Storm Breaking
Book Three of the
Mage Storms
by Mercedes Lackey
copyright 1996
version
2.0. spell checked, compared to original, formatting. Completed January 30,
2004.
Dedicated to the memory of Elsie B.
Wollheim
One
Karal lay as quietly as he could, keeping his breathing even to
avoid jarring his head.. He kept his eyes closed against the light, hoping that
the snow pack across his brow would eventually ease his throbbing headache. It
was hard to think through the pain that stabbed from both temples and seemed to
meet just above his nose. He was only vaguely aware of the rest of his body,
muffled as it was in blankets, with hot stones packed all around to keep him
from getting cold. The Shin'a'in who tended him seemed particularly concerned that
he not take a chill from the clammy stone floor or the snow packs on his head.
If this had been Valdemar, or even Karse, there would have been other recourses
to ease the fiery lances stabbing through his temples—but unfortunately it
wasn't. This half-melted ruin of an ancient tower held no such amenities as
Healers or herbal pharmacopoeias, and he was going to have to make do with
whatever their Shin'a'in allies could come up with, at least for the present.
That meant willow tea and snow packs, and hope for the best.
I can always hope for the best. It could be worse. How much worse, though—that was
something he was not prepared to contemplate at the moment.
It was a headache of monumental proportions, which was only to be
expected, considering that he had personally been the nexus-point for all of
the energies of a weapon so powerful and unpredictable that not even the Great
Mage who had ended the Mage Wars had dared to use it. It had required a
magic-channel, a living channel. Either no one in Urtho's contingent of mages
happened to be a Channel, or else the Mage of Silence hadn't wanted to risk the
life of such a person in the use of this weapon—in either case, it had remained
unused with a warning plaque advising against its use.
Or else he couldn't get any volunteers. Not that Karal could blame anyone for
not volunteering. His first experience at being a Channel had been singularly
unpleasant, but the second had been of a different order of magnitude
altogether. He honestly didn't remember too much of what had happened to him,
once the weapon had been activated. Both the Hawkbrother Adept Firesong and the
half-Shin'a'in An'desha had assured him that was all for the best, and he
believed them.
When both An'desha and Firesong agree on something... He had the shivery feeling that he
really didn't want to know exactly what had happened. If he knew, he'd have to
think about it, and that gave him a very queasy feeling.
It was much easier to lie in his bedroll and deal with pain than
to think.
Occasionally the sounds of the others, moving about in their daily
chores, made their way past the pain, oddly muffled or magnified by the strange
acoustics of the place. An'desha and the Shin'a'in shaman Lo'isha were talking
softly, their voices blending together into a meaningless murmur, as oddly
soothing as wind in leaves or the whisper of water over rocks. Someone,
probably the Kaled'a'in kestra'chern
Silverfox, was cleaning cooking utensils; soft metallic clinks punctuated the
soft sounds of conversation. Nearer at hand, the Hawkbrother Firesong sang
absently to himself; Firesong was probably mending something. Firesong always
sang when he was mending something; he said it was to keep him from saying
something he would regret. He didn't much care for mending, or for any other
chores—the Tayledras Adept had been used, all his life, to being waited on.
Having to fend for himself was an experience that Firesong was not enjoying. On
the whole, Karal was of the opinion that he was bearing up well under these
pressures and added responsibilities.
So much for the human members of the group. And as for the ones
who were not human—well, Karal knew where Altra the Firecat was. The furry,
vibrating blanket covering him from neck to knee was Altra, not some arcane
Shin'a'in cover let. Somehow, unlike mortal cats which would inexplicably increase
their weight when lying on a human, the Firecat had decreased his, making
himself no heavier than a thick woolen blanket. Only the steady radiating
warmth and the deep, soothing purr betrayed his presence.
Somewhere beyond the chamber where Karal was lying, one of the
horselike creatures known to the Valdemarans as a Companion, the one called
Florian, listened attentively to An'desha and the shaman. If Karal opened his
mind a little, he would "hear" the voices that were only a vague
music to his real ears, but he would hear them through the senses of the
Companion. The bonds between himself and the Companion and Firecat were
stronger now than only weeks ago. He had only to think of them to sense the
whisper of their thoughts, and he was aware of their presence in his mind as a
constant warmth. Something had happened during the time he could not remember
that bound the three of them even more firmly together. Anything they saw,
heard, or felt, he could experience himself if he chose. He didn't know if the
reverse was true, but he rather thought it wasn't. He was the one who'd
been changed, not them.
That was another thing he didn't want to think too closely about.
The Firecat was not entirely a mortal creature, and the Companion, while mortal
enough, like the Firecat was a human reborn into a body of magical nature. So
if something had happened that bound him to them—and so very
tightly that he no longer had to work to reach their minds—
He shivered, and the cold he felt had nothing to do with the snow
pack on his head. Oh, no. I can't have changed that much. This is probably
just temporary, something that will go away when I'm stronger.
He redirected his thoughts and noticed that at least now he could
think coherently.
That's an improvement anyway.
Now where was everyone else? He kept his eyes closed and listened
carefully, trying to locate them all by sound alone rather than take a chance
that opening his eyes would wake the pain again.
The remaining nonhumans, the two gryphons, were busy packing up
their few belongings. They muttered to each other with little hisses and beak
clicks, and their talons scraped against the leather of the saddlebags they had
borrowed from the Shin'a'in for their journey north. They had decided that they
had been away from their twin offspring long enough, and no one in the group
was heartless enough to insist that they stay. The thrill of walking where the
fabled Black Gryphon had once walked was probably beginning to pall in the face
of being away from their beloved little ones for far too long. And with the
Gates down, it would be a long trip back, even for creatures that flew.
And it could very well be that coming as close as we all did to
getting seriously hurt, Treyvan and Hydona have decided that they don't want to
leave their little ones as orphans. Who could blame them for that?
Yes, he was definitely able to think more coherently now.
Coherently enough to notice my neck muscles are in knots. Hardly a
surprise. Karal
sighed a little, and relaxed tense shoulders into the embrace of his
sheepskin-covered pack, which was now serving him as a pillow. It's a good
thing that I have clothing in there instead of books. The snow pack was
working after all; if he noticed that his shoulders hurt, that meant the
headache wasn't overwhelming everything else.
Grand, so now I get to enjoy how much the rest of me hurts!
But as the pain behind his eyes eased, so, too, did the tension in
his muscles, which were probably contributing to the pain of the headache in
the first place. So annoying how all these things managed to feed back on each
other!
Well, I'd be a poor Sun-priest if I couldn't make myself relax,
now wouldn't I? Such
relaxation techniques were part of every novice's training. You couldn't pray
if you weren't relaxed; how could you keep your mind on the glory of Vkandis if
you were being nagged by a cramp? He patiently persuaded his rebellious body to
behave itself, getting muscles unknotted that he hadn't even known were tight.
As he did so, the ache in his head ebbed further, thus proving his guess that
part of the headache was due to muscle tension.
That's better. That's much better. If his head would just let him be, he
might actually begin to enjoy this invalid state, at least a little. For once
he felt completely justified in lying abed and letting others take care of him;
the depleted state of his entire body had convinced him that he had actually earned
a rest.
And after all, it wasn't every day he had a Tayledras Healing
Adept waiting on his every wish. How many people could boast of that? He
couldn't even sigh without having Firesong ask him if he needed anything, a
rather odd turn of events given that Firesong was the one used to being waited
on.
He wasn't at all certain what prompted Firesong's
attentiveness—there were others who would certainly have played nursemaid if
the Adept hadn't insisted on taking the duty—but the Hawkbrother did make a
very good and considerate nurse.
I certainly wouldn't have expected that from him. It just doesn't
seem like him at all.
Well, maybe it wasn't much like the Firesong he knew, but
such a thought was as shallow as the flippant surface that was all the
Hawkbrother would ever reveal to him, given a choice. He immediately chided himself
for that thought.
That was unworthy as well as unkind. There is far more to Firesong
than I will ever see. We are all trying to cope with extreme situations, and if
that is the way he chooses to cope, he has a right to it.
Just at the moment, even when his head wasn't splitting, Karal was
in no shape to do anything other than wonder and enjoy the attention. He could
hardly move his hand without tiring himself, and simply getting to his feet to
go to the privy area left him so exhausted, he could only lie in his bedroll
and doze for marks afterward. That worried him; unless he regained his strength
soon, he would not be able to travel. If he couldn't travel, he wouldn't be
able to leave with the others when they returned to Valdemar. The impatient gryphon
parents were not going to wait for the others, but the humans could not wait
much longer either. If they didn't leave now, they might be caught and trapped
here by winter storms.
On the other hand... it might already be too late. The Gate that
brought us here is down, and if I were a mage, I wouldn't chance reopening it.
We might be stuck here until spring. Even under the best of conditions it's
going to take an awfully long time to walk back.
So long, in fact, that returning home might be the very worst
thing that they could do at this point. The solution to the problem of the
mage-storms he had depleted himself to provide was, once again, a temporary
solution only. This might be the very best place for them to work on a
permanent answer. They certainly had resources here at their disposal that they
wouldn't find anywhere else.
For one thing, the ancient weapon that they had used to cancel the
Storm-waves had been only one of several available to them, and it hadn't been
anyone's first choice, only the one they understood the best. Perhaps one of
the others would provide a better chance. The Kaled'a'in had promised to
provide a historian, a specialist in their own languages and the ancient
writing they alone had preserved out of the Cataclysm. Perhaps when he arrived,
he would be able to provide better translations than the gryphons.
We haven't even begun to explore this place, yet this was the
heart of the Mage of Silence's stronghold. He is said to have been the greatest
there has ever been, with vast resources. Can we really assume that we have
seen all there is? There
might be other rooms here, rooms they hadn't found yet, that might hold more
answers to their problem. Maybe they would be much better off by staying here
and looking, or studying the remaining weapons. It was an option no one had
suggested yet, but he wondered if they all weren't thinking about it, much as
they would prefer to return home.
The main problem as I see it is that we don't have anyone with us
from the mathematicians and the Artificers. That alone worried him; the last two stopgap measures had been
created, at least in part, by Master Levy's group of clever logicians. With the
help of these scholars, all of them had been able to examine the problem from
an original perspective. We need them. Firesong might not like them, but we
need them.
He knew that with certainty; as if Vkandis Himself had placed that
certainty in his heart, he was as positive of it as he was of anything in his
life. This was not a problem that could be worked through unless all of the
minds available contributed to the solution.
He sighed, and as he lifted a hand to move the snow pack off his
eyes, he heard Firesong come to take it for him. The cold, damp weight lifted
away. "Would you like a new one?" the apparently eternally-young mage
asked.
He opened his eyes and shook his head—only a little, so as to
avoid undoing the good that had been done. Firesong didn't look very much like
a nurse; the incredibly handsome young mage had managed to pack a full wardrobe
of his intricately styled, brilliantly decorated silk clothing into his single
pack. Karal could not imagine how he had done it. At the moment, he was all in
muted silver-blues which, at least, made it possible for Karal to look at him
without pain. From his precisely styled, silver-white hair to his immaculate
leg wrappings, he was every inch the exotic mage and not at all servile. The
amused smile he wore reassured Karal; if there had been anything really wrong
with him, he was fairly certain Firesong would not be smiling.
"Not at the moment, thank you," he said, surprised at
the rasp in his voice, as if he had been screaming until his vocal cords were
raw. "You really don't—"
Firesong chuckled, surprising him. "Oh, there's a reason
behind all of this," he replied with a smile. "You're ridiculously
easy as a patient, and if I'm tending you, I don't have to do any of the
more tedious chores." His voice took on the merest touch of arrogance.
"I'd rather keep putting snow packs on your head than wash dishes, I
assure you."
Karal had to laugh weakly. Now that sounded more like the
Firesong he knew! "Oh, good," he said. "I was afraid that you'd
suddenly been filled with the spirit of self-sacrifice, and I wasn't certain I
could bear that for very long."
Now Firesong laughed, and tossed his long silver hair over his
shoulder. "Keep your tender sentiments to yourself, Karsite," he said
mockingly. "Out of my own self-interest I want you to stay an invalid as
long as possible, and if you keep saying things like that, I might be tempted
to do something to keep you that way."
"You promise, but you never follow through," Karal
retorted, surprising himself with his enjoyment of the exchange. "I think
my tender hide is safe from you."
"You doubt?" Firesong's brow rose, and he raised his
gaze to a point somewhere past Karal; probably listening to Florian, the
Companion. His next words confirmed Karal's guess. "Well, maybe you're
right. A hoofprint in the middle of my face would not improve my looks—"
He dropped his gaze to meet Altra's brilliant blue eyes. "—and I don't
like the way that cat of yours is flexing his claws either."
:I wouldn't hurt you where it showed,: Altra said dryly, into both their minds. :Silverfox
might object to my alterations, however. But you would make a charming girl.:
Firesong's silver eyes widened in mock fear, but there was a tinge
of respect in his look as well. "Remind me never to anger you, Altra.
That's a bit vicious even as a joke."
:If I thought for a moment that you were serious, it wouldn't be a
joke.: The Firecat
deliberately raised one paw and licked his flexed talons. Since Altra was the
size of most large dogs, and his paws were correspondingly huge, those talons
were wicked looking indeed.
That's not very subtle, cat, Karal thought warningly, knowing Altra would hear him.
:It wasn't meant to be subtle,: the Firecat replied in his mind only. :There was a time when
he contemplated injuring you. If he ever strays in that direction again, I want
him to have something to think about.:
Karal kept his face straight as Altra imparted that choice bit of
information, so he did not reveal a reaction. That was certainly news to him.
And now everyone seems determined to protect me! But Firesong was waiting for him to say
something, so before the mage could ask what it was that made him look so odd,
he raised a shaking hand to rub his eyebrow. "Cats. You can't live with
them, and the fur's too thin for a rug."
Altra gave an exaggerated snort of disgust as Firesong laughed
aloud. "You are feeling better," he said, this time without
the mockery. "Good. Maybe tonight you'll be able to stomach something
besides that tasteless slop the shaman has been feeding you. Just try not to
get well so quickly that I'm forced to wash my own plates again any time
soon."
Before Karal could reply, Firesong rose to his feet to take away
the dripping snow pack. He turned his head slowly to look in the direction of
Florian and the others.
Sure enough, a little way past the chamber's entrance, Florian
stood with his head just above An'desha's shoulder, looking at something the
shaman was drawing on the floor.
He could, if he just relaxed a little, see everything from
Florian's point of view. He didn't want to relax that much, honestly.
I just want my headache to stop. I want to be able to get up and
do things like the others. I truly do want to stop being a burden. It isn't the
place of a priest of Vkandis Sunlord to be the one given comfort, it is the
priest's place to give comfort...
He closed his eyes, and tried to find some meditation technique
that would at least enable him to sleep despite the pain. If he fell asleep, at
least he wouldn't be quite so aware of what a nuisance he'd become.
Without any warning footsteps, he felt a touch on his arm. His
eyes popped open, all he could manage in the way of a startled reaction.
He found himself looking up into a pair of extremely blue eyes,
amused eyes, in a triangular face with golden skin. The eyes and the face
topped a body wearing Shin'a'in garments of unornamented dark sable-brown; the
color, he now recalled, that Swordsworn usually wore when they weren't engaged
in one of their rare but vicious blood-feuds.
The Swordsworn had another name. Kal'enedral. The ones Sworn to the service of Kal'enel, the
Warrior. He knew more about them now than any Karsite alive. The person
sitting lightly on "his" heels would be one of the Swordsworn who had
guided them here and guarded them on the way; who had, with the aid of
k'Leshya, excavated a way into the Tower. He couldn't tell if this person was
male or female; with the Swordsworn, it hardly mattered, since they were not
only vowed to chastity and celibacy, but were by their bond to their Goddess,
rendered incapable of a sexual impulse. That was a state that had no parallel
in the Sunlord's hierarchy; although Sun-priests were not encouraged to wed,
they were not denied that state either.
"Well, this was not what we intended when we opened our
secret to you, young outClansman," the Shin'a'in said, in a clear,
slightly roughened tenor voice that could have belonged to a man or a woman.
The Sworn One spoke with very little accent in remarkably good Valdemaran.
Karal was relieved; his Shin'a'in was rudimentary at best. "We thought you
would be here and gone again—"
The Shin'a'in paused then, as if suddenly aware that the
"gone" very nearly had been "permanently gone."
Karal shrugged. "This wasn't our plan either, Sworn
One," he said politely.
The Shin'a'in laughed. "True enough, and I think not even
your God could have predicted this outcome. Certainly our Goddess did not! Or
if She did, She saw fit not to grace us with the information. But now—well,
given that the Gate that brought you here is gone, and our winter storms are
closing in, we have determined that we will have to become true hosts."
At one point, Karal would have been shocked by the reference to a
deity other than Vkandis Sunlord—more shocked that such a deity as the
Shin'a'in Star-Eyed was spoken of in the same breath as He. Later, he would
have been able to accept that, but would also have been driven speechless by
such a casual reference to a deity, as if the person speaking had a personal
relationship with Kal'enel.
Now he knew better; these Swordsworn did have such a
relationship. She had been known to speak with Her special followers on a
regular basis, and even occasionally intervene in their lives. Which was, after
all, not entirely unlike the relationship Vkandis had with the Son of the Sun.
"I have been told that affairs were at such a turning point
that any and all outcomes were equally likely," he said carefully,
squinting around his headache. "Perhaps that is why She gave you no
indication that we were to be unexpected tenants rather than guests."
"Well said!" the Shin'a'in replied warmly. "Well,
then. Tenants you are, dwellers among our tents, and as such it becomes
necessary that we provide you with something better than the hasty arrangements
of aforetime. First, I am Chagren shena Liha'irden, and I am to be your Healer.
Lo'isha is a good man and a fine shaman, but his Healing skills are rudimentary
at best. I am better suited to helping you, trust me in that."
Karal could not help but show his surprise; a Healer among
the Swordsworn? Chagren saw his expression and chuckled.
"Given our task of serving as the Guardians of the Plains,
does it not seem logical that we must need a Healer now and again? I was a
Healer before I was Sworn, and Swore myself in part because I was one of those
who joined the battle with Ancar, and I vowed I would never again find myself
unable to defend those who I had come to Heal. I petitioned. She accepted. Not all
of us who come to serve Her so closely have tragic tales of great personal loss
behind them." Then his expression changed, becoming serious for a moment.
"Though there are many. Those who have seen too much to endure and remain
sane often petition Her and are taken into Her ranks."
Those who have seen too much to endure— Karal glanced involuntarily at An'desha,
and Chagren followed his glance. He looked back down at Karal.
"Interesting. Your thoughts on that one?"
Karal blinked at the Shin'a'in's directness. "I sometimes
wonder if there is any place for An'desha, after all he has
endured."
Chagren lost that amused smile entirely, and his eyelids dropped
momentarily to veil his eyes. "There is," he said after a pause,
"if he chooses to take it. Among us there is no tale so strange that we
cannot encompass it. Not among the Swordsworn, I think. but among the Wise,
those who wear the blue of the night sky and the day's ending. They are Sworn
to Wisdom rather than the Sword, and I think it is among their numbers he would
feel he has come home. But that is for him to decide."
The smile returned. "Meanwhile, it is for me to ease
some of your discomfort, while my fellows bring the wherewithal to make this
into a home for as long as may be. So. You have been Healed before?"
"Not really," Karal confessed. "The one Valdemaran
Healer I saw decided that all I needed was herbs and potions, not real
Healing."
"A wise Healer knows when to Heal and when to let time do the
Healing," Chagren replied with approval. "Well then; this time you
shall be the recipient of true Healing, such as, I believe, some of your
Sun-priests are known to practice. I require of you only that you close your
eyes and relax, and that when you sense my spirit, permit it to touch yours.
That should be easy enough, yes?
"I think so," Karal replied as the headache returned
with a vengeance. Any reluctance he might have felt vanished at the onslaught
of further pain. He closed his eyes as instructed, and waited, slowly willing
each muscle to release its built-up tension.
The moment he "sensed Chagren's spirit" he knew exactly
what the Shin'a'in had meant; he felt something very akin to the sensation he
had when he first communicated with Florian. And as he had when Florian had
requested that Karal "let him into his mind," he let down those
internal barriers he hadn't realized existed back when he had been plain Karal
of Karse.
But this time, instead of thoughts and sensations flooding into
his mind, a warm, soothing wave washed over him, and where it had passed, the
pain was gone, leaving behind comfort and reassurance.
He opened his eyes; he thought it was only a moment later, but
Chagren was gone. In his place stood a metal pitcher and cup, and in his
chamber and the rooms beyond, new comforts and a few new figures had appeared
as if conjured.
There was a small cast-metal stove at his feet, and he had been
heaped with more woven blankets. Several long, flat cushions arranged like a
more comfortable bed than the one he currently occupied lay beside that. On top
of the stove, there was a steaming pot.
Beyond his room, he saw at least one more stove and reckoned that
there were probably more. Better bedding had appeared, and more amenities.
Firesong appeared and glanced in the door to his chamber, and when the mage saw
that he was awake, the Hawkbrother walked unhurriedly and gracefully to his
side.
"You've been asleep through all the excitement,"
Firesong told him. "More of those Kal'enedral
appeared with a veritable caravan of goods, and this place is now almost
civilized." He smiled, and there was no mistaking the fact that he was
pleased. "They even promised none of us will have to cook anymore, though
we will still have to do the work of hertasi, I fear. That is
just as well, since I do not believe I could have eaten another of my own
meals, even if I died of starvation."
Karal croaked a chuckle, and discovered to his delight that it did
not make his head hurt. "My headache is gone!" he exclaimed with
glee.
Firesong nodded. "That fellow Chagren said it would be. I
will probably be helping him the next time he Heals you. He told me what had
caused your aching skull, and once he explained it to me, it was obvious—"
He held up a hand, forestalling Karal's questions. "—and I will explain it
all to you in detail, some time later, when we have the time for me to explain
how and why a mage or a Healer is able to do what he does. Suffice it for now
to say that you have misused that part of you that channels magic, as if you
had bruised it by battering a rough stone around inside your skull, and that
was why your head hurt. He was able to take care of the bruises, so to
speak."
Karal tried to lever himself up, and found to his profound
disappointment that he was still as weak as a newborn colt. "Too bad I'm
not completely back to normal, but I suppose Chagren can't Heal everything at
once," he answered with a sigh, as Firesong caught his elbow to help him.
"Obviously, he cannot," the mage replied reasonably.
"There are some things, such as strength and endurance, that time will
restore as much as he. Now, if you will move thus, and so, we will get you onto
this more comfortable bed, and then you must drink what he left you, and eat,
and then sleep again. For the next couple of days, making your way to the privy
and back will be all the exercise you're fit for."
With Firesong's aid, Karal moved over to the pile of flat bed
cushions, which turned out to be even more comfortable than they looked. The
mage piled all of his blankets, rugs, and furs back on top of him, then handed
him the metal cup. It proved to contain another herbal potion, but this one had
a pleasantly fruity, faintly sweet taste, with a refreshingly astringent
aftertaste that quenched a deep-lying thirst no amount of water had been able
to satisfy. At Firesong's urging, he drank a second cup, and while he finished
that, An'desha appeared with a bowl and spoon.
"Chagren promised that you would at least be able to feed
yourself, so that is your task for the day," An'desha said, handing
him both. The bowl held real soup, not the tasteless gruel that Lo'isha had
been feeding him. Although his hand shook a little, he managed not only to feed
himself, but to finish every drop in the bowl. An'desha and Firesong sat
watching him like a pair of anxious nursery attendants all during the meal, and
An'desha took back the empty bowl with a grin of triumph.
"Soon enough you will be sweeping and washing with the rest
of us," An'desha said as he rose. Karal leveled a sober gaze on Firesong
as the young Shin'a'in left the chamber.
"I feel as if I should be sweeping and washing for both of
you, you and Silverfox together," he said with guilt he could not conceal.
"I am taking up so much of your time, and contributing nothing."
"Now," Firesong replied sternly, "that says
nothing of what you have done in the past, or will do in the future. And you
are taking up very little of my time, since you sleep a great deal. Which is,
by the by, what you should be doing now; sleeping, once you have another cup of
this excellent beverage."
Obediently, Karal drank down a third cup and closed his eyes
again, although he felt no real urge to sleep. But evidently there was
something in the drink, or he needed sleep so badly that his body would take
any opportunity to seize some, for no sooner had he closed his eyes and begun
the first stages of his ritual of relaxation, than he was fast asleep.
Firesong waited until he was certain young Karal was deep in
dreaming, then gathered up the now-empty pitcher, bowl, and cup and carried
them off to be washed. The chamber through whose outer wall they had entered
the Tower had been dedicated to cleaning—everything from pots to people.
Judicious use of magic on Firesong's part had driven a pipe to the surface; at
the surface was a black-enameled basin connected to the pipe that the Shin'a'in
kept filled with snow. No magic melted the snow shoveled into the basin, just
the sun supplemented by a simple horsedung fire. The pipe slanted down into the
chamber where it was closed by a stopcock taken from a wine barrel, and simply
turning the stopcock gave them water enough for about any purpose. Waste water
went into a second pipe going down into the earth set just outside in the
tunnel. So far, it had been sufficient.
Silverfox was at the washing basin, used both for dishes and
clothing, and he felt a stab of guilt of his own that the kestra'chern should be wasting his time and talents on so menial a
task as cleaning dirty dishes. This seemed as unreasonable a task as to ask a
fine sculptor to shovel snow, yet there he was, serenely working away the soil
of camp life with his slender fingers.
But the handsome Kaled'a'in looked up and smiled at his approach,
and said lightly, "Would that all troubles are so easily washed away as
these! All things considered, I have actually been enjoying myself on this
little jaunt. I could almost feel that I am on holiday here!"
Firesong handed him the dishes with a groan. "Why do I
suddenly have the sinking feeling that you are one of those benighted
individuals who thinks that taking himself off to the utter wilderness for a
fortnight or more constitutes a holiday?"
"What?" the kestra'chern
replied innocently. "And you do not?" His blue eyes twinkled as he
continued. "Think of the splendid isolation, the uncrowded vistas, the joy
of doing everything for yourself, knowing you need rely on no one else!
Self-sufficiency! Feeling yourself unconstrained by all the rules and customs
that can come to smother you!"
"Think of the lack of civilized conversation, the dearth of
entertainment, the deprivation of decent food, hot baths, and reasonable
sleeping accommodations!" Firesong retorted. "I had rather
endure a bored little provincial courtier babble for an hour than listen to a
brook do the same, while my toes are cold and my nose even colder, and there
isn't a cushion to relax upon. And I do not particularly take joy from washing
dishes and mending clothing, I promise you. Those are tedious tasks at best,
and wasteful of valuable time at worst!"
But Silverfox's clever, sharp features softened for a moment.
"For you, perhaps, but unless he is in a circumstance like this one, a kestra'chern is never free of the needs
of others. For you, this place is an exile, but for me, a holiday in the wild
is an escape."
Now Firesong suffered another twinge of guilt, and he sat down
beside the washtub. "And even here you are not free of demands," he
said, reproaching himself. "For there are my demands on you—"
But Silverfox only laughed, and shook his long black hair back
over his shoulders. "No, those are not demands, ahela, those are
mutual desires. I could say that my demands on you are as improvident, but I
won't. But there is this—for once, I can act on my own desires rather than
concentrate on the needs of another to the exclusion of anything I feel."
Firesong felt the guilt for this, at least, lift away from him.
"I... make you feel more free, simply by being as I am? In that case,
perhaps I should be more demanding!"
The kestra'chern
laughed, as the two gryphons, loaded with their travel packs, poked their beaks
into the cleaning chamber with curiosity. "Why all the rrrevelrrry?"
Treyvan demanded. "Arre potsss ssso amusssing?"
"That depends on who is cleaning them, old bird,"
Silverfox replied. "Are you ready to depart yet?"
The female gryphon, Hydona, nodded vigorously. "Now that
morrre help hasss come, yesss. If I werrre young and unpairrred, I would
ssstay, but—"
"But nothing," Firesong said firmly, reacting to the
anxious tone of her voice, sensing she was afraid that he would demand that she
stay. "Your little ones need you far more than we do. Not that we aren't
grateful."
"When the keeper of hissstorry comesss, we will be
sssuperfluousss anyway." Treyvan admitted. "He will be able to rrread
the old wrritingsss here much morrre clearrly than we."
It was obvious to Firesong that the gryphons were chagrined at
their inability to decipher the ancient texts that had been found here, and
they took their failure personally. They had all made an incorrect assumption
about clan k'Leshya. They had assumed that the last clan that could truly have
called itself Kaled'a'in rather than Shin'a'in or Tayledras had a purer
form of the original tongue than either splinter group. Given that, the
gryphons should have been able to decipher the ancient texts. And they had also
assumed that since k'Leshya had come to dwell among the Haighlei, a people who
shunned change, their language would obviously have remained as pure as it was
the day that they all went through the Gates to escape into the West.
But while the Haighlei shunned change, the Kaled'a'in had not, and
their language had drifted from the ancient tongue as inevitably as had
Shin'a'in and Tayledras. Perhaps it had not drifted so far or so fast, but nevertheless,
it had drifted, and in a direction that rendered the ancient writings as vague
to the gryphons as to Firesong or Lo'isha.
However, providentially enough, there was among the pioneers of
k'Leshya an individual who had not only come along to record what transpired in
their new home, but one who had made a hobby of studying the most ancient
scripts. While this historian was not the expert that a true scholar of the
earliest days of White Gryphon would have been, he had volunteered to come and
assist the party at the Tower, and he should prove more of an expert than the
two gryphons.
That was the theory anyway. Very little in this strange situation
had gone according to theory.
"I will be sorry to see you leave," Firesong said
sincerely, "You both have been very patient about this, but even I can
tell that gryphons aren't comfortable underground."
Hydona didn't say anything, but Treyvan shivered, all of his
feathers quivering. "It hasss not been easssy," he admitted.
"And all that hasss kept me here at timesss isss the knowledge that the
grrreat Ssskandrranon walked thessse sssame chamberrsss."
Firesong nodded with understanding; not that long ago, he would
have said the same thing in the same reverent tones about visiting the
Heartstone Chamber in the Palace at Haven where his own ancestor Vanyel had
once worked. That, however, had been before he had been kidnapped by that same
ancestor and shoved, willy-nilly, into the affairs of the Kingdom of Valdemar.
Being conscripted by a stubborn spirit to the aid of a place and people that
were hardly more than misty history to him had given him a slightly more
jaundiced view of "honored ancestors" than most folk had.
Oh, I'll leave them to their illusions. Skandranon is not likely
to stick his beak into our affairs now, thank the gods; if he was going to show
up the way Vanyel did, he'd be here already. If that was all it took to help
them bear the feeling of being buried alive here, their illusions are valuable.
Besides, Skandranon had died peacefully, in extreme old age,
surrounded by a vast flock of worshipful grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
There were no stories of a haunted forest in which uncanny things happened
connected with his legends, and his long line of descendants had legends of
their own.
But Firesong couldn't help but wonder now and again just what his
own ancestor Vanyel was planning. He'd given no indication that he planned
to—as it were—move on, once the dual threats of Ancar and Falconsbane had been
dealt with. By now he must have recovered from the effort of taking down the
Web—and Vanyel at full strength had been powerful enough to wrest away control
of a Gate he had not erected to transport five humans, four gryphons, a dyheli, two Companions, and two
bondbirds all the way from a site at the edge of the Dhorisha Plains to the
heart of the Forest of Sorrows beyond Valdemar's northern border. There was no
telling what he might still be capable of.
I think I know why he didn't confront Falconsbane directly—but I
would not have given odds in favor of Falconsbane if Vanyel—and Yfandes and
Stefen—had been given leave to deal with him themselves.
"Do we take it that you arrre ssstaying, then?" Treyvan
asked.
Both Firesong and Silverfox nodded, but it was Silverfox who
answered. "That's why that caravan of Swordsworn showed up with all the
new equipment. We just now told Karal, but that is only because he hasn't been
awake long enough to listen to anything complicated. The Kal'enedral pointed out that we were
lucky that we didn't encounter any winter storms coming in, but we can't count
on our luck holding. If we're caught, we would have to do what the Shin'a'in
do—dig in, hope we don't freeze to death, then settle in for the rest of the
winter. Once the trail out is obliterated by a storm, there's no reestablishing
it. If we're going to be stuck, I'd rather be stuck here, where we can continue
to research what Urtho left behind. I'm looking for secret doors, or concealed
rooms, while the rest figure out what the effect of the cancellation wave we sent
out will be, and how long it will last."
"I think you are wissse," Treyvan said gravely. "I
do not think that Karrral would sssurrvive the trrrip, much lessss a grreat
sstorrm."
"Nor do I, and that was why I voted to stay," Firesong
said, then added with a sigh. "Even if it means living like a brigand
until spring."
Treyvan gryph-grinned at that, and gave him a mock cuff with a
tightly fisted claw. "Peacock!" he chuckled. "You arrre jusst
dissscontented becaussse therrre isss no one herrre but Sssilverrrfox to
admirrre yourrr handsssome face!"
"No, I am just discontented because I am not especially fond
of sewing split seams and scrubbing pots, which is a perfectly reasonable
attitude," Firesong retorted, and made shooing motions with his hands.
"Be on your way; I'm sure you can't wait to get back to cries of
'but Papa said we can!', 'But Andra's mama lets her!', and 'do I have
to?'"
When he wished to exercise that talent, Firesong could be a wicked
mimic, and he so accurately rendered a childish whine that both gryphons'
eartufts went back in alarm.
"Perrrhapsss Hydona could go ahead of me," Treyvan
ventured, then ducked as his mate leveled a killing gaze on him, "orrr
perrrhapsss not. Well, why not; we faced Ancarrr, we faced Falconsssbane, we
faced the Imperrrial Arrrmy and the mage-ssstormsss. What arrre two merrre
childrrren againssst that?"
"Worse than all of them put together, because they'll always
get what they want?" Firesong suggested, and Hydona turned her deadly
glare on him. "Of course, my opinion is hardly valid!" he amended
hastily. "After all, I don't have children!"
Hydona snorted, but looked mollified, and Firesong wisely opted to
keep the rest of his opinions to himself. "We'll all miss you," he
said instead. "But you've done more than your duty, and children need
their parents. Fly safely, friends."
"Thank you," Treyvan said simply.
Even though the Shin'a'in had labored to open the hole in the
outer wall to give them all a wider door into the tunnel, it was still a
squeeze for the gryphons to get through, burdened with their packs as they
were. As a courtesy, Firesong sent a mage-light on ahead of them, though
Treyvan was perfectly capable of making his own. Not that they were going to
get lost in a straight tunnel, but the light might make the tunnel itself seem
less confining.
Silverfox sat looking after them for a while after they were gone.
"You know," he said finally, "they were the only creatures I
ever envied when I was young."
"Gryphons in general?" Firesong asked. "Or those
two in particular?"
"Gryphons in general," Silverfox replied, turning back
to his dishtub. "The main thing was that they can fly, of course, but
besides that, they are just marvelous creatures. They grow their own wonderful
costumes of feathers, they are armed better than any fighter with those talons
and that beak, and they can take on virtually any task except those that
require unusually fine dexterity. They can even become kestra'chern! So I envied them."
"And now?" Firesong asked.
"Now I'm old enough and experienced enough to have seen the
price they pay for all those gifts. You'd be amazed at how delicate their
digestion is, they are devastated by certain diseases that are only an
inconvenience to a human, and their joints tend to stiffen up and get quite painful
as they age. I'm still of divided opinion about whether or not the drawbacks
are worth being a gryphon," he added, "but I no longer envy
them."
"I never did," Firesong said softly. "I only envied
myself," and left it at that.
* * *
"... and the Mage of Silence brought all of the armies back
to his stronghold here, in Ka'venusho," Chagren said, pointing with his
charcoal stick to the appropriate place he had drawn on the floor. Karal
nodded, and concentrated fiercely while Chagren related the rest of the history
of the Mage Wars. He'd heard it all once from Lo'isha, of course, but Chagren
had actually experienced a compressed version of this history. That had
been during a special moment in his training, when he went to Kata'shin'a'in
and entered a holy building that housed something he called the Webs of Time.
Karal's grasp of language was not quite good enough to give him a clear idea of
what physical forms these Webs were in, but Chagren said that they held
the memories of those who had made them, and that under certain specific
conditions, those memories could be awakened and experienced. Karal was
disposed to believe him; after all that he had seen. what was one more
supernatural marvel?
The gryphons had already given him their own version of the story,
more heavily weighted with the heroism of the Black Gryphon, of course. Even
Silverfox had a slightly different tale, as handed down among the Kaled'a'in kestra'cherns from Amberdrake, Tadrith
Wyrsabane, and the generations since them.
"… so that is why this place was hallowed for us, even before
we know there still were working weapons here," Chagren finished.
"Mind, I said hallowed, not holy. We of the Plains do not
count any human 'holy," not even Her Avatars or the Kal'enedral. The Mage of Silence was
a good man, a fine man, and flawed as all men are. What made him different from
most other men was that he saw his weaknesses and spent all his life trying to
keep them controlled, so as not to harm others with them; that he devoted a
larger percentage of his life to the well-being of others than most ever even
think of doing. What made him dangerous were the things he never troubled to
control: his curiosity and his desire to meddle and change things for the sake
of change itself."
Karal digested that; it was interesting to hear the various
versions, not only of the story of the Cataclysm, but the way the three
cultures viewed Adept Urtho. To the gryphons, at least, Urtho was the ultimate
Great Father, which was hardly surprising, since they knew he had created them;
to Silverfox he was both a familiar figure of history and a figure of
semi-veneration, less than a god but far more than human. To the Tayledras, he
was a figure of the misty past, and they recalled very little of him; most did
not even know his name, and called him only "The Mage of Silence." To
most Shin'a'in he was not even that—
Except to the Kal'enedral.
To them, he was a man; powerful, good of heart and soul, but one who could not
resist meddling in things he should never have touched. Without a doubt. that
was because their version was flavored with their own form of prejudice against
magic. Even Chagren was not immune from that prejudice, though he suffered from
it less than some.
The Shin'a'in had been assigned the guardianship of the Plains by
their Goddess Herself, although most of them were not aware that there really
was something here that needed to be guarded from interlopers. Certainly, being
a Goddess, She could simply have removed the weapons and dangers entirely had
She chosen, but deities work in ways that are often not obvious even after
centuries of scrutiny. It must have taken a direct edict from the Shin'a'in
Goddess to get her chief servants, the Kal'enedral,
to open the Plains and this Tower at its heart to strangers. He could hardly
imagine what their reaction must have been to learn that they would be opening
the Tower to mages.
Their faith must be very great, he thought, with wonder. Look how long it took me to accept
that Heralds and Companions were not demonic—they gave over their fears in a
much shorter time.
Or if they had not given up their fear, they had certainly worked
past it. He had encountered no hostility from these people, only the wariness
he himself felt, faced with strangers from a strange people.
Then again, perhaps the Kal'enedral
had been very careful about which of their folk were permitted to aid the
foreigners.
"I could do with a little less change myself," he said
with a weak laugh. "But the mage-storms aren't giving us much of a choice
in that."
Chagren grimaced, his aquiline features making the expression more
pronounced. "Yet another mischance that some would lay at Urtho's door.
Had he not made the choices he did, some would say that none of this would be
happening now."
Interesting choice of words. Could it be that Chagren is taking a
wider view of things?
"But not you?" Karal asked delicately.
Chagren looked for a moment as if he was not going to answer, then
shrugged. "But not me. I am not certain that Urtho's great enemy Ma'ar
would not have unleashed worse upon the world; after all, look what havoc
Falconsbane and Ancar wrought, who were lesser mages than Ma'ar. Then again, my
leshy'a teachers had... experience with mages."
Now that was a new word; he thought he vaguely recognized the
root. Something about a soul. "What kind of teachers?" he asked, to
test his guess.
"I suppose you'd call them 'spirits' although they can be
quite solidly real if She wishes," Chagren replied matter-of-factly, as if
he spoke with ghosts every day. Well, perhaps he did.
"At some point in the lives of most Swordsworn they encounter
one or more leshy'a Kal'enedral. There have even—" He broke off his
words, and stared past Karal for a moment, and half-choked. His eyes widened,
and he gave a slight bow of his head. "I believe, Outlander," he said
in an entirely different and very respectful voice, "that you are about to
find out for yourself."
Karal turned, to find that another of the Swordsworn was standing
in the doorway; this one was very clearly a woman, but also very clearly a
warrior in every fiber. She was dressed entirely in black from head to toe, and
wore a veil or scarf across the bottom half of her face. A sword and long knife
hung from her belt, and she bore the weight easily, negligently. In two paces
she had crossed the chamber and stood at the side of Karal's pallet, looking
down at him.
She could have seemed frightening, intimidating from her clothing
alone, and yet there was nothing menacing whatsoever about her. Competent, yes;
certainly imposing—but Karal would have had no hesitation in trusting her. Her
blue eyes above the black veil were both amused and kind, and he sensed that
she was smiling.
"Forgive me that I can't rise to greet you properly,
Lady," he said with deepest respect.
"Oh, not at all," she replied, and her voice had a very
odd, hollow quality to it, as if she were speaking from the bottom of a very
deep well. "As I understand it, you're rather indisposed at the
moment."
He narrowed his eyes, as he began to see, or sense, that there was
something unexpected about her. She reminded him of something very familiar; in
fact, there was some indefinable aura about her that was like—like—
Sunlord! She's—not—
"I must presume," he said carefully after a deep breath,
"that Sworn Ones such as you who choose to instruct further generations do
not bother to take a physical vehicle such as a Firecat or a Companion." She's
a spirit, that's what she is! Like An'desha's Avatars, only more here. More
real. He felt positively giddy at his own daring, looking a spirit right in
the eyes like this, and speaking to her as an equal!
"Say rather, are chosen rather than choose, and
you have it rightly, young priest," the spirit replied, a hint of a
chuckle in her hollow voice. "Though I have to admit that She has toyed a
time or two with the notion of Black Companions. Or perhaps, Black
Riders."
Since Karal could well imagine Florian's indignant response to
that idea, he had to stifle a smile of his own. Black Companions? Oh, the
Heralds wouldn't like that at all!
"I believe you've met a kinswoman of mine," the spirit
continued. "She left her mark on you, which leads me to think that she
regards you favorably. She's a hard one to please."
He tried wildly for a moment to think of who the Kal'enedral could mean. "Ah—you—Querna?"
he hazarded, trying to imagine how that rather aloof lady could have left any
kind of a mark on him.
The spirit laughed aloud at that. "No, young Clan-friend. Kerowyn.
I see you've lined up anything that could serve as a weapon, hurled or otherwise,
so that you can reach everything in the order you'd need it. That's the sort of
'mark' I mean. She's trained you so deep it's a habit."
Startled, he looked down involuntarily and saw he'd done just
that, with the things he'd have to throw at the farthest point of his reach and
his dagger right at his elbow. He flushed. What must Chagren be thinking now,
that he distrusted them all? That they had let a potential assassin into their
midst?
"Oh don't be embarrassed, boy," the spirit chided
gruffly. "That's one of the best habits to be in. What if someone
unfriendly got in here? What if one of our more fanatical brethren decided that
She had been deceived by you lot, and you all had to die? Don't you know what
we say? Know where all the exits are. Never sit with your back to the door.
Watch the reflections. Watch the shadows. Keep your hands free and your weapons
loose."
Sunlord! he
thought desperately, I'm being bombarded with Shin'a'in proverbs! What a
terrible way to die!
He meant that lightly, but it seemed that the Kal'enedral intended to continue
until she had recited every proverb on the subject of self-defense that the
Shin'a'in ever invented. "Never sit down to eat with your sword at your
side—strap it to your back for a faster draw. Better an honest enemy than a
feigned friend. When—"
"Who is wisest, says least," he interrupted,
desperate to cut through what looked to be an unending stream of proverbs. Were
Shin'a'in all like that? Even Kerowyn tended to spout Shin'a'in proverbs at the
drop of a hint. And a spirit Kal'enedral
probably knew every proverb ever composed!
The spirit laughed aloud again. "Well said!" she
applauded. "Keep that sense of humor, and you might just survive this.
Chagren, take special care of this one; he's deeper than he looks."
Chagren bowed low. "As you say, teacher," he replied.
Karal wasn't prepared for the spirit's departure; he barely
blinked and she was gone. A chill ran up his backbone, but he was determined
not to show it.
"If you see a Swordsworn in black with a veil," Chagren
said slowly, "it is leshy'a. There have been some few here among
the rest of us. We think they come to ensure your safety... or ours. It's
debated which."
"It's more likely both," Karal said, feeling a bit
dizzy. "Kerowyn's kin to her?"
Chagren shrugged. "So she says. That is something new to me,
but the leshy'a are not inclined to talk about their pasts. Often we do
not even know their names. She is my first teacher of the sword, and came to me
the night that I was Sworn—" He broke off what he was saying to shake his
head. "I am babbling. And you, young outland priest, can consider
yourself as having passed a kind of examination. None of the Sworn are likely
to question your right to be here ever again."
With that rather surprising statement, he turned and left the
chamber leaving Karal alone with his thoughts, which were, to say the least,
very complex.
Although there was one thought that was not at all complex.
So my right to be here will no longer be questioned. That's all
very well for me, but what about the others?
Firesong sighed as he regarded his much abused shirt with a frown.
His favorite sorts of garments were not meant for rough living and a camp
existence.
"Glaring at it won't put the hem back up," Silverfox
remarked around a mouthful of pins. "You might as well give up and do it
the hard way."
Firesong growled under his breath, but took up needle and thread
grudgingly. "All very well for you to say," he complained, "but
you've been able to trade off sweeping and scrubbing the sleeping room to
An'desha in return for cleaning his dishes. And you've traded Lo'isha massages
for cleaning and airing the bedding. I haven't got anything anyone wants
to trade for! Valdemar, barbaric as it was, is looking better all the
time!"
Silverfox chuckled. "It could be worse; we could still be
eating your cooking. I believe that our kin-cousins are being very generous in
taking over the larger portion of the work."
Firesong growled again. "You only say that because you can do
things even the Kal'enedral are
interested in. I'm a mage, that's all I know, and they don't want a
thing I can do for them!"
Silverfox put down his needle to look up at him with sympathy.
"You aren't just a mage. You are a lover, but you are so exotic to them
that they could more easily entertain fantasies of bedding clouds. If there is really
something you detest, would you please tell me and let me do it, or barter a
massage or something to one of the Sworn and have him do it? You are a mage, ashaka,
and I feel in my bones that soon enough you will have more important things to
worry about than hems and ripped seams."
Firesong started to reply, then shook his head and laughed at
himself. "Why is it when you say things like that, you manage to deflate
my self-importance rather than inflating it, and simply fill me with
dread?"
Silverfox merely tilted his head to one side, and replied,
"Do I?"
Let's change the subject, he thought. I can do without too much introspection.
"Magic is working more reliably now that the counterforce is evening out
the Storm-waves. It is still a horrid mess, but I think I can get a Gate up to
the rim of the Plains soon; if I can do that, we can at least ask for a few
more things to make life tolerable around here. How much would k'Leshya be
willing to part with in the way of amenities, do you think? I haven't had a
real bath in weeks and neither has anyone else. A big tub would be very
welcome, even if its real intention was to water horses. A copper boiler to
heat water would be even more welcome."
Silverfox looked thoughtful. "There might be a fair amount
they could send us, both of leftover Tayledras gear and some of our own. And
you know—if we could get a Gate open, we could get some hertasi
volunteers to come through. They can't cross the Plains in winter without a
great deal of hardship, and I wouldn't ask it of them. But they could come
through a Gate, provided they were sure we could keep them warm enough over
here."
Firesong closed his eyes for a moment in longing. Oh, how he
missed his little army of hertasi helpers! If he had just one or two, he
wouldn't have to do another tedious chore for himself again. They loved to do
exactly the sorts of things he wanted to avoid here, and could probably show
even the natives some lessons in organization.
"Before we try that, we ought to see if we can find out what
Sejanes and the rest back in Haven have found out about Gating," he
replied, after another moment of cautious thought. "Not that I wouldn't be
willing to give up a lot for a couple of hertasi, but I wouldn't want to
put them at any risk. It's one thing to toss a tub or a sack of meal through;
it's quite another to—risk a living being."
Silverfox nodded, and bit off his thread. "Should we send
Karal back if we can get a Gate up that's safe for a living creature? He'd be
better off with k'Leshya."
Once again, Firesong hesitated. Now there's a question. He
would be better off in a place where he could be properly cared for, but—how
many more of the devices here need a Channel? What are we going to have to do
in order to counter that final Storm, the one that's the reverse analog of the
original Cataclysm? "You can ask An'desha and Lo'isha if you like, but
I have the sinking feeling we still need him. If he decides he's willing to
stay here, we should let him." He took a few more stitches and knotted off
his own thread. "I think he's going to insist on it. Sometimes that child
makes me feel ashamed of myself. I sit here wailing and moaning because I have
to pick up after myself, and he's fretting because he's too weak to help."
He shook his head.
"Maybe that's why he's a priest and you're not,"
Silverfox said gently. "He seeks to give of himself even when there's
nothing left to give. It hurts him, but it also makes him feel effective. We
can't all turn out that self-sacrificing. Lady knows I'm not—"
He was interrupted by the sound of someone running. "Heyla,
you two!" An'desha poked his head into their chamber. "Come to
Karal's room. Altra made a Jump to Haven and he's back with word from
Sejanes!"
