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The Hob's Bargain

The Hob's Bargain

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was thirteen.
    He’d been in town with Father, trading fresh milk for leather to mend a harness, when Lord Moresh’s bloodmage saw him and spoke my brother’s death sentence. Quilliar had been fifteen, and he’d had a day to choose whether he would apprentice to the bloodmage or refuse and be put to death.
    If he’d chosen to become a bloodmage, he’d have learned to kill and torture for power. After a while he’d have begun to go insane, as all the mages did in the end—some immediately, some after years of a gradual decline into madness.
    He’d picked death, but not one delivered by the bloodmage. The bloodmages would have used his death, his dead body, to power their magics. So my brother walked into the middle of a snowstorm and found a place where his body would be safely hidden for three days: enough time to ensure the bloodmage had no power from him.
    I couldn’t tell Daryn I had the sight , though I’d had all winter to do it. Caution learned so harshly would not drop from me after a few months of exchanged confidences and growing love. After a night of being man and wife, I would have trusted him with my life, but I couldn’t risk losing the growing softness in his eyes when he looked at me.
    Looking into his eyes, I couldn’t tell him what I’d seen .
    â€œAren?” he asked, concerned. “Is something wrong?”
    â€œNo. No, just be careful.” I released his leg and stepped back. I hugged myself as if it would help keep my mouth from telling him everything. I wrestled with my conscience, finally deciding that if whatever happened was catastrophic, I would tell him about the sight —punishment for being too selfish to tell him now.
    He grinned at me, not seeing the seriousness of my warning. “I’ll keep my feet out from under the plowshares and be back at dusk after a dangerous day of plowing fields with your father and Caulem.”
    The warmth in his eyes kept his speech from being patronizing. He took my words as an expression of concern, perhaps the implied apology for my moodiness this morning that I’d meant to give him when I’d called him over.
    Well, my foreseeing was not exact, predicting small harms as well as great. Perhaps someone would twist an ankle today or cut themselves on a sharp rock. Maybe it would rain. I hoped it would rain.
    I set the worry to the back of my mind and kissed him when he leaned down. “See that you do,” I said.
    When I patted his cheek with a motherly hand, he grinned suddenly. He gave me a warm look and turned his head to bite my forefinger gently. I ducked a bit, not wanting him to see the heat in my eyes. He wrapped his hand around a strand of my hair and tugged me close again. This time his kiss left me too breathless to talk, sending the dark warning from my heart as if it had never been.
    The horse shifted, pulling us apart.
    â€œDon’t fret so much, Aren,” he said, and his voice soothed me as it did any of the other beasts he used it on. “You and I’ll do very well.”
    He kissed me again and set the gelding up the path to the field before I recovered enough to speak. He knew I watched him, because he pulled the big horse into a controlled rear just before he rode out of sight. The harness was more hindrance than help in riding, but Daryn sat the horse easily. He blew me a kiss, then horse and rider plunged forward and were lost in the trees.
    I shut the door of the cottage and looked about. Daryn had built the little house himself, and each joint of wood and brush of whitewash showed the care he’d taken. There was a loft for our bed, and the kitchen was set in its own nook. I’d helped to sand the wooden floor (along with everyone else in both our families), and I’d woven the small green rug that covered the trapdoor of the cellar which would keep our food cool during the summer. There wasn’t much furniture. Daryn promised that when next winter came, he’d build more. Possessively, I ran my hand over the wooden back of my grandmother’s loveseat.
    Everyone in the village knew there was a strain of magic running in my father’s family. That hadn’t stopped my sister’s wedding. There weren’t so many folk around that a taint to the blood kept people from forming alliances, not when it was properly buried a generation or so back. My brother’s death brought shame to the forefront; there were no

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