The Wizard's Ward (Queen's Quests Trilogy Book 1)
The Wizard’s Ward
Deborah Hale
THE WIZARD’S WARD
Copyright © 2004 Deborah Hale. Originally published in an altered version by Harlequin Books S.A..
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or retransmitted without the written permission of the author.
This is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
The Queen’s Quest Trilogy
The Wizard’s Ward
The Waiting King
The Destined Queen
Contents
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Excerpt from “The Waiting King”
Glossary
The Magical and Healing Properties of Some Common Embrian Plants
For my twarith, the people who help me and believe in me, no matter what challenge I tackle—my family, with all my love!
Chapter One
HER TIME HAS come.
Maura Woodbury only glimpsed those words before she’d been summoned to tend an injured child.
Whose time? Time for what? Those questions plagued her every step of the way into Windleford, a small village in Northern Embria. Unless she had misread the message or the haunted look in her guardian’s eyes, she feared she would not like the answers.
Now, as she examined the little boy’s hand, she struggled to keep her mind on her task.
“I have something here that should make it feel better.” She pitched her voice loud enough to carry over the boy’s exhausted sobs, yet soft enough to soothe and reassure him.
Lifting a small earthenware crock from her basket, she pried off the lid, scooped out a generous dollop of green salve, then smeared it on the child’s blistered skin. The wholesome tang of freshly bruised merthorn and marshwort infused the air, making Maura’s nose tingle.
The boy’s mother hovered close watching every move, all the while wringing her hands and looking anxious. Was it on account of her son’s injury, Maura wondered, or because she had the wizard’s ward under her roof?
It never seemed to bother Langbard that the villagers scarcely spoke to him or Maura unless someone was ill or injured. Then again, hardly anything ruffled the old wizard’s composure... until an hour ago when that messenger bird had arrived.
“What happened to you?” Maura asked the boy once his tears had subsided. “Did you see something good in your Mama’s stew pot and try to fish it out?”
His injuries looked worse than a simple burn, somehow.
The child sniffled. “I know better ’n that. Me and my friends was playing and I seen this queer gray twig. When I picked it up, my hand took to paining worse than a hundred bee-stings at once!”
“A pain spike?” cried Maura. “Curse those soldiers! How dare they leave such vile things lying about? Windleford is hardly a hotbed of rebellion. Ordinary weapons do well enough to keep country folk like us under their thumb.”
Since before her birth, Embria had been ruled by the Han, invaders from the south greedy for the perilous riches of the Blood Moon Mountains.
“Them younglings had no business playing so close to the garrison!” snapped the boy’s mother, though she looked angrier at Maura than at her son. “The soldiers has to keep order, don’t they? If it was a pain spike, they probably meant to use it on the outlaws. I hear tell there’s a gang of ’em camping over in Betchwood, if you please.”
“Perhaps so.” Maura chided herself for failing to hold her tongue. If it got around Windleford that she’d voiced such rebellious sentiments, the villagers would shun her worse than they did already.
Besides, the woman’s excuse might be true. Any unnatural weapons of the Hanish garrison might only be meant to combat outlaws, some of whom had grown insufferably bold of late. Maura despised their kind at least as much as she did the Han. She’d suffered more on their account than she had from the invaders.
“How does your hand feel now?” She turned her attention back to the boy. “Better?”
He had stopped crying. That was a good sign. Already his fingers looked less swollen.
The child nodded. “Still pains some, but not like it did.”
Now that she understood it was no common hurt, Maura realized it would need stronger healing. “I know just the thing to put your hand right—fresh queensbalm.”
It would be blooming now. Queensbalm always blossomed on Maura’s birthday. During her childhood, she and Langbard had often celebrated by packing a lunch and going gathering. Maura felt a wistful longing for those carefree days.
“I hope you learned your lesson about meddling with metal.” Anxious to get home she repacked her basket in a hurry. “Some of it is not harmful, if it has been properly tempered. But most is tainted with mortcraft, which can do even worse things to you than make your hand pain. The next time you see something metal, do yourself a good turn by keeping your distance.”
The boy’s eyes widened at the notion of worse things than he had already suffered. Meanwhile his mother nodded in grudging agreement. Though she might not like Maura’s implied censure of the Han, who used metal and mortcraft to dominate the people of Embria, the woman clearly approved of her warning.
Rising from the low stool beside the boy’s bed, Maura handed his mother the crock of salve. “Spread on more of this whenever he wants it, though mind you do not rub it in too hard. I will bring some queensbalm tomorrow.”
“Don’t trouble yourself.” The woman shoved the crock into her apron pocket. She looked torn between gratitude and wanting to get Maura out of her house as quickly as possible. “This looks to have done the job fine.”
Maura glanced at the boy whose eyelids were beginning to droop. “It will ease his pain, not cure it. That salve would have done well enough for an ordinary burn or a pest bite. Mortcraft needs something stronger to combat it.”
