courier looked disappointed. The king affected not to notice. This fellow had done all he could to help. What would Grus do for a man like that? Heâd reward him, thatâs what. Lanius said, âYouâll have gold for your hard ride.â
He was annoyed at himself. He should have thought of that without needing to think of Grus. The courier didnât seem upsetâof course, he couldnât know what was in Laniusâ mind. He only knew he was getting a gift. Bowing low, he said, âThank you very much, Your Majesty!â
âYouâre welcome. Youâve earned it.â Lanius snapped his fingers. âOne thing more. Does Ulashâs ambassador have a wizard with him, or is he by any chance a wizard himself?â
âHe had several servants with him when he crossed over the Stura, but I didnât see one who looked like a wizard,â the rider said. âOf course, that doesnât mean there isnât one dressed up like an ordinary servant. And I have no idea whether heâs a wizard himself. Iâm sorry, Your Majesty.â
âItâs all right. Youâve told me what you know, and you havenât tried to make up stories to pad that out.â Lanius gestured in dismissal. The courier bowed again and left his presence. To stay on the safe side, Iâll have to have a wizard with me when the envoy gets here, Lanius thought.
He wished Alca the witch were still in the city of Avornis. She remained the best sorceress heâd known. He also wished Grus hadnât taken Pterocles with him when he went north to the land of the Chernagors. Now he would have to find someone else, someone whose power and reliability he wouldnât know nearly so well.
No help for it, though, not unless he wanted to face Ulashâs man without any wizard at his side. And he didnât. Ulash was a powerful prince in his own right. That made him dangerous. But he was also a glove manipulated by the hand of the Banished One. That made him dangerous, too, but in a different way. âA wizard,â Lanius muttered. âI must see about a wizard.â The wizard he needed to see was Pterocles ⦠and Pterocles, unfortunately, was far, far away.
Grusâ army advanced through fog. Men muttered about the uncanny weather. As they came down into the seaside lowlands of the Chernagor country, they met these ghostly mists almost every morning. âDo they know what theyâre talking about?â Grus asked his wizard. âIs there anything unnatural about these fogs?â
âNot that I can find, Your Majesty,â Pterocles answered. âWeâre down by the Northern Sea, after all. Itâs only to be expected that we have fog in the morning. Men who come from the plains and the uplands havenât seen anything like it, and so they get upset. Foolishness, if you ask me. You donât see the Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms, do you?â
âWell, no,â Grus admitted. âAs a matter of fact, Iâd like to see the Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms. That would be more interesting than anything thatâs happened since we came down from Varazdin.â
Pterocles gave him a reproachful look. The wizard was a serious man. He wanted everyone else to be serious, too. Grus wasnât, not often enough to suit him. The king missed Alca. Sheâd had a sense of whimsy. That was one of the things that had made her attractive to himâand one of the reasons heâd had to send her away.
He sighed. His breath made more fog, a little billow amidst the great cottony swirls of the stuff. It tasted like water and salt on his lips. Kisses and tears, he thought, and shook his head. Stop that.
The mist seemed to swallow most of his soldiers. He looked around. By what his senses told him, he had men close by him, wavering specters a little farther away, and creatures that made noise but could not be seen