Two of the boys hastily led her mount away, but the ostler’s fumbling for a knife was interrupted by movement at the doorway of the inn. Medair turned to face three people: a pair of Ibisian women, and one sandy-haired Farakkian man. Two of them had their hands on the hilts of swords, the third was the woman Medair had seen on the stair. The White Snake had apparently thought it best to muster reinforcements before joining Medair in the yard.
"I am Jedda Seht las Theomain," the woman said, jade in her ear and disdain in her eyes. "What is your message?"
Irritated, but not anxious to deliver even silly cryptic offerings before an audience, Medair settled for stepping to one side so that the group at the door could see the adept more clearly. The response was quite satisfactory.
"
In an instant they were clustered about him, cutting him down. Medair waited patiently, keeping her nervous desire to flee under control as Jedda las Theomain had her escorted upstairs.
The White Snakes had engaged half the second floor. Inside the main suite were four other people, three Ibisian. Two were obviously servants. The third, an elegant youth in white silk, stared intently at the adept’s still figure, then withdrew to stand near the window. He also wore jade in his ear, a tear-drop depending from a thin chain so long it almost brushed his shoulder. The last in the suite was a Farakkian woman, her flaming hair as startling as her clothing was subdued. A sword rested at one hip and she touched the hilt lightly, then stayed in the background, watching Medair.
The adept was taken away to the depths of the suite, while Medair was directed to a chair in the well-appointed sitting room, and set there to listen to people moving about behind closed doors. Travel-grimed and tired, stomach beginning to rumble audibly, Medair wondered just who "Lukar" was. These people were acting as if they’d found Farak herself tied to the back of the grey.
Eventually, Jedda las Theomain returned. She did not take a seat but stood examining Medair minutely. Medair compensated by staring back just as directly. Full-blood, as Medair guessed
"Tell me your message now," said the woman, not even clothing the order in the stark Ibisian courtesy which had made the invaders seem so bloodless.
"He said to say
"That was all? You are certain?"
Medair nodded slowly.
"Where did you find him?" asked the younger Ibisian woman, seating herself on a brocaded couch to Medair’s left. Medair shifted her gaze, and found concern instead of hauteur. Part of this White Snake was Farakkian.
"Bariback Forest," she said, keeping herself factual. She’d known she’d be interrogated, and it was no good glowering at them. "I saw some smoke and went to investigate and found…a lot of dead people. A couple of different mercenary groups, Kyledrans, Decians, merchants. A blast of fire had taken out about a hundred feet of the forest. It looked like they’d been fighting before that, though, because I found bodies at the edge with battle injuries. Your adept was in the circle but unburnt. Spell shocked and wearing the form of a Kyledran boy. The shape-change wore off yesterday and he…obliged me to bring him here and tell you that."
"Your mishandling of him may cost him his life," las Theomain informed her in a cold yet absentminded voice. "He is not fit to travel."
Sweet, Medair thought, lifting a shoulder. "He wanted the speed. Something about people being due to leave this morning but having problems with obedience."
"Indeed?" Jedda las Theomain asked, her full attention shifting back to Medair. She lifted a hand and began speaking words for truth and binding. Medair hesitated, her fingers closing over the arm of the chair, but she didn’t move. The spell could not force honesty from her, only indicate when she lied. And protesting might prompt them to lock her up somewhere.
"Did Co – did the Kerin say anything else of what had happened?" las Theomain asked.
"No."
"