'The Princess Mirren, daughter of King Corfe himself. Well, this is a happy chance.' The man smiled, and they saw that despite the ruin which constituted one side of his face, his eyes were kindly.
'How do you know who I am?' Mirren demanded.
And now the man sitting on the ground raised his head and spoke for the first time. 'Your familiar told us.'
Baraz drew his sabre and nudged the grey forward until he was between Mirren and the strange pair. 'State your names and your business in Torunna,' he rasped, dark eyes flashing.
The man on the ground rose to his feet. He also seemed tired. The two might have been nothing more than a pair of road-weary vagabonds, but for that last statement, and the aura of unquiet power which hung about them.
'They're wizards’ Mirren said.
The disfigured older man doffed his wide-brimmed hat. 'Indeed we are, my dear. Young man, our business is our own, but as for our names, well I am Golophin of Hebrion, and my companion—'
'Will remain nameless, for now,' the other interrupted. Baraz could see a square jaw and broken nose under the cowl, but little else.
'Golophin!' Mirren cried. 'My father speaks often of you. The greatest mage in the world, it is said.'
Golophin chuckled, replacing his hat. 'Perhaps not the greatest. My companion here might bridle at such an assumption.'
'What are you doing here in Torunna? I thought you were still in Abrusio.'
‘I have come to see King Corfe, your father. I have some news for him.'
'What of your taciturn comrade?' Baraz asked, pointing at him with his sword.
As he gestured with the blade the weapon seemed to flick out of his grip. It spun coruscating in the air for a second and then flicked away into the heather, stabbing into the ground so that the hilt stood quivering. Baraz shook his hand as though it had been burned, mouth gaping.
‘I do not like blades pointed in my face,' Golophin's companion said mildly.
'You had best leave us be,' Golophin told Baraz. 'My friend and I were in the middle of a little altercation when you arrived, hence his testiness.'
'Golophin, there is so much I must ask you,' Mirren said.
'Indeed? Well child, you may ask me anything you like, but not right now. I am somewhat preoccupied. It might be best if you said nothing of this meeting. The fewer folk who know I am here the better.' Then he looked at his companion, and laughed. The other's mouth crooked under the cowl in answer.
'You may tell your father, though. I will see him tonight, or possibly tomorrow morning.'
'What is this news you have come to deliver? I will take it to him.'
Golophin's ravaged face hardened into a mask. 'No, one so young should not have to bear such tidings.' He turned to Baraz. 'See the lady safe home, soldier.'
Baraz glared at him. 'You may be sure I will.'
Spring might be in the air, but up here in the hills there was still an algid bite to the air when the wind got up, and as the day drew on Golophin and his companion kindled a fire with a blast of rubescent theurgy and sat on pads of gathered heather warming themselves at the transparent flames. As the afternoon waned and the sun began to slide behind the white peaks of the Cimbrics in the west, Golophin was aware that a third person had joined them, a small, silent figure which sat cross-legged just outside the firelight.
'That is an abomination,' the old mage told his companion.
'Perhaps. I am no longer sure I care greatly. One can become accustomed to all sorts of things, Golophin.' The speaker had thrown back his cowl at last and now was revealed as a middle-aged man with close-cropped grey hair and a prizefighter's face. He reached into the breast of his habit and brought forth a steel flask. Unscrewing the top, he took a sip and then tossed it across the fire. Golophin caught it deftly and drank in his turn. 'Hebrionese akvavit. I applaud your taste, Bard.'
'Call it a perk of the job.'
'Call it what it is: spoils of war.'
'Hebrion was my home also, Golophin.'
'I have not forgotten that, you may be sure.'
A tension fizzled across the flames between them, and then slackened as Bardolin chuckled. 'Why Golophin, your hauteur is almost impressive.'
'I'm working on it.'
'It is pleasant, this, sitting here as though the world were not on fire around us, listening to the hunting bats and the sough of the wind in the heather. I like this country. There is an austerity to it. I do not wonder that it breeds such soldiers.'
'You met these soldiers in the field I hear, a decade ago. So are you become a general now?'
Bardolin bowed. 'Not much of a one, it must be said. Give me a tercio and I know what to do. Give me an army and I will admit to being somewhat ill at ease.'
'That doesn't bode well for your master's efforts in this part of the world, Presbyter.'
'We have generals, Golophin, ones who may surprise you. And we have numbers. And the Dweomer.'
'The Dweomer as a weapon of war. In the days before the Empire - the First Empire - it is said that certain kings fielded regiments of mages. But it has never been recorded that they tolerated the presence of shifters in their armies. Not even the ancients were barbarian enough for that.'
'You speak whereof you know nothing.'
'I know enough. I know that the thing seated across the fire from me is not Bardolin of Carreirida, and the succubus which hides silent in the shadows behind you was not conjured up for his comfort.'
'And yet she is a comfort, nonetheless.'
'Then why are you here? To sit and wax nostalgic about the old days?'
'Is that so inexplicable, so hard to believe?' Golophin dropped his eyes. 'I don't know. Ten, twelve years ago I thought there was a part of my apprentice which could still be saved. I am no longer so sure. I am consorting with the enemy now.'
'It does not have to be that way. I am still the Bardolin you knew. Because of me, Hawkwood is alive.'
'That was your master's whim.'
'Partly. The survival of the other had nothing to do with me though, you may be sure.' 'What other?'
'The Presbyter of Hebrion's right hand.'
‘I can tell you no more. I, also, am consorting with the enemy do not forget.'
The two wizards stared at each other without animosity, only a gentle kind of sadness.
'It is not as though Hebrion has been destroyed, Golophin,' Bardolin said softly. 'It has merely suffered a change in ownership.'
'That sounds like the self-justification of the thief.'
'You are so damned wilful - and wilfully blind.' Here Bardolin leaned forward so that the firelight carved a crannied mask out of his bluff features.
'The fleet did not make landfall in Hebrion out of a mere whim, Golophin. Your - our - homeland is vital to Aruan's plans. It so happens that Hebrion, and the Hebros Mountains, were once part of the Western Continent.'
'How can you—'
'Let me finish. At some time in the unimaginable past Normannia and the west were one great land mass, but they split apart aons ago, drifting like great lilypads and letting the ocean flood in between them. Aruan and his chief mages have been conducting research into the matter for many years.'
'So?'
'So, there is something, some element or mineral in the very bowels of the Western Continent which is in effect the essence of the energy we know as
'And you what you have become, I take it.'
'This energy runs through the Hebros also, for the Hebros and the mountains of the Western Continent were once part of the same chain. That is why Hebrion has always been home to more of the Dweomer-folk than any other of the Five Kingdoms. That is why Hebrion had to fall. Golophin, you have no conception of the great