Makenna paused outside the door of the earth hut where the knight was imprisoned. “You’ve got everything?” she asked Cogswhallop.
“All but the bell, and the pen pusher’ll be along with that soon enough. Stalling, gen’ral?”
“Don’t be silly,” she snapped. But she had to admit it was true—trust Cogswhallop to see it. She opened the door and strode in.
There were several windows, but the little sod room, its ceiling barely high enough for her to stand upright, felt cramped and gloomy. He was sleeping on a pallet by the far wall, free except for the copper chain that dangled from the roof beam to his ankle. Made by goblin smiths, it wasn’t as strong as iron, but plenty strong enough to hold a man who had no iron or steel tools. It wasn’t a trap, she told herself fiercely. And even if he was trapped, her strange compulsion to set things free didn’t extend to humans.
As soon as Cogswhallop stepped inside, she slammed the door and he sat up, blinking sleepily. The bewilderment on his face changed in seconds to mulish stubbornness. Good thing she could work the lying spell, or they’d get nothing out of this one.
Without a word (let him sweat), she gestured to Cogswhallop, who handed her the small bag of silver chains. She laid the first circle on the floor at the north side of the room, opened one of her mother’s battered books, and began to trace the elaborate runes around it. Working magic from these books still brought her mother’s memory back, but now it carried love as well as sorrow.
The knight watched in silence as she completed the same process at the south and west points, but when she drew near him to lay the east circle he spoke up, apprehension clear in his voice, despite his effort to sound casual. “What are you doing?”
“Setting a spell.”
“I can see that! I mean—” He broke off, frustrated.
That’s right, lordling. I don’t have to tell you anything.
The chain rattled as he leaned back against the wall, trying to look composed and in control.
“It’s a spell that’ll tell me if you lie,” Makenna admitted. She didn’t want him too nervous, or he’d refuse to open his mouth. “A bell will ring.”
“What bell?”
“Erebus is bringing it.”
He looked more suspicious than ever. “If that’s all it is, why don’t you just put a truth spell on me?”
“Can’t.”
“What do you mean you can’t? Why not?”
She snorted. “I don’t have half the power to cast that. This one is complicated enough. Do you mind letting me work?”
“But priests cast truth spells all the time.”
“I’m not a priest.”
A polite tap on the door preceded Erebus’ bustling entrance. “I’ve got it, mistress,” he announced. “Bocami didn’t have one, so I started asking all the likely folk and found one at Wintle’s house. She was using it to store dried nettles in, which silver’s good for, but she says glass will do as well, if you want to trade for it.” He beamed at all of them, including the knight. Cogswhallop scowled.
“Aye, give her this when you get the chance.” Makenna passed him two buttons. “The second’s for your trouble.”
With both goblins’ help, she rigged a stand and hung the bell in the center of the room. Cogswhallop glanced skeptically at the complex runes. “Are you sure this’ll work, gen’ral?”
“Of course I’m sure—”
Ping. The silvery note echoed in the cramped room. Makenna felt her face turn scarlet.
“Well, we know it works,” said Erebus cheerfully.
The knight began to laugh. Makenna glared at him and he sobered, but she wasn’t displeased. It’d be easier to catch him off guard if he was relaxed. Would she have the courage to laugh like that, if she was a prisoner? She doubted it.
“What’s your name, knight?”
“What makes you think I’m a knight?” he asked pleasantly.
“Your horse’s name. What’s yours?”
The lingering laughter fled from his eyes as he realized that he’d given himself away. “Where’s Fiddle now?”
“Safe and cared for. Safer than you’ll be, if you don’t answer my questions.”
Ping.
He managed not to laugh, but it looked like a hard fight.
“Dung,” Makenna muttered. The knight’s expression changed to startled disapproval. A prig, was he? Maybe she could use that.
“I said you should let me handle this,” Cogswhallop told her. “I’d have meant it.”
“His name is Tobin,” said Erebus. “At least, that’s what he told me.”
