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Lois McMaster Bujold - Penric and the Shaman

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Lois McMaster Bujold Penric and the Shaman

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Penric and the Shaman-2-Penric Desdemona
Bujold, Lois McMaster
Spectrum Literary Agency, Inc. (2016)

In this NOVELLA set in The World of the Five Gods and four years after the events in Penrics Demon, Penric is a divine of the Bastards Order as well as a sorcerer and scholar, living in the palace where the Princess-Archdivine holds court. His scholarly work is interrupted when the Archdivine agrees to send Penric, in his role as sorcerer, to accompany a Locator" of the Fathers Order, assigned to capture Inglis, a runaway shaman charged with the murder of his best friend. However, the situation they discover in the mountains is far more complex than expected. Penrics roles as sorcerer, strategist, and counselor are all called upon before the end.

Bujold delivers an astonishing tale that is not soon forgotten.

Bujold continues to prove what marvels genius can create out of basic space operatics.
- Library Journal

Bujold is not just a master of plot, she is a master of emotion.
- SF Site

Bujold is one of the best writers of SF adventure to come along in years.
- Locus Magazine

A superb craftsman and stylist, Ms. Bujold is well on her way to becoming one of the great voices of speculative fiction.
- Rave Reviews

Bujold has a gift, nearly unique in science fiction, for the comedy of manners.
- Chicago Sun Times

Superb far-future saga.
- Publishers Weekly on the 'Vorkosigan' series

Bujold's "work remains among the most enjoyable and rewarding in contemporary SF."
- Publishers Weekly (less)
PENRIC AND THE SHAMAN

A fantasy novella in the World of the Five Gods

Lois McMaster Bujold

2016

Copyright 2016 by Lois McMaster Bujold

Cover image: Wikimedia

Author links:

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16094.Lois_McMaster_Bujold

http://www.spectrumliteraryagency.com/bujold.htm

http://www.dendarii.com/

I

Five gods, but vultures were huge when seen at this distance.

The bird cocked its pale head on its sinuous neck, peering at Inglis like a nearsighted old man, as if uncertain whether he was its enemy or its breakfast, judging by the graying of the scudding damp sky overhead. It shuffled back and forth, its pantaloon-feathers stirring on its legs as it raised one talon-tipped foot and contemplated its dilemma. The hooked yellow beak seemed to take aim. Inglis opened his parched mouth and gusted a harsh hiss, like the fire in a blacksmiths forge when the bellows blew. The bird skipped back a pace, raising vast brown wings, as if it were a villain in a play swirling his cloak just before declaiming his defiance to fate.

Fate, it seemed, had Inglis at bay now. Run to ground. He scratched at that hard ground with a gloved hand, leather cold and stiff, but grubbed up only snow. Not enough light yet to see if there was much blood on it. The steep vale he had climbed out of last night was a shadowed gulf, the ice and the rocks a mosaic of white and black streaks, the scrubby trees vague claws. His head ached abominably. He had thought that a freezing man was supposed to go numb, but his trapped leg continued to throb. One last heave failed to shift anything. Angled downward on the slope, he had no strength left to pull himself upright and try to get some better leverage.

The vulture hopped again. He wasnt sure what it was waiting for. Reinforcements? They contemplated each other for an unmeasured time.

A dog barked, getting closer. Not mere yaps, but deep woofs, as if sounding from a chest the size of a barrel. A sharper bark joined the first, and another. The vulture flapped and heaved itself into the air, retreating, but only as far as a nearby bare-branched tree, as the dogs rushed up. Surely he was hallucinatingthere could be no Great Beast here, but the deep-voiced dog was the size and shape of a wolf, and the wolf in Ingliss blood seemed to sing out to it. It shuddered in canine ecstasy, licking his face, rolling in the snow and waving its paws in the air only to jump up and lick again, as the other two swirled around him, whining and yipping. Do you imagine I am your god? No gods here

Voices.

What is it?

Something dead, looks like. Arrow, you idiot beast! Dont roll in it, youll stink up the hut fair fierceagain

Oh. Its a man.

Anyone we know?

Shadowy shapes moved around him. Someone dragged off the dog, but with a menacing growl it wriggled free, then began nosing him again.

No. Traveler.

Whats he doing this far off the pass road?

Getting his fool self killed, looks like.

He took this track, alone in the dark, in this weather? Practically qualifies him for a suicide, Id say. The Bastards bait for sure.

Should we haul his carcass down to Whippoorwill? Might be a reward or something.

A thoughtful pause.

Eh, nor there might not be, and wheres the point to that? Collect the reward now, save steps. Strip him and let the carrion birds give him a sky burial. It can make no difference to him.

Well, its about time somebody gave us a gods-day gift

Ah. The vultures reinforcements have arrived.

Hands, plucking at his clothes. Good cloth. Good bootshelp me shift these rocks, and I bet we can get both of them.

Might have to cut off the smashed one.

The leg, or the boot? No, theyd want the boot. Maybe the leg

Riding boots. So wheres his horse? Think he was thrown?

Figure we could find it? It might have a pack, with more goods.

Hed have to have been leading it, on this slope. Might have slipped stupid to try to climb in those boots. A pause. I dont see it down below.

Itd be dead meat if it were get off him, Arrow, you fool dog!

Hands at his belt. Theres a purse! Ah, piss. Not much in it.

Fancy knife hilt. Hey, think thosere real jewels?

A snort. Martensbridge glass, maybe.

They pulled at the sheath, trying to tug it free. Ingliss eyes unglued; he reached deep and found his last reserves, flinging his voice like a javelin: Dont touch my knife.

A mad scramble back. Bastards teeth, hes still alive! The lesser dogs went into paroxysms, barking wildly, and had to be beaten off him. The great dog went flat, ears and tail down, whimpering, licking his face and neck with abject servility. But the hands that had been tugging at his knife did not resume their attempted scavenge. Sacrilege. His powers, it seemed, had not wholly deserted him in craven company with his hope, faith, and courage.

Father and Mother. Now what do we do?

The very question that had been plaguing him for five hundred miles. Scraping for the last residue of truth left in him, he got out, Take me home.

He wept, he thought, but he no longer cared who saw it. Perhaps the gray dawn was false, because the world around him darkened once more.

II

Im bored, whined Desdemona. Bored, bored, bored.

Penric, as soon as he regained control of his lips from her, smiled down at the page across which his quill was carefully making its way. Destroy a flea.

We slew every flea in the palace precincts weeks ago. And all the lice as well.

And Im sure everyone here would be grateful to you, murmured Pen, if they knew. He had learned early on in his association with his demon, which had gifted him with the powers, though not yet the learning, of a Temple sorcerer, to be discreet about the deployment of their magics. He deployed his quill in the setting down of the next three words in Darthacan, glanced up at the volume in the Wealdean tongue he was copying, and translated the next line in his head, cross-checking to be sure it

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