A dull ringing chime rolled through the darkness, and Secca bolted upright in the narrow double-width bed—one of the few true beds in which she had slept since leaving Encora so many long weeks before. Sweat poured off her face, and a wall of heat surrounded her and Alcaren, as if they had been placed suddenly within an oven. She found herself gasping for breath against the unbearable heat.
Then, as quickly as the heat had bathed her, with the dying away of the dull, half-harmonic chime it began to diminish. Secca found herself shaking, as if exhausted, as if she had sung a major spell.
“What…?” began Alcaren, also sitting up, then stopping and looking at his consort. “So hot…” He flung back the blanket.
“Something with the harmonies.” Even as the words left her lips, Secca felt stupid for saying the obvious.
“It had to be,” he replied gently, blotting his own sweating forehead with the back of his hand before easing himself out of the bed onto the rough wooden floor that creaked as he moved toward the wall lamp. After picking up the striker from the side of the wash table, he fumbled with it several times before the lamp wick caught.
Secca glanced toward the shuttered window, but outside was still dark, without a hint of an approaching dawn. As dim glow from the oil lamp swelled and illuminated the chamber, Secca studied her consort. While he was not shaking or shivering, he also looked pale, wan.
In the dimness of the inn chamber, the two exchanged glances.
Then both spoke.
“The wards…”
“Your wards…”
Alcaren smiled and gestured for Secca to continue. He sat down on the edge of the bed facing her.
“I think someone tried some sort of sorcery against us, and not from very close. I could almost feel the distance,” she said slowly. “The wards…” She smiled, almost wryly, exhausted as she felt. “I guess they worked.”
“The Sea-Priests, you think?”
“Who else could it be?” She shook her head. “If there is someone else that powerful whom we don’t know about…but why would anyone else attempt it? The Ladies of the Shadows? Do they have that ability?”
“The Matriarch never believed so.”
“They limited themselves to assassinations?” Secca took another long swallow from the water bottle.
“And other uses of coins to achieve their ends,” he agreed. “They’ve never used sorcery, and I can’t believe they would now.” After a time, he added, “Do you think we should use the glass to see who it was?”
Secca frowned. “I’m still tired, but if I can do one spell, it might be a good idea. We’d know who it was. That would tell us what we need to do.”
“Then you need to eat. Now.” Alcaren rose and walked to the writing table, where he leaned down and lifted the small provisions bag that lay beside the saddlebags. After rummaging through it, he held up a small chunk of bread. “Hard and stale, but it will help.” He had to saw into the bread and split it with his belt knife before he could offer a piece to Secca.
The bread was so dry and tough that Secca had to alternate small bites with mouthfuls of water from her water bottle.
“We need to keep more biscuits or something in that,” Alcaren mumbled through his own mouthful of bread. “And cheese.”
“Where will we find them?”
Alcaren shrugged sheepishly.
“I feel badly about what we’re taking from people as it is.” Secca held up her hand to keep Alcaren from interrupting. “I know. I can’t help them if we don’t eat, but it bothers me. I don’t have that many golds left, even after taking what we did from Fehern.”
“We won’t need golds at sea.”
Secca nodded, knowing that she would need all that she could gather later, but there was little point in worrying about that now. Still, she worried that she dared not tell anyone, even Alcaren. The risk was too great that someone might hear, through sorcery or simple eavesdropping. Or are you afraid he won’t approve? What are you risking by not telling him?
“Do you want me to try the scrying spell?” he asked.
“I’ll try it. If we need a second, then you will have to do it.” Secca eased out of bed and padded across a room that was now cold to get the lutar from its case. She thought for a long time as she tuned the instrument.
In the dim light of the single lamp, Alcaren unpacked the scrying glass from its leathers and set it on the narrow writing table, then stood, waiting as Secca finished tuning the instrument and thinking about the spellsong.
When Secca was ready she turned and stepped up to the table.
“Show us now and so that we can tell
those who, against our ward, cast their spell…”
As she finished the last words of the spellsong, an invisible hammer seemed to strike her forehead, and she had to force herself to hang on to the lutar. Her eyes watered, and for several moments she could not see anything.
“Are you all right?” Alcaren’s voice seemed distant.
Swaying unsteadily, she blinked, once, twice, before the image in the glass slowly filled her vision, if blurrily, and through the daystars that flashed across her field of vision.
Flames licked at what had been a tent. All was charred except for one half-upright side, still partly suspended by the only erect tent pole and two unburned ropes. That sole, and shrinking, section of white canvas diminished as Secca watched the fire flare—and the edge of the tent sink into blackness and orange flames. Around the smoke and fire was a ring of lancers in white riding jackets.
