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ONE
As the city of Shuntian dwindled in the distance behind me, a mixture of dread and exhilaration filled me
I was all alone in the vast empire of Ch’in
It was by choice, hter would have spoken a word in her father’s ear, and his Celestial Majesty would have provided ed me to let her do so, and I suspected there would be ti wo alone in a country halfway around the world from my home
Home
It was a bittersord I no longer knehat itcave in the Alban wilderness where I was Moirin, daughter of Fainche, child of the Maghuin Dhonn
That was still true; in a sense it would always be true The folk of the Maghuin Dhonn carry our diadh-anams inside us, the divine spark of the Great Bear Herself that gives us life and guides us It is the part of our soul that connects us to Her To lose it would be like dying, worse than dying
I knew, because I had lost half of mine
Not lost, exactly In fairness, I had given it away, although I hadn’t knohat I was doing at the time
MyI rode flattened his ears and tossed his head, sensing hts “Peace, brave heart,” I murmured
He settled On the lead-line, the pack-horse plodded patiently behind us
They were gifts froifts My rich silk robes were eles rattled onon a silk chord, was a jade medallion carved with the Eon on the other It would grant e anywhere in the empire of Ch’in
Your jade-eyed witch soothes the dragon
Memories
The chestnut sidled and pranced beneath h the Five Styles of Breathing
The Breath of Earth’s Pulse, drawn into the pit of the belly and the depths of the groin, inhaled and exhaled through the mouth
The Breath of Ocean’s Rolling Waves, drawn in through the nostrils to the h the mouth
The Breath of Trees Growing, circulating energy to the li nourishment with the world
The Breath of E the heart and war the blood
The Breath of Wind’s Sigh, pulled and expelled through the nostrils into the space between ht
I breathed the entire cycle as I rode, and while the discipline calmed and centered me, with every breath I drew, a memory assailed me Stone and sea! There were so many of them
Master Lo Feng
He had taught ht me all that I knew of the Ch’in manner of meditation and harmony he called the Way It had servedbehind e to serve as a coon whose indomitable celestial spirit was housed within her , I would never have been able to help free the princess and the dragon froether in the midst of a bloody civil war
Nor could I have endured the afteric in the service of E the memories of hundreds upon hundreds of men who had conceived, built, and wielded the terrible weapons known as the Divine Thunder I carried the ghosts of thoseof brass and sulfur, blood and smoke and horror
I returned to the Breath of Wind’s Sigh, willing it to carry away the lingering acrid tang
My diadh-ana to its separated half so the memory, I let myself think about Bao, the stubborn Ch’in peasant-boy who had walked aith half my soul inside him
Bao hadn’t liked me much at first, nor had I cared for hipie, Master Lo called hiwith disdain under a shock of unke pot of bone-marrow soup over his shoulder on a bamboo staff
That had been in Terre d’Ange, the land of my father’s birth, the land tohich I first set out in pursuit of huin Dhonn Herself
In htaway in the form of Raphael de Mereliot, the healer with the charift with ic to heal others Raphael, the Queen’s favorite courtier and lover
We had wrought ether
And it had nearly killed me
If it hadn’t been for the Queen herself, it very well ht have killed me Jehanne de la Courcel There, at least, was a otten le when I came between Jehanne and Raphael And yet in the end, it was Jehanne who had rescued me from Raphael’s ambition, and Jehanne whom I had cooddess of desire, and his line was ancient in her service Naaly inas Jehanne’s companion
It had hurt to leave her It had been too soon When , Jehanne was carrying the King’s child, and she was frightened I wished I could have stayed until the child was born
I couldn’t regret leaving, though Not after the purpose I had served in Ch’in I had seen the dragon, once restored, launch hi silver coils gleaainst the blue sky I had ridden in his claw; I’d seen him summon the rain and drown the terrible weapons of the Divine Thunder, ending the war I’d seen er restored to honor
And yet…
Bao
My diadh-anahts circled back to hiun to harbor a fondness for hiether in Terre d’Ange while Master Lo Feng taught us the Five Styles Mayhap it was the first time I’d won an almost-smile from him
It was on the long journey on the greatship to Ch’in that ed between us Thrust into constant companionship, Bao and I had becolimpse of the co that lay behind his insouciant exterior And Bao…
I don’t knohat Bao felt for uarded with one another, neither of us certain how much our relationship owed to convenience, proxiement
If things had fallen out otherwise, it ht have been different
But once we reached Shuntian, the i us to be circumspect in our behavior Later, we had said to one another; later Over and over, in stolenquest, we said this to one another When this is all over, if we live through it, ill talk Later
A lu me to s hard