Dionne glanced at the keep, which now looked no more imposing than some of the Valdemar border keeps, a large, square building with a lookout turret on each corner, few windows, and a stout wooden doorway. There would be buildings and storage rooms inside, and whoever else the mage had kidnapped.
She started toward it, Rhiannon at her side. Along the way, Rhiannon continued the song of joy.
“What will happen to him?” Dionne asked.
Deck smiled. “We’ll let him go far away from you two. Valdemar is uncomfortable for mages now, and he is truly changed. Someone so young should have a second chance.”
Dionne smiled agreement, and Rhiannon said, “Yes, he should.”
Bard Breda and Master Healer Gavin both wore solemn faces as they listened to the twins’ story for the second time. They were in a small classroom they’d commandeered for the purpose, Rhiannon and Dionne sitting in student chairs while the two teachers sat at the front. At the end of their story, the girls sat with their hands folded in their laps. Breda was not particularly fooled; they were not as meek as they were pretending to be. In fact, she was pretty sure they’d get up and walk away from their callings if she told them they would have to finish out their years apart.
The girls twitched and fidgeted lightly, a foot here, a little finger there. Clearly, they thought it at least possible that Breda and Gavin would force them to separate again.
Breda had decided Gavin deserved to pronounce their judgment. He looked very solemn and serious as he said, “We guess you want to stay together?”
The twins nodded vigorously.
“You think your bond is something more than we thought, something worth nurturing and feeding.”
They nodded again.
“All right.”
The two girls screeched jubilantly and held each other, and then seemed to recall they were almost adults and settled back into their seats, still smiling.
Breda leaned over and whispered in Gavin’s ear. “I’m glad you were right. May we always learn from our students.”
He leaned over and whispered back. “If we hadn’t separated them, we would never have known how strong that bond is.”
It was Breda’s turn to speak. “You two sound like magpies. We’re not done, yet.”
Two faces surrounded by red hair looked back at her, pretending innocence.
She leaned down and pulled a box out from under her chair. She took out two new uniforms: one scarlet and one bright green.
The twins held their tongues and reached demurely for the symbols of their new status with reverent hands. Good. Maybe their adventure had helped them understand the new realities of a Valdemar without Herald-Mages. They would have to be part of the solution, as would all of the Bards and Healers and Heralds together.
Three classes of Valdemar, working together. The Power of Three. She could already hear the refrain of a song building in her head.
What Fire Is
Janni Lee Simner has published nearly three dozen short stories, including appearances in
,
magazine, the first Valdemar anthology,
, and the third,
. Her latest novel,
, will be published in early 2009. Visit her Web site at
www.simner.com
.
When I was small, I told my parents about my dreams. I thought they’d be pleased. We worshiped the Sun, after all, saying prayers morning and night to the round stone disk above our hearth. (The merchant’s daughter, Cara, said her family had a gold pendant, but I didn’t believe her; no one had that much gold.)
Yet as I spoke, my father’s face grew hard as the frozen winter fields. “Don’t talk of such things, Tamar. Try to dream happier dreams.”
“Yes,” I told them both. “Yes, I will try.”
When I was older, I called fire into the waking world.