She headed for the door. “If you would rather not have me seen coming to your house again, I can ask Sorsha Swinley to fetch the queensbalm here.”
“That would be far better!” The woman cried, then immediately repented her hurtful eagerness. “I am sorry Mistress Woodbury. I do not mean to sound ungrateful. It was good of you to come so quick. Poor little Noll hurt so bad, I was beside myself. It’s just... well... I expect you know how it is.”
“Aye.” The word wafted out of Maura on a sigh.
Part of her did understand. Wizards and their kin could be dangerous folk to know. Healers of any kind were frowned upon by the Han, who lived according to a harsh creed: The strong thrive as they deserve and none should mourn the weak who perish.
That knowledge did not make it any easier to be kept so firmly at arm’s length.
“I’m glad you’re not offended.” The woman slid her door ajar just wide enough to peer out. Then she had a quick look up and down the road before throwing it open for Maura. “I’d be much obliged if you would send that other balm when you get it.”
She spoke the words in a rush and when Maura tur
ned to reply, she found the door already shut tight behind her.
Telling herself she must not mind it, she pulled up her wrap to cover her head and set off back to the snug thatched cottage north of town where she had lived for as many of her twenty-one years as she could remember.
Had she ever lived anywhere else? How had she come into Langbard’s care? Who were her parents and what had happened to them? For years Langbard had gently but firmly discouraged such questions. Because he was the only family she had and because he was so good to her in every other way, Maura had grudgingly reconciled herself to ignorance about her past. That had not prevented her from questioning and guessing.
Now she wondered if Langbard’s mysterious message had anything to do with her equally mysterious past.
As she neared the edge of the village, Maura spied her friend Sorsha some distance ahead. She opened her mouth to call, but before she could get the words out, a pair of Hanish soldiers turned onto the main road, talking together in their own language. To Maura’s ears it had a jarring, strident sound.
The Han were taller than most Embrians, with the hard, muscular build of their race and long, pale manes of hair they pulled through holes in the tops of their helmets to trail like plumes.
Maura lowered her head and averted her gaze, as Langbard had taught her. She did not slow her step, but neither did she walk faster. Though the soldiers passed quite close, they did not seem aware of her at all, for which she was grateful.
Once they had past, she broke into a run and soon caught up with Sorsha, who was returning home from market.
“Maura!” she cried. “If I had known you were in town, I would have waited for you.”
When Maura explained about her errand in Windleford, Sorsha nodded, her generous mouth pursed in a disapproving frown.
Five years older than Maura, Sorsha was shorter and stouter than her friend. Her wild tumble of curls was ruddier that Maura’s and she had a splash of freckles over the bridge of her nose. Perhaps her most attractive feature was her air of exuberant sociability.
Better one Sorsha for a friend, Maura had often thought, than four or five others... not that she’d ever had a choice.
“The gall of that Prin Howen!” huffed Sorsha. “I will give her the sharp edge of my tongue when I see her tomorrow. If young Noll hasn’t sense enough to keep from picking up things he shouldn’t, she ought not to let him out of her sight. Then to treat you so rude after you came to help. Fair makes my blood boil!”
“Do not say anything, Sorsha, please! That will only make it worse. Langbard has never been anxious for me to make friends in the village, anyway.”
Sorsha did not protest... but neither did she agree. Instead, as was her wont, she steered their talk to another subject. “Will you come up to my place for a cup of tea? The younglings are always so anxious for you to visit.”
“Another day.” Maura shook her head reluctantly. “I must get home, now. A message came for Langbard just before I was called away to Howen’s. I have never seen him look so worried.”
“Langbard worried? It must be serious.” Sorsha’s brow furrowed. “I always thought he could walk over hot coals without turning a hair... not that he has much to turn, on top. Who did the message come from? Someone in the village?”
Maura shook her head. “I do not know who sent it, but I reckon it came from far away. A messenger bird brought it.”
By this time, the two friends had reached the foot of the lane that wound up to Hoghill Farm. Maura’s gaze strayed toward the low ridge that shielded Langbard’s cottage from view of the north road. “I hope he will confide in me. He does not seem to realize I have grown up.”
“Older folk are like that and I reckon we will be too when our time comes.” Sorsha reached for her friend’s hand and gave it a reassuring squeeze. “You know, if there is anything Newlyn and I can do to help, you have only to ask. We owe Langbard a good deal after all he did to help us.”
“I know we can count on you both.”
The last time Maura had been this worried about anything was when her friend had gotten involved with a dangerous fugitive from the living death of the Blood Moon mines. It had all turned out better than she’d dared hope between Sorsha and her husband, the man now known as Newlyn.
But as she waved goodbye to Sorsha and started over the hill, Maura recalled the levelheaded ease with which Langbard had handled that whole perilous situation. Suddenly the spring sun seemed to sparkle with a false brightness and the brisk breeze sent a chill up her back. Anything that caused Langbard to fret must be ominous indeed.