Both of them dropped their mending and got to their feet, hurrying
toward Karal's chamber—which once held the "weapon" that had
discharged all of its formidable power through him. Firesong hadn't mentioned
that to Karal yet; when they had elected not to move him, he had deduced that
since all the chambers looked alike, Karal probably wouldn't notice which one
he was in. I'm not sure how he'd react. He might not care—or it might make
him very nervous and unhappy, being in the same room where he nearly died.
When they arrived at the chamber, they found Lo'isha, a few of the
Kal'enedral, Florian, and
An'desha already waiting there, with Altra on Karal's lap and an unopened
message tube beside them.
Firesong blinked, and realized that after all the time of working
with the mages and Artificers back in Haven, he'd been unconsciously expecting
to see more people. So it's just us now. I don't know if I like that. I hate
to admit it, but those Artificers had some good ideas.
"I hope this message is written in Valdemaran, but it
probably isn't," Karal said. "I know enough of Imperial tongue to
translate, though, if you want me to."
"Go ahead," Firesong said, motioning to him to pick up
the tube. "I don't even read Valdemaran that well; you're the best reader
we have except for Florian."
"And I can just picture Florian trying to unroll the
paper!" Karal chuckled, though Firesong noted that Florian came to look
over Karal's shoulder, probably to help with the translation.
If only Aya could read foreign tongues! he thought with envy. We could each
specialize in a language; it would be so convenient!
Karal broke open the tube and extracted a roll of paper; he
unrolled it with an accompanying crackling sound.
Evidently it was in Valdemaran; Karal's frown faded and he began
reading immediately. Probably Florian was prompting him.
The letter began abruptly. "Greetings, and do not
attempt to make or use a Gate. We have already tried and the results were
Unfortunate. That's with a capital 'U' by the way."
Firesong winced. I was afraid of that.
"Things must be more unsettled than we thought,"
An'desha said with alarm. "My little magics have been working so well I
thought certainly that the larger ones must surely be all right.
"That might simply be a function of where we are,"
Firesong reminded him. "For all we know, there are upper shields on the
remains of the Tower, strong enough that we could do almost anything in here
and not be affected by what's gone on outside."
Karal cleared his throat to get their attention again. Firesong
turned back to him and nodded, and the young man continued. "I fear this
means you are exiled for the duration, colleagues. We built a small local Gate
as soon as we could after you unloosed the power of your Device, and we
attempted to transfer a few small nonliving items through it. I am glad now
that we opted for caution and made those items of a nonliving nature, for the
result on the other side was rather messy. Parts were recognizable, and that is
the best I can say. Many suffered from desiccation, aging, or physical compression.
Altra's Jumping seems to cause no such problems for the moment, even when he
'carries' someone with him, but he reports that it is becoming more and more
difficult to lump as time passes."
At this, Altra himself raised his head and spoke up. :I find
that the distance I can Jump decreases as time passes. I am afraid that within
a few weeks I will not be able to Jump across a given distance any faster than
a Companion could run across it.:
Firesong let out the breath he'd been holding in. I wonder if I
ought to go back to k'Leshya after all? I'm not sure I can continue to live
like this and not begin to lose my temper, if not my sanity. "Well,
that's not welcome news," he said as casually as he could. "Is there
anything else?"
Karal scanned the letter quickly. "Once the bad news is out,
he gets a lot more formal and technical; the short version is that Altra can
probably bring one or two people from Haven to here before he can't Jump
anymore, but that we need to work on a way to communicate with Haven—maybe
using scrying Magic that doesn't transfer or move anything physical seems to
work better than magic that does. I just hope that if there are shields
protecting this place, they wouldn't interfere with scrying, too."
He handed the letter over to Firesong. "Here, you can get all
the details yourself later; most of what he says only partially makes sense to
me."
"I'll study it later," Firesong promised. "The
question now is, what are we going to do? If we're going to have Altra bring
someone over, we'd better do it soon."
"If we can get them," An'desha said slowly, "I'd
like both Sejanes and Master Levy here."
Firesong rolled his eyes up at that, but had to grudgingly agree.
"If they'll put up with the unpleasantness of Jumping, they would be the
best choices." he sighed. "Sejanes has an entire magic discipline
that is foreign to us, and Master Levy—" He paused for a moment, reminded
himself to be charitable, and chose his words carefully. "Master Levy has
a very unique way of looking at our problems. If not him, then we should have
at least one of the Master Artificers here. Even I have to admit that we could
not have accomplished anything here without their help."
An'desha and Karal both nodded vigorously in agreement, which made
him feel a bit sour, but he had to admit that without the Artificers, they
would be working without a resource as valuable as the presence of an Adept. We
need that utterly different viewpoint here. And Master Levy might even be as
intelligent as he thinks he is.
:Master Levy and Sejanes have already volunteered,: Altra put in unexpectedly. :I was just
waiting to see if you would welcome them here. I can go back for them now, if
you'd like, although it will take a few days to get there and back with them.:
Now Firesong was startled. A few days? Altra's Jumping distances
had been severely curtailed! "If it's going to take you days, I think you
had better start back now," he told the Firecat." I don't want
to think how much faster the situation could deteriorate if we wait."
The Firecat nodded, and vanished from Karal's lap. Only Lo'isha
looked at all dubious when Altra was gone.
"What's wrong, shaman?" Firesong asked politely, seeing
Lo'isha's troubled gaze.
The Shin'a'in shrugged. "I am only wondering if we should
have asked permission of our hosts before we brought more folk in. Hopefully,
they will not be offended by the addition of two more strangers."
Curiously, that slight objection had the effect of hardening
Firesong's decision. "If we'd had them here in the first place, we might
have a permanent solution instead of a temporary one," he said stubbornly.
"I, for one, want them here. Wind and weather, Lo'isha, if you're
worried that they might somehow overpower us and escape with secrets of Urtho's
forbidden magic, Master Levy doesn't know the first thing about practical
magic, and Sejanes is so old that if you spoke a harsh word to him all his
bones might break under the force! They're hardly a threat, singly or
together"
"Oh, I agree, but it is not my opinion you must have,"
Lo'isha began, then shrugged again. "Or, well, perhaps it is. I suppose I
have as much authority here as the Kal'enedral."
He grimaced. "Much as I dislike taking on authority, I suppose it is time
that I did so."
Since it was Firesong's opinion that it was more than time that he
did so, he simply nodded and held his tongue.
Karal looked fatigued, and Firesong stood up abruptly. "I am
going to search for another hidden room. I have the feeling that this place
hasn't even begun to divulge its secrets to us. Anyone care to join me?"
Urtho may have been one of the most brilliant and compassionate
minds in history—but his architects were no small geniuses themselves. Firesong
already had found one small, hidden room by carefully probing the floor of the
"washing" room when he noticed that water, dripped in a particular
place, drained away through cracks invisible to the unaided eye. it hadn't held
anything—in fact, it had probably performed the task of simple storage—but now
he knew that there might be more such places under the floors here, and
he had the feeling that if he just looked hard enough, he might find more than
just storage areas.
"I'll help," An'desha said unexpectedly.
He smiled. "Come along, then," he replied. "I'm
trying the skull chamber next."
The "skull chamber" was the one in which they had
discovered a bizarre contraption that looked like the leavings of half a dozen
Artificers and shamans all jumbled together with the remains of a few feasts.
The centerpiece was a highly ornamented cow skull, and none of them could even
begin to guess what the device was for. They would have been afraid to
dismantle it, except that the delicate construction had already fallen apart in
several places already, and the shock of their magical working had made it fall
completely to pieces without any other ill effect.
Rather than use magic, since the chamber itself reeked of
mage-power, Firesong was using perfectly ordinary senses; taking a cue from the
water drainage, he had a skin of water with a bit of ink in it to make it more
visible, and he dribbled it over the floor, watching to see if it moved or
vanished.
With An'desha helping, the two of them were a lot more effective
than he was by himself. It was very boring work, and he had expected An'desha
to start a conversation, but he had not anticipated the subject.
"You're thinking about going back, aren't you?" An'desha
said. "To k'Leshya, if not your home Vale."
He didn't reply at first; he pretended to be paying close
attention to the water on the floor. "I'm not used to this sort of
living," he said, refusing to answer directly. "It's harder on me
than it is on you."
"I won't debate that," An'desha agreed. "And I hope
you don't think I'd put any blame on you for leaving. The gryphons did."
"But they have two children who need them," he snapped.
"I don't. I haven't any excuse for leaving except wanting to be
comfortable again!" He felt irrationally irritated at An'desha for voicing
all of his excuses, as if he were so transparent that An'desha had no
difficulty in anticipating what he wanted to do and his rationalizations.
The trouble was that every time he looked at Karal, he felt
ashamed of himself.
"It's not as if you haven't done more than most people would
have already," An'desha said gently. "First you faced down Falconsbane—"
"Mornelithe Falconsbane was a challenge, but no more than
that," he replied stiffly. "It's not as if I was alone in facing
him."
"It's not as if you had any real reason to," An'desha
pointed out inexorably. "Valdemar wasn't your home. Falconsbane didn't
threaten the Vales. You'd done your duty in training Heralds to be mages, and
then some. You could have gone home once you'd done that much."
"Leaving whom to face Falconsbane?" Firesong demanded,
his face flushing. "One of those half-trained Heralds? Elspeth? Darkwind,
perhaps? None of them could have freed you. I'm not certain even Need could
have freed you and dealt with Falconsbane."
An'desha simply nodded quietly. "But when it was over—you
could have gone home then. You could even have taken me with you, and things
might have turned out differently. You've long since gone past anything anyone
could call your duty, Firesong. No one would fault you if you were too tired of
all this to go on."
"And how am I going to compare to someone like Karal if I do
that?" he demanded, flushing still further. "Too tired? How would I
look, quitting now, next to someone who literally put his life in jeopardy over
this?"
"You make him sound like a would-be martyr," An'desha
chided. "Karal is quite a few things, including stubborn, occasionally
bigoted, and now and then incredibly naive, but he's no martyr. And neither are
you, nor any of us."
"So?" Aya must have felt his distress; the firebird
sailed in the chamber door, adroitly avoided the snare of wires and junk, and
landed on his shoulder. He petted the bondbird reflexively in a blind search
for comfort. "If he's not a martyr, then—" He stopped, aware that his
voice was getting high and strained.
He took two or three deep breaths. "An'desha, I don't know
why you're baiting me this way."
Then, in a moment of blinding insight, he did know.
He's forcing me to think things through, so that I come to a real
decision, instead of letting some unfinished business and an entire bundle of
emotions sway me back and forth.
An'desha nodded, as if he saw all that written on Firesong's face.
I can't make a decision because I'm trying to demonstrate that I'm
somehow better than Karal. And I can't make it out of guilt either.
So why am I staying?
"What Karal does is up to Karal, but—well, I'm not too old to
take a youngster like him as a good example." He smiled weakly. "You
all need me, just as you need Sejanes or Master Levy, or Altra. I'm staying
because even though I'm tired and I hate living here, it would be wrong of me
to go off and leave you without my skills. I don't want to die in the cold and
filth, but if I must, I will. It would be wrong to abandon all those people who
are hoping we'll find a solution to the final Storm. It would be wrong to break
my word to the people I promised I would help. Are those reasons good enough
for you?"
An'desha laughed at that. "Don't think to bait me, Firesong;
I was coached by an expert to steer you through your own thoughts and
motives."
He scowled at that. "Are you happy with the result?" he
growled.
"The question is not whether I'm satisfied, it's whether you
are," An'desha countered. "And if you are, it is not for me to
object. If your decision will interfere with other concerns, then that must be
dealt with then."
He stood up and moved over to another section of floor. Firesong
felt an imp of perversity rise inside him, and he knew he had to have the last
word.
"And I didn't mention the best reason of all yet," he
said silkily. Surprised, An'desha turned back to face him.
"What reason is that?" he asked, as if the words had
been pulled from him unwillingly.
Firesong smiled. "Silverfox wants me to stay," he
replied. "Can you think of a better reason?"
Two
Elspeth sighed, her breath streaming out in a fog of ice-crystals,
and pulled the ends of the scarf wrapped around her neck a little tighter. Once
again she sent a little thought of gratitude back over her shoulder toward
Valdemar and the tireless k'Leshya hertasi
who had fashioned her current costume. The little lizard-folk who had arrived
with the bargeload of envoys from Clan k'Leshya had taken one look at her
winter wardrobe and taken it upon themselves to refashion it, as if they didn't
already have enough to do. The hertasi
of k'Sheyna had already made her Herald's Whites in the style of the Tayledras,
but those had all been of summer-weight fabrics. These new hertasi had remade her Whites in wool, fur, and leather, layered in
silk according to patterns designed for her by Darkwind. These had been her
Midwinter gift from him to her, and a welcome surprise they had been indeed,
for they were certainly needed. Winter Field Whites had been designed
for harsh weather, but not as harsh as the unprecedented weather currently
holding Hardorn in its icy grip.
And Hardorn was where she, Darkwind, and a small group of mixed
Valdemaran Guards and Kerowyn's mercenaries found themselves headed shortly
after Midwinter Festival.
There hadn't been much choice; it was clear that Valdemar was
going to have to send some form of envoy overland to Grand Duke Tremane, once
it became impossible to put up any more Gates. Elspeth had been present when
that last Gate had been attempted; the mangled crate that had come through had
looked as if it had been turned inside out, and nothing in it was recognizable.
It was just a good thing that the crate had only contained a few things for
Sejanes and that they had been cautious enough to test the Gate with mere cargo
before sending anyone living through.
But travel to and within Hardorn was not easy by any standard,
even those of one who had journeyed from Valdemar to the Dhorisha Plains and
patrolled the weirdling lands being cleansed and protected by a Hawkbrother
Vale. In all of her life she had never seen snow this deep. The road they
followed into Hardorn had been kept clear for traffic, but only enough to
permit a cart pulled by two horses to pass. And even then, the wheels of the
cart would scrape the walls of snow now and again. Every ten leagues a wider
place had been cut, so that carts going in opposite directions could pass, but
otherwise the snow was piled up on either side of the road until it reached
shoulder-high on a horse. In places where the snow had drifted deeper than
that, it could be taller than a rider's head. And the cold, the wind—In
many ways, she was grateful that those tall snowbanks were there, because
without that shelter they'd be facing a wind that bit as cruelly as any blade,
and carried right down to the bone. Hertasi-designed
tunics with fur linings and riding coats of sheepskin with the wool turned
inside were the only things that made this journey bearable. She was quite
grateful that the mysterious, industrious lizard-folk had been able to outfit
the entire company with such coats before they all left.
"Why the sigh?" Darkwind asked, his breath puffing out
in frosty clouds with each word. His bondbird Vree clung to the padded horn of
his saddle, with no sign of discomfort whatsoever—except that his feathers were
puffed out all over his body and his head was pulled down tight against his
shoulders, so that he resembled a fat ball of wool with a beak. But then, Vree
was a forestgyre, and Darkwind had once told her that they had come from stock
adapted to harsher climes than this. Darkwind himself cut an odd figure, and
not just because of his Hawkbrother costume or the bondbird on his saddlebow;
Darkwind's mount was neither a horse nor a Companion, but a creature as
intelligent and as foreign to Valdemaran eyes as a gryphon. It was a dyheli, a white dyheli at that, and the representative of his own race to Valdemar.
His name was Brytha, and he had brought Firesong from k'Treva to k'Sheyna, then
from k'Sheyna to Valdemar, and now consented to bear Darkwind on this current
mission. Why? She didn't know; Darkwind didn't know either, and the dyheli seemed disinclined to explain.
They were both grateful to him; although not the equal in endurance and speed
of a Companion, the dyheli was better
suited to this mission than a horse, more sure-footed and vastly more
intelligent. The rest of their party rode tough Shin'a'in-bred horses,
especially selected for endurance, shaggy as dogs with blunt, blocky heads.
"I'm sighing because I've decided that the one thing I will
never say again is to say 'never again,'" she replied with a crooked
smile. "Because as sure as I say it, I'm forced to repeat the act I swore
never to repeat."
He chuckled ruefully, without needing any explanation. Neither of
them had ever thought they would be riding back into Hardorn again. Their
previous visit, although memorable, had not been particularly pleasant, either
for them or for the Hardornens. When they had finished, mad King Ancar and his
adviser Hulda were dead at their hands, mage-caused storms were lashing the
countryside, the capital was in a state of total chaos, and the Imperial Army
(taking advantage of the moment) was pouring over the Eastern border. And
although very few Hardornens were aware of the fact, Elspeth and Darkwind were
directly or indirectly responsible for most of the damage and chaos they left behind
them.
Not that the Imperial Army was our fault, but that's just about
the only thing we can say we didn't have a hand in.
And after the invasion came the real mage-storms, triggering
incredibly vicious weather and unleashing real horrors on the unsuspecting
countryside. Those were not the fault of anyone living, but they did
make life in Hardorn even more miserable than anyone had ever dreamed possible.
So riding into Hardorn didn't seem particularly likely or sane a few moons ago.
But that had been before Duke Tremane offered alliance; before it
dawned on everyone in this part of the world that the mage-storms were a
greater menace than anything mere humans could unleash on each other. Now
things that wouldn't have occurred to anyone as possible scenarios were being
hastily put into motion.
"Have you noticed something? The weather might be vile, but
the land isn't suffering anymore," Darkwind observed. "It's
not exhausted and ill anymore, it's just sleeping, waiting for spring. I don't
know about you, but that was one of the reasons why I didn't want to ever come
back here again."
Elspeth nodded, and so did her Companion Gwena, the bells on her
bridle chiming crisply in the sharp, icy air. :Without Ancar draining the
land of its power, things are returning to normal,: Gwena replied. :The
land, and presumably the people, are no longer sickening. And much as I hate to
say it—the blood and life-energy of all those poor folk killed in the invasion
may have sped that recovery.:
"That's a horrible thought," Darkwind observed with a
shudder, for Gwena had made certain to include him in her Mindspeaking.
Elspeth shivered; intellectually she knew it was probably true,
but it was horrible all the same. "That just sounds entirely too much like
something Falconsbane would have come up with," she said reluctantly.
"But then again, Falconsbane simply perverted things that were perfectly
normal and good. And I suppose it would be even worse to think that all those
people died and their life-energy went for nothing, or worse, was used by
someone like Falconsbane.
:Mages and those with earth-sense have known for centuries that
this is the reason why the countryside blooms after a war,: Gwena observed dispassionately. :It
isn't just that things seem better, and it isn't just that the people are ready
to greet any positive signs with enthusiasm. It's because the lives lost go
back to the land, and when the war is over, the land can use them to heal
itself.:
"We can at least be grateful that Grand Duke Tremane is apparently
more interested in allowing the land to heal than in using that power for his
own means," Darkwind replied, as he turned for a moment to stare off into
the east. He said nothing more, and Elspeth thought she knew why.
They had only the word of three youngsters and Tremane's own
people that he was to be trusted at all. Just at the moment, apparently
was the only word any of them could use with regard to the leader of the
Imperial forces. Those few facts that they had about Tremane were not much
comfort.
Tremane had been sent by his master, Emperor Charliss, to conquer
a weak and chaotic Hardorn for the Empire of the East. This assignment was to
prove him worthy (or not) to be the Imperial Heir. The Imperial Army had taken
roughly half of Hardorn before it stalled, held in place by Hardornen fighters,
in mostly uncoordinated groups ranging in size from tiny bands to small armies,
united only in their determination to oust the interloper. Since they were
fighting on their own ground, they had the advantage once the front lines
stretched out and the Imperial forces were thinned by distance. Nevertheless,
if nothing had changed, Tremane would probably have been able to reorganize,
regroup, and complete the conquest, possibly even carrying it into Valdemar.
But things did change, and in a way that no one could have
foreseen; the change had come from a direction no one would have looked, for it
had come out of the distant past.
We never do consider the past, do we? But we should have. Wasn't
Falconsbane a revenant of that past? And shouldn't that have warned us to turn
our eyes and thoughts in that direction? But then again, how can we truly plan
for everything, every possibility? Even if we knew all of the threats at any
one moment, the defenses for half of them would negate the preparations for the
other half. We are better off being resourceful than omniscient, I think.
Once, before there had ever been a Valdemar, in a time so distant
that there were no records and only the vaguest of hints about it in the great
library of the Heralds, ancient wars had ended in an event known only as the
Cataclysm. And until Elspeth had met with the Tayledras of legend, the
Shin'a'in of the Dhorisha Plains, and the last, lost Clan of the true
Kaled'a'in—progenitors of both the Hawkbrothers and the Shin'a'in—that was all
those in Valdemar had known. Now, though, with the help of histories both
arcane and mundane, the full story had been put together.
Elspeth considered that story as she did every time she had the
leisure to do so, intent on extracting the least bit of useful information from
it. Despite the huge amounts of power involved, there were still human motives
and actions behind what had happened so long ago. Even madmen would act
according to their needs, so the more that one considered events of history the
more one could deduce what those needs had been—and once one understood the
needs and motivations of the people involved, one could expound upon what else
might have happened, or realize that an obscure detail was actually something
significant in context.
There had been two Adepts back then, perhaps the most powerful
that the world had ever known, called Urtho and Ma'ar. Ma'ar, the scion of
barbarian nomads, had been infected with the mania for conquest, at first for
noble reasons of uniting clans to keep them from annihilating each other.
Urtho, the epitome of civilization and scholarship, had resisted him. But
despite the best efforts of civilization, Ma'ar, Adept and Blood-Mage, had
triumphed—
But only for a moment. In the very hour of Ma'ar's victory a dying
Urtho had brought defeat to his very door, with a pair of devices that released
the bonds on all magic within their spheres of influence. One he triggered in
his own Tower; one was sent to Ma'ar. The devices acted within moments of each
other, and the results were both devastating and utterly unpredictable.
When it was over, there were two enormous craters where Urtho's
Tower and Ma'ar's palace had stood. The first became the Dhorisha Plains; the
second, Lake Evendim. And the interaction of the two series of shock waves
created terrible mage-storms that had raged over the land for a decade or more,
raising mountains and flattening them, disrupting magic, causing living
creatures to change and warp out of all recognition, even transplanting entire
sections of countryside from one part of the world to another.
Eventually the Storms faded, to be forgotten in the ensuing
centuries, assumed by all to have been gone forever. But the forces released by
the Cataclysm were stranger and stronger than anyone guessed, and now the
mage-storms had returned, echoing back across time from the other side of the
world, growing stronger with every new occurrence.
That was
what had changed the situation Tremane had walked into, changed it out of all
recognition. The situation in Valdemar had been bad, but not a complete
disaster. Valdemar had only newly rediscovered true-magic, and did not depend
on its power for anything. The other effects of the mage-storms, the vicious
and unpredictable weather, the warping of living creatures, and so forth, could
all be dealt with in one way or another. But for Tremane's forces, dependent on
magic for everything from communication and supply lines to the means to scout
the enemy and cook their food, it was a disaster as they found themselves
completely cut off from the Empire, effectively blind and hungry as a fighting
force. As for what was going on in the Empire itself, that was anyone's guess.
Tremane had initially assumed that the Storms were a new weapon unleashed by
the Alliance of Valdemar, Karse, Rethwellan, and the Shin'a'in/Tayledras clans.
He had reacted accordingly—and in a direction entirely typical of the Empire,
where treachery and assassination were so commonplace that children were given
bonded bodyguards as cradle-gifts. He had sent an assassin to break up the
Alliance.
That was the single act that Elspeth and any other Valdemaran
found so difficult to think past. Valdemar had not attacked Imperial
forces. Neither Valdemar nor any of her allies had shown any sign of aggression
other than increasing the guard on the borders and covertly helping to supply
the Hardornen loyalists. Tremane had no reason—except for the obvious fact that
Valdemar was not suffering from the Storms as badly as the Imperials were—to
think that this was an attack by Queen Selenay or her allies. Nevertheless, he
had treated it as one, and had sent a covert operative armed with magic weapons
to kill anyone of any importance at or in Selenay's Court.
The man had succeeded only insofar as murdering the envoy from
Karse and the one from the Shin'a'in, and wounding several others. That was bad
enough, but was sheerest good fortune that it wasn't worse, and no one made any
mistake about that. If the assassin had waited until the predawn hours when
people were sleeping in their beds, he would have succeeded in killing everyone
from Selenay down to the gryphons.
Herein lay the heart of Elspeth and Darkwind's current problem.
Now they were supposed to trust a man who used assassins against those he only suspected
of aggressive action.
Elspeth found it difficult to think beyond that fact, even though
Tremane had won over to his side the last person likely to ever forgive
him—young Karal, the secretary and protégé of the envoy of Karse, Sun-priest
and Mage, Master Ulrich. Tremane had even somehow convinced Solaris, Son of the
Sun and High Priest and ruler of Karse, of his sincerity and his wish to make
amends, though only the gods knew how he'd done that.
Well, he hasn't convinced me, and he hasn't convinced Darkwind, she thought stubbornly. Whatever
spell of words or personality he put them under, I hope it's going to be more
difficult to work the same "magic" on us. I know mind-magic, and
Darkwind is so foreign to Tremane's experience that he might as well be another
species altogether. And what's more, I wouldn't be in the least surprised to
discover that Kerowyn slipped half a dozen special operatives into our escort.
Two sides can play the assassination game, if it comes to that.
She hoped that it wouldn't, but she had enough experience now to
make her plans around pessimism rather than hope. She didn't officially know
that Kerowyn had planted her own agents, but she knew the Skybolts, and they
were, one and all, "irregulars." Their skills were not those of
straight-on fighters, although they could act and fight as a disciplined
skirmishing unit and had in the past.
On the other hand... Solaris has Hansa, the other Firecat. If she
wanted to kill Tremane, there is no way he could stop her. So maybe that fact
alone will make him behave himself from now on.
That was certainly something else to consider. The Firecats
possessed the ability to "Jump" themselves and anyone in physical
contact with them from one location to another, and Elspeth was not entirely
certain what their range was. Certainly it was good enough that Altra and Hansa
served as messengers between Solaris and Selenay, and between the party in the
remains of Urtho's Tower and the mages and Artificers in the Valdemaran capital
of Haven. Solaris was perfectly capable of placing an assassin of her own right
under Tremane's privy to poke a knife up into him if she so desired, and for
that matter, there was no reason why Hansa himself could not kill a man if he
chose. Although Firecats had the ability to look like common cats if
they wished to, in their true form they were the size of enormous hounds, and
their claws and teeth were correspondingly long and sharp.
Elspeth blinked at the images that thought conjured up. My
thoughts are certainly taking a grim turn today. Maybe I'm concentrating on
spilling blood as an antidote to all this whiteness. Dear gods, it's cold—and
we haven't seen another human soul since our guides left us.
They'd been lucky when they'd reached the Valdemaran Border. A
couple of Hardornen exiles—vouched for by Kerowyn's agents—had cautiously
decided it was safe to return and acted as guides up until this morning in
exchange for two pouches of currency and two packs of supplies. Now, though,
they would have to go on without guides, because the husband and wife had gone
as far as they intended.
Last night the party had reached the village from which the couple
had originally fled. Even though it proved to be deserted, abandoned, like the
other villages they had passed on this road, the two wanted to stay; even in
thick white desolation they had a dream of a time in the future when there
would be children running and playing in a verdant town square.
Their journey thus far had been an unnerving one, riding through a
landscape devoid of humans. Elspeth could only wonder what had happened. The
land might be healing, but where are the people? True, Ancar had decimated
the population, but why hadn't they met with anyone on this road? Why
were all the villages they passed through completely deserted?
The abandoned villages raised more questions than were answered,
for everything had been taken except the heaviest of furniture, and there was
no sign of violence. Was this the result of systematic desertion or systematic
looting? Who was cleaning off the snow? Were the Hardornens hiding from an
armed and possibly hostile group? Given the fact that this was a nation racked
by war, that was possible. But why, when there was a Herald of Valdemar riding
conspicuously in the front?
Perhaps because at a distance there's no reason to assume I really
am a Herald. It's not that hard to get a white horse and a set of white
clothing.
"What are our plans for stopping tonight, or do we have
any?" she called back to the leader of the troop. They hadn't provisioned
themselves for camping, though they had brought all their own food, assuming
that rations might be short given the horrible mage-weather Hardorn had
endured. It was a good thing they had, or they'd have had a choice between
starving and (literally) eating crow.
"In theory there's a town ahead that used to have a weekly
market and five big inns," the leader replied, his voice muffled by the
scarf swathing his face. "Whether or not it's still tenanted—" he
shrugged. "Someone's been keeping the road clean for traders, and I'm
hoping it's them."
So was Elspeth, fervently. She was not looking forward to spending
another night in an abandoned, derelict building. There was always one building
that could be made to serve, and there was certainly no shortage of firewood,
but she had always been glad of the presence of the others around her. She'd
found it hard to sleep at night, with her shoulder blades prickling as if
unseen eyes watched her. No one had actually seen or heard anything that could
be taken as a ghost, but such places felt haunted.
She couldn't begin to imagine how Rusi and Severn could bear to
stay back there in what was left of their village. Granted, there was plenty of
material to make more than one of the houses sound and weather tight again. And
granted, they were well-equipped to do just that. But the aching emptiness of
the abandoned village would have sent her screaming for Valdemar within a week.
It was more than she could bear to think about right now. I've
done a great deal that people think is brave, but I'm not that brave.
But that was also assuming that the land around the village was as
deserted as it looked. When the mage-storms created killing weather and
murderous monsters, would it have been safer and smarter to fortify the
farmsteads and stay where the food was, or to come into the village and trust
in numbers and weapons but chance the food running out? It wasn't a decision
Elspeth had ever needed to make, and she hoped it was one nobody in Valdemar
would be forced to face.
For that, all their hopes rested with that tiny group in the
middle of the Dhorisha Plains, in the ruins of Urtho's Tower. If anyone could
find an answer, it would be them. Although Elspeth and Darkwind were both
Adept-class mages, Elspeth was relatively untutored and Darkwind had abandoned
magic for so many years that despite his considerable prowess he still
considered himself out of practice. As mages, they were of no help to the
researchers who had gone to the Tower. They might be of some use with the
Imperials, and they would be of great use as envoys.
She knew that Queen Selenay had debated long and hard before
deciding to send Elspeth and Darkwind as envoys from the Alliance to Tremane.
The Queen hadn't wanted to send Elspeth, but Elspeth was the only logical
choice—she could make autonomous decisions, she had been trained both as a
Herald and to wear the crown herself—she was the next best thing to Selenay
when it came to being able to think for Valdemar. Elspeth had proven
that she had good judgment, and because she was no longer the Heir since her
abdication, she was of little value as a political hostage. Moreover, she had
been trained by Kerowyn to defend herself against assassins; she could take
care of herself in an ambush or an even fight, and she was as suspicious as
even that redoubtable woman could have wished.
Then there was magic, in which she was an Adept; Tremane was no
more than a Master, though of a far different magical discipline than the one
she had been trained in. Very few of the Heralds of Valdemar were mages at all,
much less Adepts, and although their Companions would be able to help them to
some extent in matters of magic, it was no substitute for being mages
themselves.
All that might not have been enough, except for Darkwind; he was
an Adept as well, and of longer standing than she. He had been a Tayledras
scout, which made him something of a fighter as well. He would have refused
flatly to accompany anyone else; he was not a Herald, and his loyalties were to
her, not Valdemar. Whereas she would hardly have gone anywhere without him, of
course, and together they were a formidable pair.
Between her own qualifications and Darkwind's, there simply was no
one as "right" to go on this mission as Elspeth, and if she had been
anyone else's daughter, Selenay would not have hesitated for a moment to send
her.
To give Mother credit, she didn't hesitate long. Elspeth was actually a bit pleased at
that; Selenay had been treating her less as a daughter and more as—as an adult,
and Elspeth had gotten the feeling, more than once, that when the Queen forgot
to think of her as her daughter, she acted naturally. In a way, given the
Queen's behavior of late, Elspeth had been a little surprised that her mother
had given second thoughts to the mission. I wonder if some of what has made
her hesitate in the past was more guilt than anything else.
Could it have been? Elspeth and her mother had never been
comfortable with each other. No matter how hard she tried, she always saw my
father in me. In so many ways, I was more Talia's child than hers. Now
Selenay had the twins, children she could give her whole heart to; could she be
feeling guilt that she didn't have that same maternal bond with Elspeth?
Was that why she had always overreacted when Elspeth did something that might
put her in jeopardy—because she felt as if she should have been more
worried, more emotionally involved than she was?
An interesting theory, and one I'll never learn the truth of. I
certainly couldn't ask her that, and the only other person who would know will
never tell me. Talia would never betray anything she learned of Mother's heart,
and rightly so.
Elspeth gave herself a mental shake. Did it matter? Not really. Except
that—if that was indeed the case, she wished she could convince her mother that
it didn't matter. The last thing that the Queen of Valdemar needed was one more
thing to feel guilty about. She already carried enough guilt for twenty people.
And I would rather be Queen Selenay's friend and fellow Herald
than her daughter.
But the thought did present one explanation for some of Selenay's
contradictory behavior, and it was certainly worth keeping in the back of her
mind. She could watch for evidence of her own, and it would be interesting to
act on that theory and see what happened.
Meanwhile, there was a long and difficult job ahead of her, and
there was a danger they might all freeze to death before they even got
to it if they didn't find some Hardornens soon.
"How much farther do you think this town is?" she called
back over her shoulder. She glanced back to see—what was the Guard-Captain's
name? Vallen, that was it—to see Vallen shrug, the movement barely visible
beneath his multiple layers of fur, sheepskin, and wool.
"Soon, I think, but that is just a guess," he replied.
Despite the scarf he wore about his face, his words came clearly over the
muffled hoofbeats of their various mounts, over the creaking of the packed snow
beneath those hooves. He gave his horse a nudge with his heels, and took the
lead position as Elspeth and Darkwind moved aside to let him by.
Elspeth stood in her stirrups for a moment to peer up the road
ahead, but if there were any signs of habitations such as plumes of smoke that
could have been rising from chimneys, they were invisible against the uniformly
gray-white sky. The sun was nothing more than a fuzzy, lighter spot about
halfway down to the horizon.
She settled back down in her saddle; the way the road wound about,
it wasn't possible to see very far ahead, and they only got a view of the
countryside when the snowbanks allowed. We could be right on top of this
town and we'd never know it, she thought.
Minutes later, the road gave another turn and dropped away in
front of them. The snowbanks themselves inclined down to about waist-height. As
if conjured up in a scrying crystal, the watched-for town appeared ahead of and
below them, down in a shallow valley, the houses sticking up out of the snow
like so many tree stumps in the snow-covered forest.
This was not the first time a town had appeared before them, but
now, for the first time, there were signs that the place was inhabited.
Some of the houses were nothing more than snow-covered lumps, but some had been
cleaned of their burden of white. Thin smoke wreathed up out of about half the
chimneys, to be snatched away by the wind before it climbed up to form a plume.
There were a few figures moving about on the road near the town, and it was
clear from the purposeful way that they moved that the party had been spotted,
if not anticipated.
The place looked marginally better than the deserted villages they
had already passed. Perhaps half the buildings were in disrepair; one or two
had collapsed roofs, and it was hard to tell under the snow how badly some of
the others had suffered. She had to guess that only the buildings with smoke
rising from them were actually lived in, and she caught her breath at the
thought that Ancar and all the other troubles visited upon Hardorn had
literally cut the population in half. Maybe more, she reminded herself. How
many deserted villages did we pass through?
Were conditions like this everywhere? If so—well, she did not envy
any leader the task of trying to bring this country back from such devastation.
If Tremane can get the Hardornens to accept him, he has more work ahead of
him than I'd care to take on.
A group of about a dozen people had formed up ahead of them on the
road, barring them, at least for the moment, from entering the town. They were
as bundled up in clothing as Elspeth's group was, making it difficult to tell
anything about them, including their sexes; but in spite of that handicap, she
thought that their stances showed a mix of fear and belligerence.
Fear? When had anyone ever feared her? They weren't so deep
into Hardorn that the natives should be unaware of what a Herald was and what
one stood for. How could they fear a Herald? Had Ancar created that fear in
them so strongly?
She sensed the fighters behind her surreptitiously loosening their
weapons, placing hands casually on hilts, and increasing their watchfulness. So
it was not her imagination; they sensed hostility, too. Vallen reined in his
horse and allowed her to take the lead; Darkwind signaled the dyheli to drop back with his head even
with Gwena's flank. Elspeth brought them all to a halt about a length away from
the "welcoming party" by gesturing with an upraised hand.
"We are peaceful travelers from Valdemar," she said in
their own tongue, pulling her scarf down so that they could see her entire
face—though she did Wonder if they'd believe the "peaceful" part with
so many weapons in evidence. "Who is in charge here?"
Two of the figures looked at each other, and one stepped forward,
though he did not reveal his face as Elspeth had. Now that Elspeth was closer
to them, the ragged state of their clothing was painfully evident. Their coats
were carefully mended, but with patches that were not even a close match for
the same material as the original.
"Me. I'm in charge, as I reckon," the foremost man said
gruffly, and he folded his arms clumsily over his chest. He had no weapon in
evidence, but Elspeth did not take that to mean that these people were
helpless. If she'd been in charge, she'd have archers with drawn bows at every
window.
She did not look up to see if her guess was correct.
"What're you here for?" the man continued. His arms
tightened and his posture straightened. His voice rose, angry and strained.
"If you think you people in Valdemar are going to come in here and take us
over, us and our land—"
"No," Elspeth interrupted, cutting him off more
sharply than she had intended. The man's nerves had infected her, and she took
a deep breath to steady herself. "No," she repeated with less force.
"We—Valdemar—has no intention of taking one ell of Hardorn land. Until Ancar
attacked us, we were always the loyal friend and ally of Hardorn, and we intend
to return to that status now that Ancar is gone."
He laughed, but it was not a sound of humor. "Ha!" he
jeered. "You say that, but why should we believe you?"
"I swear it on my honor as a Herald!" she countered
quickly. "You must know what that means, at least! Surely you have not
lost faith even in that!"
This all had the feeling of a test, as if what she said here would
make all the difference in how they would be treated from this moment on.
Do they have some way to communicate with other communities still? She couldn't imagine how anyone could
cross this frozen wasteland faster than they were already doing, but the party
of Valdemarans was confined to the road, and perhaps the natives had some way
of cutting across country to spread news. Perhaps the old signal-towers were
still working.
That could be the answer. And it could be how they knew we were
coming.
"I swear it as a Herald, she repeated. "And as the envoy
of the Queen. Valdemar has no designs on Hardorn, nor do any of the other
parties to the Alliance."
—though Solaris had to restrain a few hotheads in Karse. Or
rather, Vkandis did—
"We're only traveling," she continued smoothly.
"We'd appreciate your hospitality for the night, though we did bring our
own provisions. We know how difficult things have been for you, and we didn't
want to strain anyone's resources."
There was a long silence, during which the man peered at her
closely, and finally nodded, as if satisfied with what he saw. "That
outfit's kind of outlandish, but you've got the horse, blue eyes and all, and that
can't be faked." He shrugged, then, and made a gesture that she suspected
told those hidden archers that all was well. "I guess we still believe in
Heralds—mostly since Ancar tried so hard to make us think you was some kind of
witchy crew that had traffic with demons. I'll take your word as bond for you
and the rest of this lot, but you better remember that you stand
personal surety for them."
She nodded, trying not to show how unsettled his words made her
feel. This was, literally, the first time she had ever encountered anyone this
close to the border of Valdemar who didn't accept and welcome a Herald
with trust. What had happened to these people to make them this way?
:Ancar is what happened to them, dear. They will be long in
trusting anyone ever again,: Gwena said quietly. :It may be that this generation never
will.:
"So where are you going, then?" the man asked, still
wary.
"Tell him the truth, ke'chara," Darkwind said
softly in Tayledras. "Don't dissemble. We might as well see now. what kind
of reception we're going to have while we still have the provisions to turn
around and go home. We can't afford to fight our way across this country to get
to Tremane."
She nodded slightly to show that she'd heard him; he was right, of
course. If they couldn't get to Tremane's headquarters without fighting, there
was no point in going on. "We're on our way to a town called Shonar,"
she said carefully, wondering how much or little he knew.
He knew enough; the man rocked back a pace. "You're going to
Tremane?" he demanded. "The Impie Duke?"
She couldn't tell if he was angry or not, but she was already
committed to the truth, so she nodded.
"We're the Valdemaran envoy to Tremane," she replied.
"He—he wants to join the Alliance. Things that we have learned make us
inclined to trust him to be honorable."
We hope.
There were murmurs from the group behind the man, and Elspeth took
heart from the fact that they didn't sound angry, just thoughtful. The man
himself considered them for a moment, then waved his followers aside. "We
need to talk, Herald from Valdemar," he said with a touch of formality.
"And there's no point in doing it in this cold. Come along; the inn's still
in repair and heated, even if the innkeeper's gone, and if you've got bedrolls
to sleep in, there's beds to put them on. If you can tend to yourselves and
feed yourselves, we can give you fair shelter for the night."
That was the most welcome statement she'd heard yet on this
journey, and she allowed Gwena to fall in obediently behind the man as he led
the way to the inn.
The inn was in good repair, as promised, and so were the
stables. The group dismounted in the inn-yard and led their mounts and the pack
animals inside a stout building with a surprising number of animals in the
stalls.
They must be keeping all of the horses and ponies in the town here, she realized after a look around. That
makes more sense than scattering them, one and two to a stable.
The Hardornens quickly set to, throwing down straw from the
hayloft to make up the remaining stalls for the visitors. As it turned out,
they also had hay, though no grain to spare; that was fine, though. The
Valdemarans had brought a string of chirras with them, loaded down with their
supplies. The chirras did perfectly well on the hay alone, and there was plenty
of grain in the supplies for the horses, Gwena, and the dyheli, Brytha.
Everyone in the party pitched in to help in the stables; Elspeth's
cardinal rule, learned from Kerowyn, was that the welfare of their beasts came
before the needs of the humans, and no one disagreed with her.
With the horses, chirras, Brytha, and Gwena warmly bedded down and
fed and the sun setting behind the veil of gray cloud, they all trudged into
the inn carrying their baggage.
Once inside, they stood in a tight group for a moment, looking
carefully around. The common room, a large chamber with a huge fireplace at one
end, stout wooden floor and walls, and smoke-blackened beams supporting the
roof, had none of the air of neglect and decay that Elspeth had feared.
She guessed that the villagers had turned the place into their
informal meeting house, for the place was too clean to have been swept out just
for their benefit. The other door, the one that led into the street, kept
opening as more and more people came in, and it looked to her as if most of the
adults were gathering in the common room. They had all brought firewood with
them as well, which relieved one question in Elspeth's mind—it would have been
difficult for the Valdemarans to supply firewood for themselves.
The fellow in charge had not yet pulled off his coat, but he had
removed the scarf from his face. He pushed to the front of the crowd, and waved
a mittened hand at the staircase, and his weathered, careworn features were
kinder than Elspeth had expected.
"Rooms are upstairs, take your pick," he said.
"When you've settled yourselves, come down here where we can talk."
Several of those waiting came up the wooden staircase with their
guests, bringing firewood to leave beside each hearth before returning
downstairs. They didn't say anything, but Elspeth got the impression that was
more because they were taciturn or shy than that they were hostile. With fires
warming the chambers that had fireplaces, and bricks heating up to warm the
cold bedding of those in chambers that didn't, the Valdemarans finally trickled
downstairs to meet the eyes of their erstwhile hosts.
Elspeth took the lead, the rest following her. The natives watched
Elspeth with covert curiosity, but the moment that Darkwind descended the
staircase, they gave up any pretense of politeness and just stared, mouths
agape with amazement. The corners of Elspeth's mouth twitched, but she managed
not to laugh out loud at their expressions.
I doubt they've ever seen anything like my Darkwind. He must seem
like something right out of a minstrel's ballad to them.
Darkwind really was quite a sight, with his long silver hair, his
strange, exotic clothing, and the enormous bondbird on his shoulder. When he
reached up a hand to Vree, casually lifted him off his shoulder, and cast the
forestgyre into the air so he could fly across the room and take a perch on a
beam, every Hardornen in the place ducked, and several looked as if they were afraid
the bird was going to attack them.
For his part, Vree was on his best behavior, perching where there
wasn't going to be anyone sitting directly beneath or behind him. That was
extremely polite of him, for if he fell asleep, his instincts would overcome
his training if he had to "slice." And a bird the size of Vree could
produce an amazing amount of hawk-chalk.
She waited for Darkwind to reach her side, and took his hand in
hers. "This is Darkwind k'Sheyna, a Hawkbrother from one of the
Hawkbrother Clans in the Alliance," she said, as matter-of-factly as if
she had said, "This is Thom, a farmer from the next valley." Their
eyes bulged at that, and she didn't blame them. Even in Valdemar, up until
recently the Hawkbrothers had been nothing more than a very spooky legend—what
must these Hardornens think?
"He is my fellow envoy, my partner, and my mate," she
continued. "Representing the Hawkbrothers, the Shin'a'in, and other
interests. As I said, we are traveling to Shonar, to Grand Duke Tremane, as
official envoys of Valdemar and other members of the Alliance."
The fellow who had taken charge of the meeting nodded. He had by
now divested himself of his coat, and wore the clothing of a craftsman—a
blacksmith, if Elspeth was any judge, by the scorch marks and mended places
that might have been burn marks. He looked much shabbier than any blacksmith
Elspeth had ever seen in Valdemar, where they tended to be the more prosperous
citizens of a town.
Perhaps he is the most prosperous man here. What a thought! If he's
as shabby as a beggar, how are the others faring?
The fact that he was the blacksmith would be the reason that Ancar
had not "recruited" him for the army, given that he was able-bodied
and neither too old nor too young to fight. A town this size depended on having
a blacksmith, and the local smith would need to have more skill than an
apprentice.
"I'm Hob," the man said, and gestured to one of the
tables. If he'd been fed as well as he should have, his face would have been
round, like an old, weathered ball. He was not starved-looking, but his bones
were showing; just a hint that these people had seen bad times, as if she
didn't already know that. "If some of your people want to go fix up your
food, we'd like to talk with you and your—your mate, there."
"We'd be happy to share what we have," Elspeth began,
flushing a little with guilt, but he shook his head.
"We've got enough to hold us, so long as spring don't wait to
midsummer," he said. "And you'll need every bit you've got to get to
Shonar. Thanks to, ah, some good advice, most folk between here and there have
enough, but there's none to spare. I doubt you'll find anyone that can sell you
so much as a sack of oats, and even if they would, it wouldn't be for
money."
Elspeth looked back over her shoulder to Vallen; he nodded, and
with a gesture sent four of the guards off to the kitchen. The rest took seats
with, and carefully around, Elspeth. Darkwind remained at her right
hand, and she was not in the least deceived by his casual pose. If anyone so
much as raised his voice in a way he considered threatening, the offending
party might find himself facing the point of a knife or being held in the bonds
of a most uncomfortable tangle-spell or racking paralysis.
And that's assuming I didn't act on a perception of threat first,
for myself.
Hob sat across the table from Elspeth, and rubbed his nose, as if
wondering how to begin. Finally he just set his shoulders and blundered in.
"You say you're going to Shonar. How much do you know about this
Tremane?"
Not long on tact, but I doubt he's used to being the leader of
these people. He probably hasn't had much occasion for tact. Elspeth shrugged. "What we know is
this; he's brought in his entire force to Shonar, and he's broken off all
hostile actions with Hardornen loyalists. From what we've been told, he's going
out of his way to avoid conflict with loyalist groups, which, you'll admit, in
this weather isn't exactly difficult."
Hob snorted in agreement.
"Not only has he expressed an interest in joining the
Alliance, he loaned us several of his mages to help us with—" she
hesitated. How much would he understand if she told him about the mage-storms?
"—with the magical problem that's at the heart of all the weird things
that have been happening."
"The monsters? The weather? Them circles?" Hob's
eyes widened and he grew quite excited. "Tremane helped you with fixing them—"
"He did, and he continues to," Elspeth replied.
"It's a bigger problem than you may realize. It isn't just Hardorn that's
been plagued by all these calamities. It's Valdemar, the Pelagirs, Rethwellan,
Karse, the Dhorisha Plains and, we're guessing, just about everywhere else,
right out to the Empire. The Alliance, with Tremane's help, managed to fix
things temporarily, in the area covered by the Alliance nations." She
decided that it might be best not to mention Solaris' personal interview with
the Grand Duke; after all, she only knew that it had occurred, not what had
been said. "As for the rest that we know about Tremane, we have been told that
the citizens of Shonar and the surrounding area have come to look upon him as
their protector. We have heard that he has been doing good things for
them."
"Aye," Hob said slowly. "We've heard the same.
We've heard that them as was fighting against him have come over to his side,
that he's been acting like—like we was his people. And now he's helping you in
Valdemar?"
She nodded. He pursed his lips and exchanged glances with some of
his fellow villagers. They weren't very good at hiding their expressions; what
she was telling them agreed with some of what they had heard, and they were
surprised to have an outsider confirm what they'd clearly thought were hopeful
but unlikely rumors.
"We've heard as how things are pretty fat in Shonar, all
things considered," he said finally. "We've heard that it's because
of Tremane. We've heard he set his men out helping with harvest, building walls
around the town, doing other things like that 'sides taking down
monsters."
She spread her hands in a gesture he could read as he chose.
"We've heard the same things," she said. "I don't know yet how
much truth is in what we've heard, but I'm certain that your sources are
completely different from ours. I can tell you this, not all of our sources are
Tremane's people."