They stared at the knight, who nodded reluctantly. “It is. Will you tell me your name, ah, in trade?”
Why not? He wasn’t going to take his knowledge to the fair. “Makenna, Ardis’ daughter.” She saw his shock at the implication of bastardy and smiled. Priggish lordling.
“And will you tell me of your family, Sir Tobin?” He winced at the title, and she wondered why, but he said nothing. “In a way,” she continued, “it doesn’t matter. Your silence tells me there’s something to conceal, and my goblins are everywhere. With your name and rank, I can get your life’s history in a few weeks.”
“Then why bother with this?” He gestured at the runes and the bell.
“To be sure I have the right name,” she answered promptly. “I don’t want my spies chasing a trail of rotten fish.”
“But why all the trappings? A sorceress of your power should be able to cast this with a wave of her hand!”
This time she laughed. “And what makes you think I’m a sorceress?”
“Master L—But you cast spells. You’re certainly not a priest. What else could you be?”
“I’m a common hedgewitch. And you’re a knight. What’s a knight doing hunting for me, Sir Tobin?”
He said nothing. He looked at the runes, the sign of someone too weak to work magic without aid. The bell hadn’t rung, but if she was a powerful sorceress, she might be able to keep it from ringing. She took a vast, malicious pleasure in his dilemma.
“I thought hedgewitches helped people,” he protested.
She had thought herself indifferent to any human opinion, but it still stung. “Why should we? People have surely given no help to hedgewitches.”
It was his turn to wince.
“What’s your connection with the settlers?” she continued.
He tensed, a flash of alarm crossing his face. A trace of color followed it. He was a pitifully poor liar. Who could have been fool enough to send him after her?
“Did the priest you mentioned tell you about them? Or did he send you out to blunder along on your own? They’re an odd lot. Half of them are soldiers, or priests in disgui—Ah. Is your priest with them?”
“No!” he snapped.
Ping. He jumped. He’d forgotten the bell.
“I mean, I don’t know.” Ping. “There is no particular priest.” Ping. He bit his lip and fell silent.
Cogswhallop grinned. Erebus shook his head mournfully.
“So, there’s a priest behind both you and the settlers, and he’s important enough to make you lose your head. He’d be the one who knows so little of goblins? Still, I’m glad I got the hiding charm on you fast. What’s his name, this Master L—?” No reply. He’d probably say nothing more, but she’d learned enough. She took down the bell and began picking up chains.
His face was red with anger. “Who are you?”
“A hedgewitch named Makenna, just like I told you.”
“He—” a furious gesture indicated the silent, satisfied Cogswhallop, “—called you general.”
“Well, I lead the goblins here.”
“Why?”
“They needed someone. The different races won’t accept another kind of goblin as their leader, but they don’t mind me.”
“You turned them into killers! I saw what you did at that cabin—I’ve heard about the others. You’re not just a hedgewitch, you’re a killer!” He sounded almost hysterical, but his eyes were observant. Trying to turn the tables and provoke something out of her? A good idea, but he’d picked the wrong target for his jibes. She cared nothing for humans killed.
He must have seen it in her face. His own expression changed, chilled and wary. “How old are you, anyway?”
It mattered even less than her name. “Seventeen.”
“Seventeen!” He glared wildly at the dismantled bell as if expecting it to ring. “Seventeen and you’re—you’re—Bright Gods! Does your mother know what you’re doing?”
It was a ludicrous question, but it cut through her defenses as his accusation of murder never could. “My mother’s dead. Drowned by the very humans she spent her life helping. If she was alive, she’d be proud of me!”
Ping. The tone was muffled by her grip, but clear. Makenna jumped. It shouldn’t have rung, with the runes dismantled. But this was an intricate spell. She’d never really understood it.
“I’m sorry,” the knight said gravely. “I can’t imagine what that must have meant to you. But surely abandoning the Bright Gods and taking power from the Dark One isn’t the answer.”
“Pigdung,” Makenna snorted, enjoying his shocked scowl. “There is no Dark God. Likely no Bright Ones, either.”
