The Hob's Bargain
spring, on the top of Hobâs Mountain, Kith had called him Nahag.
It might have been a nickname.
I focused on the bloodmage, whose face was smooth and blank, though his body shook with the effort of the magic he was using. I tried to say his name, but my throat wouldnât work rightâI just couldnât form the word. So I thought it instead.
Nahag .
It wasnât just a nickname.
I could see the reason bloodmages all went insane. Rather than looking like a brighter version of a ghost, Nahagâs spirit was like a beggarâs cloak, rags and tatters covered here and there by different colored fabrics, pieces of other peopleâs spirit. I thought of the little bits Iâd taken from the noeglins and the bits of myself Iâd had to give in return, and was sickened.
When Iâd looked at Kith or Caefawn with his real name held tightly to me, Iâd seen his soul, a rich, warm form enveloped in body and spirit. But the bloodmageâs soul was small and dark, turned upon itself as if it could not bear to touch his corrupted spirit.
One of the foreign bits belonged to Kith. I ripped it away: fury spurred my path without giving me a chance to wonder if I could do such a thing or how I could do it. As soon as it lost contact with Nahag, it disappeared from my sight .
The other ragged bits fluttered and whined, disturbed by something. It was probably my imagination, but I thought they were trying to attract my attention to their unnatural plight.
With no better plan, I decided to see what would happen if I took them away from Nahag, hoping the power heâd gained from the people heâd stolen from would abandon him.
Like plucking geese, it was a job that soon grew wearying. I stopped now and then to look, but the mage was concentrating on the hob. I couldnât tell if I was doing any good or not.
My head ached with effort, and something else was wrong, too. Iâd damaged myself breaking Nahagâs spell, but I didnât have time to worry about it. As my father said, âYou have to finish what you start, Aren. Or all your workâs for naught.â
I curled my hands around the cedar and fought off the vision so I could continue to work.
I had to rest, and took the moment to see how Caefawn was faring. His skin had lightened to a pale gray and sweat matted his hair, but otherwise he appeared unhurt.
I looked beyond him and saw a circle of villagers ringing the three of us. Theyâd come, drawn here by Duckâs riderless state, or perhaps by Kithâs abrupt leave-taking. But they stayed well away from the silent, motionless battle in the center of the street. There was grim fear on most of their faces. I wondered if they feared the hob or the bloodmage, and decided it was probably both. However, one person had joined the fight.
Rook approached the bloodmage cautiously. With a well-worn knife, he probed the magic that had kept the hob from hitting Nahag. Nahag made a brushing gesture and Rook was tossed to the cobbles. He lay there for a few counts, rolled to his feet, and tried again.
âEnough,â whispered Nahag to the determined raider.
âI wonât let you kill him,â said Rook. There was a fierce determination in his pose. I wondered if Caefawn had teased the bleakness from Rookâs soul as well as heâd done it for me.
âYou can stop nothing.â Nahagâs voice was tight with impatience. He spoke a few words and gesturedâI recognized it as the same spell heâd thrown at me, and waited for Rook to react. Nothing happened; there was too little magic behind the spell.
Rook looked almost as surprised as the mage. Iâd given up hope, because my efforts hadnât seemed to do anything; but hope flared back again.
Wary, but not yet overly alarmed, Nahag surveyed the villagers, dismissing them one by one and skipping over me to return to Caefawn.
âIs it you? What have you done?â Nahag jerked his sword out of Kith and began a strike toward Caefawn.
I grabbed as many of the captive spirits as I could and tore them free. The sword dropped to the ground, and the mage fell to his hands and knees with a guttural cry. Forcing my stubborn body to move, I walked forward. When I reached Nahag, I collapsed to the ground.
He was trying to hold together the gaps in his spirit with magic, but his power was a thin and pale thing now. He didnât seem to know how to reach the magic of the land, the
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