CHAPTER
1
It started with a prickle down Hemlocke’s spine. Nothing much, but enough to cause the faintest spark of awareness in her sleeping mind. Something was not right.
Out of all her kind, she was the one who’d been created and empowered to act as a sentinel, exquisitely sensitive to the continent the humans called Haelos and to all its living creatures, aware even in the deepest of restorative slumbers when a threat stirred.
Slowly, slowly, blood began to seep through her veins, bringing a hint of warmth to her curled body and the beginning of thought to her dreamless mind. She’d been asleep a long time in her dark, watery lair. Her injuries at the hands of the Kothite invaders had been serious, and full healing could be measured in centuries. Her body might be nearly whole, but her spirit was still weak.
Not so weak, though, that she could not protect Haelos from its enemies. She waited patiently for her mind to come to sharp alertness, her claws to regain their deadly strength, her massive, scaled body to come to a fully active state, her great wings to unfurl. And when they did …
Then she would fly.
* * *
“Madness! Unthinkable! Absolutely not!”
Raina gazed sympathetically at the sputtering Heart patriarch and his equally agitated fellow matriarchs and patriarchs. Outrageous though it surely was, nonetheless, she had been raised to the rank of emissary in the White Heart by Lord Goldeneye, leader of the great Dominion colony of changelings in the north of Haelos. He had no authority to do so, of course, but that had not stopped him.
High Matriarch Lenora had called this conclave of Heart leaders from across the settled lands of Haelos to discuss the matter, but the truth of it was that, no matter how much they blustered, their hands were tied. They needed the entrée to the heretofore impenetrable Dominion; hence they had no choice but to recognize her rank in the offshoot branch of the healer’s guild, no matter how unorthodox it might be.
“She’s a child!” a matriarch down the table spat in disgust. “The girl’s hardly fit to be a White Heart initiate, let alone an emissary equal in rank to one of us.”
The girl was sitting right here, hearing every word of their tirade. And she’d done a decent job of being a White Heart initiate, thank you very much. It hadn’t always been easy, by the Lady. Even if she wouldn’t be eighteen until springtime, age was not only measured in years but also in experience.
The Heart had three branches. The regular Heart to which most healers belonged. Then there was the White Heart, the pacifist branch of healers sworn to defend all life, to which Raina belonged, for better or worse. Lastly, there was the Royal Order of the Sun, the militaristic arm of the Heart, responsible for defending Heart chapters, their members, and the all-important resurrection Heartstones.
To Raina’s vast relief, the Royal Order also took responsibility for protecting White Heart members from harm since she and her brethren were unable to protect themselves. Most of the Dominion’s warriors had expressed a strong desire to kill her for being weak and spineless during her recent stint as a prisoner of that aggressive changeling army. They’d taught her to be abjectly grateful for the swords and shields that had hovered over her protectively since her return to Dupree.
At tonight’s meeting, the Royal Order of the Sun was represented by Lord Justinius, knight commander of the entire order in Haelos. So far, he’d sat tense and taciturn at Lenora’s right hand and not participated in the discussion. Raina suspected he saw the strategic necessity of letting her new rank stand and furthermore saw the advantage of finally having an emissary to the Dominion, her tender age notwithstanding.
Lenora patiently let the matriarchs and patriarchs bellyache their fill, which took a while. Raina had taken just about as many insults to her age, intelligence, training, and skills as she could tolerate before their complaints finally wound down to a trickle and then ceased.
The high matriarch said with admirable calm from beside Raina, “Thank you for your comments. I appreciate your candor, but here’s the thing. Never in the history of the Heart has any Dominion settlement, anywhere, allowed a member of the Heart to act as an envoy to it. We simply cannot turn down this opportunity.”
“Agreed!” the sputtering patriarch from before exclaimed. “Let us send a more seasoned Heart member to Goldeneye with all due haste.”
It was all Raina could do not to call him a fool for even suggesting such a thing. Lord Goldeneye would not stand for a substitute. They would be lucky to get their replacement emissary back alive, let alone with his or her mind intact.
