Blood of the Fold (Sword of Truth 3)
Page 133
“I guess not. Are you all right?”
“Fine,” she said. “But I’m glad it’s over.”
“I’m afraid it’s only just begun. Come on, the sliph will get us back to Aydindril.”
“You still haven’t told me what this sliph is.”
“I don’t think you would believe me. You’ll just have to see it for yourself.”
“Quite impressive, Wizard Zorander,” Ann said, turning away.
Zedd gave a dismissive grunt. “Not my doing.”
Ann wiped the tears from her cheeks, glad for the darkness so he couldn’t see them, but she had to work to keep her voice from betraying her emotion. “You may not have thrown on the torch, but you did the work of stacking the pyre. Quite impressive. I’ve seen a light web tear apart a room, but this…”
He laid a gentle hand on her shoulder. “I’m sorry, Ann.”
“Yes, well, what must be, must be.”
Zedd squeezed her shoulder as if to say he understood. “I wonder who threw the torch?”
“The Sisters of the Dark can use Subtractive Magic. One of them must have accidentally ignited the light web.”
Zedd peered over at her in the dark. “Accidentally?” He took his hand back as he voiced only a dubious snort.
“That had to have been it,” she said as she sighed.
“A little bit more than an accident, I would say.” She detected a hint of pride in his wistful whisper.
“Like what?”
He ignored her question. “We’d better find Nathan.”
“Yes,” Ann said, suddenly remembering the prophet. She squeezed Holly’s hand. “This is where we left him. He has to be around here somewhere.”
Ann stared off toward the moonlit hills in the distance. She could see a group of people moving up the north road: a coach and a band of people, mostly on horseback. There were too many not to be able to sense them. It was her Sisters of the Light. Thank the Creator; they had gotten away after all.
“I thought you could find him by that infernal collar.”
Ann began casting about in the brush. “I can, and it tells me he should be right here somewhere. Perhaps the blast injured him. Since the spell was destroyed, he had to have been here doing his part with the outer shield, so maybe he was hurt. Help me look.”
Holly searched, too, but stayed close. Zedd wandered off toward an open, flat place. Guided by the way the branches and brush were bent and broken, he was looking near the center of the node, where the power would have been concentrated. As she stooped to look among the low places in the rocks, Zedd called out to her.
Ann took Holly’s hand and hurried to the old wizard. “What is it?”
He pointed. Standing up, so they couldn’t miss it, stuck in a crack in a round hump of granite, was something round. Ann wiggled it free.
She stared incredulously. “It’s Nathan’s Rada’Han.”
Holly gasped. “Oh, Ann, maybe he was killed. Maybe Nathan was killed by the magic.”
Ann turned it around. It was locked closed. “No, Holly.” She stroked a comforting hand down the child’s hair. “He wasn’t killed, or there would be some trace of him. But dear Creator, what does this mean?”
“What does it mean?” Zedd chuckled. “It means he got free. He stuck it in that rock so you would be sure to see it, as if to thumb his nose at you. Nathan wanted us to know he got the collar off on his own. He must have linked the power of the node to it, or something.” Zedd sighed. “Well, he’s gone. Now, get mine off.”
Ann’s hand holding the Rada’Han lowered as she looked out into the night. “We have to find him.”
“Take my collar off, as you promised, and then you can gad off after him. Without me, I might add.”
Ann felt her anger heating. “You’re coming with me.”
“With you? Bags, I’m doing no such thing!”
“You’re coming.”
“You intend to break your word!”
“No, I intend to keep it, just as soon as we find that troublesome prophet. You have no idea of the complications that man can cause.”
“What do you need me for!”
She shook her finger at him. “You’re coming with me whether you like it or not, and that’s all there is to it. When we find him, then I take that collar off. Not before.”
He shook his fists in a sputtering fit while Ann strode off to collect the horses. Her gaze wandered to the moonlit hill in the distance. She saw the band of Sisters heading north. When Ann reached the horses, she squatted down before Holly.
“Holly, as your first assignment as a novice to be a Sister of the Light, I have a very important, urgent duty for you.”
