The Hob's Bargain
ONE
C hanges are frightening, I thought, even when theyâre changes for the better. From the doorway of my cottage I looked across the yard and garden to the barn where my husband was harnessing our chestnut workhorse. My husband. Our workhorse. I tasted the thought in my mind and smiled. Frightening, yes, but exciting and wonderful, too.
The barn wasnât far from the house, but the distance was great enough that I couldnât see the lacings on the harness or the faint, pale lines near my husbandâs eyes where the sun didnât reach his skin when he smiled. But I could see the horse cock an ear back, listening to Darynâs soft, slow voice. I could see the wheat-gold of Darynâs hair, newly cut in honor of our wedding.
Weâd been married all of a night, and though weâd been betrothed this past harvest, I still couldnât quite believe it. Iâd never expected to wed at all. The morning was still chilly this early in spring. I drew my shawl more tightly around my shoulders, hugging the warmth closer. Daryn tied the traces to the croup strap high on the horseâs rump so they wouldnât drag the ground all the way to the high field where heâd meet his brother and my father to continue the plowing theyâd already begun. The muscles of his back flexed under the wool shirt he wore as he pulled himself to the chestnutâs back in one smooth motion.
âDarynâ¦,â I called tentatively.
He saw me in the doorway and grinned. I smiled back with relief. When heâd left the house, Iâd been busy cleaning up after breakfast, pretending I fixed morning meals every day when it had always been my motherâs task. Near to thirty years old, and I still couldnât make toasted bread without scorching it.
Cleaning had given me a reason for my red cheeks other than the embarrassment that had first caught my tongue when I awoke in bed with him this morning and worsened dismally with the advent of the blackened bread. Iâd expected him to be grumpy, as my father always was. I should have known him better than that: Daryn didnât hold grudges.
He spun the horse on its haunches, a trick heâd taught it during the last yearâs long winter months while Iâd watched from my parentsâ house. If I half-closed my eyes, I could almost see a warrior on his mount preparing for battle rather than a landsman off to work. With a snort, the horse galloped to the small porch where I stood, his heavy feet thundering on the ground like the great horses from Gramâs tales of ancient heroes.
Daryn was handsome enough to be a hero, perhaps some lost prince or noble. A clever twinkle seldom left his eye, and good humor colored most of his expressionsâattributes all proper heroes should have. The muscles heâd earned tilling the fields were no less impressive than those of a soldier, and probably better than any prince would earn seated upon a throne.
Truth was, he was prettier than I, and the better part of a decade younger. His age had worried me when Father brought him home last fall. I should have remembered how shrewd my father was. Only an idiot could have found fault with Daryn, and I hope Iâve never been thatâor at least not very often.
âAren, my lass?â Daryn asked after a moment. I realized heâd stopped in front of me some time ago, and Iâd been staring at him without speaking.
I started to say something light and funny, something to let him know it was shyness, not moodiness, that I felt, but the words stopped in my throat. A familiar chill settled into my stomach. Not now , I thought desperately. I reached out to his normalcy and warmth, gripping the cloth of his pant leg, and hoped for the feeling to pass. When I closed my eyes against dizziness, I sawâ¦
â¦a winter lily, scarlet flower drooping and edged with brown, bobbing as something dripped on it.
As an explanation of the dread feeling that choked me, it was a complete failure. Most of my visions were like that. Later, after whatever event the sight had warned of took place, I could nod my head to myself and say, âOh, thatâs what it meant.â Not very useful.
If I had to be stricken with magic, I would rather have had something like Gramâs talent for healing, or my brotherâs knack for finding thingsâespecially because the consequences of having magic were so deadly. My brother had died for his when I
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