Green Rider
Then color shimmered like a newly created thing. A path opened up on the side of the road, painted with rusty red pine needles and vibrant green hemlock, pine, and spruce trees. Tiny white bunchberry flowers grew in patches along the path. The sun broke through the clouds, and though it appeared just a lighter shade of gray elsewhere in the woods, along the path it showered through the trees in brilliant beams of gold.
Karigan reined The Horse along the path and slumped on his neck. She could see right through his chestnut hide to the forest floor. He halted, and she slid off his back onto a moist patch of sphagnum moss. She was too exhausted to even remove the sodden greatcoat.
As she drifted into sleep, she wished to be whole again—not transparent like some living ghost.
GRAY ONE
The rising sun was hidden behind the height of the great wall. One could look up and up, and even higher, but never really see the top. It was magic, of course. Where the real granite stopped, a magical shield continued in a seamless illusion of a towering wall. The D’Yers had designed the wall to seemingly surpass the sky and reach for the very heavens. There were flying things the Sacoridians and the League had wanted to keep on the other side.
The Gray One’s original crack had spread its spidery fracture lines into the surrounding seams of mortar, weakening a section of wall about the size of a doorway. This went far beyond his expectations—that the cracks would grow more than a few inches. He was closer to breaking through than he could have hoped for.
Time. Time had made the spells brittle and the mortar vulnerable. Without the touch of a mage to maintain the wall, it had weakened. Even now silvery runes shimmered on the granite blocks around the fractures. The runes were ancient Sacoridian and Kmaernian characters. They were runes of alarm; they warned of the fissures, of the weakening of the wall. They revealed unraveling spell songs, and rhythms that had been corrupted.
No one would know about the wall until it was too late. It was already too late. The D’Yers hadn’t bothered with patrols for centuries, and even if they became aware of the cracks, they wouldn’t know what to do. They would have to seek a scholar to decipher the runes, and a very learned master he would have to be. The language of Kmaern was lost with its people, extinct from the tongues of the living for centuries.
Even if the D’Yers could translate the runes, they would have no understanding of how to rebuild the wall. Like many other things, they had lost the craft. There was no threat to the Gray One’s plans.
He splayed his fingers against the cold wall. It prickled, but without the intensity of before. He willed his thoughts down through his shoulders, down his arms, and through his fingertips. His consciousness spread across the wall like cracks, and he felt the resonance of his song still working in the rock and mortar.
The old voices had grown uncertain, and the beat weaker. With any luck, his song would spread along the entire length of the wall of its own volition and decay the spells that bound it together. In time, the wall would crumble to the earth and the power of Kanmorhan Vane would spread unhindered across the lands. Not only would the Gray One win access to those great powers, but the lands would surrender to him under the threat of darkness that lurked in the forest.
He sang the unweaving, steadily corrupting the old spells, chipping away at mortar with his thoughts, convincing the granite it had been subject to thousands of years of freezing and thawing, to wind, rain, and snow.
Finally, he weakened it enough.
The Gray One moved each limb experimentally where he lay on the dewy grass. His body proved a hindrance at times, but it managed to absorb the shock with no damage. His mind had experienced the worst strain while singing the counterspells, and when body and mind reunited after hours of unweaving, he had collapsed. His head throbbed worse than at any time during his earliest training.
It was midmorning; the soldiers would be anxious to find the messenger horse. Let them wait. They would find their quarry soon enough. First he must examine his work.
The fissures had spread along every seam across a width of about six feet. They had spread upward, too, to wherever the wall peaked. The Gray One placed his palms against the wall, and this time he pushed. The cracked section teetered and swayed, balanced on edge. The wall fell over with a shower of mortar and chipped rock; the ground rumbled like thunder as giant blocks pummeled the earth. Tremors shook beneath his feet.
