and began to compose himself. For whatever was coming, until it arrived, he had an empire to govern.
Caleb looked up and felt an instant sense of relief at the sight of his mother. “I was starting to worry…” Her expression stopped him. “What is it?”
Miranda said, “That animal Varen got me captured by the Dasati.”
Caleb said, “Are you…?” He let the question fall away, realizing that as far as he could see his mother was unhurt and had obviously escaped.
“Only my dignity was injured. Pain, as you know, goes away.” She sat down in the other chair, a rolled parchment on her knees. “What news?”
“Rosenvar and Joshua stand watch over the Talnoy, and Rosenvar reports that your experiments with Nakor have yielded good results. The control crystals work as well as the ring, with apparently no ill effect.” He began to sift through a pile of parchments and papers. “I have his report here somewhere.”
“I’ll read it later.” She sighed. “I know it’s pointless to ask about your father, brother, and Nakor?”
Caleb nodded. There had been some hope that Pug might devise a means by which to send communication back to his son and wife, but everyone counted it a very slim hope.
“No word from Kaspar’s expedition, either.”
“The warning from…what do they call themselves?”
“The Circle,” answered Caleb.
“They’re interested in the Peaks of the Quor…that report was vague on any specific time, wasn’t it?”
Caleb picked up another parchment. “Simply that we should expect them to appear in some force down on the lee side of the peninsula before the Spring Festival.”
“That’s another week, so they could be dealing with them now.” She glanced at her son. “Are you worried?”
The dark-haired hunter pushed himself back from the table. “Always. Especially when you and father leave me in charge.” He rose and paced around the desk. “You know I am here only because I’m your son. There are others in the Conclave who are better suited—”
“No,” she cut him off. “I know it is not your first choice, and you’d rather be out tramping through the woods or climbing some mountain, but the fact is you’ve been groomed all your life to take charge should anything happen to the rest of us. You know things, thousands of tiny details, that no one else, not even Nakor, knows. You just don’t know you know.” She was thoughtful. “But I think we need to find you an assistant, a magician—perhaps that young girl…”
“Lettie?”
“Yes, that’s the one. She’s not the best student we’ve had, but she’s got an uncanny grasp of how things fit together. Yes, I’ll have her sent here and you can begin to train her. I didn’t realize it until now, but we have no one ready to step in should anything happen to you .”
“What is all this?” asked Caleb. “You’re usually not this concerned with…contingencies.”
Miranda looked at her younger son. She could see a hint of her husband around his mouth, and the way in which he cocked his head to one side when thoughtful. Otherwise, he resembled his mother, from the high forehead and narrow chin to the way he moved, and his tall slender build. Like many parents she was occasionally and unexpectedly struck by how much she loved her children. “Two things, actually,” she said. “Had that madman Varen’s plan worked, I would probably still be strapped to a Dasati table being examined by their Deathpriests or I’d be dead and dissected. Many bad things besides my discomfort and ultimate demise would have occurred, the least of which was you being the only member of this family still here.”
“We knew that,” said Caleb, putting his hand on his mother’s shoulder. “There’s something more. What is it?”
“This,” she said, handing him the parchment she had received from the Emperor.
“Tsurani,” said Caleb. “Father’s hand.”
“Another of those damned notes!” Miranda wasn’t
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