Memories of Ice
'I still want to know about these old women dreaming up worlds like this!'
The warren flared, the three figures emerging from it spilling onto dusty grey earth in a tangle.
Paran rolled clear of Quick Ben and the Seer as sorcery roiled around the two grappling men. As the captain drew his sword, he heard the Jaghut shriek. Black webs raced, wrapped tight about the thrashing Seer.
Gasping, Quick Ben kicked himself away, the Finnest in his hands.
Crouched on the Jaghut's chest was a tiny figure of twigs and knotted grasses, cackling with glee.
'Who in Hood's name-'
A massive black shape exploded from the portal with a hissing snarl. Paran cried out, wheeled, sword swinging in a desperate horizontal slash.
Which bit muscle then bone.
Something — a paw — hammered Paran's chest, throwing him from his feet.
'Stop — you damned cat!'
Quick Ben's frantic shout was punctuated by a sorcerous detonation that made the panther scream in pain.
'On your feet, Paran!' the wizard gasped. 'I've nothing left.'
On my feet? Gods, I feel broken into a thousand pieces, and the man wants me on my feet. Somehow, he pushed himself upright, tottering as he faced the beast once more.
It crouched six paces away, tail thrashing, coal-lit eyes fixed on his own. It bared its fangs in a silent snarl.
From somewhere within the captain emerged an answering growl. Deeper than a human throat could manage. A brutal strength flowed into him, stealing from him all awareness of his own body — except that now, he realized, he was — somehow — on eye-level with the gigantic panther.
He heard Quick Ben's ragged whisper behind him: 'Abyss below! '
The cat, ears laid back flat, was clearly hesitating.
What in Hood's name is it seeing?
'Bonecaster!' Quick Ben snapped. 'Hold. Look around you — see where we are! We're not your enemies — we seek what you seek. Here. Right now.'
The panther drew back another step, and Paran saw it tensing for a charge.
'Vengeance is not enough!' the wizard cried.
The cat flinched. A moment later, Paran saw its muscles relax, then the entire beast blurred, changed shape — and a small, dark, heavy-boned woman stood before them. On her right shoulder was a deep gash, the blood freely flowing down to paint her arm, dripping from her fingertips to the dusty ground. Black, extraordinarily beautiful eyes regarded him.
Paran slowly sighed, felt something subside within him — and he could sense his own body once more, limbs trembling, sword-grip slick in his hand.
'Who are you?' she asked.
The captain shrugged.
Her gaze dismissed him, lifted past him. 'Morn,' she said.
Paran slowly turned.
He felt the rent like a physical blow against his heart. A welt in the air, almost within reach of the ragged roof of an abandoned tower. A wound, bleeding pain — such pain. an eternity — gods below, there is a soul within it. A child. Trapped. Sealing the wound. I remember that child — the child of my dreams …
Quick Ben had regained his feet, stood looking down on the magically imprisoned Seer, the sticksnare crouched on the man's chest.
The Jaghut, unhuman eyes filled with terror, stared back up at him.
The wizard smiled. 'You and I, Seer. We are going to come to an arrangement.' He still held the Finnest and now slowly raised it. 'The Matron's power … resides within this egg. Correct? A power unable to sense itself, yet alive none the less. Torn from the body that once housed it, presumably it feels no pain. It simply exists, here in this Finnest, for anyone to use it. Anyone at all.'
'No,' the Jaghut rasped, eyes widening with fear. 'The Finnest is aspected to me. To me alone. You foolish-'
'Enough of the insults, Seer. Do you want to hear my proposal? Or will Paran and I simply step back and leave you to this Bonecaster's tender talons?'
The dark-haired woman approached them. 'What do you plan, Wizard?'
Quick Ben glanced back at her. 'An arrangement, Bonecaster, where everyone wins.'
She sneered. 'No-one wins. Ever. Leave him to me now.'
'The T'lan Vow is that important to you? I think not. You are flesh and blood-you did not participate in that ritual.'
'I am not bound to any vow,' she replied. 'I act now for my brother.'
'Your brother?' Paran asked, sheathing his sword and joining them.
'Onos T'oolan. Who knew a mortal, and called him kin.'
'I imagine such an honour is … rare,' Paran acknowledged, 'but what has that to do with the Seer?'