woman’s never going to be interested in an ugly, third-rank templar.”
“She is.”
“I’m not,” Pavek insisted with a force that surprised himself. “I know better than to overreach.”
Ruari pushed the kivits down and rose unsteadily to his feet. “I’d kill you.”
“She’d kill me first.”
“She wouldn’t. Kashi’s not like that. She doesn’t see the evil in a person.”
He could think of a dozen things to say, all of which would have set them brawling again. Instead, he extended a finger toward a kivit and tickled the tip of the inquisitive creature’s nose.
“All the more reason to keep her and zarneeka out of Urik. You did a good job with that stowaway.”
Ruari sat down again. “Telhami’s angry at me. I never saw her so angry. I thought she was going to invoke the guardian and suck my bones into the ground.”
“Maybe she wanted to, but none of the other druids at that meeting this morning, except Akashia and Telhami, wanted to send zarneeka to Urik, and I don’t think the guardian did either.”
Ruari shredded a blade of grass. “Can you really feel the guardian, or is that just more lies?”
“No lies. I’m a lousy liar.”
Ruari swore softly and shredded another blade of grass. “I wish you’d never come to Quraite.”
“I wish I’d never seen a man poisoned by Laq, then I wouldn’t have needed to come. You ready to go home?”
Ruari said he was, but he was weak and wheezing before they left the grove. So they sat talking by the pool, getting past being enemies without becoming friends. The sun was setting when they returned to the village. Pavek went looking for Yohan, but the dwarf was gone, and so were Akashia, two farmers and five kanks: Telhami’d evoked a whirlwind to separate the ripened zarneeka from the sand, then she’d sealed it up and sent it on its way to Urik.
Chapter Thirteen
The air remained cool from the recent dawn when Akashia, Yohan, and two awestruck Quraite farmers set out afoot from the market village of Modekan, headed for the brilliant yellow walls of Urik. After four day’s travel kank-back across the wastelands, the farmers were eager to see the Lion-King’s city; Akashia wanted to finish their business quickly, uneventfully.
No one knew what Yohan was thinking—except that he didn’t approve, and he hadn’t said more than two words at a time since they left Quraite.
It wasn’t Modekan’s Day for the Urik markets; they had the road to themselves. Akashia had ample time to relax, think, and get anxious again. They took some chances bringing zarneeka to Urik on a day when it and they weren’t expected. She could hope that the Modekan registrar had reported to his superiors in the templarate, and that the repulsive dwarf they traded with would be at his procurer’s table in the customhouse.
And she could hope that the dwarf would shepherd the zarneeka powder to its proper destination: a thousand folded papers of Ral’s Breath powder. But for that hope to become real, she had to hope, above all else, that Just-Plain Pavek was wrong about his former colleagues in the civil bureau.
Akashia believed with all her heart that the chronic aches and illnesses of Urik’s common folk were important enough to justify the risks she was taking. She believed, too, that her mind-bending skills coupled with druidry would be sufficient to protect her, her companions, and the three amphorae nestled in the straw-filled cart Yohan pulled.
When she called her spells and her skills across her mind’s eye, her confidence grew; then something would catch her attention at the side of the road or she’d see the shadow of Just-Plain Pavek lurking in the corner of her memory, and her calm would shatter.
In her heart she believed Pavek was wrong about Urik’s need for zarneeka and Ral’s Breath but, try as she might as she walked, she couldn’t convince herself that he was lying about the city’s danger or the procurer’s duplicity. Grandmother had agreed that Pavek spoke what he fervently believed was the truth. He was transparent in so many ways to both mind-bending and druidry; he’d never make a master of either craft—yet he could evoke the guardian and, somehow, he’d managed to enter Ruari’s grove after Ruari had hidden himself inside it.
She thought she could have found her young friend’s grove and forced herself inside, but by every reckoning she and Grandmother had made, the challenge should have been far beyond Just-Plain Pavek’s abilities… Unless Ruari had welcomed him, in which case one of