Storm Warning - Mercedes Lackey [66]
“And a fine evening to you, sir lamptender,” Rubrik called back. “They told me wizard-weather is coming in tonight—”
“So I was told, so I was told. I’ll be finishing here in a candlemark, I hope. I’d like to be indoors when it hits.” The man lifted the pierced metal screen that shielded the lamp wick from wind, and carefully trimmed it, then filled the base of the lamp from a smaller jug at his hip. “This is like to be a nasty storm, the mages say. At least we’ve got warning now, though they don’t seem to be able to do much about it. More’s the pity.”
Huh. Well, maybe that’s why everything is so quiet; everybody’s shut their houses up, waiting for the blow. They passed the man as he started down his ladder. He waved farewell to them, but was clearly anxious to finish his job for the night.
Why can’t the Valdemaran mages do something about the weather? We can....
“Too much to do, and not enough mages,” Rubrik said, his shoulders sagging. “For some reason, weather-working seems to be one of the abilities we don’t see often. Weather-witches, the people that can predict weather, we have in plenty now that we know how to train them, but not too many that can fix problems without making them worse elsewhere.”
“We have something of a surplus of weather-workers,” Ulrich said, very carefully. “It seems to be a talent we Karsites have in abundance. Perhaps it is because our climate would be so uncertain without them.”
“I know,” Rubrik replied, his voice so tired that Karal couldn’t read anything into it at all. “That is one of the first things that Selenay wants to discuss with you. We thought that we would have everything under control once Ancar stopped mucking about with unshielded magic, but things are getting worse, not better. You saw the bridge—”
“Hmm.” Ulrich said nothing more, but Karal knew what he was thinking. Aside from all other considerations, Valdemar was a wealthy land by Karsite standards—in the only real wealth that counted, arable land. Karse was hilly, with thin soil that was full of rocks. Valdemar had always had a surplus of grain, meat, animal products. Karse would not be at all displeased to acquire some of that surplus in return for the service of a few weather-workers. That sort of thing hadn’t come up in the truce negotiations, and the tentative arrangements for the alliance that followed.
That sort of thing was why he and Ulrich were here now.
That sort of negotiation would be impossible if it weren’t for the presence of the Empire looming in the East, an Empire whose magics were legendary.
Not even for food would some of those stiff-necked old sticks be willing to negotiate anything with the Demonspawn. Only Vkandis and the threat of complete annihilation managed to get them to agree. Well, if we start getting these little incidental negotiations through, perhaps by the time the threat is disposed of, either the old sticks will be dead, or they’ll be so used to having deals with the “Demonspawn” that it won’t matter to them anymore.
Still, it seemed odd that Valdemar should be having more magically-induced problems, not less. They had Adept-level mages enough to teach the proper ways of handling and containing magic, and now that Ancar wasn’t spreading his sorcerous contamination everywhere, things should have been settling down. Shouldn’t they?
Unless there was something else stirring things up. “I wonder if the Empire has anything to do with this,” he wondered aloud, not thinking about what he was saying before he said it.
“To do with what?” Rubrik asked sharply.
Karal flushed hotly, glad that the darkness hid his embarrassment. Stupid; that was twice in a row, and he was going to have to watch himself. And school himself not to talk when he was so tired—his thoughts went straight to his lips without getting examined first. “The—this bad weather, sir,” he replied. “The Empire is full of mages, so they say. Could they be sending bad weather at you, to soften you up as a target?”
“It’s possible—it’s more than possible. I just didn