"And when two people say the same thing... aye." There
was a great deal of murmuring behind him. He chewed on his lower lip. "All
the same—"
"All the same, it's possible that he is putting on a good
face for us, hoping to lure us into accepting him," she said, as bluntly
as he would have. "We don't know, and we won't know until we get
there."
Hob traced the grain of the wood of the table with his finger and
avoided her eyes. "All the same, lady—we need a leader. There's nobody
left of the old blood; damned Ancar saw to that."
"And people have been talking about accepting the Duke?"
That was more than she had expected to hear, on this side of the former battle
lines. "A foreigner? An Imperial?"
"The Duke, not his bloody Empire!" someone said in the
back. "We heard his Emperor left him hanging out to dry when the troubles
started; we heard he's not Charliss' dog no more."
"Hell, he couldn't be, could he, if he's comin' to you with
his brass hat in his hand, looking to get into the Alliance," Hob said,
looking hopeful. "He's proving himself for Shonar; if he proves himself
for Shonar, why not for Hardorn?"
"But what if he doesn't just want to be your leader?"
Elspeth asked softly. "What if he wants to be your King?"
Hob hesitated a moment, then shrugged. "That's all cake or
calamity tomorrow, isn't it?" he said philosophically. "We got to get
through the winter first." He favored Elspeth with a shy smile. "I
can tell you this, there's one way we'd take him."
"Even as a King?" Darkwind asked quietly.
He nodded, slowly. "Even as a King. He'd have to swear on
something we'd trust that he wasn't Charliss' man. Then he'd have to swear to
Hardorn. And he'd have to do what Ancar, his father, even what his grandfather
never did." He paused for effect. "He'd have to take the earth, in
the old way."
Elspeth shook her head. "That's nothing I know of," she
replied.
Hob smiled again. "The earth-taking—that's old, lady. Older
than Valdemar, or so they say. What's old is sure, that's the saying anyway.
They say them as takes the earth can't betray it. There's still a priest or two
about that knows the way of earth-taking. If this Tremane'd take the earth and
the earth takes him—well, there's no going back. He's bound harder and tighter
than if we put chains on him."
Elspeth kept her feelings of skepticism to herself. After all
she'd seen, there was no telling whether Hob was right about this
"earth-taking" of his or not. "Well, you can believe that
Valdemar has no interest in taking the rule of Hardorn away from the people;
what you do about it is your business," Elspeth said carefully.
"Our business is to see if what we've been told is true, and to advise the
Alliance if it is not."
He nodded, and did not add the obvious question of how she
expected to get herself and her party out in one piece if Tremane turned out to
be playing his own game. That wasn't his problem, and she couldn't blame him
for not volunteering to help if things got difficult. The people of Hardorn had
all they could do to survive, and they had nothing to spare for foreigners out
of Valdemar.
Comforting aromas of cooking food emerged from the kitchen, and
Hob took that gratefully as his escape from the conversation. "Looks like
your people have your food ready; we'll go leave you in peace with it. You can
leave in the morning when you choose—and—ah—" he flushed a little
"you'll have better welcome farther along. Signal-towers are still up, and
there's still a few as know the old signals. We'll be passing along that you're
all right, that you're going on up to Tremane. Nobody'll hinder you; there're
enough places with four sound walls and a roof that you'll get shelter at
night."
As he stood up, Elspeth remained seated, but raised a hand toward
Hob. "And does the Grand Duke know that the towers are still
working?" she asked.
He laughed, which was all the answer she needed. So Tremane was not
aware of this rapid means of passing news along. That could be useful, if it
turned out he was playing a deeper game than they thought.
Hob and the rest of his people filed out, leaving the Valdemarans
alone, and Elspeth turned first to Vallen as the kitchen crew put bowls of
stewed dried meat and preserved fruit, and plates of travel biscuits onto the
table. "Well?" she asked. "What do you think?"
He sat down across from her in Hob's place and picked up a biscuit
and a bowl before answering. "This matches what we'd heard and didn't
really believe," he said slowly, dipping his bread into his gravy and
eating the biscuit with small, neat bites. "Tremane sounds too good to be
true. Altogether an admirable and unselfish leader." There was a faint
echo of mockery in his voice.
"So does Selenay, if you look at things objectively."
Darkwind reminded him. "And yes, I know, Tremane has no Companion to keep
him honorable, but I'm not sure one would be needed in this case. At least for
now, he's in a precarious situation. With the way things have fallen out, his
position and his level of personal danger aren't that much different from the
average craftsman in Shonar. He needs them as much as they need a leader; if
they fall, it won't be long before he does, too. If they rebel, he has no
population base to support his troops. This summer, they were fighting against
him, and it wouldn't take much mistreatment to make them turn on him."
Elspeth nodded, agreeing with him, although Vallen appeared a bit
more dubious. "He has armed troops, loyal only to him," Vallen
pointed out.
"He'll have a hard time feeding those troops without
farmers," Elspeth replied. "And he can have all the silver he needs
to pay them, but if they haven't anywhere to spend it, their loyalty will start
to erode. You can't keep an army under siege, starving, and far from home
without losing it."
Vallen speared a bit of meat and blew on it to cool it. "All
I can say is this," the Guard-Captain said, after he'd eaten the bite.
"It's not all that difficult for a charismatic leader to sway the people
immediately around him with words instead of deeds. It's a lot more difficult
to do that with people out of the reach of his personality. They're inclined to
look for something to corroborate what they've heard, and if there's nothing
there, they forget him."
"But you're surprised at what you're hearing from Hob,"
Elspeth stated.
Vallen nodded. "Very. And not the least because a few months
ago, these people would have fought with everything they had left to get rid of
the man. Now they're considering accepting him as a leader. Doesn't it
sound as if they've heard and learned something very compelling over the past
few months? I just hope that what they've heard has more substance than
twice-told tales."
Elspeth sighed and nodded, as she and everyone else applied
themselves to their food. This was the first warm meal they'd had all day, and
their supper last night had been hastily prepared over a smoky fire in the
remains of a half-ruined house, not cooked in a proper kitchen. As the gnawing
hunger in the pit of her stomach eased, and the warmth from their dinner filled
her, she became aware just how tired she was. When she glanced around the
table, there wasn't anyone except Darkwind who wasn't leaning his head on his
hand as he ate. She felt the same way; worn down by the cold, and quite ready
to go to bed as soon as she finished the last bite. Darkwind seemed in his
element, and she would not have hesitated a moment in trusting the entire
expedition to him.
Some of the others looked quite ready to fall asleep over their
plates. "It's the cold," Darkwind said quietly. "Don't worry
this is normal. It's being in the cold from dawn until dusk, without a chance
to warm up, then going to bed in cold beds and unheated rooms. Tonight will
make a difference, with a good hot meal and warm beds; tomorrow everyone will
end the day without being quite so exhausted. If we can get shelter like this
for the rest of the trip, our people will revive in no time at all."
He ought to know, and she should have remembered. Then
again, perhaps she was not at fault for forgetting; when she'd worked beside
him as a scout and border-guard at k'Sheyna Vale, they'd lived in the
Vale. They'd return from their shifts on patrol to an ekele in the midst
of a garden spot, as warm as a midsummer day. Before that, he'd refused to live
inside the Vale, and there might well have been times when he'd returned home
to a chilled ekele, or might even
have remained overnight camping in the wilderness. Just because she had never
personally experienced such hardship, that didn't mean he hadn't.
"Let's go to bed," Vallen said abruptly, after jerking
his head up suddenly for the third time as he nodded off in spite of valiant
efforts to stay awake. "I can't keep my eyes open anymore."
"I'll clean up; I'm good for that," Elspeth volunteered,
and smiled at the look of surprise from Vallen. What, did he think she
considered herself above such chores? Or had he forgotten that at the last
several stops, she'd taken her turn at gathering fodder from the ruined barns,
putting together makeshift stalls for the horses and chirras, and gathering
clean snow for water? "I was a Herald-trainee once, or don't you recall?
I've scrubbed my share of pots in my time, and I think I can manage without
breaking anything."
Darkwind picked up empty bowls, knives, and spoons without comment
other than a wink. Sometimes they both forgot the way other people saw them.
She caught Vallen staring after Darkwind with an even greater look of surprise
than he'd shown when she volunteered to clean up.
Does he think Hawkbrothers magic their plates clean? Oh, well, he
probably does, and it doesn't occur to him that it would be harder work to
clean a pot by magic than to do it by hand.
She gathered up what Darkwind couldn't carry, and both of them
went into the kitchen.
This had been a particularly fine inn once, with a pump supplying
water to the kitchen; the cooking crew had left water heating on the hearth.
Both the regular Guards and Kerowyn's mercenaries were used to every aspect of
this kind of mission; when it came to cooking, they were nothing if not
efficient. It didn't take long to clean the bowls and cutlery and the two pots
they had used for heating the food.
"I keep having second thoughts about this trip," Elspeth
said quietly.
Darkwind nodded. "I can understand why you would feel that
way, but I believe we are doing one of many things that could be the right
path," he replied, carefully wiping out a pot and putting it away. It was
a typically Tayledras response. "We must remain in contact with Tremane;
that much I am certain of. How we do that—well, this is one way. There
would have been others, but this is the way we chose, and I do not think we
have chosen amiss."
"At least in this case, we'll have our own eyes and ears in
Shonar, she sighed.
He smiled. "And tongues as well! We can also advise, if
Tremane chooses to listen to us."
The pots, bowls, and utensils had all come with them, and she
repacked them in the bags with the supplies. "Given the way things have
been going so far," she observed, "it's only too likely, I suppose,
for something entirely unexpected to happen out here. And in that case, the
Alliance had better have people in place to observe and reassure..."
Darkwind slipped his arm around her shoulders, turning his hug
into a way to turn her toward the door to the common room. "And to fix,
transform, leverage, and otherwise turn things for the better. Tremane,
according to Kerowyn, comes from a culture in which treachery is a
commonplace," he reminded her. "If anything unexpected were to
occur, that would be the first explanation that would come to him."
She shook her head, and let him draw her toward the door. If she
hadn't been too tired to think properly, she might have been able to make some
kind of rational discussion out of this. As it was—
"You know, I almost feel sorry for Tremane," she
admitted reluctantly as they mounted the stairs to their room. Rank did have
privileges, and she had laid claim to one of the rooms with a real bed and a
fireplace; it had probably been one of the expensive chambers when this had
still been an inn. She was looking forward to sleeping in a bed, warmed by a
hot brick at its foot.
Well, maybe not sleeping, at least not for a little while. I do
have Darkwind here...
"I do feel sorry for him," Darkwind said unexpectedly,
"And I believe I know why young Karal forgave him. just because he has
been forced to deal with daily treachery does not make him a treacherous
individual. We do not know what he is really like, except that we may guess
somewhat through his actions."
This speech had taken them up the stairs and to the space just
outside the door to their room. Elspeth opened the door, drew him inside, and
stopped the rest of the speech with her lips on his.
"I have had quite enough of Tremane to last me until
morning," she said firmly, as he responded as she had hoped he would, by
pulling her closer and simultaneously closing the door to their room. "I
think we can afford not to think of him, for a little while, at least."
"Oh, at least," he agreed, and then said nothing more
with words for quite some time.
Hob was as good as his word. From that time on, they began to see
and interact with the people of Hardorn—those that remained, at least—and were
given the limited hospitality that this sad land could afford. Elspeth
continued to be surprised at the suspicion with which the Valdemarans were met.
It didn't make any sense to her that the natives should persist in considering
them the harbingers of another invasion. If they had been a real invading
force, they would have had a small army at least. If they had been the advance
scouts of an invasion, they wouldn't have come so openly.
She gradually decided that the reason had nothing to do with
logic. Ancar had already poisoned his people's minds about the Valdemarans, and
some of that poison still lingered. At the very beginning of his war with
Valdemar, when his people had not yet been aware of the kind of man he really
was, he had told them that his war was justified, that the Valdemarans were
responsible for the murder of his father and most of the High Council, and that
the Queen of Valdemar intended to annex Hardorn as a subject state of her own
land. Later, of course, Ancar proved even to the most naive of his countrymen
that he was never to be trusted, but some of his lies still remained in the
back of peoples' memories. Perhaps they no longer even recalled it was Ancar
who had spread those lies in the first place.
And to folk who themselves were never warlike to begin with, and
who were now suffering privations worse in their way than even their life under
Ancar, an armed force like hers—obviously well-trained, well-fed, well-armed,
and in top condition—must look very much like an army. These folks hadn't yet
seen the Imperial Army; they'd only heard rumors of it, how large it was, how
incredibly professional. Away from the conflicts at the border, they had
never seen anything larger than the garrisons Ancar bivouacked in their
villages to insure their cooperation and to collect taxes. Perhaps their
imaginations couldn't encompass the idea of an army, how large one had to be.
Yet here was her force, quite large enough to take over every town in its path,
and they didn't have to imagine what it was like, for it was real, and
right in front of them.
The natives usually came around after a short meeting, such as she
and her troop had had with Hob. At that point, the Valdemarans were treated
like travelers instead of conquerors. Villagers would recall the old,
hospitable customs, and would usually open the inn, the temple, or a Guildhall
to them. Then there were warm beds, warm rooms, and once in a while, a bit of
fresh meat to add to their own rations. There was no trouble with finding
firewood this winter—not with half (or more) of the buildings in any given
community standing empty, and falling down. Sensibly, the survivors had moved
into the best homes and kept them in repair, and were using the rest for
materials and firewood. They might be on short rations, but they were going to
spend the rest of the winter in warmth.
And that, Elspeth realized, (as she and her party continued to
brave the cold that penetrated even the warmest of clothing and left them
aching by day's end), was what would save these villagers. They could get by on
less food, as long as they were warm enough. They might emerge when the snows
melted as gaunt as spring bears, but they would be alive, for the cold would
kill more quickly than short rations.
But the nearer they got to Shonar, the more people seemed
cautiously impressed with Tremane, or at least with the stories they were
hearing about him. Once the terrible, killing blizzards caused by the passing
waves of mage-storms had subsided into more "normal" winter weather,
he had begun making tentative overtures toward those who lived out past the
area he had secured for himself and his army. He had sent his men out to clear
the roads and keep them clear; he had encouraged such small trade as there
might be in the dead of winter. If the rumors were true, he had also sent his
men ranging in a limited fashion on monster-killing expeditions.
Supposedly, anyone within a three-day range of Shonar could come
and request his help with killing a monster, provided that they knew either
where it denned or what its range was. The Grand Duke evidently had no
intention of sending parties of his soldiers off to wander about in the snow,
trying to find a monster, and possibly making targets of themselves. Tremane
would send out a team of twenty of his trained soldiers, all armed to the teeth
and experienced in fighting mage-born aberrations, and all the natives had to
do was lead them to the monster or to where it might be trapped or cornered.
The soldiers did the rest; the natives got the privilege of deciding what
happened to the carcass. Often, if it looked remotely edible, they would ask
the Healer who traveled with the group to determine if it was safe to eat, and
the Healer invariably obliged.
In addition, once the monster or monsters were disposed of, the
group would remain long enough to conduct a hunt of feral stock, which was
generally not all that difficult to find. Half of what they killed they took
back to Shonar; the remaining half they left to feed the natives. Since this
was always more than the locals had before the hunt began, no one protested
when Tremane's men claimed the "Imperial share." And in addition,
while the hunts for monsters or feral cattle were going on, the Healer who
always accompanied the expedition would tend to any illness or injuries among
the natives.
In short, when the Imperial group returned to Shonar, they left
behind a stockpile of much-needed meat, people who had received medical
attention the like of which they had not seen since Ancar took the throne, and
land that was now safer, if not as pastoral and tranquil as in generations
before. If any new monsters appeared, the natives had only to request help
again, and the entire scenario would be repeated.
Tremane would not give aid against wolves, bears, or
bandits; the first two, it was said, he had decreed were perfectly well within
the means of the natives to deal with. And as for the third—he claimed that he
could not tell the difference between bandits and "patriots," and he
was not going to try. This was a bit hard on the Hardornens who were suffering
from the depredations of fellow humans, but perhaps it gave them incentive to
track down those who had once been their neighbors and reintroduce them to a law
that had been long absent from Hardorn.
All of this was very impressive in tale and rumor—more impressive
in that the stories were remarkably consistent—but Elspeth waited to see what
was being said nearer to Shonar.
Finally, they came within that three-day sphere of Tremane's
influence, and they saw for themselves that the stories of Tremane's
"philanthropy" were true.
Unexpectedly, they had stepped from a road cleared just enough to
let a single cart pass, to one which had been completely shoveled free of snow
right down to the earth or gravel of the roadbed—and one which obviously was
kept free of snow. They saw for themselves the trophy heads (or other parts)
from the monsters that Tremane's men had tracked down and killed. And they
heard from the natives who had been fed and Healed out of Tremane's bounty just
what a good and just leader he was.
No one was mentioning the word "King" yet, but Elspeth
sensed that it was not far from anyone's thoughts. How could it be, when in the
face of the worst times that Hardorn had ever experienced, this man was slowly
imposing order and sanity on the face of the land? And it wasn't the arbitrary
selfish order of a tyrant, either; they'd seen enough of that under Ancar to
recognize it if they saw it. This was law and order that they could live with
and be at peace with.
Elspeth couldn't help but contrast their lot with that of their
fellow countrymen who did not have the advantage of living within three days of
Shonar. Reluctantly she had to admit that if she were in their boots, she'd
have felt the same way.
More than that, she found herself agreeing with most of what he'd
done and ordered here. A few things represented laws or customs from the Empire
that she wouldn't have imposed, but the rest—it was just the hand and the mind
of someone who was concerned about the welfare of the people and knew how to
derive the greatest good from a limited amount of resources.
The day before they were to meet with Duke Tremane himself,
Elspeth and Darkwind were approached by a solemn group of Hardornens as they
ate their evening meal. This time the innkeeper still tenanted his inn, but it
had been a long time since he had actually served guests. He had offered a
chance for Elspeth and Darkwind to have a quiet dinner together, without the company
of their escort, and the prospect was too enticing to turn down.
He put them in a small, private dining room, with the troop seated
in the larger room outside. Elspeth had not realized how much she had missed
being able to talk to him without worrying about the ears of others. There were
things she had wanted to discuss that needed to wait until they were alone in
their room—if they were alone, since they often shared their sleeping
quarters with the others.
They lingered over their last drink, making the most of this
private time—and that was when the innkeeper interrupted them.
"Town Council would like to talk, sir, lady," he said
diffidently, poking his head into the room. "Alone here, if you
please?"
Elspeth sighed. She did not please, but there was no point
in saying so. "If they must," she replied, allowing some, but not
all, of her annoyance to show.
The innkeeper vanished, and the delegation must have been waiting
right outside, for they trooped through the door immediately.
"We won't take up much of your time, Envoy," said the
best-dressed of the lot, a fellow who still boasted the velvets and furs of
earlier prosperity. "It's just something we'd like you to—to say for us,
to Duke Tremane."
"Not a complaint!" added a second, only slightly less elegant
than his fellow. "No, not a complaint! Something he might want to hear,
maybe—"
"There's been talk," the first interrupted, with a glare
at the second. "We've heard the talk. Oh, I was Guildmaster for the Wool
and Weavers Guild for this whole region—"
Which explains the finery, Elspeth thought.
"—and Keplan here was Master for the Leather and Furrier's
Guild. So, as I say, there's been talk, and people have come to us with it.
Duke Tremane's proven good for us, and there are some that want to make him our
leader." The Guildmaster waved his hands expansively. "Some who are
even saying—King."
The second interrupted his fellow Guildmaster. "Now, we've
sent out word, looking for some of the old royal blood of Hardorn. We've
got ways of sending word out farther and faster than you'd believe. And there's
no one, not one person of the old Royal Family left alive."
"I can't say that amazes me," Elspeth told them dryly.
"Ancar wasn't one to tolerate rivals. And he wouldn't let a little thing
like the age or sex of a possible pretender stop him from removing someone he
wanted out of the way."
The Woolmaster coughed. "Ah. Aye. And woe betide anyone that
got in the way back then." He looked up hopefully to see if Elspeth agreed
with this attempt to exonerate himself for not attempting to interfere. By
that, she inferred that at least one opportunity had occurred, and he hadn't
even tried.
But who am I to judge? I wasn't there, I don't know what happened.
If he took the coward's path, his own guilty conscience may be punishing him
enough by now.
"You were saying that there isn't anyone of the old royal
blood left," she prompted. "So?"
"So—well—there's some consensus that we might offer Duke
Tremane the Crown. With conditions." He held his breath and waited for her
reaction.
"An interesting proposal," Darkwind said quietly.
"I presume that the conditions would be unusual, since you mention them at
all."
The Woolmaster switched his attention from Elspeth to Darkwind.
"They could be," he said. "it's—well, it's something our old
Kings hadn't done for generations. It's—"
"He'd have to take earth-binding," the furrier burst
out. "We've got a priest of the old beliefs, one that knows the ceremony
and can make it stick. He'd have to bind himself to the earth, to Hardorn, so that
anything that hurt the land would hurt him!"
The Woolmaster stared at his fellow, appalled, but Elspeth only
shrugged. "It sounds like a sensible precaution on your part," she
told them. "And if the opportunity presents itself, we will convey your
message to the Grand Duke. But we can't promise anything, and we certainly
can't promise that he'll agree to any such thing."
"That's all we ask, Envoy!" the Woolmaster said, waving
at his little group and backing up himself, with a great deal of haste.
"That's all! Our thanks!"
As he spoke, he herded the others out in front of him, and with
the last word, he shut the door to the dining room behind him.
Darkwind looked at Elspeth, and she grimaced. "Well,"
she said, into the heavy silence. "That was certainly interesting."
"And it leaves the question begging," he replied, with a
rueful smile. "Just how would one present such a proposition to
Tremane?"
"I think that we can wait until we ride into Shonar itself,
and we get a chance to see what the Empire represents—as molded by the hand of
Grand Duke Tremane," she replied. "That in itself will tell us
whether or not there's any point."
Despite the icy wind cutting through her coat, Elspeth sat back in
her saddle and stared until her eyes hurt from snow glare. "I can't
believe they raised all this in a single season," she muttered.
:And without magic,: Gwena reminded her, shifting her weight in tiny increments to
keep muscles warm. :Granted, they did have a great deal of incentive—the
possibility of hostile Hardornen troops attacking, and the certainty of
monsters—what did that fine young man call them?:
"Boggles," Elspeth replied absently, taking in the
reality of a two-story-tall wall, and not a wooden palisade, mind, but a brick
wall. This edifice circled not only the entire city of Shonar but the much
larger camp and garrison of the Imperials, and an open sward that had
once been the town's grazing commons as well. A monumental task? Without a
doubt.
Then add to that the equally monumental task of constructing barracks
buildings for the Imperial forces before the snow fell, and it became a job to
stun the mind in its scope. How had he gotten all that built? Where had he
found all the laborers?
"We're very proud of our work, Siara," said the
"fine young man" in Imperial uniform who had met them half a day out
of Shonar and escorted them in. Siara was evidently the generic title of
respect applicable to either sex that the Imperial military used when the
person doing the addressing did not know the true rank of the one being
addressed. It was probably the equivalent to "sir;" mercenaries
generally addressed their officers as "sir" regardless of gender, a
perfectly sensible approach of which Elspeth approved.
"We all worked on the walls and the barracks, every man of us,"
the young soldier continued, his cheeks flushed in the cold. "Except when
some of us went to work on the harvest, and then we traded work with townsfolk.
However many it took to make up the work that one of us could do, that's what
Duke Tremane traded, so the walls and the barracks could keep going up."
:Sensible. Did you notice? The boy says that Tremane
"traded" work for work, not that he conscripted workers.: Gwena's head was up as she made her own
survey of the walls. :Granted, it wouldn't have been very smart to conscript
workers for a wall you're building for your own protection, but that hasn't
stopped rulers in the past from doing things equally stupid.:
Elspeth nodded; no point in confusing the poor fellow by answering
someone he couldn't hear. The Imperials were already confused enough by her
insistence on special treatment and housing for Gwena and the dyheli Brytha, although they had agreed
to such a condition before a single Valdemaran set foot on the road to Shonar.
Darkwind cleared his throat gently. "As impressive as these
walls are, I suspect our fellow travelers are as cold as I am, and we are not
growing any warmer for standing here."
The young soldier snapped to immediate attention and stammered an
apology. "Of course, Siara, forgive me! We'll be on our way at
once!"
He nudged his own horse awkwardly with his heels, sending it
ambling toward the gate ahead of them. He obviously (at least to Elspeth's
eyes) was not used to riding, and the horse was certainly not a cavalry mount;
thick-legged, jugheaded, and shaggy, it probably belonged to a farmer who
didn't have any need for it in this season. He was probably grateful he hadn't
had to ride out too great a distance to meet them; he handled the reins as if
afraid the steady old gelding was going to rear and bolt at any second. The
horse had no intention of doing so, he was just perfectly happy to be heading
back to the city, a warm stall, and a good feed. She wouldn't hurt the poor
boy's feelings by laughing at him, but she was very glad for the scarf wrapped
around her face, concealing her mouth.
The guards patrolling the top of the wall looked down at them with
interest as they approached, though with no sign of alarm. There was some
nudging and pointing when those nearest caught sight of Darkwind's dyheli, but that was to be expected.
For her part, Elspeth saw absolutely nothing to make her instincts
issue an alarm. Except for the uniforms, these men could have been any force in
any of the Alliance nations watching the envoy of one of the other Allies ride
in. There was no show of hostility from them, and no sense of entrapment on her
part. They went through the gate without a challenge, and followed their guide
through the main street of the city. It was strange, after all these weeks of not
hearing their mounts' hooves do more than thud dully on the creaking snow, to
ride once again to the peculiar music that Gwena's silver hooves made as they
chimed against the cobblestones once they passed the wall, punctuated by the
staccato clicking of Brytha's cloven toes. Townsfolk, evidently warned of their
coming, gathered along the side of the street to cheer and wave welcomes and
stare at Darkwind. She was reminded of the way they had last entered towns in
Hardorn, as part of a traveling Faire. They hadn't stood out then in the midst
of so much outlandish, gaudy, somewhat tarnished finery; probably onlookers had
assumed that the dyheli had been an
ordinary horse or pony in disguise. Now Darkwind had everyone's undivided
attention, and to his credit, he seemed just as nonchalant as if there was no
one gaping at all.
They passed several good-sized inns, and several more buildings
that might have quartered them, and came out on the other side of the town.
They were heading in the direction, not of the moundlike barracks buildings,
but of a stone edifice rising at least four stories in height in the main, with
towers of five or six stories above that. It seemed they were to be quartered
in this fortified manor Tremane had appropriated as his headquarters; Elspeth
wondered how many clerks, officers, and other underlings had to be reshuffled
to make room for them. She was not going to be parted from her escort, and she
doubted that Tremane was going to be foolish or naive enough to expect anything
different, and that would mean displacing a fair number of people.
"The previous owner had a very small stable actually inside
the manor," the young soldier said, as they approached a second set of
walls about the manor. "The entrance is on the courtyard, and it is situated
beside the kitchen. The Duke's Horsemaster said he thinks it was for very
valuable mares in foal. There are four loose-boxes, and it's warm enough for
people to sleep in at need. Will that do for your—ah—mounts?"
He looked questioningly at Brytha and Gwena, as if he still didn't
understand what all the fuss was about.
For her part, Elspeth was just grateful that they'd not only found
a decent place for the nonhuman members of the delegation, but that it was gong
to be within the same building complex. "That should be perfect." Now
it was her turn to hesitate. "We're going to want to see to them before we
are taken to our own quarters, or even meet with Grand Duke Tremane for the
first time. I hope he will understand."
The soldier's nod made it clear that he didn't think
Tremane would understand, but that he was prepared to put up with the
peculiarities of the Valdemarans.
Gwena chuckled in Elspeth's mind. :Never mind, dear. The only
person we have to persuade of my intellect is Tremane, and that won't take
long. And it can wait until tomorrow, he's going to have enough shocks today as
it is. Frankly, I'm more interested in a nice warm mash and a rest in a warm
place than in meeting Tremane anyway.:
Gwena surely was easier to
live with these days. Or maybe I've finally grown up! Elspeth chuckled
to herself, allowing herself to relax the tiniest amount. If there had been
anything untoward, Gwena would probably have sensed it.
The walls about the manor were much, much darker than the walls
around the city. These had been made of cut stone, like the manor itself, a
dark gray that somehow stopped just short of being depressing. There were more
guards on the top of these walls as well, but again, their manner was casual.
While these men were professional, and ready to act on a moment's notice, their
manner led Elspeth to think they did not consider themselves to be under any
particular threat.
They entered a gate with an iron portcullis, but instead of
passing under the walls into the yard between the walls and the manor, they
went into an arched tunnel which actually passed under the walls of the manor.
Torches dispelled part of the gloom, but not all of it. Elspeth did not miss
noting the murder-holes in the ceiling above them, nor did anyone else in their
party. The holes were spaced so closely that if the gates on either end of the
tunnel were dropped, there would be no escaping boiling oil or other
unpleasantness coming out of those apertures. This would have made her a great
deal more nervous had the manor not predated Tremane's arrival.
Not that he wouldn't use them, he just had not put them
there in the first place. The nasty mind that came up with them was a native
Hardornen.
Possibly one of Ancar's ancestors...
The delegation split exactly in half once they were in the
courtyard. Half of Vallen's troop took the luggage to what was going to become
their ambassadorial quarters, and the other half remained with Darkwind and
Elspeth while they saw to the comfort of their mounts. Elspeth was just a
little irritated at the too-obvious guardians, but she was experienced enough
to realize they were a necessity. Until they really knew the situation here, it
was better to be too cautious and formal, and reinforce the Imperials'
perceptions of herself and Darkwind as people of diplomatic importance—which,
of course, they were.
Her irritation was short-lived, for Vallen and his people made
themselves useful instead of decorative, and things were soon settled in the
stables to the comfort and satisfaction of everyone. One of the Imperials had
remained to take them to their quarters, and with their own guards trailing
behind, she and Darkwind followed him across the cobblestoned courtyard to one
of the many entrances opening onto it.
"We've given you this tower," he said diffidently as he
led them to a staircase, his Hardornen stilted, and painfully correct.
"Duke Tremane hopes it will suffice your needs."
"I believe it ought to," she replied, as they climbed to
the first residential floor. The half of their guards that had gone on ahead
were already making themselves at home. This was quite a spacious room,
furnished with beds and chests and not all that dissimilar from barracks in
Valdemar. The second floor was identical to the first, but untenanted at the
moment.
They continued to climb the staircase which wound around the
outside wall. "These will be your quarters, sir and lady." said their
escort, as they reached the third level.
They were standing in a public reception room set up on the third
floor, with a table and chairs suitable for conferences, with writing tables
and an arrangement of three comfortable chairs beside the fireplace.
"Your bedrooms and a study are on the fourth floor, and there
is a storage room on the fifth," their escort said. "I am one of Duke
Tremane's aides, and I will be at your disposal."
As Elspeth and Darkwind explored their personal quarters, he
explained very seriously that they did not really want to use that top floor
for anything except storage; it had no fireplace and was exposed to the winds
in every direction. After poking her nose up there and seeing a thin layer of
frost on the stones, Elspeth agreed.
Tremane gave them a decent period of time in which to get settled
and into presentable clothing. Elspeth very much missed the comforts of the
Palace at Haven; a hot bath here meant heating water over the fire in kettles,
and pouring it into a tub the servants brought into the bedroom. The rest was
just as primitive, and she wrinkled her nose at the sight of the chamber pot.
But the alternative could be worse... and it wouldn't be the first time she and
Darkwind had made do.
Finally, when they were presentable, Tremane sent another of his
aides to invite them to dinner with him.
As good a time and place to open relations with him as any. When Darkwind gave her a little nod, she
accepted for both of them, and they followed the young man down the stair and
into the main body of the manor. They traveled down a dark and faintly chilled
hallway for some time, with their only light coming from lanterns mounted in
brackets at intervals along the wall. Finally they reached another stair, and
the aide led them up into what was clearly another tower. In fact, if this
tower held Tremane's quarters and was laid out in a similar manner to theirs,
they could probably look right into his bedroom from their own.
An interesting thought, and one which showed a measure of trust
from Tremane. If one could look, one could also shoot...
They discovered, as the aide ushered them into a room that
corresponded to their own reception room, that this was to be an informal
meeting. The table was set only for three, with a single aide standing by a
sideboard full of covered dishes. Tremane was already waiting for them, and
Elspeth scrutinized him carefully, even as he was looking both of them over
with the same care.
She would not have taken him for the brilliant military leader he
was supposed to be. He didn't look anything like a professional soldier—but
then, neither did half of Kerowyn's best fighters. He was losing his
mouse-brown hair, and what remained was going gray. His intelligent face showed
signs of age and strain both.
Tremane embodied contradiction. His shoulders were firmer and
broader than any clerk's, but there were inkstains on his right hand. He wore a
sword as one for whom it was a standard piece of attire, but there were lines
at the corners of his gray-brown eyes that people got when they habitually
squinted, trying to read in dim light. On the one hand—scholar. On the
other—fighter.
He stood up after a moment, as if they had surprised him by
arriving sooner than he had expected, and extended his hand. Elspeth found his
expression impossible to read; closed, but somehow not secretive. A gambler's
face, perhaps, the face of a man unwilling to give anything away.
But what his face might not reveal, other signs might. His
clothing was a variation on the Imperial uniform, but with none of the fancy
decorations she normally associated with someone of high rank. There was just a
badge with a coronet and another with what might be his own device. Nowhere was
there evidence of the imperial Seal or Badge, although the badge of a crossed
pen and sword looked as if it had been sewn in place of a larger badge.
Come to think of it, no one I've seen wears the Imperial Badge. That, more than anything else, told her
he really had given over his allegiance to the Empire. Soldiers set a
great deal of store by what device they fought under; if the Imperial Seal was
gone, so was their loyalty to what it represented.
The lack of decoration, though—military men took pomp and
decoration for granted. What did that lack of decoration say about Tremane?
That he was modest? Or that he wanted to appear modest?
Tremane extended his hand to her, and she clasped it, returning
his clasp strength for strength. He didn't test her, but his clasp was firm and
so was hers. "I am pleased to meet you at last, Princess," he began.
She shook her head, and he stopped in mid-sentence, tilting his head a little
to the side in what was probably a habitual gesture of inquiry.
"Not Princess, if you please," she corrected.
"I renounced that title some time ago in favor of other responsibilities.
'Envoy' will do, or 'Ambassador,' or even 'My Lady,' although I do still
hold lands and title that are the equivalent to yours, Grand Duke. No one in
Valdemar even considers me as being in line for the throne anymore."
Must not let him think he's being slighted by having someone sent
to him who is of lesser rank.
"My partner and spouse, Darkwind k'Sheyna, is an Adept; his
people do not have any equivalent titles specifying nobility," she
continued, "But we judged his status as a mage to be significant in place
of a title."
Tremane nodded, released her hand, and took Darkwind's. The two
men gazed measuringly into one another's eyes before releasing their grips.
"I am very pleased to meet you both at last, and I would deem
it an honor if you would dispense with titles and simply refer to me as
'Tremane,' as my people in my home lands did," the Grand Duke replied,
softening his formal manner with a slight smile. "Would you take a seat? I
fear you will find my fare somewhat plain, but these are not the times for
overindulging."
It was Darkwind who replied, as he held out a chair for Elspeth.
"I could not agree more, Tremane," he said. "But it does appear
that the folk under your command are prospering better than most in
Hardorn."
Tremane waited until both of them were seated before he took his
own chair. "That is as much a matter of luck as anything else," he
replied. "Luck, in that we have one resource that Hardorn lacks—manpower.
There is enough to be scavenged if you have enough able-bodied men."
Tremane's aide offered Elspeth a simple dish of vegetables baked
with cheese, and she nodded in acceptance. As he finished spooning a portion
onto her plate and turned to Darkwind, she took up the conversation.
"Nevertheless, you have impressed those natives here who live within your
sphere of influence."
Tremane took a sip of his wine. "One of the virtues of the
Empire is that its leaders are well-trained," he said, after a moment.
"Its vices are many, but it is well-governed. At the best of times, its
citizens had little to complain of."
"And at the worst?" Darkwind asked bluntly.
Tremane bowed his head for a moment. "So much power is easily
abused," he said finally, and applied himself to his food, ending the
conversation for the moment.
When it resumed, they spoke of inconsequential things. Tremane was
a decent conversationalist, though not a brilliant one. He was not a
courtier, or at least, not someone who devoted most of his time to such
pursuits. But he was also too careful to be blunt, too practiced to say
anything that might cause him or his people damage. He was a survivor of a very
dangerous Court, and he had learned his lessons in that Court well.
When they bid their host a cordial, if guarded, good night,
Elspeth knew only one thing for certain.
Grand Duke Tremane was a man who kept his own council, and it
would be difficult to penetrate the walls he had built about himself. He would
clearly protect his honor by maintaining silence at judicious times, and
practicing deflection when possible. Anyone who attempted to divine this
complex man's deeper motives would find themselves with a nearly impossible
task, yet that was precisely the task Elspeth and Darkwind faced.
Three
Emperor Charliss sat enrobed in his heavy velvets of State, amid
the grim splendor of the panoply surrounding his Iron Throne. He endured the
burden of the Wolf Crown pressing down upon his brow, ignored the content of
the peoples' chatter, and watched his courtiers vainly attempt to conceal their
jittery nerves.
Outwardly, this Court was like any other, except in degree.
Gossip, flirtations, negotiations, assignations, betrayals, confidences—the highborn,
ranked and wealthy, all danced their dances just as they had for years, as
their fathers' had, and as their grandfathers had. Over the years their forms
of jockeying and presentation had gone from custom to manners to mannerism,
tempered by fashion and fear. Today, each attempted to hold their clothing and
their overly expensive accessories in their practiced ways, but their true
state showed in their stilted movements, the nervous glances toward his dais,
and in the faintly hysterical edge to their voices as they murmured to one
another. His Court had always been noted for flamboyance of dress, but fewer
and fewer of his courtiers were taking the time and care needed for truly
opulent displays, which showed more clearly than any other outward signs that
their minds and energies were directed elsewhere. They were afraid, and people
who were afraid did not concern themselves with inventing a new fashion or
impressing an enemy with their wealth.
Below the dais, people milled in the patterns dictated by rank and
custom, but he was acutely aware of the holes in the patterns. The Court itself
held little more than half the usual number of attendees. How could it be
otherwise? Those who could leave for their estates already had, despite the
fact that the Season was well underway.
This was wildly contrary to custom; no one who pretended to power
or importance left the Court in winter. Summer was the time when the highborn
of the Empire retired to their estates, not winter. Winter, that time of the
year when snow and ice barricaded the isolated estates, one from the other, was
the time to take one's place at Court and engage in revelry and endless
intrigue, while one's underlings dealt with the tedium of estate caretaking,
and become immersed in the round of social intercourse known as the Season.
Those with youngsters to marry off brought them here to display them to the
parents of other youngsters or potential older spouses. Those who wanted power
jockeyed for position; those who had it campaigned to keep it. Those who
pursued pleasure came here to pursue it. Only the impossibly dull, preoccupied,
or solitary remained in their homes during the Season.
But not this winter.
When the first of the mage-storms had come sweeping out of nowhere
across the Empire, disrupting or destroying all the magic in its path except
that which was heavily shielded, the Emperor had been angry, but not seriously
alarmed. Such a powerful work of magic could not have been easy to create, and
he had not expected that the senders would be able to repeat it at any time
soon. Granted, it had taken down every one of the Portals that were the
fundamental means of long-range transportation across the Empire, but it had
been possible to set them back up again in a relatively short period of time.
The Storm had caused inconvenience, but no more. He had never had any doubt
that the mages of the Empire would restore conditions to normal, and then he
would deliver a punishment to the fools who sent such a thing. This punishment
would send terror not only through their ranks, but into the hearts of anyone
else even peripherally involved.
But then, without any warning, the second Storm had passed
over the face of the Empire. That had been impossible, by the rules of all
magic as he knew it. And then came a third. And after that Storm had passed,
still more, and the intervals between them kept decreasing, even as the
magnitude of the damage that each wrought increased.
The courtiers might not have been aware of the damage that was
being done in the Empire as a whole, but they were certainly aware of the
impact on their own lives. Mage-fires heating their rooms and baths no longer
functioned. Mage-lights vanished, and had to be replaced by inferior candles
and lanterns, normally only used by laborers to light their hovels. Meals, even
in Crag Castle were often late, and frequently cold. One could no longer
commandeer a Portal to bring something from one's home Estate. There were
servants enough that discomforts were rectified to a certain extent—but not entirely.
Those in the Court that had no truly pressing need to be here, and who
had the intelligence to see what might happen if conditions continued to
deteriorate, found reasons and the means to get home.
By now it was next to impossible to maintain anything of a magical
nature without exhaustive work on shields, and every time another Storm-wave
passed, those shields were so eroded that they required intensive repair.
Transportation within the Empire was at a standstill, and communication
sporadic at best. Physical constructions such as buildings and bridges that had
incorporated static magics into their construction had crumbled. Every
structural disaster created more disruption and fear, and sometimes involved
great loss of life. Nor was that the only physical effect of the Storm-waves;
great pieces of land had been changed out of all recognition, and bizarre
monsters were appearing as if conjured out of the air itself. Migrating birds
had altered their patterns, or flew entirely lost. Wide-leafed plants as tall
as men, stinging to the touch, grew inexplicably from stonework and soil alike,
and all over the capital and nearby provinces, vines strangled horses in the
night. Carcasses of creatures that looked like nothing of this world were
brought in as proof that these Storms were only making their world stranger and
more horrifying with each passing day.
By this time anyone who stood the slightest chance of reaching his
or her Estate by purely physical means had left the Court. At home, a courtier
would at least have reasonable foodstocks at hand, and many had Estates that
relied on old fashioned, nonmagical, purely physical sources of heat, light,
and sanitation. One irony was that the poorer and less pretentious of the
courtiers, who had not had the spare means to spend on magical amenities in
their estates, were now the least uncomfortable of their peers. As perilous as
life on the Estates could become now, with monstrous creatures attacking
without warning or provocation, the wise and forethinking knew it was not only
possible, but probable, that life in the capital would become far more
dangerous. How long before food riots set the disaffected against the wealthy?
Charliss gazed upon his courtiers through narrowed eyes, and his
normally inscrutable face betrayed some of his annoyance. He wondered if these
who were left realized just how perilous life here could become. There were a
remarkable number of very foolish people here now; people he had heard saying
some amazingly silly things. "I come here to the Season at Court to forget
the world outside these walls," one woman had said testily in his hearing.
"I don't care to hear anything about it while the Season is on; I have
more important things to think about—I have balls to attend and five marriageable
daughters to dispose of!"
But the world outside the walls of Crag Castle was vanishing, even
as that woman danced and displayed her offspring, and no amount of willful
ignorance was going to change that. Already those outlying provinces of the
Empire that had but lately come under the rule of the Iron Throne had revolted,
regaining their independence. Charliss did not know, in most cases, what had
become of the imperial forces that had been stationed there. Some few had made
their way back to lands that were still within Imperial sway, but others had
vanished into the silence. Perhaps they had revolted along with those they were
supposed to rule; but more likely they had been slaughtered, or had merely
surrendered and were now prisoners. He did not know, nor did anyone
else. Reluctantly, he was forced to admit to himself in recent days that his
Empire, powerful and vast, had one particular fatal flaw. It was entirely
optimized toward controlling any and all threats from inside itself—from riots
to political intrigue—to civil war—but was pathetically unprepared for outside
disrupting influences such as these Storms.
Within the Empire itself, with transportation reduced to the
primitive level of horse and cart, matters were degenerating much faster than
he could prop them up. Food was the most critical item, usually imported into
the cities all winter long from the Estates that supplied it, foodstuffs were
running short as even Imperial storehouses were emptied. Food was getting into
the cities, brought by individual farmers or carters a sledgeload at a time,
but there were not only distances to consider, but the dreadful winter storms
as well. Prices for perishable items were trebling weekly, with the cost of
staples following suit, though more slowly since he had ordered Imperial
stockpiles to be put on the market to stabilize prices. In some cities food
riots had already broken out, and he had ordered the Imperial troops to move in
to quell the unrest by whatever means necessary.
At least on the Estates, which were used to supporting themselves.
there was plenty of food in storage, and most nobles had their own personal
forces to maintain order. There would be more cooperation than competition
among their dependents and underlings, if a lord or lady was a wise governor of
his or her property. If not, well, they would get what was coming to them.
There had already been extensive rioting in those cities where
major public aqueducts, maintained by magic, had collapsed, leaving the entire
city with no source of fresh water. He had been able to repress news of those
riots, but he was not certain just how long he would be able to repress news of
food riots if they became widespread. Somehow, when news was bad, it always
managed to spread no matter how difficult the circumstances.
It was not the weight of the Wolf Crown pressing down on his brow
that made his head ache, it was the weight of the misfortune.
Why am I the Emperor upon whom all this is visited? Why could it
not have waited for my successor?
One bizarre effect of these disasters on the citizens of the
Empire—as if there were not enough bizarre effects already—was that strange
religious cults were springing up all over what was left of the Empire. It
seemed as if every city had its own pet prophet, most of them predicting the
end of the world—or at least of the world as the citizens of the Empire had
known it. Every cult had its own peculiar rites and proposed every possible
variation on human behavior as the "only" means of salvation. Some
preached complete asceticism, some complete license. Some advocated a single
deity, some attributed spirits to every object and natural phenomena, living or
not.
Some sent the most devoted out to sacrifice themselves to
marauding monsters in the hopes of appeasing whatever had sent those
monsters—but of course nothing was ever appeased but the appetite of the
particular monster, and that was only a temporary condition. Needless to say,
those cults did not long survive, for either their followers grew quickly
disillusioned and abandoned their leaders, or they grew quickly angry and fed
their leaders to those same monsters.
The cults neither worried nor really concerned Charliss, even
though many of them had recruited untaught or illtaught mages, and were raising
impressive, though shortlived, power. He left it to his own corps of mages to
deal with that power or drain it. He left the day-to-day emergencies in the
hands of his underlings, mostly from the military. He had more personal
concerns; most of his attention these days was taken up with his own
well-being, even his own survival, both of which were in great jeopardy. He had
depended on reliable and consistent magic to maintain those spells keeping him
alive and healthy after two centuries of life, and magic was neither reliable nor
consistent anymore.
He could die before he was ready, and he had come
chillingly close to it more than once. That, above all, was something he wanted
no one to learn.
Many of his courtiers were mages, and he wondered how tempting it
would be for one of them to take advantage of his precarious situation. He was
under no illusions about the ultimate loyalty of his courtiers; he had once
been one of them, and like them, his ultimate loyalty had been only to himself.
There were two sorts of folk out there in the Great Hall now; those who were
still here because they were fools, and those who were still here because they
saw opportunities. The latter were drastically more dangerous than the former,
and he never forgot that.
He had been able to keep his own existence from being eroded by
keeping the heaviest of shields upon himself, but he required an increasing
number of lesser mages to do that, and he lost more ground every time another
wave of Storms passed. Not even his corps of mages knew just how delicately his
life was hanging in the balance.
At the moment, he had managed to keep the fact that there was even
the slightest thing wrong with him a secret. His courtiers did not seem to
notice any difference in his appearance, but it was only a matter of time before
some sharp-eyed individual—or one with a good network of informants—learned
that all was not well with the Emperor by assembling all of the small hints
into one concise answer. The moment that happened, the panic in the cities
would be replicated in miniature in the Court, unless Charliss could quickly
exert total control over every courtier here. How could he do that, when every
spare iota of time and energy was spent bolstering his failing reserves? He
felt events slipping like sand between his fingers, and his very helplessness
raised a rage in him that was as powerful as it was futile.
My Empire is disintegrating beneath me. Soon I may not have an
Empire; I may consider myself fortunate to still retain a Kingdom—or a city—or
my life.
But he did not despair. Despair was an emotion for weaklings and
failures, with no place in the heart of the one who wore the Wolf Crown. Anger,
a cold fire in his belly, rose in him until he felt he had to find a direction
for it or burn away.
The realization of how his anger should be channeled rolled in and
struck like a thunderbolt in his mind. He knew precisely where to place the
blame for this situation, and his anger pointed like a poisoned arrow into the
West and the home of his enemy.
Valdemar.
There could be only one source for his troubles, for the
mage-storms and all they had wrought. Nothing like this had ever happened
before he sent Tremane to finish taking Hardorn and consider taking the Kingdom
of Valdemar which lay beyond Hardorn. Valdemar did not have magic as the
Empire knew it, and yet they had defended themselves successfully against all
of Ancar's magical attacks. The rulers of Valdemar had prevented his own agents
from penetrating its borders for decades with great success; only a handful had
obtained any intelligence, only three informants had ever gotten into the Court
itself. Two of the three had not been mages, which had seriously hampered their
effectiveness, and the third had been forced to forgo magic while she remained
within the borders, which had the same effect. Valdemar had allied itself with
foreigners as weird as any of the monsters currently springing up
everywhere—with the grim Shin'a'in and the alien Hawkbrothers, with the
monotheistic fanatics of Karse. Valdemar would be the only power to have come
up with so completely unpredictable a weapon. The fact that—at least at last
report—Valdemar and her Allies were not suffering the effects of the Storms
only confirmed his "revelation." Surely only the people who had sent
out such an encompassing weapon would know how to defend against it affecting
them as well.
