“These people are behind us,” Kalamadea said, in a tone of strain.
She turned, to find herself staring at the point of a spear, held by one of the half-dozen warriors who had crept up behind her little party while they watched the group below. The warriors were all quite alert, quite competent-looking.
And she could not touch the minds of a single one of them. When she tried, she touched that curious blankness she had met before.
Behind the spear-carriers, the bulls stood patiently, watching them and their masters. She had the feeling that they wouldn’t stay patient if she and her crew charged, however.
On the other hand, they didn’t have much choice. If they didn’t make an escape attempt now, they probably would never get another chance, assuming they weren’t killed out-of-hand.
Mero launched the attack before she could say anything; he flung a levin-bolt at the nearest fighter. It crackled through the air between him and the warrior, blue-white as lightning, and just as powerful.
The levin-bolt touched his armor, and was deflected off into the grass, leaving a scorched mark there—despite the fact that the warrior made no move to counter it himself. Worse, he didn’t seem at all startled by the attack. He hadn’t moved, not even to step back involuntarily. It was as if he had known he was safe from magic attacks.
Blast! Mero had taken care of any chance to parley—and it was obvious these people weren’t going to be spooked off by a display of power.
I’d better try something quick! Shana flung an attack of pain and blindness at the mind of the one holding the spear on her at the same time that Mero flung a second magical levin-bolt. This was a combination of the elf-shot magic that the elven lords used, and a mental attack of the sort the human wizards chose. It should have worked, felling her attacker. Even if he was protected against elven magic, he shouldn’t have been proof against the combination of elven and human magics.
He didn’t even blink. The attack went into that curious blankness that surrounded his mind, and was absorbed, effortlessly.
She stared back into the deep brown eyes of the warrior facing her, and took a deep breath.
“I think we’re in trouble,” Keman said quietly, getting slowly to his feet as the warrior nearest him gestured he should do so with his spear.
Shana did not bother to thank him for the observation.
“I think we should surrender,” Kalamadea added, as yet more riders thundered up on their shaggy mounts, spears at the ready. “I really do think we should surrender.”
“Fine,” Shana snapped, without taking her attention from the spear pointed at her throat. “Now—just how do you pro pose we do that? These are strangers; they don’t know our language, and we don’t know theirs! One wrong move—” She didn’t bother to finish the sentence.
Myre had led her two charges down into places that Rena had never dreamed existed in the estate cellars—not all of them very nice, most of them very dirty. The maid hadn’t really wanted to take Rena along at all, even when Rena used the argument she’d used on Lorryn, but she had finally agreed when Lorryn told her flatly that he was not leaving without Rena. The maid had changed what had always been a faintly superior attitude to one that was faintly insolent. Yet Rena could not find it in her to object; they were, after all, at her mercy. She didn’t have to help them.
They threw together what supplies and weapons they could as Myre led them to rummage through the storerooms; their short time before the household woke stretched considerably by Lorryn, and a magic he used to keep the inhabitants of the house sleeping soundly and a lot longer than they normally did. They didn’t dare go out of the house itself, for there was no way of extending the magic to the stables and slave pens and beyond, so all of the useful weapons and gear (not to mention horses) that lay outside the house walls might just as well have been on the moon for all that they could reach it
They fled into the cellars carrying crude packs made up of bedding, with straps improvised from belts. Rena carried the food they filched from the kitchen, knives, a firestriker, and a single metal water bottle she’d found in the cellars. Lorryn carried his bow and his arrows, knives and sword, his own clothing and bedding, and things Myre had found for them: rope, a small axe, a huge square of waterproofed silk, and their heavy cloaks, which were too bulky for Rena to take.
There were exits to the outside from the cellars, doors through which barrels and boxes were delivered without having to take them through the kitchen or any other door. Myre tried all of them until she found one that was unlocked. They scrambled up over a pile of roots tumbled down through a hatchway from above, when she tried that and found it open.
The roots were filthy and hard as rocks, and Rena could hardly imagine how they could be made edible.
They popped out of the hatchway into the dim gray of false dawn, scuttled across the yard into the relative shelter of the kitchen gardens, and from there followed Myre across the paddocks and fenced-in home-fields toward the edge of the estate. Each field was bounded by hedges and ditches bringing irrigation water, ideal cover for someone who was escaping.
Except that they were going in the opposite direction from the gate and the road. Rena hadn’t seen the point of that; the estate was completely walled in, and the only entrance was at the front of the manor. But she was afraid to say anything; Myre could decide to leave her behind “accidentally,” and in this half-light, it wouldn’t be difficult to do so. Then what would she do? It would be rather difficult to explain what she was doing, dressed in the clothing of a male slave, carrying a pack, with her hair hacked off at chin length. Even if she made her way back to her own quarters undetected, the hair would still be difficult to explain, and taken with Lorryn’s absence, would be bound to get her into immediate trouble.
Finally they came to the wall; made of smooth stone, it was many feet thick at the bottom to prevent anyone digging under it. It towered above them, and as Rena already knew, the top was well protected by shards of glass set into mortar. There was no way to climb it, and no way around it.
But Myre didn’t seem dismayed; instead, she led the way along the fence as the false dawn gave way to the true blue-gray light of early morning. Rena was getting more and more nervous; in a little while the supervisors would be bringing the slaves out here to work the fields, and they would be seen. What was Myre up to?
But Myre clearly knew exactly what she was doing; she led them to something Rena hadn’t even dreamed existed, a place where a small, deep ditch or aqueduct led under the wall. The tunnel itself was as black as a starless night, and seemed to be very long. It probably led underground as well as under the wall—a clever deterrent to escape attempts. Water came up to within a half a foot or so of the ceiling.
“I see now why you asked if we could swim,” Rena said, staring at it. The water looked very cold. “Won’t there be bars or something across the mouth of this, though? I can’t imagine Father not barring this somehow.”
“Leave that to me,” the slave replied, then looked over her shoulder at Rena with a sardonic expression on her face. “Last chance to go back.”
Rena shook her head, wordlessly. Now that she was in this, she was hardly going to turn back, no matter how difficult it got.
Myre snorted. “Don’t say I never gave you a chance.” And with that, lithe as an otter, she dove into the water and disappeared.
A moment later her whisper echoed through the half-flooded tunnel under the wall. “Are you coming, or not?”
Lorryn took off his pack and lowered himself into the water, letting the pack float behind him as he towed it by one of the straps. It occurred to Rena that his bow was going to be useless for a while after this, at least until the bow itself and the bowstring dried out.
Oh well. What use would a bow be against Father’s magic, anyway?
The water came up to Lorryn’s chin, which meant it would be over Rena’s head. Not a good sign. He let the current carry him into the runnel, and was quickly lost in the shadows.
Rena hesitated only a moment longer; it was growing light, and it wouldn’t be long before someone came along here. She followed Lorryn “s example and took off her pack, tying one strap to her own belt. Then, clutching the side of the aqueduct, she lowered herself into the water.