She opened her mouth to tell the man so, but Lord Justinius sent her a brief, quelling look and a small shake of his head.
The big knight leaned forward ponderously, leather gambeson creaking under his chain mail, to weigh in at last. “Ladies and gentlemen. We are in full agreement that we have been presented with a rare opportunity, and we cannot turn away from it. However, I have met Lord Goldeneye, and he is not the sort to be trifled with. If this young lady is the one he chose, I guarantee you, he will accept no other. I shall send one of my most experienced knights to guard her, and he will be fully capable of advising her should she need guidance.”
She studied Justinius while the others buzzed and Lenora tried unsuccessfully to quiet them. What was his game? Did Lord Justinius wish merely to plant an observer in his enemy’s stronghold, perhaps co-opting control of her mission for his order?
Or did he aim higher? Did he dare hope for a rapprochement between the Royal Order of the Sun and the Dominion itself? The idea skirted perilously near treason. The Dominion’s leaders openly declared themselves sworn enemies of Koth, nearly as openly as they declared their intent to conquer all the lands of Urth for themselves.
“The enemy of my enemy?” she murmured under the hubbub for Justinius’s ears only.
“Silence!” he hissed in alarm.
Lord Justinius didn’t deny her implication. But he did push abruptly to his feet, towering over them all in his armor and weapons while she stared at him in shock.
The others fell mostly silent, and his voice cut across the last few protests. “It is settled. I will send Sir Lakanos to Dupree to accompany her. He is a skilled warrior who will earn the respect of the Dominion and is subtle enough to help Raina manage the nuances of this assignment. When do you leave for the Great Den, Emissary?”
“Lord Goldeneye told me to return in the summer.”
“Very well. When the days lengthen and the wheat ripens, look for my knight.”
She bowed her head respectfully. “Yes, my lord.”
* * *
Downstairs in the big common room with its heavy-beamed ceilings and plenty of cots for the ill and injured, the Heart door opened to let in twilight’s chill, and a crowd of drunken soldiers spilled inside loudly. The gypsy healer Rosana scowled as Will Cobb peeled away from his boisterous cronies, members of the elite Imperial Special Forces unit who called themselves the Talons of Koth. He wasn’t a member of the unit, but they were recruiting him hard to join them. And to her chagrin, he was letting them.
“The lot of you are sloshed again?” she complained, hands planted in dragon wings of irritation on her hips.
“’Ey there, Rosie,” Will called, overloud, his words slurring slightly. “We’re here to get our blood purified so we can start drinking anew.”
“What brilliant tactician thought up that idea?” she snapped.
“Me, of course.” Will made an exaggerated bow in her general direction. “Will Cobb, tactical genius extraordinaire, at your service.”
“I see your ego hasn’t suffered any bruises after your training with Captain Krugar,” she replied tartly.
Will had come to the Heart daily for the past two weeks for treatment of various contusions, cuts, and even a few cracked ribs after his sparring sessions with the Imperial Army officer. Unfortunately, Will’s ego was growing right along with his prodigious combat skills.
Something had happened to him a few months back during the pitched fight to close a portal to the dream plane up in Dominion territory. He’d unlocked some sort of repressed memories of martial training from his childhood. He’d gone from being able to handle himself reasonably well in a fight to a highly skilled battle caster in the blink of an eye. Rumor had it he was actually beating Krugar on a semiregular basis in their weapons training now.
She ought to cut him some slack, forgive him for his abrupt surge of arrogant confidence, but it still rubbed her the wrong way. She preferred her humble cobbler’s son from a tiny village in the Wylde Wold to this swaggering young man.
Maybe Will’s attitude was influenced by the tree spirit trapped in the wooden disk that had grown onto his chest a year back. Bloodroot was the tree lord of death, destruction, and rage, after all. Ever since their unnatural union, Will had struggled against bouts of anger, jealousy, and quick temper.
Sometimes Rosana despaired of hanging on to the sweet lad who’d rescued her from an orc attack on a deserted road in the western woods over a year ago and won her heart in the process.
“C’mon, Rosie. Give us some potions,” Will cajoled.