Besides, Valdemar had murdered his agents and envoys. That, he had
personal proof of, for they had fallen through the Portal from Hardorn with
daggers bearing the Royal Seal on the pommel-nuts. His advisers differed in
their opinions on whether or not this had represented a deliberate provocation,
an act of war, or simply a challenge, but there was no difference of opinion on
whose hand had done the deed. It had to be someone actually in the Royal
Household, either the Heir or the personal agent of the Queen, not just any
provocateur or Herald.
Tremane, parked on the. very doorstep of Valdemar, had agreed with
that assessment, but the measures that he had taken to disrupt the Alliance had
gone seriously amiss.
Or had they?
It could be that he had never taken those measures at all, that he
had concocted the story of his tame assassin out of whole cloth. Had he been
planning to defect to the Valdemaran Alliance all along, in the hope that they
would give him a Kingdom, when he saw that he could not win the war with the
Hardornen rebels?
That would make very good sense, considering that Charliss had
made the promise of the position of Imperial Heir contingent on whether or not
Tremane won Hardorn—the whole of Hardorn—for the Empire.
Given the choice between coming home in disgrace—barely retaining
his own Duchy—and winning himself a Kingdom, it could have been an easy
decision.
All this was speculation, of course, but Charliss did have certain
facts to guide him. Without question, Tremane had revolted, looting an Imperial
supply depot, declaring to his men that the Empire had deserted them, and
making common cause with the Hardornens he had been sent to subdue. Chances
were that the Valdemarans had persuaded him, perhaps had even given him the
idea to revolt in the first place. Tremane had been the best choice Charliss
had from among those to whom he had offered the opportunity to earn the Heir's
Coronet. Tremane was no fool, but nothing in his makeup had given Charliss the
impression that he could be induced to revolt. He was intelligent, but not
particularly imaginative. Yet one agent who had made his way across country
against impossible odds had painted a very clear picture of Grand Duke Tremane's
traitorous words and deeds.
That betrayal was as bitter as any experience in Charliss' long
life and reign, and it would not go unpunished. It was a pity that Tremane had
left no potential hostage in the form of a wife or child at Court, and that his
Estate was so far away on the borders of the Empire that reaching it to despoil
it was about as practical as going after Tremane himself. Of course, Charliss
could and would assign it to someone else, but that was an empty gesture, and
both he and the recipient would be well aware of that. No one would be able to
get there until late spring at best, and if the Empire continued to fall apart,
they might as well not try.
Still, a gesture would have to be made, hollow or not. These
people below him, fools though they were, would have to be shown once again
that he was the Emperor, and he was not to be trifled with.
He signaled to his majordomo, who rapped his staff three times on
the marble of the floor to gain the Court's attention. Nothing disturbed the
icy tranquillity of the majordomo's demeanor; men had been cut down by the
imperial Guards at his very feet and he had not turned a hair. Arrayed in a
splendor of purple velvet and gold bullion embroidery, and bearing the
wolf-headed Imperial Staff which stood taller than he was, no mage-made
homunculus or clockwork manikin could have been more controlled than he.
So completely did his office subsume him that Charliss did not
even know his name.
Silence fell immediately with the first rap, so that the next two echoed
down the hall with the impact of Death himself rapping on a door. All eyes
turned at once to the Iron Throne, and Charliss stood up to face them all, his
heavy robes dragging at his shoulders. He braced his calves against the Throne,
grateful for the invisible support.
He could have had the majordomo make the announcements, but that
would lessen the impact, and it might give the impression that he was no longer
vigorous. He could not have that, especially not now. He must appear to be as
powerful now as the day he took the Throne.
His voice echoed portentously out over the crowd of courtiers,
amplified and rendered more imposing by clever acoustical design around the
dais. "Intelligence has reached Our ears that gravely grieves and angers
Us," he said sternly into the silence. "We have received news from an
unimpeachable source that Tremane, Grand Duke of Lynnai, has turned traitor to
the Empire, to his vows, and to Us."
The gasps of surprise that rippled through the Court were not
feigned, and only confirmed Charliss' impression that those courtiers still
remaining were for the most part not among his brightest and best. He scanned
for a few particular faces, men and a few women who were numbered among his
advisers—and there was no surprise or shock registering there.
Good. It's agreeable to know that I haven't chosen any complete
idiots.
"There can be no doubt of his intent or his thoughts,"
Charliss continued, as the gasps and murmurs died down again. "He has
orchestrated the looting of an Imperial storage depot for his own profit,
including the contents of the exchequer there, monies intended to pay the
faithful soldiers of the Empire their just and well-earned stipends."
He cast a glance at the stiff figures lining the walls. Ah, my
own guards are looking black at that one. Good. Word will spread through the
rest of the Army, and may the Hundred Little Gods help him if he shows his face
where a single Imperial soldier can find him. Of all the truths in the
Empire guaranteed to preserve life, limb, and prosperity, this was the truest: Pay
the Army, pay it well, and pay it on time.
Charliss permitted a touch of his anger to show on his face and in
his voice. "He has declared his allegiance to the Empire at an end, and
has subverted his troops, entrusted to him, to renounce their oaths as well. He
has broken off hostilities with the rebels of Hardorn, has entered into
unlawful and traitorous alliance with them, and is acting in all ways to have
set himself up as King of that benighted land."
Shaking heads and avid looks told him that every one of the power
seekers still gathered here was hoping for profit from Tremane's downfall.
Well, in the void left when a great tree fell, little trees could climb to
reach the sun. Even in these strange days, that might still come to pass.
Now, however, was the time to alert these idiots to their danger.
"Worst of all, he has entered into alliance with the vile and duplicitous
monarch of Valdemar, which nation has sent unprovoked assaults by magic lately
against this, our peaceful Empire." He paused for a breath, steadying
himself against the Throne under cover of his robes. That last was only
supposition, but even those with intelligence networks the near-equal of his
could not be certain of that, and really, would not care. Tremane had no
friends here; those who had been nominally his allies would be scrambling for
new men to attach themselves and their fortunes to. And proving that the
current misfortunes had a recognizable origin might consolidate some of these
idiots into a cohesive whole. There was nothing quite like a common enemy to
make a force out of disparate and bickering parties.
Now to show them that the old lion had teeth. He put on his most
dreadful look, the one that left even hardened guards with trembling hands and
quaking knees, and made his next words thunder out like the pronouncement of
some barbarian god. "We therefore declare Tremane of Lynnai a traitor, his
title and lands forfeit, and his name anathema! We pronounce upon him the
sentence of death, to be executed by any that have the means and opportunity!
Let no loyal citizen of the Empire aid him, on pain of that same sentence; let
his name be stricken from the rolls of his family, and let the House of Lynnai
die with his father! Let his name be chiseled from monuments of battle, be
erased from the records of the Empire, and let it be as if he never was
born!"
That was the harshest sentence possible to pronounce within the
Empire, and no few faces below him turned pale. For most of these people, this
erasure was worse than a sentence of execution, for it extended Tremane's
punishment into the Hereafter. If and when Tremane did die, he would
have no immortality, for without some record on earth of who and what he had
been, his soul would vanish at the moment of his death, or would wander
aimlessly in the cheerless, empty limbo between earth and the afterlife,
without any knowledge of who it had once been...
Or so it was believed. When a citizen of the Empire believed
anything. he believed in the immortality of records; when he worshiped
anything, he always included his ancestors. To remove someone from his rightful
place among his ancestors was to remove a piece of the very cosmos.
Charliss smiled grimly. Now they know I haven't gone soft, just
because I was prepared to name a possible Heir.
He allowed his expression to soften. "We know that this has
come as a great shock to all Our loyal subjects, the more especially as the
Nameless One had been put forth as the potential Heir to the Imperial Crown.
Such a betrayal harms you as well as Us, by threatening the security of the
Empire. We would not see Our children distressed by the taint of betrayal
mingled with uncertainty. Therefore, We now do name Our successor, and bestow
on him all those lands, goods, and titles that were once the property of the
Nameless One."
The looks of greed and avidity were back—though only briefly, and
quickly controlled. At this moment, no one knew who Charliss was going to name,
least of all the recipient. Once Tremane had been designated, Charliss had
taken pains to show no partiality to anyone else; he had wanted to give Tremane
as fair a playing field as possible in a Court as filled with intrigue as this
one. And besides, by not showing favor to any one person. he had virtually
opened up the field—if Tremane failed to conquer Hardorn—to anyone. The
scrambling and jockeying had been most amusing when he'd had the leisure to
take note of it. Every one of his advisers had the potential to be named Heir
as far as anyone knew, and several of his mages as well. Those who thought
themselves in the running were moving up through the crowd, almost without
realizing that they were doing so, attempting to place themselves nearer the
Throne, where he could see them better.
But his thoughts were wandering, the suspense was about to send
one or two out there into a fit of apoplexy.
He had to end the suspense, although there would be several who
were shocked or affronted at his choice. Nevertheless, Melles had been his
second choice before he sent Tremane off to conquer Hardorn, and Melles had
remained in that position all along. "We therefore do name as successor
and Heir, the most worthy and knowledgeable adviser and most loyal servant of
the Empire, Court Baron Melles."
He had just named Tremane's most fervent and implacable enemy. And
if anyone was going to put in the astounding effort it would take merely
to attempt to execute the Imperial death sentence on Tremane, it would be
Melles. There was real hatred between the two of them, a hatred more powerful
than Charliss had witnessed in a very long time. There was not much room for
hatred in the Imperial Court; it was better to keep emotions superficial, for
today's enemy might be tomorrow's ally.
Melles had been standing just to one side of the dais, visible,
but unobtrusive, as was his normal habit. He was a slightly better-looking
version of Tremane in some ways; thinner and not as muscular, with none of the
physical attributes of a fighter. He was not balding; his hair was darker, and
he was two or three years Tremane's junior. Otherwise, though, they could have
been cut from the same cloth and sewn by the same tailor. Both of them had
cultivated the art of being ignored and overlooked, though Charliss suspected
that their motives for this differed greatly. He knew what Melles'
motives were; now, in retrospect, he could guess at Tremane's.
Melles was not a hereditary noble like Tremane; he was a Court
Baron, a man with a title but no lands, as his father had been before him.
Melles' wealth came from trade, as did the wealth of most of the Court nobles,
although the commodity that Melles bought and sold was quite unlike that of his
livestock-brokering father. It was no secret that an ambitious tradesman with
enough ready cash could buy a Court title for himself, and with further
applications of his wealth could arrange for the title to be inherited by his
son. There was no shame in this—though many of the Court nobles were
extraordinarily touchy about their titles, and many of the landed gentry made
no secret of the fact that they considered the Court nobles to be purest
upstarts. There was some friction between the two factions, although it was
quite astonishing how quickly that friction vanished when a family with title
but no fortune was presented with the heir or heiress to a fortune with no
title as a matrimonial prospect.
Was that how the enmity had begun between Tremane and Melles? Had
Tremane, or Tremane's father, snubbed Melles or Melles' father? It seemed
unlikely that such hatred could spring from so trifling a cause. Oddly enough,
Charliss could not imagine Tremane being rude to anyone, not even to someone he
held in contempt. Tremane had always been too clever to make such enemies
casually.
Well, it didn't really matter now. whatever the cause, it served
the Emperor's ends.
Barron—now Grand Duke—Melles moved forward out of the knot of
courtiers at the very foot of the steps leading to the dais. He stood alone for
a moment, then walked with solemn deliberation up the three steps permitted to
one of his new title, bowing his head and going to his knee at the fourth.
Charliss motioned to the guard at his right to bring up the coronet of the Heir
from the niche at the side of the dais where it had resided since Charliss
himself had resigned it to put on the Wolf Crown.
Although the acts of this ceremony appeared spontaneous, it was
anything but. It was another dance, the steps dictated by the custom of ages
past, every move choreographed centuries ago. Only the participants in the
dance changed, never the steps themselves.
Even the guard who brought the coronet to Melles had rehearsed
just this action a thousand times, even though there was no telling which
guard would be directed to retrieve the circlet, nor who it would be given to.
It was simply a part of an Imperial Guard's duty, rehearsed along with every
other part.
The guard performed flawlessly, handing the circlet to Melles, who
in accordance with tradition, solemnly crowned himself, just as he would crown
himself with the Wolf Crown when Charliss died. Power and authority in the
Empire came from within the man, and were not bestowed by the hands of priests,
and in token of that, every Emperor and Heir bestowed the trappings of power
upon himself.
Once crowned—not that the coronet was all that imposing, just an
iron circlet in the shape of a sword, with a topaz matching those in the Wolf
Crown set as the pommel-nut—Melles stood up, and bowed to his Emperor. Charliss
surveyed him with satisfaction, thinking that he probably should have chosen
Melles in the first place. Unlike Tremane, Melles was a powerful Adept who
could, with a few decades of practice, be Charliss' equal in magic. Given that,
and despite current conditions, it was just barely possible that Melles would
contrive to bring back Tremane's head.
Charliss mentally resolved to resign on the spot if Melles managed
to pull that one off. Not that he considered it likely, but such
diligence would deserve a reward, and there wasn't much else Charliss would be
able to give him.
And if he can do that, he'll be strong enough to take the Wolf
Crown from me. It would be better to resign it with grace, and concentrate on
keeping myself alive.
No matter how powerfully his enemies among the courtiers would
gladly have plunged daggers into Melles' heart at that moment, not one of them
would betray himself. "Go and take your well-deserved congratulations from
Our Court," Charliss directed with cool approval. "We will discuss
your new duties and privileges later."
Melles bowed, and backed down the steps. There was no throne for
the Heir, nor any special place for him at Court ceremonies. Emperors of the
past had not deemed it necessary or advisable to give their Heirs too much
power or the appearance of it lest they acquire an addiction to it and crave
more. As Melles turned at the foot of the steps to face those thronging to
greet him, Charliss decided that the Emperors of the past had been very wise.
Melles could certainly be one of those who would crave more than his just due.
Charliss decided to keep him on a short leash, as he watched the
dance of power begin swirling about this new center.
One Tremane was enough, after all.
Melles had often thought, of late, that there had been so many
upheavals that there was nothing that could evoke the feeling of surprise in
him anymore. And although his intelligence network was extraordinary—in fact,
it had been one of his spies who had brought word of Tremane's defection back
to Crag Castle—he really had not expected to be named Charliss' Heir.
According to his own calculations, he wasn't the logical
candidate, even though there were personal considerations involved. Since the
onset of the mage-storms and the consequent disasters spread over the entire
Empire, it had seemed to him that the Emperor would have to name someone who
had absolutely no enemies at Court whatsoever. Whoever came after Charliss
would have to cope with a much-reduced Empire, revolt everywhere, a possibly
hostile Army; he would have to somehow convince the worst of enemies to act together
and forge alliances until the Empire was stable again. Melles had far too many
enemies who would rather die than work with him in any way; Tremane was not the
only one, nor was he even the most deadly. Melles was a man who made enemies
far more easily than allies. On the whole, he preferred enemies, for it was
much easier to manipulate them than allies, and there was never the risk of
disillusion when they realized they had been manipulated.
Friends were quite out of the question; a friend was a potential
hole in one's armor, and he had not permitted himself such a weakness since he
became a man. Then there was the matter of his position and duties under
Charliss, which did not endear him to anyone. He could not think of a single
person who liked him in the entire Court. Many feared him, some admired
him grudgingly, others tolerated him as a necessary evil, but no one liked
him.
But there they all were, flocking to fawn on him as if they
couldn't wait to become his best friend. Some of them, in fact, might very well
have plans in that direction, foolish as such plans might be. He was, after
all, surrounded by fools; they wouldn't be here now if they weren't.
He smiled and accepted their congratulations with an expression
that suggested that he would be eager to become their best friend. Why not?
Even fools had their uses, and just like the Emperor who had bestowed his new
title, he had never been the kind who threw away a potential tool.
The men thronged about him first, jostling one another in their
eagerness to say something that he might remember later, reminding him of past
favors they had done for him, offering favors for the future. It was quite
astonishing, the sort of things they considered to be "favors;" he
could not for a moment imagine why anyone could think that invitations
to incredibly boring social gatherings featuring meaningless entertainments
would ever be sought after.
And the women! They were worse than the men! If they were
unmarried, they were pressing about him with looks and poses that were just
short of open invitations to do as he pleased with them. If they were anything
other than blissfully, happily married (and there were damned few of those
at Court, especially now!) they were behaving the same. If they had daughters
of anything resembling marriageable age—and plenty of these women had very
liberal ideas about what constituted "marriageable age"—they were
alluding to their daughters' admiration of him, and dangling invitations on
their behalf.
As if any of them had the faintest notion who I am or what I look
like—
No, that was unfair, Not all of these people were here because
they were blind idiots who wouldn't have their Season spoiled by a few petty
disasters. Some were here because they couldn't get back to their Estates,
others because of their positions as Imperial Advisers, and some because they
had no Estates. There were young girls—and not so young girls—who knew very
well who he was and what he looked like, as they knew the identities,
properties, and titles of every unwedded man expected to be at Court this
Season. That was part of their duty, as they and their parents went
about the serious business of husband hunting. He might not have been very high
on their list of desirable matches until now, but they knew who he was.
And if he made an appearance at a private party, a musical
evening, or other entertainment, each of them would proceed with grim
determination to try to convince him that nothing would make him happier than
to take her as his lawfully wedded soon-to-be-Empress.
That no less than an hour ago most if not all of these maidens
would have cheerfully confessed that the idea of wedding him made them ill was
of no consequence now.
Look how these same women throw themselves at Charliss the old
mummy! It isn't his handsome face that makes them act like shameless cows in
season around him.
Furthermore, Melles was well aware that if he had evidenced any preference for
young men he would still be under siege from these women and their
parents. After all, he would still be expected to try to produce an Heir
of his body. The fact that only about half of the Emperors of the past had been
the physical offspring of their predecessor didn't matter, he would still be
expected to try.
And if some of what I've read in the private Archives is true,
some of them went to some fascinating extremes in trying...
Well, that didn't matter either. He wasn't a lover of men or boys,
and not of little girls either. But he would wait until he wore the Iron Crown
himself before he took a wife, and when he did, his first choice would be an
orphan with no living family left whatsoever, just for spite!
"Yes, of course," he murmured to one of the women—after
being certain that he was not agreeing to anything of importance. It would be a
grand joke on all of them if he selected his bride from among the common
citizens. It would certainly be easy to find an attractive orphan there!
He whispered an aside to one of the other advisers, a man who had
been a disinterested ally in the past. This is all going to my head. There
will be time to think about women later, now is the time to concentrate on
consolidating my base of power, and determining what can best be done to get
the Empire through this crisis.
Pleasures of all sorts would have to wait until the Empire was
stable. Perhaps sometime in the future there might even be an opportunity to
execute the Emperor's sentence of death on Tremane. But that time was not now,
and he would wait for it to come to him. Hatred was an emotion that brought him
a great deal of energy and entertainment, and he enjoyed it.
It was not for nothing that his enemies often compared him to a
spider sitting in the middle of a web. If there was one virtue he possessed, it
was patience, for patience was the only virtue that eventually brought rewards.
Now that the dance of courtiers and Court was over and the
business of the Empire had been disposed of in Council, Melles got his private
audience with the Emperor. Private? Well, not precisely; the Emperor was never
alone. But no one of any pretense to wealth or rank in the Empire ever really
noticed servants or bodyguards—
Unless, of course, that person was Melles, or someone like him. To
the Emperor, without a doubt, they were invisible. To Melles they were possible
spies.
The subject of conversation, as befitting the position and duties
of the new Heir, was the state of the Empire. Melles was not particularly
surprised to discover that Charliss had less information on this subject than
he did. The Emperor had not been concerned with the day-to-day workings of his
Empire for decades; he had been able to leave that to his underlings.
In Melles' opinion, he no longer had that luxury. "My Lord
Emperor," Melles said patiently. "It seems to me that you have been
insufficiently acquainted with the desires and needs of the common man."
They compare me to a spider in its web, Melles thought dispassionately, as he
watched the old man glare at him over the expanse of a highly-polished black
marble table. They should see him when he is not playing his role. He looks
like an ancient turtle deciding whether or not to stick his nose a fraction
more outside his shell.
Inside the sheltering back and arms of the Emperor's thronelike
chair, that was precisely what Charliss resembled. And, like the turtle, Melles
suspected that the Emperor really did want to pull himself back into his
shell entirely.
He did not seem disposed to learn, or deal with, the basic changes
in the Empire, and that fit with Melles' plans. So what I need to do is to
persuade him that not only is that a good idea for him, but also that he can
trust power in my hands. Melles already had a great deal of power; he had
been in charge of dealing out whatever punishments the Emperor deemed necessary
for many years now. Not quite an Executioner, and considerably higher in status
than a mere lawkeeper, when something unfortunate occurred to a member of the
Court and the Emperor took special notice of it, everyone knew whose hand had
been behind seeming accidents or twists of fate. Melles' value to the Emperor
lay in making certain that it was impossible to prove anything when such
accidents occurred.
The "accidents" weren't always supposed to be fatal, or
at least not fatal to the physical body. Sometimes ruin suited the Emperor
better than death, whether it be the ruin of a reputation or of a fortune. A
ploy that Melles particularly favored was to contrive romantic liaisons that
were entirely disastrous; it was amazing what people would do to prevent their
follies from becoming widely known when that folly involved sexual favors,
infatuation, or a combination of the two.
"Just what exactly do you mean by that?" the Emperor
asked querulously.
Melles spread his hands wide. "I mean, Lord Emperor, that the
common man is an extremely simple creature. You are thinking of him now in
terms of the mob, which is a being with many arms and legs and no head, and as
a consequence behaves in ways no rational man can predict. I am thinking
of him as he is before he devolves to that mindless, intractable state." He
tilted his head to one side; that had been a much longer speech than he usually
gave to the Emperor, and he had learned to make certain that the Emperor always
had openings in which to insert his own comments.
"So what is the so-called common man, when he isn't in a
mob?" the Emperor mocked.
Melles was not about to let his own mask of serenity slip. Such
mockery was as much a test as Tremane's assignment had been.
And I am not likely to be lulled by the illusion that I am the
Emperor's only executioner. If he perceives me as a failure, I will not live
long enough to rebel.
He inclined his head a little; not quite a bow, but enough to
acknowledge his subservience even as he "corrected" the Emperor's
ignorance. "As I said, Serenity, he is simple. What he needs—desires—those
things are just as simple. First of all, he wants the roof over his head to be
sound and the food on his plate to be abundant. He wants that food to arrive
every day. He wants to be left alone to pursue his work and the pleasures of
his bed, home, and table. If you give him these things, he is not inclined to
argue overmuch about the means required to deliver them. If he is deprived of
them, he is likely to welcome whatever measures are taken to restore
them." He raised a single finger to emphasize his next point. "Most,
if not all, of your common citizens have been so deprived, and see only a
steady decline in the quality of their lives, but if measures could be taken
that will restore many of their comforts, those things they consider so important
to their lives...."
"I see your point," the Emperor replied, with no more
mockery in his voice. He sat in silence, only the movement of his eyes
betraying his alertness. He could have been a grotesque statue, if not for
those glittering eyes. The Emperor did not fidget, did not visibly shift his
weight in his chair, or perform any of the other tiny, unconscious movements of
lesser beings. Partly it was a matter of training, for such utter stillness
enhanced his image of supernatural power; partly, or so Melles suspected, it
was simple good sense, to conserve his waning energy and resources.
Finally, the Emperor spoke, his voice low, deep, and grating.
"You want me to give you the authority to order whatsoever you think is
necessary to restore order at the level of the streets."
Melles nodded, very slowly, as those powerful eyes, blazing with
the deadly life of a finely-honed blade, pinned him to his seat. He could not,
dared not, return that glare. He was not here to challenge the Emperor, he was
here to get the old man to share out some of his power. But he also wouldn't
get anywhere if he didn't admit what he wanted. It was an interesting
observation by one of his tutors that there were only three classes of people
who could afford to speak the unvarnished truth—the very bottom, the very
topmost, and children. The lowest classes could afford it because they had
nothing to lose, the highest because there was no one who could call them to
account for it, and children because they held no power and hence were no
threat. Melles had never forgotten that observation, nor did he forget the
implications of it. The Emperor could speak pure truth; Melles could not. When
the Emperor asked a direct question, Melles had better be careful how much of
the truth he told.
But there was another factor here. At the best of times, when the
Emperor had been in his prime, he hadn't had time enough for everything. No
great ruler did; that was why they had underlings and delegated their authority
to those they thought could be trusted with it. Now, the Emperor was old, his
powers waning, and he had the very personal and pressing matter of preserving
what was left of his life to concentrate on.
The real question, the one Melles had no answer to as yet, was
just how close to the end the Emperor was. That would tell him how reluctant
Charliss would be to give up power to his Heir. Would he clutch his powers and
possessions to him, or release them to clutch at life itself?
Those sharp, chill eyes measured him, and missed nothing in the
process. "Very well." The voice was as cold as the eyes. "Have
the orders written, and I will sign and seal them, granting you authority over
city guards, militias, and authorizing you to make use of the Army in quelling
local disturbances. That will be enough to see if you have the insight into the
common man that you claim." A thin, humorless smile stretched the
Emperor's lips. "If you succeed, I shall consider granting you more."
He waved a hand at the Emperor, in mute disavowal of wanting any
other powers. "That will be sufficient, my Lord Emperor, I assure you. I
wish only to restore order; without order, these seeds of chaos will spread to
engulf us all."
Charliss only made a wheezing grunt full of cynical amusement.
"I doubt that you intend to limit your grasp. But this is all you will get
for the present. Go to the clerks and draw up the orders."
That was clear dismissal, and he took it as such. He stood, bowed
with careful exactitude, and walked backward until he reached the door. The
Emperor's eyes were on Melles every step of the way, and the slight smile on
the Emperor's lips would have chilled the blood of a lesser man.
He reached behind him and opened the door without looking at it,
backed through it, and closed it without taking his eyes off the Emperor. As
the door closed, the Imperial eyes were still fixed on him, still measuring,
still watching him for a hint of insubordination.
As the door shut with a decisive click, Melles let out his
breath, slowly. That went better than I had any reason to hope. He's still
sane; if he stays that way, I can handle him. He turned and stalked
silently down the cold gray marble hallway with its high ceilings and austere
decorations of captured weaponry from ages and wars long past. Like the room he
had just left, the hallway was chilly enough to make him wish he had worn
heavier clothing. Ostensibly, it was due to a failure in the enchantments of
heating, but in fact it was deliberate, to discourage loitering. The hallway
was meant to impress one who walked it with his own insignificance, and its
acoustics underscored the message well.
Here, so near to the highest seats of Imperial government, the
Audience Chamber, the Council Chamber, and the great Court Hall, one necessary
adjunct to so much power was a highly-trained cadre of Imperial clerks to make
decisions into orders. Nothing could function without written orders. Articles,
commands, and doctrine, no matter how seemingly small, had no official life
until they were quantified as documents. These pieces of paper were so vital to
the working of the Empire, they were like water, food, or air to a soldier, and
an official document would carry more power in its words than any courtier
posturing and spouting similar verbiage.
And of course, there was such a group of vital clerks, a small
army of them, ensconced in the one comfortable chamber on this floor, between
the Court Hall and the Council Chamber.
An efficient Empire was one dependent on (though not run by)
clerks, though they might not know it; their masters did, and always had, and
took care to ensure the comfort of these all-important workers in the hive of
Imperial rule. Large windows, screened against insects, let in cooling breezes
during the heat of summer. And although the heating-spells had failed elsewhere
in Crag Castle—legitimately—measures had always been in place in case of such a
failure in the Clerks' Chamber. There were three great fireplaces on the wall
shared with the Council Chamber, and two more on the one shared by the Court
Hall, all of them burning merrily. Charcoal footwarmers sat under desks, and
those all-important fingers kept warm and supple with metal handwarmers on each
desk. Each clerk had his own oil lamp to read and write by, and there were
pages assigned to this room only, to bring food and drink whenever called for.
Some—always among the "new" nobility who were not yet
acquainted with the way things worked—grumbled at this treatment of
"mere" clerks. What they were not aware of was that these clerks
weren't "mere" anything, and most of them were higher in rank than
the grumblers. Here the offspring of the noblest families in the Empire paid
their service, even those intended eventually for the Army. They were
accustomed to preferential and comfortable treatment, but that did not mean
they did not earn it by their labors. There was never an hour when there were
not at least six clerks on duty here, and there were twenty between dawn and
dusk. Only the most skilled and most discreet served here, and their ability to
remain closemouthed about what passed over their desks was legendary.
To open the heavily-guarded door and enter this haven of heat and
light was a decided relief; Melles felt tight muscles relaxing under the
influence of the gentle warmth. It was still early enough in the day that all
twenty clerks were in attendance; Melles scanned the rows of desks, and went
straight to the first unoccupied clerk he saw.
The young man he chose sat, like all the rest, at a large wooden
desk with everything he required arranged neatly on top of it. A stack of rough
draft paper, a smaller stack of Imperial Vellum, inkpots containing red and
black ink, blotting paper, blotting sand, glass pens, and his handwarmer were
all arranged in a pattern he found personally the most efficient. Off to one
side was the book he had been reading, which he had immediately laid aside when
Melles neared him. The only sign of individuality was a small egg-shaped
carving of white jade in a motif of entwining fish.
The clerk himself was nondescript, unmemorable, as all of them
were. They were taught how to be forgettable and self-effacing before they came
to this duty. Here, they were a pair of hands and a brain full of specific
skills, interchangeable with every other clerk in the room. Melles alone among his
acquaintances had never taken a turn in this room, but that was because he had
been serving Empire and Emperor by learning another set of skills entirely.
While the clerk made rapid notes, he dictated the orders; the
clerk first made a rough copy, checking it word for word with him, then from
the corrected rough, made a final copy on Imperial Vellum incorporating all the
changes. Melles was being very careful in how he phrased these orders, giving
himself precisely the amount of authority that the Emperor had specified and no
more. Three more clerks were summoned to make copies at this point, for a total
of five copies in all.
As yet, obviously, the orders were nothing more than paper. When
he had finished, the clerk summoned a page from the group waiting and
chattering on a bench beside the fire and sent him to the Emperor with the
finished documents. The page would not walk down the corridor that Melles had
just left; he would use a special passage between this room and the Emperor's
chambers reserved only for the pages, so that he could not be stopped and
questioned or detained.
Melles did not go with him; he was prohibited from doing so, nor
would the Emperor's guards permit him to approach with documents to be signed
in hand. This was to prevent him from somehow coercing the Emperor into signing
and sealing them, or being tricked into doing so before he had read them. All
these convoluted customs had their reasons.
At length, the page returned, and the glitter of the Imperial Seal
on the uppermost document told Melles that all had gone well; the orders were
approved with no changes. Had there been changes, the page would have returned
with one copy, not five, which would have had the Emperor's revisions written
on it. The rest, one of the Emperor's guards would have burned on the spot, so
that the Seal could not have been counterfeited on them.
Melles accepted his copies with a bow of thanks, and left the
room. The chill of the hallway struck him with a shock, despite being prepared
for it, but he didn't hesitate for even a moment. Now his first priority was to
get one copy of the orders into the hands of the Commander of the Imperial
Army. The cooperation of the Army was needed before he attempted any of his
ambitious plans.
He had been careful to phrase his orders in such a way that the
Commander's authority was not being subsumed by his own. The last thing he
wanted was to make an antagonist out of General Thayer. The General made a very
bad enemy, one who never forgot and never forgave. The orders as he had
dictated them gave him the authority to coopt regimental groups or smaller,
depending on need, but only if they were not currently deployed on some other
duty. If I can't quell a riot with less than a regiment, I won't quell it
with anything larger. That's not a threat to Thayer, and it means I won't be
countermanding any of his standing orders to the Army as a whole.
With luck, he wouldn't need to use Imperial soldiers very often,
but luck had not been with anyone of late. He already knew that he would have
to disperse at least one riot in each City by giving the soldiers orders to
kill. It would be the first time in centuries that Imperial soldiers had been
used against civilians, and it would come as a tremendous shock. He hoped that
the shock would be great enough that he would not need to repeat the lesson.
The loss of civilians meant loss of taxpaying workers, and at this point the
Empire could not afford to lose much in the way of taxes.
The Imperial Commander had quarters here in Crag Castle, as every
Emperor since the Third had preferred to have the Commander of his Armies where
he could keep a watchful eye on him. The Third Emperor had originally been the
Imperial Commander, and he had not approved of the Second Emperor's choice of
Heir. He had taken matters into his own hands the moment that the Second
Emperor was dead, and had decided not to give his own Imperial Commander the
kind of opportunity that he had taken advantage of. The rest had followed his
wise example.
As Melles moved down various corridors and staircases, he passed
through narrow zones of warm air alternating with much more extensive zones of
chill to positively frigid air. Since the denizens of Crag Castle were now
relying on fireplaces and other primitive providers of warmth, heating was
unreliable and often unpredictable. There would be illness in the Castle before
the year turned to spring; illnesses of the kind more often associated with
poorer folk.
The times are... interesting. And likely to become more so before
the end.
The corridors themselves never varied in decor, only in size and
height; they continued to be built of the same gray marble, and continued to
feature only captured weaponry as decoration. Once Melles left the area of the
Emperor's Quarters and the official chambers of government, the hallways he
traversed became much narrower, and the ceilings dropped to a normal level, but
that was the only way to tell that he was not within the quarters of the
Emperor himself.
The Imperial Commander was one of the highest-ranking officials in
the Council, so his chambers were correspondingly nearer to the Imperial
Chambers. Only those of the Heir—which Melles' servants were currently engaged
in arranging to suit him—were nearer. The Commander's personal bodyguards stood
at attention to either side of the door, showing that the, great man himself
was inside, as Melles had expected. Melles would shortly have a pair of those
guards outside of his own chambers, now that he was the designated Heir. They
were not just to protect the life of those they were assigned to, they were
meant as protection for the Emperor. The Imperial Guards were an elite group,
trained and spell-bound to the service of the Emperor. No force on earth could
turn them against Charliss, and if either the Heir or the Imperial Commander
proved troublesome, well... only the details of burial would prove troublesome
once their guards were finished with them. It was possible to break the spells
sealing them to the Emperor, and it was possible that the Storms themselves had
already done so. The only way to be sure would be to approach them on the
question of eliminating the Emperor, and if the spells were intact, that could
be a fatal mistake.
Tremane had managed to leave his pair of Imperial Guards behind
him when he went off to command the conquest of Hardorn, probably because the
Emperor had not expected trouble from him away from Crag Castle. Perhaps, if
Charliss had insisted that Tremane take along his watchdogs, things might have
turned out differently.
Or perhaps not, except that the Guards would have solved our
problem by dispatching Tremane for us, and I would still be Heir. There would still be mage-storms to
contend with, the Empire would still be falling to pieces, and all else would
be following much the same paths. The only change would be that they would have
one less danger to worry about—Melles knew, as no one else in the Court did,
that it was by no means certain that Tremane had allied himself with
Valdemar. In point of fact, he hoped fervently that this was not the case.
These mage-storms were bad enough, random and untargeted as they seemed to be;
if the mages of Valdemar had at their disposal an expert, one who knew
everything there was of any importance about the Empire, what would happen
then? What if the Storms could be targeted accurately, to cause the most
disruption and damage? If Tremane really were to ally himself with Valdemar,
that might be what they would have to deal with.
As for what such a revelation would do to the Emperor—
When he was fit and not beset by so many problems, he would simply
have been angry, gotten over it, and would dismiss his anger until someone
brought him Tremane's head. Now, I cannot be sure, because it is possible that
he, like the Empire, is disintegrating, and his sanity will crumble along with
his physical body.
He nodded to the two guards, who saluted and stepped aside for him
as he displayed the Imperial Seal on the documents he carried. He knocked once
on the door, then opened it and stepped inside.
He entered an anteroom, lushly carpeted, with battle-banners on
all of the walls, but holding only a monumental desk, three comfortable chairs,
and a single servant dressed in a compromise between military uniform and
private livery—who was obviously one of Thayer's secretaries.
"I have Imperial orders for the Commander," he told the
bland individual behind the desk. "And if the Commander has time for me, I
should like to discuss them with him."
Conciliate, be polite and humble. It costs nothing, and keeps the
peace.
The secretary immediately rose to his feet, and held out his hand
for the orders. "I will deliver the orders to him directly, High Lord
Heir," he said smoothly. "Please take a seat. I believe I can assure
you that the Commander will always have time to discuss matters of the Empire
with you, for he left standing orders with me to admit you to his presence
regardless of other circumstances."
As Melles suppressed his surprise, the secretary took the paper
from his hand and exited quickly through the doorway behind his desk. Melles
took a seat, examining the fingernails of his right hand minutely as a cover
for his thoughts. He had been aware since he became a member of the Council
that Thayer was an astute politician, but he had not known how astute. Most of the
other advisers were still scrambling to decide how to handle Melles now that he
was officially the Heir. That Thayer had left standing orders with his
underlings to admit Melles at any and all times was an interesting development,
and Melles wondered if it meant that the Commander was prepared to cooperate
with the new Heir on all levels. If so, that would make Melles' tasks
incalculably easier.
To have the Commander of the Imperial Army in my pocket... half
the power of the Empire will be divided between us. And the rest, well, that
can wait.
The secretary returned before Melles needed to find some other
object to examine. "Please follow me, Great Lord," the young man said
as he bowed deeply. "The Lord Commander is eager to speak with you without
delay."
Melles rose to his feet and followed the secretary into the next
room of the suite, this one very similar to the antechamber. The Commander had
excellent taste; he had carpeted over most of the floor with one of the rich,
plush rugs of the Biijal tribes of the Eastern Islands, some of the more
attractive captured battle-banners hung on the walls, and there was a good fire
going in the fireplace. Like the antechamber, this room held little in the way
of furniture, just another monumental desk, several comfortable chairs, and two
smaller tables. Oil lamps served for illumination in place of the mage-lights
that would ordinarily have been here; with darkness falling, these had been lit
and burned brightly.
General Thayer was waiting, the Imperial Orders in his hand,
standing beside his desk rather than sitting behind it. In the silent protocols
of the Empire, he was receiving Melles as an equal rather than Melles arriving
as a supplicant. This was another good sign; Thayer was not going to challenge
his authority at all.
The General could have taken his place in the ranks of his own
forces; though his hair was as gray as granite, his body was as hard and tough
as that stone. The very few fools who had challenged Thayer to single combat
over one pretext or another had not survived the experience. Enemies and
friends alike compared him to a wolf—enemies compared him to a ravening,
insatiable hunter, friends to the powerful pack leader. Gray as a wolf he was,
and his teeth and wits were just as keen.
That sharply chiseled face wore a friendly, welcoming expression
today, however, and although Melles knew the General to be an astute
politician, he also knew that Thayer was no good at all at hiding his feelings.
As surely as his mind was a great asset, his face was a great handicap in the
game of politics. To counter that handicap, Thayer made every attempt to play
the game in writing and appeared in person only when policy permitted truth.
The General extended his free hand toward Melles with a smile as
the secretary bowed himself out, and Melles took his hand with an answering
smile.
"By the Hundred Little Gods, I was hoping you'd come to me
first before any of the rest!" Thayer grated. A hilt-thrust to his throat
as a young man had left him with a permanently marred voice.
"Congratulations, Melles. The Emperor finally made a good choice. Tremane
was a little too popular with his own men to make me entirely easy in my
mind about him."
"Whereas I am so equally unpopular with everyone that you
find me more acceptable as Heir?" Melles raised one eyebrow delicately,
and Thayer barked a laugh.
"Let's just say that when the Commander discovers that one of
his generals is popular, it makes him wonder why that general is
cultivating popularity." Thayer bared his teeth in a smile as Melles
nodded his understanding. "Sometimes it happens that popularity is an
accident, but more often than not it's been deliberately sought. You,
however—"
"I, who am known as 'Charliss' Executioner' need not trouble
himself about such trifles as popularity." Melles softened the comment
with a wry smile. "I would rather have respect than popularity."
Thayer answered that sally with a lifted brow of his own. "In
that, as in other things, we are like-minded. The Emperor, may he reign long,
is not the only one who needs to worry about underlings with ambition, and I am
glad enough to see Tremane eliminated. So, about these orders—your idea?"
Melles nodded, carefully gauging Thayer's reactions before saying
anything. He need not have been concerned; it was clear that Thayer could not
have been more pleased had he dictated the orders himself.
"Damned good idea! Come sit down so we can talk about this in
detail." The General waved him to one of the chairs beside the fireplace,
and took another, tossing the orders onto the desktop but making no move to
place himself behind the desk. Melles took his seat, and the General moved his
own chair nearer to that of the Heir before sitting in it. "Damned good
idea!" he repeated. "Declare martial law, and you'll have the cits up
in arms and starting a revolt in the streets, but bring in the Army without
actually calling it martial law, and they'll fall in line without a
whimper if you can restore order." He coughed. "Give them back their
easy lives, and they'll call you a god and not care how you managed it."
"My idea is to use the smallest number of soldiers that I can
to crush disturbances absolutely," Melles said cautiously. "I don't
want people to begin muttering that we've called out the Army on them; I
believe that is one thing the citizens of the Empire won't tolerate. If you'll
look at those orders, you'll see I've been given direct command of city guards,
constables, and militia. The way I see it, if I use those forces in the front
ranks, and only use the Army regulars to back them up and add strength to their
line, I'll get the effect that I want without it looking as if the Army is
taking over."
"Good. Sound strategy," Thayer confirmed. "Out in
the provinces they expect the Army to put down trouble, but the cits think
they're above all that. Put down the first riots efficiently, kill a few of the
worst troublemakers, and I don't think you'll have any trouble reestablishing
order. I was hoping someone would figure out that we're in for a spot of
domestic trouble and would plan on dealing with it."
And of course he didn't dare suggest it himself. Charliss would
see that as a direct threat to his own authority, and I would have been asked
to find General Thayer a—retirement. Thayer knows it, too. He nodded, and leaned back in his chair,
feeling much more confident with Thayer as an open ally. "It's not common
knowledge, but there have already been small disturbances, and I expect larger
ones as food runs short and hardships build up," he said easily. "If
we're ready—and ruthless in suppressing the troubles to come—I think the
citizens will accept what we do as a necessary evil."
"Yes, as we've said, find a way to get them their meals and
peace and the cits will accept anything short of burning down the city,"
Thayer retorted with contempt. "Now, how exactly do you want me to help?
You want a special regiment detached to go wherever it's needed, or—"
Thayer paused, looking eager, but a bit reluctant to put forth his own ideas.
"Well, I'm a military man, I don't have any experience in riot control,
but—
"You have an idea of your own," Melles said, leaning
forward with interest. "Please. I'd like to hear it."
"We've still got limited communication mage-to-mage with all
the military bases, and you know there's at least one near every large
city," Thayer told him. "Now, if I were to move a certain
number of men, a company, say, into each city—if you were to get the militias
and city guards and so on organized in the way you want beforehand—well, as
soon as a riot started, your city militia would naturally go take care of it,
and just as naturally the captain of the company would offer his help. Your
militia captain would accept it, and why not, they're both in military
brotherhoods, as it were. With the backing of the Army, I don't see any reason
why we couldn't squash any riot. And technically, since I doubt every hothead
in every city would take it into his head to riot on the same day, you wouldn't
be exceeding the number of men you asked for." He grinned slyly. "You
see, they'd only be under your command for the duration of the riot;
after that, they'd come back under my authority."
Melles allowed himself a dry chuckle. General Thayer was obviously
a past master at the fine art of manipulating loopholes, and his strategy was
an application of the very orders that he had written that he himself had not
considered.
But then, I didn't have any reason to suspect that Thayer would
make quite such an eager ally.
"That, General, is a brilliant plan; quite perfect for all
our purposes," he replied, allowing approval to creep into his voice. The
General smiled, a smile with just as much steel in it as warmth.
"Good. We're agreed on it, then." Thayer nodded
decisively. "Now, in return, I'd appreciate it if you could do something
about some domestic orders for me—not exactly requisitions, more like
assignments. It all still comes under the heading of restoring domestic
order."
"I'll do what I can." Melles had expected this; trading
favor for favor was the accepted way of doing business in Imperial politics. He
wouldn't commit himself until he'd heard precisely what Thayer had in mind, but
Thayer knew that already.
"Put the Army in charge of all intercity transportation of
supplies." Thayer looked him straight in the eyes. "As it is, stuff's
being moved inefficiently, what gets moved is random, and carters are
getting fat no matter what. The Army's suffering, because we're having to pay
through the nose, just like the cits are. Conscript the carters, take over the
Cartage Guild, make 'em subject to Army discipline, and we'll cure what's
causing some of your riots in short order. Every dog in the Empire knows what's
going on, and they'll be happy to see the Cartage Guild get what's coming to
them. The cits are as tired of the profiteering as I am."
And you and your officers will get fat on the profits, instead of
the Cartage Guild.
Melles saw right through that one, but Thayer was right about several things.
Transportation was a hit-or-miss matter right now, and the profits that the
carters were making were obscene. Putting the Army in charge would reduce
profiteering to an acceptable level, and get transportation organized. And
there had been unrest over the profiteering; at least one of the riots had
destroyed a Cartage Guildhall and the buildings near it.
No, there will be no weeping if I conscript the carters, their
beasts, and their vehicles.
The question was, could he get away with that assignment, as an
interpretation of the orders that Charliss had just signed?
He unrolled one of his own copies and scanned it quickly, then
looked up into Thayer's flat brown eyes. "I think this particular set of
commands gives me that authority," he said, knowing that the Emperor
wouldn't care so long as he could keep anyone from lodging complaints against
it. And since Thayer was going to have pressing reasons to prevent
complaints.... "When I send out copies of the original orders, I'll see to
it that this particular amendment is added."
Thayer smiled with satisfaction. "I'll have my mages get to
work," he promised. "By tomorrow night, there'll be companies picked;
by the next day I'll have them moving into barracks in the cities. Don't worry;
I'll send orders to select steady men, veterans, men who won't panic, won't
shoot unless they're ordered, and won't exceed their orders. I'll send captains
who have every reason to keep peace, steady men, not sadists who enjoy breaking
heads."
Army efficiency, he thought enviously. It's a beautiful thing to see working.
"My orders will have to travel by signal and sometimes courier, but
they'll get to most of the Empire in a fortnight," he replied, and stood
up. "It will be a pleasure working with you, Lord Commander," he
finished, holding out his hand as the General stood up.
Thayer took it in another firm handclasp. "An equal pleasure
here," he said. "And a damned sight better than working with one of
the infernal groat-counters, let me tell you!" He followed at Melles'
elbow, quite pleased to accompany his visitor to the door.
Melles knew what he meant; several of the possible candidates for
Heir were men less of vision than of caution. Few of them would have the
imagination to foresee the riots he knew were bound to come, much less to plan
how to quell them. "Just remember—we want our actions to be as unobtrusive
as possible—so that the citizens welcome the sight of soldiers in the streets
rather than fearing it."
Thayer opened the door to the antechamber for him, nodding
vigorously. "Exactly. I'll draw up a set of riot orders for you; you look
them over and tell me what you want changed." He waved Melles through.
"Grevas, see the Lord Heir out, would you? Lord Melles, I can't thank you
enough for coming here yourself."
"Think nothing of it; I am glad that we could reach an
understanding so quickly." Melles passed into the antechamber where the
secretary received him with a deep bow of respect, then hurried to open the
door for him. He waved his thanks at the underling, and entered the cold
hallway feeling as if he had done a good day's work indeed.
Now, what else? Orders to requisition food if it's necessary, and
it will be. And orders to requisition extra beasts and vehicles from the
Estates, placing them in the hands of the Army. Have to specify rules about
requisitions; taking a farmer's only cart and horse is only going to be
counterproductive. Put one of my secretaries on it. Mertun—he was a farmer's
son. That would
be enough for now; too many orders all at once, and it would cause more unease
and unrest than already existed.
And I need to consolidate my personal position. That, fortunately, was mostly a matter of
reinforcing his own standing orders to his special operatives. Those operatives
would act as needed, and bring him the information he required. And insofar as
power in the Council of Advisers and the Court went—well, most mouths would
smile and utter compliments, and he would accept them. Action would speak the
real truths, and his operatives would ferret out what those same mouths said in
private.
There was a single exception to all of that. If the Army could manage
to keep their lines of communication open, it meant that they were able to get
some magics to work. Probably those of short duration; and that may be the
secret. That, and a great deal of power forcing the magics through. I have
power, and I have more than one mage in my own pay. I simply hadn't thought to
apply great power to small goals, but maybe those goals are not so small after
all, now.
He hurried down the corridor to his new quarters, only a short
distance from the General's, and found his own Imperial bodyguards waiting at
the door for him. They opened the door for him with great ceremony, and he was
greeted on the other side by his own servants, who surrounded him and began
fussing over him immediately with great ceremony and a little fear.
Impatiently, he waved most of them away. His new quarters were
fundamentally identical to his old, except that the rooms were a bit larger,
the furnishings (those that were not his personal gear) more luxurious, and the
suite itself was situated better with regard to conveniences. In the time he'd
spent conferring with the Emperor and General Thayer, his servants had removed
all signs of the former occupant, and had made it seem as if he had
always lived here. His own carpets were on the floor, his tapestries and maps
on the walls, his books in the cases and on the tables. He went straight to his
desk to draft the orders—or rather, elaborations—that were to be appended to
the Imperial Orders he had with him. When he had finished, he handed the rough
drafts to his own secretary—along with the four copies of the Imperial Orders
he still retained.
