appealing.
She snarled her dissatisfaction at the worker who brought their
meals. That was on her tenth day in Maksche.
Things seemed to move slowly in Maksche. Marika’s
complaints continued for a week, growing virulent. Yet nothing
happened.
“Do not cause trouble,” Grauel cautioned.
“They are studying our conduct. It is all some sort of
test.”
“Pardon me if I am skeptical,” Marika said. “I
have walked the dark side a hundred times since we have been here.
I have seen no indication that they even know we are here, let
alone are watching. We have been put out of sight, out of mind, and
are imprisoned in a dungeon of the soul.”
Grauel exchanged glances with Barlog. Barlog observed,
“All things are not seen by the witch’s inner eye,
Marika. You are not omnipotent.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“It means that one young silth, no matter how strong, is
not going to use her talent to see what a cloister full of more
practiced silth are doing if they do not want her to
see.”
Marika was about to admit that that might be possible when
someone scratched at the door. She gestured. “It is not time
to eat. The drought must be over.”
Barlog opened the door.
There stood a silth older than any Marika had encountered
before. She hobbled in, leaning on a cane of some gnarled dark
wood. She halted in the center of the room, surveyed the three of
them with rheumy cataracted eyes. Her half-blind gaze came to rest
upon Marika. “I am Moragan. I have been assigned as your
teacher and as your guide upon the Reugge Path.” She spoke
the Reugge low speech with an intriguing, elusive accent. Or was it
a natural lisp? “You are the Marika who stirred so much
controversy and chaos at our northern fastness.” Not a
question. A statement.
“Yes.” Marika had a feeling this was no time to
quibble about her role at Akard.
“You may go,” Moragan told Grauel and Barlog.
The huntresses did not move. They did not look to Marika for her
opinion. Already they had positioned themselves so that Moragan
stood at the heart of a perilous triangle.
“You are safe here,” Moragan told Marika when no one
moved.
“Indeed? I have your sworn word?”
“You do.”
“And the word of a silth sister is worth the metal on
which it is graven.” She had been studying the apparel of the
old sister and could not make out the significance of its
decorations. “As we who were under the sworn guardianship of
the Reugge discovered. Our packsteads were overrun without aid
coming. And when we fled to the Akard packfast for safety, that too
was allowed to be destroyed.”
“You question decisions of policy about which you know
nothing, pup.”
“Not at all, mistress. I simply refuse to allow policy to
snare and crush me in coils of deceit and broken oaths.”
“They said you were a bold one. I see they spoke the
truth. Very well. We will do it your way. For now.” Moragan
hobbled to a wooden chair, settled slowly, slapped her cane down
atop a table nearby. She seemed to go to sleep.
“Who are you besides Moragan?” Marika asked.
“I cannot read your decorations.”
“Just a worn-out old silth so far gone she is past being
what you would call Wise. We are not here to discuss me, though.
Tell me your story. I have heard and read a few things. Now I will
assess your version of events.”
Marika talked, but to no point. A few minutes later
Moragan’s head dropped to her chest and she began to
snore.
And so it went, day after day, with Moragan doing more asking
and snoring than teaching. That day of her first appearance, she
had been in one of her more lucid periods. Sometimes she could not
recall the date or even Marika’s name. Most of the time she
was of little value except as a reference guide to the
cloister’s more arcane customs. Always she asked more
questions than she answered, many of them irritatingly
personal.
Her role, though, provided Marika with a role of her own. As a
student she occupied a
The Bearens' Hope: Book Four of the Soul-Linked Saga
Lee Ann Sontheimer Murphy