Though the Tower wasn't tall, it gave a view of the countryside matched only from the Toad. That grim formation was clearly visible. The rain had cleared the air.

  Someone was running toward the Tower. Beyond, a fountain of smoke rose against the backdrop formed by the Dragon's Teeth.

  A distance-muted thunderclap smote the air.

  "That's your place," Torfin said softly.

  XVII

  A man in black, wearing a golden mask, rounded a knoll. He paused above the Palikov stead. Bloody dawn light leaked round the Toad. It splashed him as he knelt, feeling the earth. It made his mask more hideous. The faceted ruby eyepieces seemed to catch fire.

  Thin fingers floated on the air, reaching, till they pointed westward. The man in black rose and started walking. His fingers led him on.

  He went slowly, sensing his quarry's trail. It was cold. Occasionally he lost it and had to circle till he caught it again.

  The sun scaled the sky. Kai Ling kept walking. A gentle, anticipatory smile played behind his mask.

  The feel of the man was getting stronger. He was getting close. It was almost done. In a few hours he would be home. The Tervola would be determining the extent of his reward.

  He crossed a low hilltop and paused.

  A shepherd's stead lay below. He reached out . . . .

  One man, injured, lay within the crude sod house. A second life-spark lurked in the grove surrounding the nearby spring.

  And there were six riders coming in from the southwest.

  One seized his attention. She coruscated with a stench of wild, untrained Power.

  "Lords of Darkness," Kai Ling whispered. "She's almost as strong as the Demon Princess." He crouched, becoming virtually invisible in a patch of gorse.

  Five of the riders dismounted. They heaped kindling round the timbers of a partially finished house.

  A man staggered from the sod structure. "Shirl!" he screamed. "For god's sake . . . ."

  A raider tripped him, slipped a knife into his back as he wriggled on the earth.

  Kai Ling stirred slightly as two blasts of emotion exploded below.

  A child burst from the grove, shrieking, running toward the killer. And the wild witch lashed the man with a whip. He screamed louder than the boy.

  Kai Ling reeled back from the raw surge. She was as strong as the Prince's daughter. But extremely young and undisciplined.

  He stood.

  The tableau froze.

  The boy thought quickest. He paused only a second, then whirled and raced away.

  The others regarded Kai Ling for half a minute. Then the witch turned her mount toward him. He felt the uncertainty growing within her.

  Kai Ling let his Aspirant's senses roam the stead. The barn stood out. That was his man's living place. But he was gone.

  Faceted rubies tracked the fleeing boy. Lips smiled behind gold. "Bring him to me, child," he whispered.

  The raiders formed a line shielding the woman. Swords appeared. Kai Ling glanced at the boy. He waited.

  She felt him now, he knew. She knew there had been sorcery in the Zemstvi. She would be wondering . . . .

  A raider wheeled suddenly. Kai Ling could imagine his words.

  He had been recognized.

  He folded his arms.

  What would she try?

  The fire gnawed at the new house. Smoke billowed up. Kai Ling glanced westward. The child had disappeared.

  The witch's right arm thrust his way. Pale fire sparkled amongst her fingertips.

  He murmured into his mask, readying his defenses.

  She was a wild witch. Untrained. She had only intuitive control of the Power. Her emotions would affect what little control she had. He remained unworried despite her strength.

  Kai Ling underestimated the size of the channel fear could open in her. She hit him with a blast that nearly melted his protection.

  He fell to his knees.

  He forced his hands together.

  Thunder rolled across the Zemstvi. The timbers of the burning house leapt into the air, tumbled down like a lazy rain of torches. The sod house twisted, collapsed. The barn canted dangerously. The cow inside bawled.

  The witch toppled from her horse, screaming, clawing her ears. She thrashed and wailed till a raider smacked her unconscious.

  The Caydarmen looked uphill. Kai Ling, though unconscious, remained upon his knees. Golden fire burned where his face belonged. They tossed the witch aboard her horse, fled.

  Kai Ling eventually fell forward into the gorse, vanishing.