"Take care of these—and have Mertun specify under what
conditions a man's beast and vehicle are to be exempt from requisition,"
he ordered. His secretary bowed and took the papers out. Only then did he
permit himself to relax, putting himself into the care of his valet. His
secretary would see that three sets of the Orders got into the hands of the
Imperial Clerks for distribution and dissemination. One set would remain here,
for use as a reference.
He walked into his private chambers at the direction of his valet;
with his own furniture here, in the same positions as in his old rooms, he
could almost convince himself that nothing had changed.
Almost. It's begun. I have started the avalanche; there will be
no stopping it now. He allowed his valet to extract him from his stiff coat
of heavy, embroidered satin and help him into a much more comfortable robe.
Within a short period of time he was settled in a chair beside a fireplace,
with food and drink and a book on the table at his right hand.
He stared into the flames, amused and bemused by everything that
had happened today. It had certainly been an eventful day, and one he
would remember for a long time.
Nevertheless, his day was not yet over. He rang for his valet, and
when the man appeared, murmured a certain phrase that meant his operatives were
to be contacted and called in, one at a time. My agents will have to watch
for some new things now, as well as the old. My mages—well, if the Army can
accomplish communicative magics, perhaps there are a few things that we can
accomplish, too.
It occurred to him that although vengeance on his old enemy
Tremane was probably out of the question, at least he ought to be sure just exactly
what Tremane was up to. Scrying was another magic of limited scope and
duration, and it was just possible that enough could be learned by means of
scrying to warn him if Tremane was actually a danger to the Empire.
He settled back, sipped hot spiced wine thoughtfully, and waited
for the first of his spies to appear. No, much as he would like to, he could
not dispose of that annoying Tremane—but he could not ignore the man either.
And in the kind of war he waged, the best and most reliable
weapon was knowledge.
It was time to wield that particular weapon, and with more finesse
and care than he had ever exercised before.
Four
The cavernous interior of Urtho's Tower was remarkably quiet with
the gryphons gone. An'desha hadn't quite realized until now how much sound the
gryphons produced—like the constant click of talons on stone, the windlike
bellows—sound of their breathing and the rustle of feathers. He'd gotten used
to those whispers of sound, and without them, his own voice seemed unnaturally
loud despite the sussuration of other activity.
"Look here, it's really quite logical," An'desha said,
with one finger under the line of characters—the same words, written in three
different languages. Karal peered at them, his forehead creasing with
concentration. "This is the Hawkbrother, this is the Shin'a'in, and you
can see how similar—"
A muffled thud interrupted him, followed by the sound of
alarmed and complaining voices. Startled, he looked up, past Karal and into the
central room of the Tower.
He knew those voices, although he had not expected to hear them
today. He got up and moved to the doorway, just to see if he was somehow
mistaken.
He wasn't. The aged Imperial mage Sejanes, in his robes of oddly
military cut, was a strange contrast to Master Artificer Levy in his practical,
yet luxurious, black silk and leather. Both of them, however, looked pale and
ill and much the worse for their travel. Walking ahead of them was Altra.
"By the Hundred Little Gods!" said Sejanes, every hair
on his gray head standing straight out. "If I never have to travel
this way again, it will be too soon!"
Master Levy swallowed, looking to An'desha as if he were fighting
to keep his stomach from revolting. His face had a greenish tint, and the
knuckles of his clenched fists were white. "I... quite agree with you,
Sejanes," he said in a strangled voice. "I believe that, given the
option, I will walk home."
Altra looked at both of them with unconcealed contempt, stalking
off into Karal's side room to bonelessly flop down onto the foot of Karal's
pallet. An'desha followed him. An'desha didn't "hear" the Firecat say
anything, but Karal pulled his mostly-untouched bowl of stew over to the cat,
who gratefully inhaled it as if he hadn't eaten in weeks.
Meanwhile, Firesong, Lo'isha, Silverfox, and two of the Shin'a'in
hurried over to greet the aged mage and younger Master Artificer. There wasn't
much in the way of furniture here, but Silverfox brought both of them folding
stools to sit on, and they sagged down onto that support with evident
gratitude. An'desha didn't blame either of the newcomers for their reactions;
he knew from personal experience that they were not exaggerating their
exhaustion and illness.
An'desha had traveled once in the care of Altra the Firecat, in
the creature's bizarre distance-devouring method of transportation called
"Jumping," and he would not particularly care to experience it again.
The Firecats were somehow able to cross great distances in the blink of an eye,
and could take with them whatever or whoever was touching them. The experience
was a gut-wrenching one, similar to a Gate-crossing, but repeated over and over
with each Jump. The closer together the Jumps were, the worse the effect was.
The amount of cumulative effect varied with each person, but from the look of
these two, Altra hadn't paused much between Jumps and this latest journey had
been quite a rough ride for them.
An'desha watched for a moment, but Firesong, Silverfox, and the
rest seemed to have the situation well in hand. Sejanes clearly needed to go
lie down, and Master Levy to sit down and have something to settle his stomach.
After a brief rest, both of them were taken into the vacant side chamber that
had earlier served as the gryphons' nest. Karal, meanwhile, was fussing over
Altra, who, for the first time in An'desha's experience, was looking rather
shopworn. Evidently the trip hadn't been easy on him either.
He remembered what Altra had said about the fact that even Jumping
had become much more difficult. "Are you feeling all right?" he asked
the cat, as Karal hovered over him anxiously.
:I have felt better,: the Firecat replied dryly. :But I believe that with a short
rest and food, I shall be fine. The currents in the energy-fields are vicious.
It has become very dangerous to Jump even a tenth of my usual distances. I do
think that from here on in I, too, would prefer to walk where I need to go,
given the choice.:
The clacking of hooves on the floor signaled the arrival of the
Companion Florian. :Oh, don't be ridiculous, Altra,: the Companion said
mockingly. :Of course you won't have to walk. You'll convince one of us to
carry you.:
Altra ignored him, pretending to concentrate on the vital task of
licking the bowl clean. That didn't take too long, and as soon as the last hint
of gravy was gone, he curled up in such a way that he wouldn't be in the way of
Karal's feet if the young Karsite needed to rest. :I'm going to sleep now,:
the Firecat said with great dignity, and he closed his eyes firmly, still
ignoring Florian's jibe.
Florian made a whickering sound that was so like a chuckle that
there was no doubt in An'desha's mind what the Companion was thinking.
"Oh, leave him alone, Florian," he told the Companion. "At least
for now. You can't deny that he has done more than his share for some time to
come. If Gating is dangerous, how could Jumping be less than hazardous?"
:True enough,:
Florian replied equitably. :You are correct, An'desha, and I am at fault
here. Altra has served heroically, and I should not have teased him, especially
not when he is as exhausted as his passengers. I beg your pardon, cat.:
:And I grant it, horse,: came from the seemingly-sleeping Firecat.
Florian stepped over and touched his nose to the Firecat's fur in
a conciliatory gesture, then backed off to the chamber entrance. He stood with
one eye cast toward the main chamber, and the other watching over Altra and his
friends, before finally quietly clopping off.
"Well. We have everyone we need," An'desha said to
Karal, "Except perhaps that Kaled'a'in scholar we have been promised. We
can certainly resume investigating the other devices we found."
"I keep thinking that there are more rooms and chambers we
haven't found yet," Karal replied, lying back down on his pallet, taking
care to not to disturb Altra.
"There probably are," An'desha told him. "We've
found signs of at least four more places where there might be storage chambers
or even a passage to a lower level. The problem is that we haven't been able to
get them open. Perhaps Sejanes or Master Levy will be able to help there."
He smiled at his friend. "To tell you the truth, I suspect it will be
Master Levy; I have the feeling that the tricks to getting these hatches open
are purely mechanical."
Karal smiled back. "I think you may be right. That would fit
well enough with what Treyvan was able to tell me about the Mage of Silence. It
would be like him to put a mechanical catch in a place of magic, knowing that
anyone who came here intending mischief would probably be expecting magic and
not be prepared for mechanics."
An'desha chuckled. "And that would certainly put Firesong's
nose out of joint. Poor Firesong! At every turn, it seems as if his great
powers as an Adept are less and less important!"
Karal nodded and rubbed the back of his neck in thought. "It
must be awfully difficult for him to face each day. Just look at what has
happened. He went from being the brightest star in the skies to... finding his
powers unreliable and lessened, with new methods to do what he used to do
coming up every day. Some of them are even contradictory to what he has known
as fact all his life."
An'desha frowned and nodded. "Sometimes I feel like I cheated
him out of his glory by being who and what I am, but I know that none of us
dictated or could have predicted the way things would unfold. I owe him my
life, by the Star-Eyed's grace, and I am grateful to him, but I wish that he
could feel the happiness now that he used to enjoy in the Vales. And as for
things being contradictory—you've been experiencing much of that yourself,
spiritually. So have we all, I think." He paused, fingers tented as he
carefully considered his next words. "Still—Master Levy says that all
things in our world, no matter how illogical they may seem, are still
consistent under unseen laws. The spirits I have spoken with on the Moonpaths
have implied much the same—that magic in all its forms works under those laws
as surely as rain, wind, and beasts do. Perhaps Firesong, and all of us, are
learning new aspects of the laws we have been subject to all our lives."
"With Master Levy here to confound us all with his teachings
on universal laws, you'll need me for a secretary again," Karal said as he
smoothed down his warm robes, brightening considerably. "I'll be glad to
be useful again."
An'desha nodded with sympathy; he knew how idleness, even
enforced, had fretted his friend, and he would also be glad to see Karal
feeling as if he were contributing his share. Realistically, Karal was not able
to help at all with brute-force physical tasks, but the role of secretary was perfect
for him.
He would have said something, but he noticed that Karal seemed
very tired, and it occurred to him that the two of them had been working quite
steadily on comparing Shin'a'in, Tayledras, and Kaled'a'in writing ever since
breakfast. Mental work could be just as exhausting as physical labor, even for
those, like Karal, who had a knack for it.
"Why don't you look after Altra for a while," he said,
cleverly using the Firecat as an excuse to get Karal to rest. "I'll go see
if our hosts want to know anything about Sejanes and Master Levy."
Karal nodded, and caressed Altra with one hand while he closed his
eyes. An'desha collected the empty stew bowl and made a mental note to get
something more suited to Altra's tastes from the Shin'a'in.
He left Karal beginning to doze, Altra already asleep, and Florian
watching over them both, and went out into the main chamber in the center of
the Tower. Master Levy already recovered, was examining the floor of that
chamber on his hands and knees. He looked up as An'desha entered.
"Has anyone looked at the floor here?" he asked.
"We looked, but we didn't see anything," the Shin'a'in
replied." Why? Have you found something?"
"Perhaps." Master Levy got to his feet. "When I was
still studying, I used to earn spending money by designing and helping to build
hidden doors and chambers for wealthy or eccentric clients. I think there might
be something here."
"Huh." An'desha looked closely at the floor, and had to
shake his head. "I'll take your word for it. Do you think you can get it
open—if there is anything there?"
"Perhaps," Master Levy repeated. "I'll have to
examine it later, when I'm not exhausted. This is all sheer nervous energy, you
see, plus a rather stupid wish to seem in better physical shape than old
Sejanes, and it's all about to run out. I'm going to get a bowl of that stew I
smell, and then I am going to sleep for a day."
An'desha laughed, as Master Levy shrugged ruefully and with
self-deprecation. As the Master Artificer drifted in the direction of their little
charcoal stove and the bubbling stewpot atop it, he started back toward Karal.
But halfway there, he turned, a little surprised, as a soft voice hailed him.
It was one of the few black-clad Kal'enedral, and with him was another wearing dark blue. The one
in black he knew; Ter'hala, an old man whose blood-feud would technically never
be completed, because the one who murdered his oathbrother had been Mornelithe
Falconsbane. It was doubly ironic that An'desha and Ter'hala had become friends
over the past few days. Ter'hala knew who and what he had been, of course.
An'desha, understandably nervous, had asked him why he continued to wear black;
Ter'hala had laughed and said that he was used to the color and too old to
change.
"Ter'hala!" An'desha greeted him. "Who is your
friend?"
The Kal'enedral
sketched a salute of greeting. "This is Che'sera, young friend. He wished
to meet you."
An'desha bowed slightly. "I am always honored to meet one of
the servants of the Wise One," he said politely, though he could not for
the life of him imagine what had brought so many of the reclusive
"Scrollsworn"—as he called them, to distinguish them from the true
Swordsworn—out of Kata'shin'a'in and their stronghold there. "We are all
truly grateful for the hospitality and tolerance you have shown to us."
I wonder if the reason is that we've just added two more meddlers
to the group, and one of them is a mage from a completely unknown land, he thought, though he kept his thoughts to
himself. Not that I blame them. We're the interlopers here; the Star-Eyed
gave them the keeping of this Tower and its secrets, not us.
Che'sera returned his bow. "I am pleased to meet you,
An'desha," he replied, his voice so carefully neutral that An'desha could
not read any second meaning into the words. "It is not often that one of
the Plains who goes to become a mage ever returns again."
"It is not often that the shamans permit him to return,"
An'desha replied, as calmly and carefully as he could, although he could in no
way match the lack of inflection in Che'sera's voice. "Until only
recently, mages have been forbidden the Plains, even those of the People."
"Well, and you can certainly see why," Che'sera
countered immediately, gesturing at the Tower remains about them. "This
would all have been a great temptation. Can you say, had you become a mage of
the Tale'edras, that you would not have been tempted to try to use one of these
weapons against the one they called Falconsbane?"
An'desha shuddered. He still had far too many of Falconsbane's
memories of the life he had led using An'desha's body for comfort—and behind
those memories, marched others, a seemingly endless parade of atrocities
stretching back into a dim past as ancient as this Tower.
"I would," he admitted slowly. "I would have been
tempted by anything that might have brought the monster down. Anything that
would have saved others from the horror he wrought."
Che'sera shrugged. "And yet it took how many of you,
working together, to simply use the energy of one of these weapons rather than
the weapon itself?"
"And yet you permit us here now." An'desha allowed one
eyebrow to rise.
"We do, and that is in part why I wished to speak with
you," Che'sera told him. "May we speak privately, you and I, for a
little while, Shin'a'in to Shin'a'in?"
Now An'desha was considerably more surprised, and not at all
certain what Che'sera had in mind. This was the first time in his reckoning
that any of the Shin'a'in here had addressed him in such a fashion; most seemed
uncomfortable with the concept of a Shin'a'in who was also a mage, and some
seemed of the personal opinion that his half-foreign blood made him more alien
than Shin'a'in. "Certainly, if that is what you wish." He nodded
toward the sleeping chamber. "My friend Karal is asleep in there; he will
not hear us, and if we speak quietly, we will not disturb him. I fear that is
the most privacy I can offer, as it is in somewhat short supply here despite
the vastness of the place."
Che'sera nodded. "That will do," he said, and gestured
to An'desha to lead him onward.
An'desha did so, walking with great care past Karal and Altra,
although neither stirred, nor in fact gave any indication that they were alive
except for their steady breathing. At the moment he was suffering from mixed
feelings; he was both curious and apprehensive to hear what Che'sera wanted to
say that required privacy.
He gestured at his own pallet, waiting until Che'sera took a seat
at the foot before seating himself.
"So," he said, wondering what he was letting himself in
for. "What is it you wish of me, Sworn One?"
When Che'sera left him at last, he sat back against the
gently-curving stone wall and simply thought of nothing for a while. He felt as
if Che'sera had taken his mind, had turned it upside-down and shaken it,
examined it, poked and prodded it, turned it inside out, and then, when he was
finished, put it all neatly back in place with the ends tucked in.
He had probably been the most skillful interrogator that An'desha
or any of Falconsbane's many incarnations had ever encountered. You know, I
suspect that at this point he could predict my reaction to virtually any
situation, and do so with more accuracy than I could!
Although his questions had covered virtually every subject,
Che'sera seemed particularly interested in the Avatars. That was the one thing
that hadn't surprised him, since virtually all of the Sworn had wanted to know
about Dawnfire and Tre'valen sooner or later. Some of them here had actually
been present when Dawnfire, trapped in the body of her bondbird, had been transformed
into an Avatar in the first place. It had occurred to An'desha that as far as he
was concerned, such a transformation was a poor substitute for returning
Dawnfire to her proper human form. But then again, perhaps that had not been
possible; granted, the Star-Eyed had been able to undo most of the changes
Falconsbane had run on An'desha's own body, but that was in the nature of
restoring something to its rightful state, not changing it into something else
altogether.
Perhaps all that She would have been able to manage would have
been transformation into a tervardi, one of the bird-people, and that might
have been a truly cruel "reward" for her, since the tervardi are
frail and not very humanlike. At least this way, she is still fundamentally
herself and she is anything but frail.
He also sensed that there were other complications to the story
that no one had told him about. And there was, of course, the factor that
Dawnfire had been mourned for dead, and her human body buried when the bond to
it was snapped by Falconsbane. It didn't necessarily do for a deity to
resurrect people; the question would inevitably arise: "Why this one and
not my father, mother, sibling, lover." Better, on the whole, not to do
any such thing. Look at all the effort that the Companions went to in order to
preserve the secret of their own nature, and they weren't even returning as
humans!
Just such philosophical questions had arisen in the course of
Che'sera's questioning—though on his part, rather than Che'sera's—and the Sworn
One had neatly deflected them. Perhaps it had been because Che'sera wanted him
to think of possible answers for himself; there had been that kind of feeling
as the conversation progressed.
And in all of that, I didn't learn a thing about Che'sera himself. Now that was truly unusual, since
Falconsbane had been a rather skilled interrogator and some of that expertise
was available to An'desha. Given the proper occasion, that was one of
Falconsbane's abilities that An'desha did not mind coopting, but he had not been
able to insert so much as a single personal question of his own the entire time
the two of them spoke. Che'sera was most unusual, even for the Sworn.
An'desha rubbed his temples, feeling as if he should have a
headache after all that Che'sera had put him through, even though he did not.
Activity, that was what was called for. There were dishes to wash,
there was clothing to mend, and there were all manner of things to be done. Or
perhaps he ought to go look at the food supplies the Shin'a'in had brought, and
see if there was something more that could be done with them than the seemingly
endless round of soups and stews they had been presented with thus far. He
wasn't precisely a grand cook, but he did have experience in dishes that no one
else here did.
He rose and went in search of something useful to do.
The clothing and kitchen work had already been taken care of, but
as it turned out, there was something new he could concoct in the way of dinner
for them all. There was fresh meat, brought in by Shin'a'in hunters; there were
beans and a few other winter vegetables such as onions, and there were spices
and dried peppers. That particular combination reminded him of a recipe Karal
had made up for him once, when they'd been too late to catch dinner with either
the Court or the Heraldic students. He diced some of the meat and hot peppers
and browned them together, added onions, beans and sweet spice, and set it all
to cook slowly. While all of those ingredients had been used before, no one in
the group had ever used them in that combination. It would definitely be
different from anything the Shin'a'in had been cooking, and that was what he
was looking for.
It had taken a long time to dice the meat as finely as the recipe
called for, and having his hands busy allowed his mind to rest. His mind wasn't
the only thing resting, however, and although Karal was still sleeping, others
were awake again. At about the time he finished with his concoction, Master
Levy was out in the main room on his hands and knees, looking intently at the
floor, and prying at invisible cracks with some very tiny tools he took from a
pouch at his belt.
An'desha washed up the utensils he'd used for his preparations,
dried his hands, and went out to join him, though no one else seemed at all
interested in what he was doing. "Is there anything I can do to
help?" he asked, sitting on his heels just behind the Master Artificer.
"Well, there is something here, all right,"
Master Levy replied in an absent tone. "This is a movable stone, and I
would guess that it drops down and fits into a slot carved into the rock. It
may take me a while to figure out the release, though. Tell me something, do
you have any idea if this mage thought in patterns, in numbers of
things? As in—oh, the Karsites think in terms of one, seven, or eight—if they
build a device with a catch, it will either have a single trigger-point or
seven. That's because they have a single God, but in the usual representations
of Vkandis as the sun rising, there are seven rays coming from it and in the
ones of the sun-in-glory there are eight rays. The Rethwellans almost always
use three, for the three faces of their Goddess. Most Valdemarans use three or
two, three for the same reason as the Rethwellans, or two for the God and
Goddess. It's not a conscious thing, it's just the kind of patterns that people
establish as very small children."
"You might try four," An'desha said, after a moment of
thought. "Urtho shared the Kaled'a'in faith, if he shared anything
religious with anyone, and that's the same as the Shin'a'in. Except where it's
free-flowing and curvy, there's a great deal of square and diamond symmetry in
the decorations around here."
Master Levy grunted what sounded like thanks, and seemed to widen
his scope of examination a bit.
Finally he sat back on his haunches, stretched all his fingers and
shook his head. "Shall we see if we're supremely lucky and we're not
dealing with a random placing?" he asked An'desha, his saturnine face
showing rather more humor than An'desha was used to seeing from him. "If
your guess is right, I think I've found all four trigger points; if mine is
right, this far inside his Tower Urtho would not have bothered to be terribly
clever about hiding his additional workrooms and the catches won't be difficult.
I don't suppose you've got a clue about an order in which to push four
trigger-points, do you?"
"If you're not supposed to push all of them at once, you
mean?" An'desha thought again. "East, South, West, and North. That's
the order in rituals, with the Maiden being in the East and the Crone in the
North."
"That sounds as good a guess as any. Let's see what
happens."
Master Levy reached out with one of his tools, but An'desha shot
out a hand to stop him. "Wait a minute!" he stammered. "If you
do this wrong, is anything likely to—well—go wrong? Will the ceiling fall in
and crush us, or poison gas start seeping in here, or something?"
Master Levy paused. "There is that possibility," he
began, and laughed at An'desha's expression. "Oh, for Haven's sake, it's
not very likely he'd put something like that in the floor now, is it? Where it
might be triggered by accident just by people standing on it?"
An'desha flushed, embarrassed. "I suppose not," he
replied, letting go of Master Levy's hand.
The Master Artificer continued his interrupted task, depressing a
small spot in the stone of the floor. An'desha noted with fascination that it
remained depressed so that if one had placed a coin on the spot, it would be
flush with the rest of the floor. Master Levy then touched a second, and a
third, both of which also remained depressed after he touched them, and
although An'desha had not been able to spot the second place, once he had the
distance between the first and second, he was able to deduce the locations of
the third and fourth spot before Master Levy touched them. An'desha held his
breath in anticipation when the Master Artificer pushed on that last place.
Nothing happened for a long moment, and An'desha sighed with
disappointment. Master Levy however, had his head cocked to one side, and as
An'desha sighed, he stood up, looked fixedly at a place in the pattern of the
floor shaped like an octagon, then stamped sharply down on one corner of it
with his boot heel.
With a reluctant, grating sound, the stone moved a trifle,
dropping down by about the width of a thumb.
Master Levy stamped downward again, and the stone moved a bit
more. "It's stuck. Old, you know," he quipped. He continued urging it
with carefully-placed blows of his heel as it dropped down about the distance of
a man's hand measured from the end of the middle finger to the wrist, then
began to slide sideways. Once there was a sliver of a gap between the octagonal
stone and the rest of the floor, he got down on hands and knees again, and
peered at it.
By now, thanks to the sounds of stamping and the grating of
stone-on-stone, he had attracted the attention of everyone in the Tower who was
not asleep. "Will you look at that!" Silverfox exclaimed, as the
curious gathered around. "We never guessed that was there!"
"I am looking at it. I think I'm going to need something to
pry with," Master Levy replied. "The mechanisms are rather stuck,
which shouldn't be too surprising considering their age. I'm afraid once I get
this open, it's not going to shut again."
"I don't see a problem with that," Firesong said,
dropping down on his heels to peer at the stone himself, beside Master Levy,
while Silverfox went off to get a pry bar from a Plainsman. "If there's
anything down there worth bothering with, we wouldn't want to close it, and if
there isn't, we'll clean out the trash and use it for sleeping quarters or
something."
Master Levy grunted and nodded his head as he felt along the crack
with great care, then put his nose to the crack to sniff at it gingerly.
"I don't smell anything that shouldn't be down there," he said after
a long moment while he concentrated on the scent with his eyes closed.
"And I always did have the best nose in my year-group. When the students
were experimenting, my Alchemy Master always used to count on me to know when
to evacuate the workroom if something went wrong."
"Comforting, considering there might be a mechanism to
release poisons into the room below, if not this one," said Sejanes,
coming up to the rest with his hair all rumpled from sleeping. Silverfox
arrived at that moment with the pry bar and shook his head at the Imperial
mage.
"Not Urtho, and especially not in his own Tower," the kestra'chern said decisively. "He
was a compassionate and considerate man, safe and resourceful but not vengeful.
He would only create wards to protect things, not to punish. He wouldn't have
taken the risk that a curious hertasi
or some other innocent might set such a thing loose."
Sejanes looked skeptical, but didn't say anything. Silverfox,
however, read the look correctly.
"You're not dealing with the Empire, Sejanes," he said.
"You're not dealing with people looking to gain in rank by whatever means
it takes. Urtho's personal servants and close friends were loyal enough to die
for him—and many did, to his sorrow. Here in the heart of his personal
stronghold, he would not have used safeguards that could harm his own people as
well as intruders."
Master Levy inserted the tongue of the pry bar in the crack, and
pulled.
The stone grated, and moved slightly, then kept on moving for a
little after Master Levy stopped pulling. Now the gap was about as wide as a
large man's palm.
"Do we want to investigate before we open this any
further?" the Artificer asked Silverfox. "I defer to your judgment,
since you seem to know more about the master of this place than anyone else
here."
Silverfox looked pointedly at An'desha, who shook his head in
answer to the silent question. "My knowledge is tainted, since it comes
from his enemy," he said at once. "Ma'ar is far more likely to have
underestimated a foe he considered sentimental and soft."
"It wouldn't hurt to drop a lantern down on a string,"
Silverfox said to Master Levy. "Then at least we'll be able to see what
we're dealing with. For all we know, this is just a well, and not any kind of a
storeroom or workroom."
"A source of water other than melted snow from the surface
would be welcome," Lo'isha murmured quietly. Master Levy heard him, and
nodded in answer to both statements.
This time it was An'desha's turn to go off and rummage for a
lantern and some appropriately strong string. They hadn't needed lanterns since
they arrived here, although the Shin'a'in had brought some, just in case the
magical lights failed. The magic lamps hanging from the center of the ceiling
of each room had been quite enough to serve their needs and showed no signs of
being harmed at all by the mage-storms that made magic problematic outside the
Tower. An'desha dug one of the lanterns out of a pile of articles no one had
found a use for, and got some string from the kitchen area. He filled the lamp
with oil, trimmed the wick with thread clippers from a sewing kit, and lit it
before bringing it out to the rest.
Master Levy made the handle fast to the string and lowered the
lantern down into the cavity while the others crowded around. An'desha couldn't
see anything from his vantage, and neither could most of the Shin'a'in.
"Well?" called Che'sera. "What's there?"
"Stairs, mostly," Master Levy replied. "So this
isn't a well. I believe I see something like furniture at the bottom, but the
light doesn't go very far down."
"It's not dimming in bad air, is it?" An'desha asked
anxiously, vague memories of tomb openings intruding from one of Falconsbane's
previous lives. "Even if there are no poisons, the air could have gone bad
from what's been sealed inside."
"No, it's burning brightly enough. It's just a long way down
to the next floor and the light is between me and what's down there,"
Master Levy replied. "It is an issue of contrast and visual acuity. Well,
no help for it. Back to hard labor."
He inserted the tongue of the pry bar and continued to lever the
stubborn stone out of the way, while at least a couple of the observers looked
at each other, wondering why the Artificer used such flowery terms to say he
couldn't see well. Suddenly, with no warning whatsoever, the frozen mechanism
gave way. The stone slid beneath the floor into hiding, and Master Levy, taken
completely off guard, fell over backward, the pry bar dropping out of his hands
and clanging end-over-end down the staircase.
Only An'desha remained to assist the winded Artificer to his feet;
the rest of the spectators made a rush for the stair with Firesong in the lead.
In mere moments they had descended out of sight; then Firesong spoke a single
word, light poured up from below, and muffled exclamations were drifting up
through the hole in the floor.
"You might say 'thank you!'" Master Levy called after
them, and sighed, rubbing his hip where he had landed. "We may as well go
find out what they've discovered. I only hope it isn't Urtho's treasury; there
isn't a great deal of good that gold and gems would do us in this
situation."
"Urtho's treasury would have books, not baubles,"
An'desha assured him. "But we ought to go down, too, before they all get carried
away in their enthusiasm."
Master Levy went with An'desha following him, taking the stone
stairs carefully, for they were quite steep. They also went down farther than
he expected, for the stone floor of the room above was at least as thick as his
hand was long, perhaps a little thicker, which accounted for the fact that it
hadn't rung hollow and had sounded like solid stone to their footsteps. It
looked as if this room had actually been hollowed out of the bedrock after the
Tower itself had been built.
Although the air was a bit stuffy and very dusty, with a hint of
strange metallic scents, it was not at all damp. Nor was the room as gloomy and
ill-lit as An'desha had anticipated. There were more of those magical lights
everywhere, and as An'desha looked around, he had no doubt at all just what
Urtho had used this room for. It was a workshop, with everything necessary for
an inveterate tinkerer who was interested in literally everything.
Needless to say, the room was very crowded, despite the fact that
it was just a little smaller than the main room above. This was not a mage's
classical workroom, a place where only magic took place, and few if any
physical components were needed. This was a place where anything and everything
could be worked with, played with, investigated. Here was a bench with an array
of glassware and rows of jars that had once held chemicals both liquid and
solid—most of the former long since evaporated, leaving only dust or oily
residue in the bottoms of their bottles. There stood another bench with a small
lathe, clamps, a vise, and tools for working wood and ivory and beside it a
similar bench with the tools for shaping soft metals, and a third bench with
the tools for cutting and polishing lenses, glass, and crystal. Looking incongruous
beside that was a potter's wheel and glassblower's pipes, and along the back
wall were a forge, a kiln, a glassmaker's furnace, and a smelter. They probably
had once shared a chimney, long since blocked up by the destruction of the
Tower above. There were more benches and work spaces set up, but from the
staircase An'desha could not tell what they were, only that most of them had
been in use up to the day of the Cataclysm.
An'desha simply stood and stared as the others wandered about,
looking, but not touching. Master Levy on the other hand, looked supremely
satisfied by what he saw, as he surveyed it all from the staircase.
"Now this is much more in my way of doing things," he
said, folding his arms across his chest and looking over the workshop with
approval. "I believe I could have liked this Urtho."
On all of the benches—all of them—were projects in various
states of completion. It was difficult to tell what some of them had been
intended to do, if anything. There were pages of notes arrayed neatly beside
each of these projects; it appeared that, in his workplace at least, Urtho was
a tidy and methodical man. Firesong stood beside a particular bench laden with
some very odd equipment indeed. He gazed on these pieces of paper with longing,
although he forbore to touch them.
"This is maddening," he complained, hovering over a
small sheaf of scrawled manuscript. "I'm afraid even to breathe on these
things for fear that they'll fall to dust, but I think I may die if I can't
read what's on the next page!"
But something about the way the "paper" looked stirred
echoes in An'desha's deepest memories; he descended the last few stairs and
made his way over to what appeared to be a small jeweler's workbench. There was
a half-finished brooch there, nothing magical or mechanical, obviously just a
piece of jewelry in the shape of a hummingbird to be inlaid with a mosaic of
tiny agate-pieces formed into stylized feathers. "Wait," he muttered.
The original design lay next to it, and after a close examination of the sheet,
An'desha picked it up.
Silverfox stifled a gasp, and Firesong bit off a protest. He waved
the intact and flexible drawing at them to prove it was not hurt by handling.
"Pick up what you want," he urged, "It's not paper.
Or rather, it isn't like the paper we know and use now. It's a special
rag-paper treated with resins so it wouldn't disintegrate. You can write on it
in silverpoint, crayon, or graphite-stick, but not ink; ink just beads up and
won't penetrate."
"Really?" Master Levy walked to the bench nearest him
and picked up another piece of the paper. "Very useful around chemicals, I
would guess."
"Very useful around anything that might ruin your
notes," Firesong observed, snatching up the papers he had stared at so
covetously. "oh—now this—oh, my—" He held the papers up so
that Silverfox could peruse them, too, as between them they tried to decipher
Urtho's notes in ancient Kaled'a'in, using the Hawkbrother tongue Firesong knew
and Silverfox's modem Kaled'a'in as guides.
Che'sera looked at them curiously, but Lo'isha laughed at their
immediate absorption. "Oh, we have lost them for a time," he said
indulgently. "I know that look. The weaver is one with the loom!"
"Not entirely," Firesong responded absently. "But I
will be very pleased when this scholar of Silverfox's shows up, so he can help
us with this. If these notes are right, this may be the answer to our
isolation here." He waved a hand at the bench and what looked to be a pair
of mirrors serving as the lids to a matching pair of boxes. "These are
completed, or all but some cosmetic frippery—and they're supposed to act
like a pair of linked scrying spells, except they don't use true-magic, they
use mind-magic. Apparently it can work over unknown, incredible distances.
Somehow they amplify it so that it only needs one person with mind-magic
to make both boxes work, or so I think this says."
That made every head in the place turn toward the Adept, and he
finally looked up from the notes he was sharing with Silverfox, shaking his
hair out of his eyes. "Got your attention then, did I?" he asked,
with a sly smile.
:If these devices use mind-magic, they won't be disrupted by the
mage-storms,: commented a
mental voice from above, and Altra flowed gracefully down the staircase, taking
a seat on one of the steps at about head-height to the humans. :That would
be more than merely useful. If we learned how to use them, I could take one to
Haven; if we learned how to make them, I could take another to Solaris. And I
certainly have enough mind-magic to make them work, no matter who wishes to use
them.:
"I thought you said that you didn't want to Jump
anymore," Firesong said sardonically. An'desha chuckled.
:I don't want to, but devices like these could replace that aspect
of my duties as well as give us the resources of all of Master Levy's
colleagues at Haven,: the
Firecat replied with immense dignity. :For that matter, if we could concoct
a third device, I would not necessarily have to Jump it to Solaris; Hansa could
come and get it instead.:
An'desha hid a smile at the unspoken implication behind Altra's
statement, an implication that Altra felt his colleague and fellow Firecat had
been getting off a bit too easily in the transportation department.
:Our ability to Jump is partly true-magic, partly mind-magic,: the Firecat continued, for once without
any hint of irony or mockery in his mind-voice. :It is growing hazardous for
passengers to Jump with us, as Master Levy and Sejanes discovered. It is no
longer comfortable for us to Jump very long distances, and I was not
exaggerating earlier about how I felt when we arrived. I was exhausted and
drained, not a common occurrence until now. I can predict a time very soon when
it could become actually inconceivably dangerous for us to Jump. But if we have
a way to communicate with Haven and Karse—such a thing would be beyond price.:
"I had deduced that for myself, thank you,"
Firesong replied with a touch of acid. "If you can just conjure up that
Kaled'a'in scholar, we have a chance of learning how to use these things before
the time comes when you can't take one back to Valdemar."
"The scholar will be here soon," Che'sera put in,
looking up from the glassware bench. His dark-blue clothing reflected richly
from the surface of the dusty glassware. "The main problem has been that
since his assistant is a—what do you call the lizard-folk—?"
"Hertasi,"
Silverfox interjected. The handsome kestra'chern's
face lit up at Che'sera's words. "Ah, so it is Tarrn who is coming!
Oh, that is very good, he may be frail, but he is the finest scholar in the
ancient version of our tongue outside the lands of White Gryphon, and a good
being as well." Silverfox seemed immensely relieved by what Che'sera had
said, and that in itself made An'desha feel as if they were all beginning to
make some progress at last.
"Yes. It seems the problem has been to find a way to bring
both of them in a gryphon four-harness carry-basket and still keep the hertasi warm without magic."
Che'sera left the glassware-bench, and moved back toward the staircase.
"When I left, a means had been devised, and they were planning on arriving
within two or three days of when I expected to be here. They had only to
manufacture this device, whatever it was, and then they could leave. I would
have told you earlier, when I first arrived, but you all seemed quite busy, and
I had business with An'desha that I wished to conclude before I dealt with
anything else."
"That is even better news!" Now Firesong seemed much
happier as well, so much so that he forbore to comment on that last statement.
"I vote that if we can't, on superficial examination, find anything more
important to investigate than these devices, we'll concentrate on those for our
immediate goal. If we can communicate with all of the mages and Artificers on a
regular basis, it will be as good as being at Haven with all the advantages of
being here in the Tower to implement what we deduce."
He looked around at the rest of the party, most of whom shrugged
with indifference or bafflement. "You and Sejanes should be the ones to decide.
I'll be of very little use without a translator in any event," Master Levy
said with great candor. "At the moment, I have nothing really to work on,
as I believe we need to develop a new set of theories to match the changed
conditions. Those, I feel, must come from things we can learn by studying the
Cataclysm itself and Urtho's own methodologies. So until the translator
arrives, what I can and will do, is attempt to find out if this place holds any
more secrets in the floor."
"Very little use!" Firesong actually snorted.
"After you were the one who found this place! No false modesty,
thank you, Master Levy!"
"I may be of some slight assistance here below,"
Che'sera said, with great caution. "I shall examine those objects that
seem to partake of the nature of the shaman, and see if I may make something of
them. We Shin'a'in lost some things when the Cataclysm destroyed our land and
sundered the Clans. I may be able to rediscover some of what was lost, and that
may be of some help."
Hah!
An'desha thought with triumph. Now I know what you are, o mysterious one!
Both Sworn to the Old One and a shaman! Now, is it a need to keep an eye on all
these mages that brings you here, or was it the hope of keeping us from finding
things that the Clans would rather we didn't learn? Is it an interest in what
you might find within the walls of this Tower, or is it something else
altogether? Myself, perhaps?
It could be, but he was not going to have the hubris to assume
that the latter was the case. There were plenty of reasons for the Kal'enedral to want a shaman here;
most of the Sworn were not leshy'a with a direct link to the Star-Eyed,
though they could all walk the Moonpaths when they chose. Although An'desha had
seen more than one or two of the Veiled Ones about, they had never stayed for
very long, and he had the feeling that they were not "permitted" to
take a physical form for too long—perhaps just long enough to serve some
specific need, or be in themselves a kind of message.
The Moonpaths... perhaps I ought to go walk them myself. I haven't
seen or spoken to Tre'valen and Dawnfire since we burned out that weapon of
Urtho's.
Firesong looked up, as if distracted for a moment, and cast a
speculative look at An'desha. "You know," he began, "it is all
too fortuitous, that we find these things."
An'desha smiled a little as he noticed Che'sera looking at him in
a similar way. He heard himself saying, "It is the way of the Star-Eyed to
provide such opportunities for those who will help themselves. If I were you,
I'd be careful with these new finds, for She is unlikely to hand over easy
answers. The mind that controls the hand must use the tool wisely, and all
tools can harm their user."
Firesong grunted, and actually looked for a moment as if he could
be considering those words in the way a Shin'a'in would acknowledge the cryptic
advice of a shaman as being worthy of meditation. Then the Adept shrugged a
little and made off with the sheaf of notes.
An'desha looked about the workshop to see what the others were
doing; Che'sera cracked a slight smile and rejoined Lo'isha, huddling together
over a workbench's treasures in the far corner. Sejanes was examining the bench
with some of the equipment that An'desha could not immediately identify.
Firesong and Silverfox were halfway up the staircase in no time, with their
papers in their hands, chattering to one another and ignoring everything else
about them. Master Levy was already back up on what An'desha was now thinking
of as the "ground" floor, and Karal was probably still asleep. There
might or might not be other Kal'enedral
besides Che'sera about; they preferred to spend much of their time in the camp
on the surface, and since he had arbitrarily taken care of dinner preparations,
there was really no need for any of them to be inside the Tower at this point.
This would be as good a time as any to walk the Moonpaths undisturbed.
He went up the stairs as quietly as he could, nodding to Altra on
the way. The Firecat nodded back with immense dignity, then turned to follow
Firesong and Silverfox, tail waving like a jaunty banner. Evidently he
wanted to hear what they were up to, probably because they were the most
interesting creatures in the Tower at this, moment.
An'desha turned his steps in toward the sleeping chamber. Karal
was, indeed, still asleep. He noticed as he paused in the doorway that Master
Levy was in the side chamber where An'desha and Karal had found indications of
another trapdoor. The Artificer was back down on his hands and knees and
peering at the pattern in the floor. Florian was beside him, occasionally
tapping a hoof on the stone at his direction.
An'desha tiptoed past Karal to his own sleeping place. You
know, if I look more as if I'm taking a nap, I'm less likely to be disturbed.
He pulled off his boots and curled up in his bedroll, arranging himself in what
he thought was a very natural-looking position.
It occurred to him as he closed his eyes that he was being very
secretive about this, when there really was no reason for him to do so. On
the other hand, I don't think I want Che'sera to know everything I'm doing
until I know more about him. If Che'sera turned out to be as rigid and
inflexible as Jarim first was, or as hidebound as the shaman of An'desha's home
Clan, it would be easier to keep away from him and his demands if he wasn't
aware of everything An'desha knew or could do. All I've told him is that the
Avatars appear to me, not that I can go look for them. I think I'll keep it
that way for now.
He settled himself comfortably, then slowed his breathing and
began the combination of relaxation and tension that marked a Moonpath trance.
This, for those who were not trained in the technique, was more difficult than
it sounded; too much tension and the trance state would never be reached, too
much relaxation brought on a nap rather than a trance. Once he hovered on the
edge of trance, with all of his attention focused, and nothing from the
"real" world intruding, he sent his mind going in, and then out,
in the pattern that Tre'valen had shown him, that felt like so very long ago.
He found himself, in his vision, standing on a path made of
silvery sand that sparkled with a subdued glimmer, in the midst of an
opalescent mist that swirled all around him. Or rather, he seemed to be
standing there; this body was an illusory one, and he could change it to
another form if he concentrated on it. This was a comfortable form, one he
didn't have to think about to maintain, and it didn't seem reasonable to waste
time and energy changing it to something else. He still was not certain if the
Moonpaths themselves were an illusion; he had never bothered to test his
surroundings to find out. The mist had no scent, and was neither cool nor warm;
the sand beneath his feet neither so soft as to impede his steps, nor so hard
as to be noteworthy.
"Tre'valen?" he called out into the mist, his voice
echoing off into the distance in a way that had no counterpart in the real
world. "Dawnfire?" The mist swirled about him, following his words
with eddies of faint colors that faded within moments.
He had no answer immediately, but he didn't expect one. The
Avatars were not in existence to serve and please him, after all, and he
was well aware of that. Instead, he moved out along the path of soft sand,
occasionally calling the names of his friends quietly into the mist.
Eventually, if they were not occupied with something more important, they would
come to him.
And so they did. They came winging through the mist in their bird
shapes, forms the shape of a vorcel-hawk, but the size of a human, and with the
sparkling, fiery, multicolored plumage of a firebird. He knew they were coming
before they arrived, for they lit up the mist in the far distance like
lightning within a thundercloud as they flew toward him, their flight paths
spiraling around each other, leaving a double helix of light through the fog in
their wakes.
Here they did not need to backwing to a landing as they would if
they had taken "real" hawk-forms in the world. They simply slowed,
then went into a hover above the path, then flowed into the vaguely avian-human
shapes they normally wore to speak to him. Tre'valen was dressed as the
Shin'a'in shaman he had been before he became the Star-Eyed's Avatar; but
Dawnfire, though clearly Tayledras rather than Shin'a'in, wore a simple tunic
that could not be readily identified as coming from any particular culture. Her
long silver hair moved slightly, like the mist that swirled slowly about her.
They both seemed to be completely ordinary humans—except for their eyes.
Not eyes, but eye-shaped windows on the night sky... the darkness
of all of night spangled with the brightest of stars. So beautiful….
It was said that Kal'enel Herself had eyes like that; in this way
She marked these two as Her Avatars, a way that could not be mistaken for
anything else.
"Younger Brother!" Tre'valen greeted him warmly.
"It is far too long since we have seen you, but I pledge that we have not
been idle in that interval!"
"Not all that long for a mere mortal," he corrected with
a smile, "but a great deal has been happening to us as well. I was not
certain if you knew about what we have uncovered and learned, and besides that,
I wanted to make sure that you two were all right after the Working."
Not that I could have done anything if they weren't.
Dawnfire shrugged fluidly. "Poor young Karal bore the brunt
of our Working, and we two were only a little drained," she said, and
extended a cool hand to him, which he took in brief greeting. "It sounds
as if you have not been idle either—you in the Tower."
That confirmed one of his guesses, that the Avatars, for all their
power, were neither omniscient nor omnipotent. They were bound by some physical
laws at least. Was that because they were not really physically
"dead," as the spirit-Kal'enedral
were? Or was it because they had been granted wider powers by the Star-Eyed?
"Would you like to tell me what you can, or hear what news I
have first?" he asked.
"Your news; I suspect that much of what we have to tell you
will be mere confirmation of what you already know," Tre'valen told him.
"We have been ranging far in the world and in the Void, to see what
changes the Working wrought on the energy-patterns of the Storms, and how
far-reaching those changes were. I fear I bring no startlingly good news."
An'desha nodded, and detailed everything that had been happening
since the "Working" of which Karal had been the channel; from the
effect that being the focus of so much energy had wrought on the young Karsite
priest, to the departure of the gryphons and the arrival of Sejanes and Master
Levy, to the comings and goings of so many Kal'enedral, to Che'sera's intense interest in him.
Lastly, he described the events of the afternoon, the opening of the hidden
trapdoor and the discovery of the workshops below.
They both listened with concentration and apparent interest—and
surprise when he described the workshops. So, the existence of the workshop
is something that the Star-Eyed did not tell them, though Her agents have
certainly been about. Interesting.
"There may be answers there," Tre'valen said at last,
and for a fleeting moment, his face took on that "listening"
expression that Karal wore when either Florian or Altra Mindspoke him. An'desha
wondered if the Star-Eyed might be speaking to Her Avatar at that instant, and
his next words might have been a confirmation of that. "Certainly Firesong
should pursue the investigation of the mind-mirrors; they should not be
difficult to revive nor to duplicate, and they will serve you all in the days
to come."
Oh, my; even more interesting. Perhaps my intuition about the
Star-Eyed's providence was well-founded.
Dawnfire placed one long hand on Tre'valen's shoulder and, with a
rueful expression, admitted, "This is the only concrete advice we can give
at the moment. Would it were otherwise, but the future is still trackless and
without a clear path. And even our Goddess is bound by constraints She cannot
break, so that we may all work out our futures with a free will."
An'desha sighed, but saw no reason to doubt her. "So we are
still muddling our way through a point when there are many futures possible? I
had hoped after the Working that we would at least have gotten our feet on a
clear path again!"
Tre'valen looked uneasy. "The danger has only been postponed,
not negated, but luckily the forces involved have not worsened," he told
An'desha. "You knew that the Working was not a solution to the
mage-storms, only a reprieve, and that has not changed."
"We have been tracking the results of the Working since the
initial release of the energy contained in Urtho's weapon." Dawnfire took
up the thread of conversation. "The effect is all that one could have
wished over Valdemar, the Pelagirs, Karse and Rethwellan and even Hardorn. The
waves that you sent out are canceling the waves of the mage-storms, but—only to
a point."
"What point?" he asked instantly, sensing that this was
important, although he did not know why yet.
"Just beyond the border of Hardorn in the East,"
Tre'valen told him. "Also South, just at the borders of the Haighlei
Empire, and around White Gryphon and its environs, but they know how to deal
with the effects. And in any case, the Storms are weak there. North, well into
the Ice-Wall Mountains. To the West, well, that is Pelagir-wilds and the Storms
will hardly change that. It is East that concerns us, for the Empire is
the recipient of the worst of the Storms, and they are causing great havoc
there, among those who depend so much upon magic."
An'desha gave that some thought. "That could be good for us,
or bad," he said finally. "Given what the Emperor did to us, I'm not
at all sad to hear that they are having troubles. I'd rather that the Empire
was so busy trying to hold itself together that they had no time to think of
us, but Duke Tremane thought we were the source of the Storms, and what if the
Emperor's people assume the same and retaliate?"
Tre'valen nodded. "Precisely. Warn your friends, An'desha,
and when the mind-mirrors are working and in place, use them to warn Valdemar.
Such things could be possible."
Could be possible, he says. Yet if I understand the constraints
the Avatars labor under, pointing out something specifically as possible may be
the only warning they are allowed to give of a future they have seen. Or
perhaps not...
Despite the unpleasant information, An'desha felt a warm glow of satisfaction.
The Avatars avoided giving direct advice most of the time, but he was getting
better at deducing what they wanted him to think about, and what information
was the most critical to the current situation.
"What about the Storms themselves?" he asked.
"Eventually, they're going to become strong enough to overcome the
counter-Storm we sent out, aren't they? That's why we knew what we did was only
going to be temporary—" He watched Tre'valen's face carefully and took his
cues from the faint changes in expression, as he suspected he was supposed to
do. "—so eventually, what happens? We're getting a—a reversal of the
original Cataclysm, am I right? That was why we used this spot for the Working,
because it's the place where the waves converge. Eventually the Storms are
going to overcome the Working, and build up to something very bad?" He
swallowed uncomfortably as Tre'valen's slight nod told him he was on the right
track. "So then what? Obviously, the Storms that got set off aren't going
to—go back into the weapons and things they came from. Do we get the Cataclysm
all over again?"