“That’s blasphemy! Besides, if there are no gods, where does your power, and the priests’, and the goblins’, come from?”
“From the same place.” She gestured to the meadow outside the windows. “From nature, from inside ourselves. The only reason I’m not a priest is that the chooser said I hadn’t enough power. ‘Her holiness is not sufficient.’” She mimicked the chooser’s voice, remembering her mother weeping in the night.
“But…” He fell silent and then spoke quietly. “Jeriah said something like that once. That the priesthood was the Hierarch’s way of keeping people with powerful magic gifts in his service. Father was furious.”
“Who’s Jeriah?”
He realized he was giving away information and his mouth snapped shut.
She shrugged. “It makes no difference. He sounds a sensible man, whoever he is. But if you’re interested, these days I swear by St. Maydrian the Avenger.”
She smiled and left him to think it over.
“Please, sir, all I want is work.” She stood before Master Lazur, eyes downcast, her shaking knees concealed by the unaccustomed skirt. Cogswhallop and Erebus had both hated this idea—and they never agreed on anything. But she needed more information about the settlement, and according to the knight, they believed their enemy was an ancient and powerful sorceress. They shouldn’t suspect an ordinary peasant girl.
She’d been confident she could deceive them…until the guard brought her to this tent and addressed the sharp-eyed priest before her as Master Lazur. Well, what if he was her enemy? He couldn’t know who she was, for they’d only caught a glimpse of her at the wall, and she looked very different now, with her drab skirt and properly braided hair. She took a calming breath and steadied herself to meet his eyes. Unlike the knight, she was a fine liar.
“Things are hard this time of year,” she said pathetically. “Goodman Branno, he couldn’t afford to keep me, and since then I’ve worked only a few days at a time. In Brackenlee, when I heard about your people, I thought there’d be lots of hands needed in a new village, so I came to ask. I’ll work for bed and board until you can pay me.”
“I think we can do something for you.” His words were kind. He probably was a kind man, unless you got in his way. Then you’d be uprooted and burned, along with the rest of the grapevines. Makenna knew all about ruthlessness in defense of your own. She wouldn’t underestimate this man. Just now, for all his kindness, he looked as if most of his attention was elsewhere. Good.
“But first you must answer a few questions, so we can be sure we can trust you,” the priest went on. “May I cast a truth spell on you? It’s a standard precaution—we’ve done it with all our settlers here.” Makenna’s heart lurched. His expression held nothing but a trace of boredom. It probably was a standard precaution, just like he said. Sensible, too, so why hadn’t she thought of this possibility?
“Of course you may.” To say anything else would arouse his suspicions. She drew a deep breath. “I have nothing to hide.”
He stood for a second, gathering power while she strove desperately to gather her wits. Unlike the weaker spell in her mother’s books, the truth spell forced you to tell the truth, but perhaps…
He laid his hand against her throat, and she felt the power swirl through her like a churn paddle. She gasped and he glanced at her, startled. Should she not have felt it? She blinked innocently. He withdrew his hand, and the power wrapped around her stomach like a giant fist and settled there.
“What’s your name, girl?”
The fist squeezed and she felt the answer welling up in her throat. She couldn’t stop it. “Makenna, Ardis’ daughter.” He accepted the indication of bastardy with visible indifference, and she thanked St. Spiratu the Truth Giver that she’d not yet told anyone the false name she’d intended to use.
“Where do you come from?”
“The wetlands, originally.” The name of her village rose in her mind, and she added quickly, “But that was years ago. I’ve traveled a lot since.” It was all true. The alien power in her belly stirred restlessly but forced no further answer. Good lies came from truth, like butter came from cream. If she could keep talking and always tell the truth, would that work?
The priest shrugged. He evidently cared little for her travels. “What do you want here?”
Need it be the whole truth?
“To work for some good family,” she said. The words “to spy” surged in her throat, but she swallowed them down and babbled on rapidly. “It’s a long time since I had a proper job, and I haven’t much money left.” The pressure was subsiding. She’d answered and spoken the truth—evidently that was enough.