He opened his arms, and she scooted out of reach, swatting at his hands. “You know that is not how Heart resources are used.”
Commander Thanon, leader of the Talons, threw an arm across Will’s shoulder. “We’ll pay for the potions. Twice—no, triple—their worth. I’ve got gold.”
Rosana’s scowl deepened. With triple the cost of the potions in gold, she could replace the ones she used on these fools with many more potions to heal the needy who poured through the Heart’s front door in a never-ending stream. “Fine,” she huffed. “But show me the gold first.”
* * *
Raina heard a commotion downstairs and recognized the voices. Grabbing her white cloak boldly emblazoned with the royal blue symbol of the White Heart, she headed down to the big common room.
One of the men lolling about with Will spied her and peeled away from the others. She recognized the Imperial Army officer, a handsome young man entirely too cocky for his own good. He was a paxan, with a closed third eye in the middle of his forehead, and he made an exaggerated bow to her. “Greetings, my lady fair. Mine eyes rejoice at the sight of thy beauty.”
She rolled her eyes. “Good evening, Commander Thanon. I see you and your friends have been celebrating again. Is there some occasion I am not aware of to warrant this revelry?”
“Merely the fact of being alive, my lovely Raina.”
“I am not yours, sir,” she replied a shade sharply. She turned to Will, her good friend and traveling companion of the past year. “I have some news to celebrate and was hoping you and Rosana could join me and our friends for a drink.”
He frowned foggily, and she impatiently placed her glowing hand on his elbow, murmured an incant, and released magic that would purify his blood of the alcohol flowing through it.
Rosana stepped out into the main room holding a fistful of glass vials. “I’ve got the purification potions. Hand over the gold you promised.”
“Take the gold, but keep the potions,” Raina told her. “I’ll take care of these louts.”
“Hey!” A general cry went up from the soldiers, but they crowded around readily enough to accept her healing.
Irritated at their obnoxious behavior, Raina declined to trickle the healing slowly into the men to minimize discomfort. Rather, she slammed the healing into each man at combat speed, ensuring maximum pain as it did its work, coursing through their blood, cleansing the alcohol from it.
Thanon was last. Raina was tall, but Thanon was taller by nearly a head and smiled down at her entirely too intimately for her comfort. His attention zinged across her skin like a vibrating wire and made her more nervous than she liked to admit. He murmured low, “I shall relish the pain because it is you who causes it, my lady.”
She really wished he would quit calling her that. Just to be contrary, she trickled his healing into him slowly enough not to cause the slightest discomfort. “I would not dream of hurting an important Imperial officer such as yourself, Commander. After all, I am but a lowly commoner.”
He grinned broadly. “My dear, you are anything but common.”
The twinkle in his eyes was hard to resist, but he was not the first handsome young man to flirt with her since her return from the Dominion lands. She stepped back and said formally, “I must go.”
“Form up, men,” Thanon ordered crisply, entirely sober now.
The Talons fell into a marching formation and departed the Heart with sharp efficiency.
“Shall we go find Eben, Rynn, and Sha’Li?” she asked Rosana and Will.
The three of them set out across Dupree, the capital city of the Imperial Kothite colony in Haelos, in search of their friends. Raina barely noticed the pair of Royal Order of the Sun guardians who fell in behind them, but she was still glad for their presence.
They arrived at what had been Landsgrave Hyland’s residence until his permanent death. Leland’s foster son and their friend, Eben, still lived there. The young jann, an elementally aligned humanoid, grabbed his cloak eagerly when he heard the plan to go out on the town and celebrate Raina’s promotion in rank.
Rynn, a magnificently handsome paxan with golden hair and brilliant blue eyes—three open blue eyes, to be exact—was also pleased to join them, although his enthusiasm was more measured. He paused to don a filigree headband that covered the third eye in the middle of his forehead before sweeping on his cloak and pulling its deep hood far forward to hide his damningly illegal open eye.
All members of the paxan race had third eyes; it was just that most were permanently closed. Imperial law dictated that all open-eyed paxan were to be arrested on sight and turned over to the Empire. No one knew what happened to them once in Imperial custody, but it could not possibly be good.
