Something More Non Canon Witcher Story

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Something More

This is a fan translation of a French translation of the story from Andrzej Sapkowski's The Sword of Destiny (L'pe de la Providence). I am not a native or even a strong French speaker but I hope that the result is sufficiently readable for my fellow Anglophones who may be trying to read Blood of Elves and wondering who the hell Ciri is. Here you go.

I When the hooves struck the planks of the bridge, Yurga didn't even raise his head. He stifled a scream, dropped the binding from the wheel that he was trying to reattach and crawled under the cart as quickly as possible. In tears, digging his back into the rough coat of mud and manure that covered the underside of the vehicle's floor, he was screaming intermittently and trembling with fear. The horse slowly approached the cart. Yurga noticed how cautiously and delicately the hooves moved on the beams that were moldy and rotted through. Get out of there, said the unseen rider. Yurga hissed through his teeth, regathering his wits. The horse snorted and stamped a hoof. Easy, Roach, said the rider. Yurga heard the man patting the neck of his horse. Come out, friend. I won't do you any harm.

The merchant did not believe the stranger's words. There was nevertheless something in the voice that was reassuring and intriguing, although the tone was not pleasant. Muttering prayers to several gods at once, Yurga at last stuck his head cautiously out from under the carriage. The rider had hair as white as milk, held back by a leather headband, and a black wool coat that fell onto the rump of his chestnut mare. He did not look at Yurga. Leaning on his saddle, he looked at the wheel of the cart and the axle stuck in the split boards of the bridge. He suddenly lifted his head, touching the merchant with his gaze in the process of impassively observing the vegetation that pushed through the banks of the ravine. Yurga extricated himself with difficulty, grumbling. He wiped his nose on the back of his hand, smearing his face with wood tar from the axle. The rider darted him a somber and attentive look, sharp and cutting as a harpoon. Yurga remained silent. The two of us will not be able to free it, the stranger finally said, indicating the stuck wheel. You're traveling alone? There are three of us, lord, Yurga stammered. My servants have fled, the cowards... Not surprising, responded the rider, looking down at the bottom of the ravine beneath the bridge. Not at all surprising. I think you should do the same. There is still time. Yurga's eyes did not follow the stranger's gaze to the skulls, ribs, and shins scattered among the stones, visible through the burdock and nettles growing on the dry riverbed. The merchant feared that those black eyesockets, beautiful smiling teeth, and all the broken bones would cause him to break down completely, and what remained of his courage would burst like a fish's swim bladder. Then he would flee along the road, stifling his screams, as the driver and the

valet had just an hour earlier. But what are you waiting for? asked the rider in a low voice, turning his horse. Twilight? It will be too late. They will take you as soon as night falls. Perhaps even earlier. Go, mount your horse, come with me. Get out of here as fast as possible. And the cart, sir? Yurga yelled at the top of his lungs, surprising himself with the intensity of his shout, not knowing whether it was fear, despair, or anger that caused it. The merchandise! A whole year of work! I'd rather die! I won't leave any of it behind! It seems to me that you don't yet know where fate has led you, friend, the stranger said quietly, gesturing with his hand toward the horrible cemetery stretching beneath the bridge. You don't want to leave the cart here, you say? I tell you that when twilight falls, not even the treasures of King Dezmod will be able to save you. Stop thinking about your damn cart. The devil with your idea to take a shortcut across such a marvelous country. Do you know what massacres have taken place here since the end of the war? Yurga indicated his ignorance. You don't know, replied the stranger, shaking his head, but you see what lies below! It's difficult not to notice. They are exactly those who tried to take a shortcut. And you, you say you don't want to leave your cart behind. What does it contain, your famous cart? I'm curious to know. Yurga did not answer. While looking at the rider from below, he was torn between oakum and old rags. The rider didn't appear particularly interested in his response. He calmed the chestnut mare who was tossing her head nervously. Lord... the merchant stammered at last. Help me. Save me. I would be grateful until the end of my days... Don't let me... I'll give you what you want, anything you desire... Save me, lord!

The stranger turned his head abruptly, keeping both hands on the pommel of the saddle. What did you say? Yurga, mouth agape, was silent. You will give me what I want, repeat it. Yurga swallowed and closed his mouth. He regretted that he had not thought twice before speaking. His head spun with the most fantastic conjectures concerning the price that the strange traveler could exact. Everything. Even the privilege of a particular trade once a month with his young wife, Chrisididae, did not seem so terrible compared with the loss of his cart, and no doubt much less macabre than becoming a bleached skeleton at the bottom of the ravine. The merchant's atavism quickly bowed to the considerations of the situation. The rider didn't look like a tramp, a vagabond, or a marauder, as many as there were since the end of the war. Neither was he a prince, a councellor, or one of those little knights with a high opinion of themselves who liked to extract money from their neighbors. Yurga estimated his worth at close to twenty gold coins. His commercial nature nevertheless prevented him from offering a price. He limited himself to speaking indiscriminately of eternal gratitude. I asked you, the stranger repeated calmly, waiting for the silent merchant, if you will give me what I want. He had to speak. Yurga swallowed hard, nodding his head. Against expectations, the stranger did not look triumphant; he did not even seem especially pleased with the success of his negotiation. He spat into the ravine, leaning on his horse. But what am I doing? he said sadly. Aren't I making a mistake? Either I try to get you out of here. I won't deny that this adventure could be fatal for one or both of us. If we succeed then you, in return...

Yurga tensed, ready to cry. You give me, the rider in the black coat said quickly, the thing that you did not expect to find on returning home. Do you swear? Yurga nodded his head, stammering. Good, grinned the stranger. Now move over. It's best if you hide under the cart again. The sun is setting. He got down from his horse and took off his coat. The merchant noticed the sword that the stranger carried on a shoulder strap and the harness that crossed his chest. He had the feeling that he had heard talk before of people who carried their weapons in this way. The black leather jacket cut at the waist and the long gauntlets studded with silver could indicate that the stranger was from Novigrad or its area. The fashion for such garments was popular among the youth lately, but the stranger was no longer a young man. The rider turned after unloading his horse; the medallion suspended on his chest by a silver chain began to shudder; he held in his arms a small iron mug and a long, tied bundle covered in skins. Still not under the cart? he asked, approaching. Yurga noticed the wolf with bared fangs depicted by the medallion. Would you be... a witcher, sir? The stranger shrugged his shoulders. That's right. A witcher. And now, hide under the other side of the cart. Don't come out and keep your mouth shut. I need to be alone for a moment. Yurga complied. He crouched near the wheel, hiding underneath the tarp. He preferred not to see what the stranger was doing on the other side of the cart, and wanted to see the bones lying at the bottom of the ravine even less. He looked instead at his shoes and the star-shaped specks of green moss covering the rotten planks of the bridge. A witcher.

The sun disappeared. He heard footsteps. The stranger came out slowly, very slowly, from behind the cart and moved to the center of the bridge. Yurga saw his back. He noticed that his sword was not the same one he had before. It was a beautiful weapon: the hilt, the guard, and the iron embellishments on the scabbard shone like stars. Even at dusk, they glowed. The golden and purple glow covering the forest faded. Sir... The stranger turned. Yurga managed to suppress a scream. The stranger's face was white, white and porous as fresh cheese under his clothes. And his eyes... Oh gods... The terror screamed through Yurga. His eyes... Behind the cart, quickly, the stranger ordered in a low voice. It was not the same voice that he had heard earlier. The merchant suddenly felt the pressure of his overfull bladder. The stranger turned and walked over the bridge. A witcher. The horse tethered to the ladder of the cart groaned and neighed, striking the planks with its hooves. A mosquito hummed over Yurga's ear. The merchant did not even move to swat it. A second mosquito arrived. Entire clouds of mosquitoes were concentrated in the brush on the opposite side of the ravine. They were screaming. Yurga saw, clenching his teeth painfully, that they were not mosquitoes. In the increasingly dense twilight, small misshapen silhouettes, horrible, no taller than an ell, thin as skeletons, were overtaking the other side of the ravine. They moved onto the bridge with a bizarre gait like a heron's, lifting their swollen knees very high in abrupt movements. Bilious eyes

bulged from flat and wrinkled faces. Their small frog-like mouths sported tiny pearly fangs. They approached, hissing. The stranger, still as a statue in the center of the bridge, suddenly lifted his right hand with his fingers positioned strangely. The monstrous dwarves retreated, hissing, before quickly resuming their approach, faster and faster, raising their long, grasping, stick-thin limbs. From the left came the sound of claws: a new monster appeared suddenly from under the bridge; the others pounced, in stupefying leaps. The stranger turned. The new sword flashed. The head of the creature that climbed from the bridge flew six feet into the air, trailing a garland of blood behind it. The white-haired man bounded into the group that remained. He struck, whirling his sword right and left. The monsters hurled themselves at him from all sides, screaming, flailing their limbs; the sword, bright and sharp as a razor, did not discourage them. Yurga huddled against the cart. Something fell at his feet, covered in blood. It was a long bony leg with four claws, scaled like a hen's. The merchant screamed. He felt a stealthy presence next to him. He curled up as if to disappear under the carriage. The ghastly thing then fell upon his neck: the large clawed leg gripped him at his temple and his cheek. Yurga closed his eyes. He tore himself away from the monster, screaming and slashing at the body; he found himself in the middle of the bridge, surrounded by corpses lying on the planks. The battle raged. The merchant saw nothing except the raging tumult and confusion from which emerged, from time to time, an arc of silver light. Help! he yelled, feeling the sharp fangs pierce his hood and engulf the back of his skull. Get your head down! He pressed his chin to his chest, searching with his gaze for the quick strike of the blade. The sword sang through the air, brushing his hood. Yurga heard a wet and terrible crack.