When the dust had settled, rubble sat in a heap where a once impermeable section of wall had stood. Not only was the physical barrier down, so was the corresponding magical barrier that had shielded above it. The real wall was only ten feet high, whereas the magical shield extended far into the sky. His broken section would now serve as a portal.
Black tree limbs twisted and writhed in a shifting vapor beyond the breach. Much of the forest remained cloaked by fog. Unknown wild creatures screeched within. Soon. Soon some of them would find their way through the wall and into Sacoridia.
He wanted to explore the forest, but there was no time. He turned away from Kanmorhan Vane with some regret.
I will enter one day. But now is too soon. I must lay the groundwork.
A fluttering of wings on an old ash tree caught his eye. An owl launched from its perch and flew swiftly away to the east, soon disappearing in the distant sky.
It is sensible to leave, he thought. This will soon be no place for owls or other creatures to live.
He called his ghostly slaves to attend him. They swam in an indistinct mass before him. These had once been individuals with their own paths in life, their loves and hates, their skills and talents and dreams. Some had been good citizens, and some had been criminals. Indiscriminately, the Gray One had cut short all of their lives. All so they could serve him.
One stood off by itself, more rigid and defined than the others.
“Coblebay,” the Gray One said. “You couldn’t resist my call this time.”
The spirit wavered as if drawn by the Gray One’s words, then redefined himself. I still resist.
“Won’t you help me take the quick road?”
I’ve come to see what you’ve done.
“Magnificent, isn’t it?”
The spirit’s face remained impassive.
The Gray One knew what energy it cost the spirit to appear to him, and yet resist. He stretched out a hand. “You will serve, not defy me.” The magic of his command vibrated in his throat. The binding song flowed through his mind.
The spirit faded, began to drift toward him.
“Yes,” the Gray One said. “You serve me.” But even as he said it, he lost strength in his legs and staggered, barely maintaining his feet. The strain was too much. He asked too much of his body after having breached the D’Yer Wall. He would have just enough power and strength to travel. Reluctantly, he let F’ryan Coblebay go, and watched him vanish.
He wondered at the spirit’s stubborn nature. It was strong, and it had its own agenda that impelled it to resist him.
SEVEN CHIMNEYS
Someone prodded Karigan’s ribs.
“Stop it, Estral. I’ll go to class tomorrow.” She moaned and rolled over onto her back. The rich scent of loam filled her nostrils and the sun beat on her face. She blinked her eyes open. Clouds smeared the sky like fingerprints. This wasn’t her dorm room.
Thump, thump. This time on her shoulder.
Karigan blinked again. Soldiers pursued her. Soldiers who would stop at nothing to possess the message she carried.
She sat bolt upright, and the world spun. She gasped in terror, feeling around herself for a rock, for anything with which to defend herself, expecting at any moment to feel the sting of Captain Immerez’s cruel whip. But when the dizziness passed, two elderly ladies, not Captain Immerez at all, stood before her. She rubbed her eyes to make sure.
“The child is alive,” said one.
“I can see that very well for myself,” said the other.
Karigan shook her aching head to make sure she wasn’t drea
ming, but the two still stood there staring at her in fascination, lively eyes animating crinkled elfin faces.
The plump one wore a dress of burnt orange and had a white apron tied around her ample hips. A kindly smile rounded her cheeks into robust humps. Her companion, in contrast, wore a sterner expression on her narrow face. She was dressed in deep green velvet with puffy sleeves, a black shawl draped over her shoulders. She leaned on a cane of twisted hickory, which she had used to prod Karigan awake. They both looked as if they were out for a stroll in one of Selium’s manicured parks, not standing in the middle of the wilderness.
“Do you think we ought to take the child in?” the plump one asked.
“She does look harmless and frightfully out of sorts. It would be rude of us not to invite her to tea.”
“That would surpass mere rudeness, I fear. It would be uncivilized. But what of the others?”
“They must be invited, too.”
Karigan glanced over her shoulder to see who they meant, but only The Horse stood there.
“Letitia will have a thing or two to say about the mud.”
