The Captain lowered his head. This was news he didn't want to hear. 'Easily? Are you saying we could be facing something worse?'

'I'm not. Because I will find the sorcerer responsible. And I will kill him.'

Newt quacked for more wine, which the Captain poured. 'How?'

'His own magic shall lead me to him. I leave tomorrow.'

'And I'll go with you,' said Wyst.

I looked deep into his eyes and he into mine. 'As you wish.'

I'd already known he would be coming along. As a White Knight, it was his obligation. I welcomed the company. Not only because he was an able champion, a worthy ally on a dangerous journey. But because after thinking him dead, I'd realized just how much he'd come to mean to me. My limited experience told me I was no longer smitten. This was something more. And I sensed it, or perhaps merely hoped it, within Wyst of the West as well. I couldn't deny it any longer.

I tapped my broom twice on the floor. 'Come, Newt. We must prepare for our journey.'

Newt slurped down the last of his wine and followed me out the door. I cast one last glance over my shoulder at Wyst.

He smiled, but it was a slight smile. I tried not to make it more than it was. What could a handsome, chaste White Knight want with a hideous, undead witch?

Not two steps out the door, Newt had to contribute his opinion. 'Why are we taking him along? He'll just distract you.'

He expected me to argue, but he was quite correct. Even now, my mind was a splintered fragment of properly witchly thoughts and fleshly desires. Such diversions could only hinder me on my destiny, perhaps even lead me to my horrible death.

And honestly, I didn't care a whit.

GWURM ADDED A FEW more imaginary, dead goblings to the small pile outside my tent. 'Is that enough?'

I nodded, standing before the mound.

'They're already starting to turn,' Gwurm observed. 'I don't think they'll last more than a few hours.'

'I don't need the corpses. Only the raw magic within them.'

I grabbed a gobling from the pile and held it over a bowl. I stared into its crossed eyes and mumbled. The green corpse dissolved, melting between my fingers. Most of it evaporated into the true nothing that it was, but a few silver drops fell into the bowl. Newt and Gwurm leaned closer to watch the shimmering fluid slide like a living thing up one side of the bowl and down the other. I quickly snatched another gobling and repeated the procedure. My companions watched for a while, but the distillation of phantoms quickly grew boring.

'What happened to your nose?' Newt asked.

The troll felt the hooked, red protrusion on his face. 'You don't like it?'

'The old one looked better. This one's the wrong color. And it's far too big for your face.'

Gwurm sighed. 'I know. Unfortunately, my old one was eaten by a gobling.' He sniffed and snorted and flared his nostrils. 'I was hoping it might look distinguished.'

'No. Just big. But the purple eye looks good. Old one get eaten too?'

'Sucked right out of the socket by one of the little bas­tards.'

'Where'd you get the parts?'

Gwurm patted the pouch on his belt. 'It pays to be pre­pared.'

'What else have you got in there?'

Gwurm opened the pouch and glanced inside. 'A tongue, some teeth, a terrific big toe I save for special occasions.' He tied it closed. 'And of course, my unmentionables.'

'What unmentionables?'

'Well, if I could mention them, they wouldn't be unmentionables, would they?'

'Oh. So that's where you keep them.'

'Certainly,' Gwurm replied. 'Where else would you expect? Wouldn't be polite to walk about with them dangling for all the world to see, would it? Not to mention I prefer them wrapped up nice and warm. Promotes reliability when I need them.'

'I guess.' Newt grinned. 'But it seems an awful small pouch to be carrying all that.'

Gwurm twisted his new red nose with a displeased frown. 'I'll have you know it's not the size of your unmentionables, it's how you use them.' He popped off the nose, snarled at it, and snapped it back on, upside down.

'That looks better, but you might drown if it rains.'

The troll spun it into its proper position and shrugged.

'You know what you should have done. You should have put on the bad nose before the battle. That way, you'd still have your old one.'

'That's a very good idea. I'll have to remember that next time.' He crossed his one yellow eye and one purple eye to glare at the nose. 'Are you certain it doesn't look even a little bit distinguished.'

'No. Just big and red.'

Gwurm growled.

Newt chuckled.

It took but an hour to distill the goblings into their raw magic. The tall mound was reduced to a small bowl of fluid silver. It throbbed, ebbing and expanding as if breathing. Newt and Gwurm watched as I coughed up a wad of phlegm and spat it into the pure sorcery. The yellow and red lump lay atop the liquid. I waved a hand, grunted, and the spittle sank slowly into the silver with a bubbling hiss. The ooze darkened and gurgled.

'What are you doing?' Newt asked.

It was a pointless question. I couldn't explain it to him. In many ways, I didn't know myself. Witch magic is not an exact craft, and Ghastly Edna's tutelage had never been rote study. Rather, it was more of an art, an intuition. My mistress couldn't have taught me magic for every situation. Life was far too unpredictable. But I knew this would work. I knew without knowing.

I poured the bowl's contents onto the dirt. The dull gray liquid swirled, broke apart into a dozen tiny puddles, and rejoined. I bent down and broke the surface with two fingers. It rippled, and in its depth, images formed. The art of divining is nothing more than clearing your mind and trusting the magic to show you what it wished. So I watched, and I learned.

Newt stared into the depths by my side. He didn't see anything beyond the slipping gray and black patterns. Certainly they looked pretty to his eyes, but he couldn't glimpse the shapes within shapes. There were fields of grass, a forgotten road, a bridge, bothersome half faeries, a river, and a place of memories forgotten. A land that didn't exist waited at the end. It wasn't an exact map but a journey of images that would make sense in its own time.

The silver pool burned away in a slow yellow flame. The scent of seared moss and wet wolf hair was left behind. A patch of grass spontaneously sprouted, uprooted itself, and scampered away as a random aftereffect of the universe reabsorbing the raw magic.

'Did it work?' Newt asked.

'Yes.'

'You saw the way to our vengeance?'

It was technically my vengeance, not his. But demons have a great passion for revenge, and I was willing to share. I was less concerned with avenging my mistress. Preventing Fort Stalwart any more woe was more my true goal. Motive was irrelevant, and if by doing one I accomplished the other, then this would be a stroke of good fortune.

'When do we leave?' Newt asked with a grin.

'Soon.'

'How far is it?'

'As far as it is.'

'Will there be perils?'

'Most certainly.'

Вы читаете A Nameless Witch
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