“Let it go,” Alcaren said. “They’re Sturinnese. Or they were.”
Despite the pounding in her head, and the pain and blurring in her eyes, Secca lifted the lutar and managed to sing the release couplet. Just singing the couplet reinforced the pounding in her head, so much that she lurched against the table.
Alcaren took the lutar from her shaking hands, setting it down gently on the floor and against the wall. He straightened and put an arm around his unsteady consort, helping her back to the bed, where she sat down heavily.
“My head…it’s like being pounded on an anvil.” Secca squinted. “It’s hard to see.” She took the water bottle Alcaren tendered—his, because she had finished hers earlier—and slowly drank. The coolness helped some, and she thought the pounding inside her skull was slightly less intense, but her eyes still hurt, and everything she looked at still blurred and flashed.
“You need to eat more. I’m going to see what I can find.” Before Secca could say anything, Alcaren was pulling on his trousers and boots and belting on his sabre. He took Secca’s water bottle as well.
Stepping to the door, he slid the bolt.
“Ser?” asked Gorkon, sleepily, as though the lancer had been drowsing at his post outside the door.
“The lady Secca had to do some unforeseen sorcery, and she needs something to eat.”
Secca couldn’t hear the rest of what Alcaren said, because he had closed the door. She looked toward the window, but no light slipped through the shutters, and the way she felt she doubted if it was much past midnight. She massaged her forehead with her left hand, then her right, but her head still ached, and she was so exhausted she had to give up the effort.
In the end, she just sat and looked blankly at the door until it opened, and Alcaren stepped back inside and slid the bolt.
He carried a loaf of dark bread, and a small wedge of cheese, and a pouch of some sort, as well as the water bottle. As if reading her thoughts, he answered, “Dried fruit. I persuaded the innkeeper to provide it.”
“Persuaded?” Her voice cracked even on the single word.
“I just asked,” Alcaren replied, innocently. “Oh, and there’s ale in the water bottle. I wasn’t sure either of us wanted to try a cleaning spellsong.” He handed her the water bottle and then set the cheese on the edge of the wash table, where he hacked off a section, quickly extending it to Secca. “Here.”
“I don’t…my stomach is roiling around.”
“Please try it. You can’t get better without eating something.”
“Can I try some of the bread first?”
The dark bread was surprisingly moist, and tasty. Although Secca took very small mouthfuls, it seemed that she had eaten very little, yet the first chunk was gone, and she was reaching for a second.
“You were hungry.” Alcaren managed through his own mouthful of bread. “Could I have a sip of the ale?”
“I thought it was for me.” Secca had to force the grin.
“It is, but would you miss a little?”
Secca handed him the bottle.
It seemed as though no time had passed when the two looked up at each other after finishing all the cheese, the entire loaf of bread, and the double handful of dried fruit. Secca licked a last crumb off her fingers.
“How is your head?” asked Alcaren.
“Better. It still hurts, but it’s a dull hurt. I can see without it blurring, but there are still daystars, now and again.”
“I’m glad you’re better.” Alcaren frowned. “I worry about the wards.”
“About what?”
“Won’t there be others who will try? Won’t we need to redo them?” Alcaren’s question was almost hesitant.
“We should. I’d like to do it now, but I can’t. We’d have to wake the players, anyway.”
Alcaren frowned. “Can we wait till morning? What if—”
“I can’t do it now!” Secca snapped. “I just can’t. I couldn’t even see, except in blurs. My head hurt so much I couldn’t think. It still hurts. How could I sing anything now?”
“I’m sorry,” Alcaren said gently. “I just worry about you.”
“I worry, too. I can only hope that they don’t have that many strong sorcerers, and that they won’t try anything.” Secca found tears streaming down her cheeks, and she turned her head toward the wall, hoping that Alcaren wouldn’t see in the dim light.
“Are you all right, my lady?”
“My eyes…I told you they hurt,” Secca choked out.
“You said…” He left his words drift into silence as he slipped onto the bed beside her and put an arm around her. “I’m sorry. I just worry. I don’t want anything to happen to you.”
After a moment, Secca let her head rest against his, but she didn’t turn to face him. “I know. I know. We’ll see in the morning. That’s all I can do. That’s all you can do. If you tried any sorcery now, you’d be worse than I am now, and then where would we be?”
Alcaren said nothing, just squeezed her gently.
“We’ll be all right,” she murmured. In spite of Alcaren’s closeness, she shivered.