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Storm Warning - Mercedes Lackey [54]

By Root 569 0
dropped open with astonishment. “Gisell? Humility?” The two simply did not go together! Gisell had been one of the most stiffnecked little high-born bitches he’d ever had the misfortune to meet. Nothing could induce her to forget her lofty pedigree or her many important relatives.

Rubrik laughed heartily, and his smile reached and warmed his eyes. “Oh, a gryphon can bite you in two and have your legs shredded while your top half watches. When he tells you that you will work with the son of a pigkeeper and like it, you learn to be humble very quickly.”

“If Gisell can learn to be humble, then I can believe in gryphons,” Karal said firmly, provoking another burst of laughter, both from the Herald and from his master.

“Gryphons are just as real as my Companion Laylan, I promise you,” Rubrik assured him. “And no more a monster than he is.”

Now that triggered another thought, one that had sat in the back of his mind, pushed aside by the pressing dilemma of Rubrik-as-Herald. His horse—or rather, his Companion. Karsite legend had plenty to say about the creatures that Heralds rode, too! And now his behavior, which had seemed to be “only” remarkable training, had an explanation.

Laylan wasn’t a horse. Obviously. “No more a monster than he is” he said—but he isn’t, can’t be, even a magical horse like the Hawkbrothers’ birds. Even if back home they’d call him a Hellhorse. So what is he if he isn’t a horse?

He held the question back, but it irritated him like an insect bite he couldn’t scratch. Laylan himself seemed to know that it was tormenting him, too, because he kept looking back at him, and now he saw what his assumption that he was an animal had not let him see before. He watched him, watched Ulrich, and he had the sense that he was somehow participating in the conversation, even if he couldn’t say anything in words.

Finally he couldn’t stand it anymore. “Sir? Your—Laylan—what is he?”

Rubrik blinked, taken quite by surprise by the breathless question. “I suppose you wouldn’t know, would you,” he said, finally, turning in his saddle and squinting against the bright sunlight. “Ah—the best explanation we have is that Companions are a benign spirit in a mortal body. In some ways, rather like gryphons, except that they deliberately ally themselves with Heralds in order to help us help our land. They choose to look like horses, we believe, because horses pass without notice practically everywhere.”

“Ah!” Ulrich’s exclamation of delighted understanding made both of them turn toward the Priest. “That is the best explanation I have heard yet; I never had heard any reason why your Companions should have that particular form. It seems an inconvenient one.”

Rubrik snorted, and so did Laylan. “Say that some time when you see him in full charge! This is several stone of muscle and very sharp hooves, my friend, and he knows how to use both to advantage! I’d rather have him in a fight than twenty armsmen, and that’s a fact.” He tilted his head to one side and added, as if it had never occurred to him before, “Odd though, that you Karsites don’t seem to have anything like Companions, with your Vkandis being so—”

He flushed, and cut the sentence off, but Ulrich chuckled. “So much of a divine busybody in our lives, is that what you were going to say?” Rubrik winced, but the Priest only grinned. “Oh, don’t apologize, even Her Holiness has been known to comment on that from time to time. Actually, though, Vkandis does have two supernatural manifestations that ordinary Priests—which are the closest thing we have to your Heralds—can experience. The sad part is that one of those was and is tragically easy to feign.”

Ulrich gave Karal a prompting look.

“The Voice of Flame?” Karal asked with interest, taking the look to mean that Ulrich meant him to supply the correct answer.

Ulrich nodded. “Good, you recall what I told you.” He turned back to the Herald. “The Voice of Flame is a sourceless nimbus of fire; it appears above the head of a Priest and speaks through him. It is, by far, the most common manifestation of Vkandis’ Will. Since we

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