The party, now numbering five, rang a great brass bell down by the dock and passed along an invitation for Sha’Li to join them to the lizardman who rose out of the water at their call. He knew who the black-scaled lizardman girl was and agreed to pass the message along to her.
Eben seemed relieved when Sha’Li didn’t join them, which made Raina frown. Something had happened between him and Sha’Li in the Angor Swamp a few months back. Though they were once the best of friends, Eben refused to even speak of the lizardman girl now. It pained Raina to see two of her dearest friends so estranged.
They headed for the Hungry Horde Inn, a favorite watering hole of young artisans in Dupree. The ale was hearty, the food plentiful, and none of it too expensive. Tonight, Raina treated her friends to dinner and drinks, unaccustomed to having a bit of gold jingling around in her belt pouch. High Matriarch Lenora had given the coins to her before she left the Heart earlier, calling it her allowance as an emissary. Apparently, emissaries required spending money to conduct business in a manner commensurate with their rank.
“Look at you!” Will exclaimed. “All grown up and financially independent!”
She laughed. “I wouldn’t go so far as to say I’m independent. The Heart provides me with my cash and resources. And I do have to earn it by doing a job.”
Rynn looked concerned. “When must you return to the Dominion?”
“This summer. And Lord Justinius has offered to provide a knight escort for me.”
“More like a babysitter,” Rosana teased.
Raina rolled her eyes at the characterization but could not deny its truth.
They talked and laughed about nothing in particular through the evening. It was a welcome change after the stress and danger of the past few months. They’d sought, and ultimately found, another piece of the Sleeping King’s regalia that they would need to wake the ancient elven king one day. Furthermore, they’d finally found their good friend Kendrick Hyland, who’d been kidnapped last year. Unfortunately, he’d chosen to stay with his captor, nature guardian Kerryl Moonrunner, and to retain the were-curse Kerryl had put upon him.
Raina worried about Kendrick and shared his grief at the permanent death of his father, Landsgrave Leland Hyland, who had been like a father to her since she arrived in Dupree.
Sha’Li, their lizardman friend, never showed up at the pub. Whether she didn’t receive the invitation or simply chose to ignore it, Raina couldn’t guess. Sha’Li spent most of her time underwater in the lizardman settlement near Dupree, rather than roaming the streets of the human city where most people eyed Sha’Li’s kind with suspicion, if not outright hostility.
Not that the lizardmen had done anything to earn the enmity of the locals—or the Kothite regime, for that matter. They were just … alien. Technically, Raina supposed they were nothing more than simple animal changelings—part animal and part human, but their reptilian features and scaled bodies unsettled even Raina at a visceral level. Strange appearance aside, though, Sha’Li had been as loyal and supportive a friend as Raina had ever had. No matter how hard Sha’Li would have protested if she said it aloud, Raina thought the girl had a deeply noble soul.
“Hey, look who’s here!” a familiar voice boomed behind Raina, shaking her from her ruminations.
What was Thanon doing here? She swiveled on the bench, scowling to see the military officer and a half dozen of his men piling into the pub. Had they followed Will? Or worse, her?
“The hour grows late,” Raina announced in disgust. “I’m going back to the Heart. Rosana, do you wish to come with me or have Will bring you back later?”
The other healer answered, “I’ll come with you and your escort.”
The two girls piled out of the corner of the pub, and Raina pressed a few coins into the hand of the bartender. “Keep the ales flowing for my friends, if you will.”
“Consider it done,” the fellow replied, grinning.
Raina stepped out into the evening, and two Royal Order of the Sun guardians emerged from the shadows beside the pub, falling in behind her. It had started to snow while they’d been in the pub, a fine, crystalline dusting coating every horizontal surface and hiding the usual mud and muck of the cobbled streets in early spring.
“Wait up!” Thanon called from the doorway of the pub. “I’ll walk you home.”
She sighed and summoned a smile. It was not as if she could tell him not to bother. He was a high-ranking Imperial officer, and the way she heard it, he was also the governess’s favorite. He fell in beside her, sparing a nod and grin for the Royal Order guards.