The thin one rolled her eyes. “She always has a thing or two to say.”
“The child does look like she’s in need of a good scrubbing. She is very muddy.”
“I agree. It would only be proper for her to be presentable, and Letitia wouldn’t have so much to complain about.” The woman then turned her sharp eyes on Karigan. “Come, child, and bring your friends. It’s nearly time for tea and you mustn’t keep us waiting.”
The two ladies turned their backs to her and walked down a surprisingly well-groomed trail. A well-groomed trail? The last she remembered was a tangle of underbrush. She watched The Horse follow the strange old ladies, his ears twitching back and forth as if he listened to their nonsensical chatter rising and burbling like birdsong. The woman in green halted and looked over her shoulder.
“Child, are you coming or not? It would be terribly impolite of you to be late. Look, your companions are joining us.”
Karigan looked, but still couldn’t see anyone but The Horse. She could only wonder who these eccentric ladies were and what they were doing in the middle of the woods.
They appeared harmless enough, and The Horse seemed to trust them. She snorted at herself: was she to rely on horse instinct this whole strange journey? It was her stomach, though, that decided her. It rumbled in an empty, cavernous way, and the thought of tea and cake was heartening. Legs wobbly and head pounding, she climbed to her feet and trotted to catch up with them.
The woods gradually grew more cultivated. The path broadened into a full-scale road wide enough for two amply outfitted coaches to pass one another. It was well maintained, too, compared to the North Road. Someone had cleared dead wood and the snaggle of underbrush from the bordering woods, lending the area an aura of order and balance unlike the chaos of the untouched wilderness. Neatly trimmed hedges lined the road.
They crossed a stone bridge which spanned a chatty stream. Warblers trilled in the woods about them. The pounding in Karigan’s head subsided; weariness lifted from her shoulders.
The road ended in a loop at a stately old manor house built of stone and timbers. Several chimneys puffed balsam smoke into the air, and windows rippled in the sunshine. Vines crept up the sides of the manor house, blending it harmoniously into the woods. Several outbuildings of like character, including a small stable, were spread out behind it. It was an oasis in the middle of the Green Cloak.
The two ladies mounted the steps to the front porch which wrapped around the house. “Welcome to Seven Chimneys,” said the woman in green, as if addressing an assembly rather than just Karigan.
Karigan counted the chimneys and came up with nine, not seven.
“It was built by our father long ago,” the woman continued. “Come.” She extended her hand. A fine tracery of veins like rivers on a map looped around her thin wrist and across the back of her hand. “Our servants will see to your friend, the horse.”
No servants appeared, but The Horse walked toward the stable as obediently as if led. The two old ladies certainly were peculiar, but they didn’t seem threatening, and so she followed them into the house.
The floors were a light stained oak, and the walls were papered with intricate, flowery designs. Rich hangings, anonymous portraits of men and women garbed in armor or fancy dress, and hand-braided carpets adorned each room they passed through, all miraculously unfaded by time or sunlight.
Heavy furnishings were intricately carved, not a surface left untouched. One such chair in the corridor had a back carved in the likeness of a tree, its armrests and legs all leaves and sinuous, winding branches and roots. A red velvet cushion covered the seat.
Cheerful fires glowed in each fieldstone hearth they passed, and Karigan’s damp chill began to be replaced by warmth.
“Letitia has set a bath for you, child,” the plump lady said. “She will be none too happy about the mud you’ve let in, but don’t let her annoy you. If she couldn’t complain, she wouldn’t enjoy life at all. Isn’t that right, Miss Bayberry?”
“Indeed. Mud season is the bane of her life, poor dear, and sends her into a snit every year. We endure, however. It is impossible to find good help out here.” Miss Bayberry paused in front of a door and took a deep breath. “Well, then, child, we shall lend you a nightgown and robe after your bath. Letitia will see to the cleaning of your clothes.”
