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Geoffrey had a faraway look in his eyes. “Therefore… it doth behoove us to use as little power as we must, to defeat them.”

Rod nodded. “Which we haven’t exactly been doing, so far.”

“We may stay then?” Cordelia cried, jumping up and down.

Rod fixed them all with a glare.

They pulled themselves into line, hands clasped in front of them, heads bowed a little—but looking up at him.

“Do I have your absolute promise that you’ll all go right home, without any argument, the next time I say to?”

“Oh, yes, Papa, yes!” they cried. “We will flee, we will fly!” Cordelia avowed.

“We wouldn’t want to stay, if this sorcerer really were dangerous, Papa,” Magnus assured him.

“But you don’t believe he could be, eh?” Rod fixed his eldest with a glare.

“Well…”

“That’s all right.” Rod held up a palm. “I’ve got your promises. It’s okay—you’re still on board, at least until the next attack. And if it’s too close to being dangerous, home you go!”

“Home,” they averred.

“Still don’t believe me, eh?” Rod looked up at Gwen. “How about you? Promise?”

“I shall heed thee as strongly as ever I have done, my lord,” she said firmly.

“That’s what I was afraid of,” Rod sighed. “Well, I suppose I’ll have to be content with that. C’mon kids, let’s set up camp.”

 

Gwen threw her head back with a happy sigh. “Ah, ‘tis good to be aloft again.”

“I’m glad for you.” Rod gripped the broomstick tighter and swallowed heavily. His idea of flying was inside a nice, warm spaceship, with a lounge chair and an autobar. “This shooting around on a broomstick is strictly for the birds. On second thought, strike that—even the birds wouldn’t touch it.”

“Oh, certes, they would, Papa.” Cordelia shot up alongside, matching velocities. A robin sat on the tip of her broomstick, chirping cheerily.

Rod gave the bird a jaundiced glance. “Odd friends you’re making, up here.”

Gregory shot past them, flipping over onto his back to look back and wave bye-bye.

“Show-off,” Rod growled, but his heart sang at the sight of a smile on the face of his sober little son. It was good to see him be a child again.

“Regard thy way,” Gwen called after him. Gregory nodded cheerfully and flipped over onto his tummy again.

Magnus swung up alongside. “I thank thee, Papa! We are free again!”

“Delighted.” Rod tried to mean it. “Might as well, since Alfar knows who we really are, anyway.”

“Yonder.” Magnus pointed ahead. Rod looked up, and saw a line of hills, blued by distance. Magnus informed him, “Tis the Titans’ Rampart.”

“The Romanov boundary.” Rod felt his stomach suddenly grow hollow. “Somehow, I find myself less than eager to cross it.”

“But ‘twill be exciting, Papa!” Geoffrey cried, flying up on his port side.

“That’s a kind of excitement I think I can live without. Besides, I’m hungry. Darling, what do you say we find a town large enough to have an inn, this side of the boundary?”

“I misdoubt me an they’d welcome folk so poorly dressed as we, my lord.”

“Yeah, but they’d let us sit in the innyard, if we buy our food with real silver.”

“Hot sausage!” Geoffrey cried.

“Stew!” Magnus caroled.

“Toasted cheese!” Cordelia exulted.

“Hungry children,” Gwen sighed. “Well, husband, an thou dost wish it.”

“Great. Land us in a nice little copse, about half a mile out, will you? Tinkers they might accept in the innyard, but not if they use it for a landing strip.” He stared ahead hungrily. “Terra firma!”

 

5

As they came into the town, Cordelia gave a happy little sigh. “Tis so nice that the nasty old sorcerer knows we come toward him!”

“Oh, indeed yes,” Rod muttered. “This way, he can have a wonderful reception all ready for us! Why do you like it, dear? Because you can fly?”

“Oh, aye!”

“I dislike disguise, Papa,” Geoffrey explained.

Rod gave his son a measuring stare. “Yes, I suppose you would—even when you see it’s necessary.”

“As ‘tis, I know,” the little boy sighed. “Yet doth it trouble me, Papa.”

“I understand.” Rod frowned. “What bothers me, is trying to figure out how Alfar saw through our disguises.”

The family walked on in brooding silence—for a few seconds. Then Gwen said, “ ‘Tis widely known that the High Warlock doth have a wife, and four bairns—and that one is a lass, and the other three lads.”

Rod scowled. “What are you suggesting—that they had their illusionist attack every family who came North?” His gaze wandered. “Of course, I suppose there aren’t that many families coming North… and the kids’ ages are pretty much a matter of public record…”

“It doth seem unlikely,” Gwen admitted.

“And therefore must be seriously considered. But we would have heard about it, wouldn’t we? Monsters, attacking families…”

“Not if the witch and her monsters won out,” Geoffrey pointed out.

“But no sooner would they have attacked, than the witch would have seen the families had no magical powers!” Cordelia protested. “Surely she would then have called off her monsters.”

Geoffrey’s eyes turned to steel. “She would not—if she wished to be certain no word reached the King.”

“That does seem to be their strategy,” Rod agreed.

“But—to kill bairns?” Cordelia gasped.

“They are not nice people,” Rod grated.

The children were silent for a few minutes, digesting an unpleasant realization. Finally, Gregory pointed out, “We do not know that, Papa.”

“No, but I wouldn’t put it past them. Still, it does seem a little extravagant.”

“Mayhap they did post sentries,” Geoffrey suggested.

Rod nodded. “Yes, well, that’s the most likely way—but what kind of sentries? I mean, we haven’t seen any soldiers standing around in Alfar’s livery. So his sentries must be disguised, if he has them. And I suppose they’d have to know what we looked like…”

“Eh, no!” Magnus cried, grabbing Rod’s wrist. “They need only be…”

“Telepaths!” Rod knocked his forehead with the heel of his hand. “Of course! Just station mind readers on each of the main roads—and maybe even out in the pastures, if you’re the suspicious type—and they’d be almost impossible to spot! They could be anybody—the farmer who passes in his cart, the varlet in the kitchens, the merchant and his draymen…”

The children looked around them, suddenly alert.

“…and they’d be almost impossible to spot,” Rod finished, “since all they have to do is sit there, with their minds wide open for every stray thought!”

“We could have masked our minds,” Geoffrey mused.

“Yes, but we didn’t.” Rod shook his head. “Besides, it’s not as easy as it sounds. You’re all beginning to get pretty good at it…” He caught Gwen’s glance. “…every time you’re doing something you don’t want Mama and me to know about.”

The children exchanged quick, guilty glances.

“Of course, Mama and I are getting even better at probing behind the masks,” Rod went on, “so I suppose it’s very good training for all of us. In fact… that might not be a bad idea.” He flashed a grin at each of them. “Start poking around inside minds here and there, kids.”

Instantly, all four faces turned blank, their eyes losing focus.

“No, no! Not now! I mean, if they have been listening to us, they’ll have heard us, and just wiped their minds and started thinking disguise thoughts! You’ve got to catch them when they’re not ready, take them by surprise. Listen and probe for them whenever you just happen to think of it, at odd moments.”

“But will they not always be masked to us, Papa?” Cordelia protested.

“Not when they’re trying to listen to your thoughts,” Rod explained. “They can’t do both at the same time—mask and listen. You’ve tried it yourselves—you know.”