“Nothing,” Hasso said – nothing he wanted to talk about, anyhow. “I think I am truly Lord Zgomot’s man, too.”
The dreams came back two nights later. He’d been free of them for months, and thought they were gone for good. No such luck. As he lay asleep, wrapped in a blanket by a fire that had guttered down to crimson embers, he felt someone stalking him through the inside of his own head.
Patient as a wolf chasing an elk, the Lenello wizard pursued him through slumber and finally caught him. Hasso was anything but surprised to find it was Aderno. “What do you want?” the German asked.
“What are you up to?” Aderno returned.
“None of your business, not after you try to kill me twice,” Hasso said.
“It’s my king’s business, by the goddess.” When Aderno named her, Hasso saw Velona behind him. “It’s my folk’s business.”
“I am no part of your folk. You make that plain enough. When I come to you, all you want to do is murder me.”
“What are we supposed to do with you?” Yes, that was Velona. Seeing her, hearing her even in dreams tore at Hasso from the inside out. “You’re up to something with the cursed Grenye.”
“You Lenelli don’t want me anymore.” Hasso didn’t waste time denying it.
“King Bottero tried to ransom you. The savage who runs Bucovin wouldn’t take his money,” Velona replied.
What she said was true – and also missed the point. Lord Zgomot was a decent, capable, worried, rather gray little man doing the best job he knew how in a predicament Hasso wouldn’t have wished on his worst enemy. To the Lenelli, he was only a Grenye. He would have been only a Grenye to Hasso, too, but for the fortunes – and misfortunes – of war.
“Sorry. I can’t do anything about it,” Hasso said. “Then you try to kill me. Should I love you after that?” He started bleeding inside again. He still wanted to love Velona, and wanted her to love him.
“We were denying you to the enemy,” Aderno said.
He made perfect military sense. He also made Hasso want to wring his neck. The combination reminded the German of some of his own country’s less clever policies during the war. He said, “When you try to kill me you turn me into an enemy.”
“If you’re a dead enemy, it doesn’t matter,” the wizard said.
If the
“You
“They could kill me, and they don’t,” Hasso answered stolidly. “More than I can say for some people.”
“Killing is better than renegades deserve. Killing is
Hasso had thought his own modest sorcerous abilities were what had kept him from harm when the two of them struck at him in Falticeni. Maybe those abilities helped, but he’d forgotten Falticeni lay at the heart of Bucovin: the place where, for whatever reason, Lenello magic was weakest. Here near the western border…
He didn’t just scream himself awake, as he had in Lord Zgomot’s palace. He puked his guts out, as if he’d eaten bad fish. He shat himself, too. He thought his ears were bleeding, but he was in too much more immediate torment to stick a finger in one of them and find out. When he had to piss, he pissed dark. What had they done to him? Everything but kill him, plainly. While the fit was going on, he almost wished they had.
Rautat and the other Bucovinans stared at him while he writhed and heaved. “I’d heard about this at the palace,” the underofficer said to his comrades – Hasso heard his voice as if from a million kilometers away. “It wasn’t so bad there.” He was right. Nothing could have been as bad as this. Hasso would rather have stood out in the open during a volley of
The only good thing about the fit was that it didn’t last long. Once it passed, Hasso lay on the ground, spent and gasping like a fish out of water. “Give me a little beer,” he choked out. Dumnez poured him some. He didn’t swallow it, but used it to rinse his mouth. It couldn’t get rid of all the foul taste; some of his vomit had gone up his nose. “Where is a stream?” he asked. “Need to wash.”
“Back over there.” Rautat pointed. “Will anything more happen to you?”
“I hope not,” Hasso said.