  Then only the flames moved on the Kleckla stead, casting dancing color onto the man whose dreams were dying with him.

  XVIII

  Tain pushed the roan. He met Steban more than a mile from the Tower. The boy was exhausted, but his arms and legs kept pumping.

  "Tain!" he called. "Tain, they killed Pa." He spoke in little bursts, between lung-searing gasps.

  "You go on to your mother. She's at the Tower. Come on. Go." He kicked the roan to a gallop.

  Steban didn't reach the Tower. Rula, having conquered Tain's mule, met him. She pulled him up behind her and continued toward her home.

  Tain saw the Caydarmen to the south, but didn't alter course. He would find them when their time came.

  It was too late now. Absolutely too late. He had switched allegiance from peace to blood. He would kill them. The Witch would go last. After she saw her protectors stripped away. After she learned the meaning of terror.

  He was an angry, unreasoning man. Only craft and cunning remained.

  He knew he couldn't face her wild magic armed only with long and shortsword. To do so he had to resume his abandoned identity. He had to become a soldier of the Dread Empire once more. A centurion's armor bore strong protective magicks.

  What amazing fear would course through the Zemstvi!

  He pulled up when he topped the last hill.

  The after-smell of sorcery tainted the air round the stead. The familiar stench of the Dread Empire overrode that of the Witch . . . .

  He hurled himself from the horse into the shelter of small bushes. His swords materialized in his hands. His emotions perished like small flames in a sudden deluge. He probed with Aspirant senses.

  They had come. Because of the civil war he hadn't believed they would bother. He had fooled himself. They couldn't just let him go, could they? Not a centurion with his background. He could be too great a boon to potential enemies.

  The heirs of the Dread Empire, both the Demon Princess and the Dragon Princes, aspired to western conquests.

  Tain frowned. Sorceries had met here. The eastern had been victorious. So what had become of the victor?

  He waited nearly fifteen minutes, till certain the obvious trap wasn't there. Only then did he enter the yard.

  He couldn't get near Toma. The flames were too hot.

  Kleckla was beyond worry anyway.

  Tain was calm. His reason was at work. He had surprised himself in the jaws of a merciless vice.

  One was his determination to rid the Zemstvi of the Witch and her thieves. The other was the hunter from home, who would be a man stronger than he, a highly ranked Candidate or Select.

  Where was he? Why didn't he make his move?

  Right now, just possibly, he could get away. If he obscured his trail meticulously and avoided using the Power again, he might give his past the slip forever. But if he hazarded the Tower, there would be no chance whatsoever. He would have to use the Power. The hunter would pin him down, and come when he was exhausted . . . .

  Life had been easier when he hadn't made his own decisions. Back then it hadn't mattered if a task were perilous or impossible. All he had had to do was follow orders.

  He released the old cow, recovered his mule packs. He stared at them a long time, as if he might be able to exhume a decision from their contents.

  He heard a noise. His hands flew to his swords.

  Rula, Steban, and the mule descended the hill.


  Tain relaxed, waited.

  Rula surveyed the remains. "This's the cost of conciliation." There was no venom in her voice.

  "Yes." He searched her empty face for a clue. He found no help there.

  "Rula, they've sent somebody after me. From the east. He's in the Zemstvi now. I don't know where. He was here. He chased the Caydarmen off. I don't know why. I don't know who he is. I don't know how he thinks. But I know what his mission is. To take me home."

  Steban said, "I saw him."

  "What?"

  "A stranger. I saw him. Over there. He was all black. He had this ugly mask on . . . ."

  A brief hope flickered in Tain's breast.

  "The mask. What did it look like? What were his clothes like?"

  Steban pouted. "I only saw him for a second. He scared me. I ran."

  "Try to think. It's important. A soldier has to remember things, Steban. Everything."

  "I don't think I want to be a soldier anymore."

  "Come on. Come on." Tain coaxed him gently, and in a few minutes had drawn out everything Steban knew.

  "Kai Ling. Can't be anybody else." His voice was sad.

