The Hob's Bargain
to talk Moresh into using you at allâhe liked them with more bulge and height. I asked him, Whoâd you have an easier time hearing in the woods, a moose or a ferret?â
The force of Kithâs stare drew her attention away from the cedar staff.
âIn this light you almost glow, Firehair,â continued the mage. âI always like my works of art to be pretty as well as functional, and Iâve always been partial to red.â
Kithâs eyes were still holding mine. If I hadnât known him so well, I wouldnât have seen his mouth tense when the mage called him Firehair. I wouldnât have seen the power that name had over him. It bound him to the mage. I could see the tie, spirit to spirit.
I remembered what Caefawn had told me about names. Kith had a name, given him by earth, air, fire, water, and magic. Given to him by the bloodmageâwho was evidently a man of little imagination. Firehair? My poor Kith .
I could feel the part of me constrained by the mageâs spell. It itched like an infected tooth, and I pushed against it.
âIâm not Moresh,â the mage said. âHe didnât know how much of myself I put in each of you.â
He spoke like an artisanâdidnât the saddlemaker say that very thing so often it had become a running joke in the village? I paused in my thoughtsâhadnât I given part of myself to the creatures Iâd commanded? Perhaps Fennigyr meant it literally.
I focused on Kith, trying to see him as Iâd seen Wandel while heâd practiced, as Iâd seen Kithâs ties to the bloodmage a moment ago.
Kith broke into the bloodmageâs speech. âWhat did you do to the girl?â
âSheâs not your concern,â purred the mage. âOne of the things I liked best about you was that you were never quite tamed. Moresh thought it was a weakness. He feared you, did you know? What he couldnât see was that the difference made you better than the others. Youâre older than any of my other men.â The mage stared sadly at the sky. âSuch hard work to make, and so easily destroyed. He didnât see you were more than just a man without a shield arm. I could kill youâ¦.â
She looked at the sky, too, but all we saw was clouds. I needed to see Kith. Or my staff. If I could have spoken, Iâd have sworn. I swore to myself anyway, though I continued to struggle with the spell and my fear.
A harsh grunt returned her flittering attention to Kith. He was on his knees, and I could see the veins in his forehead. I could see how the mage used his bonds to cause pain.
ââ¦how easy it would be?â asked the mage. He hurt Kith some more.
Kithâs fair skin had turned dark red.
I fought; the itch turned to an acheâhow strange without a body, and at that moment it turned to outright pain as something tore. I would have screamed if I could. Iâd done more damage, but Iâd also damaged Fennigyrâs control.
Iâd freed my magic, too, what little there was of it.
Firehair , I thought. Holding Kithâs real name to me, I looked at him. With his name, my spiritsight was much clearer than it had been with the harper. Like Wandelâs, Kithâs spirit was full of light. If ghosts were a candle, then living spirits were a glass, magnifying the light of the soul. I could see the little bits of foreign spirit tied into his own, and I plucked at them. But when I pulled one away, I had to replace it, because I saw Iâd damaged Kith. Without those little bits, Kithâs spirit would be wounded beyond healing. So I attacked the spirit bond that tied him to Fennigyr instead. It fell apart like a poorly knitted sock, leaving Kithâs spirit damaged, but free.
âWhat?â exclaimed the bloodmage, staring at Kith.
Kith gasped a deep breath of air, unaware that it was not the mage who had released him. The mage was not so handicapped. Kith didnât have time to look up before the mageâs swiftly drawn sword slid into his back and out his belly.
She turned her face away from Kithâs death as wild grief sliced through me. Her gaze passed by the other berserker, and I could see the pain on his face. The lowlander had loved Kith, too.
Failure and agony almost distracted me enough that I didnât see what lurked behind the berserker, but no one could miss the solid thwack as Caefawnâs staff hit the berserker in the
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