Tre'valen shook his head, but not in negation, and Dawnfire spread
her hands wide. "That is just what we do not know," she admitted.
"And I confide in you—neither does She. There are too many possibilities,
and some of them rest on very subtle factors. We do not yet know what the mages
and Powers of the Empire will do, and that will have an effect. There are many
things that you could do here, all of them effective, but in different ways and
with differing results. Probably there will be another, lesser
Cataclysm, unless you here manage to do one of the things that could avert or
absorb it. There are many things you could do; you could do nothing whatsoever,
as well, and from any action that is taken there are the possibilities of
prosperity or ruin in varying degrees. Whatever happens, that is all we can
tell you for certain."
He groaned. "That is not much comfort!" he complained.
"But I suppose that it gives me enough to tell the others for now."
Tre'valen managed a ghost of a smile. "We never pledged to
bring you comfort, younger brother," he chided gently. "Only enough
help that you need not make your decisions blind, deaf, and ignorant."
"Let me ask about something closer to home, then,"
An'desha replied. "Che'sera. What is Che'sera to me, or I to Che'sera?
Sooner or later he will deduce the source of my information, whether or not I
actually say where it comes from in his presence."
Tre'valen's expression softened with affection. "What is
Che'sera to you? Simply enough—a teacher, if you should decide, for yourself,
that you wish to learn what he has to teach. And what are you to Che'sera?
Largely, affirmation. He has been searching for someone to pass his knowledge
on to, and he hopes that you will be that person. But it must be your decision,
and he will not urge it upon you. He is—a good man, and much in the same way of
thinking as Master Ulrich was; Karal will be like him, one day."
So. There it was, out in the open at last; his invitation to
become a shaman. And not, perhaps, just any shaman, but one Sworn to the
Goddess in her aspect as Wisdom Keeper. He sighed, wishing that he could be as
certain of what he wanted as Karal was. But at least now he knew that Che'sera
was neither a fanatic nor inflexible. That took a few worries from his
shoulders, at least.
"You will be seeing more of us in days to come,"
Dawnfire told him, her sweet face full of seriousness. "I promise you,
An'desha, we will tell you and help you all that we can; we see no good reason
to leave you without aids and guides in this—"
Tre'valen looked out into the mists suddenly.
"—and right now, we must go," Tre'valen interrupted her.
"There are more things we must investigate and watch for you. Fare well,
younger brother! Time is running, and it is not on our side."
And with that, An'desha found himself alone again on the
Moonpaths, as if the Avatars had never been there. With no further reason to
remain, he sent his awareness dropping slowly back into his physical self,
going down, then out—
As he slowly woke his senses, he heard Karal stirring at last, and
smelled the distinctive scent of the meat and bean mixture he had prepared
earlier. His stomach growled, and he opened his eyes.
"I brought you some dinner," Karal said, looking at him
intently as he handed An'desha a bowl. "You were with them, weren't
you?" Karal hooked his thumbs together and made flapping gestures with his
fingers by way of definition.
He saw no reason to deny it, and nodded as he sat up slowly, and
accepted the bowl and spoon from Karal. "They didn't tell me anything we
didn't already know, or at least not much. I'll let Firesong and Sejanes know
as soon as I've eaten."
Karal looked better than he had in days, and An'desha wondered if
that was all due to the work of the Shin'a'in Healer, or if the Avatars had a
hand in it. He suspected the latter, and not for the first time wondered what
the link between Vkandis and the Shin'a'in Goddess was. The Avatars seemed
quite drawn to Karal, and he to them.
On the other hand, they are very compassionate by nature, and he
certainly deserves compassion and sympathy.
"Florian and I are going out for some fresh air. Do you want
to go with us?" Karal invited nonchalantly. "I'm tired of being down
underground like a hibernating bear; I want to see the sun before I go
mad." He shook his head. "I can't imagine how that mage was able to
stand being cooped up in here."
"You may see the sun, but you won't feel it," An'desha
cautioned." It's so cold that if you pour out a cup of water it'll be ice
before it hits the ground."
"So I'll bundle up," Karal shrugged. "I've felt
cold before. Karse isn't exactly a pleasure garden in winter, and up in the
hills, there's snow on the ground for half the year. I'm beginning to
sympathize with the gryphons; if I don't see some open sky, I'm going to start
babbling."
"Then I'll go with you." It didn't take An'desha very
long to pull on a heavy tunic, a second of the same weight, then his quilted
Shin'a'in coat over it all, but Karal needed a little more help getting all
that clothing on. He was quite steady on his feet, however, which An'desha took
to be a good sign of his recovery.
By now, Master Levy was deep in his prodding and poking of the
floor, and he jotted down measurements and diagrams in one of his notebooks.
Silverfox and Firesong were sitting on their heels, the pages of notes neatly
stacked in front of them, regarding another sheaf of their own notes with some
dubiousness. "Where are you two going?" Silverfox called as the three
of them passed by.
"We're going out for some fresh air," Karal replied.
"Why don't you join us? We'll go frighten the Shin'a'in into thinking what
you found in the workroom turned us all into monsters." He made a hideous
face and Silverfox laughed.
"Fresh air? Not a bad idea." Firesong raised his head as
Karal tendered his invitation. "We aren't making much more out of these
notes. Maybe a little sun will wake up my mind. Go on out, we'll catch up with
you."
An'desha noticed at once that their hosts had been at work on the
tunnel to the surface—the opening they had made into the side of the Tower was
large and quite regular, without any debris of broken masonry to trip over. The
tunnel was also wider, though no higher, and there had been some extensive work
done in shoring it up since the last time he'd come through it. It was still
claustrophobic, but on this trip he no longer had the feeling that the tunnel
was going to collapse and trap him at any moment.
He sent a small mage-light on ahead of Karal; he couldn't see past
Florian's rump, so a mage-light was hardly of much use to him. Altra had
declined to come, saying that he had seen quite enough of snow, and was
planning another nap in Karal's bed.
He scented the outside before he saw any indication they were
nearing the entrance. Although the air below remained remarkably clean, and the
scents that lingered, thanks to some small magics on his part and Firesong's,
were all pleasant in nature, there was a fresh quality to the outside air that
nothing below could duplicate. Some of that was due to the cold, but not all.
The other thing they could not duplicate below was the light. As
he stumbled out into the late afternoon sunlight, he squinted and put out a
hand to steady himself against Florian's side. There wasn't a single cloud in
the sky; the great bowl of the sky itself was an intense and blinding blue, and
with all of the glare reflected off the snow, there was as much light coming
from below as above.
Karal stood to one side, taking in huge gulps of air, his pale
face taking on more color with every breath. Florian trotted off and kicked up
his heels friskily.
Seen from the outside, the Tower itself was hardly more than a
snow-frosted stub of melted-looking rock protruding from a snow-covered,
rolling hill; the only projection above the otherwise flat Plains at all, not
prepossessing except for its size. Because they had dug a long, slanting tunnel
to reach the wall of the Tower below, the entrance came out quite some distance
from the remains of the Tower itself, and it was at the foot of the Tower,
precisely above the point where they had broken into the walls, that the
Shin'a'in had pitched their tent-village. The round felt tents, white and brown
and black, made a very orderly and neat array against the snow, so neat and
orderly that it looked like a model rather than a place where people were
actually living and working.
"Whoof!" Firesong exclaimed from behind An'desha, as
Florian frisked and gamboled in the snow with Karal laughing and throwing
snowballs for him to dodge. "Very bright out here! I shouldn't wonder if
you could get a worse sunburn than in high summer!"
Silverfox ducked as Karal turned and lobbed a snowball at them.
Karal laughed, and the kestra'chern
pelted after him, swearing vengeance, while Firesong looked on indulgently.
"So," the Adept asked quietly, while Karal and Silverfox
took shelter behind facing snowbanks, and hurled missiles at each other.
"What did your Avatars have to say for themselves?"
An'desha flung him a startled glance, and Firesong chuckled at his
expression. "You have a certain quiet glow after you've gone visiting
them," the mage told him. "It's not terribly obvious, but it's there
if you know what to look for. So? What did they have to say? Anything useful?"
"Mostly that nothing has changed that much. We've
successfully bought some time for ourselves and our friends, things outside the
areas we protected are deteriorating quickly, and eventually even our time will
run out," An'desha said, wishing his news was better.
Firesong nodded, unsurprised. "And when our time runs out,
we'll get—what? A replication of the Cataclysm? After all, everything is
supposedly converging here."
"Maybe. Even They don't know for sure." An'desha sighed.
"If She has any idea, She's not saying anything. If you want my guess, the
gods are doing what They always do—unless and until all life is threatened with
catastrophe, They'll see to it we have the tools and the information to find
our own solutions, then leave us alone to find them. The Avatars think the
things we're finding in the Tower will help us, but—"
"'But there's no clear 'future' to see or even guess
at." Firesong looked surprisingly philosophical. "I'm determined to
see this as an opportunity; for once in my life there isn't a god or a spirit
or the hand of fate or prophecy or anything else demanding that I trace a
certain pattern on the pages of time. We're going to make our own future here,
An'desha, and nothing is going to interfere with us to make it go some other god-ordained
way. There's a certain satisfaction in that, you know."
"I suppose so," An'desha replied; he would have said
more, but Silverfox suddenly broke off the snowball fight to peer into the
north, and point.
"Look!" he exclaimed with glee, as Karal dropped his
final snowball without throwing it to squint in the direction he indicated.
"Gryphons! Yes! They have a carry-basket, and I think they've brought
Tarrn!"
An'desha shaded his eyes and narrowed them against the glare, and
finally made out four sets of flapping wings with a half-round shape beneath
them. He couldn't think what else would have that particular configuration
except four gryphons and a large carry-basket.
"Come on!" Silverfox crowed. "Let's go meet
them!"
He set off at a run; Florian loped up and half-knelt beside Karal,
who pulled himself onto the Companion's back. The two of them quickly overtook
Silverfox; Firesong cast an amused glance at An'desha and indicated the others
with a finger.
"Shall we trundle along behind?" he asked.
"It would only be polite," An'desha pointed out.
"And besides, the Shin'a'in have cleared a perfectly fine path between
here and there. It would be a shame not to use it."
They followed in Silverfox's wake, though at a more leisurely
pace. By the time they arrived at the Shin'a'in tent-village, the gryphons and
their passengers had already landed and been taken into one of the tents. It
was easy to tell which one; there was only one that was large enough to hold
four gryphons at once, and only one whose pallet of snow had been churned by
gryphon claws.
Dark-clad Kal'enedral
nodded as Firesong waved to them, then went about their own business. An'desha
pulled the entrance flap aside, and he and the mage entered the tent, being
careful to let in as little cold air as possible. It took quite a bit of time
for An'desha's eyes to adjust to the darkness inside the tent after all the
snow glare outside; he stayed where he was while he waited, listening to the
chatter of at least half a dozen creatures all speaking at once.
He looked around as soon as he could make anything at all out; he
didn't recognize any of the gryphons, but he hadn't expected to. They were all
arranged at one side of the tent, and it came as no surprise to see that they
were eating—or rather, gorging. Not only would they have to recover from the
stress of carrying their passengers all the way from K'Leshya Vale, but they
would have to recover from the stress of dealing with the cold as well.
Karal was conversing with the gryphons, occasionally helping them
where the quarters were too cramped for them to move themselves. Silverfox,
however, was engaged in a highspeed conversation with a gray-muzzled, but
jaunty-looking kyree.
This odd creature, vaguely wolflike as to the head and coat, but
also vaguely catlike in body shape and proportions, was easily the size of a
small calf. An'desha knew more about kyrees
from personal experience than from Falconsbane's memories, as Mornelithe
Falconsbane in all of his incarnations had very little to do with the creatures.
An'desha, on the other hand, was quite familiar with Rris, the kyree representative to the Kingdom of
Valdemar and the Alliance. Rris might look like this old fellow many years from
now; his muzzle was quite white, and his head was liberally salted with paler
hairs among the black. He was tired, but clearly in good spirits, and he
chatted with Silverfox like the old friend he probably was.
Or to be more accurate, Silverfox chattered; the kyree, who could only Mindspeak, nodded
and made replies in his own inaudible fashion. Until Tarrn chose to
"speak" in the "public" mode, no one would hear him except
those he chose.
With him, bundled in so many layers of quilted clothing he
resembled a roll of brightly colored Kaled'a'in bed coverings, was a hertasi. He was practically sitting on a
brazier, since the lizard-folk were very susceptible to cold. It wasn't that
they were cold-blooded, precisely, it was that they were not able to control
their own body temperatures very efficiently. Opinions were divided on whether hertasi had been created by Urtho or by
an accident involving magic, but in either case their physiology had some
flaws, and this was the major one. The poor thing could very easily lose limbs
to the cold, or would go involuntarily into a kind of hibernation. Layers of
clothing would not necessarily help this, especially not during a long journey
in bitter cold, hence the brazier now and whatever other measures the
Kaled'a'in had taken. All that could be seen of this hertasi was the end of the snout and a pair of alert, bright, and
apparently happy eyes peeking out of the depths of the hood.
A great deal more of Tarrn was visible. An'desha knew kyree from his acquaintance with Rris,
but he had not had much opportunity to get to know any hertasi. A few had come with Silverfox and the Kaled'a'in
delegation to Valdemar, but he hadn't had much to do with them. And of course,
Falconsbane was universally despised by both races, in all his lives, so he
would hardly have had any congress with them.
At just that moment, the hertasi
spoke up; the hertasi associated with
the Kaled'a'in tended to vocalize far more often than they used Mindspeech, the
exact reverse of the habits of the ones associated with the Hawkbrothers.
"I believe I am thawed enough to make the dash for the
Tower," he said, in a high-pitched voice with hints of a whistling sound
underlying the tone.
:Excellent, Lyam,: the kyree replied. :They
tell me our baggage is already there, waiting for us. If we truly make a dash,
you won't get too much of a chill.:
"Florian says he'll be happy to carry Lyam, if Lyam thinks he
can cling on," Karal spoke up. "Florian can get him to the tunnel
mouth faster than he can get there on foot." He turned toward the hertasi, polite but a little uncertain
in addressing such an odd creature. "A Companion's gait is very smooth,
and I've never heard of one losing a rider, and you should see one run!"
"I have never tried riding, but if I can get from White
Gryphon to here without the loss of limb or tail, I think I should be able to
survive an attempt on a Companion's back," the hertasi said with warm good humor. "And almost anything is
worth not having to walk through snow myself!"
"We ssshall ssstay herrre overrrnight," one of the
gryphons said. "Thisss issss verrry comforrrtable, and we do not
want to go underrrgrrround even to sssee the Towerrr!" The others nodded
with agreement.
"It isss wonderrrful to be wherrre the grrreat Ssskandrrranon
once wasss, but he did not have to crrrawl underrrgrrround," said another,
flicking his wings nervously. "I do not know how Trrreyvan and Hydona
borrre it."
The kyree didn't shrug,
but An'desha had the impression that if he could have, he would have.
"Suit yourselves; you will have to make do with my descriptions,
then."
"Yourrr dessscrrriptionsss will be asss if we werrre
therrre," the first gryphon said firmly. "I will fly the ssssky that
Ssskandrranon flew, and that will be enough forr me."
Tarrn stood up, and shook himself thoroughly. :One more dash,
then, and we will be where no kyree or hertasi has set foot in
thousands of years!: He seemed to relish the prospect with
scarcely-restrained glee, and the air of a creature a quarter of his apparent
age. :Well, friends, let us take these last few paces at the gallop!:
Firesong, who had known many kyree
and hertasi in his life, was
comfortable with these two immediately. Tarrn had all of the warmth and wisdom
of Irrl, one of Firesong's academic teachers, and Lyam had a great deal more
assertiveness than most of the normally-timid Vales-bred hertasi. Although Firesong loved to be petted and made much of by
his own hertasi, he had always found
the shyness of the Vale hertasi
something of an irritation. Someone once suggested that their manner was
reflective of the deep trauma they had suffered during the Cataclysm, and that
worried him deeply; if that was so, how would they react to another such event?
They'll cope, I suppose; it's the thing they do best. I don't know
how they manage.
Both kyree and hertasi were at heart cave- and den-dwellers,
and both of the new arrivals were obviously comfortable in the Tower. They
settled into the same room shared by Karal and An'desha with every evidence of
content. They had not yet moved in their luggage, but the Shin'a'in had brought
appropriate bedding material for both of the new guests—and extra warming pans
for both beds. As far as personal belongings went, the two had traveled much
lighter than he had expected. Their main luggage consisted of boxes of very
special writing materials; books of tough paper with waterproof metal covers
that locked over the contents like protective boxes, and ink that would never
run once it had dried, even if water was spilled directly on it. Tarrn was a
historian; not a traditional kyree
historian like Rris, who memorized and recited from memory—but the kind of
historian like the Chronicler of Valdemar, who attempted to personally view as
much as possible of epochal events, and to note the honest and bare facts in
record-books called Chronicles. Only when those hard facts had been listed
would Tarrn then make his own interpretations of the events, written separately
in Commentaries. Tarrn was very serious about his calling; he would rather have
the fur pulled out of his tail until it was as naked as a rat's than put a
personal interpretation in the Chronicles.
Actually, that wasn't precisely true. Tarrn would dictate, for,
having no hands, he could not write. Lyam would do the actual writing. Lyam was
Tarrn's third secretary in a long life as a historian, and his relationship
with the kyree was obviously based on
affection and mutual respect. Normally it was Lyam who cared for the kyree's needs, but with Lyam just now
the one who was in need, Tarrn was seeing to it in a quiet and dignified manner
that Lyam got first priority.
Lyam needed warmth more than anything else, and Karal volunteered
to take care of him. Firesong had an idea that he knew why, too. At heart,
Karal still considered himself to be the young secretary who had ridden to
Valdemar from Karse, and he must be feeling a great deal of empathy for Lyam.
That's good; they are both strangers in strange places, and it
will do them good to have a friend with the same—outlook? Status? They have a
lot in common, anyway.
Tarrn, however, was quite ready for work, and looked it. He had
been consulting with Silverfox all the way here from the tent-village. Firesong
could not imagine where he was getting the energy.
He approached Firesong with Silverfox still in tow as soon as
Karal took Lyam off to be wrapped up in warmed blankets and given something hot
to drink.
"Firesong, Tarrn wants to speak with you privately, before we
get to work," Silverfox told him, with a quizzical expression. "He
says he has something for you, but he can't tell me what it is."
The kyree nodded his
head as Firesong turned to look down on him with surprise. :Indeed, Firesong
k'Treva,: Tarrn said with grave courtesy. :I have. Would you come with
me to where they have brought our belongings?:
"Certainly," Firesong replied with equal courtesy.
"Would you prefer that I Mindspoke with you?"
:That will not be necessary, but thank you,: Tarrn replied, turning and walking slowly
toward the heap of bundles that the Shin'a'in had left just inside the main
room of the Tower.
:It is not that this is a secret matter,: the kyree
continued. :It is simply that I have not been given permission to say
anything to anyone else before I discharged my obligation.:
"Oh?" This was getting odder with every moment. Firesong
couldn't think of anything or anyone among the Kaled'a'in of k'Leshya Vale who
would have had anything to send to him.
Tarrn stopped beside the pile of belongings. :If you will
please remove the three bags of Lyam's clothing there—: he indicated the
drab bundles with his forepaw. :—you will find what I brought you beneath
them. It is wrapped in blue wool, and it is very long and narrow.: Firesong
easily moved the three packages, revealing a long, narrow packet wrapped in
blue wool cloth and tied with string. Firesong picked it up.
And it Mindspoke to him.
:Hello, boy.: The
grating, decidedly female voice was all too familiar to him, although it
was not one he had expected to hear ever again.
"Need?" he gasped, as he tore at the wrappings,
trying to free the blade within. Lyam must have wrapped it; the string was tied
in a complicated knot-pattern only a hertasi
or a kestra'chern could admire. He
finally pulled off the string, the fabric fell away, and there was the ancient
spell-bound sword. She looked precisely as she had the last time he saw her,
strapped to Falconsbane's "daughter" Nyara's side as she and Herald
Skif rode out of Valdemar to become Selenay's envoys to the Kaled'a'in and
Tayledras, and possibly to the Shin'a'in as well.
"Need, what are you doing here?" He hadn't been
taken so completely by surprise since—since he'd been kidnapped by his ancestor
Vanyel!
:Nyara doesn't require me anymore; she's better off on her own,: the sword said to him. :There's
nothing at k'Leshya that she, Skif, or the Kaled'a'in can't handle. You, on the
other hand, are dealing with very old magics. I am very old magic, and I still
recall quite a bit. I helped you once before, and I'm hoping I can help you
again.:
Firesong held the sword in both hands, and stared at it. It was
very disconcerting to be Mindspeaking with what should have been an inanimate
object. A sword didn't have a face to read, eyes to look into, and it was
difficult to tell if it could read his expressions.
But there's something about all this that doesn't quite make sense
yet.
"I find myself wondering if there is something more to this
than just an urge to help us here," he said finally. "You've never
put yourself in nonfemale hands before."
:Hmm—let's say I've never done it deliberately, but it has
happened, and it was usually with lads who had the same taste in men as my
"daughters.": The
sword chuckled, but he sensed there was still a lot more than she was telling,
and he decided to press her for it.
:Try again,: he
said sternly in Mindspeech. :You're avoiding my question.:
A sword could not sigh, but he got that sensation from her.
:All right. I could tell you to work it out yourself, but why
waste time? You've got mage-storms disrupting magic; you've managed to get them
canceled out for the moment, but we all know this is only a temporary respite,
not a solution. I'm magic. I've managed to hold myself together this long, but
each Storm gets stronger, and sooner or later I'm going to lose to one. I don't
know what will happen when I lose, but it's going to happen.: She paused for a moment. :Worst case is
that I'll go up in fire and molten metal, the way the sword was made. Best case
is that the magic will just unravel, and there won't be anything here but a
perfectly ordinary sword.:
He had never once thought that Need might be affected by the
Storms; she had always struck him as being so capable, so impervious, that it
never occurred to him that she might have been in trouble.
This bothered him. :I can't promise anything,: he said
soberly. :I don't even know if we're going to survive the end of this ourselves.:
To his surprise, the sword laughed, though rather sardonically. :You
think I don't know that? If I go pfft, I don't want little Nyara to see it
happen. She had enough troubles in her life and she shouldn't lose an old
friend and teacher in that unexpected a fashion. Besides, if I'm going to go, I
want to do it while I'm trying to accomplish something. How could I miss a
chance at getting my hand in on what you're trying to do—It's complicated, it's
dangerous, it's challenging, it's irresistible.:
"If you say so," he said aloud, but strapped the sword
on anyway, for she required his presence to be able to see and hear clearly.
Without a bearer, it took incredible effort for her to perceive anything, and
at that it was only dimly. He didn't often carry a blade, and she felt very
odd, slung across his back in Tayledras fashion. "An'desha will probably
be happy to see you, but you're going to have to explain yourself to the rest.
They don't know anything about you."
And the gods only know what the Shin'a'in are going to make of
her. Yes, Kethry
had carried her, and Kerowyn after that, but still—she was yet another creature
of magic inside the heart of the Plains. How much more were they going to be
willing to allow?
:I can't wait,: Need replied, with a bit less irony than he expected. :There's
something rather amusing about the reactions people get the first time I talk
to them.:
Amusing? Oh, gods. Firesong buried his irritation at this particular complication in
an already complicated situation; after all, Need was right about her
abilities. She did know much older magics than anyone here, and that
included An'desha. That might be crucial at this point, for there could be
something ancient and long-forgotten that would give them all the clues they
needed to solve this situation. She was a powerful mage in her own
right—something near to an Adept, or she never could have made the magics that
bound her human soul to an iron blade. He, An'desha, and Sejanes were the only
true mages here; having Need with them gave them a fourth.
And if she is right, and the mage-storms overwhelm her along with
the rest of us, she won't have to worry about how she unravels. If she
dissolves into flame and melted steel, we here among all these dangerous
machines of power will have far more to worry about than her.
On the other hand, dealing with Need's irascible personality was
not going to be easy. He rubbed his temples, feeling another headache coming
on.
She Mindspeaks; perhaps I can get Tarrn interested in her. When he
is not translating for us, wouldn't she be fascinating for a historian?
He could only hope that was the case, because he had the feeling
that Need was not going to give him a choice about becoming her bearer. In this
all-male enclave, he was probably the closest she was going to come to an
acceptable bearer, for by now, even the female Companions they had ridden here
on had begun the long journey back to Valdemar.
"Well, we might as well get this over now," he said
aloud, as Tarrn watched him with interest. "I assume, sir, that you have
made the acquaintance of my metal friend, here?"
:I have, and I hope she will continue to impart her tales of the
past to me here, when our work permits,: Tarrn replied gravely, which made Firesong feel a little more
cheerful about the situation. At least he wouldn't be burdened with Need's
presence and personality all the time.
"Well, most of my other colleagues here don't even know she
exists, so we'd better introduce her to them before she startles one of them
into dropping something critical by mindspeaking to him without warning."
Need remained silent after that little sally, which either meant that she
agreed with him, or that she was insulted and was plotting revenge.
:An excellent plan,: Tarrn replied. :Carry on.:
He gathered them all together by the simple expedient of going
into the central chamber, clearing his throat, and announcing, "Excuse me,
friends, but something rather—unexpected—has come up that you really ought to
know about."
That
certainly brought everyone who understood Valdemaran boiling out, and the few
Shin'a'in who didn't know the language followed the rest out of sheer
curiosity.
Silverfox was the first to arrive, and stared at him as if he'd
grown a tail. "Firesong," the kestra'chern
began incredulously, "what are you doing with a sword?"
He removed Need from her sheath, just in case the leather and silk
hampered her ability to Mindspeak at all, and held her out in front of him,
balanced on his palms, as the others arrived. "Well. that's what I wanted
to tell you all about," he said, flushing a little. "It seems we
didn't get two additions to our little group here, we got three. I'd
like you all to meet Need, those of you who haven't already encountered
her."
"Need!" An'desha had only just emerged from the sleeping
chamber, but there was no doubt that he was glad to see the mage-blade.
"What is she doing here? This is wonderful!"
Firesong's expression must have been a bit sour, for An'desha took
one look at his face and laughed. "Oh, it's that way, is it? You're the
chosen bearer?" He looked down fondly at the blade. "Firesong is much
too certain of his own expertise, dear lady; I trust you can teach him that
there are other people here who are just as expert in their crafts as he. I
warn you though, he looks much better this way than in a dress."
:Don't be so hard on him, boy,: the blade replied, amused. :Leave that job to me. I've got
more experience at it.:
By now all the rest had gathered around, and were staring with
varying degrees of fascination and puzzlement at the sword. "What is
this?" Sejanes asked, brows knitted.
"Is this by any chance the famous sword called 'Need'
that the ancestress of Tale'sedrin Clan once wore?" asked Lo'isha, as the
other Shin'a'in gathered in a knot behind him, murmuring. "The one carried
by our Clan-sib, Herald Kerowyn?"
"The same," Firesong all but groaned. "To answer
you, Sejanes, Need is a magically made sword with the soul of its maker bound
into it, and she is unbelievably ancient. Either she or Tarrn can probably tell
you the story of why she did such a daft thing—"
:Hardly daft. Reckless, yes, and probably less than wise, but at
the time we didn't have many options, and all of those were worse than what I
did. Of course, I could have just folded my hands and done nothing at all,
but—let's just say that went against my conscience and my nature.:
Those who didn't know what she was went wide-eyed with startlement
at the sound of her projected mind-voice.
"The point is, she's from a time that actually predates the
Mage Wars and the Cataclysm, at least so far as we can tell and that makes her
an expert in magics much older than the ones we know," Firesong said,
noting as he spoke that An'desha's eyes were unfocused, which probably meant he
was talking privately to her. "She has volunteered to come help us, since
her last bearer no longer requires her tutelage."
Master Levy rubbed his chin with one hand as he looked down on the
sword with speculation. "What happens if and when the mage-storms
overwhelm us here?" he asked. "If she is magically made—"
:Then unless I can manage to shield myself, which I'm not certain
I can, I either go quietly or dramatically, and I don't know which it will be,: Need replied bluntly. :These Storms
disrupt the patterns of magic so deeply they may as well be spells of Unmaking.
But that would happen whether I was here or somewhere else, and I'd just as
soon be trying to accomplish something. I told you, I'm not one to sit with
folded hands, even if I still had hands to fold.:
"Wait a minute," Sejanes objected, speaking directly to
the sword, glimmering with reflected light from above. "If you predate the
Mage Wars and the Cataclysm, how did you survive them?"
:In a shielded casket in a shielded shrine in the heart of the
triply-shielded Temple to Bestet, the Battle-Goddess,: she replied promptly. :And when the
Cataclysm was over, the shields on the shrine and the casket were gone and I
felt as if I'd been drained to the dregs. It took me years to recover, and by
then I'd been moved to the armory since no one could figure out why I'd been
put in with the Goddess' regalia in the first place. If I were inclined to such
things, I'd have been indignant.:
Sejanes nodded. "It would be difficult to find such a
situation again," he observed, stroking his chin with one hand.
"Indeed, it is quite surprising that you were in that situation during the
first Cataclysm."
:The only reason they had shields like that was because of the war
with Ma'ar. I don't know of any Temples now with that kind of protection,: Need went on. :Or to be more honest, I
don't know of any that would offer me shelter. I might as well be doing
something useful, and I just might be able to save myself while doing it.:
"Do you fear death so much?" Karal asked softly. Light
rippled across the surface of the sword, as if Need reacted to that question.
Firesong expected a sarcastic reply, or none at all, but was
surprised by both her answer and her sober tone.
:I don't fear death, youngling,: she said, with great honesty. :What I'm afraid of is more complicated
than that. I don't want to vanish without fighting, I don't intend to just lie
down and accept "death" passively. There is the possibility that I
could meet my end violently, and if that is the case—:
"Then it would be better here," Sejanes said with
finality, as a chill crept up Firesong's spine. "If there is a second
Cataclysm and the effect penetrates this place, your demise will be
insignificant compared to the violence that will be unleashed."
Light rippled along the surface of the blade again. :Good.
You'd already considered that.: Need sounded relieved. :I'd hoped I wouldn't be
the bird of ill omen forced to point that out to you.:
I would rather hope we can
pull this off right to the very end, thank you. "No, just the one who forced us to
think about it a little earlier than we wanted to," Firesong sighed.
Now she gave him one of her typical sardonic chuckles. :Consider
it incentive to find a solution,: she told him.
Now, of course, those who had never met Need wanted to speak with
her; Firesong handed her over to An'desha for that, although he was quite aware
that she was not going to change her mind about her choice of a bearer.
Somewhat to his surprise, Karal separated himself from the group for a moment
and approached him.
"I'm not quite sure what to say, except that I know it isn't
going to be easy or very entertaining to have Need literally on your back while
we work our way through all this," Karal said quietly. "I've had
teachers like her. They were very good, but not easy to live with, and you have
my sympathy, for what it's worth."
"Thank you, Karal," he replied with some surprise. The
last thing he had expected was sympathy or understanding from the Karsite!
"Just trying to—oh, I don't know." Karal smiled
crookedly. "Believe it or not, I like and admire you, Firesong. We
irritate each other sometimes, but who doesn't? And I never properly thanked
you for what you did for me."
Firesong found himself blushing hotly, something he hadn't done
since boyhood. "Oh, please," he replied, for once at a loss for
words. "Don't thank me, we all—"
Karal shook his head. "I know very well what all of you did,
and I won't mention this again since it obviously makes you uncomfortable. I
just want you to know that it's appreciated and you are appreciated. And—well,
I think I've said enough."
Considering that Firesong didn't think he'd be able to flush any
hotter, Karal was probably right. When the Karsite rejoined the group talking
to Need, it was a decided relief.
:Ahem.:
This time the mind-voice was Tarrn's, and Firesong was very glad
to hear it.
"Can I help you, sir?" he asked, looking down at the kyree, who was in turn looking up at him
with amused golden eyes. The white hairs of his muzzle contrasted strangely
with the youth in those eyes.
:Since virtually everyone else is involved with speaking to our
metallic friend, why don't we go have a look at those notes Silverfox says you
are so concerned with? If this device is what I believe it to be, then the
translation will be a simple one, and we may have some answers within a
quarter-day.:
"Really?" Firesong's eyebrows rose.
:Mind you, this is likely to be the only case where the
translation will be so easy,: Tarrn cautioned, :And that is only because I am familiar with
similar devices used by our gryphons. I think this is probably an improvement
on those devices, allowing visions as well as thoughts and—: He stopped,
and shook his head until his ears flapped. :—and we really ought to just see
for ourselves before I make too big a liar of myself. Shall we?:
Firesong got the notes and spread the pages out on the floor in
one corner of the main chamber. He and the kyree
bent over them in intense concentration, with Lyam taking notes beside them,
and before very long, Tarrn was able to determine that the device was nothing
more than an improvement on something he called a "teleson."
At that point, Silverfox joined them again, and by the time supper
came and went, they had worked out not only the way to activate the devices,
but also how to make more.
Provided, of course, that there were sufficient parts to do so.
There were some esoteric components that needed to be prepared beforehand, and
Firesong wasn't certain whether or not there had been any of those components
among the parts in bins on the workbench. Both Tarrn and Silverfox were of the
opinion that, although the Kaled'a'in could probably make more of these
components eventually, it would take a great deal of trial-and-error to do so,
given the vagaries of the way the language had changed over the centuries.
"Well, let's confine ourselves to activating the two we
have," Firesong said at last, sitting back on his heels and stretching
muscles that had cramped in his shoulders and back. "If they work, then we
can see if we can make a third and get it to work. With communication open back
to Haven, that will give us more than we'd hoped for; open it to Sunhame, and
we're doubly advantaged. We can worry about being able to build more of these
devices from scratch later, when we have the leisure."
"That seems a good plan to me," Silverfox concurred,
rotating his head and neck to stretch out cramps of his own. "Let me go
and get one of the devices and bring it up here, and that way we can actually
test it over a little distance." He looked around. "We'll need someone
with Mindspeech up here. That would be Tarrn, I suppose."
:That seems reasonable,: the kyree said
agreeably. :We will also need a mage—Sejanes, perhaps—to activate it.:
"And I'll go down to the workshop and activate and man the
other device down there," Firesong said, getting to his feet. He and
Silverfox descended the stairs down into the workshop; Silverfox took one of
the two devices from the bench and carried it carefully up the staircase again.
The instructions for activation had been quite unambiguous and
equally simple, phrased in language that not even the passage of time had
altered. Even a child, had he both true-magic and Mindspeech, would have been
able to follow the instructions. It was obvious from the notes now that the
reason these devices had not been put into use by Urtho was that anyone could
"eavesdrop" on conversations held with their aid. That rather negated
their value in a time of war. Urtho's notes had made it very clear that Ma'ar
had many folks Gifted with Mindspeech in his ranks, and that he used it as he
would any other tool.
Firesong only hoped that communications sent through these
telesons would not be forced into the minds of those with Mindspeech; if
that were to be the case, their use would be severely limited. Having to maintain
ordinary shields was one thing; having to put up shields against something like
coercion in order to block these communications out would be very
uncomfortable. And for those who were untrained and unaware of their Gift, it
would be impossible.
I don't want to drive people mad by having them suddenly forced to
listen to strangers talking in their heads!
Well, there was only one way to find out for certain.
A very little magic was needed to help activate the device, and
none to maintain it once it was active. There was nothing for mage-storms to
disrupt; the device took Mindspeech and amplified it, using some resonance of
an arrangement of crystals. The trick was, even those who normally would not be
considered to have Mindspeech would be able to use it also; it only needed one
so Gifted on one of the two telesons in order for the trick to work.
That would mean that Master Levy could talk with one of his fellow
Artificers through the intermediary of a Herald, or a mage so Gifted could
speak with Sejanes, who was not.
Hmm. And if the device isn't urgently needed, young Karal can talk
with Natoli. The idea
delighted him; now and again he had the urge to matchmake, and this was one of
those times. It might be the strangest courtship ever on record, but if it
worked—
Worry about that when you can get this ancient construction to
operate! he scolded
himself, and bent his concentration to doing just that.
A moment later—well, it seemed to be working. So far as he
recalled the notes, it looked as if he had activated it. But—
:FIRESONG?: If
it had been a real voice and not a mindvoice, the shout would have deafened
him. As it was, it was excruciatingly painful!
"Aiii!" he shouted, clapping his hands over his ears,
even though he knew that wasn't going to make a difference.
:Sorry.: That
was a more normal "volume," although there was no sound involved. :Is
that better?:
He didn't recognize the mind-voice; it certainly wasn't Tarrn. It
also "sounded" rather odd, and he couldn't tell why. :Who is
this?: he sent back cautiously, so as not to blast their minds.
:Sejanes. I must say, this is an interesting way to speak.: Firesong blinked for a moment, both to
clear his thoughts and to try to pinpoint just why the mind-voice felt so
strange. The mental images—
Wait, that's it. There are no mental images! There's no emotional
flavor, no images, no leaking over of other thoughts! This is just like
speaking, not like Mindspeech at all.
And that, for those who were not Gifted and not used to sorting
through the wealth of additional information that came along with Mindsent
"words," would be a good thing. :I believe we have a workable Pair
of prototypes,: he sent back with glee.
His elation was matched by the others. After making certain that
both devices were working according to the notes, and that all of the
components were well-seated, the consensus was that they had earned a real
respite.
But before they took that well-earned rest, everyone, Gifted and
not, had a try at the teleson pair. The notes were correct; so long as one of
the operators was Gifted, the result was the same, crisp, clear Mindspeech with
no overtones of anything else. If both were Gifted, then the results were
different; precisely like "normal" Mindspeech. To Firesong's relief,
there was no "spillover" from the devices to those who were Gifted,
although, as Urtho had indicated, the Gifted could "listen in"
with perfect ease when the devices were in use.
Right now, that might be an advantage. It certainly wouldn't hurt
to have more than two people at each Mindsent conference.
Altra had recovered enough from his last Jumps to take the device
to Valdemar immediately, and insisted on doing just that, then and there. He
saw no reason whatsoever to delay, and every reason to make all speed.
:With every mark that passes, it is more difficult to Jump,: he said firmly. :Why wait? It will be
easier to Jump with an inanimate object, but "easier" does not mean
"easy." I want to get this over with!:
There were no dissenting voices, so as soon as the mindmirror
teleson had been wrapped in a cushion of quilts to keep it from any possibility
of damage, Altra left, saying that he thought he would return in four days.
"We'll know if the device still works or if it works at the
distances that Urtho claimed in two days, of course," Sejanes observed as
they all prepared for sleep. Not that any of them really thought he would get
much sleep after all the excitement that day. "In two days he'll be in
Haven, and then it will just be a matter of getting one of the Heralds to try
calling us."
He crept into his own bed—the only one that was a bed, since it
was not possible for him to get into and out of a pallet on the floor.
"Or one of us can call them," Karal pointed out, and
yawned. He was already in his bedroll, with Florian curled up at his back,
taking the place of Altra as a living bedwarmer. "You know, I was really
excited a couple of marks ago and I thought I'd never be able to get to sleep,
but now—" He yawned again, and looked puzzled. "—now it seems as if
this is an anticlimax."
Firesong had the answer to his puzzlement. "Well, we're all
worn out—it's been a very busy day—but there's more to it than that." He
tied up his long hair to keep it from knotting up while he slept.
:Permit the old pessimist,: Need interjected. :It's not an anticlimax, child, it's that
this hasn't been the climax you think it should be. We have a new tool, and
nothing more. If those devices hadn't worked, we would have gone on without
them. We will find the answers here, if there are answers to be found, but the
teleson is not one of those answers, and that is why it feels as if what we
accomplished with them is only a minor addition to our work and not a major
part of it.:
"Ah." Karal's face wore a sober expression of
understanding. "I see what you are saying. We're not at the end of our
work, just the beginning, and it's not even close to the point where we can
celebrate. Well. That's a little disappointing, but at least we haven't fallen
back."
"Exactly," said Firesong. "Which is all the more
reason why you should get a good night's sleep. We'll need everyone in
the morning." He leveled a sober look at Karal. "Especially you. I
think we'll have work enough to make you and Lyam wish there were four of
you."
"I'll be glad to get back to work," Karal said, with a
weak smile, and on that note, Firesong extinguished the lights with a word, and
it was not long before even he was fast asleep.
Five
What is the Shin'a'in saying? Darkwind asked himself, as he watched Duke Tremane trying to make
out careful plans for the time when the mage-storms finally overcame the latest
efforts to stave them off. Ah, I remember. "The best plans never
survive the first engagement with the enemy." How has the Empire done so
well when they insist on having detailed plans for everything?
The three of them sat around a small table in the Grand Duke's
personal quarters, a table currently quite full, what with papers, glasses of
water, and maps strewn across it.
"What do you two think?" Duke Tremane asked, setting
aside the plans he and the Valdemarans had been discussing, and leaning over
the table. As he looked up at them, his gray-brown eyes seemed anxious.
"My scholars haven't been able to unearth any more information about the
Cataclysm, and my mages have not been able to predict anything that these
mage-storms have done."
Elspeth grimaced. "I don't know that much either, I'm
afraid," she replied honestly. She glanced over at Darkwind, who shrugged
slightly.
"I can only tell you of the effects the Cataclysm had,
according to our records and traditions," he told the Grand Duke.
"Those effects were widespread and all-encompassing. All magic was
disrupted, from the Ice-Wall Mountains in the north to the borders of the
Haighlei Empire in the south, and in an equal distance east, and west of what
are now Lake Evendim and the Dhorisha Plains. If any shields survived the
Cataclysm, I am not aware of it, but I must add that the Kaled'a'in groups my
people are descended from had none of the greater mages with them."
"So shields might survive?" Tremane persisted, fiddling
nervously with a pen.
Oh, how he wants to have some way to get his sort of magic back! Now that this area of Hardorn was
buffered from the worst effects of the mage-storms, Tremane had given orders
for some judicious use of magic to take some pressure from scarce
resources—mostly burnables. The barracks and headquarters were all heated and
lit with mage-fires and mage-lights now, and about half the time food was
cooked using mage-fires in the stoves. It did make things more comfortable,
especially in the barracks, which had been heated with dried dung, and were
hardly illuminated at all. But Darkwind and Elspeth could both tell how much
the Grand Duke wanted to be able to use magic for all of the things he was used
to; the only trouble with that idea was that it just wasn't possible to do so.
For one thing, magical energy ran thin and low here; Ancar had depleted it
sorely, and it would take a long time to recover. There was enough for lights
and fires—but not for something more complicated, such as blind scrying, or
creating mage-walls to keep the "boggles" out. For another Hardorn
was only buffered; there were still slight effects, and those were
increasing, a little at a time, with every passing day.
Darkwind spread his hands wide, shaking his long, silverstreaked
hair back over his shoulders as he did so. "That, I cannot tell you. The
people to ask would be the k'Leshya, and they are somewhat difficult to reach
at the moment."
He caught Elspeth's face taking on that slightly vacant look that
meant she was Mindspeaking to Gwena, and he waited for her to say something.
Tremane was always forgetting that Gwena was "present" in spirit, if
not sitting at the same table, and the Companion would hardly forgo a chance to
remind him.
"Gwena says that she can relay an inquiry to Skif's Cymry at
k'Leshya Vale, and get the answer back in a couple of days," Elspeth said,
her dark eyes crinkling at the corners, telling Darkwind that she was holding
back laughter. Gwena had probably said far more than that, probably about
Tremane and his faulty memory, but this was a diplomatic mission and
such things would not be diplomatic to relate. "There are enough mages
there that surely someone will know the answer. And she says if not, then she
can relay on to Florian at the Tower and see if An'desha knows anything."
Not every Companion had that long-distance capability; in fact,
there were only two in all of the world as far as Darkwind knew. One was Gwena,
and the other was Rolan, the Companion of the Queen's Own. They were special;
"Grove-born," the Heralds called it, and claimed that instead of
being physically brought into being in the normal way, they simply appeared,
full-grown, out of a grove in the middle of Companion's Field. They had
unusually powerful abilities in mind-magic, and through most of the history of
Valdemar there had never been more than one Grove-born Companion at once. But
then again, this was, by all accounts both sacred and secular, a crucial point
in the history, not only of Valdemar, but of this entire part of the world, and
if ever there was the need for a second Grove-born Companion, this was the
time.
Tremane chewed on his lip, and ran a hand over the top of his
balding head. "You know," he said cautiously. "The fact that those
weapons they are looking at in the Tower survived at all might indicate that
some shields held, wouldn't it? Surely there were very powerful shields on that
Tower at the time of the Cataclysm."
"And it might only indicate that things at the heart of the
Cataclysm had some natural protection, like things in the eye of a
whirlwind," Elspeth reminded him, twisting a silver-threaded chestnut curl
around one finger. "I wouldn't count on that. I also wouldn't count on any
of us, singly or together, being able to replicate shields created by the mages
who lived back then. These were people capable of creating living
beings—gryphons, basilisks, wyrsa—and I don't know of anyone living now who
would even attempt such a thing."
Darkwind cleared his throat softly to regain their attention.
"To get back to your question about the effects of the original
Cataclysm—afterward, the natural flows of magic energy in those areas changed
completely, and we can only assume that the same thing will happen again. And
as for the physical world—well, we Hawkbrothers are still healing the damage
that was created in the wake of the original Storms. If you think the monsters
that you've seen so far are bad, wait until there are hundreds, thousands of
them, when the number of warped and changed creatures equals or exceeds the
number of normal creatures." He drummed his fingers on the table for a
moment as he made some quick calculations. "To give you an idea, it has
taken us something like two thousand years to clear an area approximately half
the size of your Empire of dangerous creatures and even more dangerous
magic."
Tremane brooded over his stack of paper for a moment. "So
your suggestion would be...?"
Elspeth and Darkwind exchanged another look, and it was Darkwind
who replied. "If our group at the Tower can't do anything—warn everyone
you can reach, create what shields and shelters you can, assume that they won't
hold, and endure. Make your plans after you see what the effects are this
time."
The Duke made a sour face, but did not respond. Elspeth tried some
sympathy.
"Duke Tremane, I know this is difficult for you, but at least
you are in command of an area in which much of the magical energy has been
drained away, and which never relied on magic to get things done in the first
place," she pointed out. "You can count on most buildings staying up,
most bridges standing firm, count on fires heating your barracks as they always
have, candles lighting the darkness, and food cooking properly in a well-made
oven. Hardorn is prepared for everything except what the final Storm will do to
the physical world—and in a way, you can even prepare for that, simply by
knowing what the last Cataclysm did."
Tremane sighed, and rubbed one temple with his fingers. "Yes,
I know this, and I also know that this is not going to be the case in the
Empire. Things were falling to pieces so badly that when I mounted my raid on
that Imperial warehouse complex, the men there hadn't heard from their
superiors in weeks, and now—I can't even imagine the state of chaos the Empire
must be in. It's just that things were difficult for us before, and the one
comfort I had was that I couldn't envision them getting any worse. Now I have
to, and plan for it, somehow."
Elspeth shook her head emphatically. "You can't plan for this,
Tremane. All you can do is to warn people of what they might expect, and
put things in place that will give you information once the worst happens. The
signal-towers, for one thing. They work almost as well as Companions, and you
ought to make it a priority to get them manned by people who know how to use
them. You ought to make it a priority to get more of them in place if it is at
all possible! If every little village had a tower, the way every village has
access to a Herald, you'd be able to get help to people long before a messenger
could have reached you."
Darkwind nodded. "Don't plan for specific events; doing that
will inevitably prove to be an exercise in futility."
"Plan for flexibility, you mean?" The Duke considered
that for a moment, and nodded. "All right, I can see that." Then he
sighed. "And plan for communication, put ways of bringing in information
in place while we still can. That's good, as long as the trouble spots are
places where there are still people living. But if they aren't, there could be
a nest of something brewing, some monstrous creatures, say, and we wouldn't
know about it until the creatures had wiped out an entire town. Maybe not even
then."
He rubbed his forehead, and Darkwind saw the shadow of physical
pain in his eyes, in the tense muscles of his homely face. "I just wish
there was a way to watch the land," he said fretfully. "I used to be
able to get my mages to scry entire stretches of countryside, and that's what
I'd give my arm to have working again."
Darkwind exchanged another look with Elspeth. :What do you
think? This is the best opening he's ever given us.:
:If we can make him believe in earth-sense,: she replied, with some pessimism. :Still,
you're right. It isn't just the best opening, it's the only opening he's ever
given us.:
:You, or me?: he
asked.
:Me first, just to open the subject. I'm the local royalty, the
local Herald, and the local expert in mind-magic. I could be expected to know
about these things, and know if the Hardornens were just making something up.
You pick up if you see an opening to insert something you know.:
He folded his hands on the table in front of him as she cleared
her throat. "Duke Tremane," she said, "I may have a solution to
that particular problem, and oddly enough it is a part of a proposition that
the Hardornens outside your domain wanted me to make to you on their
behalf." She smiled apologetically. "I think you probably were
anticipating that the loyalists might ask us to serve as their envoys as well
as envoys for the Alliance. We promised we would put their proposal before you
at an opportune time, but we promised nothing else; that seemed harmless
enough."
He looked up sharply, and a little suspiciously. "A
proposition? What sort of proposition?"
