None of you can hear me either?" Sir Gavin asked.

Inko's voice had a sharp pitch. "You now are calling out?"

"Aye."

Sir Caleb steered his horse beside Sir Gavin's. "The water this morning did have the slightest taste of mint."

Sir Gavin nodded once, almost bowing in shame. "We've been breached in more ways than one."

Vrell cast about for understanding. "Mint is bad?"

"It's strong enough to mask the bitterness of the aleh flower. Someone has silenced us." Sir Caleb's horse stomped its feet and the knight patted the horse's neck. "Whoa, girl."

Vrell ran her tongue over the roof of her mouth. A hint of mint lingered, but nothing resembling the bitterness of aleh. When could this have happened? How long until it wore off?

"Inko. Do you have any dried karpos?" Sir Gavin asked.

Inko reached for his saddlebag. "I'd be foolish to not be having it."

"Good. We must seek out the wielder before he escapes. No spirit can manifest without the help of a man. Someone must have followed us to keep up Achan's illusion."

Sir Caleb handed the torch to Inko, who was still digging in his saddlebag. Vrell met Sir Gavin's stricken expression and dared not speak.

Stones clicked in the distance, like footsteps.

Sir Caleb spurred his horse and galloped away. Sir Gavin rode after him.

"It's looking like they have been finding him."

Vrell stared into the darkness where the knights had ridden, listening to the horses' hooves receding. "Achan?"

"The wielder." Inko sniffed a leather pouch. "After all Gavin has been going through to be finding him, to be losing him to a mage and a gowzal is most distressing. May Arman be having mercy on our numerous imperfections."

Vrell prayed Arman would protect Achan, wherever he was. She hoped Inko had enough karpos for all of them. Jax had taught her it was the only thing that could counteract aleh.

Moments later Sir Caleb returned, holding a thrashing body across his lap. Sir Gavin rode up behind him and dismounted. He grabbed the figure by the back of the shirt and dragged him to the ground.

A pale-skinned boy, no more than thirteen, kicked and swung his skinny arms about. "Let go!"

Sir Gavin pushed the boy's face to the ground and pressed one knee into his back. "Where is he?"

"I know not who you mean." His voice cracked, caught between boy and man. "I'm bound for Melas to see my sister."

"Then where is your pack?"

"I have no pack, sir."

In one motion, Sir Gavin flipped the boy over in the watery sand. "I don't want to hurt you, lad. Don't tempt me."

Sir Caleb dismounted and took the torch from Inko. Light spilled over the boy, revealing pale, freckled skin and bright orange hair.

Vrell gasped. "I know him."

Sir Gavin's mustache curled down. "Well?"

"He is Locto Eli," Vrell said. "Lord Eli's little brother and squire."

"Are you?" Sir Gavin clamped a hand around the boy's chin. "Locto, we left your brother back in Mirrorstone. He didn't mention having a sister in Melas."

The boy hissed, the sound forming strange words. "Gowzal, yarad. Parar no oyeb."

Sir Gavin clenched the boy's tunic at the base of his throat. "Don't try your witchcraft on me, lad."

"Gowzal, yarad. Parar no oyeb! Gowzal, yarad-"

"Sh'ma Er'Rets, Arman hu elohim, Arman hu echad." Sir Gavin's voice started low and grew to a yell.

Warmth bathed Vrell as if a summer breeze was blowing through Darkness. Locto's eyes went wide. His body trembled. Had he felt the warmth too? Arman's presence?

"That's the true old language," Sir Gavin said. "What you speak has been perverted far from what Arman originally spoke to the kings of Er'Rets. You worship a false god and call on black spirits. To what end? To be used, that's what. As a tool of Gazar."

"That's not true," Locto squeaked.

"You worship demons, boy. You let them toy with you. You, a creature created to serve Arman. You defile yourself."

Locto shook his head. "Barthos is not a demon. He's a powerful god. I've seen him. I've seen his miracles."

"You've seen what Gazar wanted you to see. What your feeble mind couldn't discern was false. If you've seen the One God and are not the chosen king or a dead man, then you've not truly seen the One God. Get up."

Locto struggled to sit, his face flushing. "Take that back! I follow Barthos, not Gazar."

Sir Gavin picked the boy up by the back of his shirt and stood him on his feet. "We'll take you home and introduce you to our One God, Arman Echad. Then you'll see a real miracle when Arman destroys your idol in front of you."

Every muscle in Achan's body screamed. His tongue stuck to the roof of his mouth. His lips had cracked, and no amount of licking brought comfort. He sat on a smooth rock-wrists still chained in front-and massaged his swollen foot, cut from the rocks he'd stumbled over for hours…days? A long time. His stomach pressed against his ribs, aching in its empty state. They'd given him only aleh tonic to drink and crusty bread.