A hot liquid spilled like a bucket across his shoulders. A dead weight around his neck forced both his knees to the ground. The merchant saw three other monsters spring from under the bridge. Leaping like locusts, they seized the stranger's legs. One of them, its frog face split by a blow, staggered rigidly away before falling to the planks. The second, pierced by the tip of the sword, collapsed into spasms. The others surrounded the white-haired man like ants, driving him to the side of the bridge. The third monster was thrown, bleeding, screaming and convulsing, from the fray. The disordered horde rolled at the same moment over the edge of the bridge and into the ravine. Yurga fell to the ground, protecting his head with his hands. Under the bridge, the merchant heard the triumphant clamor of the monsters give way to the hissing of the sword, screaming and moans of pain. Then there came from the darkness a clanging of stones followed by the crackle of crushed and smashed skeletons, and again the whistle of a sword and a final, desperate, blood-curdling croaking, prematurely interrupted. It was then that the silence was punctuated here and there, among the trees deep in the woods, by the frightened cry of a bird. Then even the birds were silent. Yurga swallowed hard and sat up slightly, lifting his head. The silence still reigned. Not even the leaves of the trees made a sound. The forest seemed to have become mute with terror. Frayed clouds darkened the sky. Hey! The merchant turned, instinctively protecting himself with his hands. The witcher was standing before him, motionless, black, holding his shining sword at arm's length. Yurga noticed that he did not stand up straight, he leaned to one side. Lord, have you made it?

The witcher did not respond. He took a heavy and awkward step, touching his left hip, and reached out to hold on to the side of the cart. Yurga noticed black and shining blood dripping onto the planks. Lord, you're injured! The witcher did not respond. He clung to the side of the cart, locking eyes with the merchant, and then slid slowly onto the bridge. II Easy, careful... Under the head... One of you support his head! Here, here, on the cart! By the gods, the lord... Master Yurga, he's bleeding through the dressing... Stop jabbering! Come on, hurry up! Profit, the nerve! Cover him with furs, and you, Vell, don't you see that he's shaking? Perhaps he could be given some vodka! Wounded and unconscious? Are you mad, Vell? Pass me the bottle instead: I need a drink... Dogs, scoundrels, miserable cowards! Running away like that and leaving me alone! Master Yurga! He said something! What? What did he say? I'm not sure... A name... What name? Yennefer... III Where am I? Don't get up, sir, don't move, or everything will reopen and tear. Those horrible creatures must have bitten the thigh

down to the bone. You lost a lot of blood... Don't you recognize me? Yurga! The man you saved on the bridge, don't you remember? Ah... Are you thirsty? By the devil, yes... Drink, my lord, drink. You're consumed by fever. Yurga... where are we? We're on the road, in my cart. Don't say anything, my lord, don't move. We must cross the forests to reach the first human settlements and find a healer. Your dressing isn't enough. The blood won't stop flowing... Yurga... Yes, my lord? In my chest... a flask... sealed with green wax. Break the seal and give it to me... in a goblet. No-one must touch the flask... if you value your life... Quick, Yurga... Damn, but this cart can shake... The flask, Yurga... Here... drink. Thank you... Pay close attention. I'm going to fall asleep. I will be thrashing and raving, and then still as a corpse. It's nothing, don't be afraid... Sleep, lord, otherwise your wound will reopen and you'll lose all your blood. He sank into the furs. His head reeled. He felt that the merchant had covered him with a coat and a blanket that smelled of horse sweat. The cart jolted. Each bump hit his thigh and hip painfully. He gritted his teeth. Above him, he saw millions of stars. So close that it seemed that it would be enough to reach above his head, just above the line of the trees, to touch them. He chose to follow the path farthest from the light, from the glow of fires, to hide in the areas of swaying shadow. It wasn't easy: all around were burning pyres of pine, dotting the sky with the red light of torches, adding their banners of

smoke to the darkness, crackling and flaring with light between the dancing silhouettes. Geralt stopped to allow the passage of the procession mad, screaming, savage that approached him and blocked any escape. Someone seized his shoulder and tried to give him a small cup filled with foam. He refused politely, but firmly pushed away the staggering man who carried a barrel of watered beer around to the people. He did not drink. Not tonight. Not far away, on a stage built from the trunks of birch trees that overlooked the huge bonfire, the fair-haired King of May, wearing a crown of flowers and branches, kissed the Queen of May; he caressed her breasts through her thin, sweat-drenched tunic. The monarch, very drunk, staggered and could not keep his balance without holding onto the queen, holding a nice mug of beer in the fist at his back. The queen was not sober either. Encircled by a wreath of flowers that was falling over her eyes, she clung to the neck of the king and kicked up her legs. The crowd danced on the stage, singing, shouting, and waving branches twined with flowers and vines. Belleteyn! a girl cried into Geralt's ear. Tugging at his sleeve, she forced him to join the procession that surrounded him. She danced beside him: her robe and the flowers in her hair fluttered in the breeze. He allowed her to draw him into the dance. He whirled deftly, allowing the other couples to pass. Belleteyn! It's the night of May! Next to them, a scuffle broke out, the cries and nervous laughter of a girl struggling against a boy who carried her off into the dark, outside the circle of light. The procession, shouting, followed a path between the burning fires. Sometimes, someone stumbled, falling and breaking the chain of linked arms that then branched out into small groups.

The eyes of the girl, piercing through the leaves that adorned her brow, were watching Geralt. She approached and hugged herself forcefully against his shoulders. He gave a blunt refusal. Her fingers pressed the wetness of her body through the fine linen. She lifted her head, closing her eyes. Her teeth gleamed brilliantly below her slightly raised lip. The girl gave off the smell of sweat and sweet grass, of smoke and desire. Why not, he thought, crumpling the back of her dress. His hands delighted in the humid and ethereal heat. The young woman was certainly not his type: too small, too tightly-wrapped. He felt with his fingers where the too-tight dress divided her body into two sharp curves, just where he should not feel them. But why not, during a night like this... it doesn't matter. Belleteyn... The fires on the horizon. The night of May. Nearest to the stake, engulfing the bundles of dry resin that launched the flames, the yellow glow intensified, flooding the area with light. The girl met Geralt's eyes. He heard her inhale sharply. Her body suddenly tensed; her fingers curled abruptly against the witcher's chest. Geralt released his companion. She hesitated at first, then moved her body away without immediately giving up the contact between her hips the witcher's thigh. Avoiding his gaze, her head bowed, she withdrew her hands before taking a step back. They were still for a moment. The return of the procession did not absorb them, did not shake them, did not hurry them. The girl awkwardly turned and ran, losing herself in the mass of other dancers. She cast a furtive glance back. Belleteyn... But what am I doing here? A star shone, twinkling in the dark. Blinding. The amulet around the witcher's neck began to tingle. Geralt

instinctively dilated his pupils to pierce the darkness without difficulty. The woman was not a peasant. The country girls were not wearing black velvet cloaks. The country girls were pushed or dragged by the men into the bushes, crying out, giggling, wriggling and trembling like freshly-caught fish. None of them gave the impression that they were in control of the situation: this woman was taking a companion into the dark, a man with blond hair and his shirt half open. The country girls never wore a velvet ribbon around their necks or an obsidian star encrusted with diamonds. Yennefer. Her violet eyes burned in a pale , triangular face. Geralt... She released the hand of the blond angel whose torso gleamed with sweat like a copper plate. The boy hesitated, staggered, fell to his knees, turned his head, looked around, protested. Then he rose slowly, considering them with a look that was at once skeptical and embarrassed, and walked off toward the fires. The sorceress didn't even look at him. She stared intently at the witcher. Her hand trembled on the edge of her cloak. It's good to see you again, he said without emotion. He felt then that the tension between them had fallen. Same, she replied, smiling. It seemed that the smile contained something forced, but he wasn't sure. This is a pleasant surprise, I agree. What are you doing here, Geralt? Oh! Pardon me, excuse my indiscretion. Of course you are here for the same thing I am. This is the feast of Belleteyn. The difference being that you have caught me, one might say, in the act. I've disturbed you. I'll live, she joked. The night will go on. If I like, I can seduce another. A pity that I don't know how, he managed to say,

feigning indifference. A girl saw my eyes in the light and ran away. In the morning, she replied, smiling in an even more artificial way, when they really go mad, they won't pay so much attention. You'll find another, you'll see... Yen... The rest of the sentence caught in his throat. They looked at each other for a long time, a very long time. The red glow of the fire danced over their faces. Yennefer sighed suddenly, veiling her eyes under their lashes. Geralt, no. Don't start... It's Belleteyn, he interrupted, did you forget? She approached slowly, put a hand on his shoulder and pressed gently against him, curling herself gently against his chest. He stroked the raven-black hair that fell in curls like snakes. Believe me, she murmured, lifting her face, I wouldn't hesitate for a moment if if it were only a question of... but there's no sense in it. Everything would begin again and end as it did before. There's no sense in us... Must everything make sense? It's Belleteyn. Belleteyn? She turned her face. What difference does that make? Something drew us to these fires and these celebrating people. We intended to dance, to let loose, to get a little drunk and vigorously enjoy freedom from good manners here, in honor of the renewal of the cycle of nature. And what? We trip over each other after... how much time has passed? After... a year? One year, two months and eighteen days. I'm touched. Do you do that on purpose? Yes, Yen... Geralt, she interrupted, leaning back suddenly and shaking her head, let me be clear: it's impossible. He confirmed with a nod of his head that this was clear.

Yennefer pushed her cloak back from her shoulders. She wore a thin white blouse and a black skirt held by a belt of silver links. I don't want to start again, she repeated. And the idea of doing with you... what I intended to do with the handsome blond... under the same rules... that idea, Geralt, I find demeaning. Degrading for you and for me. Understand? He nodded again. She looked at him, through her lowered lashes. You aren't going? No. She remained silent for a moment, then shrugged her shoulders impatiently. You're offended? No. Come, let's sit down somewhere, away from the chaos. Talk a little. You see, I'm glad that we met. It's the truth. Let's sit a moment. Agreed? All right, Yen. They left in the dark, away from the bonfire, toward the dark edge of the forest, careful to avoid the embracing couples. To find a quiet place, they had to walk for a while. They stopped on a dry hill flanked by a juniper bush as slender as a cypress. The sorceress unclasped her brooch and spread her cloak over the ground after shaking it out. He sat next to her. He longed to take her shoulders, but it would only annoy her. Yennefer rebuttoned her wide-open blouse, with Geralt watching attentively. She sighed, holding herself against him. Geralt knew that Yennefer had to make a great effort to read thoughts, but that she instinctively sensed the intentions of others. They were silent. Oh, by the plague! she cried suddenly, breaking free of his embrace.

