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Wren Journeymage
Sherwood Smith
Chapter One
Wren
peered out the open window in her room at Cantirmoor’s Magic School. The
sun
shone on fuzzy green buds on all the branches.
Birdsong carried on the breeze that smelled like new grass and turned
soil . . . so what was wrong?
Of
course! She was too warm.
Laughing,
she pulled off the heavy woolen winter tunic she’d just put on out of
habit,
and reached in her storage chest for her light cotton summer tunic,
folded away
so many long months ago.
But
where were her sandals? Ah. Hiding
behind a pile of books of historical plays that she’d been meaning to
take back
to the palace archive, but it had always been too snowy, too sleety, too
cold.
She
sighed, and began to pick up the books.
May as well haul them all back now, and get it done at once. She’d have
to clean her room out anyway, for
this spring she was expected to write up her journeymage project,
petition the
Magic Council through Master Halfrid, and then get to work. In addition
to her other studies. And sometime, in the next year or two or
three, she’d complete the project, present it to the Magic Council, and
hope to
be awarded the white tunic and blue sash of a master mage.
Master mage. Mistress Wren.
She
laughed at herself again. The idea felt
too much like play acting. Well, that
day lay somewhere in the hazy future.
Maybe by then she’d be used to the idea.
First,
to make sure she had all the borrowed books. She scouted under the bed,
under
the desk, behind her storage chest, on her shelf. Sure enough, three
small
books turned up.
Now
the pile nearly reached her chin. You
borrow two, then three, then one, then another two, and suddenly you
find you
have almost twenty books that don’t belong to you, and have to be lugged
back.
“Sooner
done, sooner over with,” she muttered, backing out her door.
“What?”
She
whirled around, almost dropping the books onto the toes of a tall foxy
faced
fellow with long, unruly brown hair.
“Tyron!”
“You
were expecting maybe Andreus?”
“If
I were expecting a social call from a wicked king, I would have worn my
silk
gown.” Wren simpered. “With armor over
it,” she added, pretending to curtsey.
Though she nearly dropped the books.
Tyron
smiled, turning a thumb to her stack.
“What’ve you got there? Magic
texts for your journeymage project?”
“Is
that a hint for me to get busy? Actually
they are plays. Going back to the palace, since I’m due to visit Tess
anyway.”
A
couple of magic students passing by gave Wren covert glances. She
pretended not to notice. Nobody but she called the new young queen
‘Tess.’ Wren, having spent years with
Teressa in an orphanage when the then-princess was in hiding, couldn’t
think of
her as anything else.
Tyron
waved a hand. “Go visit Teressa. Get rid of your books. I wasn’t
dropping any hints. You told me as soon as the first fine spring
weather came you’d get started researching for your petition. I’m here
to find out if you mean it, or if I
can get you to teach the basic illusions class.”
“Of
course I’ll help,” Wren said, hiding an inward sigh. It was beginning
to look like this year would
be like last, but how could she complain?
The
Magic School was mostly repaired from the destruction caused by Lirwani
warriors the winter before last. Masters
had been either promoted, like Tyron, or else hired from a distant
school to
replace the ones killed during the war.
But the Magic School was still short two positions—and Master Halfrid,
who was the head of the school as well as the Queen’s Mage, had been
going off
on extended trips to see to some sort of Magic Council business.
Everyone therefore had extra duties to keep
the school running more or less smoothly.
Tyron
gave Wren a rueful look. “Just today and
tomorrow. Fliss was the only we had to send north on an errand, and
she’ll be
gone two days.” He shook his head. “You’ve been great at helping out
with the
beginners, but Halfrid really wants you to have some time to think about
your
journeymage project. Now, get to the palace before your arms fall off.”
Wren
was glad to comply. Her arms already ached.
Before
she’d gotten ten steps outside the vine-covered archway leading to the
palace
road, one of the younger students popped round the corner, almost ran
into her,
and backed hastily away.
“Oh,
sorry, Mistress Wren.”
“Just
Wren. Out here.” Mistress Wren. She knew
it was just an honorary sort of title—given by the younger students to
senior
mage students who helped teach classes—but it made her feel
uncomfortable, like
she was pretending to be something she wasn’t.
Especially as the boy’s round brown eyes
looked so, well, respectful. Suddenly
Wren felt old. She’d always been the
youngest, but now she wasn’t any more.