“You’re incorrigible,” she muttered as he held out his forearm expectantly, forcing her to rest her hand on it or else be openly rude to the man.
“Irresistible, aren’t I?”
“And modest, too,” she replied dryly.
“My finest quality.”
They walked in silence for a few minutes. Then Thanon commented, “In Koth, everybody talks about how squalid and filthy Haelos is, but seeing it like this, quiet and covered in a coat of new fallen snow, it’s actually rather quaint. Pretty.”
Raina considered the half-timbered buildings jostling for space on the cobblestone street. Dupree was by far the grandest place she’d ever been in her life, born and raised as she’d been at the very westernmost edge of civilization in Haelos. With Dupree sprawling up the sides of two great hills and sloping down to the expansive Bay of Dupree, close to five thousand people lived in the city’s tall, narrow buildings and winding streets.
“Where’s the most beautiful place you’ve ever been?” she asked Thanon, whose many badges and blazons on his uniform spoke of a long military career and travels all over Urth. No matter that the man looked to be no older than his mid- to late twenties. It must be nice to age at the rate of a long-lived race like the paxan.
He glanced down at her. “The most beautiful place I’ve seen is wherever you are,” he answered. One corner of his mouth lifted in a grin.
She couldn’t help but laugh. “Truly. Incorrigibility is your gift.”
The slate roofs and black-painted timbers around them wore their fluffy coats of sparkling snow with quiet dignity. Their footsteps melted behind them, leaving a trail of footprints to mark their passing through the still streets. The evening was serene, as if a blanket of peace and calm lay over the entire world this night. The past several months of life-threatening danger and never-ending stress fell away, leaving her feeling as weightless as the flakes settling gently around her toward earthly rest.
The avenue they trod spilled into the large square in front of the towering House of the Healing Heart, a sprawling, four-story-tall structure taking up most of one side of the square. The tall dome of the central Heartstone tower in its private courtyard within the Heart headquarters peeked above the main building’s roof. It was an elaborately carved and gilded rotunda as befitted a place where people could magically be restored from fully dead to alive.
Thanon escorted her across the broad expanse of pristine snow covering Heart Square and stopped at the foot of the wide, shallow steps leading up to the glowing front doors of the blond stone edifice.
“I shall leave you here and wish you sweet dreams, my lady.”
“Safe travels and a good night to you, Commander Thanon,” she replied formally.
“I have spent part of it with you. It is already a good night.”
Stars, that man missed no opportunity to lay on the charm. Were all courtiers like that? She would not know. Funny, but the past year had taught her a great deal about just how much she did not know of the world. An urge to travel, to see more and learn more surged through her.
“C’mon. I’m cold,” Rosana muttered, starting up the broad steps.
Raina followed the ever-practical Rosana inside, out of the snow and out of the night’s quiet magic.
* * *
When the girls left the pub, Eben ordered a round of ales for himself, Will, and Rynn. He was surprised and pleased when the barkeep informed him that their White Heart friend had covered their tab for the rest of the evening. That was good of Raina. Beneath all that deep thinking and political maneuvering she lived for, she was a decent sort. Good heart.
“All right, boys. I need your advice,” Will declared. “It’s about Rosana.”
“Give her whatever she wants and don’t cross that gypsy temper of hers, man.” Eben laughed.
Will punched him playfully in the upper arm. “No, you fool. I want to propose to her, but I have to figure out just the perfect way to do it.”
Eben grinned. “About time you got around to it.”
Everyone had known the pair was sweet on one another and would end up together for much longer than the two of them had known it. Rosana smoothed out the rough edges of Will’s temper, and he helped her be braver and more confident.
Will turned to Rynn. “I figure a pretty fellow like you has lots of experience with women. How do girls like to be proposed to?”
Rynn squawked. “How should I know? I’ve never proposed to anyone!”
Will groaned, and Eben declared to him, “You’re on your own on this one, my friend.”
Rynn piped up jovially, “Good luck with it.”
Will scowled and downed the entire contents of his mug, then stared morosely into the remnants of foam clinging to the sides of the tankard, which frankly amused Eben to no end. Not that he would tell Will that and risk rousing Will’s formidable temper.