They led her into a stone-flagged room where yet another hearth merrily crackled with fire. A solitary window looked out into the garden. Sunlight filtered through its upper pane, which was stained in the deep hues of wild blueberries and cast liquid splashes of blues and greens on the slate floor.
Plumes of steam rose from a brass hip bath in the center of the room. It wasn’t what Karigan was used to, with Selium’s porcelain tubs and piped water, but in her present state, the hip bath looked heavenly.
Miss Bayberry pointed her cane at the tub. “Take your time, child. Relax—you look thoroughly done in.”
The two left, pulling the door shut behind them. The voice of the plump one drifted back to Karigan from somewhere down the corridor: “I think our etiquette has improved over the years, dear sister.”
The other made a muffled agreement.
Karigan disrobed, untidily dropping her clothes on the floor. A bucket of cold water and a dipper stood next to the tub. She ladled enough cold water into the bath to make it bearable, but it was still shockingly hot as she submerged.
Sprigs of mint floated on the water, the scent soothing and relaxing her. Her body quickly adapted to the heat, and her taut muscles loosened. Before she became too languid, she set about cleaning several days’ accumulation of grit from herself. Her long hair wasn’t easily managed, but she struggled with it till it was clean and fully rinsed.
She sighed blissfully and eventually dozed off. When she awakened, the bath water was still comfortably warm, and sunshine still glimmered through the window as before. Yet, she couldn’t help but think hours had passed.
Her clothes had disappeared, but the promised nightgown and robe hung from pegs on the wall, a comb placed on a side table, and a pair of soft suede slippers were on the floor below.
They do think of everything.
When she was dry, robed, and her long hair was combed out, the pleasant smell of mint lingered on her skin and hair. As if on cue, Miss Bayberry tapped on the door.
“Child, are you prepared for tea?”
Karigan cracked the door open and smiled. “Yes, I’m ready.”
“Very good. Bunch awaits us in the parlor.”
Bunch?
Miss Bayberry, leaning on her cane, led Karigan to the most elaborate room of all. They sat on a plush sofa which faced yet another hearth. The sofa’s armrests were carved with floral patterns and hummingbirds. Sunlight beamed through a broad window casting the room in a warm amber tint.
The plump one, “Bunch,” Karigan supposed, carried in a silver t
ea service on a tray and set it on a table before them.
“We use the silver for special guests only,” she said. “Not that we receive guests very often, special or otherwise. Usually a wayward stranger lost in the woods. I trust you found the bath satisfactory.”
“Oh, yes—splendid!” It wasn’t a word Karigan typically used, but it seemed appropriate in this house of rich furnishings, and in the company of these two ladies.
Bunch poured tea. “Honey and cream? No, not you, my dear Bay. You know what cream does to your digestion.”
Miss Bayberry hrrrumfed her opinion.
Butter cookies, scones, and pound cake were served with tea, and while the ladies discussed the oddities of weather and gardening, Karigan’s mind brimmed and swirled like the cream in her tea, especially when Bunch poured a fourth cup which she placed before an unoccupied chair.
Miss Bayberry noticed Karigan eyeing the teacup. “I am sorry your other companion could not join us, but Letitia would not have him in the house. She was adamant.”
Karigan couldn’t take it any longer. “Companion? What companion? I’ve been traveling alone.”
“Oh, my dear. You must be terribly unobservant.”
“Or dense,” Bunch said, not unsympathetically.
“I was referring, of course, to your companion whom you call The Horse. I assure you that though he did not join us for tea, he is being well tended by the stableboy.”
“The Horse.” Karigan shifted in her seat wondering if the women were mad. “And the other?”
Bunch and Bayberry exchanged surprised glances.
“If you don’t know, dear,” Miss Bayberry said, “then it may not be our place to tell you.”
“Oh, come now, Bay. She will think us daft old fools. My dear child, a spirit accompanies you.”
A swallow of tea caught in Karigan’s throat and she choked violently.