“Have you heard of the sorceress of the Goblin Wood?”
“Aye, in Brackenlee.” And from Sir Tobin and many others, but she managed not to say it.
“Have you ever seen her?”
“No, sir. To tell the truth, I didn’t believe much of what they told me.” And still don’t.
“Do you serve this sorceress?”
“No, sir.” For she doesn’t exist.
He nodded acceptance, then thought of a final question. “Do you intend harm to anyone in this settlement?”
The compulsion to answer squeezed her gut and her mind raced. “As long as they mean no harm to me and mine, I mean no harm to them,” she blurted, trying to sound pert, then looking down as if embarrassed. The power roiled, dissatisfied, but the compulsion to speak wasn’t overpowering. Someone entered the tent, but she was too busy controlling her expression to look around.
“Very well.” The alien power drained out of her and she suppressed a gasp of relief. “Goodwife Garron has a new baby—she might need an extra pair of hands. Jeriah will show you.”
She glanced up, startled by the name, and saw a handsome boy, younger than herself. The knight’s Jeriah? It wasn’t a common name. He nodded to Master Lazur and smiled at her.
“I thank you, sir.” Makenna curtsied unsteadily to both of them and Jeriah showed her out. She wished desperately for a few moments’ privacy to recover from her narrow escape, but Jeriah walked on without pause. She wiped her sweaty palms, gritted her teeth, and followed him.
After one shrewd glance, he didn’t speak—did she look that shaken? But probably many did, after their meeting with Master Lazur. She’d have plenty of time to ask questions later, so Makenna fell in with his silence, and used the time to compose herself before meeting Goodwife—what was the name? She felt a moment of panic, but Jeriah introduced them carefully.
Goodwife Garron was a thin, quick-moving woman, still pale and tired from the recent birth. But tired or not, she never wasted time. Almost before she knew what was happening, Makenna found herself up to her elbows in a tub of dirty laundry, where she finally had a chance to relax, after a fashion.
With a host of goblins willing to work for buttons and bowls of milk, she’d forgotten the incessant grind of housework. Even though there was no house, for the cabin they would live in was only half built, cooking, laundry, firewood, and dozens of other chores had to be done. By the end of the day, when the family came back to the big tent where they all slept, Makenna’s muscles ached as if she’d been pulling a plow.
There were six in the family. Goodman Garron was as slow moving as his wife was quick and seemed a quiet man, but perhaps that was only because he couldn’t get a word in. Along with the new baby boy, there was a boy of twelve, Dacon, who took after his father, and a seven-year-old boy, Mardin, who grinned impudently at her. Ressa, the only girl, was five, and Makenna never found out much about her because her thumb never seemed to leave her mouth. Mardin and Ressa were too young to be much help, so Goodwife Garron sent them off to pester the men during the day. The children giggled when she told Makenna that, and Dacon beamed with pleasure at being classed as one of “the men.”
Makenna gained a bit of useful information that first night.
She was laying a pallet for herself in the already crowded tent, protesting that she could very well sleep outside.
“Nonsense, Makenna,” said Goodwife Garron. “Suppose it rains? The last thing we need is to have to nurse you through a chill. Or suppose the alarm rings in the night?”
“Then she’d be closer to the church than we are,” Mardin piped up, and then giggled as Dacon buried him in the blankets.
“What alarm?” Makenna asked Goodwife Garron, who was smiling at the uproar.
“Didn’t I tell you? By the saints, I suppose I didn’t! All the folk who’ve tried to settle in this wood have been attacked by goblins—”
“Led by a sorceress, seven feet tall, with flaming eyes,” proclaimed Mardin, shaking off his brother.
“Well, not quite that, perhaps. But that’s why we’ve all these soldiers and priests—to catch the sorceress. If the alarm bell rings, you and I and the children will go straight to the church, Makenna. The menfolk, in fact most of the men in the village, plan to stay out and guard the stock and the supp—”
“I could help guard, too!” Mardin informed them. “If I had a medal like father does, I’d—”
“What medal?” asked Makenna, interrupting in turn.