The sorceress lifted her arms and recited an incantation. Over their heads rose bubbles of red and green that burst high in the air and formed feathery red flowers. Laughter and cries of joy reached them from the fires. Belleteyn, she said bitterly. The night of May... The cycle repeats itself. They have fun, if they can... There were other sorcerers in the area. Three orange flashes rang out in the distance; on the other side, at the foot of the forest, a geyser of rainbow-colored meteors twirled into the sky and exploded. The dancers near the fire cried out in admiration. Feeling tense, Geralt caressed Yennefer's curls and inhaled the scent of lilac and gooseberry they gave off. If I want her too much, he thought, she will sense it; it might upset her. I'll ask her quietly if it's all right. It's nothing new to me, she said. Something trembled nonetheless in her voice. Nothing worth mentioning. Don't do that to me, Yen. Don't read my mind. It bothers me. Forgive me. It's instinctive. And you, Geralt, what's new? Nothing, nothing worth mentioning. They remained silent. Belleteyn! she cried suddenly. Geralt felt the shoulders pressed against his chest rise and fall. They have fun. They celebrate the eternal cycle of nature. And us? What do we do? We, the relics, those condemned to death, to extermination and oblivion. Nature is reborn, the cycle repeats itself. But not us, Geralt. We can't perpetuate ourselves. We are denied that possibility. We have inherited the gift to do extraordinary things with nature, sometimes against it, but we have been deprived in return of what is most simple and natural. What does it matter that we live longer than humans? There is no spring after the winter; we are not reborn, our end carries us with it. But something draws us to the fires, even though our presence is a cruel

joke, a sacrilege against this festival. She fell silent. He didn't like to see her fall into such darkness. He knew too well the reason for it. It's starting to gnaw at her again, he thought. There had been a time when it seemed that she had forgotten or accepted her fate. He moved his shoulders, rocking her like a child. She did not resist. Geralt wasn't surprised; he knew that she needed it. You know, Geralt, she said, suddenly calm, it's your silence that I've missed the most. He pressed his lips to her hair, her ears. I want you, Yen, he thought, I want you, you know that. You know it well, Yen. I know, she murmured. Yen... Only for now, she replied, watching him with wideopen eyes. Only on this night that will soon disappear. That will be our Belleteyn. We will part in the morning. I beg you, don't count on anything more. I can't... I couldn't. Forgive me. If I hurt you, kiss me and let me go. If I kiss you, I'm not leaving. That's what I thought. She bowed her head. Geralt kissed her parted lips. Cautiously: first the upper lip, then the lower. His hands tangled in her curls, touched her ears, the gems in the lobes, her neck. Returning his kiss, Yennefer drew herself to him; her nimble fingers had no trouble defeating the clasps of his jacket. She slid back on the cloak arranged over the moss. Geralt kissed her breasts. He felt the nipples harden and rise up under the fine fabric of her blouse. Yennefer was breathing raggedly. Yen... Don't say anything, please. The touch of her bare skin, sweet and cold, electrified his palm and his fingers. Geralt's back shuddered under

Yennefer's nails. Shouting, singing, whistling reached them all the while from the fires, in a distant whirlwind of sparks and purple smoke. Embraces, caresses. Him, her. Chills. And impatience. He touched the slender thighs closed around his hips that shook like a leaf. Belleteyn! Breaths and sighs began their ballet; lightning flashed before their eyes; the scent of lilac and gooseberry enveloped them. The King and the Queen of May, was it the expression of a sacrilegious joke? Of oblivion? It's Belleteyn, the night of May! A piercing groan from Yen or from Geralt; black curls covering their eyes and mouths; trembling fingers entwined in their tightly-grasped hands. A cry; black lashes, damp; a groan. Then silence. An eternity of silence. Belleteyn... The fires on the horizon... Yen? Oh... Geralt. Yen, are you crying? No! Yen... I had promised myself... I had... Don't say anything. It doesn't matter. Aren't you cold? Yes. And now? Warmer. The sky cleared at a dizzying speed. The black wall of the forest regained its contours: the jagged line of the ridge of trees emerged from the indistinct darkness. Behind her, the azure announcement of dawn poured over the horizon, extinguishing the stars. It got colder. Geralt held Yennefer tighter. He covered her with his coat. Geralt? Hmm...

The day will break. I know. Have I hurt you? A little. Will it start all over? Nothing ever stopped. Please... I feel good with you... Don't say anything. Everything's fine. The smell of smoke was rising from the heather. The smell of lilac and gooseberries. Geralt? Yes? Do you remember when we met the Great Mountain Kestrel? And the golden dragon? What was his name? Three Kestrels. I remember. He told us... I remember, Yen. She kissed the back of his neck, pinning his head and tickling him with her hair. We were made for each other, she murmured. Perhaps even destined for each other. But none of this can happen. It's a shame. We will have to separate when the day breaks. It can't be otherwise. We have to separate so as not to hurt each other: destined for each other, made for each other, but the one who created us should have thought of something more. Forgive me. I had to tell you. I know. Making love makes no sense. You're mistaken. Go back to Cintra, Geralt. What? Go to Cintra. Go, and this time don't give up. Don't repeat the mistake from last time... How do you know? I know everything about you. Have you forgotten? Go

to Cintra, go as fast as possible. A dark time approaches. Very dark. You must get there in time... Yen... No, don't say anything, please. It was more and more fresh and more and more clear. Don't go now. Wait for the dawn. We'll wait. IV Don't get up, lord. Your dressing needs to be changed, because the wound is dirty and your leg is horribly swollen. By the gods, it's awful... We need to find a healer as soon as possible... To hell with healers! groaned the witcher. Give me my chest, Yurga. Yes, this flask. Pour it directly on the wound. Oh! By the plague and cholera! It's nothing, add more... Oh! That's good. Dress it and cover me... It's swollen, lord, the whole thigh... And you're stricken with fever... To hell with the fever... Yurga? Yes, lord? I forgot to thank you... I'm not the one who should be thanked, lord, but you. It's you who saved my life. You have been injured in defending me. And me? What have I done? I only tended to an injured and unconscious man. I carried him in my cart and kept him from perishing. It's an ordinary thing, master witcher. Not so ordinary as that, Yurga. I have been abandoned in similar situations, like a dog... The merchant was silent, bowing his head. Yes... it happens. The world around us is horrible, he murmured at last. But that's not a reason for all of us to behave so execrably. Good is necessary. That's what my

father taught me and that's what I will teach my sons. The witcher fell silent. He watched the tree branches that hung over the road and disappeared with the movement of the cart. His thigh came back to life. The pain was gone. Where are we? We have just forded the Trava river. We are actually in the woods of Alkekenge. It's no longer Temeria, but Sodden. You were sleeping when we crossed the border and when customs officers searched the cart. I must tell you that they were surprised to find you there. But the oldest one knew you and they allowed us to go through. He knew me? Yes, without a doubt. He called you Geralt. That's what he said: Geralt of Rivia. Isn't that your name? So... He promised to send someone ahead with word that a healer was needed. I gave him a little something so that he doesn't forget. I thank you, Yurga. No, lord. I already said: it's I who thank you. And that's not all. I am still in your debt. We agreed... What's happening, lord? Are you losing your strength? Yurga, give me the flask with the green seal... Lord, you're going to go back... You cried out so terribly in your sleep... I need it, Yurga... As you wish. Wait while I pour it into a goblet... By the gods, we need a healer, as soon as possible, because otherwise... The witcher turned his head. He heard the cries of children playing in the ditch, drained, next to the castle gardens. There were a dozen of them. The kids made a devil of a racket, shouting to each others in their little falsettos, shrill and excited. They ran up and down the bottom of the ditch, resembling a school of small fish ceaselessly changing

direction, but managing to stay together. As is always the case in these situations, a smaller one, out of breath, was trying to catch up with the gang of older ones, thin as scarecrows, who wrestled and shouted. There are a lot of them, the witcher remarked. Mousesack gave him a forced smile, pulling on his beard and shrugging. Yes, a lot. And one of them... Which one of these boys is the famous surprise? I can't, Geralt... Calanthe? Of course. You don't believe, I hope, that she would give you a child so easily? You know that, don't you? She is a woman of iron. I'll tell you something that I should not admit. In the hope that you understand... I'm also counting on you not to betray me to her. Speak. When the child was born six years ago, she called for me and ordered me to find you. To kill you. You refused. We refuse nothing to Calanthe, Mousesack replied seriously, looking him right in the eye. I was ready to set out before she called me back. She revoked the order without comment. Be careful when you talk to her. I will be. Mousesack, tell me: what happened to Duny and Pavetta? They were sailing to Skellig from Cintra when a storm surprised them. Nothing was recovered of the boat, not even some boards. Geralt... the fact that the child was not aboard with them is maddeningly strange. Incomprehensible. They had to take it with them on the ship, but they changed their minds at the last moment. No-one knows why. Pavetta was never apart from... How did Calanthe handle this misfortune?

How do you think? I see. Hurling expletives, the children climbed like a band of goblins to the top of the ditch and immediately disappeared. Geralt noticed a little girl, just as thin and noisy as the boys, but with a plait of fair hair, keeping her distance from the head of the small group. With a savage cry, the little band slipped down the steep slope of the ditch again. At least half of them, the girl included, fell on their backsides. The youngest, still unable to catch up to the others, somersaulted and fell to the bottom where he began to bawl hot tears and rub his scraped knee. The other boys stood by, railing at him and laughing before resuming their course. The little girl knelt next to the boy, took him in her arms and dried his eyes, wiping the dust and dirt from a face grimacing in pain. Come on, Geralt. The queen awaits. So be it, Mousesack. Calanthe was sitting on a wooden bench with a backrest, which was suspended by chains from one of the main branches of an enormous linden tree. It seemed that she was napping, save for the small kick of her foot she gave from time to time to revive the swing. Three young women remained at her side. One was sitting on the grass near the swing. Her dress fanned over the grass and formed a white spot on the green, like a patch of snow. The other two were arguing further away, delicately picking strawberries. Madam, said Mousesack, bowing. The queen lifted her head. Geralt knelt. Witcher, she responded drily. As before, the queen wore emeralds matching the green of her dress and her eyes. As before, a thin gold crown encircled her ash-gray hair. But her hands, which he remembered as thin and white, were not as thin as before. Calanthe had put on weight. Hail, Calanthe of Cintra.