  "You know him?" Rula asked.

  "I knew him. He was my best friend. A long, long time ago. When we were Steban's age."

  "Then . . . ."

  "Nothing. He's still a Tervola Aspirant. He's been given a mission. Nothing will deflect him. He might shed a tear for our childhood afterward. He was always too emotional for his chosen path."

  She surveyed his gear while he helped Steban off the mule. "You mean you have to run to have a chance?"

  "Yes."

  "Then run. Anything you did now would be pointless, anyway."

  "No. A soldier's honor is involved. To abandon a task in the face of a secondary danger would be to betray a code which has been my life. I'm a soldier. I can't stop being one. And soldiers of the Dread Empire don't retreat. We don't flee because we face defeat. There may be a purpose in sacrifice. We withdraw only if ordered."

  "There's nobody to order you. You could go. You're your own commander now."

  "I know. That's why it's so difficult."

  "I can't help you, Tain." The weight of Toma's demise had begun to crack her barriers against grief.

  "You can. Tell me what you'll do."

  "About what?"

  He indicated the stead. "You can't stay. Can you?"

  She shrugged.

  "Will you go with me if I go?"

  She shrugged again. The grief was upon her now. She wasn't listening.

  Tain massaged his aching temples, then started unpacking his armor.

  Piece by piece, he became a leading centurion of the Demon Guard. Steban watched with wide eyes. He recognized the armor. The legions were known far beyond lands that had endured their unstoppable passing.

  Tain donned his helmet, his swords and witch kit. He paused with his mask in hand. Rula said nothing. She stared at Toma, remembering.

  Tain shook his head, donned the mask, walked to the roan. He started toward the Tower

  He didn't look back.

  The armor began to feel comfortable. The roan pranced along, glad to be a soldier's steed once more. He felt halfway home . . . .

  What he had said penetrated Rula's brain soon after he passed out of view. She glanced around in panic.

  The mule remained. As did all Tain's possessions except his weapons and armor. "He left his things!"

  Quiet tears dribbled from Steban's eyes. "Ma. I don't think he expects to come back. He thinks he's going to die."

  "Steban, we've got to stop him."

  XIX

  Tain came to the dark tower in the day's last hour. Caydarmen manned its ramparts. An arrow dropped from the sky. It whistled off his armor.

  Torfin stood beside the Witch. Tain heard her say, "He's not the same one. He wore robes. And walked."

  And Torfin responded, awed, "It's Tain. The man who stayed with your father."

  There was no thought in the old soldier. He was a machine come to destroy the Tower. He let decades of combat schooling guide him.

  He began with the gate.

  From his witch pouch he drew a short, slim rod and a tiny glass vial. He thrust the rod into the vial, making sure the entire shaft was moist. He spoke words he had learned long ago.

  Fire exploded in his hand. He hurled a flaming javelin.

  It flew perfectly flat, immune to gravity. It struck the gate, made a sound like the beating of a brass gong.

  Timbers flew as the gate shattered.

  Caydarmen scrambled down from the ramparts.

  Tain returned to his pouch. He removed the jar and silver box he had used in the pass. He greased his hands, obtained one of the deadly peas. He concentrated, breathed. The cerulean glow came into being. He hurled a fiery blue ball upward.

  It rose slowly, drifted like gossamer toward the ramparts.

  The Witch didn't recognize her peril until too late. The ball jumped at her, enveloping her left hand.

  She screamed.

  Torfin bellowed, followed his confederates downstairs.

  Tain dismounted and strode through the gate.

  Grimnir met him first. Fear filled the big man's eyes. He fought with desperate genius.

  And he died.

  As did his comrades, though they tried to team against the man in black.

  Trolledyngjans were feared throughout the west. They were deadly fighters. These were amazed by their own ineffectuality. But they had never faced a soldier of the Dread Empire, let alone a leading centurion of the Demon Guard.

  The last fell. Tain faced Torfin. "Yield, boy," he said, breaking battle discipline. "You're the one good man in this viper's nest. Go."

