'It just so happens, my lord Cheynar,' she said sharply, 'I was seeing that the resupply of horses
Mere reached again. :
'Really? Was it the horses that interested you...or the horse-keepers?' Cheynar smiled nastily. 'It couldn't have been the horses...we don't have any stallions here...'
The sound of a palm striking a cheek with a
Shana lay flat on her back in her bed in the Citadel, all alone, her eyes closed, to all outward scrutiny completely asleep.
In actuality, she was very, very busy.
Between her native ability and the amount of practice she had in using the amplifying powers of her stones and crystals, her 'touch' in the use of the spells that moved things about was unrivaled, even by older wizards. Add that to her ability to levitate objects, and she was, essentially, an invisible, undetectable saboteur. So she had taken it as her task to make life interesting for the elves hunting them.
At first, she had confined herself to simple sabotage. Now she was after bigger game.
From Mero's mind, she found Dyran's tent. With that location verified, she could 'look' inside it, and even peer within caskets, 'read' unopened documents, and sift through piles of papers without moving any of them.
Thus, letters vanished from a locked box in Dyran's tent, and reappeared under a pile of dispatches on Triana's portable desk. Cheynar's secret dispatches to the Council appeared in Dyran's correspondence. A series of small, valuable objects belonging to various subordinates ended up among Lord Berenel's personal effects.
A large cache of gold coins, moved from the storage vaults under the Council chamber, appeared in Berenel's luggage.
She still had some strength left after all this, so she concluded her exercise by disarranging the papers in all the elven lords' tents, making it look as if someone had been rummaging through them.
Then, greatly daring, she eased a touch into Cheynar's mind.
Shana found the dim lighting of the Citadel meeting-room restful to her tired eyes. The other four looked just as weary; even Keman had been hard at work, keeping watch as best he could on the elven lords' thoughts.
The council of war in the wizards' meeting-room included the four youngsters for the first time, at Denelor's urging. Up until this moment, their efforts had been discounted...but the effect they were having at slowing the elves' advance and disrupting their movements had finally convinced the older wizards that they knew what they were doing.
'... and I
Denelor straightened his tunic and nodded. 'There's no doubt that what you're doing is keeping them distracted. More than that, really. The seeds of mistrust you planted are flowering so that they are
Valyn, who had been silent until now, finally spoke up. 'It's Dyran,' he said softly.
All heads turned in his direction.
'Would you care to elaborate on that, lad?' said Denelor.
'It's Dyran,' Valyn repeated. 'Haven't you noticed that while all the others are at each other's throats,
Denelor nodded thoughtfully, as if Valyn's words confirmed a guess of his own. 'Go on, lad. You obviously know something we don't.'
Valyn frowned. 'He's always been able to keep people under his thumb. He's a master at it...threats, bribes, persuasion, glamorie...it doesn't matter, he knows how to handle them all. He's the one who's kept the quarrels patched up, who's found a face-saving explanation for the inexplicable. I don't know
'Dyran is the real foe here?' asked Garen Harselm, his green eyes icy and calculating.
'That would make sense,' said Lukas Madden thoughtfully, hand stroking his beard. 'It makes excellent sense. But what does Dyran expect to get out of this?'
Valyn shrugged. 'I know a lot
But a full-grown elven lord?
The first thing the others would think of would be betrayal; the next, how Valyn could be used as a hostage.
So, Valyn had miraculously become a halfblood cousin, like Mero, named for Dyran's heir and placed in the heir's service until that worthy had gone off to Lord Cheynar for fosterage. Whereupon, fearing discovery, the two had escaped. None of the other wizards knew as much about the elven lords as Denelor, the subterfuge had passed unremarked.
'We have to conjure up some trick that not even Dyran can explain away,' said Parth Agon decisively. 'The longer we keep them quarreling, the more time we will have.' He smiled thinly. 'I must admit that I find it ironic to think that the very tactics that defeated our predecessors may be our salvation.'
'Only if we can continue to make them work for us,' Denelor warned. 'The combined troops of all of the allies could easily overrun the Citadel, despite its protections, if they ever learn exactly where it is. Arrogance and overconfidence lost the last war for us. And according to the old chronicles,
He looked directly to each of the wizards in turn, before concluding his speech. 'Let's learn from our history, shall we?' he said mildly.
There was a moment of silence...
Then Parth cleared his throat, and half a dozen voices spoke up at once, each with a different plan.
So, Lord Dyran was the one to reckon with, hmm? Garen Harselm left the war council with a decidedly different set of ideas than his fellow wizards. And as he made his way to his quarters, he weighed all the possible options in his mind.
And probably die. Denelor was right. The wizards should learn from history. And history said that opposing the elves was suicide.
Garen opened the door and lit the lamps in his suite with a negligent flick of his hand, and surveyed the accumulations of a lifetime, all crowded into three cluttered rooms. Not so much, really. Nothing that couldn't be replaced. Very little he couldn't live without.