I bid you welcome, Geralt of Rivia. Rise. I was waiting. Mousesack, please accompany the girls to the castle. At your service, my queen. They were left alone. Six years, Calanthe said without smiling. You are terribly punctual, witcher. He made no comment. At times, no, for years at a time, I deluded myself that you might forget. Or that for other reasons you might be prevented from coming. No, I didn't want anything unfortunate to happen to you, but I had to take into consideration the dangerous nature of your profession. It is said that death follows in your footsteps, Geralt of Rivia, but that you never look behind you. Then... when Pavetta... You know already? I know, Geralt said, inclining his head. My sincere condolences... No, she interrupted, it was all long ago. I no longer wear mourning clothes, as you see. I wore them for long enough. Pavetta and Duny... were destined for each other to the end. How can I deny the power of destiny? They fell silent. Calanthe, with a kick, revived the swing. And so it is that the witcher returned after the agreedupon period, she said slowly. A strange smile bloomed on her lips. He returned, requiring that the oath be respected. What do you think, Geralt? It's probably in this manner that the storytellers will recount our meeting in a hundred years. With the difference that they will embellish the story, striking a chord and toying with the emotions. Yes, they know their work well. I can imagine it. Listen, if you would: And the cruel witcher said at last: 'Respect your oath, Queen, or my curse will be upon you.' The queen, in tears, fell at the feet of the witcher, crying, 'Mercy! Do not take that child from me! He is all I have!' Calanthe...

Don't interrupt me, please, she replied drily. Haven't you noticed that I am telling a story? Listen closer: The cruel and vicious witcher stamped his foot and waved his arms, shouting: 'Beware, perjurer. You will not escape your punishment if you do not respect your oath.' The queen responded: 'So be it, witcher. Let it be done according to destiny. Look over there: a dozen children are playing. Recognize the one destined for you. Take that one and leave me alone, with a broken heart.' The witcher was silent. Calanthe's smile grew more and more ugly. In this story, the queen, I imagine, offers three chances to the witcher. But we do not live in the world of fairy tales, Geralt. We are indeed real, you, me, and our problem. And so is our destiny. This is not a story being told, it is a life at stake. Sickening, cruel, arduous, sparing neither error and prejudice, nor regret and misery, and sparing neither witchers nor queens. That is why, Geralt of Rivia, you will be granted only one attempt. The witcher had not yet flinched. One single attempt, repeated Calanthe. I said before: we are not characters in a story, this is real life where we must find our own moments of happiness, because, you know, we can hardly count on a happy ending. That is why, regardless of your choice, you will not leave empty-handed. You will take a child. Whichever you have chosen. A child that you will turn into a witcher... provided that he passes the trial of Herbs, of course. Geralt lifted his head abruptly. The queen was still smiling. He knew that smile, ugly and vicious, contemptuous and concealing none of her artifice. I've surprised you, she said. I gave the matter some study. Since there was a chance that Pavetta's child might become a witcher, I put myself to the trouble. However, my sources did not inform me of the proportion of children, out of ten, who can pass the trial of Herbs. Would you like to

satisfy my curiosity in this area? My queen, Geralt began, clearing his throat. Without a doubt you must have taken sufficient pains in your studies to know that my code and my witcher's oath forbid me from uttering the word, let alone from discussing it. Calanthe violently stopped the movement of the swing, planting her heels in the ground. Three, at most four out of ten, she explained, feigning concentration with a nod of her head. A difficult selection, very difficult, I would say, and that at each stage. First, the choice, then that of the test. And finally the changes. How many rogues ultimately receive the medallion and the silver sword? One in ten? One in twenty? The witcher remained silent. I have given the matter a lot of thought, Calanthe went on, abandoning her smile. I came to the conclusion that the stage of the choice is incidental. What difference does it make, Geralt, that one child and not another dies or goes mad as a result of a massive dose of drugs? What difference does it make if the mind is destroyed or consumed by delusions, or the eyes explode instead of becoming the eyes of a cat? In light of the blood or the sickness preceding his death, what difference does it make whether one child or another was truly destined by providence or was perfectly inappropriate? Tell me. The witcher folded his hands across his chest to control their trembling. To what end? he asked. Do you expect an answer? No, I don't expect that. The queen smiled again. As always, you remain infallible in your conclusions. Who knows whether I, in response to your answer, might graciously deign to devote a little of my attention to the sincerity and the truthfulness of your words? The words that you speak might who knows? lift with them the weight on your spirit. If not, oh well, let's get to work providing the

material for the storytellers and go choose a child, witcher. Calanthe, he responded, fixing his eyes on the queen. What do the storytellers matter to us? If they don't get any material, then they will invent something. And even if they have access to some authentic source, you know perfectly well that they will distort it. As you yourself rightly remarked, this is not a fairy tale, but life, sickening and cruel, through which we are trying, by the plague and cholera, to live decently and to strictly limit the amount of harm we inflict on others. In one tale, the queen must actually beg the witcher and he responds by stamping his foot. In life, the queen could simply say: 'Do not take this child, please.' And the witcher answered: 'Since you insist, my queen, so be it.' He then resumed his journey at dusk. Such is life. The storyteller would not get a cent from his audience if he told such nonsense. At most, a kick in the rear. Because it's boring. Calanthe stopped smiling. He saw something else shining in her eyes. And so? she growled. Let's end this game of hide and seek, Calanthe. You know what I think. I will leave just as I arrived. Choose a child? What do you take me for? You think that this is so important to me? That I came to Cintra, tormented by an obsession with taking your little child from you? No, Calanthe. I simply wanted to see the child, to look into the eyes of destiny... Myself, I don't know... Don't be afraid. I will not take it. You had only to ask... Calanthe jumped up violently from the swing. A green light burned in her eyes. Ask? she growled, furious. Of you? Me, afraid? Afraid of you, cursed sorcerer? You dare to turn your expression of contemptuous pity on me? You dare insult me with your condescension! You reproach me for my cowardice! You disobey my will! My kindness to you unleashes your

insolence! Beware! The witcher decided not to shrug his shoulders: it was more prudent to kneel and prostrate himself. He did. Well, Calanthe growled, standing over him. Her arms were swinging, fists clenched around the spikes of her rings. Finally. This is a more appropriate position. It is in this position that one answers to a queen when she requires a response. And if instead of a question, it's an order that I give you, you will bow down even lower and hasten without delay to obey it. Understood? Yes, my queen. Perfect. Get up. He stood up. She looked at him, biting her lips. My outburst of anger has not offended you? I ask regarding its form, not its content. No. Good. I will try not to explode again. As I told you, ten children play there in the ditch. Choose the one that seems to you the most suitable. Take him with you and by the gods make him a witcher, because that is the will of destiny. And if not of destiny, know that it is my will. He looked her in the eye and bowed very low. My queen, he said, six years ago, I showed you that there exist things more powerful than the royal will. By the gods, if such things really exist, I will prove it once more. You will not force me to make a choice I do not want to make. Pardon the form, not the content. The depths of my castle dungeon are riddled with cells. I warn you: one more moment, one more word, and you will rot. None of the children playing in the ditch is suited to become a witcher, he said slowly. The son of Pavetta is not among them. Calanthe blinked, but did not waver. Come, she said finally, turning on her heel.

He followed her through the flowering bushes, the clumps and hedges. The queen entered a sunlit gazebo. Four rattan chairs surrounded a malachite table. On the streaked tabletop supported by four fierce griffons, there sat a pitcher and two small cups. Have a seat and pour. She drank, without pretension, heavily, like a man. He did the same, but remained standing. Sit down, she repeated. I want to talk. I'm listening. How did you know that the son of Pavetta was not found among those children? I don't know. Geralt opted for sincerity. I said it at random. Ah? I might have guessed. And none of them is suited to become a witcher, is that the truth? How can you tell? By magic? Calanthe, he answered in a soft voice, I could neither confirm nor deny it. What you said earlier was the simple truth: every child is capable. The trials decide. Later. By the gods of the sea, in the words of my late husband, she declared, laughing, it is all false! Including the law of surprise! The legends of children nobody expected and for whom the claimants return at the appointed time. I thought so! It's a game! A game of chance and fate! But all this is diabolically dangerous, Geralt. I know. A game that causes harm. Why, tell me, do you force the parents or guardians to make such difficult promises? Why take their children? There are so many, everywhere, there is no need to take them. The roads swarm with orphans and vagabonds. In any village, it is easy to buy an infant on the cheap. During the drought before the harvest, any serf will sell his children willingly. What does he care? A new one is already on the way. Why demand an oath of Duny, of

Pavetta and myself? Why appear six years to the day after the birth of the child? And why, by cholera, don't you want it now? Why tell me that you won't take it? Geralt remained silent. Calanthe nodded her head. You don't answer, she concluded, letting herself fall against the back of her chair. Attempt to elucidate the reason behind your silence for me. Logic being the mother of all knowledge, what does she suggest in this matter? What do we have at our disposal? A witcher on a quest for destiny hidden in a strange and unlikely surprise. The witcher discovers that destiny and then abruptly renounces it, saying that he no longer wants the child-surprise. His face remains utterly impassive and his voice resonates with the coolness of glass and metal. The witcher thinks that the queen, a woman after all, will allow herself to be tricked and in the end will cede to his masculinity. No, Geralt, don't wait for me to show weakness. I know why you renounce your choice of a child. You renounce it because you do not believe in destiny, because you are not certain. And when you're not sure... it's fear that takes over. Yes, Geralt, fear is your engine. Fear is your cargo. Dare to say otherwise. He slowly pushed the cup on the table so that the clink of silver on malachite would not betray the uncontrollable trembling of his arm. You don't deny it? No. She bent to seize his hand with vigor. You disappoint me, she said, giggling prettily. This isn't voluntary, he responded, laughing as well. How did you guess, Calanthe? I did not guess. She did not release his hand. I said it at random, that's all. They broke out in laughter. They settled into silence in the greenery and the smell of the clusters of cherries, in the heat and the buzzing of

bees. Geralt? Yes, Calanthe? You do not believe in destiny? I don't know if I believe in anything. As for destiny... I think that it is not enough. There must be something more. I must ask you a question on this point: what was your story? It is said that you were a child-surprise. Mousesack said... No, Calanthe. Mousesack had something else in mind. Mousesack undoubtedly knows... but he resorts to legend when it suits him. I was never the thing that one does not expect to find on his return. It is wrong to say that I became a witcher for that reason. I was an ordinary orphan, Calanthe, a kid that his mother, whom he does not remember, did not want. But I know who she is. The queen was all ears, but Geralt did not continue. Are all the stories about the law of surprise also legends? All of them. How can one know whether something is chance or destiny? But you, the witchers, you keep looking. We don't stop. But that makes no sense. Nothing makes sense. You believe that a child of providence will safely pass the tests? We believe that such a child would not need to pass the tests. One more question, Geralt, quite personal. Do you mind? He nodded his acquiescence. It is known that there is no better way to pass on hereditary traits than in the natural way. If you seek a child possessed of such qualities and such strength, why not look for a woman who... I am being indelicate, no? But it seems to

