Storm Warning

Storm Warning by Mercedes Lackey Read Free Book Online

Book: Storm Warning by Mercedes Lackey Read Free Book Online
Authors: Mercedes Lackey
about that. But An’desha could not rid himself of the surety that the danger was not coming from the Empire.
    This was something more than mere warfare; something much, much worse.
    When I was still hiding in Falconsbane’s body, and the two Avatars of the Star-Eyed came to teach me the way toward freedom, did they not say something about this?
    Now that he came to think about it, he believed that they had. He had been guided by a pair of spirits, who had once been fleshly. One had been a Hawkbrother, the other, a Shin’a’in shaman. They had helped and taught him how to gradually insinuate himself into his enemy’s mind in such a way that Falconsbane thought the thoughts directing his actions were his own. They had also taught him how to gain access to the memories of Falconsbane’s many pasts.
    At least once, and perhaps more often, they had hinted that if he succeeded in regaining the use of his own body again, there was an even greater peril to be faced.
    If only he could remember what they had said! But he had been too busy worrying about his own survival to pay much attention to vague hints of terrible danger to come. He’d had quite enough terrible danger on his plate at the time!
    Firesong continued his speculations concerning the threat of this Empire, and he tried in vain to suggest that the peril might be coming from elsewhere. Finally, he just gave up; when Firesong had the bit between his teeth about something, there was no hope for anyone else to get anything in. It was best to just nod thoughtfully and let him continue to expound.
    But inside, his thoughts had a new target to circle around in worried, dizzy spirals. The danger was not from the East, but from where? What could be worse than an army, full of powerful mages and larger than anything Valdemar had ever seen, bearing down on the border?
    If only he could remember....

Karal
    Three
    Karal patted his horse’s damp neck nervously and tried not to be too obvious about watching the Valdemaran Guards out of the comer of his eye. The horse fidgeted and danced in place as it picked up his unease, and he dismounted to hold it by its halter, just under the chin. It snuffled his chest but calmed as soon as he got down on the ground beside its head; a light, warm breeze played across both of them, gradually drying the horse’s sweating neck.
    He continued to stroke it, his nose full of horse scent, the familiar aroma calming his own nerves. Nothing really bad had ever happened to him when he was around horses, and he kept reminding himself of that, holding it to him as if he held to a luck-talisman.
    This was a good little gelding, and someone had trained it well before tithing it to Vkandis Sunlord. The sun shone on a perfect, glossy coat, skin without scars or disease, an eye bright with intelligence. Karal had no idea why the gelding’s first owner had sent it in as part of his tithe, but it was obviously someone who took his duty to the Sunlord seriously, sending “the first and best fruits of his labor” as the Writ urged, rather than trying to cheat as so many did, sending only the unwanted and unusable.
    A good thing for both of us that they did, Trenor.
    The gelding was too small and light to go to the cavalry, and too nervous for a scout or skirmisher, so it had gone to the Temple. Karal had known quality horseflesh when he saw it, and requisitioned this youngster the moment his master and mentor suggested that he was entitled to a mount of some kind from the Temple herds.
    This gelding was a lovely bay, otherwise perfect except for the slight flaw of high-bred nerves, and he’d named it after his little brother Trenor, who danced in place in much the same way when he was nervous. Trenor the gelding was, without a doubt, the best piece of horseflesh currently in the novices’ stables, and every time he rode the gelding, Karal gloated a little under the envious eyes of his fellow novices. None of them were mounted nearly as well as he,

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