Fire in the Mist
CHAPTER 1 -- A Pox on Bright
In front of a fieldstone cottage, on a crisp spring morning, Risse
Leyeadote and her leggy, dark-eyed daughter, Faia, hugged each other
goodbye.
Faia pulled away first and grinned. "I love you Mama. I will see
you soon."
"Such a hurry. My youngest daughter cannot wait to abandon me
for the flocks and the fields."
"Oh, Mama --!"
Risse laughed, then held out a wrapped packet and a necklace.
"Take these, Faiachin. I have more than enough jerky here to get
you to the first of the stay-stations, and I have finished the work
on a special amulet -- added protection against wolves. And I am
sending my love. You have your erda?"
Faia nodded
"Wolfwards?"
Another nod.
"Knife? Herb bag? Matches? Needles? . . ."
Faia nodded at each item on her mother's list until finally she
burst out laughing. "Mama! How many years have I been taking
the flock upland? I have everything I need. I will be fine, the
sheep will be fine, the dogs will be fine, and I will see you in
late summer with a nice bunch of healthy lambs and fat ewes."
Her mother smiled wistfully. "I know, love. But it is a mother's
job to worry. If I did not, who would? Besides, I miss you when
you are not here."
Faia's face grew serious for a minute. "I always miss you, too,
Mama -- but it will not be forever."
Her mother nodded. "Have you said your goodbyes to Rorin or Baward
yet?"
Faia caught the conspiratorial inflection and winked. "To Rorin,
yes. Last night. Baward is going to meet me at the Haddar Pass pasture
in a month, and we are going to -- ah, graze the flocks together
for a few days."
"Are you, now?" Her mother smiled a bit wistfully, remembering
long summers in her own youth spent "grazing the flocks" with one
young shepherd or another. "Remember to use the alsinthe, then.
Well, I'm glad you aren't going to be up there alone the whole time.
Really, Faia, there seem more wolves than usual this year. Do not
forget to set the wolfwards. Not even once. Remember, Faljon says
'Wolves need not knock at the door that's open.'"
Faia hugged her mother again, then whistled for the dogs. "I know,
Mama. I know." She hung the brightly colored chain of the silver-and-wolf-tooth
amulet around her neck and tucked the jerky into one of the pockets
of her heavy green felt erda. "Love you, mama."
"Love you, too, Faiachin," she heard her mother call when she
was halfway down the slope to the pasture.
Faiachin, Faia thought, and winced. Sometimes she
still thinks I am five years old instead of nineteen.
Chirp and Huss, black-and-white streaks of barking energy, were
under the fence and hard at work before she could even get across
the stile. They needed little direction for her to pack the sheep
into a nice tight bunch and get them moving to the gate. Diana,
the old yellow-eyed lead goat, knew the routine too. She trotted
up to Faia and stopped. Faia put the supply harness on her, and
checked to make sure the bags on either side were securely attached.
The bags held emergency rations for Faia and the dogs and coins
for the stay-stations. They also made Faia's pack lighter, and she
was grateful for that.
Faia scratched the goat behind the ears and tapped her once on
the rump with her staff to hurry her to her place at the front of
the flock. That done, the flock, the dogs, and she moved onto the
narrow two-rut cart-path that would dwindle to a dent in the grass
by the time they got to the highlands.
The sheep, their bellies already starting to swell with lambs,
looked oddly naked after the shearing. They trotted after Diana
while Chirp and Huss ran vigorously at their heels, nipping and
barking and otherwise trying to demonstrate to Faia that they were
the only reason the sheep were going anywhere. Faia suspected a
fair amount of the show at this point was just because the dogs
were so damned glad to be heading for the highlands again.
And as for her --
She started whistling. The tune was "Lady Send the Sunshine,"
but she thought up some words for the chorus and switched abruptly
from whistling to raucous singing.
"No damned shearing
No more carding,
No more spinning
And no dyeing!
No more weaving
And no sewing --
Flocks must to the uplands go."
She liked it enough that she trilled it a few more times, getting
louder and louder with each rendition, until with her last chorus,
she threw in some silly dance steps with her brass-tipped staff
as her partner.