“It’s a charm to keep goblins away,” the goodwife explained. “The same kind of enchanted iron they’ve got around the doors and windows of the church. We’ll be safe in there, and the men’ll take care of the rest.” Her frown told Makenna she wasn’t quite as sure of that as she sounded. But when Dacon told Mardin he was too young to guard a hamster, let alone a cow, the resultant fracas made the baby start to cry, and the subject was dropped.
Makenna slipped out of the tent. The noisy jostling of these humans disturbed her, and she stood a few moments, staring up at the starry sky and trying to ignore the settlement around her. How was she ever going to sleep in a tent full of them?
At least she was getting the information she needed. How easy it would be to have the Flamers set the church afire—no need to cross charmed iron for that. And when the men rushed to save the women and children, their goods and gear could be stolen or destroyed. Of course, something must be done about the priests and soldiers first. She still had much to learn.
These people had been kind, but their kindness was for a human servant girl. For a hedgewitch, for her goblins, they would have no mercy at all. With a weary sigh, Makenna turned back to the crowded tent. In spite of her fears, she was so tired she fell asleep immediately.
As Makenna grew more accustomed to the Garron family, her very lack of unease around the humans began to trouble her—they were, after all, the enemy. If she got too comfortable, she might make some slip and give herself away. She hoped the need to gather information would keep her wary enough.
One bright morning, her hands covered with bread dough, Makenna asked Goodwife Garron who Jeriah was.
She laughed. “Don’t set your heart on that lad, dear, he’s a lordling or I’ve never seen one.”
“I noticed that,” said Makenna, kneading more flour into the dough. It felt strange to perform this task outside, in the sunlight. Perhaps it was the familiarity of these ordinary household chores that was draining her defensiveness. “That’s why I asked about him. What’s a lordling doing here?”
“He’s some sort of assistant to Master Lazur, who seems to be a pretty important man, judging by the way the other priests act around him. It’s not that odd.”
“Aye, I guess that’s right,” Makenna admitted, and turned the subject. There was no other priest whose name began with L, so Master Lazur was almost certainly the priest the knight had mentioned. If Jeriah was his assistant, it made sense that Tobin would know him, though it seemed strange that a priest’s assistant would have such heretical opinions.
She found out a lot about the soldiers by eavesdropping on their conversations. Though they were civil, the soldiers cared little for the settlers—their one ambition was to capture the sorceress, destroy the goblin army, and get out of “this wilderness” and back to the City of Steps to spend their reward. That chilled her, for the City of Steps was the Hierarch’s city, which meant these men were from the Hierarch’s own guard.
They all wore goblin repulsion charms, just like the knight’s, and many of the settlers had them, too. In addition, all the priests and some of the soldiers had extra charms to help them resist goblin spells. She tried to learn which of them carried these charms, but it was impossible, for they changed hands nightly when the soldiers gambled. Along with the charms, many of them wore steel armor beneath their rough tunics, but they carried no swords for fear of compromising their “disguises.”
Their plan was to let the goblins overrun them and flood into the settlement. Then they would close ranks to hold and slay them. The thought of her goblins dying in their trap sent a wave of hatred washing over her, and Makenna took several small risks trying to discover where their weapons were stored.
But it wasn’t until she entered the nearly completed church for the priests’ First Day Speaking that she found them, stacked neatly in crates along the back wall and protected from the goblin’s interference by the charmed windows and doors.
She’d avoided Master Lazur since their first meeting, fearing his sharp intelligence. Now she watched him curiously, but there was little to see. Although his eyes were fixed on the speaker, he looked as if his thoughts were elsewhere. Thinking of her? Makenna shivered and looked away, and her attention was caught by a young woman with tears pouring down her face. She seemed familiar, but Makenna couldn’t remember having met her in the settlement.