me that I've hit my mark. As always, he responded with a sad smile, you remain infallible, Calanthe. You have hit upon it, to be sure. What you suggest is impossible for me. Forgive me. Her smile disappeared. In the end, it's only human. A witcher isn't human. Ah? And so, no witcher... None. The trial of Herbs, Calanthe, is horrible. And what is irreversibly done to young boys during the changes is even more so. Stop lamenting your fate, she grumbled. This is not like you. It doesn't matter what you've been subjected to. The result in my eyes is quite evident. If I knew that Pavetta's child would become someone like you, I wouldn't hesitate an instant. The risk is very large, he said quickly. It's just as you said: four in ten survive. By the devil! Is there only danger in the event of these changes? Only the future witchers take risks? Life is full of hazards, Geralt. Life, too, is governed by selection: accidents, diseases, wars. Opposing destiny is perhaps as dangerous as abandoning it. Geralt... I would voluntarily give you this child, but.. I am also afraid. I will not take it. It is too great a responsibility, one that I refuse to assume. I would not want for this child to speak about you the way... the way I... You hate this woman, Geralt? My mother? No, Calanthe. I doubt that she was given a choice... or perhaps she had no say? No, she had, you know, enough formulas and elixirs... Choice. There is a sacred and incontestable choice of every woman that must be respected. Emotions are of no importance here. She had the indisputable right to make such a choice. That's what she did. But I think about meeting her, the expression on her

face then... it gives me a sort of perverse pleasure, if you understand what I mean. I understand what you say perfectly, she replied, smiling. But the chances of this happening are slim. I can't judge your age, witcher, but I suspect that you're much older than you appear. And so this woman... This woman, he interrupted, must now look much younger than I do. A sorceress? Yes. Interesting. I thought that sorceresses could not... She no doubt thought the same thing. No doubt. But you're right... Let's not speak any more about the right of a woman to decide. This is not the subject at hand. Returning to our problem. You will not take a child? This is final? Final. What if... destiny was not a myth? If it truly exists, do you not fear that it will take revenge? If destiny takes vengeance, it will be on me, he replied calmly. It is I who attack it. You have fulfilled your duty in this matter. If destiny proved not to be a legend, I would then find the child from those you showed me. The child of Pavetta is among them? Yes. Calanthe inclined her head slowly. Would you like to look into the eyes of destiny? No. I don't care. I withdraw and renounce my claim on the boy. How can I see the face of destiny when I don't believe in it? To unite two individuals, I think, destiny is not enough. It takes something more. Should I follow, groping along like a blind man, nave and uncomprehending? I have no respect for such destiny. My decision is irrevocable, Calanthe of Cintra. The queen rose, smiling. The witcher could not divine what that smile concealed.

So be it, Geralt of Rivia. Perhaps destiny willed that you withdraw and renounce your claim. I am, for my part, convinced. If you had chosen the right child, the destiny that you mock might have cruelly mocked you in return. He saw irony in those green eyes. She continued to wear an indecipherable smile. A rosebush grew next to the gazebo. Geralt plucked a flower, breaking its stem and then knelt, his head bowed, presenting the flower in his hands. I regret that I did not meet you sooner, white-haired one, she said, accepting the offered rose. Rise. He rose. If you change your mind, she went on, sniffing the flower, if you decide... Return to Cintra. I will wait for you. Your destiny will be waiting for you, as well. Perhaps not advitam aeternam, but for some time, no doubt. Farewell, Calanthe. Farewell, witcher. Look after yourself. I... I sometimes feel... in a strange way... that I am seeing you for the last time. Farewell, my queen. V Geralt awoke and discovered with astonishment that the stinging pain in his thigh had disappeared. It seemed that the swelling had also diminished. He wanted to check with his hands, but he could not lift them. Before he could understand that the weight of the fur blankets prevented him from moving, a horrible icy anxiety seized his stomach with talons like a hawk's. He extended and relaxed his fingers and repeated silently, no, no, I'm not... Paralyzed. You're awake. It was an observation, not a question, made in a voice that was clear and sweet. A woman. Young, certainly. He

turned his head and mumbled something about trying to get up. Don't move. Not so roughly, anyway. Are you in pain? Nnn... The sticky lips tore. Nnno. Only hurts... back. A bedsore, the gentle alto voice diagnosed, with open chilliness. Leave it to me. Come, drink this. Easy, in slow sips. The taste and smell of juniper dominated the beverage. An old trick, he thought. Juniper or mint to mask the true composition. He recognized cousataire and perhaps some button-heart. Yes, the button-heart was doubtlessly to neutralize the toxins and purify the blood poisoned by gangrene or infection. Drink. Drain the cup dry. Slower, or you'll choke. The medallion he wore around his neck began to vibrate slightly. Then the potion contained magic as well. With effort, he dilated his pupils. Lifting his head, he could now see clearly. A woman of feeble constitution, she wore men's clothing. The pallor of her thin face was luminous in the darkness. Where are we? In the tar-makers' clearing. The smell of resin floated effectively through the air. Geralt heard voices coming from the side of the hearth. Someone threw on some dead wood. The flame rose, sizzling. He looked at her again, making use of the light. Her hair was held back by a band of snakeskin. Her hair... He felt a suffocating pain in his throat and his chest, and forcefully clenched his fists. Her hair was red like fire. Illuminated by the light of the hearth, it looked vermillion, like cinnabar. Are you in pain? She read his emotions incompletely. Wait... He felt the shock of heat from the contact of her hand: the fire flowed down her back, and lower, toward her buttocks.

You're coming around, she said. Don't try to move on your own. You're very weak. Hey! Could someone help me? Geralt heard steps next to the hearth; he saw shadows, silhouettes. Someone bent down. It was Yurga. How are you feeling, lord? Better? Help me turn him over, the woman said. Carefully, slowly... Ah yes... Good. Thank you. Lying on his stomach, he could no longer meet her gaze. He calmed and controlled the trembling of his hands. She could sense his feelings. Geralt heard the clinking of bottles in her bag and the tinkling of flasks and porcelain jars. He also heard her breathing and felt her warmth against his side. She knelt next to him. My injury, he asked to break the unbearable silence, was difficult? Yes, indeed. A little. A chill entered her voice. It's often the case with bites. The worst type of injury. But you must be used to them, witcher. She knows, she searches through my thoughts. Reads them? Probably not. And I know why... She's afraid. Yes, nothing new for you, she repeated, knocking together her glass tools. I saw that you had some scars... But I managed. I am, you see, a sorceress... and a healer. That's my specialty. Yes, I was right, he thought. He did not respond. Going back to your injury, she continued calmly, you must know that your pulse, four times slower than that of an ordinary man, saved your life. Otherwise, you would not have survived. I can say that without hesitation. I saw the bandage that you had on your leg. There was something resembling a dressing, but it was a poor imitation. Geralt remained silent. Later, she continued, lifting his shirt up to his neck, the wound became infected, which is normal with bites. The infection was finally controlled. Of course, your witcher

elixirs were a great help. Still, I don't understand why you still take hallucinogens. I heard your ravings, Geralt of Rivia. She reads, he thought, she really reads thoughts. Unless Yurga told her my name. Perhaps I said it during my dreams under the effects of black gull. Devil only knows... The knowledge of my name could mean nothing. Nothing. She doesn't know who I am. She is completely unaware of who I am. He felt her apply to his back a cool and soothing ointment that gave off a strong smell of camphor. Her hands were small and very soft. Forgive my conventional methods, she said. I could reduce your bedsore with the help of magic, but I'm tired from tending to your injury: I'm not feeling very well. I bandaged your leg and healed it as much as necessary. You're no longer in danger. Don't get up for two days. Even veins repaired by magic can rupture and cause terrible bleeding. The scar will remain, of course. A new one for your collection. Thank you... He pressed his cheek against the furs to distort his voice and mask his natural tone: Might I know to whom I owe my thanks? She will not tell me, he thought, or will prefer to lie. My name is Visenna. I know, he thought. I am glad, he said slowly, keeping his cheek to the furs all the while, I am pleased that our paths have crossed, Visenna. By chance, she replied coolly, replacing his shirt on his back and covering it with fur blankets. The customs official informed me that someone had need of my art. When my presence is necessary, I go. It's a strange habit of mine. Listen: I gave the ointment to the merchant. Ask him to apply it morning and evening. Since he says that you saved

his life, he can perform that service for you. And me, Visenna? How can I thank you? Don't talk about that. I never take money from witchers. Call it solidarity, if you like, professional solidarity. And sympathy. In the cause of that sympathy I will tell you, listen to one more piece of advice, or if you prefer, the prescription of a healer: stop taking hallucinogens, Geralt. Hallucinogens aren't curative; they don't heal anything. Thank you, Visenna, for your help and your advice. I am grateful to you... for everything. He moved his hand from under the furs and touched the healer's knee. It began to tremble. She took his hand and squeezed it slightly. Geralt carefully freed his fingers to grasp her forearm. Of course it was the smooth skin of a young girl. The sorceress trembled even more, but did not withdraw her arm. He found the hand of the young woman and squeezed it firmly. His medallion, hanging around his neck, vibrated in agitation. Thank you, Visenna, he repeated, controlling the tremor in his voice. I'm glad that our paths have crossed. It was chance... she answered again, but this time without coldness in her voice. Perhaps it was destiny? he suggested, surprised that her excitement and nervousness had disappeared without leaving a trace. Do you believe in destiny, Visenna? Yes, she said, after some time. I believe in it. Do you believe that people bound by fate, he continued, necessarily meet one another? I believe that too... What are you doing? Don't turn over. I want to see your face... Visenna. I want to see your eyes. And you... you can look into mine. She made a movement as if she would fall to her knees,

