The Eighth Warden Book 6
Copyright© 2024 by Ivy Veritas
Chapter 3
“Nedley said you told him a lot of new people are coming this way?” Sarette asked as she accompanied Cenric south of the village to the new barracks to show him around. He, his wife, and his sister had found lodging at the boarding house, then he’d come looking for her.
“More than I saw over the summer,” he said. “I was living farther north, though, so I’m not sure what it was like closer to Four Roads.”
“We thought it would slow down once news got out about the battle.”
Cenric shrugged. “The story going around is that Corec, his mages, and a few dozen soldiers defeated the armies of Larso and sent them fleeing back home. I’m not so stupid as to believe that’s how it went, but ... you’re still here and Larso isn’t. The freelanders are taking it as an omen.”
Sarette wasn’t sure how to reply to that, so she changed the topic, pointing out the activity ahead of them. “Georg is Armsmaster now, so he’s handling most of the weapons training, but he may ask for your help on the things you’re more familiar with.”
At the moment, Georg and Ral were teaching the newest recruits how to use the captured ballistae the knights had abandoned. Most of the invading force’s siege weapons had been destroyed during the fighting, but some of the sabotaged devices had been far enough away to survive. The knights had left them behind as part of their surrender—and to speed up their return to Hightower. Corec had laid claim to them, ordering repairs and then replacing most of the ballistae on the fortress walls with catapults.
Siege weapons wouldn’t normally be part of the Armsmaster’s duties, but Georg had more experience with them than anyone else, so he supervised the training when he could. The former knight noticed Sarette and Cenric approaching and came over to greet them, leaving Ral to finish the session.
“You’re back,” Georg said to Cenric.
“I am,” the other man replied.
That was all they said. Cenric had never been much for talking, but Sarette suspected she’d missed an unspoken conversation in the few words the two Larsonian veterans had exchanged.
“He’ll be a sergeant again,” she said. “We were just discussing his duties.” She turned back to Cenric. “What I really need is for you to train up new sergeants and corporals. Nedley’s joining the knights and Ral is old enough to retire. We’re spread too thin on people who can actually lead a squad.”
She figured that was the best way to use Cenric’s skills for as long as he decided to stick around. The dour man had come looking for work because he’d run out of other choices, but after his time as a red-eye, he’d lost his will to fight. There was a good chance he’d quit again once he’d saved up a bit of coin, and she wanted to take advantage of what he could offer in the meantime.
“Teaching?” he said, looking thoughtful. “I can do that.”
Georg snorted. “Sometimes I don’t know why we bother with all this, if mages are just going to do all the fighting for us,” he told Sarette. “How am I supposed to train people for a job you can do better by yourself?”
“We didn’t do all the fighting,” she said. “The soldiers played their part well.”
“I was there, remember? I saw what happened, and I don’t care to see it again.” Georg didn’t seem to have the Order of Pallisur’s typical hatred for magic, but the piles of dead bodies left behind by the mercenaries had been a disturbing sight. Sarette wouldn’t want to repeat that day either.
She considered his words, trying to figure out what he really meant by them. Georg could be an antagonistic bully when no one stood up to him, but if he’d actually wanted to leave, he’d have done so already. And he wasn’t entirely wrong.
“If you’re worried about the soldiers not having enough to do, then we’ll have to teach them a new way to fight,” she said. “We worked together against the dragon. We can do it again.”
Georg frowned. “Just how are we going to do that?”
“That’s something the three of us will have to figure out.”
The lively chatter in the Great Hall of the Four Roads chapter house brought back a lot of memories. Treya had spent four years here before Mother Yewen sent her to Tyrsall, and not much had changed since then. Most of the same teachers were still around, looking a little older now. The students were different, but that was normal—girls were always coming and going from the chapter houses.
Treya accepted a plate from one of the girls assigned to serving duty for the evening, then sat down near Shana.
“Feeling better after the bath?” the other woman said.