The school was full of boys and girls much younger. How had that
happened without her noticing?
“Do
you want some help with those?” the boy asked shyly. Tam, that was his
name.
“I’m
going to the palace.”
Tam
smiled. “I know. Your weekly meeting with the queen. Everyone knows
that. It’s on my way. More or less.” He reached for the top four or
five books,
and her burden eased just a bit.
“So,
how do you like Basics?” she asked, feeling obliged to say something to
her
helper as they walked along the sunlit road toward the city gates.
Tam
wrinkled his nose. “Boring. But I sure do like illusions class.
Especially when you teach it,” he added in a
rush. “We all think so.”
Wren
laughed. “Flattery will not get you
through your Basics Test. I’m not a
Master Mage!”
“But
you are a good teacher,” Tam said earnestly.
“You’re funny. You make us laugh,
so it’s never boring, but somehow we learn a lot.”
“Tam!”
Two
more brown-clad students ran up, both
wearing spring sandals. The tall one, a boy, greeted them, then said,
“Aren’t you going to the pastry-shop, Tam?”
“Stopping
at the palace first. Just to help Mistress Wren with these books,” Tam
explained, brandishing his share of the burden.
“Just
Wren outside the class,” Wren muttered.
“We’ll
help too,” the girl said, digging an elbow into her companion’s side.
The
two each took a few books off Wren’s stack, leaving her with only four.
The
girl said, “We were going to get pastries, to celebrate the nice
weather. We would invite you along, Mistress Wren,
but—”
“You
have to meet the queen,” the tall boy put in.
“We all know that.”
Wren
began to say “Just Wren!” but then she shrugged. They were too used to
classroom politeness, that was all.
As
they passed up the royal road and through the city gates, the younger
students
began chattering happily about the prospects of spring, and who was
making
their Basics test soon, and wondering what kinds of questions might be
asked. Wren was reminded of her own
classmates, when she first came to the school.
Spring
bloomed delightfully everywhere, filling the air with the scents of new
herbs
and blossoming trees. Windows in the
living areas above the shops were unshuttered, letting in fresh air for
the
first time in months. Some people put
fresh-washed quilts over the sills to dry in the sun, others were busy
setting
out flower boxes full of blooms carefully nurtured through the snowy
season.
They
passed a bakery. Tam veered a couple of steps, as though drawn in by
magic
spell toward the compelling aroma of baking cinnamon buns. Wren
smothered a laugh, just as horns
sounded, faint but clear, from somewhere beyond the buildings: horns!
Those
were the horns of outriders—unfamiliar horns, playing a fast,
challenging
chord. Moments later, the palace bells
rang the quick Alert at your station signal. People stopped,
listened, then some
scurried inside their houses and slammed doors and windows. Others
hastened on, ducking inside the doors
of shops.
Tam
whirled around and peered anxiously down the cobbled Royal Road toward
the city
gates, where sentries’ outlines could be made out against the clear
morning
sky. They too had gone still.
“Those
are not Lirwanis,” Wren said, trying to sound calm. Easy.
“They didn’t blow their horns quite like that. Their horns blatted
more. Like this.” She put
up her free hand, held her nose, and squawked a parody of the war horns
of the
invaders two winters before.
“That’s
right, you were in the middle of the war,” the tall boy said. “Did you
really—”
“I
don’t want to hear any horrible war stories,” the girl interrupted, her
voice
sharp. “I heard enough from my mother.”
“But
those of us who got hidden away safely, well, we have to remember, we
have to
be ready, that’s what I keep hearing,” Tam retorted.
The
girl paled, then she glared at Tam, her lips parting--
To
prevent an argument from starting, Wren said, “How about a funny war
story?” And when three faces turned her way, she
resumed her brisk pace, heading up an alleyway that was a shortcut to
the
palace. “Would you like to hear how I managed to get myself kicked by my
own
shoes?”
“It
was the protection spells,” the tall boy exclaimed. “Wasn’t it?
That Master Tyron laid over the school, before the Lirwanis came and
tried to destroy it?”
“Tyron
and Laris,” Wren said, her chest hurting.
Never forget Laris. “Well, Tyron
had gotten most of the spells undone before I arrived back at
Cantirmoor, and
don’t think it wasn’t a whole lot more work than it had been to place
the
spells!”
