'Excuse me, Prince Bahzell, but are you saying that you and Gayrfressa are still linked somehow?'
'I'd not be calling it 'linked,' ' Bahzell replied. 'Yet it might be as how it's after being something in that direction.' He tapped his forehead with an index finger. 'It's not so much as if I'm after 'hearing' her, or as if we're after living inside one another's minds still. And yet, there's not the least tiniest question in my mind as how I know what it is she's after thinking. Or, come to that, where she's after
Kelthys' eyes widened suddenly, and he laid the bridle aside for the first time since Bahzell had entered the stable. The hradani's eyes narrowed as he saw the human's expression, but he said nothing, only waited.
'Milord Champion,' Kelthys said after several seconds, obviously choosing his words even more carefully than before, 'is Gayrfressa the only courser whose location you know?'
'Ah?' Bahzell gave him a look which combined surprise and disbelief at being asked such a ridiculous question. But then he frowned and closed his eyes, cocking his head as if he were listening to a distant sound. He stayed that way for several seconds, and then his expression went blank and his eyes popped back open.
'She isn't, is she?' Kelthys murmured, watching him very intently.
'No,' Bahzell said. He waved a hand in the general direction of the paddock to the south of the stable, completely invisible from where the two of them sat. 'It's the entire herd I can be feeling,' he said. 'All of them- from Gayrfressa to the youngest foal.'
'
'That's after being ridiculous!'
'Oh, I agree-I
'Only Gayrfressa and her family,' Bahzell replied. But then he shook his head. 'No, that's not after being exactly right. There
'Only him?' Kelthys frowned in surprise. 'None of the others?'
'Naught but him,' Bahzell confirmed, and then he smiled slowly. 'And now I think on it, I'm thinking as how I might be knowing why. I'd not realized it until this very moment, but now it's plain as the nose on Brandark's face! He's after being her brother, Sir Kelthys.'
'Her
'Aye, he'd a mate among the Bear River mares, but he was after losing her to an accident these three years back.'
'And how do you know all that, Milord?' Kelthys asked in fascination.
'As to that, I don't really know. But I'm thinking as how he might be after telling us himself in not so very long .'
'He might wh-?' Kelthys began, then cut himself off as the light from the stable entrance was abruptly obstructed. He looked up, and his face lost all expression as he recognized the huge stallion pacing slowly into the stable. It was the Bear River roan.
'Aye, so he might ' Bahzell continued quietly, his own eyes locked to the oncoming courser, 'for unless I'm after missing my guess, he's after having just discovered as how
The roan might very well have been the largest courser Kelthys had seen in his entire life. The stallion had to stand over twenty-four hands-more than eight feet tall at the shoulder-and he carried his majestic head almost eleven feet above the stable floor. He towered over Bahzell, well over two tons of majesty and power, managing to do what no other creature ever had and reduce the hradani to merely mortal stature. It seemed as if the very earth should tremble when he trod upon it, and his presence seemed to fill not simply the stable, but the world.
He stood there, magnificent in the remnant of his winter coat, and his huge eyes-amber-gold, not brown-were fixed upon Bahzell.
Bahzell stood, slowly, as if he were being drawn to his feet by another hand, not rising of his own volition. He stood less than five feet from the courser, and then, even more slowly than he'd stood, he stepped forward.
The courser stood motionless for a second, possibly two. And then he lowered his head, and his impossibly soft nose touched the hradani's broad chest. The nostrils flared, the amber-gold eyes slipped shut, and the stallion blew heavily. Bahzell's hands rose, as if they belonged to someone else. They stroked up the stallion's muzzle, gently, gently. They found the ears-the ears that pricked sharply forward, as if listening for the sound of the hradani's heart-and caressed them with a delicacy that seemed impossible for such powerful, sword-callused fingers.
Kelthys stared, unable to believe even now, despite everything that had happened, that he was seeing what he saw. A thousand years of history said this moment
'His name,' Bahzell half-whispered, 'is Walsharno.'
A thousand years, it seemed,
Sir Kelthys Lancebearer leaned against a paddock fence, Walasfro standing beside him like a warm, black wall, and watched the Wind Plain's newest wind rider trying not to fall off of his courser.
?This
'Tell me something I didn't already know, Twinkle Hoofs,' Kelthys replied mildly, then winced as Bahzell almost lost his seat. The hradani looked ridiculous perched on top of what was probably the only 'horse' in the world that could make
?He'll break his neck the first time Walsharno breaks into a trot,? Walasfro predicted glumly.
'Nonsense!' Kelthys said bracingly. 'Hradani are tougher than that. Besides, he'll probably fall off
?
'Actually, you know, it
'I'm not saying it isn't going to . . . upset a few people,' he conceded. 'On the other hand, only the most dyed- in-the-wool bigot is going to be able to argue Bahzell didn't do one hell of a lot more to
?As you gave me yours, Brother,? Walasfro replied gently.
'Well, of course.' Kelthys smiled and reached up to stroke Walasfro's shoulder.
'Still,' he continued after a moment, fighting not to grin as Walsharno circled patiently around the paddock, 'it
?Practice?! And, pray tell me, Two Foots, just where was a hradani his size going to find a horse capable of carrying him?? Walasfro snorted again. ?Not to mention the fact that his people don't exactly have the best possible relationship with us or the lesser cousins-historically speaking, of course,? the stallion corrected himself with exquisite irony.
'You can be so cynical sometimes,' Kelthys scolded with a chuckle. Walasfro poked his nose at him, and