here with your knees beside his head. Toma, can you hear me?"
Kleckla stopped struggling. He met Tain's eyes.
"I'm trying to sew you up. You have to hold still."
Rula ran her fingers over Toma's features.
"Good. Try to relax. This won't take a minute. Yes. Good thinking, Steban."
The boy had hurled himself away, heaved, then had taken control. He returned with fists full of wool. Tain used it to sponge blood.
"Hold the wound together, Steban."
The boy's fingers quivered when the blood touched them, but he persevered.
"Good. A soldier's got to do what's got to be done, like it or not. Toma? I'm starting."
"Uhm."
The suturing didn't take a minute. The bandaging took no longer.
"Rula. Make some broth. He'll need lots of it. I'm going to the barn. I'll get something for the pain. Steban. Wash your hands."
The boy was staring at his father's blood on his fingers.
A gust of wind stirred fire and door covering. The wind was cold. Then an avalanche of rain fell. A more solid sound counterpointed the patter of raindrops.
"Hailstones," Rula said.
"I have to get my horse inside. What about the sheep?"
"Steban will take care of them. Steban?"
Thunder rolled across the Zemstvi. Lightning scarred the night. The sheep bleated.
"Steban! Please! Before they panic."
"Another lesson, Steban." Tain guided the boy out the door. "You've got to go on, no matter what."
The rain was cold and hard. It fell in huge drops. The hailstones stung. The thunder and lightning picked up. The wind had claws of ice. It tore at gaps in Tain's clothing. He guided the roan into the rude barn. The gelding's presence calmed the mule and cow. Tain rifled his packs by lightning flashes.
Steban drove the sheep into the barn too. They would be crowded, but sheltered.
Tain went to help.
He saw the rider in the flashes, coming closer in sudden jerks. The man lay against his mount's neck, hiding from the wind. His destination could be nowhere but the stead.
Tain told Steban, "Take this package to your mother. Tell her to wait till I come in."
Steban scampered off.
Tain backed into the lee of the barn. He waited.
The rider passed the spring. "Torfin. Here."
The paint changed direction. The youth swung down beside Tain. "Oh, what a night. What're you doing out in it, friend?"
"Getting the sheep inside."
"All right for a Caydarman to come in out of it?"
"You picked the wrong time, Torfin. But come on. Crowd the horse inside."
Lightning flashed. Thunder rolled. The youth eyed Tain. The ex-soldier still wore his shortsword.
"What happened?"
"You haven't been to the Tower?"
"Not for a couple days."
"Torfin, tell me. Why do you hang around here? How come you're always watching Steban graze sheep?"
"Uh . . . . The Klecklas deserve better."
Tain helped with the saddle. "Better than what?"
"I see. They haven't told you. But they'd hide their shame, wouldn't they?"
"I don't understand."
"The one they call the Witch. She's their daughter Shirl."
"Lords of Darkness!"
"That's why they have no friends."
"But you don't blame them?"
"When the Children of Hell curse someone with the Power, is that a parent's fault? No. I don't blame them. Not for that. For letting her become a petulant, spoiled little thief, yes. I do. The Power-cursed choose the right- or left-hand path according to personality. Not so?"
"It's debatable. They let me think she was dead."
"They pretend that. It's been a little over a year since she cast her spell on the Baron. She thought he'd take her to Iwa Skolovda and make her a great lady. But she doesn't understand politics. The Baron can't go back. And now she can't come home. Now she's trying to buy a future by stealing."
"How old are you, Torfin?"
"Nineteen, I think. Too old."
"You sound older. I think I like you."
"I'm a Caydarman by chance, not inclination."
"I think you've had pain from this too."
A wan smile crossed Torfin's lips. "You make me wonder. Do you read minds? What are you, carrying such a sword?"
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