but she remained at his side. Geralt turned slowly, wincing in pain. The light was bright: someone had thrown more wood on the fire. The sorceress did not move. She turned her face in profile. The witcher noticed then that her lips trembled. She squeezed his hand hard. Geralt watched her carefully. There was no resemblance. Her profile was completely different. A small nose. A narrow chin. The woman said nothing. She finally leaned over and met his eyes. Closely. All without a word. Do my improved eyes please you? he asked calmly. They're not very common... Do you know, Visenna, what is done to the eyes of witchers to improve them? Do you know that this is not always successful? Stop, she said softly. Stop it, Geralt. Geralt... He felt suddenly that something had broken in him. It's Vesemir who called me that. Geralt of Rivia! I even learned to imitate the regional accent. Probably to fill an inner need to belong somewhere. Even if the sentiment is fictitious. Vesemir... gave me that name. He also revealed your identity to me. Not without reluctance. Shut up, Geralt, shut up. You tell me today that you believe in destiny. At the time, did you believe in it already? Yes, certainly. You already saw that destiny would ordain our meeting. Even so, it should be noted that you yourself contributed little toward its realization. The woman still said nothing. I always wanted... I asked myself what I would say when we met. I thought about the question I would ask you. I imagined being able to feel a perverse pleasure... A tear beaded distinctly on the healer's cheek. Geralt felt his throat tighten painfully. He was tired, sleepy, weak. In the light of day... he murmured, tomorrow, in the

light of the sun, I will look into your eyes, Visenna... And I will ask my question. Or perhaps I won't ask, because it's too late. Was it destiny? Yes, Yen was right. It is not enough to be, yourself, subject to destiny. There must be something more... But I will look into your eyes tomorrow... In the light of the sun. No, she replied softly, in a voice of velvet that pierced through and summoned up the layers of memory that were missing, nonexistent, but remained nevertheless. If, he protested. If I want to... No. Sleep now. When you wake up, you will stop wanting that. What good is it to lock eyes by the light of the sun? What will that change? We can't turn back time. We can't change anything. What sense is there in asking me that question, Geralt? The fact that I don't know of any response that will really give you a perverse pleasure? That will give us that mutual destruction? No, we will not look into each other's eyes. Hypnotize yourself, Geralt. Between us, know that it wasn't Vesemir who gave you that name. Even if this does not change anything and does not undo the past, I want you to know that. Farewell, take care of yourself. Don't try to find me... Visenna... No, Geralt. You're going to fall asleep. And me... I will have been a dream. Goodbye. No, Visenna! Sleep! she intoned in a velvet voice that broke the witcher's will and tore it like tissue. Sleep. Geralt fell asleep. VI Are we already in the territory of Outer Rivia, Yurga? Since yesterday, my lord Geralt. We will reach the

Yarouga river soon. On the other side, we will be in my home. Look, even the horses are walking more quickly and leaning their heads forward. They've picked up the smell of the barn and the house. The house... You live within the castle's fortifications? No, in the suburb. Interesting. The witcher looked around. There's practically no evidence of the war. It was said, however, that the country was horribly destroyed. Well, Yurga replied, there is a shortage of everything but ruins... at least, that's not what's missing. Look carefully: almost every house, every courtyard, has a brand new frame. Beyond the river, you see, there it's even worse, where the fire burned everything to the ground... War is war, but one must keep on living. We suffered the worst torments when the Black Ones crossed through our lands. It seemed that they wanted to turn everything into a desert. Many of those who fled then have never returned. In their place, newcomers have settled. Life must go on. That's right, murmured Geralt, life must go on. Regardless of the past... one must keep on living... Absolutely right. Here! Look at it this way. I sewed and patched your trousers. Now they are like new. Just like this land, my lord Geralt. The war tore and trampled it under iron horseshoes; bruised and bloodied it; but the land renews itself, becoming fertile once more: the bodies themselves work to enrich the soil, even if it is difficult to work the land because of the bones and the armor cluttering the fields. Earth will overcome iron. You don't fear the return of the Nilfgaardians... the Black Ones? Now they know the path through the mountains... Well of course, we live in fear. But what can we do? Sit down and cry? Tremble? One must keep on living. Come what may. Whatever fate has in store for us, we can't avoid

it. You believe, then, in destiny? How could I not believe in it? After our meeting on the enchanted bridge where you saved my life! Oh, master witcher, you'll see that my Chrysididae will be kissing your feet... Stop with that. In truth, I am the one indebted to you. On the bridge... I was only doing my job, Yurga. I was practicing my profession, which consists of protecting humans for money, not for charity. Yurga, you know what people say about witchers? That no-one knows which is worse... them, or the monsters that they destroy. That's all wrong, lord, I don't understand why you talk like that. You think that I don't have my own eyes to see with? You are cut from the same cloth as that healer... Visenna... She didn't tell me her name. She came to us and offered her services without hesitation, knowing that we needed her. That evening, by the time I got down from my horse, she was already taking care of you. Oh, my lord, she took such good care of your leg. The air was filled with magic and we all fled, terrified, into the forest. And then the blood ran from her nose. Magic, apparently, is not easy. She bandaged you with such delicacy, like... Like a mother? Geralt asked through clenched teeth. Effectively. That's right. And when you were asleep... Yes, Yurga? White as a sheet, she was barely on her feet. But she came to ask us if any of the rest of us needed her help. The tar-maker, who had his hand crushed by a tree, benefited from her care. And she didn't take a cent. She even left the medicine. I know, Geralt, that there are many things said in the world about witchers and sorceresses, but not here. We, the people of Upper Sodden, of Outer Rivia, we know the truth. We need sorceresses too much not to know who they

really are. Their memories are not peddled by storytellers or gossips, but etched in stone. You saw for yourself back in the woods. Besides, my lord, you certainly know better than I do. The whole world knows about the battle that was fought here less than a year ago. You must have heard about it. I haven't been back here for over a year. I was in the North. But I heard talk... The second battle of Sodden... Exactly. You will see the hill and the rock. Before, the hill had the ordinary name of 'Mount Coulemelle,' but now all the world knows it as the Sorcerers' mountain or the mountain of the fourteen. Because twenty-two sorcerers joined the battle and fourteen died. It was a terrible struggle, master Geralt. The ground rose up, the sky spat fiery rain. Lightning struck. Corpses littered the ground. But the sorcerers at last vanquished the Black Ones and snuffed out the power that animated them. Fourteen of them did not return. Fourteen of them gave their lives... What's wrong, my lord? What is it? Nothing. Continue, Yurga. The battle was terrible, oh! Without the sorcerers on the hill, we surely would not be able to talk like this today, you and I, on the tranquil road to my house, because it wouldn't exist anymore, and neither would I, and perhaps you wouldn't either... Yes, we are indebted to all those sorcerers. Fourteen of them died in our defense, we the people of Sodden and Outer Rivia. Of course there were others who fought as well: warriors, nobles and peasants alike, anyone who could lay hands on a pitchfork or an ax, or even a stake... All acted with courage. Many of them died. But the sorcerers... Nothing is more natural for a warrior than to die on the field of battle, and then, that life is short anyway... But sorcerers can live as long as they like. Even so, they did not hesitate. They did not hesitate, repeated the witcher, wiping his forehead. They did not hesitate. And me, I was in the

North... What's wrong, my lord? Nothing. Yes... All of us, in the area, we leave flowers on that hill and through May, Belleteyn, the fire always burns. It will burn forever and ever. These fourteen sorcerers will live eternally in the memories of men. Living in memory, master Geralt, it's... it's something more! You're right, Yurga. Every child knows the names of the fourteen carved in stone at the top of the hill. You don't believe me? Listen: Axel known as Raby, Triss Merigold, Atlan Kerk, Vanielle of Bruga, Dagobert of Vole... Stop, Yurga. What's wrong, my lord? You're as pale as death. Nothing. VII He climbed the hill very slowly, carefully, attentive to the work of tendons and muscles after their magical healing. Despite being completely healed, the wound still required his attention, and he took care not to put his full weight on the leg. It was hot. The smell of the grass intoxicated him and clouded his mind, but it was pleasant. The obelisk had not been installed in the center of the plateau at the top of the hill, but further down, behind a row of sharp stones. If Geralt had come before sunset, the shadow cast on the standing stone by the row of stones would accurately represent the perimeter and indicate the direction in which each sorcerer's face was turned during the battle. He looked in each direction, over the endless rolling fields. If there were any bones left he was certain they were covered by the abundant grass. A hawk circled in the distance, hovering serenely, with wings outstretched: the

only movement in a landscape petrified by the heat wave. The base of the obelisk was large. To encircle it would require at least four or five people with arms outstretched. It was obvious that it would have been impossible to transport it so far without resorting to magic. The face of the standing stone that faced the row of stones had been meticulously polished. On it had been engraved in runic characters the names of the fourteen deceased. He appproached it slowly. Yurga, indeed, was right. At the foot of the obelisk, common flowers, wildflowers, poppies, lupines, forget-me-nots, had been placed. Triss Merigold, chestnut hair, cheerful, ready to burst into laughter for no reason at all, like a child. He liked her. It had been mutual. Lawdbor of Murivel, with whom Geralt had avoided a fight in the city of Vizima, on a day when he had caught the witcher in the act of manipulating dice with a discreet telekinesis. Lytta Neyd, alias Coral. She had been dubbed with nickname because of the color of the cream she applied to her lips. She had once spoken ill of Geralt to the King Belohun, who then imprisoned him for a week in a dungeon. As soon as he was released, he went to find her to ask for her reasons and had found himself in bed with the beautiful woman, without knowing how, for another week. Gorazd the Elder who had wanted to pay him 100 marks in exchange for the opportunity to examine his eyes and even 1,000 for the chance to dissect him, not necessarily today, he had clarified. He waited three more years. Geralt heard from behind him a quiet rustle. He turned. She was barefoot, dressed in a simple linen dress. Long fair hair tumbled free over her shoulders. A daisy-chain crown adorned her brow.

