Hag in the Water
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About this ebook
A novelette of 15,000 words, sequel to Hambly's Dragonsbane (Winterlands) series. When a gnome wizard is murdered by what is thought to be a demon, the other gnome mages call on the human witch Jenny Waynest for aid. Unfortunately, Jenny is away. Her non-wizard partner, the scholarly Dragonsbane John Aversin, steps in to help solve the crime.
Barbara Hambly
Since her first published fantasy in 1982 - The Time of the Dark - Barbara Hambly has touched most of the bases in genre fiction. She has written mysteries, horror, mainstream historicals, graphic novels, sword-and-sorcery fantasy, romances, and Saturday Morning Cartoons. Born and raised in Southern California, she attended the University of California, Riverside, and spent one year at the University of Bordeaux, France. She married science fiction author George Alec Effinger, and lived part-time in New Orleans for a number of years. In her work as a novelist, she currently concentrates on horror (the Don Simon Ysidro vampire series) and historical whodunnits, the well-reviewed Benjamin January novels, though she has also written another historical whodunnit series under the name of Barbara Hamilton.Professor Hambly also teaches History part-time, paints, dances, and trains in martial arts. Follow her on Facebook, and on her blog at livejournal.com.Now a widow, she shares a house in Los Angeles with several small carnivores.
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Hag in the Water - Barbara Hambly
Hag in the Water
By
Barbara Hambly
Published by Barbara Hambly at Smashwords
Copyright 2017 Barbara Hambly
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
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Table of Contents
Hag in the Water
About the Author
Hag in the Water
When so be that through excessive and promiscuous smelling of rue a man should develop a scorpion in his brain, such that the can not sleep for grief of it, let his friends fill a platter with mole’s blood and, lulling the man to dulness with diuerse songs, enter into his chamber in silence and place the blood beneath his bed. So be it that in the night whilst he lieth wakeful the scorpion will be drawn out through his ear unknowing, and will be found drowned in the blood upon the morrow.
Did Dotys ever actually TRY this? wondered John Aversin, examining, enthralled, the elaborate scene depicted amidst the capital letter’s foliage: helpful friends and dripping platters and entomologically unlikely arthropods (That thing’s the size of a dog, how’d it fit in the poor bastard’s head?).
And does it work on scorpions generated in the brain by means other than sniffin’ excessive rue?
John turned the page over hopefully, but the five pages of the long-missing second volume of Dotys’ Sover Medicia had been bound into a miscellany with what looked like a gnomish translation of Uralius’ Art of Poetry and a series of sermons praising the god Sarmendes, and there was no further discussion to be found on the treatment of cranial infestations. From the garden beyond the wide windows of the chamber in which he lay, John could hear the songs of children, sweet-voiced page-boys in the gold-and-crimson livery of the royal House of Uwanë, rehearsing their part in the masque to be presented tonight to celebrate the wedding of the King.
The final night of celebration, reflected John, sitting up on the window-seat’s plush cushions and propping his battered spectacles on the bridge of his nose. He smiled, torn between his affection for the stooped, scholarly young monarch – not to speak of the month he’d spent bingeing his way through the books in the royal library – and his awareness that summer was fleeting. Winters came on earlier than they had in his boyhood, and even twenty-five years ago they’d come early enough. Scholar though he was, he was warrior enough to be aware of the cloud-patterns in these soft southern skies, and to calculate how many days he and his beautiful witch-wife Jenny would be on the road back to the north, once she returned from her botanical excursion to the Petty Islands a day’s sail south of Bel.
It was time, and past time, to go.
He and Jenny had shared their joy at King Gareth’s marriage, after the death two years before of his first wife Trey. They both loved quiet Danae, the new queen, and her bright-eyed impudent little daughter who was now step-sister to Princess Millença. Jenny had laid magics of health and well-being on both children, on the young King and his bride.
But the road to the Winterlands would be deep in snow, by the time they returned home.
John was calculating how many books he could get through – and make notes on – before Jenny’s return, when he heard voices in the garden above those of the choir.
…’twill beget trouble,
pronounced the gravelly but oddly childlike tones which John recognized at once as those of Sevacandrozani, Lord of the Gnomes of Ylferdun Deep, the great gnome kingdom whose gates lay half a day’s ride from the walls of Gareth’s royal city of Bel. Zarbochedronn Blue-Hair, greatest of the Wise Ones of the Deep, hath long said that the secrets of the Deep are no business of they who dwell above the ground. He’ll not welcome the lady Jenny, no matter your opinion of her, my lord, nor all she hath done for our people.
"And I’ll not welcome," retorted the light, rather scratchy tenor of the young King Gareth himself,