Holly nodded seriously. “What is it, Ann?”
“It’s critical that Zedd and I go find Nathan. I hope it won’t be long, but we must hurry before he gets away.”
“Before he gets away!” Zedd howled behind her. “He’s had hours. He’s got a huge lead. There’s no telling where that man went. He’s already ‘gotten away.’”
Ann glanced back over her shoulder. “We have to find him.” She turned back to Holly. “We need to hurry, and I don’t have time to go catch up with Sisters of the Light over on that hill there. I need you to go to them and tell Sister Verna everything you know about what’s happened.”
“What should I tell her?”
“Whatever you know about what you’ve seen and heard while you’ve been with us. Tell her the truth, and don’t make anything up. It’s important that she know what’s going on. Tell her that Zedd and I are going after Nathan, and that when we can we will join up with them, but our first priority is finding the Prophet. Tell her to head north, as they’re doing, to escape the Order.”
“I can do that.”
“It’s not far, and the road right over here will take you to the road they will be riding up, so you won’t miss them. Your horse knows and likes you, so she’ll take good care of you. You’ll be there in just an hour or two, and then you’ll have all the Sisters to keep you safe, and love you. Sister Verna will know what to do.”
“I’ll miss you until you catch up with us,” Holly said, her voice choked with tears.
Ann hugged the little girl. “Oh, child, I’ll miss you so much, too. I wish I could take you with us, you’ve been such a help, but we must hurry if we’re to catch Nathan. The Sisters, especially Prelate Verna, need to know what’s happened. It’s important; that’s why I must send you.”
Holly bravely snuffled back the tears. “I understand. You can count on me, Prelate.”
Ann helped the girl up into the saddle and kissed her hand as she put the reins in them. Ann watched and waved farewell as Holly trotted off toward the Sisters of the Light.
She turned to the fuming wizard. “We’d best be going if we’re to catch Nathan.” She patted his bony shoulder. “It won’t be long. Just as soon as we catch him, I’ll have that collar off your neck, I promise.”
52
The Hagen Woods were as dark and uninviting as ever, but Richard was sure that the mriswith were gone. In their journey through the gloomy wood he hadn’t sensed even one of them. The place, though forbidding, was deserted; the mriswith had all left for Aydindril. He shuddered to think what that meant.
Kahlan sighed nervously, twining her fingers together, as she stared at the sylph’s pleasant, smiling, quicksilver face. “Richard, before we do this, just in case something goes wrong, I want to tell you that I know about what happened when you were a captive here, and I don’t hold it against you. You thought I didn’t love you, and you were alone. I understand.”
Richard leaned closer as he frowned. “What are you talking about? What things I did?”
She cleared her throat. “Merissa. She told me all about it.”
“Merissa!”
“Yes. I understand, and I don’t blame you. You thought you would never see me again.”
Richard blinked in astonishment. “Merissa is a Sister of the Dark. She wants to kill
me.”
“But she told me how when you were here before, she was your teacher. She said that… Well, I met her, and she’s beautiful. You were lonely, and I don’t blame you.”
Richard took her by the shoulders and forced her to turn away from staring at the sliph. “Kahlan, I don’t know what Merissa told you, but I’m telling you the truth: since the day I met you, I’ve loved no one but you. No one. Yes, when you made me put on the collar and I thought I would never see you again, I was lonely, but I never betrayed your love, even when I thought I had lost it. Even though I thought you didn’t want me, I never… with Merissa, or anyone else.”
“Really?”
“Really.”
She smiled her special smile, the one she gave no one but him. “Adie tried to tell me the same thing. I was afraid I would die before I could see you again, and wanted you to know that I love you, no matter what. Part of me is afraid of doing this. I’m afraid I’ll drown in there.”
“The sliph felt you, and she says you can travel. You have an element of Subtractive Magic, too. Only those with both magics can travel. It’ll work. You’ll see.” He smiled encouragement. “It’s nothing to be afraid of, I promise. It’s unlike anything you’ve ever felt before. It’s wondrous. All right, now?”