Winterlands 4 - Dragonstar

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Authors: Barbara Hambly
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be her power.
    This attention, this meditation, returned to her now in the dark. She sorted sound from echo, built words from inflection and rhythm of speech. The stillness in which she listened was like a dream, as if, in sleeping, she passed into the nothingness of the darkness itself. From this nothingness she reached toward the demon voices, bodiless as smoke.
    She understood them. That was another thing that the demon Amayon's possession had left in her mind.
    “… seven hundred slaves here.” A gnome's voice, deep and vaguely familiar. She thought it might be one of the guards who had shot her when she'd fallen into the pit-trap in the mine. He spoke in the tongue of the demons. “Folcalor will bring another two hundred at least.”
    Two hundred? Jenny gasped, appalled. All through the North she had heard rumors for weeks of gnomes buying slaves. Not, as they ususally did, to work in the deeper levels of the mines, but paying good silver for children too young to work, cripples whose families wanted to be rid of their upkeep, grandparents who could no longer contribute to the harsh endless work of the Winterlands farms. The gnomes, as usual, denied these rumors as they denied all rumors of ever having human slaves. John had freed a band of them when he'd passed Tralchet Deep in the North—they'd warned him then of more sinister goings-on. The days were long gone when the King could send men into the mines to investi-gate—or do anything about whatever he might find.
    But two hundred slaves? And seven hundred … where? In the Deep? The tunnels, Jenny knew, extended much farther north than most people knew, and there were entrances scattered through the great jagged mountain range of Nast Wall. With the Realm's northern province of Imperteng in rebellion against the King all last summer, it would have been easy, of course, to bring in any number of such slaves. But seven hundred …?
    How would they even move them unseen?
    Morkeleb, she thought. He would know how far the tunnels of the Deep extended to the north; Morkeleb or Miss Mab. The dragon had gone to the surface, to lie on the black rocks far above the tree line, scrying the wind. Would he take note of a coffle that large coming out of the Wyrwoods? Or a succession of such trains? Or would he consider it not a thing of dragons, to care whether gnomes enslaved humans or not?
    “And no luck with the dragon?” A man's voice this time. Again, the timbre was familiar, as if Jenny had heard it before, speaking human words. The gnome must have shaken his head, because the man added a curse. “Unless we find the dragon, we're wasting our time. All this …” By the flex in his voice Jenny knew he gestured to something—what? “… won't give us a toad's spit without her secret name. And you know Folcalor won't listen if we say we can't find him.”
    “We'll find him. Stinkin' snake. Even if we don't, those'll give us power to find the catch-bottle that old Arch-Seer made.”
    Those what? Surely if they'd blasted a tunnel to trap Morkeleb, they'd have known he escaped.…
    “What, in Ernine? With her power over all that land?”
    Catch-bottle? The phrase was an old one, a spell Jenny had only heard of in the lore handed down by the Line of Herne. Since Caerdinn hadn't been clear himself what it meant or how it worked—his master Spaeth having left the North with the last troops of the King's last garrison—Jenny didn't know, either.
    “Her power can only reach so far. We know the bottle was lost when the mages went into the mirror-chamber. For certain she was never trapped in it, the bitch. So all we have to do is find it. How far can it have rolled?”
    The man's voice cursed again. “I'm not going after it, I can tell you.…”
    “Folcalor will go, and you'll go with him or I'll know why. With these here and the ones he'll bring, that should give him the power to see through whatever blinds she can weave.”
    These what? Jenny's mind groped, and she

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