  "Release her." The youth indicated the ramparts. The girl's screams had declined to moans. She had begun fighting the ball. Tain knew she had the strength to beat it, if she could find and harness it.

  He smiled. If she failed, she would die. Even if she succeeded, she would never be the same. No matter what happened to him, he had won something. At her age pain could be a powerful purgative for evil.

  Still, he had to try to make the situation absolute. "Stand aside, Torfin. You can't beat me."

  "I have to try. I love her, Tain."

  "You're no good to her dead."

  At the bottom of it, Torfin was Trolledyngjan. Like Tain, he could do nothing but be what he was. Trolledyngjans were stubborn, inflexible, and saw all settlements, finally, in terms of the stronger sword.

  Torfin fell into a slight crouch, presenting his blade in a tentative figure eight.

  Tain nodded, began murmuring the Battle Ritual. He had to relax, to give his reflexes complete control. Torfin was more skilled than his confederates. He was young and quick.

  He shrieked and lunged.

  Tain turned his rush in silence. The soldiers of Shinsan fought, and died, without a word or cry. Their silence had unnerved men more experienced than Torfin.

  Tain's cool, wordless competence told. Torfin retreated a step, then another and another. Sweat ran down his forehead.

  Tain's shortsword flicked across and pinked Torfin's left hand. The dagger flew away. The youth had used the weapon cunningly, wickedly. Its neutralization had been Tain's immediate goal.

  Torfin danced away, sucked his wound. He looked into faceted crystal and knew the old soldier had spoken the truth when claiming he couldn't be beaten.

  Both glanced upward. Shirl's moans were fading.

  Tain advanced, engaging with his longsword while forcing Torfin to give ground to the short. Torfin reached the ladder to the ramparts. He scrambled up.

  Tain pursued him mercilessly, despite the disadvantage. The youth was a natural swordsman. Even against two blades he kept his guard almost impenetrable.

  Tain pushed. Torfin was relying on youth's stamina, hoping he would tire.

  Tain wouldn't. He could still spend a day in his hot armor, matching blows with the enemy. He hadn't survived his legio
n years by yielding to fatigue.

  Tain stepped onto the battlements. Torfin had lost his last advantage. Tain paused to glance at the Witch.

  The blue ball had eaten half her arm. But she was getting the best of it. Only a few sparks still gnawed at her mutilated flesh.

  She looked extremely young and vulnerable.

  Torfin looked, too.

  Tain feinted with the longsword, struck with the short.

  It was his best move.

  Torfin's blade tumbled away into the courtyard. Blood stained both of his hands now.

  He backed away quickly, seized a dagger his love carried at her waist.

  Tain sighed, broke battle discipline. "Boy, you're just too stubborn." He sheathed his swords, discarded their harness. He removed his helmet, placed it between his blades.

  He went to Torfin.

  The youth scoured Tain's armor twice before the soldier took the dagger and arced it out into the grass of the Zemstvi.

  Torfin still would not yield.

  Tain kicked his feet from beneath him, laid the edge of one hand across the side of his neck.

  Tain backed away, glanced down. Torfin's dagger had found a chink. Red oozed down the shiny ebony of his breastplate. A brutalized rib began aching.

  He recovered his shortsword, went toward the Witch.

  In seconds she would complete her conquest of his magick. In seconds she would be able to destroy him.

  Yet he hesitated.

  He considered her youth, her vulnerability, her beauty, and understood how she had captivated Torfin and the Baron.

  She bleated plaintively, "Mother!"

  Tain whirled.

  Rula stepped onto the ramparts. "Tain. Don't. Please?"

  Seconds fled.

  Tain sheathed his blade.

  Shirl sighed and gave up consciousness.

  "Tain, I brought your things. And your mule." Rula pushed past him to her daughter.

  "The wound is cauterized. I'll take care of the bone."

  "You're wounded. Take care of yourself."

  "It can wait."

  He finished Shirl's arm ten minutes later. Then he removed his breastplate and let Rula tend to his injury. It was minor. The scar would become lost among its predecessors.