Stifling that worrisome thought, Maura hurried toward the cottage. She found Langbard sitting in his favorite chair in front of the hearth, still clutching the scrap of parchment he had peeled off the bird’s leg.
He was a tall man, greater in height than many of the Han, but lank of figure and gaunt of face. The crown of his head was bald, but the thick gray fringe around it grew long enough to braid into a plait that hung down his back.
He glanced up with a preoccupied smile of welcome when Maura entered. “The child—how is he?”
“The poor little fellow got hold of pain spike.” She set down her basket. “But he should be fine once I make a queensbalm salve for him.”
Langbard winced at the mention of the pain spike, then nodded to endorse Maura’s choice of treatment.
She knelt by his chair. “Before I go off to Betchwood gathering queensbalm, you must tell me about the message you received. I have been so worried.”
“Gathering queensbalm?” Langbard surged out of his chair. “Why, it is your birthday!”
“So it is, Uncle... but the message?”
“All in good time, my dear, I promise you.” Langbard took Maura’s hand and helped her to her feet. “Let us pack a lunch and go gathering in Betchwood, like we used to.”
The melancholy tenderness of his smile was impossible to resist.
“We do have some mutton sausages in the cold hatch,” she said, “and I made oatloaf fresh this morning. Unless you have been foraging, there should be some marshberry tart left, too.”
“Splendid!” Langbard cried. “A wonderful birthday feast. You pack the basket and I will make ready.”
“On one condition, Uncle?”
“What might that be?”
Maura lifted the trap door to the cold hatch. “On the way to Betchwood, I want you to tell me what that message meant.”
“Of course, my dear.” Langbard glanced down at the scrap of parchment in his hand, as if he had forgotten it for a moment and regretted being reminded.
More to himself than to her, he murmured, “I cannot put it off any longer.”
He gazed around the large room that served as both kitchen and parlor. “It seems like only yesterday you were a wee thing, crawling around the cottage floor popping everything into your mouth. No wonder you have such an apt hand for magic—you ate enough potion ingredients before you could walk!”
While Maura climbed down into the cold hatch to repack her basket with food, Langbard hunted up his walking staff, his cloak, his hat and the many-pocketed sash he wore whenever he went any distance from the cottage. It held emergency supplies of vitcraft ingredients most necessary for healing and defense.
A while later, as they cut across the Swinley’s north pasture, heading for Betchwood, Maura asked Langbard once more about his cryptic message. “Who sent it to you? It is bad news, isn’t it?”
Though Langbard shook his head, he still looked too anxious to ease Maura’s fears. “Grave, perhaps, but not bad. Indeed, it may be the best possible news for the people of Embria. Perhaps it is selfish of me not to welcome it as such.”
If he meant the words to reassure her, they did not. “Please, Uncle, you are talking in riddles.”
“Your pardon, my dear. I do not mean to. Only, it is hard to know where to begin. Perhaps I should have begun preparing you long ago, but I dared not take the chance you might let a careless word sl
ip. And you were always such a happy child, I could not bear to burden you with it until I had no choice.”
“Goodness, Uncle, you make these tidings sound very dire.” How could anything that concerned her be other than quiet and commonplace?
Langbard heaved a regretful sigh. “Perhaps I was wrong not to tell you as much as I knew about your parents when you asked.” Her parents? Was she going to find out about them at last?
She had been quite an age when she’d come to realize that most children had mothers and fathers to look after them. From there it had been a short step to wonder if her parents had given her away because they’d been displeased with her. Sorsha had been quick to soothe her worries on that score, suggesting the more dramatic possibility, that Maura’s parents might have been murdered by outlaws.
For years Maura had preferred to believe it over the likelihood that she’d been abandoned. Deep in her heart, though, the gnawing doubt had never quite gone away.
Langbard gazed off toward Betchwood, yet Maura sensed he was looking back into the past. “This might all make more sense if I begin at the beginning. Do you remember the stories I used to tell you about King Elzaban?”
“Of course, I do. They were always my favorites.” But what did childhood stories have to do with her or the message Langbard had received?
Long ago, perhaps a thousand years, Elzaban, the Margrave of Tarsh, had forged the provinces of Embria into one strong, proud nation. Many heroic tales were told of his brief but glorious reign. One in particular had stirred Maura’s fancy.
“Then,” said Langbard, “you’ll recall he disappeared during The Battle of the Three Castles and was never seen again?”
“Yes, Uncle.” Did he truly suppose she could forget? “King Elzaban had taken a mortal wound in the fighting. But his beloved Abrielle spirited him away and wove a powerful spell around him to hold back death and time.”
Maura could not keep a tender, dreamy note from her voice. Her only knowledge of such passionate attachment between a man and a woman came from such tales. Often she had fallen asleep picturing herself as Abrielle. Only in her dreams, she always found a way to heal her dying lover, so they could wed and enjoy a long lifetime of happiness.