whirled to do the same to another Skinner. Half out of the earth, it dissolved.
Five spots near them exploded as Skinners leaped free of the ground. Daine screamed. Numair reached to pull her closer, and discovered that someone else had thesame idea. Two pairs of hands clutched the girl by the arms, dragging her into a patch of air that burned silvery white.
âNo!â shouted the mage, wrapping both arms around Daine. The phantom hands continued to pull.
Sinking into white pain, Daine heard a man shriek, âCurse you, follow them! Follow, follow, FOLLOW!â
Unseen by her or Numair, an inky shadow leaped free of the grass to wrap itself around her feet. Girl, man, and shadow vanished into bright air.
Every inch of her throbbed. Hands gripped her; she fought. âThe Skinners! Theyâll kill Numair, theyâll kill the People, theyâll kill the crops! Let me go !â
A female voice, one that she knew, said, âIf she doesnât rest, she wonât heal. Heâs just as bad. Both keep fretting about those monsters.â
âIâd best take care of it, then.â The second gravelly voice was even more familiar.
âWhy?â The speaker was an unknown male. âLeave mortal affairs to mortals.â
âNonsense,â barked the gravel voice. Whiskers tickled her face; a musky scent that she knew well filled her nose. âListen, Daine. Numair is here, with you. Heâs safe. Iâll fix those Skinners. I can handle them. Now rest, and stop fussing!â
She sneezed. âAll right, Badger.â If her old friend the badger god said that things would be taken care of, she could believe him, even if all this was only a dream.
The womanâs voice was fading. âIâll tell Numair.â
The next time Daine woke, the pain gnawing at her had turned to a dull, steady ache. Cloth rustled nearby; the faint odor of sweet pea and woods lily filled her nose. Like the female voice sheâd heard, she knew that scent well. She opened her eyes.
A blurred face hung over her. Daine squinted, tryingto see. The face became clearer: blue eyes, a dimple at the corner of that smiling mouth, creamy skin, straight nose, high cheekbones. The whole was topped with a braided crown of heavy golden hair.
In a second the girl forgot the last four years. She was twelve again, and in her bed in Galla. âMa?â she croaked. âI dreamed you was dead.â With a frown, she corrected herselfâshe knew how to speak like cultured folk nowadays! âI dreamed you were dead.â
Sarra BeneksriâDaineâs motherâlaughed. âSweet-ling, it was no dream. I am dead.â
Some of Daineâs confusion faded. âWell, thatâs all right, then.â She tried to sit up. âWhere am I?â
Sarra moved pillows to help her. âYouâre in the realms of the gods.â
Moving dizzied the girl. âHowâd I get here ? And why do I hurt so?â
âWe brought you. Sadly, passage between realms was fair hard for you. Hereâs something to drink against the pain.â
âTalk about familiar,â Daine grumbled, taking the offered cup. With each swallow, she felt an improvement; by the time sheâd swallowed all of the liquid, her pain was nearly gone. âYour messes have gotten better,â she remarked with a grin.
âItâs the herbs here.â Sarra pinched Daineâs nose gently. âTheyâre stronger. Open your eyes wide.â She used her fingers to pull back Daineâs eyelids. âWhere were you born?â
âSnowsdale, in Galla. Why are you asking?â
âTo see if your mindâs unhurtâthough it being you, I wonder if Iâll be able to tell.â
âMa!â squeaked Daine with laughing outrage.
âHow old are you?â
âSixteen.â Memory returned in a rush. âWhereâs Numair? The Skinnersââ
Her mother stopped her from