Trayn had the eyes-and talents-to take that closer look, and nausea rose into the back of his throat again as he realized what he was actually seeing. No wonder no horse wanted to be any closer to Cherdahn than it had to be!
'My dear Cherdahn,' Tremala half-laughed, 'surely you don't think Wencit of Rum could possibly have failed to realize that
'Indeed?' Cherdahn's voice remained as deep, as polished. As hungry. Yet Trayn knew Tremala had scored a hit of her own.
'Oh, yes, indeed.' This time Tremala did laugh out loud. 'That's what makes him so persistently . . . irritating. Still, he's also persistently
'So, you see the Scorpion as bait?' Cherdahn inquired almost genially.
'Of course I do. But not
'I see.' Cherdahn gazed up at her for several moments, then shrugged. 'I don't suppose I could quibble with any of that. And, as you say, at the moment things seem to be proceeding quite nicely. Won't you dismount and join us for supper? We ought to just about have time to finish dining before the first of our guests arrive.'
X
The starry night had wrapped itself in a thickening shroud of cloud, and the hradani smelled rapidly approaching rain on a strengthening wind out of the east. The disappearance of the stars and the orange sliver of moon which had floated among them had turned the night pitchy black, but Walsharno was a courser and Bahzell was a hradani, and both of them could see with remarkable clarity.
Not that either of them was very happy about
'I've no doubt at all, at all, as how old Demon Breath would never dream of upsetting you if you'd only be telling him that,' Bahzell responded to Walsharno's disgusted observation.
'I'm not so very sure we're going to be doing any riding down it,' Bahzell said rather more seriously.
*
'And are you after telling me that agreeing to be one of himself's champions and all
'Aye, that there may be. Still and all, Walsharno, I'm thinking it's not so very likely as there'd be fighting room for you.'
The hradani turned to look at his companion. At just over seven feet, nine inches, no one-not even another Horse Stealer-would ever consider Bahzell a small man, but Walsharno stood twenty-four and a half hands. Bahzell's head didn't quite top the huge stallion's shoulder.
'That's as may be, but I'm better suited to be fighting in twisty little corners underground than
Few creatures in all of Norfressa could match a Sothoii courser stallion for lethality, but a 'horse' Walsharno's size needed fighting space. Needed to be able to rear and kick, needed the ability to dodge.
'Aye. But who's to say it stays that way? I'm thinking that if
'I'm not saying as how you should 'let' me be doing anything of the sort. It's not as if we were having any real choice, is it now?'
Walsharno snaked his head around and lowered it to look Bahzell in the eye. Silence lingered for several seconds until, manifestly against his will, the stallion tossed his head in grudging agreement.
'Because we're the good fellows, and they're the bad fellows,' Bahzell said lightly. 'Still and all,' he reached up, unhooked a case of oiled leather from his saddle, and extracted the deadly horsebow of a windrider, 'I'm thinking as how it's not so very likely we'll be creeping into
He strung the bow smoothly and easily. It had taken his fellow wind riders a long time to convince him to give up his steel-bowed arbalest, and he still wasn't as good an archer as most of them were. They, after all, had literally grown up in the saddle, bows in hand. Bahzell had been doing other things-like raiding the Sothoii himself-at a comparable point in his own life. Still, the horsebow's rate of fire was far higher than even a Horse Stealer crossbowman could manage, and if Bahzell was a bit less accurate, he could pull a bow far heavier than any mere human. In the final analysis, the sheer, incredible power of his weapon made up for quite a lot.
'And aren't you just the funniest thing on four feet?' Bahzell replied, attaching his