The trees that lined the lane arched over her head, blossoming
or barely greening; spring smelled fresh and earthy and new; and,
Lady, it is good to be on my way and free! was the thought
foremost in her mind.
At the top of the first hill, the trees were cleared and she turned
to look back at Bright nestled below her. At her own house, which
lay nearest her point of view, a wisp of smoke rose from the chimney.
Further back, the smith's forge was already going at full blast,
and she could just catch the steady "clink, clink" of the smith's
hammer on the anvil as it drifted across the distance. The littlest
children played tag in the cobblestoned street; their older sibs
helped mothers and fathers with the serious work of readying the
plows and harnesses for ground-breaking and planting. She could
see Nesta shoving round loaves of bread into the tall stacks of
ovens -- an older relative of those loaves rested in her pack, along
with some cheese from Nesta's sister, Gredla.
She smiled. Home, wonderful, home -- where just at the moment,
unfortunately, everybody was busy as birds with nestlings. Thank
the Lady for giving her the gift of tending; if it were not for
that, she'd be home doing the dull labor, like tilling, or planting,
or pulling weeds, and some other lucky soul would be heading for
the hills for the summer. For, thanks to her magic with flocks and
dogs, ahead of her lay the upland pastures. There she could dally
about and play her reed-flute and watch the stars and admire the
newborn lambs when they came. And cloudgaze nearly to her heart's
content.
The flock trotted onward and she blew Bright a smug little kiss
and hurried after them.
Risse watched her youngest child depart and felt a special pang
of maternal longing. Nineteen years old, tall,strong, and beautiful,
Faia was everything she could have hoped for in a daughter,and more.
In spite of Faia's heated arguments to the contrary, Risse was sure
there would be special young men soon; not the current casual lovers,
but men Faia would want to have children with. And Faia's life would
change as she had to accept responsibility for babies. She would
have less time to wander the hills, less time to play with her dogs.
Risse tried to imagine her daughter with children, and came up with
a mental picture of Faia with beautiful babies swaddled on her back
as she bounded across an upland pasture after her sheep. The older
woman grinned. it was actually the only way she could imagine her
youngest with children.
She will be such a boon to the village -- when she grows up
and gets her father's wayfaring ways out of her system.
There was more to Faia than stubbornness and independence and
wanderlust, though, and Risse worried about that, too.
She has more of the Lady's power than I have ever sensed before
-- even if it has not surfaced yet. She's like a river -- deep and
quiet and unbelievably strong. I just wish she had more interest
in exploring her talent -- the Lady does not give gifts in order
for them to be wasted.
Risse shrugged her anxieties off. She was having plain old mother-worries
compounded by the fact that this was the last of her four children
to grow up. Those worries, added to her "wolf-worries," were giving
her the worst case of jitters she'd ever had. Still, life was dangerous.
She carried memories of packs of wolves, sudden snow-squalls, avalanches,
big mountain cats, and crumbling mountain paths from her own summers
spent with the sheep. The highlands posed threats even to smart,
cautious, experienced shepherds like her daughter. She hoped Faia
did not run into more trouble than she could handle.
The amulet should help. I spent enough time and energy on
it. If she finds out what it really does, though. . .
Faia's mother shook her head ruefully. Faia's independence was
legendary in Bright. Faia asked help from no one -- never
had, even as a tiny child, and Risse figured, probably never would.
So Risse had done a thing she considered slightly sneaky. She made
a link between her and her daughter, which would let her know if
Faia needed help without having to wait for Faia to ask.
The amulet would do exactly what she'd told her daughter it would.
It would ward off all but the boldest or most crazed of wolves --
two or four-legged. But it would also carry a distress message from
Faia to her mother, who could then summon help. There's a chance
Faia will sense the link, Risse thought. It wasn't likely.
Faia rarely heard -- or felt -- anything that she didn't want to
hear. Besides, it was a chance Risse had to take. Her nerves screamed
with the possibilities of disaster -- wolves, her dreams said --
and the signs of wolves were heavier this year than they had been
in a decade. She had an uneasy feeling about them.
Risse had learned to trust her feelings.
Hunting the Corrigan's Blood>>
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