She turned and looked at the drunkard with distaste, but when Kelder reached for her again she rose quickly and crossed to him. She knelt beside him and held out her left hand.
“Here,” she said.
While Iridith watched silently, Kelder used the point of his own knife to draw blood from Irith’s left little finger. He dabbed up a drop on his own little finger, then peeled back one of Ezdral’s eyelids with his other hand and carefully pressed the drop onto the eye beneath.
Ezdral snorted, but did not stir.
Kelder repeated the operation with the other eye, then sat back on his haunches and waited.
Nothing happened, except that Irith said,
The two of them ate their supper that night in resentful silence. At the next table, where Valder and Iridith were bringing each other up to date, Asha made a point of bringing Iridith her meal, to impress her new mistress with her enthusiasm and ability. Whenever the girl looked away Iridith grinned with delight. When Asha was watching, of course, the wizard kept her face serious, accepting the over-attentive service in the spirit in which it was meant.
Afterward, Kelder decided that something had to be done. He suspected that Irith, in terror of being coerced out of her magic, was on the verge of fleeing. That would not do. If she fled this time, somehow, he was less certain than ever before that he would ever see her again. Zindre’s predictions seemed a tenuous thread to bind her with; he could no longer trust only in the prophecy. He wanted to speak to Irith in private, to explain, to tell her he loved her and ask her to marry him.
After all, why should he keep the prophecy secret any longer? If she was to be his wife they had to trust each other.
And even with her magic, even with her refusal to consider a life in Shulara, he still wanted her. They could live in Ethshar, if she wanted, or somewhere else; there was no hurry about going back to Shulara, and he didn’t really care if he
After all, how could an ordinary farmboy have the audacity to try to wed a legendary creature like Irith, without some magical support of his own?
He needed to tell her all that. He needed to talk to her alone, but with the inn full of customers, with servants hurrying hither and yon, finding a suitable place was a challenge.
Finally, in a moment of inspiration, he borrowed a lantern from Valder and suggested to Irith, “Come out to the hilltop with me, and let’s look at the river in the moonslight. Both moons are up; it should be especially pretty.”
She considered him for a long moment before saying, “All right.”
Together they walked up to the top of the ridge behind the inn, not speaking yet, and together they settled onto the grass of the meadow. The night air was cool, but not cold-certainly warmer than it had been on previous evenings. The river was a constantly-changing band of rose and gold sparkles in the light of the two moons, and for a long moment they watched it in silence.
“Thank you,” Kelder said at last, “for curing Ezdral.”
“Well, it wasn’t his fault,” Irith said.
Kelder was still trying to puzzle out exactly what she meant by that when a blood-curdling shriek split the night. Both of them started; the crickets fell silent for a moment before resuming their interrupted chirping.
“What was
“I don’t know,” Kelder said. “I think it came from the inn.” He turned to look.
“That’s Ezdral,” Irith whispered. Kelder turned in surprise, and she added, “He’s really mad at me.”
Kelder had not thought about how Ezdral might react, once the spell was removed. Now that it was thrust under his nose, though, he realized that naturally, the man would be furious. The love spell had protected
And Irith was its obvious target.
Kelder stood and looked back toward the inn.
He could see a shadowy figure, barely visible in the distant light of the torch over the door-a man, standing unsteadily in the road. The figure shook a fist in the air.
“What should we do?” Irith asked, holding Kelder’s leg.
“I don’t know,” Kelder said, frozen with indecision.
The figure by the inn was turning, turning and scanning the dark landscape, and now his gaze climbed the ridge, and Kelder suddenly realized that he must be silhouetted in the moonlight, and that Ezdral might well blame
Ezdral spotted him.