Greetings to you, he said. Without answering, she looked at him with eyes that were blue and cold. Geralt noticed that she was not tanned. It was strange, because the skin of the country girls, scorched by the sun, was ordinarily dark by the end of the summer. Her face and what was visible of her shoulders was missing the golden tint. You've brought flowers? She smiled and lowered her eyelids. He felt a chill set in. She passed by him without a word and knelt at the foot of the monument, touching the stone with her hand. I don't bring flowers, she said, lifting her head. Those that have been brought here are for me. He watched her carefully. She knelt, her body hiding the last name engraved on the stone. The girl emitted a glow of light against the base of the dark rock. Who are you? he asked slowly. You do not know? I know, he thought, looking at the icy blue of her eyes. Yes, I think that I know. Geralt felt calm. He could not be otherwise. Not now. I have always been curious to see you, madam. You don't have to give me such a title, she replied coldly. We have known each other for years, haven't we? We know each other, he agreed. They say that you follow in my steps. I go my own way. But you, you had never, until just now, looked behind you. You turned back today for the first time. Geralt remained silent. Tired, he had nothing to say. How... How will it happen? he asked her at last, coldly and without emotion. I will take you by the hand, she replied, looking him straight in the eye. I will take you by the hand and lead you

across the meadow, through a cold and wet fog. And after? What is there beyond the fog? Nothing, she replied, smiling. After that, there is nothing. You have followed me step by step, he said, cutting down the ones in my path. Why? So that I would be alone, isn't that right? And finally begin to know fear? I'll tell you the truth. You have always frightened me. I didn't turn back for fear of seeing you behind me. I was always afraid. I have lived my life in fear, until today... Until today? Yes. We stand face to face, but I don't feel any anxiety. In taking everything from me, you have also stripped me of fear. Why are your eyes, then, filled with terror, Geralt of Rivia? Your hands shake. You are pale. Why? Are you afraid to read the fourteenth name engraved on the obelisk? If you like, I can tell you the name. No, you don't need to. I know whose name it is. The circle closes. The snake bites his own tail. So be it. You and your name. The flowers. For you and for me. The fourteenth name engraved at the base, the name that I gave my heart to by night and by the light of the sun, in frost, drought, and rain. No, I will not speak it now. But yes, speak it. Yennefer... Yennefer de Vengerberg. But the flowers are for me. End this, he managed to say. Take... take my hand. She stood and approached him. Geralt felt a chill, hard and penetrating. Not today, she replied. Another day, yes. But not today. You've taken everything from me... No, she interrupted. Me, I take nothing. I only take by the hand. So that no-one must be alone and lost in the

fog... Goodbye, Geralt of Rivia. Some other day. The witcher did not respond. She turned slowly and then disappeared into the fog that was drowning the summit of the hill where everything was disappearing: into that damp and white haze vanished the obelisk, the flowers placed at its base and the fourteen engraved names. Soon there was nothing left but the fog and the grass wet with brilliant droplets under his feet, a grass whose sweet, heavy aroma created a doleful atmosphere, a will to forget and collapse from fatigue... Master Geralt! What is it? Were you asleep? I warned you that you could still weaken yourself. Why did you climb to the summit? I was asleep, he groaned, wiping his face with his hand. I was asleep, by the plague... It's nothing, Yurga, it's because of this heat... Yes, you have a devil of a fever... We must continue on our way, my lord. Come, I'll help you down the slope. I have nothing... Nothing, nothing. I'm curious to know the reason for your staggering. By the plague, why did you climb the hill in this heat? You wanted to read all their names? Nothing... Yurga... you really remember all of the names inscribed on the monument? Of course. I'll test your memory... The last. The fourteenth. What is it? But you're a real skeptic. Don't you believe anything? You want to verify that I'm not lying? I told you that even children know the names. The last, you say? Yes, the last, it's Yol Grethen of Carreras. You know her, perhaps? No, he replied. I don't know her. VII

Master Geralt? Yes, Yurga? The merchant bowed his head and was quiet, wrapping his finger with the thin strap with which he had repaired the witcher's seat. He stood at last and nudged the back of the valet who was driving the cart. Let go of the reins, Profit. I'll drive. Sit on the seat next to me, master Geralt. And you, Profit, what are you still doing here? Come on, hop to it! We need to talk. No need for your ears here! Roach, ahead of them a little and biting the rope that secured her to the charriot, appeared to envy the little mare that Profit rode at a trot along the highway. Yurga clicked his tongue, lightly striking the horse with the reins. Well, he drawled, the situation is this, my lord. I promised you... then, on the bridge... I made a promise... Forget it, the witcher interrupted promptly. Forget it, Yurga. I cannot forget it, the merchant responded bluntly, my word is not the wind. That which I don't expect to find at home when I return with you. Leave me be. I don't want anything from you. We are settled. No, lord. If I find such a thing at home, it will be the sign of destiny. And if one makes a mockery of Destiny, if one tells lies, she takes it very seriously. I know, thought the witcher. I know. But... master Geralt... What, Yurga? I won't find anything at home that I don't expect to see. Not a thing, let alone what you want. Listen, master witcher: Chrysididae, my wife, will give me no more children. Whatever may happen, there will not be a new child at home. You are mistaken.

Geralt did not respond. Yurga remained quiet also. Roach snorted again, tossing her head. But I have two sons, Yurga said very quickly, looking at the road ahead of him. Two healthy sons, strong and not stupid. I must send them into apprenticeships. One of them will, I think, learn the trade with me. But the other... Geralt continued to be silent. Yurga turned his head and looked at him: You were saying? You demanded an oath from me on the bridge. It was for you to find a child, nothing else, isn't that so? I have two sons: let one of them study the witchers' arts. It's not a bad idea. You are sure, Geralt interrupted in a low voice, that he isn't stupid? Yurga blinked. Defending people, saving their lives, in your opinion, is it a good or a bad thing? Those fourteen, on the hill? You, on the bridge? What you yourself have accomplished, is it good or bad? I don't know, Geralt managed to respond. I don't know, Yurga. Sometimes, I think that I know. But sometimes I have my doubts as well. Would you like for your sun to have such doubts? And why not? the merchant replied seriously. Why not have doubts? It's nothing but a human and good thing. What? Doubt. Only an evil man, master Geralt, is without it. And no-one escapes his destiny. The witcher did not respond. The main road ran along a high promontory and bent birches that mysteriously managed to keep hold of the steep slope. The trees had yellow leaves. Fall is returning, thought Geralt, it's a new autumn. Below, a river shimmered. Behind a freshly-whitewashed fence, one could see the roofs of

houses and the polished stilts of the wharf. The winch squeaked. The ferry was heading toward the edge, pushing a wave ahead of it. It split the waters with its blunt prow, pushing aside the grass and leaves that floated on the surface, trapped by a coating of dust. The ropes, pulled by the ferrymen, groaned. The crowd assembled on the banks was raising a commotion: women's cries, men's cursing, children's tears, bellowing, neighing, bleating. The deep monotone chant of fear. Stand back! Make way! Stand back, damn it! shouted a knight, his head covered by a bloody rag. His horse, immersed up to the abdomen, was annoyed, lifting its forelegs roughly and raising splashes. On the pier could be heard screams, cries: soldiers armed with shield pushed the crowd back, striking where they could with the butt of their spears. Stay away from the ferry! cried the knight, swinging his sword. The army has priority! Stay back, or heads will fly! Geralt pulled on the reins to stop his horse, which danced on the edge of the slope. At the bottom of the valley marched heavily-armed soldiers. The movement of their weapons and armor enveloped the wearers in a cloud of dust that reached the shield-bearers in their path. Geraaaalt! The witcher looked down. A thin man with a cherrycolored jacket and a hat with an egret-feather plume jumped up and hailed him from a cart loaded with wooden cages that had been abandoned at the side of the road. In the cages, hens and geese were cackling constantly. Geraaaalt, it's me! Dandelion! Come join me! Stay away from the ferry, the knight continued to

scream from his bandaged head, on the pier. The ferry is only for the army! If you want to get to the other side, you pack of dogs, take your hatchets and get to work in the forest! Make yourself a raft! The ferry is only for the army! By all the gods, Geralt, panted the poet, climbing the side of the valley. His cherry-colored jacket was covered with poultry feathers white as snow. You see what's happening? Sodden just lost the battle: they retreated. Retreat? But what am I saying? It's more of a stampede... a full panic! We need to get out of here, Geralt, and cross to the other side of the Yarouga river... What are you doing here, Dandelion? Where did you come from? What am I doing here? shouted the bard. You ask me that? I am doing the same as the others. I was jolted all day yesterday on this cart! Some son of a bitch stole my horses during the night! Geralt, I beg you, get me out of here! Those Nilfgaardians could arrive at any moment! Anyone without the Yarouga river between himself and their army will be slaughtered. Slaughtered, you understand? Don't panic, Dandelion. Below, they heard the neighing of horses forced aboard the ferry and the clamor of their hooves striking the boards; the screaming; the uproar of the crowd; the sound of splashing caused by a cart pushed into the water; the bellowing of cattle whose faces broke the surface of the water. Geralt saw the crates and bundles of hay carried by the current smash against the hull of the ferry and continue on their way. All was clamor and cursing; a cloud of dust rose from the valley; hoofbeats could be heard. Each in turn! yelled the knight with the bandaged head, plunging with his horse into the crowd. In order, you sons of bitches! One after the other! Geralt, moaned Dandelion, clinging to the stirrup, you know what's happening? We'll never get aboard the

ferry. The soldiers will outdo themselves and burn it afterward so it can't be used by Nilfgaardians. That's what they do in general, eh? You're right, agreed the witcher. That's the favored practice. I still don't understand why all these people are in such a panic! Is this the first war they've ever seen? Usually, the royal troops fight amongst themselves, then the kings come to an agreement, sign a treaty and take advantage of the occasion to kill each other. These events shouldn't concern all the people stampeding on the pier! What explains this outburst of violence? Dandelion looked directly at the witcher's face without releasing the stirrup: You clearly have very meager access to information, Geralt. Or you don't know how to interpret it. This is not an ordinary war of succession or a dispute over the ownership of a piece of land; we are not dealing with the quarrel of two noblemen to which peasants, occupied by their crops, remain passive witnesses. What is it then? Enlighten me, because I don't know what's going on. Between you and me, it doesn't interest me much, but explain it anyway, please. This war is unique, the bard explained seriously. The armies of Nilfgaard leave behind them nothing but desolation and corpses: entire fields of corpses. It's a war of total extermination. Nilfgaard against everything. The cruelty... There is no war without cruelty, the witcher interrupted. You're exaggerating, Dandelion. It's like burning the ferry: such is the practice... It is, I would say, a military tradition. Since the beginning of the world, armies have been killing, stealing, burning and attacking, unceasingly, and in that order. Since the beginning of the world, when a war breaks out, the farmers and their wives hide in the woods with the few possessions that they can

carry and return home when the conflict is over... Not this war, Geralt. After this war, no-one returns. There will be nothing to return to. Nilfgaard leaves behind it only rubble; its armies advance like lava from which no-one escapes. The roads are strewn, for miles, with gallows and pyres; the sky is cut with columns of smoke as long as the horizon. Since the beginning of the world, in fact, nothing of this sort has happened before. Since the world is our world... You must understand that the Nilfgaardians have descended from their mountains to destroy this world. That's absurd. Who would benefit from destroying the world? Wars aren't fought for the sake of destruction. Wars are fought for two reasons: the first is power; the second is money. Stop your philosophizing, Geralt! You can't change what's happening with philosophy! Why aren't you hearing me? Why do you refuse to understand? Believe me, Yarouga will not stop Nilfgaard's momentum. In winter, when the river freezes, they will push the front even farther. I tell you this: we must flee to the North. They may not reach that far. But in any case, our world will no longer be the same. Geralt, don't leave me alone here! Don't go without me! Don't leave me! You've lost your mind, Dandelion. The witcher leaned over his saddle. Fear must have made you take leave of your senses. How can you believe that I would leave you alone? Give me your hand. Get on my horse. You won't find anything of value on the ferry. Besides, they'll never let you on board. I'll take you up the river. We'll look for a boat or a raft. The Nilfgaardians will catch us. They are already there. Have you noticed the knights? You can see that they come directly from the battlefield. Let's go downriver, toward the mouth of the Ina. Stop panicking. We'll get through, don't worry.