“I healed myself,” Treya admitted. Her legs had been sore and her feet numb after running the entire distance from Hilltop Village to Four Roads, but they’d managed the trip in just two days, far outpacing the speed of traveling by horseback. “I can heal you too, if you want.”
Shana shrugged. “I’m fine. You get used to it if you run as much as I do.”
“Do you really have to go?” Treya asked. They’d had this conversation already, but she’d enjoyed having another mystic around to practice with.
“There’s not much left I can teach you that you can’t learn on your own,” Shana said. “And your friends certainly don’t need me to do their fighting for them. I can’t stay here forever—there’s always someone who needs help somewhere.”
Mother Yewen joined them then, along with Treya’s old friend Liese, a shy, dark-haired girl who had to wear spectacles to see five feet in front of her face. Liese had trained with the Order of Scholars and now kept books for the chapter house.
“I hear you two made quite the entrance, almost running over the girls cleaning the courtyard,” Yewen said.
“I’m sorry, Mother Yewen,” Treya replied. “We didn’t see them until we came around the house of healing.”
“Don’t apologize—you’ve got them interested in the Order now. And I was a mystic once too, remember. Sometimes you just have to see how far you can take it. Speaking of which, I’ve heard back from the senior Mothers. They’ve agreed to grant permission for you to move forward with your idea, on a trial basis only.”
“My idea?” Treya asked.
“To start a new Order for the trades and crafts, and to require mystic and concubine candidates to learn another skill so they have something to fall back on if their plans don’t work out. I excluded the scholars from that, of course, since that’s a trade in itself. I didn’t mention anything about putting less emphasis on the Order of Concubines. One thing at a time.”
“But I never told you...” Treya started, then noticed Shana’s big grin.
“I may have passed along a few notes,” the other woman said.
The idea was important, Treya was certain, but it was only an idea. She’d never considered having to implement it herself.
“I’m not sure what to do,” she admitted.
“I can help!” Liese offered, then looked embarrassed at having spoken up in front of the others.
“Perhaps that would be for the best,” Yewen said. “In truth, Treya, you’re not the best person to build it—you’re not a tradeswoman yourself, and Liese is. But if you want the idea to catch on, someone will have to champion it, and that should be you. After the dragon, your name is known across all the chapter houses. They know you’re close with Corec Tarwen as well, and his name is on the rise too. Now is the best time to use your influence.”
“I can do that, I think,” Treya said. She wasn’t sure what it meant, exactly, but she could write letters or get Leena to take her around to the different chapter houses.
“Good,” Yewen said. “And since you’re here, you and Liese can talk about your ideas for the new Order, then start reaching out to the trades and guilds in town to see what they can offer in partnership.”
Treya nodded. It seemed Mother Yewen had put more thought into the planning than she herself had, but it was sound advice.
“You’ll let us start the new Order here, then?” Treya asked.
“I’ll have to. Unless you’re ready to build your own chapter house?”
“I ... what?”
“With the number of people moving into your region, you’ll need one eventually.”
“I don’t think we’re ready for that yet,” Treya said. “We don’t even have any orphan girls, unless you count Ditte.” Four Roads was already the smallest of the chapter houses, and that was in a town of thirty thousand people. The population surrounding Hilltop Village couldn’t be growing that fast, could it? Bobo and Carn Tammerly were still trying to get a better estimate from the more distant settlements.
Yewen nodded. “It can wait until it’s necessary. Until then, I’ll take any girls you need homes for. But start thinking about who you’d want running your chapter. Will you allow the Orders to assign an outsider, or should it be someone who’s already there? Between you, Berit, and Nallee—and Kimi—which one of you is best suited for managing things ... and keeping the good will of the local lord?”
“Another distraction,” Shana murmured. “But that’s the life you’ve found for yourself. You’ll manage.”
Leena studied the image on the page as she idly twirled the jade bracelet around her wrist, trying to puzzle out the meaning of the map Bobo had given her.