The
girl nodded soberly. “If you didn’t keep
notes you have to find them.”
“And
if they overlap—”
“And
if you get attacked—”
Wren
nodded at each speaker, then said, “So Tyron and Laris didn’t get to all
the
dormitory rooms. At that time Fliss and
I were sharing, you see. And Tyron had
taken some extra care with the rooms of his friends. So I arrived back,
tired. All I wanted was to
fall into bed and sleep for a year. So I
open the door. Tyron yells Wait! But it’s too late. Shoe
attack! Not just my shoes but Fliss’s
hurled themselves at my head, and began thumping me good!”
All
three laughed, though the girl looked back with a quick, tense movement
when
the horns sounded again, this time much closer.
“I
was howling and dancing around, and Tyron couldn’t release the spell
because he
was laughing too hard. When he finally
managed, and it seemed to take forever, did I smart! When people count
up war
wounds, I have to admit the worst of mine came from my own shoes.”
Wren
and her companions rounded a corner, reaching the Royal Road again.
They were very close to the palace now,
walking swiftly past the fine three-story houses belonging to nobles or
wealthy
citizens, pale stone homes with tall windows, trees and small gardens
before
them. The thundering clatter of horse
hooves could just be made out above the thinning of city traffic, and a
pall of
yellow-tan dust hung in the air over the city gates. All the
pie-sellers and carters and children
and dogs dashed madly right and left to get out of the way lest they be
trampled.
“If
we hurry, we can get through the palace gates first,” Wren said. “I
wonder who that is? How arrogant, galloping smack through the
city, right when market-traffic is the worst.”
Even
Garian Rhismordith, Teressa’s cousin and now the foremost noble of
court, was
no longer arrogant enough to do that. Already Wren hated the newcomer.
She and her companions sped up until they
were skipping, the books jiggling in their arms; Wren might be short and
round,
but she was a fast walker when she was determined.
Still,
the fastest walker in the world is not going to outrun a galloping
horse. The drum of hooves on flagstones and the
newcomers’ horns blasting sent Wren’s group scrambling onto the grassy
verge
just before they reached the palace’s arched gateway.
Wren
whirled around, glaring up at the leading rider. Then her jaw dropped.
She recognized that tall young man, the broad
shoulders, the long gleaming black hair falling loose to blend into the
shadows
of a fine black woolen riding cloak.
“That’s
Hawk!”
She
wasn’t aware that she’d spoken until he raised a gloved hand and the
entire
cavalcade came to a spectacularly dashing halt, horses shuddering and
tossing
heads, hooves striking sparks on the cobblestones, outriders with their
banners
snapping in the breeze.
Hawk
slung his cloak back over one shoulder, revealing a splendid riding
tunic of
gold-embroidered black, fitted instead of long and loose, and fitted
black
trousers instead of the loose ones she was used to seeing on the fellows
around
her. His riding boots were black and
glossy.
He
leaned back against the saddle cantle, looking down at Wren with lazy
eyes and
a mocking smile. “Ah, it’s the stripe-haired magic prentice. With a
trail of goslings.” With a careless wave he indicated the
students.
“These
geese can bite,” Wren stated. “If you
don’t believe me, climb down and watch.”
Hawk’s
mocking smile deepened at the corners, his followers laughed, and Tam
flushed,
but he looked too afraid to speak. The
girl’s lips were moving. Practicing
spells, Wren thought in approval.
Hawk
ignored them. “From what I hear, Cantirmoor’s been boring this past
year,” he
went on. “Aren’t you glad to see
me? You know things are never dull when
I show up.”
Wren
scowled. “If you’re here to make trouble
for Tess, you’ll wish things were dull,” she stated.
Hawk
laughed. “Still hot at hand, I
see.” Surprisingly, his tone was not at
all cruel, it was more teasing. His
slanted brows quirked even more at the ends, and he said, now laying his
gauntleted hand over his heart, “But I am not here to make trouble. Far
from it!
I am here on a mission of peace, good will, and maybe even romance.”
Wren
pruned her mouth. “Romance? Euw!
What do you mean—” Then she realized, and gasped. “You can’t!
You wouldn’t!”
Hawk’s
laughter was as mocking as his smile.
“But yes, my unromantic young mage.
I am here in my legitimate position as heir to the Rhiscarlan coronet,
to court your Queen Teressa.”
©2010 by Sherwood
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