Elspeth bit her lip and looked down at her strong, well-muscled
hands for a moment. They were hardly the hands of a pampered princess, and
Darkwind had a suspicion that Tremane had noticed this. "Well... it's a
rather interesting one. It seems that they've been watching how you manage things
here, and you've frankly impressed them. There seems to be a general consensus
that under certain very specific circumstances, they would not only be happy to
arrange a truce with you, but they would be willing to offer you the crown of
Hardorn itself."
He looked as if she had hit him in the back of the head with a
board. It was the first time he had ever actually shown surprise. "The crown?
They'd make me their King? What about their own claimants?"
"There aren't any," Darkwind said crisply. "Ancar was
very thorough when it came to eliminating rivals. We were told that there
weren't even any claimants on the distaff side; apparently he didn't in the
least see any reason to exclude his female relatives from the purges, nor
children, nor even infants. From all anyone can tell, he went back to the
fourth and fifth remove of the cousins. By the time he was finished, well, you
have as much right to the throne as any of the natives, that's how thin the
royal connections are."
We learned most of that when we were here last, but I don't think
it would be politic to mention that little trip.
Tremane didn't exactly pale, but he did look a little shocked.
"And I thought that politics in the Empire were cutthroat," he
murmured, as if to himself. Then he blinked, and collected himself. "So,
just what are these specific circumstances you were talking about? And
how will all this give me intelligence about what is happening to the
land?"
Elspeth toyed with her glass of water. "This is where I am
going to have to ask you to stretch your imagination a bit, Tremane," she replied. "You know
that mind-magic exists, now that you've seen the members of our party use
it."
He nodded cautiously.
"You also have your own Healers who use Healing magic, which
is similar to, but not identical with, mind-magic," she continued,
"And you know that neither are affected by the mage-storms which are
disrupting what we in Valdemar call true-magic."
"I'm following you so far," Tremane said with a nod.
"'Well, as near as we can tell, there is another form of
magic which is like mind-magic and like Healing-magic, but isn't
exactly either of them," she told him, leaning forward earnestly.
"It's called earth-magic, and it seems to have entirely to do with the
land, the health of the land, and restoring that health. We think that's what
hedge-wizards and earth-witches use, rather than true-magic; people who are
trained in those disciplines—so they tell me—also refer to their power as
earth-magic, and they call what you and Darkwind and I are accustomed to using
by the name of high-magic."
:Right. So you tell him about Hawkbrother Healing Adepts while I
figure out how to segue this into the earth-binding ritual.:
Darkwind nodded very slightly and caught up the conversational
ball. "We Tayledras have specialized Adepts, called Healing Adepts, who
have the ability to sense the poisoned places, the places where magic has made
things go wrong, and fix them again," he told Tremane, who was sitting
back in his chair with an odd expression that Darkwind could not read.
"And if you need evidence of how well this works, it is in the fact that
we have restored so much of the land to the pre-Cataclysm days. The special
ability that makes this possible—Elspeth's people would call it a Gift—is
something we all call the earth-sense."
"It's not just Tayledras Healing Adepts and earth-witches
that use this. Both the King of Rethwellan and my stepfather Prince Daren have
earth-sense, in fact," she said, taking the narrative back. "It seems
that the Gift has always been in the Rethwellan royal line. They haven't needed
it for generations, but it's obvious how useful it is when you know that even
though Daren was not familiar with Hardorn and not ritually tied to the land
here, he could still sense what Ancar had done to it when he came here
to help Valdemar drive Ancar out. That actually proved to be of tactical value,
since it gave us an idea of where Ancar was finding all the power he
needed."
Tremane nodded, his brows knitted intently, and seized on the
phrase that they had both hoped he would. "Ritually tied to the
land?" he asked. "Just what does that mean?"
"The monarchs of Rethwellan—and I presume, of Hardorn—have
always taken part in a very old ritual known as earth-binding," she
told him. "Because we in Valdemar do not have that particular ritual, I
can't even begin to tell you how it works, or why, but when it is over, every
major injury or change to the land is instantly sensed by the monarch. Ancar
obviously never participated in that ritual, or he could not have done the
things he did—I suspect that, as in Rethwellan, the earth-binding is part of
the Hardornen private rites that take place just before the public coronation.
Ancar crowned himself, without the usual rituals, so—" She shrugged.
"My stepfather says that those who even have earth-sense latently can have
it aroused by such a rite."
"The point here is that the people of Hardorn have found some
of the priests of the old ways who know that ritual," Darkwind continued,
as she glanced at him to cue him to take up the narrative. "They
think that if you were to be tested for earth-sense and had it even latently,
that would qualify you for the Hardornen crown. And if you were to undergo the
earth-binding ritual, thus awakening the earth-sense and binding you to Hardorn,
you would be a—a safe monarch for Hardorn, because you would be unable
to harm, abuse, or misuse your land the way Ancar did."
"Because harming the land would hurt me." He lifted one
eyebrow skeptically.
:Is he going to laugh?: Elspeth sounded dubious, and Darkwind didn't blame her. This was
such a primitive, unsophisticated concept—for someone from the Eastern Empire,
so sophisticated in the ways of magic that its power was used for practically
everything, this must seem incredibly savage and crude.
But he didn't laugh, and in fact, he seemed to be thinking the
concept over. "Can you tell me anything else about this earth-sense? Just
what does it entail? How do you learn to use it."
"Among my people, it isn't very complicated," Darkwind
told him. "You don't so much learn to use it as you learn to keep it from
using you. It's rather like Empathy in a way, or extremely strong Mindspeech.
You actually learn how to shut it out so that it doesn't affect you all the
time."
"Interesting. I can see how it would be inconvenient to be
affected adversely by the very condition you are attempting to remedy."
His brows creased in thought. "And does it go the other way? Does the
physical condition of the King affect the land?"
"Havens, no!" Elspeth exclaimed. "For one thing,
the King is not exactly as—as monumental as a country! It would be like a flea
stepping on a horse. For another, it's only a sense, like the sense of smell,
and..." She trailed off in confusion as Darkwind shook his head.
"I hate to have to contradict Elspeth, but that's not
entirely true, Duke Tremane," he said, feeling the need to be totally
frank. "Under certain very specific circumstances, the health of the King
who is bound to the land can affect the land. He can, in fact, sacrifice
himself—give up his own life—to restore the land to its former health. This is
something that my people know, and that the Shin'a'in not only know, but have
even, very rarely, practiced. I must also say, however, that I personally do
not believe that the Hardornens ever practiced that form of earth-binding. As
with all crafts, there are scores, even hundreds or thousands of ways to do
them, and nothing that they told us gave me any indication that they even know
such a possibility exists. And I must also point out that to be valid, to have
any chance of working, the sacrifice must be a self-sacrifice, entirely
voluntary—and indeed eagerly sought by the sacrificial victim." He managed
a thin smile. "Hauling one's King to the stone of sacrifice and spilling
his blood upon the ground only serves as a sort of gruesome fertilizer to the
local grass; it won't change anything else without that will to be
sacrificed."
Tremane's brows crept halfway up his forehead as Darkwind imparted
that choice bit of information, but he made no comment. After a moment, he
stood up.
"I'd like to go think about this for a little," he said.
"I assume you have a way of contacting someone if I make a decision?"
"I can find a contact,: Gwena said firmly in both their minds.
"We do," Elspeth told him.
"Then give me—about a mark," he replied. "I'll send
for you, if you have no objections."
Since it had been a very long time since breakfast, and this would
provide an excellent excuse to send their Imperial aide in search of food,
Darkwind had no objections whatsoever, and neither did Elspeth. With a polite
exchange of bows, they retired to their own quarters, leaving him sitting back
in his chair, staring at the ducal ring on his finger, clearly deep in thought.
They were about halfway through a solid, if uninspired meal of
bread and cold sliced meat and pickles, when Gwena announced that she had found
the contact she had promised. :Go to the Hanging Goose Tavern after dark,:
she told Darkwind. :It will have to be you, since I don't think that Elspeth
would be welcome in this particular tavern, and if there are two of you, he
might suspect a trap.:
Elspeth exchanged a wry glance with Darkwind and shrugged,
applying herself to her food.
:You want to speak to the bartender who dispenses the beer, not
the one who handles the harder drinks,: she continued. :You tell him, "I drink my beer very
cold." He is supposed to reply, "That's an odd habit," and you
say, "I picked it up in the West." He'll nod and ask you what your
message is. He has a perfect memory, he'll pass it on word for word. If Tremane
decides to take the gamble, I suspect you'll have your delegation, priest
included, within a few days. Maybe sooner. They might have moved someone into a
village nearby, hoping you would be able to offer him the proposition soon
after we arrived."
"I rather suspected that the loyalists had agents in the
city," Elspeth said, as she ate the last bite. "I couldn't imagine
how they knew so much about him just from 'hearing things.' But this sounds as
if the network has been well in place for some time. It takes a long time to
find someone with a perfect memory who is trustworthy enough to act as a
message drop. It makes me wonder if this tavern wasn't a contact point for...
other things." She smiled suggestively at Darkwind.
He chuckled. "I am just a poor Hawkbrother scout with no
knowledge of you city dwellers and your ways," he protested. "What
other things?"
"Smuggling, maybe. Possibly intriguing against Ancar. And
I'll bet the reason Gwena doesn't want me to go there is not because I wouldn't
be welcome alone there either." She grinned at something Gwena said only
to her. "I thought so." She reached out and patted Darkwind's hand.
"The ladies working in this tavern will be selling more than just strong
drink and food, my poor, uncivilized Hawkbrother. I suggest that you make it
very clear to them that you aren't interested in their wares, or you might
bring something inconvenient and uncomfortable home with you that would require
a Healer's help to clear up."
He grinned back at her, and was trying to think of a clever retort
when Tremane's aide came to fetch them.
The Grand Duke was waiting for them when they arrived, looking no
different than when they had left him. They took their seats and waited for him
to speak.
"Frankly, I am not entirely convinced that this earth-sense
you told me about really exists," he said after a moment. "'And I
honestly do not think, if it exists, that I happen to have it. It just seems
all too very pat and too coincidental that out of all the people who might have
been sent here, I would happen to have this sense which is needed at
this particular time." He frowned a little. "It's rather too much
like something a tale-seller might make up."
"Possibly," Darkwind replied. "But you might
consider it before you dismiss this proposition out-of-hand. If you take as
your premise that earth-sense does exist, and that the extreme form of it could
only be... induced, let us say... by this ritual, then the lesser, or latent
forms would be very useful to anyone who was in a position to rule even a small
area. Having such a thing could explain why some landowners are more successful
at managing their property than others—why some landowners have an uncanny
ability to gauge what is going on with their property and people, and why some
have remarkable hunches that always prove correct."
"I can see that," Tremane acknowledged.
"So, given that, it is logical to assume that those
landowners whose lines were so Gifted would be more prosperous than others.
would accumulate more property, and would eventually rise to higher and higher
positions of power over the many generations," Darkwind persisted.
"And in short, it would actually be logical to assume that a man who had
been a ruler of property or even a King would be so Gifted, because his
predecessors could not have prospered so well without it."
Tremane laughed out loud; it was the first time that Darkwind had
ever heard him laugh, and he liked the sound of it. He often judged aspects of
peoples' character by their laughter; Tremane's laugh was open, generous, and
not at all self-conscious.
"I think that if you had not been born among the
Hawkbrothers, you would have become a diplomat, a courtier, or a priest, Master
Darkwind," he said finally. "You certainly can turn a fine argument.
Now, hear me out, if you please."
Darkwind and Elspeth both nodded, and Tremane set forth his own
reasoning.
"You must know, and they must know, that with or
without this earth-sense, if my men and I can recreate order here—as we
already have done, you might note—people will come to my banner without the
title attached to it. That is the great secret of Imperial success. We wait
until a land is disorganized and demoralized, and then we move in, offering
peace, order, and prosperity. Usually people welcome us. Then, when they see
the high level that Imperial prosperity represents, word spreads, and the lands
we move on generally are half-conquered before the Army itself ever reaches
them."
"That makes rather too much sense," Elspeth put in
dryly.
He nodded his acknowledgment and continued, tapping his index
finger on the table to emphasize each point. "You must make it very clear
to these people that no matter what happens, I intend to go on holding this
particular piece of Hardorn from now on, for myself, my men, and those
Hardornens who have accepted my rule and my order without any of this
earth-binding business."
"I think they are already well aware of that, Tremane,"
she answered just as frankly. "But I will make sure that arrangement is
openly acknowledged on both sides. To be honest with you, there is no way that
you can be dislodged with the few resources these Hardornen loyalists have at
their command. That would take an army. The only armies large enough are those
commanded by the Allies, and we are here representing the Allies in a gesture
of peace and goodwill, so I don't think you need concern yourself about losing
your hold on this place."
"Good. just so that we're all clear on that." He toyed
with a corner of a piece of paper for a moment. "I can't say that I really
care for the idea of subjecting myself to this ritual. It all sounds terribly
primitive, somehow. But perhaps even if I don't believe I have this so-called
earth-sense, the priest will be convinced that I do, and will let me go through
with this ritual even if it is meaningless. Frankly, if that happens, it would
be the easiest and quickest way to get all of Hardorn under my wing, and it
would be done with absolutely no bloodshed." He smiled; an oddly shy smile,
and Darkwind had the feeling that it was a rare smile, as if Tremane had even
less to smile about than to laugh about. "How could I possibly turn away
that kind of opportunity?"
"In your position, I certainly would not," Darkwind told
him. "Well, is that the whole of your message?"
Tremane nodded. "And if you'll excuse me, I have matters
regarding my men to see to. My aide can escort you back to your quarters, and
if there is anywhere in the city you need to go, he can give you the proper
directions."
:That won't be necessary,: Gwena said.
"Thank you," Darkwind replied, without giving any
indication that he would take Tremane up on his offer.
Once again, after a polite exchange of bows, they departed for
their own quarters. Elspeth had a thoughtful look on her face, but waited until
they were alone again before saying anything.
She stood with her back to the cast-iron-and-brick stove holding
the mage-fire, warming herself at it. A real fire also burned on the hearth,
and between the two, their rooms were as comfortable as any in Valdemar. But
the hallways of this fortified manor were still cold, despite the addition of
such stoves, and they both tended to get chilled going from their quarters to
Tremane's.
There was no doubt that this was one of the worst winters that
Hardorn had ever experienced, even without the effect of the magestorms. The
main difference in the weather now that the mage-storms had abated, according
to their aide, was that now there were only snowstorms, not killing blizzards,
every two weeks or so. With the incredible blanket of snow covering the ground,
the sun couldn't even begin to melt it before another layer fell.
The modified Heralds' Whites that the hertasi had designed for her seemed particularly well-suited to the
icy landscape outside. He wondered what the Imperial soldiers thought when they
saw her; did they believe that her costume was meant to reflect the season, as
Tayledras scout gear did?
"You know," Elspeth said finally, in Tayledras.
"This situation has some interesting parallels in the history of
Valdemar—the Founding, specifically."
"Oh?" Darkwind joined her, hands outstretched to the
warm stove, wishing that there was something like a Hawkbrother hot spring or
soaking pool about. It never seemed possible to be entirely warm except in bed.
He responded in the same language. "I wasn't aware of that."
"'Well, Valdemar was fleeing the Empire rather than serving
it when he and his followers trekked out in this direction, but when he got to
the point where Haven is now and started building, he actually built beside an
existing village," Elspeth replied, turning to face the stove and rubbing
her hands together. "The locals there were not entirely thrilled with
having a foreign power moving in, although they never actually opposed him. But
once they saw the advantages of coming under his protection—and the way in
which his own followers were treated—they began to act the way the Hardornens
are with Tremane. And eventually, of course, they insisted that he call himself
a King." She chuckled. "That was really rather funny; it seemed that
every little petty ruler for leagues in every direction was calling himself a
'King,' and his own people were embarrassed to be led by a mere Baron. They had
a crown made up, called in a priest to concoct a ceremony, and had him crowned
before he had a chance to object. I gather that he was rather startled by it
all."
Darkwind laughed. "That may be the first time I've ever heard
of someone being tricked into becoming a King," he responded. "But
you're right, I do see the parallels there."
She stared at the stove, frowning. "I think we can assume
that Tremane is going to be offered the Crown, no matter what."
"I think that is a foregone conclusion, yes,
lover"" Dark wind admitted. "Even if he doesn't have earth-sense,
the priest may perform the binding anyway, just to make him eligible. I think
he was right about that."
She sighed and nodded. "The next question may be how we
arrange for there to be the same cheeks on the King of Hardorn that there are
on the Son of the Sun, the King of Rethwellan, and the Queen of Valdemar.
Solaris has to answer to Vkandis, Faram has both the earth-binding and his
family's sword to contend with, and Selenay has her Companion." She chewed
her lip. "Then again—we may already have those checks partially in place.
Solaris did curse him with speaking only the truth, after all."
"Yes, but not the whole truth," he reminded her.
"There are ways of lying simply by not telling all of the
truth."
She grimaced, and turned away from the warmth to pace the room as
she often did when she was thinking. "You may think I'm going mad, but I'm
beginning to agree with young Karal; I think this man has a basically good
nature. That entire interview about the assassins when we first arrived...."
Darkwind nodded, for he had come away with the same impression out
of that interview; that Tremane was a man who would bear the dreadful burden of
indirectly ordering the deaths of innocent people, and he would feel guilt
about that for the rest of his life. Real guilt, not feigned. And it
didn't matter that he had good reason at the time for his actions; what
mattered was that he himself had changed over the course of these several
months. What had been acceptable to him before no longer was.
But Darkwind also was aware that the man could be a very good
actor. Most rulers were, to a greater or lesser extent.
"I still have some reservations," he said after a
moment. "What occurred in the past is immutable. He has done terrible
things to us, and without any provocation. Perhaps he has regrets now. but I
find myself wondering if he might not revert to his old ways under
pressure."
She sighed. :I think we'd better continue this conversation in
a way that can't be overheard,: she cautioned.
:Good idea. Sejanes had some magical way of learning Valdemaran
and other tongues; there might be someone else here who can do the same thing.: Granted, there might not be enough
mage-energy for them to do so. but why take the chance? :We Tayledras are
more suspicious than any other race, I think, but I wish I knew if it was
Tremane's better nature that had been subverted by the expediency of the
Empire, or his expedient nature that has chosen to disguise itself as a good
heart for—well—!:
:He's in a position to do everyone more good than harm right now,: Gwena pointed out, joining the
conversation.
:Gwena's right; and in fact, that's exactly what he has done,: Elspeth seconded. :Look at his record:
granted, he coopted the best structure in the area for his headquarters, but
other than that, he lives a relatively lean life for someone who is basically
the uncrowned king of this area. He eats exactly the same food as his men, he
isn't wasting precious resources on extravagant entertainments for his own
benefit; in fact, he's pouring a lot of those resources back into the community
here. He never asks his men to do anything he wouldn't, and he's usually out
there leading them in person.:
:He thinks first of his men, then of the local folk, then of their
land and their beasts, and then of himself,: Gwena put in. :That is the pattern that I'm seeing, and
honestly, while some of that might be expediency, it can't all be explained by
that.:
Darkwind chuckled. :I'm glad he's not handsome; I'd be jealous.
He's managed to seduce both my ladies away from me.:
Elspeth picked up an inkstand and pretended to throw it at him; he
ducked.
:Consider yourself kicked,: Gwena retorted.
:Honestly,
ke'chara, I would like to give him the chance to prove himself, and the way
he handles the next crisis—which is going to be very, very bad, I think—will
tell us what he's really made of," Elspeth replied.
Darkwind chewed on that thought a while before replying, wondering
if they were all making a terrible mistake. He wanted to believe in Tremane,
and in the idea that the man was finally allowing himself to behave in a moral
fashion rather than a calculated one. How must it have felt, to spend most of
one's life having to plot each and every action without regard to whether or
not it was ethically right? If he himself had been in that position, he'd have
been driven mad.
:All right,: he
said at last, :but I have one proviso.: His jaw tensed as he hardened
his mind. :If he proves treacherous, and a danger to the Alliance—if he is
going to cost more lives—we take care of the situation ourselves.:
:You mean, kill him.: Elspeth nodded, very slowly. :I don't like it—but I don't want
another Ancar, much less another Falconsbane. He's used to using magic, and it
would be very tempting to resort to the blood-path to get the power he's used
to having.: She shivered, and so did he; they had both seen far too much of
the results of that path. :We've done this before, and I'd rather the blood
were on our hands, I suppose, than find that even more innocent blood had been
spilled.:
It was a nasty moral trap; when was murder acceptable? But that
was the moral trap that the Tayledras had always been in. Darkwind himself had
faced it many times—warning trespassers three times, and assuming that if they
did not heed the warning, they were in Hawkbrother lands for evil purposes. How
many would-be enslavers of tervardi and hertasi, mages hunting for yet more power for the wrong purposes,
and would-be murderers of Hawkbrothers had he eliminated over the years? Enough
that he had lost count.
Elspeth only had a handful of deaths on her conscience, but she
was prepared to add another if the need was there.
:And with any luck, we'll all discover that our pessimism is
unfounded,: Gwena said
cheerfully. :I'll tell you what; I will see if I can tell whether or not
Tremane has earth-sense, while you make contact with the loyalists. Darkwind,
my dear, we need to rummage through your wardrobe and find something in it that
will not scream foreigner to every person in the town.:
:What do you mean, we, horse?: he asked her.
Darkwind found his messenger—and Gwena's careful probe of Duke
Tremane uncovered only a verdict of "maybe." Four days later, their
aide knocked tentatively on the door to their quarters just after they'd
finished breakfast. "Excuse me, Envoys?" he said, when Darkwind
opened the door to him. "I don't want to interrupt, but there's a
religious gentleman below who says that you called for him?"
Elspeth turned in surprise. Despite Gwena's assurance, she hadn't
really expected an answer to their message this quickly. The man really must
have been fairly close by; that argued for certainty on the part of the
Hardornens that they had made Tremane an offer he would find irresistible.
"We have been expecting him, Jem," Darkwind told the
young man. "We just didn't know when he would arrive. If you are
reasonably sure that it is safe to do so, please show him the way up.
Otherwise, if you are not happy with a potential breach of security, we can
arrange to meet him in the town."
Jem flushed. "Oh, no. He's just an old man—it won't cause any
problems. I just didn't know if you wanted to be bothered with him, if he might
be a charlatan or—" He flushed even redder, realizing that he might have
inadvertently insulted all of them.
"That's fine, Jem. Please show him here, and arrange for
something hot for all of us to drink. And perhaps more food, he might not have
broken his own fast yet," Elspeth said, in her kindest tones.
The aide bowed a little, still red with embarrassment, and left
quickly. Tremane's aides were far more used to military situations than to the
diplomatic ones they now found themselves hip-deep in. Elspeth found it rather
charming, actually; military men were, in general, much easier to deal with and
much more straightforward than civilians.
The old man and the second breakfast arrived at the same time;
Elspeth privately thought that she wasn't too surprised Jem had taken him for a
possible charlatan. There was nothing at all remarkable about him. His hair,
gray and a touch on the shaggy side, looked as if he had not put a scissors to
it lately. His build was that of a long-time clerk whose parents may have been
merchants or tradesmen of modest means. His face, square, with a small beard,
was lined with care, yet had smile-creases bracketing his mouth and eyes. His
robes and cloak were clean and serviceable, but hardly impressive, he wore no
liturgical jewels, and his manner was unassuming and cheerful. All of which, in
her experience, meant that he was probably a very good priest; good
priest, like good leaders, gave more to their followers than they kept for
themselves, and were not particularly conscious of appearances.
They introduced themselves and offered the old man, who called
himself Father Janas, their hospitality. As Elspeth had anticipated, he hadn't
eaten, and he applied himself to the food with a hearty appetite. They kept
conversation to a minimum until he had finished; once he had taken his cloak
off, it was fairly obvious that, like most Hardornens, he had been sharing in
the hard times. He wasn't emaciated, but he was thin enough that he had
probably been on the same short rations as his followers.
"Oh, that was lovely," he said at last, when he had
finished, and leaned back in his chair cradling a cup of hot tea laden with
honey. "I'm afraid that my besetting sin is that I cannot resist good
food." He laughed. "Since we are supposed to be concentrating on the
spiritual world rather than the secular world, I suspect I shall be chided for
my failing sooner or later by those to whom I must answer."
Darkwind smiled at that. "I would rather say that you were
showing proper joy and respect for the bounty of the earth," Darkwind
replied, and the old priest chuckled, a twinkle in his eyes.
"Well, shall we deal with the reason that I am here, rather
than engage in rationalizing my shortcomings" he asked, after taking a sip
of his tea. "As I assume you suppose, I have come to test Duke
Tremane for earth-sense, which will mean that I will awake it if it is there;
and once I have done so, I will bind him to Hardorn. Now, nothing I have been
vouch-safed has given me any indication that he does or does not have the
Sense, and I am quite sure that he has no idea what is going to happen,
do either of you?"
Elspeth shook her head. "We don't use that Gift in Valdemar,
or, rather, if we do, it isn't used by Heralds, Bards, or Healers. And those
are the only ones whose training I'm familiar with," she said. "My
stepfather has it, but we've never discussed it much, and he was never
formally bound to Valdemar. I've heard of other latent Gifts being awakened as
a theoretical possibility, but no one in my lifetime has ever tried such a
thing."
Darkwind shrugged, as the priest turned to him. "The
Tayledras Healing Adepts all develop earth-sense along with their other
abilities," he replied. "It doesn't come on them all at once, and if
anyone has it latently, we've never bothered to awaken it. I haven't any idea
how someone would react in such a circumstance."
Father Janas raised an eyebrow. "It can be rather dramatic,"
he said cautiously. "Assuming that one has it latently, rather than having
a very weak version of the Sense, that is. We have always conducted this
particular ceremony several days before the actual coronation of our kings,
precisely because of that. It sometimes takes the recipient a good deal of time
to get used to his new ability, if heretofore it has only been latent and when
actuated proves to be very strong."
Elspeth nodded. "Rather like suddenly being able to see, I
suppose," she offered. "Well, that is all very well in theory—but you
are here to put theory into practice. How soon would you care to see Duke
Tremane? Are there any preparations you would like to make, any vestments you
need to change into before you are presented?"
Father Janas smoothed down the front of his robe self-consciously.
"Much as I wish I could present a more impressive picture, I am afraid
that I am wearing my best—indeed, my only vestments." He licked his lips
and looked apologetic. "Ancar did not persecute priests and clerics
directly, but he found many ways of doing so indirectly. I do not think you
will find a single religious organization in all of Hardorn surviving at better
than a subsistence level, and many simply vanished altogether as old members
died and no new ones came to replace them." He shook his head sadly.
"At any rate, it is all moot; I have no preparations to make, and I should
prefer to see the Duke as soon as possible, as soon as he has the time
free."
Darkwind rose to request their aide to take a message to the Duke.
Elspeth had some other ideas, however.
She wrote a short note while Darkwind was talking with Jem, and
asked the aide to take the message down to Tremane's chief of supply on his way
back from delivering their request for an audience to the Duke. Jem looked
baffled, but agreed; he was obviously not going to question why the envoy
wanted to send a note to the supply sergeant.
"Just what are you up to?" Darkwind asked her, as they
closed the door behind his retreating back and returned to their guest.
Elspeth seated herself before replying. "Tremane told me that
he and his men had virtually gutted an entire Imperial warehouse complex,"
she told him, as well as their guest. "Now, given how the Empire likes to
regiment things, even though there is no official Imperial religion, I
am betting that somewhere among all the uniforms brought back are at least a
few standard imperial Army Chaplains' robes, or something of that nature. And
I'm also betting that they look pretty much like every other priest's robes
I've ever seen, precisely because an Imperial Army Chaplain would have to be
able to conduct the rites of several religions, hence the uniform robe will be
as bland and as general as possible."
"I follow your reasoning so far," Darkwind said, still
puzzled. "But why should the supply sergeant let us have one of these
uniforms, if they exist?"
She grinned. "I've been talking to the townsfolk. I know that
it is Tremane's standard procedure to sell anything in stores that is not
immediately useful to his soldiers if a civilian wants to buy it. You'll find a
lot of townsfolk outfitted in surplused uniforms of some of the odder auxiliary
disciplines, if you know what to look for. I asked specifically if I could
purchase a set of chaplain's robes if there are any, and asked him to send them
up as soon as he found them." She turned to the priest, who was a little
flushed. "We'll have plenty of time to alter them into something
approximating your own vestments before Tremane has time to see us."
Father Janas looked even more embarrassed. "Really, that's
too good of you—"
She interrupted him with a cautionary hand. "You're being
generous and forgiving; I know that this was a bit high-handed of me. But we
may be more anxious to settle this than you are, and I'd prefer not to leave
anything to chance. The Grand Duke isn't even certain that he believes
earth-sense exists; I suspect his attitude is more that he is humoring us than
anything else. We all want him to agree to go through with something he already
considers to be mummery, and we want him to agree to do it now. The better the
impression your appearance will make on him, the more likely he is to do
that."
Darkwind nodded thoughtfully. "Actually," he put in,
"using an Imperial uniform may serve us better than if you had come with
your own vestments. He has lived with the chaplains. He is going to respect the
uniform and what it represents without realizing he is primed to do so."
Father Janas uttered a faint laugh in self-deprecation.
"Well, it is certainly true that most people rely on one's outward
appearance for their impressions, and I am afraid my appearance is hardly
likely to inspire confidence."
His admission only deepened his obvious embarrassment, and
Darkwind quickly changed the subject to that of the conditions over most of
Hardorn. The priest was only too willing to talk about the hardships people all
over the country had and were suffering, and the spirit with which they were
enduring those hardships.
"Everything you saw as you journeyed here is representative
of conditions everywhere in this land," he said, with real sadness.
"People are not starving, but they are hungry. They are not freezing to
death, but they are cold. There is not a single soul in this country that did
not lose at least one member of his family to unnatural death in the last five
years, and as you saw, entire towns and villages have been emptied. Temples and
other places of worship are deserted, or tended by a few old men like myself.
Worst of all, we have lost most of a generation of young men, and no matter how
much better things become, how can we possibly replace them? Who will be the
parents of our next generation of citizens?"
There are several thousand young men, none of whom will ever be
able to return to the Empire, camped right here, Elspeth thought. And most of them
would be perfectly happy to become the parents of the next generation of
Hardornens. I wonder if he's thought of that—I know Tremane has.
At length Jem returned with the answer from Duke Tremane, he would
be free immediately after lunch to receive the priest, and if necessary, could
clear a good portion of the afternoon for the interview.
"That would be wise," Father Janas said, as Darkwind
deferred to him. "Please return, tell him this would be very much to my
liking, and ask him to do so."
Jem went back with the reply. Not long after he left, one of the
many locals who had been hired to run errands within the Imperial complex
arrived with a large, neat package and a handwritten bill. Elspeth accepted
both, made a face at the mildly extortionate price the supply officer was
charging, but rummaged in her belt-pouch for the correct number of silver coins
anyway. They were Valdemaran rather than Hardornen or Imperial, but the price
had been quoted in silver-weight and not a specific coinage. Given the
circumstances, she doubted that anyone would care whose face was stamped on
them so long as the weight was true. Those she sent back with the errand boy,
as Darkwind handed the package over to Father Janas.
Just as she had suspected, the official uniform of an Imperial
Chaplain was, once the rainbow of specific accoutrements for various religions
and liturgical events were set aside, virtually identical in cut to the
threadbare robe Father Janas already wore; it was even a very similar gray in
color. He retired to the next room to change, and returned looking much
trimmer.
Darkwind surveyed him with a critical eye. "Just what form
does your deity—or deities—take?" he asked the priest. "Forgive me,
but I think we need to make you look a little more impressive."
The priest looked confused but answered readily enough. "The
Earth-father and Sky-mother are usually represented by the colors green and
blue, and by a circle or sphere that is half white and half black, but—"
Darkwind had already turned to the pile of multicolored stoles and
other accessories, sorting through the plethora of plain and appliqued fabrics,
and came up with one stole that was green, and one blue. Quick work with his
knife gave him four halves, two of which he handed to Elspeth. She had already
divined what he was up to, and had gone into the other room for her sewing kit;
a few moments later, she draped a stole about Father Janas' neck that was green
on his right side and blue on his left.
But it was still too plain, and she took it back from him. While
she cut half-circles of black and white fabric from two of the other stoles to
applique to the ends of the new one, Darkwind left for their bedroom and
returned with a bit of his personal jewelry. "This probably isn't much
like something you would ordinarily wear," he said apologetically.
"But it will probably do for now, and Tremane isn't going to know the
difference between Hardornen and Shin'a'in work."
He handed a copper medallion on a tanned leather thong to Janas;
Elspeth recognized it at once as the sort of token the Shin'a'in carried to
identify themselves or their allies to Tayledras. She had once carried a
similar token, meant to identify her to Kerowyn's kin, as well as to any
Tayledras she might have encountered. This one was engraved with a swirling,
abstract pattern on one side, and a deer on the other.
But a leather thong simply would not do. Now it was Elspeth's turn
to go back to the bedroom and rummage through her jewelry.
Copper. What do I have that is copper?
When they had left, she had simply tossed everything she owned
into a bag, including some of the pieces meant to go with the costumes that
Darkwind himself had designed for her. A glint of copper at the bottom caught
her eye, and she untangled an interesting belt made of a heavy copper chain
entwined with a light one. She purloined the light chain to hang the medallion
from, then as an afterthought, suggested to Father Janas that he use the heavy
chain for the original purpose of a belt. That was the final touch that he
needed, for the robe had been just a bit long on him; now with the new robe,
stole, belt, and medallion, Janas presented quite a different picture from the
man who had arrived.
He seemed to feel the change as well; he seemed less weary, stood
a little straighter and with confidence matching his natural cheer. All in all,
Elspeth reckoned that they had put in a good morning's work.
"It isn't precisely canonical," Janas told them,
"But as you said, no one here is going to know that, and it does
look—well—much more respectable, in the sense of worthy of respect. I
can't begin to thank you enough."
"Thank us if all of this bears fruit," Elspeth replied
firmly. "And speaking of which, here's our lunch."
As usual, it was rather plain fare, but there was plenty of it.
Jem seemed startled by Father Janas' transformation, but treated him with more
deference than he had shown initially, thus confirming Elspeth's feeling that
the effort of reclothing the priest was more than justified. Jem lingered while
they ate, which all of them read as an indication that Tremane was impatient to
have the interview over with quickly. Spurred by that, they made quick work of
their meal.
:I think we should let Janas take the lead in this now,: she told Darkwind.
:I agree; it will establish his authority from the beginning.
After all, officially, we're only involved in this peripherally. We were never
more than the informal intermediaries,: Darkwind replied.
Elspeth signaled the priest with a slight nod as she set her cup
aside. He read the hint as adroitly as she had thought he would.
"I think we are ready to see Duke Tremane if he is ready for
us," Father Janas said to the aide, standing up and settling his new
vestments with an air of brisk competence.
"He is ready for you, sir," Jem responded with all of
the respect that any of them could have asked. "If you would care to
follow me?"
He then looked for a moment with confusion at the two envoys, as
if he had, for that instant, forgotten that they were involved. Clearly he was
uncertain whether they should be properly included in the invitation.
Father Janas solved his problem. "I have asked the Alliance
envoys to accompany me," he said smoothly. "If Duke Tremane has no
objection."
Jem's face cleared as Janas took the question out of his hands,
and he bowed slightly to all of them. "Certainly, sir. If you would all
please come with me?"
All during the quick walk to the Grand Duke's private quarters,
Elspeth was conscious of an increasing feeling of irrational excitement. Something
was going to happen; she wasn't quite certain what it was, but this visit was
not going to pass without an event of some sort.
I wish there was something more of Foresight in my family than
just an ability to get an occasional hunch, she thought fretfully. It would be nice to have some warning
when a mountain is about to drop on us.
At last they were finally closeted with Tremane, seated across
from him in three chairs arrayed before his desk. This was not to be the less formal
(Tremane was never informal) sort of meeting that she and Darkwind had been
having with him of late; he had arrayed himself as the Grand Duke, the
Commander of the Army, and the local Power. He wore his uniform, minus the
Imperial devices, but with all of the other decorations and medals to which he
was entitled. He had both a crackling fire in the hearth and a mage-fire in a
stove, imparting a generous warmth to the room and a fragrant scent of pine
resin to the air. Sunlight streamed in through the windows whose heavy velvet
curtains had been pulled back to let in as much light as possible. He had a
choice of chairs to use here, and he had selected the heaviest and most
thronelike for his use; the desk separated them from him like a fortress wall made
of dark wood.
She was very glad now that she had gone out of her way to dress
Father Janas appropriately. If he had entered this interview looking as shabby
as he had when he had arrived, he would have begun on an unequal footing with
Tremane. As Darkwind had speculated, she could see Tremane responding to the
implied authority symbolized by a "uniform" he recognized, and Father
Janas assumed his rightful position as an authority equal to his.
As for Elspeth, she was acutely aware of everything around her,
her senses sharpened by her anticipation. Her feeling was so strong that it was
amazing to her to see that Duke Tremane was concealing a certain amount of
polite boredom under a smooth and diplomatic courtesy.
If Janas was put off by Tremane's attitude, he didn't show it.
"Duke Tremane," Father Janas said, "you know why I am here.
Those who have led the struggle against Imperial subjugation have heard of your
defection from the Empire, seen how you have governed and protected the people here,
and have come to the conclusion that you, at least. are not necessarily an
enemy to Hardorn."
Tremane nodded at this recitation of the obvious, and waited for
him to continue. Behind him, a knot in the wood on the fire cracked
explosively; no one jumped.
Janas had clearly rehearsed his speech many times, until he was
comfortable enough with it that he didn't have to think about it. "The
consortium of loyal fighters believes that, since there is no one man who has
been able to become their clear leader, and since no one in Hardorn commands
the resources that you do, you may be the appropriate person to take up the
defense of this land against outsiders and current adversity." He smiled
thinly. "I will not mince words with you, Duke Tremane. These men are willing,
given other conditions, to allow you to purchase the rule of Hardorn with the
resources and men that you command."
He seemed a bit surprised by Father Janas' bluntness. "That
would seem reasonable," he replied with care. "And I am certainly
willing to put those resources into Hardorn."
Father Janas nodded. "So I have been sent here by those men
to discover if you are both fit and willing to lead this nation and help to
defend it against those who would subject it to the rule of a foreign power—including
the Empire." Janas tilted his head in inquiry. The fire popped again,
scattering sparks, as he waited for an answer.
Tremane's reply was brief but polite. "I would welcome the
opportunity to prove my worth, but I would like to point out that I am not, and
never have been, a traitor to any cause. It was the Emperor and the Empire who
abandoned us here; we broke none of the oaths that we had given. But now that
those vows are broken, we see every need to hold fast to the oaths that we gave
to each other. And if, in keeping those vows, we aid the people here, that is
all to the good. Times are perilous, and whenever loyalty is found, it should
be rewarded with loyalty." His face hardened. "But any new
responsibilities that I assume must work with my vows to my men."
"There will be no conflict." Janas nodded, and there was
a great deal of satisfaction on his face. "In keeping with our traditions,
the ruler of Hardorn must be possessed of the quality we know as earth-sense,
and be bound to the land if he has that quality. In order that your consent to
be tested is informed, I shall explain precisely what that means."
He went into a much more detailed explanation than Elspeth or
Darkwind had done, and in Elspeth's opinion, Tremane was a bit too cavalier
about the entire thing. She had not been certain until this moment that the
test for the earth-sense involved actually awakening it if it was latent. And
Tremane was clearly preoccupied with some other thought as the priest explained
that if he showed the symptoms of having the earth-sense, he would be expected
to undergo the earthbinding ritual immediately.
Perhaps his own statements to Janas had reminded him of things he
needed to deal with among his own people; perhaps it was only that he was not
inclined to spend his time on something even peripherally connected with
religion. She had the feeling that Tremane was a man who gave secular respect
to religious authority, lip-service to the rituals, and otherwise gave no
thought to the subject. And he considered the entire business of earth-sense
and earth-binding to be essentially religious in nature, a matter of faith
rather than fact.
:He has already made up his mind that nothing is going to happen,: Darkwind commented, as he watched
Tremane's attention wandering. :He is good enough at reading people to know
that Janas thinks he can be a good leader for Hardorn, and I suspect he thinks
that is the only "test" he needed to pass. I think he has decided
that Janas will make a couple of mystic passes, then declare he has the earth-sense,
mumble a few phrases, and say that he is bound to Hardorn, all without anything
he can detect actually occurring.:
:I think he's making a mistake, if that's the case,: Elspeth offered. :I wish he'd listened
a bit more closely because I don't think he really knows what he might be
getting into.:
Well, it was already too late to say anything, for Tremane nodded
with relief when Janas finished, and said, "Please, I am quite ready if
you can begin now."
And Janas was not going to give Tremane a chance to change his
mind, for the priest stood immediately.
"If I may come to your side of the desk, sir?" Janas
asked, and at Tremane's nod, moved around the desk until he stood behind
Tremane's chair, and placed the tips of his fingers on Tremane's temples before
Tremane had a chance to object.
The priest closed his eyes and opened his mouth before Tremane
could pull away from the unexpected touch. Elspeth started, literally jumped,
as what emerged from Janas's mouth was not a chant, but a single, pure,
bell-like tone.
The sound resonated through her, filling her ears and her mind,
driving every thought from her head and rooting her to her chair. She couldn't
have moved if the room had suddenly caught on fire. She couldn't even be
afraid; the tone drove out all emotion, including fear. It had exactly the same
effect on Darkwind, who stared at Janas with round, vaguely surprised eyes.
But it did not have that effect on Duke Tremane.
Beneath Janas' hands, the Grand Duke stiffened, and his own hands
came up to cover the priest's, but not as if he was trying to tear Janas's
fingers away from his head. His eyes closed, and his hands were clearly holding
Janas's hands in place. His own mouth opened, and a second tone, harmonizing
with the first, emerged from his throat. The effect of the two tones
together was indescribable, and even as Elspeth experienced it, she was unable
to analyze it. She was suspended in time and place, and nothing existed for her
but the two-note song that resonated with every fiber of her body and soul. In
fact, every sense was involved; colors intensified and became richer, and there
was a scent of growing things and spring flowers filling the air that could not
possibly have been there.
How long that went on, Elspeth could really not have said. It took
no time at all, and it took forever. The moment when it stopped was as dramatic
as that when it had started, for suddenly Tremane's eyes opened wide, then
rolled up into his head; his mouth snapped shut, cutting off the tone. He let
go of Janas' hands, and he collapsed over his desk as if his heart had suddenly
given out.
Elspeth was still frozen, unable to stir. Janas stopped his
singing—if that was what it was—the moment Tremane fell forward. For a moment
he stared at the Grand Duke in something like shock, shaking his hands as if he
had touched a burning coal.
"Well," he said finally, "he certainly has
earth-sense."
Before either Elspeth or Darkwind could move, the priest pulled
Tremane back up into the support of his chair, and shook him gently until he
awoke.
"Is—" Darkwind began, half standing. Janas waved him
back.
"Duke Tremane is simply suffering from the confusion of
having a very powerful new ability thrust upon him," the priest
said in a preoccupied voice. "But there is nothing wrong with him, I
promise you. In fact, he may well be more right than he has ever been
before in his life."
Tremane was clearly still dazed, as Janas reached for a letter
opener on the Duke's desk, seized one of his hands, and stabbed the tip of his
index finger with it. He was so dazed, that he acted as if he hadn't even felt
the point of the blade piercing his skin.
Janas held onto the Duke's hand so that Tremane couldn't pull it
away, and reached into a pouch on his belt, pulling out a tiny pinch of earth.
He inverted Tremane's maltreated finger over the bit of dirt, and squeezed
until a single drop of blood fell and mingled with the soil.
"In the name of the powers above our heads and below our
feet, I bind you to the soil of Hardorn, Tremane," he intoned, letting go
of Tremane's hand and seizing his chin instead. "In the name of the Great
Guardians of the people, I bind you to the heart of Hardorn," he
continued, and took up the pinch of mingled blood and earth. "In the name
of Life and Light, I bind you to the soul of Hardorn, and by this token, you
and the land are one."
He held out the bit of blood-soaked earth to the Duke's mouth.
Tremane opened his lips to receive it, and fortunately, he swallowed it rather
than spitting it out, which would probably have been a very unfortunate gesture
and a terrible omen.
Janas stepped back, watching the Duke narrowly, and Tremane
blinked owlishly at him for a moment. Then, without any warning, he made an odd
little mewling cry and clapped both hands to his head, covering his eyes with
his palms.
Now Elspeth started to rise, but the priest waved her back as
well. "It's quite all right," he said, with immense satisfaction.
"I can't begin to tell you how well this is going. He has the strongest
earth-sense that I have ever seen in someone for whom it was latent until
now—and just at the moment, he's a bit disoriented."
"Disoriented?" the Duke said from behind his hands.
"By the Hundred Little Gods, that is far too mild a
description!" He sounded breathless, as if he had been running a long and
grueling race. "I feel—I feel as if I have been deaf and blind, and
suddenly been given sight and hearing and I haven't the least notion
what the things I am experiencing mean or what to do with them!"
He brought his hands down away from his head, but it was quite
clear from the bewildered expression he wore and the dazed look in his eyes
that he was undergoing sensations he had never experienced before. "I
think I may be ill," he said faintly. "I feel terrible. I'm going to
be very, very sick in a moment."
"No, you don't." Janas soothed. "That's not your
own body you're feeling, it's Hardorn. The land is sick, not you, sick and
weary. Separate yourself from it; remember how you felt when you woke up this
morning? That is you, and the rest is the land's ills."
"That's easy for you to say, priest," Tremane replied
feelingly. "You aren't in my head!" He was pale and sweating,
and his pupils were so wide that there was scarcely any iris showing.
But Janas had already gone to the door and had called for
Tremane's aides. "The Duke is not feeling well," he told them.
"He needs to be taken to his bed and allowed to sleep. I think it would be
wise to cancel any appointments he has for the rest of the day."
Both aides looked alarmed at the state of their leader, and one
put a hand on the hilt of his weapon and cast a doubtful glance at Janas,
suspecting, perhaps, that the priest had somehow poisoned the Duke or inflicted
a disease on him.
"It's all right," Tremane reassured them. "I think
I've just been overworking. It's nothing serious."
As if that had been a coded phrase to tell the aides that nothing
the visitors had done had caused his condition, both aides relaxed immediately
and went to assist their leader to stand. "You know that the Healers have
been warning you about overworking yourself," one of them scolded the Duke
in a whisper that the foreigners were probably not supposed to hear. This was
an older man, the Duke's age or even a few years senior to him, and the aide
clearly considered it his responsibility to take Tremane to task. "Now
look what's happened to you! You can't work yourself half to death and not
expect to pay for it!"
"I'll be all right, I just need to sleep," the Duke said
vaguely, and although he was not paying a great deal of attention to his
surroundings or his visitors, he no longer seemed quite so disoriented, at
least to Elspeth. it seemed more as if he had focused his attention inward, in
a state of partial trance.
His two aides helped him into the other room, and Janas nodded at
the door. Taking the hint, Elspeth and Darkwind rose and followed the priest
out.
"Don't you need to be with him, to give him some kind of
instruction?" Darkwind asked anxiously as they made their way along the
cold corridors back to their own quarters.
The old man shook his head; he still had that air of great
self-satisfaction. "No, he already has the instruction; that was what I
was giving him at the beginning. It's all there for him to use, he just needs
to sort things out while he sleeps. Don't worry—we've been doing things this
way for centuries, not just with our monarchs, but with priests whose
earth-sense is also latent. But I must say, this is probably the most
successful ritual I have ever done!" He rubbed his hands together with
unconcealed glee. "Now we'll have to get word across the country what has
happened, plan for a coronation, find something like a crown—oh, there are a
hundred arrangements we'll have to make."
He shook his head, interrupting himself, as they reached the door
of their quarters. "I hope you won't think me rude, but I am going to have
to leave immediately. There is just too much I have to do, and not a great deal
of time to do it in. We'll be sending important people here soon, as liaisons
with our new monarch. In the meantime, I think I can count on both of you to
help him through the next day or two."
"I can certainly help explain what he is
feeling," Elspeth replied, but with a little doubt, opening the door and
waving him inside ahead of her. "I suspect it might be like the first time
I was—ah—blessed with Mindspeech."
"Exactly, exactly!" Janas said, as he gathered up his
old robe and made it into a neat bundle. Then he looked down in confusion at
the clothing he was wearing, and for a moment, certainty was replaced with uncertainty.
"Ah—I—"
"Consider the new vestments a gift from the Alliance,"
Darkwind said, divining his question before he could ask it. "And please
feel free to approach us if any of your other liaisons might need similar
outfitting."
Janas turned, taking his hand and shaking it with gratitude.
"Thank you, thank you for all your help!" he said, brimming with so
much effervescent pleasure that Elspeth could not help but smile back at him.
"'Now, I really must be off, there is absolutely not a moment to waste!"
He hurried to open the door to the hallway; fortunately, one of
the sentries at the door intercepted him and offered to find an aide to escort
him out. He accepted absently as he pulled his shabby cloak on over his new
finery, and the last that Elspeth saw of him, he was explaining to the aide
some of the preparations that would need to be made to get ready for Tremane's
coronation as the new King of Hardorn.
Elspeth closed the door behind them, and joined Darkwind who was
sprawled bonelessly on the couch. She suddenly felt as if she had been
running an endurance test, and collapsed beside him.
