Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #13 April 2015 | Page 96
wherever it was they happened to be. ‘Speak when
spoken to’ was one of his father’s rules. He’d enumerated a great many more before they set out.
#
Andarta was drunk, not falling down, throwing up
drunk but definitely drunk enough to get in trouble.
She would have thought twice about insulting Sabor
otherwise, Sabor who had once boasted of strangling
a bear. Still, she thought, she could beat him, if she
wasn’t so drunk. It didn’t look like he was going to
give her a chance to sober up though.
As Sabor drew his sword Andarta noticed, in the gathering crowd, a man and a boy, struggling to become a
man, watching with intense interest. As she pulled her
own sword free and Sabor charged she realised she’d
seen the man before. In the King’s court. Now I’m in
trouble, she thought as she parried Sabor’s first wild
swing. Her full attention switched to staying alive as
the two warriors traded a series of blows. Sabor was
strong but without imagination, and she soon saw he
had a series of well-learned manoeuvres. After a parry
that left her arm tingling, she neatly stepped inside
the big warriors reach and cracked his temple with the
hilt of her sword. As he toppled, she saw plenty in the
crowd exchanging money from the bets that they’d
made. The man and boy came over to talk to her.
“I have need of a strong and clever arm,” the druid,
who she realised was one of the four Great Druids,
said.
“I’m not for hire,” she countered. Druids and their
ilk, ovates and bards, were trouble. Bards not least for
wanting to immortalise you, ovates not least for their
delving into powers men were not meant to know, and
druids for their traffic with the Fair.
“Indeed?” said the tall druid.
“Yes,” she said and turned away, stalking back to the
Inn and to her wine. The truth of it was that she wasn’t
for hire. That the fat fool of an innkeeper had already
hired her to keep the inn safe. That even if he hadn’t
she wasn’t free to go gallivanting off around the coun-
tryside because of her sick partner, who needed medicine, which needed money, which called for her to
sell her sword in the first place. She made a sour face
at her wine and took another gulp. Free wine being a
perk of the job she had become, perhaps, a little too
fond of.
“It is going to kill him,” the deep voice of the druid
said. She looked up startled, she hadn’t heard him approach, not the best advert for a warrior’s instinct she
thought bitterly.
“I’m sorry, what?” she said, distracted. She could see
the boy walk inside the inn.
“The cough.”
“What?”
“Your partner’s cough. Sean isn’t it?” the druid said,
no trace of sympathy existed on his craggy face.
“How did you—”
“It will kill him,” the druid interrupted. “Within a
month. Two at the longest.”
Andarta found herself standing up. “Who do you think
you are? Sean is NOT going to die. Take that back.
Take it…” She trailed off in horror as she realised
what she’d been doing—jabbing her finger into the
chest of one of the most powerful men in all the Four
and One.
“I can alleviate the pain, but I cannot save him. I can
give him a faster journey to the Wheel and the promise
of a better next life.”
Andarta sat like a puppet with its strings cut. “He’s going to die?” She said in a small voice. “I knew he was
ill but…” She looked up at the druid. “You can spin
the Wheel for him?” The big druid nodded gravely.
Out of the corner of her eye she saw the boy approaching. He stopped a polite distance away.
“Well?” the druid said.
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