deep breaths and his face relaxed.

'It does not hurt,' Vanye said.

Chei daubed away at himself, one wound and the other, the blanket mostly fallen about him, his drying hair uncombed and trailing water from its ends. Vanye took a bit on his own fingers and covered the patches that Chei could in no wise reach, those on his shoulders, then let Chei do the rest.

'Why?' Chei asked finally, in a phlegmy voice, after a cough. 'Why did you save me?'

'Charity,' Vanye said dourly.

'Am I free? I do not seem to be.'

Vanye lifted a shoulder. 'No. But what we have we will share with you. We are in a position—' He drew a breath, thinking what he should say, what loyalties he might cross, what ambush he might find, all on a word or two. '—we do not want to make any disturbance hereabouts. But then, perhaps you have no wish to be found hereabouts—'

The man said nothing for a moment. Then he reached inside the blankets to apply more of the salve. 'I do not.'

'Then we do have something to talk about, do we not?'

A pale blue stare flicked toward him, mad as a hawk's eye. 'Have you some feud with Gault?'

'Who is Gault?'

Perhaps it was the right bent to take. Perhaps the man in his turn thought him mad—or a liar. Carefully Chei took a fresh film of salve on his fingers and applied it, and winced, a weary flinching, premature lines of sunburn and pain around the eyes. 'Who is Gault?' he echoed flatly. 'Who is Gault. Ask, what is Gault?—How should you not know that?'

Vanye gave another shrug. 'How should we? I know great lords aplenty. Not that one.'

'This is his land.'

'Is it? And are you his man?'

'No,' Chei said shortly. 'Nor would I be.' He lowered his voice, spoke with a quickening of breath. 'Nor, unlike you, would I serve the qhal.'

It was challenge, if subdued and muttered. Vanye let it fly, it being so far off the mark. 'She is my liege,' he said in all mildness, 'and she is halfling, by her own word. And in my own land folk called her a witch, which she is not. I should take offense, but I would have said the same, once.'

Chei occupied himself in his injuries.

'It was this Gault left you to die,' Vanye said. 'You said that much. Why? What had you done to him?'

It was that hawk's stare an instant. There was outrage in it. 'To Gault ep Mesyrun? He lives very well in Morund. He drains the country dry. He respects neither God nor devil, and he keeps a large guard of your kind as well as qhal.'

'Tell me. Do you think he would thank us for freeing you?'

That told. There was a long silence, a slow and evident consideration of that idea.

'So you may reason we are not his friends,' Vanye said, 'and my lady has done you a kindness, which has so far gained us nothing but an alarm in the night and myself a few bruises. Had you rather fight us to no gain at all? Or will you ride with us a space—tillwe are off this lord gault's land?'

Chei rested his head in his hands and remained so, sinking lower with his elbow against his knee.

'Or do you mislike that idea?' Vanye asked him.

'He will kill us,' Chei said, and lifted his face to look at him sidelong, head still propped against his hand. 'How did you find me?'

'By chance. We heard the wolves. We saw the birds.'

'And by chance,' Chei said harshly, 'you were riding Gault's land.'

The man wanted a key—best, it seemed, give him a very small one. 'Not chance,' Vanye said. 'The road. And if our way runs through his land, so be it.'

There was no answer.

'What did you do,' Vanye asked again, 'that deserved what this Gault did? Was it murder?'

'The murder was on their side. They murdered—'

'So?' Vanye asked when the man went suddenly silent.

Chei shook his head angrily. Then his look went to one of entreaty, brow furrowed beneath the drying and tangled hair as he looked up. 'You have come here from the gate,' Chei said, 'if that is the way you have come. I am not a fool. Do not tell me that your lady is ignorant what land this is.'

'Beyond the gate—' Vanye considered a second time. It was a man's life in the balance. And it was too easy to kill a man with a word. Or raise war and kill a thousand men or ten thousand. There was a second silence, this one his. Then: 'I think you have come to questions my lady could answer for you.'

'What do you want from me?' Chei asked.

'Simple things. Easy things. Some of which might suit you well.'

Chei's look grew wary indeed. 'Ask my lady.' Vanye said.

It was a quieter, saner-seeming man Vanye led, wrapped in one of their two blankets, to the fireside where Morgaine waited, Chei with his hair and beard clean and having some order about it once he had wet and combed it again. He was barefoot, limping, wincing a little on the twigs that littered the dusty ground. He had left all his gear down on the riverside—Heaven knew how they would salvage it or what scouring could clean the leather: none could save the cloth.

Chei set himself down and Vanye sat down at the fireside nearer him than Morgaine—in mistrust.

But Morgaine poured them ordinary tea from a pan, using one of their smaller few bowls for a third cup, and passed it round the bed of coals that the fire had become, to Vanye and so to Chei. The wind made a soft whisper in the leaves that moved and dappled the ground with a shifting light, the fire had become a comfortable warmth which did not smoke, but relieved what chill there was in the shade, and the horses, the dapple gray and the white, grazed a little distance away, in their little patch of grass and sunlight. There was no haste, no urgency in Morgaine.

Not to the eye, Vanye thought. She had been quiet and easy even when he had come alone up the hill bringing the cups, and told her everything he could recall, and everything he had admitted to Chei—'He knows the gates,' Vanye had said, quickly, atop it all. 'He believes that is how we got here, but he insists we lie if we do not know this lord Gault and that we must know where we are.'

Morgaine sipped her tea now, and did not hasten matters. 'Vanye tells me you do not know where we come from,' she said after a moment. 'But you think we should know this place, and that we have somewhat to do with this lord of Morund. We do not. The road out there brought us. That is all. It branches beyond every gate. Do you not know that?'

Chei stared at her, not in defiance now, but in something like dismay.

'Like any road,' said Morgaine in that same hush of moving leaves and wind, 'it leads everywhere. That is the general way of roads. Name the farthest place in the world. That road beyond this woods leads to it, one way or the other. And this Gate leads through other gates. Which lead—to many places. Vanye says you know this. Then you should know that too. And knowing that—' Morgaine took up a peeled twig to stir her tea, and carefully lifted something out of it, to flick it away. 'You should know that what a lord decrees is valid only so far as his hand reaches. No further. And I have never heard of your lord Gault, nor care that I have not heard. He seems to me to be no one worth my trouble.'

'Then why am I?' Chei asked harshly, with no little desperation.

'You are not,' Morgaine said. 'You are a considerable inconvenience.'

It was not what Chei had, perhaps, expected. And Morgaine took a slow sip of tea, set the cup down and poured more for herself, the while Chei said nothing at all.

'We cannot let you free,' Morgaine said. 'We do not care for this Gault; and having you fall straightway into his hands would be no kindness to you and no good thing for us either. Quiet is our preference. So you will go with us, and somewhere we shall have to find you a horse—by one thing and the other I suppose you are familiar with horses. Am I wrong?'

Chei stared at her, somewhere between incredulity and panic. 'No,' Chei said faintly. 'No, lady. I know horses.'

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