Downriver, there are crowds of fugitives. At each ford, like here, there will be problems with crossing by ferry. All the boats must have been requisitioned. We'll go upriver, against the current. Don't be afraid. I'll get you across, on a tree trunk if necessary. You can hardly see the other bank! Stop complaining. I told you I would get you across. And you? Get on my horse. We'll discuss it on the way. Hey, by the devil, you're not taking this huge bag! You want to break Roach's spine? It's Roach? Roach was a bay, this one is chestnut. All of my horses are named Roach. You know that very well. Stop giving me the run-around. What do you have in there? Gold? Manuscripts! Poems! And my rations... Throw it all in the river. You'll write new poems. As for food, I'll share mine with you. Dandelion made a mournful face, but didn't hesitate. He threw his bag into the water and jumped onto the horse, sitting on the saddlebags and clinging to the witcher's belt. On the way, on the way, he repeated anxiously. Don't lose any time, Geralt, go into the woods before... Stop, Dandelion... You're making Roach nervous. Don't mock me. If you knew what I... Shut up, by the plague. We're taking the road. I'd like to get you across before nightfall. Me? And you? There's nothing calling me to the other side of the river. Have you gone mad, Geralt? You've had enough of living? What are you doing? It's nothing that concerns you. I'm going to Cintra. To Cintra? But Cintra doesn't exist anymore! What are you talking about?

Cintra doesn't exist anymore. It's only rubble and ruins. The Nilfgaardians... Get down, Dandelion... What? Get down! The witcher turned forcefully. At the sight of his face, the troubadour shot down from the horse like an arrow, stumbling. Geralt in turn dismounted calmly. Having passed the reins over the mare's head, the witcher stood indecisively for a moment before running his gloved hand over his face. He sat on a stump opposite a bush of blood-red dogwood shoots. Come here, Dandelion, he said. Sit with me and tell me what happened to Cintra. Tell me everything. The poet sat: The Nilfgaardians dealt the first blow, he began after a moment of silence. There were thousands. They met with the armies of Cintra in the Marnadal valley. The battle lasted all day: from dawn to dusk. Cintra's troops valiantly resisted before being decimated. The king died, and that's when the queen... Calanthe. Yes. Seeing that her army had succumbed to panic and scattered, she gathered around herself and her standard any who could still fight and formed a line of defense that reached the river, next to the city. All the soldiers who were still able followed. And Calanthe? With a handful of knights, she covered the troops' crossing and defended the rear. They say she fought like a man, plunging into the thick of the battle. She was impaled by pikes when she charged against the Nilfgaardian infantry. She was then evacuated to the city. What's in that flask, Geralt? Vodka. Want some?

Well then, gladly. Speak. Continue, Dandelion. Tell me everything. The city wasn't properly defended. There was no headquarters. The defensive walls were empty. The rest of the knights and their families, the princes and the queen, barricaded themselves in the castle. The Nilfgaardians then took the castle after their sorcerers reduced the gate to cinders and burned down the walls. Only the tower, apparently protected by magic, resisted the spells of the Nilfgaardian sorcerers. Even so, the attackers penetrated inside four days later without making camp. The women had killed the children, the boys and girls, and fell upon their own swords or... What's is it, Geralt? Continue, Dandelion. Or... like Calanthe... head first, from the battlement, the very top... It's said that she asked to be... but no-one would agree. So she climbed up to the crenelations and... jumped head first. They say they did horrible things to the corpse afterward. I don't want... What is it? Nothing, Dandelion... At Cintra, there was... a child: the little daughter of Calanthe, about ten or eleven years old. Her name was Ciri. Have you heard of her? No, but a there was terrible massacre that left almost no-one alive in the city and the castle. None of the defenders of the keep escaped from death, as I told you. Most of the women and the children of the royal families were there. The witcher remained silent. You knew Calanthe? asked Dandelion. I knew her, indeed. And the little girl you told me of? Ciri? I knew her well. A wind blew across the river, rippling the surface of the water and shaking the branches of the bush. Some leaves flew by, swirling. It's fall, the witcher thought. It's the new autumn.

Geralt stood. Do you believe in destiny, Dandelion? The bard lifted his head and looked at the witcher with eyes wide with astonishment. Why do you ask me that? Answer. Well... yes, I believe. But do you know that destiny alone is not enough? That there must be something more? I don't understand. You're not alone. But that's how it is. It takes something more. The problem is that I... I never knew what that was. What is it, Geralt? Nothing, Dandelion. Come on, in the saddle. Let's go. Hurry up. Who knows how long it will take to find a big enough boat. I'm still not abandoning Roach. We're going to cross together, then? asked the poet, invigorated. Yes. I have nothing more to look for on this side of the river. IX Yurga! Chrysididae! The young woman standing next to the gate ran, stumbling and crying out, hair flying, to Yurga who tossed the rains to his servant and leapt out of the cart toward his wife. He took her by the waist, energized, lifted her and whirled. I'm back, Chrysididae! I'm back! Yurga! I'm back! Throw the doors open wide! The master of the house has returned!

Surprised in the middle of doing laundry, Chrysididae was wet and smelled of soapy water. Yurga set her back down without releasing her. She remained in his arms, trembling, pressed tight against him. Come with me to the house, Chrysididae. By the gods, you returned... I couldn't sleep... Yurga... I couldn't even sleep... I'm back. Hey, I'm back! I've even come back rich, Chrysididae! You see the cart? Hey, Profit! Crack the whip, go through the gate! You see the cart, Chrysididae? It carries a lot of things... Yurga, what do I care about your cart? You've come back... in good health... whole... I came back rich, I tell you. Come see... Yurga? And him, who is he? The one dressed in black? By the gods, with a sword... The merchant turned. Dismounting, the witcher pretended, with his back turned, to settle the cinches and adjust the saddle of his horse. He did not look up and he did not approach. I'll tell you later. Oh, Chrysididae, as long as... Tell me, where are the children? They're in good health? They're in good health, Yurga, in good health. They went out to the fields to shoot crows. The neighbors will tell them to come home. They'll turn up right away, all three... All three? What's... Chrysididae? You can... No... but I must tell you something... you won't get angry? Me? With you? I adopted a little girl, Yurga. The druids took her in...You know, the ones who saved the lives of children after the war... They gathered them up in the forests, the lost and abandoned kids... barely alive... Yurga? Are you angry? Yurga slapped his hand to his forehead and turned around. The witcher walked behind the cart, leading his

horse. Avoiding their gaze, he kept turning his head. Yurga? Oh, by the gods, groaned the merchant. By the gods, Chrysididae! Something that I didn't expect! At home! Don't be angry, Yurga... You'll see that you'll grow to love her. She's a smart little girl, friendly, hardworking... a little strange, it's true. She refused to say where she was from and then started to cry. So I don't ask her questions. Yurga, you know how much I've always wanted to have a little girl... What do you think? Nothing, he replied softly. Nothing. It's destiny. All along the way, he kept repeating the word feverishly: Destiny, destiny... By the gods... we aren't capable of understanding what it is, Chrysididae. It's impossible to know the thoughts of something like that. And the dreams. We aren't capable... Papa!!! Nadbor! Sulik! How you've grown! Regular little bulls! Come to me... Yurga stopped dead when he saw the sickly little girl with her ashen hair walking slowly behind the boys. The little girl looked at him. The merchant noticed the large green eyes like spring grass and bright as two stars. He saw her suddenly pick up speed and run... He heard her cry out in a shrill and piercing voice: Geralt! The witcher turned instantly and rushed to meet the young girl. The scene left Yurga speechless. He had never seen anyone move so fast. They met in the middle of the yard: the little girl with ashen hair surrounded by a gray dress; the white-haired witcher with his sword on his shoulder, dressed in black leather studded with silver; bounding lightly; the little girl trotting; the witcher kneeling; the tiny hands of the little girl around his neck; the mouse-gray hair of the girl falling on

the witcher's shoulders. Chrysididae gave a muffled scream. Yurga drew her to him without saying a word and took her in his arms. His other arm hugged the two boys. Geralt! the little girl repeated, hugging the witcher's chest. You've found me! I knew it! I always knew! I knew you'd find me! Ciri, the witcher said. Yurga didn't see Geralt's face, hidden by the little girl's ashen hair. He only saw black-gloved hands squeezing Ciri's back and shoulders. You've finally found me! Oh, Geralt! I waited all this time! It took so long... We'll stay together now, won't we? Now we'll be together, right? Say it, Geralt! Forever! Say it! Forever, Ciri. It's just like they predicted, Geralt! Like they predicted... I'm your destiny? Say it! I'm your destiny? Yurga saw astonishment in the eyes of the witcher. He heard Chrysididae's discreet sobs and felt her shoulders trembling. He knew that he would not understand the answer, but he waited anyway. With good reason: You're more than that, Ciri. More than that.

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