which I can see the fighting.'
Rolf caught up with them, his horse stopping with theirs. He listened as Torio said, 'There are woods along the edges of the fields here-they don't show on the map. We can ride through there, and you can see what's happening fairly well.'
'Good-let's move.'
The other stragglers also caught up as they left off galloping along the road to cut across newly-plowed fields and into the trees. Here it didn't matter whether the horses were fast or slow; all were slowed to a walk by the underbrush. Rolf's horse balked, and Melissa caught up its reins. 'I'll guide you,' she said.
'Thank you,' he said, his words polite but edged with bitterness. 'They won't need my talent, anyway, until we get to the plain. Unless it's to keep it raining. You're Melissa, aren't you?'
'Yes.'
'Can you tell me if the rain has stopped? At least I can keep that going, to hamper the enemy until my lord can reach them.'
'It's only drizzling now,' Melissa told him. 'The clouds you brought together last night are nearly empty.'
'But the clouds themselves are moisture,' he replied. 'This close, I can make them give up every drop-if I knew where they were. I… I'm lost, Melissa. We've been twisting and turning so I don't know which direction the plain is.'
She pulled his horse up beside hers, and took his hand as she had Read Wulfston do. 'That direction,' she said, using his hand as a pointer. 'The plain begins about four miles from here, and extends a good five miles.'
'Thank you.' He concentrated. She Read the clouds draw together again from the wide configuration they had scattered into during the night. The rain turned to a steady downpour.
'I told you where the plain was,' she said. 'How did you know where the
'I don't know. I mean, I always
'Then why couldn't you have found your way just now by… feeling for that something that tells you where the clouds are?' She urged her horse forward, leading Rolf again.
'I… never thought of it,' he replied. 'But ordinarily it wouldn't help anyway-clouds move all the time. Just knowing where there are some clouds won't usually tell me where /am.'
'But it will this morning. Keep focusing on those clouds.'
'Focusing?'
It was a Reader's term. 'Keep your attention on them. We're still twisting and turning-but are you lost now?'
'No,' he said in wonder. 'Thank you, Melissa!'
What she had used was a simple technique for teaching young Readers to sense the shape of the world about them-using whatever they found easiest to Read to locate other things.
Was Rolf Reading? He didn't feel like a Reader-but then he had no experience in verbalizing thoughts or other techniques usually taught to Readers as children. She had never heard of a Reader's being discovered through his ability to sense objects-but children almost always had that sense already when they were discovered, or developed it within a few weeks. It just wasn't very dramatic; even children whose parents were Readers were usually discovered when they answered an unspoken thought, or responded to somebody else's pain.
//Rolf!// she tried, projecting at the strongest level. He did not respond.
//It's no use,// came Torio's mental assurance. //I've
Carefully avoiding the mention of Reading, Melissa asked, 'What can you sense besides clouds?'
'Water,' he replied. 'Clouds
'It certainly
'I don't understand. Any blind person can hear or smell where the ocean is-but all but Torio will fall over knee- high rocks trying to get there.'
'You do not sense the rocks because they contain no water?'
'Perhaps. I never thought about it.'
'Do you bump into people, Rolf?'
'They usually move out of my way.'
'But do you ever? If you come up behind someone?'
He pondered that. 'No… I don't think I have for a long time. I fall over everything else, though.'
'Dogs, cats, chickens?'
'Melissa, what are you really asking?'
'People and animals are mostly water-warm water. Have you tried sensing them that way?'
'Not deliberately,' he replied. 'I'll try it. Thank you, Melissa.' He fell silent. Again Melissa tried to Read him, and again found nothing to suggest he was Reading. But what could his «sensing» be if not Reading?
The sounds of battle could be heard through the trees now; it was full daylight of an overcast day, but it had not rained where the two armies clashed, and dust rose to obscure the scene as they reached the edge of the woods and tried to peer into the melee.
Melissa and Torio together Read the intertwined armies-but new troops were coming in from the north to aid Wulfston's people, while to the south the Aventine army was bogged down in mud, making very slow progress across the sodden plain.
Wulfston dismounted and stood at the edge of the woods as Torio described the battle. He held another map now-no, Melissa Read, not a map. A wax tablet scored into squares, which became the map of any area a Reader was Reading for him. Melissa Read in fascination as Torio pointed to sections of the tablet, and they became inscribed as he described them-woods, field, edge of the plain, advancing troops. 'But right through this area,' he said, running a finger down the center of the grid, 'both armies are fighting. If you throw thunderbolts in there, you're as likely to hit your own people as the enemy.'
'How many people?'
'Perhaps a hundred on each side-and both sides are inflicting heavy casualties.'
'We've got to stop it,' said Wulfston. 'I had hoped to be here before they engaged. Now how do we-? I have it! Jara! Mik! Come here. You have the power to put people to sleep.'
'Yes, my lord,' almost in chorus, as the two minor Adepts left their horses and joined the Lord of the Land.
'We're going to put to sleep all the soldiers fighting in this area-it doesn't matter which side they're on.' He handed the wax table to Torio, and the three Adepts joined hands and concentrated. Melissa Read the effect-raised spears fell from limp fingers; swords clattered to the ground; men crumpled and lay as they fell, deeply asleep and totally helpless. The dust slowly settled over them.
'Now let's drive the Aventines back into the mud!' cried Wulfston, mounting his horse and galloping southeast. The rest of his party quickly followed.
A fresh contingent of Aventine soldiers were marching toward the scene of battle. Their Reader reported what had happened ahead in dismay-and then, 'Riders coming toward us-I can't Read most of them-!'
A sheet of flame leaped out of the ground just in front of the first rank of soldiers. They sprang back by reflex, bumping into the troops behind them.
But these were seasoned soldiers-their leader was shouting orders already. Archers stood and fired over the heads of the front ranks, toward the small band of riders-but the arrows were stopped as if they had hit a wall a few paces before the advancing band of riders.