In two days, she was scheduled to collect her new students—Yelena’s two new bondmates—from Sanvar to take over their training. That training would pull her away from other tasks, yet in the weeks since she’d retrieved the bracelet from Pavan after the battle, she’d barely made any progress at all on the map. Other than a second trip to the diagonal world, this time without meeting any of its residents, there’d just been a series of failed attempts to reach the more distant lines.
The lines did represent worlds—she was certain of that, even if the demonic realm appeared different every time she went—but how was she supposed to use that knowledge? They were just lines drawn out on paper. They didn’t provide enough information to reach any one particular spot, much less indicate which location she was meant to find. Surely this had to do with Snake somehow, but how?
She stared again at the lower half of the map, the four lines representing the worlds she’d been able to reach—the three parallel worlds with which she was most familiar, and then the diagonal line which crossed through her own world, barely missing the other two.
She straightened up in sudden realization. The lines themselves might not be distinct enough to represent specific locations, but the point where they crossed had to mean something.
Leena scrawled a quick note to Ellerie, explaining what she was attempting, then Traveled to the point where the lines crossed, keeping her focus on the middle of the three parallel worlds. She wanted to see the intersection from her own side.
She appeared in the middle of a heavy rainstorm, and it took her a moment to get her bearings. Peering up at the rocky ridges surrounding her, she found she was partway down the sloped side of a massive crater. The center of the crater was another five hundred feet west from her position and a hundred feet lower in elevation, the lowest point marked by a jagged, inky black crevice in the ground. The weak light of the sun through the clouds didn’t seem to shine inside like it would with a cave. It was more like a hole ripped in paper and held up against a dark night.
Rough trails had been carved throughout the crater, then worn down by time and erosion. The rainwater gathered in rivulets that trickled down the slope, gradually washing away dirt and stone to cut gaps in the pathways in the spots where the water flowed. The rivulets joined together in tiny streams near the bottom of the crater, draining into the dark hole.
A flicker of motion at the corner of Leena’s eye warned her that she wasn’t alone. Scattered figures trudged along the trails at distant points around the crater. At the far side of the bowl, a wider, sturdier road led from the top of the ridge directly down to the crevice. As she watched, a figure reached the bottom and climbed down into the dark hole, disappearing from sight.
There was something wrong with the way the figure had moved, something unnatural, and Leena was suddenly wary about standing in the open. She didn’t want to be seen by anyone until she’d learned more. No one was looking her way so she hurried up the side of the crater, taking the closest trail that would lead her to the top. The slope grew steeper as she went, and she had to crawl the last few feet, pulling herself up and over the ridge and tearing her dress around the knees as she braced herself on the rocks.
At the top, she discovered that the whole area was surrounded by a dense jungle, not much different than those in Sanvar. Crouching behind an outcropping of rock to hide from view, she peered back down into the crater.
The nearest figure, wearing a brown robe, was slowly approaching her position as it traversed a horizontal trail fifty feet down. Every so often it stopped to bend down and pull something from the ground. Vegetation, Leena realized—with the jungle so near, the crater must have required regular maintenance to keep from getting grown over.
Like the other figure she’d observed, this one also moved oddly, its steps longer but slower than a human’s. As it drew close, she recognized it as a type of creature she’d encountered on her first visit to the diagonal world. It walked upright on two legs, about the same height as a tall man, but it had four arms. The upper pair were larger and more muscular, ending in hands that were almost like talons, with claw-like appendages. Over one arm, it carried a leather bag where it deposited the plants and weeds it was pulling from the trail. Its lower arms—unoccupied at the moment—were slender and shorter, with human-like hands and fingers.
Had the creatures crossed from one world to another through the hole? Where could this place be that no one had noticed their presence?
Leena’s gift couldn’t tell her precisely where she was, and she was too far from home to try Seeking, but she could make a rough guess by comparing to other locations she’d Traveled to in the past. She was west and south from where she’d started. Too far west to be in Aravor, or even in the seaborn homeland she’d only seen on maps. Not quite as far south as Sanvara City. With the jungle blocking her view, she couldn’t get a sense of how large the landmass was. Was she on an island in the ocean? Or was it a continent she’d never visited before?