needed to protect! It was cold, it was evil—and it was not sane.
Dallen sensed it in the same moment, but Dallen’s reaction was not fear, but fury. He felt Dallen gathering all his mental power, like a thunderbolt, and aim it ready to strike this vicious thing down where it stood—
Too late. Whatever it was ... was gone.
_______________________
Mags poked listlessly at the remains of his stew, and listened to three of the most senior Heralds in the Circle debate what he had felt over his head. They had cleared everyone else out of this tiny room as soon as he had recovered enough to get what he had sensed out in coherent sentences, and Herald Caelen had sent for Nikolas and a third man, who evidently had been in the Palace, doing some searching of his own. From all Mags gathered, he was as strong a Mindspeaker as Mags, and a great deal more practiced and disciplined.
Now here Mags was, sitting on a cushion on the hearth, head aching, body feeling as if he had been beaten black and blue, utterly exhausted. In that sense of unreality that comes with exhaustion, he was feeling less and less with every passing moment that he had ever sensed anything at all that wasn’t some dream-fragment out of his own mind. After all, if it couldn’t be verified ...
“Stop that,” came a calm voice to his right. He turned and stared at the Herald, the Mindspeaker.
“Sir?” he managed, meeting those calm gray eyes. He wished
“Stop second-guessing yourself. You sensed
“Ye thin’ that’s what I got?” Mags asked hopefully. He really did not want to think that there was something with a mind like
“It certainly corresponds to what I felt near a colddrake, long ago,” the older man said cautiously. “And according to the theory, since they are very powerful mentally, it is certainly possible for a colddrake’s thoughts to have been carried on a storm like this one. Especially if the drake was anywhere about where it started.”
Mags nodded and finished his stew, conscious that there must be no wasted food for as long as they were all snowed in.
“I’m not convinced—” Nikolas said warily. “That’s just entirely not reasonable to me. How could the thoughts of a beast from beyond our borders get here? And
It was Caelen who snapped his fingers then. “Of course!” he exclaimed.
Nikolas raised an eyebrow. “Of course what?”
“That’s the answer. Those bodyguards—why in the name of all that is holy would they have been so convinced,
“Unless they have had visitations before,” Nikolas said slowly. “That ... Caelen, that makes altogether too much sense.”
Mags stirred uneasily. Something about this theory didn’t feel right.
“And if one is being troubled by a vengeful spirit, perhaps in dreams, how does one deal with the nightmares?” Caelen persisted.
The third Herald answered, a little grimly. “Steady drinking, usually. And if the visitations were ugly enough, the nightmares bad enough, it might just drive a man to ignore warnings of an impending blizzard to try and get to a source of really strong drink.”
He turned to Mags. “Trainee, did you get any sense at all of whether this—thing’s—target was Valdemaran?”
Mags had to shake his head, even though he had some grave misgivings that the solution was this simple. After all, this was not the first time he had had a brush with this thing. And when he had, it had been pursuing something
But the answer certainly seemed to satisfy the others. “I think it might be wise to make sure these men have access to either distilled spirits or that herb Healer’s sensitivity-deadening potions for as long as they are snowed into the palace,” Nikolas was saying. “Things are going to be tense enough as it is before we dig ourselves and the city out. The last thing we need is for one of those men to go mad.”
“Agreed,” said the third Herald. “And just to be on the safe side, I will keep watch for the revenant myself. If I sense it, I will see if I can find a priest about to cast it out.”
“Well, historically, they never stay cast out for long,” Nikolas observed, as Mags shuddered at the thought of having
“True, but by then, they should be gone.” Caelen looked down at Mags. “And so should you, young Trainee. You look as if you would not make it as far as the second floor before you passed out.”
“’M all right,” Mags said, struggling to his feet. “Just a bit—”
He blinked as he found himself sitting again. “Huhn—”