The water was warm. Then warmer. Verging on hot.
Harmodius laughed aloud. ‘Well done!’ he said.
The captain lay back in the bath, tired. Amazed. ‘I had help,’ he said, to cover his confusion. ‘Magus, that shouldn’t have been possible. How is it possible?’
Harmodius shook his head. ‘I have theories. No proof.’ He rubbed his neck. ‘I didn’t plan to ride out on errantry, two weeks ago. I planned to find some quiet, far from a trap Thorn had set for me. I wanted to perform some experiments.’
‘Instead, you got the siege.’ The captain was soaping himself shamelessly.
‘I managed a few of my experiments,’ Harmodius said.
‘Like what?’ asked the captain.
‘I got a Wild caster to use sunlight instead,’ Harmodius said smugly. ‘I
The captain shook his head. He ought to be angry. But he felt-
He felt very powerful, indeed. ‘What if you were wrong?’
Harmodius shrugged. ‘It was unlikely. I had reason for my theory in the first place. Besides, I no sooner got here than I found a woman who cast in both colours. Wild and sun. Every time I watch her heal, it is like a miracle.’ He rubbed his hands together in glee. ‘Last night I linked with the Abbess,’ he said.
‘You sound like a boy bragging about his first kiss,’ the captain said.
Harmodius laughed. ‘You
‘I like the world fine as it is,’ Tom said from the doorway. ‘When you two man-witches are done having your bloody rites, sacrificing babes and eating them or whatever heathen thing you do, I’m ready with the day’s muster.’
The captain was still lying in the hot water, unmoving. ‘Did you come to find me just to experiment on me? Or did you have another motive, Magus?’
‘Thorn is planning to attack us. Directly.’ The Magus was trying to put the tapestry back over the opening. For a man of such power, he was curiously inept at the task. ‘Last night he learned he could overcome our defences. Now he’ll come.’
Tom came over, shkk’d him out of the way, and reached the corners out to tug them over heavy iron spikes driven into the end beams of the floor above.
‘Really?’ The captain asked. ‘How do you know?’
Harmodius shrugged and poured himself some wine. ‘We are linked to each other, for good or ill. I can feel his fear. And his anger, and his gloating. As can the Abbess.’
‘Fear?’ Tom asked. ‘Fear? Yon mighty godling is afraid o’ we?’ He laughed.
But the captain understood. ‘He must be afraid,’ he said. ‘I would be.’
‘He has a great deal to lose,’ Harmodius said. ‘But he knows he can destroy our trebuchet with one shot if he gets close enough. Of course, he has to risk himself on the plain to get it, hence his attempt to get it done with the wyverns. But they’ve failed.’
Tom shook his head. ‘You make him sound like he’s but an engine himself.’
Harmodius bobbed his head. ‘Not bad, Tom. In a way, the magi aren’t much more than siege engines, on a battlefield. Except we move much faster and we are much deadlier. But I agree, the effect is the same.’
The captain made a face. ‘Why must he get the trebuchet? So he can move his engines against the Bridge Castle?’
Harmodius nodded. ‘I suppose so. That’s not my department.’ He put his wine cup down. ‘I’ll leave you to get ready. The Abbess asked us for sunset.’ He paused in the doorway. ‘Don’t stop practising, young man. We need you.’
Tom watched him go. ‘He’s an odd one and no mistake.’