Rynn emptied his mug and slammed it down on the rough, board table. “A gift,” he declared.
Will looked up, frowning.
“Give her a gift. Something significant to both of you. Something that will make her cry and feel all emotional. Then spring your proposal on her, and she’ll be swept away and say yes.”
Eben frowned. “Isn’t that trickery?”
Rynn shrugged. “Either he wants the girl or he doesn’t. All’s fair in love and war.”
The barkeep brought them three more brimming mugs, and Eben sipped this one a bit more temperately.
“What gift would make her cry?” Will wondered aloud.
Eben and Rynn both shrugged, their limited store of wedding proposal advice exhausted.
“What of you, Eben? Any young women in your near future?” Rynn asked.
This last mug of ale was hitting Eben hard all of a sudden, and he had to concentrate to form an answer to his friend’s question. “No time for love. I have to help my sister, Marikeen. Get to the dream plane. Protect her from whatever goes on there.” He asked Rynn abruptly, “Can you help me? You’re good with all that dream plane stuff, right?”
Rynn nodded modestly.
“I know you can take me there. You did it when I first saw my sister on the dream plane. Can we do that again? Watch me sleep or whatever it is you do, and take me to Marikeen.” Whew. The pub’s dirty plaster walls and low, blackened ceiling were starting to spin.
Rynn mumbled, “Sure, fine. Are you all right, Eben? You look like you want to pass out. Maybe we should go back to Hyland House…” The paxan started to push to his feet but collapsed back to the bench, blinking hard. “Whoa. I’m a little dizzy.”
“Can’t hold your booze?” Will teased, jabbing Rynn with an elbow, but half missing and tipping himself partway over.
Rynn gave Will a shove back upright and then grabbed Eben’s hand across the table. “I’ll help you find your sister. I promise, my friend.”
“You’re a good man. No matter how many eyes…” Why were words so hard to enunciate clearly all of a sudden?
“Thanks. Not so bad yourself for a jann,” Rynn mumbled, frowning and appearing to work hard to focus on Eben’s face.
Rynn’s brilliant blue eyes whirled like a kaleidoscope, and Eben grinned stupidly. “Look … funny…”
“Feel … funny…” Rynn sighed back.
Eben felt himself starting to tip over and pulled against Rynn’s hand to right himself. Rynn was leaning at an odd angle, too, and he did his best to prop up the paxan, not that it helped one whit.
A new voice intruded from somewhere above Eben’s head. Eben squinted and made out the barkeep, flanked by two burly young men who looked like his sons. The fellow’s words only sluggishly formed meaning in Eben’s sotted brain. “Too bad the girls left, but ye three’ll still bring me a pretty penny from Anton and his boys. He’s got quite the bounty out on ye. Sweet dreams, then.”
Eben glanced across the table at Rynn in dawning horror. The paxan stared back blearily, looking appalled. Will toppled sideways into Rynn just as Eben and Rynn fell forward in unison and passed out.
* * *
Raina hurried up the Heart’s front steps behind Rosana. She loved how the broad stones were worn a little in the middle, testament to the thousands of feet that had trod these stones in search of healing over the years.
The glow around the front doors blinked out as someone inside removed the key from the wizard’s lock for them. Raina followed Rosana inside, and the wizard’s lock went back up behind them, the magically protected doors glowing once more.
Raina shook like a dog, giggling as Rosana did the same and they pelted each other with melted droplets of snow.
“A moment of your time, Emissary,” High Matriarch Lenora said from near the big hearth across the room.
Raina crossed to where the woman sat in a deep armchair, a quilt spread across her lap. Raina sank into the matching chair, relieved that the common room was empty of sick or wounded supplicants for a change. She supposed most people stayed at home on a night like this, tucked into their warm beds, rather than venturing out and getting hurt.
“How may I serve you, High Matriarch?”
“I hear Commander Thanon and his men escorted you and your friends out this evening.”
“They did.”
“And that young Thanon brought you home?”