Goodwife Garron had spent most of the Speaking whispering threats to her restless children, instead of watching the priest, so it was easy to catch her eye and nod at the weeping girl. The goodwife’s cheerful face darkened. “Lost her baby, poor thing,” she murmured. “Stillborn. It came early when the goblins burned them out.”
The girl at the cabin! She looked diminished now, with her lank hair and reddened eyes. Makenna thought of the small, unformed creature that Goodwife Garron cherished so—she’d hardly let anyone else touch the child. Makenna’s mother had healed and helped pregnant women. “Magic comes from life and is part of it,” the long-dead voice whispered in her memory. But it was different from her mother’s voice—silvery, like the chime of the liar’s bell. A cold chill crept around her neck and shoulders. Her mother would not have approved of this, of her.
Makenna looked down. But her mother wouldn’t have approved of the slaughter of the goblins, either. She’d been forced to choose, and she had no regrets. But…magic comes from life. Perhaps it was because of the voice that she did what she did next.
It started simply enough. The afternoon clouds had blown off without producing rain for once, and the family sat around the dinner fire, wrangling as usual. Goodwife Garron had just told Mardin for the third time not to talk with his mouth full or he’d choke, when the boy stopped talking and wheezed loudly.
At first Makenna thought it was a joke—Mardin had a seven-year-old’s sense of humor. Then the strangled choking began, violent and obviously involuntary. Goodwife Garron laid down the baby and rushed to him. His father reached him at the same time.
“Slap his back,” said Dacon.
“No, don’t,” said the Goodwife. “You might drive it deeper!” She pressed her hands against Mardin’s stomach, trying to squeeze the air out of his lungs, but nothing happened. His face was turning blue. “Dacon, go for a healer priest, hurry!”
The boy took off like a bird. Mardin’s father laid him down. His frantic thrashing was weaker. Soon he would be unconscious. The priest would be too late.
Before she was even aware of moving, Makenna found herself kneeling beside the child. She snatched a piece of charcoal from the fire and drew the runes of loosening and freeing on his chest, then grabbed a pot of butter, since no oil was available for the essential object, and rubbed it on his throat and spoke the words.
His lungs heaved, and he began to cough—loud, clear coughing, his lungs inflating time and again. He spat out a piece of half-chewed meat. His mother pulled him into her arms and met Makenna’s eyes.
“What’s happening here? Is the child all right?” It was one of the priests, an older woman with a sharp hatchet face.
Makenna froze, hiding the piece of charcoal under her skirt. Useless. Her mind screamed, Fool, they’ll know you’re a hedgewitch, and then the rest of it will come out! You’ve traded it all for that brat’s life!
“There’s nothing wrong now.” Goodwife Garron stood, holding Mardin against her, pulling his shirt over the smudged runes on his chest. “He was choking, but he brought it up himself, by the Bright Ones’ grace! I’m very grateful for your coming, though.”
There was a frozen pause as if the entire noisy family was holding their breath. Then Mardin began to sob, and Ressa and the baby joined in, and in the tumult of getting them all settled down, the priest was thanked again and politely dismissed.
As soon as the others were asleep, Makenna stole from the tent. No one had mentioned the spell she’d cast, and she knew Goodwife Garron and her husband never would. But the children were another matter. The sooner she was away, the better.
She wished that she hadn’t been forced to put her hiding charm on the knight. She’d put off making herself a new one—she couldn’t bring it into the human village, and she hadn’t had time for the complex spell. There was no reason for them to use magic to search for a runaway hired girl, and she couldn’t imagine they’d ever suspect her of being “the sorceress.” But she’d make herself a new one as soon as she could, just in case.
A simple look-away spell took her past the perimeter guard, and soon she was walking through the darkened woods. The relief of being free of the human settlement lightened her heart. She now had enough information to make a successful plan. Soon she’d be back with her own, and they’d drive these humans away.
But at the thought, a cold chill touched the back of her neck. It took her several minutes to shrug off the knowledge that her mother would not have approved.