“He walked with me, yes.” She did not correct Lenora for calling Thanon young. The high matriarch knew as well as anyone that a paxan could be hundreds of years old and look one-tenth his or her age.
“Tell me something, Raina. Why do you choose to move about Dupree in the company of Imperial soldiers rather than entrusting your safety to the Royal Order of the Sun?”
Caution surged through Raina. The high matriarch was as subtle as anyone she’d ever known. Even the simplest question had the potential to be fraught with layers of meaning.
“Has the Royal Order complained?” Raina asked.
“They would never dream of complaining about such a thing, but it does bother them that you do not seem to trust them.”
Raina forced herself to take a moment to honestly consider the question. Clearly, there was import to the matter or else Lenora would not have brought it up. Perhaps Raina was unknowingly committing some grave breach of Heart etiquette and the high matriarch was too polite to say so outright. Or maybe the Royal Order of the Sun was embarrassed that the new emissary shunned them in favor of an elite military unit.
Or perhaps this was a deeper gambit by the Royal Order of the Sun to position itself as Raina’s primary source of support and advice going forward. They had already managed to become her sole guardians and advisors once she went north to the Dominion.
She knew herself to be an extraordinary mage and was moving quickly into a position of unusual power compliments of her relationship with the Dominion. Of course, others would see her as a political tool to be possessed and wielded.
But as she considered the question, the truth was rawer and uglier than she’d realized. She was afraid.
Raina admitted reluctantly, “When the Dominion kidnapped me and my friends, I was utterly helpless. They gagged and bound me so I could not cast magic, and they did not acknowledge the neutrality of my colors. They showed me just how weak I truly am in hostile situations. I understand now that healers who wear White Heart colors are exquisitely vulnerable to the violence and cruelty of a wild place like Haelos.”
“Make no mistake, child. Everywhere on Urth is rife with violence and cruelty. Haelos has no special claim to either.”
“And because of my White Heart vows, I am as a babe in the woods, completely unable to defend myself should anyone wish me harm.”
Lenora remained silent, studying Raina intently.
At length, Raina continued, “Thanon and his men make me feel safe. They’re heavily armed, highly skilled warriors, and travel in packs. They display their lethality without apology. They’re formidable soldiers whom others would do well not to cross.”
“I would remind you that the reputation of the Royal Order of the Sun is no less formidable. You can trust the Order, Raina. Lord Justinius chooses and trains his men and women with great care. They will lay down their lives for you to the last one of them.”
“But that’s the problem! I don’t want anyone to die for me!”
“Are you saying that you value Thanon and his men’s lives less than Justinius’s and his men’s? Is that why you choose to travel with the Talons? You would rather see them die for you?”
Raina stared into the sluggish fire, shocked. Was that what she had been doing without even being aware of it? Stars, this business of being in the White Heart was hard. Apparently, she must give everyone around her an equal opportunity to die on her behalf in addition to healing those around her evenhandedly.
“It is the nature of your work that others will leap to protect you from harm, Raina. You may not like it, but you must not stop them.”
“And yet my colors force me to try. It goes against everything I stand for to let others die protecting me.”
“Then I must counsel you to do nothing nor go anywhere that will put your life at risk.”
Hah. As if that was going to happen anytime soon. She and her friends still had to find a way to wake the Sleeping King. And that path was fraught with immense danger.
Her thoughts must have shown upon her face, for Lenora murmured, “You cannot have it both ways. There are consequences to all our decisions, all our actions. The course you have chosen is perilous in the extreme. You must be prepared to lead fine warriors to their deaths on behalf of your colors. And, I might add, on behalf of the quest you have chosen to undertake.”
She got the feeling Lenora was warning her of more than a Royal Order guardian dying someday. Did the high matriarch know of some new threat to Raina and her friends as they searched for the means to wake the Sleeping King?
“Furthermore,” Lenora continued, “you must accept that those warriors freely chose their path. You must let them walk it.”
Raina stared at the older healer, who stared back. She was missing some hidden message Lenora was trying to convey.
The high matriarch said soberly, “Sometimes the things we do are larger than our small lives.”
Copyright © 2018 by Cindy Dees and Bill Flippin