"Well," he said finally. "I confess I am at a loss
for words."
"I have a few," she told him, putting her head on his
shoulder. "But mostly, I can't begin to tell you how relieved I
feel."
She turned her head so that she could see his face, and he smiled
into her eyes. "You know how the Shin'a'in are always saying to be careful
of what you ask for," he chided gently. "'And you did ask for some
sort of cheek on Tremane's behavior as a leader."
"I did." She took a deep breath, and let it out slowly.
"I can't say that I'm at all unhappy about how this has fallen out.
This means the probable end of conflict inside Hardorn. They're going to have a
real, competent leader. He is going to be incapable of misusing the land or the
people, and I have the oddest feeling that he won't even be able to think about
going to war with anyone unless Hardorn is threatened first."
Darkwind kissed her forehead, then rested his head back against
the back of the couch, staring up at the ceiling. "At the moment, I feel a
great deal of sympathy for him. This may not be a punishment commensurate with
what he did to our people, but he is going to be suffering real and sometimes
serious discomfort for quite some time if I am any judge of these things."
"'Because of the state of the country you mean?" she
asked.
He nodded. "Absolutely. You heard Janas; Hardorn is sick,
injured, and only now beginning to recover. He gets to experience all
that, until the land is healed again. What's more, when the mage-storms start
up again, whatever they do to the land, he'll feel as if it's happening to
him!"
She chuckled, a little heartlessly. "I wonder what having
bits of the countryside plucked out and transplanted elsewhere will feel
like?"
"'Nothing I would care to share," Darkwind said
emphatically.
She contemplated the prospect, and it didn't displease her. And
she knew someone else who would find the new situation very much to her liking.
"I wonder how long it will take to get word of this to
Solaris?" she mused aloud.
:Not long, trust me,: Gwena replied. :And, oh, to be a fly on the wall when it
does!:
As the official-unofficial liaisons to Tremane on behalf of the
rest of Hardorn, Elspeth and Darkwind found themselves dealing with a dozen
requests the next morning that were the direct result of Father Janas' work the
previous day. "You know, it is just a good thing that all this is
happening in the dead of winter," Elspeth remarked to her mate, as she
dealt with yet another request for "Royal Patronage" from a merchant
in the town. "If we were in the midst of decent weather, we'd have half
the country trying to get here for this coronation Janas wants to
arrange."
Darkwind had handed most of the correspondence over to her, for
the Hawkbrothers had no equivalent to royalty and the pomp and display that
went with such personages. He shook his head. "I feel as lost as a tiny
frog in the midst of Lake Evendim. Or a forest-hare in the middle of the
Dhorisha Plains," he said ruefully. "Now I know what your people mean
when they speak of feeling like a 'country cousin.' I haven't any idea what
half these people want from Tremane."
"Frankly, neither have they," she replied dryly.
"Royalty is rather like a touchstone to those who are accustomed to kings
and queens and the like. One judges one's own worth by one's worth to the king,
whether or not the king is himself a worthy person. All these people are
attempting to gather about Tremane in the hope that some of the glitter will
rub off."
She would have said more, but at that moment, there came a knock
on their door. When Darkwind went to answer it, much to her surprise, Tremane
himself stood in the doorway, guarded by his older aide, and looking a bit wan.
"Might I come in?" he asked. "Something in these
memories of mine says that you might be able to help me. Sort things out, that
is."
Darkwind waved him in; the aide remained behind, but with a look
that said he would station himself at the door and not move until Tremane left
again.
The Duke took a seat on their couch, and Elspeth made a quick
assessment of him. For once he was hiding nothing; she suspected that at the
moment he simply was unable to. He was still quite unsettled, disoriented, and
distinctly wild eyed. She handed him a fragrant cup of kav, a beverage
the Imperials favored that she had also begun to enjoy, as much for the effect
it had of waking one up as for the flavor.
"You know," he began plaintively, "when you came
here, I told you that I accepted this mind-magic of yours, but to tell you the
truth, I didn't entirely believe in it. You could have done everything
you claimed simply by having two well-trained beasts and a clever set of subtle
signals. Spirits, putting one's thoughts into someone else's head—that was all
so much nonsense and only the really credulous would have given it much
credence...."
His voice trailed off, and Elspeth nodded. "Now, for the
first time, you are in the grip of something you can't explain. Right?"
she asked.
He nodded, looking oddly vulnerable and forlorn. "Magic is supposed
to be a thing of logic!" he protested. "It has laws and rules, they
are all perfectly understandable, and they bring predictable results! This is
all so—so—intuitive. So unpredictable, so messy—"
Darkwind started to laugh, and the Duke looked at him
suspiciously. "I don't see what is so amusing."
"Forgive me, sir," Darkwind choked. "But very
recently a friend of ours, who truly and with all of his heart believed that magic
was wholly a thing of intuition and art, having nothing to do with laws and
logic, was confronted with the need to regard magic as you and your mages do.
And he sounded just like you do now—the contrast is just—" He
choked, trying to swallow his laughter, and Elspeth, who recalled quite well
how Firesong had sounded, had to work very hard not to join him. That would not
have done Tremane's spirit any good at the moment.
"When you have gotten used to this, I think that you'll find
it has its own set of rules and logic, and you'll be able to deal with it in a
predictable manner," she soothed. "This is simply as if—as if someone
had dropped all of the rules of mathematics and geometry into your mind,
and expected you to deal with them. You're overwhelmed with information, and I
promise you that will change."
Darkwind managed to get himself under control, and took a seat
next to the Duke. "I'll help you as much as I can," he pledged.
"I am probably the nearest to an expert, until Janas or someone like him
comes back here."
Tremane let out a sigh, and began slowly trying to ask questions
for which the vocabulary was as new to him as the concepts. Elspeth listened
carefully, adding what she could, and relaying when Gwena had any useful
information to add.
:Poor man,: she
said to Gwena, though not without a touch of faintly vindictive amusement. :The
only thing more unsettling to him right now would be for the ghosts of his
ancestors to come back to haunt him, or for a Companion to Choose him.:
:Oh, now there's a thought,: Gwena replied, and at Elspeth's reaction of alarm, sent a chuckle
of amusement of her own. :Don't worry. The only way that Tremane would ever
be Chosen would be for most of the population of Hardorn and Valdemar to be
swallowed up by the earth, and even then, I wouldn't put high odds on it.:
:At least now he'll believe us when we say you've said something.: That was a satisfying realization.
Then something else occurred to Elspeth. :Darkwind,: she
told her mate, :I think this is best treated as something like Empathy.
Janas may have put the rules for dealing with it in his mind, but if the Gift
is so very strong, he may be so overwhelmed by the sensations that he can't
actually relate them to what is happening. Try taking him through ground and
centering, then shielding, just as you would someone with strong Empathy.:
He nodded slightly, and changed his angle of attack on the
problem. To Elspeth's way of thinking, this was actually going to be easier
than dealing with someone with Empathy; there would be no changes in what he
sensed as people around him underwent emotional changes. Since what he felt
from the land was quite steady, with no sudden increases in intensity, once he
learned to shield he would not have to learn to strengthen or weaken his
shields.
In fact, he wouldn't want to; he needed to know when the
land was harmed, and he couldn't do that if his shields were too strong.
She watched the two of them as Darkwind coaxed him through his
first exercises. She came to the conclusion, watching his rapid progress, that
there was more to what Janas had given him than mere instructions; once he had
a grasp of the technique Darkwind was showing him, it didn't take him long to
apply the technique correctly.
:Too bad we can't teach every young Herald the way Janas
"taught" him,: she
remarked wryly to Gwena.
:It would take an ability most Heralds haven't got,: Gwena replied frankly, and a bit
enviously. :For that matter, most Companions haven't got it either. I didn't
realize until now just how remarkable old Janas is.:
Oh, really? That
made her reexamine the priest and his mission in an entirely new light, and
wonder just what his real rank in the hierarchy of his religion was. Something
equivalent to the Son of the Sun, perhaps? Probably only someone like Solaris
would be able to tell for certain.
The only conclusion she could make was that the Hardornens had
left nothing to chance in this venture, and had gambled a great deal.
But she kept all of this to herself; it wouldn't matter one way or
another to the situation, and Tremane had enough on his hands right now with
this new ability and the responsibility of becoming a King.
Becoming a King. What a strange idea that is. I can't think of any
ruler in this part of the world who has been picked by his people since—since
Valdemar. The parallels
were coming closer all the time.
Tremane absorbed all that Darkwind showed him like dry ground
absorbing rain; slowly the lines of anxiety and strain left his face, and the
signs of disorientation and illness eased from his posture and expression. Finally,
he sighed and closed his eyes with relief.
"I feel—normal," he said, as if he had never expected to
feel that way again.
He opened his eyes, and Darkwind smiled with satisfaction.
"That is precisely how you should feel," the Hawkbrother told him.
"You shouldn't have to think about those shields for them to be there,
since you are already acquainted with setting magical shields. They should
remain in place until you take them down or weaken them yourself. Now
the only things you will feel will be when something happens to Hardorn for
good or ill; you'll sense the change as soon as it happens."
Tremane colored a little, and coughed. "I seem to recall some
injudicious words to the effect of wanting an ability that would give me
that information."
Darkwind's smile turned ironic, but he didn't say anything. He
didn't have to.
Surely every culture has a variation on the saying, "Be
careful what you ask for, you may get it."
"Well, sometimes the Hundred Little Gods display an
interesting sense of humor," Tremane sighed.
"They've displayed it more directly than I think you
realize," Darkwind told him. "Are you aware that thanks to this
'gift' that Janas bestowed on you, that you are literally bound to
Hardorn? You can't leave, at least not for long."
Tremane shot him a skeptical glance. "Surely you are
exaggerating."
Darkwind shook his head. "I am not. You will not be able to
go beyond the borders of this land for very long. Janas was not speaking
figuratively as we both assumed when he made his explanations to you. I know
enough of magical bindings to recognize one on you, and I doubt that anyone can
break it. This is the magic of a very primitive religion, meant to ensure that
a ruler could not get wandering feet and go off exploring when he should be
governing."
Elspeth watched Tremane's face; though normally opaque, this
experience had left him open—not as open as an ordinary person, but open enough
for her to read his expressions. "What you're saying is, this earth-binding
they put on me ensures that there is no possibility of going back to the
Empire."
Darkwind held his hands palm up. "The most primitive magics
tend to be the strongest, the hardest to break. Perhaps a better word would be primal.
I suspect this one may date back to the tribes wandering this area before the
Cataclysm. It was a fascinating piece of work to watch; no chants, no real
ritual, just a tonal component as a guide for invocation, and of course the
mental component. Simple but powerful, and that argues for a piece of work that
is very old, and so proven by time that it is, in fact, a benchmark by
which later magics could be judged." As Tremane sat there, with a dazed
look in his eyes and a numb expression, Darkwind warmed to his subject.
"It really does make sense. If you have a tribe that has recently settled,
given up nomadic, hunting and herding ways and gone into agriculture, it stands
to reason that your best leaders, the ones who are likely to be the most
successful at defending your settlement from other nomads, are the people most likely
to want to go back to the unsettled ways. If you want to keep them where they
belong and give them a powerful incentive to hold the land in trust and
not plunder and ruin it, you'd bind them to it."
"I get the point, all too clearly," Tremane interrupted
dryly. "Seeing as I am the one blessed with this particular application of
'primitive' magic, and now am prisoner in an all too clear way." He rubbed
his head with his hand, absently. "No disrespect to you, Darkwind
k'Sheyna, but speculation about the origin of this bit of religious arcana is
moot, and it can probably wait until the happy day when everything is settled
again and you and Janas can argue about history to your hearts' content."
Darkwind was not at all embarrassed. In fact, he graced Tremane
with the expression of a teacher whose student has missed the point of the
lesson. But all he said aloud was, "Duke Tremane, if you wish to know how
and why a magic works the way it does, you must learn or deduce its origin and
purpose. In complex spell-work, the causes, triggers, paths, and effects are
not always obvious, and are often fragile. In more primal spell-work, the
variables may be fewer, but they are not necessarily any more obvious. You
cannot unmake a thing—supposing you should choose to do so—without knowing how
it is made."
"Supposing I should choose to do so..." Tremane's voice
trailed off, and he stood up to go look out the window. "I am not, by
nature, a religious man," he said, with his back to them.
"We rather gathered that, sir," Elspeth put in, her tone
so ironic it made Tremane turn for a moment to give her a searching look.
"There is not much in the Empire that would make one believe
in gods, much less that they have any interest at all in the doings of
mortals," he said, looking straight into her eyes. "Tangible effect
is the focus in the Empire. Results and tasks of the day take a distinct
precedence over thoughts of divine influence or the spirit world. The closest
thing to a religion of state is a form of ancestor veneration, which takes its
higher form as the honoring of previous Emperors and their Consorts, who are
collectively known as the Hundred Little Gods. Not that there are exactly a
hundred, but it's a nice, round figure to swear by."
"I'd wondered about that," Darkwind murmured.
"Nor have I in the past been one to put credence in either
predestined fate or omens. Nevertheless," he continued, "since
arriving here, I have been confronted, time and time again, with situations
that have literally forced me into the path I am now taking. I find myself
beginning to doubt the wisdom of my previous position regarding destiny."
Elspeth could not resist the opportunity. "If you would care
for some further proof that your previous position on the divine is
faulty," she offered, "I am sure that High Priest Solaris would be
happy to arrange for a manifestation of Vkandis Sunlord."
It was wrong of her, but after all that Tremane had been
responsible for, she could not help but take a certain amount of vengeful
pleasure in the way that his face turned pale at the mere mention of Solaris'
name.
"That won't be necessary" he said hastily.
"As you wish," she murmured, with an amused glance at
Darkwind.
:Well, talk about fire to the left and torrent to the right—not
only does he have Solaris' curse of truthfulness on him, but the Hardornen
earth-binding.:
Gwena sounded unbelievably smug, but for once, Elspeth was in full agreement
with her. :I do believe that Grand Duke Tremane is going to be very
cooperative with the Alliance from now on—because if he isn't, he hasn't got
the option to escape and he knows it.:
:And I just thought of another good reason for putting the
earth-binding on your King,: Darkwind Sent silently, as Tremane turned back to the window. :If
you bind him to a place so that he can't escape from it, he has to rule well,
because he certainly can't ignore what he is immersed in.:
:Let's hope that's one of the things he's thinking about right
now,: Elspeth
replied. :He is a skilled leader and an intelligent man, and he is certainly
a pragmatic one. It should dawn on him soon just how deep in he is right now,
and then he will have to accept it and deal with the tasks at hand. For the
sake of the Alliance as well as of Hardorn, I want him to know he has no other
option but to rule wisely and honestly. We can't afford anything less.:
Six
Paper rustled quietly, the only sound in the cold, cavernous room.
Baron Melles read the last page of Commander Sterm's report with a smile of
satisfaction on his lips. Jacona, the throne city, was now effectively secured.
Although the capital of the Empire was not precisely under martial law, his
soldiers shared the streets and the patrols with the city constables, and both
were happy to have the situation that way. He had tried his plan out here, where
everything was directly under his careful supervision, and his ideas had all
worked. They had not worked perfectly, but he had never expected
perfection; they had worked well enough that he and Thayer were both pleased.
As he had predicted, the price of staple food supplies had
increased as the availability had decreased, to the point where the average
person either could not find or could not afford two out of three meals. That
was enough to trigger food riots, his first shoot-to-kill order, and his second
tier of plans. Jacona was already divided into precincts, with an elected
official, the precinct captain, responsible for arranging local matters such as
street repair with the city. That made organization much easier. The citizens
of Jacona were now under strict rationing, with so many ration chits per
commodity per week each, as arranged and administered by their precinct
captains. Price controls went into effect with the rationing. No one was
starving, and prices, while high, were no longer as extortionate as they were.
Food supplies from the surrounding countryside had been assured, and those
ration chits guaranteed that everyone would have access to a minimum diet. The
chits did not cover luxury items, only staples, permitting those with higher incomes
the ability to buy what they chose.
Naturally, there would be some citizens who would choose barter
away their own chits and even those of members of their families for cash or
other commodities, such as alcohol. And naturally, the Empire officially took
no stand on this, so long as those who were involved were adults.
A child was different, and precinct captains were on orders to
watch for children begging for food. If they found a child starving, and if its
parent could not produce its ration chits or enough food to cover the
household, the child (and its ration allocation) would be taken away and put in
an Imperial orphanage.
That would be the end of that; once taken away, a parent could not
retrieve a child, and it became the ward of the State. Once it turned fourteen,
if male it would go into the Army; if female, underdeveloped, or sickly, an
Army auxiliary corps or a workhouse—unless it showed extraordinary ability and
qualified for higher training. But that was child welfare, and had nothing to do
with rationing.
Naturally, there were luxuries and larger rations available for
cash, and the Empire took no stand on this, either, so long as the commodities
for sale on the gray market were not purloined from Imperial stores. Meals and
services continued normally in the homes of the wealthy, although household
expenses had doubled in the past few weeks. From what Melles had learned from
his agents, prices on the gray market had stabilized, which meant that the
wealthy would simply have to work a little harder to maintain their wealth.
Many of them had already begun investment in coal, wood, and other fuels, or
speculation in food items. There were a few with new-built fortunes in the
city, because they had seen the trend of things and had moved accordingly.
There were a few who were ruined, because their stock-in-trade consisted of
small items that depended on magic, or because they were dealers in items like
Festival costumes that no one wanted to buy under the current conditions. But
so far as Melles could see, aside from these few unlucky or clever individuals,
nothing much else had changed.
There were no more riots after the first serious one that gave
Melles the excuse to issue his shoot-to-kill order, and which had resulted in
the death of a dozen fools who happened to be leading it. There were occasional
demonstrations, and a great many speeches on street corners, which were
officially ignored. There were also no more collapsing buildings, or loss of
service because magic had failed. This was because there were no more services
left—or buildings still standing—that depended on magic.
There was plenty of work, though, and the one large change was
that unemployment simply did not exist anymore. Those who demonstrated or made
speeches did so when their working hours were over—unless. of course, they
happened to be one of the few wealthy eccentrics who did not need to work to
have an income. Where magical aqueducts no longer supplied water, and there
were no communal wells, brigades of otherwise unemployed citizens with buckets
brought fresh water from reliable sources to fill newly-constructed below- or
above-ground cisterns. An entire newly-formed corps of citizens with handcarts
now collected garbage, cinders, and ashes from fires, and animal waste from the
streets and yards. Fortunately, the sewers were nonmagical in nature, and still
functioned reliably.
Life in the city was not back to the way it had been, and never
would be again until these mage-storms were over, but the ordinary citizen went
to work, received his pay, ate regular meals, and slept securely at night. If
he was colder this winter than last, or a little hungrier, well, that was the
case for all of his neighbors, too. But not only were his streets kept clear of
dangerous riots, they were also kept clear of vagrants and beggars—for vagrants
and beggars swiftly found themselves in Imperial workhouses or work gangs,
cleaning the streets and carrying water for the good of the ordinary citizen.
This made the ordinary citizen happy. What made him even happier was the fact
that Imperial workers were toiling day and night to find ways to restore more
of the things that he had come to take for granted in the days of reliable
magic. Already some things had been replaced—safe stoves that could burn a
variety of fuels, from dried dung to coal, were now being made available at a
moderate price from Imperial workhouses. Imperial bathhouses and laundries had
been established, so that if a man could not afford to heat water for regular
baths and laundry, he could still have those baths and get his clothing
clean for a few copper bits. The average citizen could look forward to
eventually regaining the kind of comfortable life he had lost.
And if he had to give up some of his freedom to get that life
back, well, all but a few malcontents thought that was an acceptable loss. Some
folk even welcomed these new workhouses and work gangs, and were happy to see
soldiers patrolling the streets and sweeping up those with nothing better to do
than to make trouble. It was true that crimes like assault, robbery, rape, and
burglary had dropped to almost nothing after the deadly-force patrols had been
deployed on the street level.
Well, assault, robbery, rape, and burglary by citizens against
citizens have dropped to almost nothing. No one in his right mind is going to
report a soldier or constable for such a crime. And if there is no report,
there is no crime, and hence officially no problem.
So far, everything that he had set in motion in Jacona was working
well or would be with a few slight adjustments. Now was the moment to plan the
next steps. He put both elbows on the desk, tented his fingers together and
rested them lightly over his lips, thinking.
He stared at the flame in the oil lamp on his desk that replaced
the mage-light that had once burned there. The desk itself had been placed near
to the antiquated fireplace, which held a better, more improved version of the
official stove, a contrivance of ceramic and steel that burned coal rather than
wood. More Imperial cleverness, that; coal fires burned hotter and longer than
wood, and although the smoke coming from them was dirtier and might cause a
problem one day, this new "furnace" invention would get them through
the winter. All the fires in the Palace and in most of the homes of the noble
and wealthy had these furnaces, and the coal mines, which once produced only
fuel for the smelting furnaces for the metal trade, now sent huge wagonloads
into the city on daily deliveries. A variation on this furnace heated the boilers
that once again delivered hot water into the bathing rooms of Crag Castle and
other edifices—and also supplied the hot water for the Imperial bathhouses and
laundries. Interestingly enough, this entire situation was proving to be
surprisingly profitable for the Imperial coffers, for not only was the Empire
collecting more tax money, since taxes were based on profits, but the Empire
was also something of a merchant, selling heating- and cook-stoves and the
services of the bathhouses.
Theft of coal was punishable—like all theft—by being sent to a
work gang. So were the crimes of inciting to riot, participating in a riot,
looting, chronic public drunkenness, vandalism, vagrancy, and delinquency. Any
crime against property rather than against a citizen now bought the perpetrator
a stint in hard labor rather than jail or the Army. The new policy made for
quiet streets.
Tremane would never have ordered all of this; Tremane didn't have
the vision or the audacity, and perhaps not even the intellectual capacity to mastermind
such sweeping plans on such a broad scale at such short notice.
Melles continued to stare at his lamp flame, but nothing in the
way of inspiration occurred to him. He reached for another, much shorter
report, and leafed through it again. Perhaps before he thought more about the
next stage of his plans, it was time to deal with his covert operations.
All in all, once the food riots were quashed, there had been fewer
complaints than he had anticipated, and very little civil unrest. That came as
something of a surprise, because he had assumed there would be a higher level
of resistance to his new laws than there actually was.
So, all that meant was the good citizens of Jacona were being very
good, going where he led like proper sheep.
There were, of course, a few wild goats out there still—the
inevitable underground "freedom" movement, which he had also
anticipated. How could there not have been? There were always those who would
not be hoodwinked into accepting restrictions on their freedom, no matter how
one disguised those restrictions.
The Citizens for Rights group correctly identifies you as the
source of all of the new edicts and punishments, the report, written by the head of his
network of low-level agents in the city, read. They assume that the Emperor
knows nothing, and that with enough work they will be able to draw his
attention to your abuses and have you ousted. Failing that, and assuming that
you somehow have the Emperor under your personal control, they plan on a
general citizens' uprising to overthrow the entire government.
That was also precisely what he had anticipated; not only did it
not alarm him, he was actually rather pleased that he had predicted the
development so accurately. His agent was not particularly worried, but he
wanted more instructions about what to do now that he had identified the
movement, its goals, and its members.
He picked up a pen and took a clean sheet of paper from the tray
at the side of his desk. He wrote in code without having to think about the
translation; he'd had enough experience at it that he could write directly to
any of his agents in the correct code. This was a content-sensitive code,
rather than an encoded letter; to all appearances, this missive was a perfectly
ordinary letter about commonplaces, from a servant in the Palace to a relative
in the city.
What it really said, however, was something else entirely.
Do nothing to openly disrupt the movement against me. As for the
general citizens, continue to feed them misinformation; concoct tales of my
helplessness in the face of the Emperor's growing tyranny. Make them think that
I am trying to stem the Emperor's excesses and that Charliss himself is
directly responsible for everything they object to. What I want is to hear that
even the members of the Movement are starting to call me "The Peoples'
Friend." Continue to identify all new members of the Movement, and if any
really effective leaders emerge, identify their weaknesses and find ways to
handicap them without actually removing them. Keep me informed at all times.
He started to seal up the envelope, then thought of something else
and added a second page.
There are always bureaucratic mistakes; men taken up in a
street-sweep who were actually on their way to work, outright victims of some
soldier's personal feud. These people will know of each and every one—send me
the particulars so I can arrange for investigations and turn a few loose with
restitution. If any of them have young children suffering hardship without
their father, mark them especially.
Now he sealed and addressed the letter and put it in the tray for
his house agent to take to the appropriate drop. That last addition was nothing
less than inspiration; all he would have to do would be to have one of the
clerks deal with the paperwork to free the man, and send the family a little
money, some luxury food items, and a basket of sweets for the children, and
Melles would be a hero on the street. And he needn't trouble himself about
petitioners plaguing him either. Now that he was officially the Emperor's Heir,
the layers of bureaucracy between him and the citizen on the street were so
many, so complex, and so labyrinthine that the average citizen would die of old
age before he completed all of the paperwork required for an audience with him.
This would only generate a little more work in the way of petitions, and there
were plenty of low-level Imperial civil servants to take care of additional
petitions.
Perhaps another man might have sent soldiers to arrest every
member of the Movement—but another man did not have the depth of experience
that Melles did. As long as he knew who belonged to these organizations, who
were the real leaders and workers, and what their failings were, he was better
off leaving them all in place. In times like these, insurrectionist movements
were like cockroaches; squash one and a hundred more would hatch behind the
wallboards. Rebels actually tended to thrive on a certain level of persecution,
since persecution validated their cause in the eyes of others. In fact, many of
them absolutely required feeling persecuted—and speaking loudly of it—in order
to validate their own meager existence, since obviously only a Great Good would
be opposed by a Great Evil. What made this even funnier, in a cripple-pitying
sort of way, was that they would only proclaim their oppression to those peers
least likely to disagree with them.
Melles, of course, played one facet of the same game on a much
higher, more sophisticated level. People invariably polarized their views when
they were given little information about a situation's complexities. If someone
was not for your cause, then they must be against your cause; if not black,
then white; if not day, then night. While the perennially-oppressed would use
this tendency in human behavior to generate sympathy from others, Melles used
it to steer public reaction. his actual plans and coups were more complex than
could be briefly discussed by any layman, and he used fronts—like the labor
groups and the police—to act as buffers and visible representations. He created
simple concepts for laymen to absorb and react to, while giving little
information about the greater, more complex goings-on. Thus, even the most
clever leaders of rebel movements would be basing their actions upon incomplete
information at best, low-end rumor at average, and utter fabrications at worst.
Worst for them, anyway; for Melles it was simply human behavior according to
schedule.
No, he would watch them, occasionally nurture them, frustrate and
thwart them, and use them, but above all, he would let them have their little
"committee meetings" and make speeches and inflame one another. That
kept them quiet and mostly harmless. The more they ranted about being
suppressed under improving conditions, the less anyone would listen to or
believe in them.
It was better to remove the occasional competent and dangerous
member than to go after the entire group. If he could not manage to do so in
any other way, the really dangerous ones would tragically die while defending
themselves against a street thug or a house robber. Then, before the person
could be martyred, various carefully-contrived "secrets" about them
would turn up during "investigation" of the death—evidence that they
were child molesters, for instance—to spoil the probable public outrage there
would otherwise have been, and that distaste would carry over to be associated
with any of the person's movement. It would only take ten or twenty such
instances for the general citizenry to feel relieved that these troublemakers
were gone.
On the whole, he enjoyed the amateur "freedom fighters"
as delightful entertainment, and if no group had sprung up, he would have had
to start one just to have an organization to attract the real troublemakers.
The most dangerous would be the very few individuals who realized that groups
were obvious targets, and determined to undermine the authorities on their own.
If he could catch someone like that, it would be by accident.
But the insurrectionist groups had their uses, not the least of
which was that they gave the hotheads a place to vent their spleen. When they
were making speeches, they were not setting fire to a storehouse of records,
counterfeiting and giving away food chits, or breaking into a work camp and
freeing prisoners.
Better a thousand fools' ineffectual speeches than a single food
riot.
He moved that report from the "pending" tray to the
"completed" tray, and turned his attention to the next in line. If
conditions had not been so dire, he would have been positively gleeful; never
had he possessed so much power over so many, and the sensation brought an
intoxication he had not expected.
Report after report, from the heads of his specialized covert
operations rings around the city, indicated that events were proceeding with as
much smoothness as anyone could reasonably expect. The only things that could
not be planned for were the effects of the mage-storms, and he hoped he had
made enough allowance for the chaos those could cause. The precinct captains
were political creatures, and although they were elected, he could replace them
at his discretion. They could and would lie to save their jobs. The Imperial
Commander was less likely to lie, yet still might shade the truth to conceal
problems. His agents, however, were carefully picked and trained and they never
reported anything but the facts, no matter how unpleasant. That was their job;
he rewarded the truthful and got rid of those who were not—sometimes
permanently, if they had been in a delicate or sensitive position. These
reports confirmed his impression that the city was his: pacified, and lying
quietly in the palm of his hand.
That was good, because he had no intention of leaving the capital,
and he wanted it secured so that he could turn his attention to the Empire
beyond without worrying about his personal safety and comfort. The power that
gave him his authority was here, and although by now he could carry out his
plans if the Emperor changed his mind and made someone else the Imperial Heir,
it would be much more difficult to do so. He had the Army, but that might not
be the case if the Emperor appointed a new man—and to subdue the rest of the
Empire, he needed the Army.
Now that he knew what was working with Jacona, he knew what would
work outside the capital. He returned to the longer report that he had set
aside; this was the condensed version of what was going on in the Empire
itself.
In the immediate vicinity, the countryside could reasonably be
declared "pacified" as well. The sources of disturbance were those of
chaos rather than man's intention—terrible weather and roving monsters rather
than rioters. Within the small towns and villages, people were in no danger of
going hungry—but they were terrified. Physical storms could sweep down at any
moment, bringing snow that could bury a village to the eaves, winds that could
rip a building apart, blizzards combining the two that lasted for days at a
time. That was bad enough, but in the midst of the storms, terrible, malformed
creatures came ravening into their very streets, monsters that no one
recognized or knew how to kill. On the estates, things were sometimes even
worse, for most nobles did not keep many retainers who were trained to fight;
this close to the capital, keeping a small private army was generally frowned
upon. So there had already been a case or two of a storm burying an estate, and
before the servants could dig it out again, a bloodthirsty creature had
appeared that kept them all penned inside—and in one case decimated the entire
estate.
One less annoying minor noble to endure.
The Army was handling that situation with all the efficiency that
anyone could ask for. Melles was both pleased and surprised to learn that
General Thayer had deployed squads of monster hunters before ever
implementing the requisition orders that Melles's secretary had drawn up. With
scores of monstrous beasts hanging from hooks on display in village squares and
estate courtyards, people had not only been happy to "donate" the
items the Army requisitioned, they had even come forward with additional help.
Some truly antique equipages had been made roadworthy—but also some very clever
work had been put into the hands of the Army as well. Some genius of a village
blacksmith had come up with a way to fasten runners on the wheels of carriages
after locking those wheels in place, so that instead of having to wait until
snow had been removed from the roads, carts could skim over the top of it.
Practically speaking, what that meant was that the Army supply trains bringing
food into the city could use roads with a single, narrow track cut for the
horse or mule rather than needing to clear the entire road.
Pity that the wicker snowshoe for horses didn't really work, then
we wouldn't have to clear the roads at all, or even use the roads. It is ironic
that the poor are turning out to be the saviors of the wealthy, for only they
had the knowledge of how to do things in completely nonmagical ways.
Other than that, life in the countryside was not at all bad;
certainly better than in the city. Firewood was immediately available. So was
food, in a greater variety than the cities were seeing now. Life on the estates
was even better, and Melles was fairly sure that those nobles who had fled back
to their possessions were by-and-large congratulating themselves for having had
the wisdom to do so.
So much for life in the immediate vicinity of the capital. Now for
the other large cities...
With a few variations, it seemed that what had worked for Jacona
would work for any large city in the Empire. He had to make allowances for local
religion in a few places, and for one brand new cult in Deban that had
virtually taken over the entire city, but for the most part, there were not too
many changes he needed to make.
Finally, he finished the last of the replies he needed to make to
Thayer and to his own agents in the field. His hands were cramped by the time
he was done, and one of the servants had come in to check the fire and add coal
twice. Despite the fire, the room was icy; for all its luxurious fittings, it
was less comfortable than a warehouse.
Perhaps a sheepskin cover for his desk chair would help, and a
charcoal brazier for under the desk. Better still, he ought to have his valet
bring in the same kinds of amenities that the Imperial clerks used. He flexed
his aching fingers and rose, feeling the cold in every stiffened joint. He knew
with grim certainty that his battle with the encroachments of age was failing.
Before all this nonsense with the mage-storms had begun, he had started on his
own minor rejuvenation magics. He resented the fact that they had failed him
now, at a time when he most needed his body to be in perfect health. He simply
could not afford any distractions, yet what were all these aches and pains but
irritating distractions?
Reminders of mortality?
He went to the heavy gilded and carved sideboard where the
blown-glass decanters of liquor and special, cut crystal glasses were stored.
His nose and feet were so cold they were numb; perhaps a drink would restore
circulation and make him feel warmer. He was well aware that the warmth that
came from liquor was a false, fugitive thing, but he wanted the comfort of it
just now, and the pain-deadening effects that would ease his aching joints.
His valet entered, impeccable and correct in his livery of black
and purple, just as Melles poured himself a small glass of potent,
doubly-distilled brandy. The liquor gleamed in the glass with the deep glow of
fine rubies, as Melles held it up to the light, admiring its color. The valet
waited until Melles acknowledged his presence with a nod before speaking.
"His Imperial Highness has called a Court, Lord Heir," the man said
smoothly, one arm already draped with a suit of court robes in anticipation of
the fact that Melles would need them. "Would you care to change your
clothing here, or in your more private quarters?"
Melles sighed. This was the last thing he needed right now; he was
tired and cold, and really wanted a moment or two to warm up and rest before he
dealt with another crisis. But Bors Porthas would not have interrupted his
working hours if this had been some bit of social nonsense; no, this must be
something serious, and he had better steel himself to meet it.
"Here will do." No one was going to walk in on him
unannounced, and Porthas, bland, self-effacing, incredibly competent Porthas,
would have brought everything Melles would need with him. The balding little
man with the thin, expressionless face was a miracle of efficiency, but that
wasn't too surprising. He'd had plenty of practice in more demanding service
before Melles retired him to this, his own retinue. In fact, there were a great
many of the higher nobles of the Court who would have recognized Porthas' face
as that of their own valued personal servant, forced by sudden illness to
retire... A fair percentage would have been shocked into speechlessness, and a
few would have gone pale, recalling that they had sent floral tokens to the
funeral of this particularly faithful servant.
Porthas looked remarkably healthy for a man who had been dead at
least three times, and rendered forever incapable of leaving a bed on another
five occasions. He looked ageless, in fact, and Melles was aware that not only
could Bors Porthas perform every possible duty that would be asked of a valet,
he could also still meet and beat many men younger than he in a bout of
swordsmanship. As for his other talents—he was the only person Melles would
entrust with certain jobs besides himself. That trim body was as efficient as
the mind that was housed in it, and just as lithe.
Melles sometimes wondered if, after all the years of serving as
Melles' agent, the life of a "mere" valet was stultifying. But then
again, Porthas was no "mere" valet, any more than Melles was a
"mere" courtier; he was the coordinator for all of Melles' agents, in
the city, outside of the city, and most importantly of all, within Crag Castle.
He and Melles alone knew the real names and identities of all of Melles'
agents. And in the rare event that Melles would need to have a
"removal" performed with precision and absolute secrecy, if he could
not for some reason perform it himself, he would entrust it to Porthas. There
was no one else besides he who was anywhere near Melles in level of expertise
at their mutual profession. And he actually seemed to enjoy being a
valet. Perhaps, after all his other activities, serving as a valet was restful
and amusing.
He was certainly nimble enough at assisting Melles into the
cumbersome court robes he despised. In sartorial matters, Porthas was not
Melles' equal; he was Melles' acknowledged superior, and Melles was only too
happy to give way to his expertise. When the last fold and crease had been
arranged to Porthas' liking, Melles thanked him—without overdoing it, but
making sure that the man knew that his service was noted and valued. With a
smile of satisfaction, Porthas gathered up the discarded garments and retired
to Melles' private chambers.
The long walk down the castle corridors, accompanied by the silent
and ever-present Imperial Guards, allowed him to rid himself of some of his irritation.
He knew that there was something in the air when he entered the Throne Room;
nervous whispering did not cease at his entrance, as it often did, and the Iron
Throne itself was vacant.
Melles made his way up to the foot of the Throne and his own proper
place as First in the Court. General Thayer was already in attendance, with a
frown on his face that told Melles he had no more idea than anyone else why the
Emperor had called this particular Court into session. The General was also in
full regalia, ceremonial breastplate gleaming over the somber livery of
Imperial Army full-dress uniform, his ceremonial helm with its jaunty crest of
purple horsehair tucked under his left arm, from which position he could fling
the useless piece of pot-metal at a would-be attacker while he pulled his
not-so-ceremonial sword with his right hand. On one occasion, the General had
actually stopped his attacker with the helmet before the man ever came within
reach of his sword.
"Have you heard anything?" he asked Melles under his
breath. Melles shook his head, and the General swore several pungent oaths, his
face darkening. "I don't like this," he said. "Charliss never
used to call full Courts without notice. He's been closeted with a messenger or
an informant—and now he calls a full Court. He's not acting rationally anymore,
and the Hundred Little Gods only know what he can inflate out of tiny rumors.
If he's heard something—"
"It won't be about us," Melles said smoothly. "We
are proceeding splendidly, and the law-abiding citizens of the Empire are very
happy with us, and with the Emperor. Look at the reports—look at the streets!
And he signed every law, edict and change to procedure we've instituted with
his own hands. Whatever he has heard, it will concern someone else's activities,
and not ours."
At just that moment, Emperor Charliss appeared, draped in his own
ceremonial robes, moving slowly toward the Iron Throne flanked by two of his
guards, with four more following. Melles was shocked at his appearance,
although he doubted that anyone other than a highly trained Adept would notice
the level of deterioration in Charliss' protections and rejuvenation magics. It
only showed in small things—in the careful way that Charliss moved, and in the
signs of pain and illness around his mouth and eyes—but it was very clear to
him that Charliss was losing his personal battle against age and the
mage-storms. And as Thayer had said, only the Hundred Little Gods knew what
that deterioration was doing to his mind.
In the past, the Emperor's mind had been the very last thing to
go; all of the Emperor-Adepts had died with their minds clear even as their
eyes closed for the last time. But that was in the past, with magic working
properly; what if the reverse was happening, and Charliss' mind was decaying
faster than his body? What if the poisons of age were pouring into his brain,
acting like insidious drugs on his thinking processes?
The Emperor surveyed his Court with cold eyes, then placed himself
in the chill embrace of the Iron Throne, and regarded his assembled Court
again, as if searching for signs of insurrection. Finally he gestured, and a
single, weatherbeaten man in the garb of an Imperial soldier stepped out from
behind the screen of guards, moving down the stairs to stand below the Iron
Throne.
"One of Our agents has returned from the west," the
Emperor rasped. "And meanwhile, there have been petitions and questions
brought before this throne. Some among you doubt the wisdom of Our declaring a
second heir, saying that the rumors concerning the Nameless One are only that,
and that We should wait until We had real proof before We acted. We have
brought you all here to witness this report, so that you may see that the
Emperor rules over you because he is wiser than you."
The man stepped forward, went on one knee before the Throne, and
began reciting a report in a dispassionate and unaccented voice. His report was
virtually identical to everything that Melles already knew, and he didn't pay a
great deal of attention to it. Granted, he had not realized that Tremane had
looted the Imperial supply depot in Fortallan quite so thoroughly—the
man had practically taken the very walls of the place, and Melles had to give
him credit for the sheer audacity of the undertaking—but it was still hardly what
he would call news. Charliss himself had known all of this; he'd made it
public when he'd declared Melles as his new heir, and there should have been
nothing in these words to cause the Emperor to feel the need to call a formal
Court just so everyone could hear it.
In fact, there was something odd about the fact that Charliss felt
the need to address the petitions and questions of Tremane's few friends in the
Court. Charliss had always ignored such voices of dissent in the past. It
wasn't at all like the Emperor to behave in such a fashion, anymore than it was
normal for him to sit and listen to a report he'd already heard several times
over. Nevertheless, Charliss was clearly agitated by what he heard. and grew
more so with every word the agent recited.
Then the man reached the part of his report that was actually new
information—a speech that Tremane had allegedly given to his troops, the
contents of which were very clearly treasonable. Melles was fairly certain that
the speech was accurately reported, in no small part because the agent kept
referring back to notes he had taken, held in a small book that he took from
his belt-pouch.
Melles paid very close attention to that speech, once he realized
this was the reason that Charliss was so agitated. As the man spoke, the
Emperor's hands clutched the arms of the throne, and he leaned forward with his
eyes narrowed, cold rage in every nuance of his posture. This was a problem;
the old Charliss would never have betrayed the fact that something angered him,
but this was not the old Charliss. If the Emperor lost his temper violently in
public, it was possible that his competence might be called into question. If
that happened, his choice of Heir might also come under fire. The last thing
that Melles needed right now was a Court on the verge of deposing the Emperor
and finding a new and more tractable Heir.
Supposedly, Tremane accused the Emperor of violating his own
sacred oaths to the Army. He accused Charliss of being the one who created the
mage-storms, as a mad experiment in weaponry of mass destruction. He told his
troops that Charliss deliberately sent them all out to be left in the area of
effect of this new weapon, just to see what would happen to them. He claimed
that Charliss had then deserted all of them, leaving them to face mage-storms.
and hostile enemy troops on their own, with no supplies, no pay, and no
reinforcements. Lastly, he declared that they would have to make their own way,
for the Empire no longer cared what became of them.
A strong speech, and one that Tremane might well have believed
himself. Certainly, with no clear source for the mage-storms, one could make a
case for them coming from the Empire rather than the insignificant little
nation of Valdemar. Given that the Empire had centuries of tradition of magic
use, and Valdemar, so far as anyone knew, had none, it would be far more
logical to assume that combat-mages within the Empire had originated the
mage-storms. In fact, if Charliss had actually possessed such a weapon, he
might very well have used it in exactly the way he was accused. The Emperor was
guilty of such callousness so often that a great part of his anger might stem
from the fact that he had been accused when for once he was actually innocent.
Then the agent dropped real news, rather than just relating a
speech. By working a team of mages together, his group had managed to get a
clean scrying on Tremane until the last mage-storm had passed through. They had
proof, besides the speech, of Tremane's perfidy. He had made common cause with
Valdemar and her allies against the Empire. He had joined the Alliance, and
would soon be crowned the new king of Hardorn, the land he was supposed to have
taken for Charliss. And one of the stipulations that the Hardornens had
insisted on was that he and his men, Imperial soldiers, would defend Hardorn
against any further attempts by the Empire to invade and conquer their land.
It was at this point that Charliss exploded with fury, halting the
recitation in mid-sentence.
Melles and Thayer exchanged a startled glance, for neither of them
had ever seen the Emperor react in this uncontrolled a fashion. And the moment
that the Emperor paused for breath—which was, thanks to his poor physical
condition, after no more than a dozen rage-filled words—they both stepped up
onto the dais and flanked him.
"I will handle Tremane, Lord Emperor," Melles
said before Charliss could start again. "That is why you chose me, and
believe me, he will live just long enough to regret his actions."
"And I will deal with the traitors who decided to cast
their lot in with him," Thayer rumbled. "They are Imperial soldiers
under my command, and as such, they will be executed by Imperial hands."
Charliss looked up at them both, face still contorted with rage, and started to
rise.
Melles again exchanged glances with Thayer, and nodded at the side
door that led from the dais to the Imperial quarters. Melles moved his head in
agreement, and each of them took one of Charliss' arms to help him to his feet.
"The Emperor wishes to confer with us as to the appropriate
punishment for these traitors," Melles proclaimed, as they got Charliss up
and standing between them. It wasn't a good answer, but it was better than
saying nothing, and far better than letting the courtiers make something up for
themselves. Before Charliss could say anything else, they had him moving, and
once they had him started in the right direction, he continued until he was
back in his austere, gray marble, high-ceilinged, private chambers. Wisely, the
guards did not hinder them, perhaps because they knew that if Charliss went
into a spitting, foaming rage in public, it would not do anyone any good except
the rumor mongers.
Once Melles and Thayer got Charliss into a seat, however, the
temper tantrum they had prevented from occurring in public broke out in
private.
Charliss hissed, spat, pounded the arms of his white-leather
chair, and probably would have thrown things if he'd had the strength to rise.
Flecks of foam dotted his withered lips, and the pupils of his eyes were
dilated. The guards stood at the door, eyes straight ahead, pretending to be
deaf.
Most of what he babbled was incoherent, and it was painfully clear
that Charliss had completely lost control of his formidable temper and of his
ability to think. If it had not been for the fact that he was so angry he
couldn't even control his voice, his shouts would have informed everyone in
Crag Castle just how out-of-control he actually was.
But between his rage and his physical state, his voice didn't get
much above a hoarse growl, and much to Melles' relief, he also could not get
out of his chair to pace—or to destroy the contents of his chamber, as he had
once or twice in the past decades. He could only beat impotently on the padded
arms of the chair as he cursed Tremane's name and lineage back to the days of
the First Emperor.
He and Thayer took turns trying to soothe the Emperor with
promises of personal revenge and Imperial justice, not that any of those
promises had any likelihood of being fulfilled. The agent had made it quite
clear that there were no more "loyal" Imperials with Tremane's
troops; for one reason or another they had all defected over to him. The only
way to get at Tremane now would be to send a magical assassin—and that would
take the combined abilities of several mages. In light of all of the other
pressing needs there were for the little magic that could be made to function,
a magical assassin would be an extremely stupid thing to waste time and energy
on.
While it was Thayer's turn to distract the Emperor, Melles sent
one of the guards for his physicians, and looked around for something that
might serve to blunt the Emperor's anger—or at least anesthetize him. This was
a fairly public room, filled with gray or white-leather chairs arranged in
small groups, with a white desk of bleached wood that was too clean to be used
very often off in a corner, and rugs made of bleached sheepskin scattered about
on the white-marble floor. There was a sideboard of gilded gray marble to
Melles' right that was even more impressive than the one in Melles' rooms; it
was loaded down with crystal decanters of liquors he recognized and those he
did not. What, in the name of the Hundred Little Gods, would a drink as yellow
as a buttercup or as blue as a berry taste like? Or one as green as new spring
grass?
Or did he really want to know?
Probably not. If Charliss was used to entertaining the minor
rulers of his possessions here, he would probably keep a stock of every vile
concoction that every pelt-wearing barbarian ever invented in the name of
"something to drink." Over the years, Melles had sampled a few of
these, and he was not eager to renew his acquaintance with any of them. There
were some things man was not meant to know—or imbibe.
By carefully sniffing the necks of each of the likely bottles, he
found a decanter of the same potent brandy he himself had been drinking when
the formal Court had been called. He poured a much larger portion than he would
ever have drunk himself, and took it to the Emperor.
Charliss seized it in a clawlike hand and downed it without even
blinking, then threw the glass across the room, where it hit the wall and
shattered, leaving sparkling shards and a few ruby-red drops of bloodlike
liquid on the white floor.
Melles raised an eyebrow at Thayer, who shook his head. Evidently
the General figured he had the situation in hand and didn't need to turn the
Emperor over to Melles just yet. Melles nodded, got another two glasses of the
wine, kept one for himself and brought the other to Thayer. Then he stood back
until Thayer needed him.
His enforced idleness gave him plenty of time to think about the
Imperial agent's report. Tremane had shown more intelligence and initiative
than Melles would ever have given him credit for, and on the whole, Melles was
impressed. He would never have gotten the troops to stand by him, if he had not
come up with a story to convince them that it was the Emperor who had
deserted them. It was an adept use of polarity. And to somehow manage to
make peace with the Alliance and convince the very people he had been fighting
against to make him their new ruler—well, that was nothing short of a miracle.
Melles would have given a great deal to know how Tremane had managed that
particular feat.
Despite the fact that he hated Tremane with an unholy passion and
would happily have seen him slowly drawn and quartered over the course of a
lengthy dinner, Melles knew that in Tremane's position he would have done
exactly the same things. For all the faults that Tremane had, stupidity wasn't one
of them. He wasn't as brilliant as Melles, but he was not stupid either. He was
lucky, though, and he had used all of the facts he had to make some reasonable
conclusions. Melles had access to all the Imperial records, and he knew for a
fact that Charliss had not given Tremane support or orders for months before
the looting of the Imperial depot. Once Tremane's magics began to fail, he
would have found himself fighting an unsupported war in unfamiliar
territory—surrounded by enemies. He would have had no advantage over the enemy
without magic to help. By the time the winter storms began, it would have been
impossible to retreat across country to the Empire. So just what did
Charliss expect Tremane to do at that point? Die in place, like a loyal fool
out of the old Chronicles? Men like that had gone extinct in the days of the
First Emperor, probably because they kept doing stupidly loyal things that
bought them early graves. Charliss could not have concocted a better scheme to
get rid of Grand Duke Tremane if he'd tried—except, of course, if he had
appointed Melles to do away with him.
Not that Melles would have minded at all if Tremane had been such
a loyal fool, but the fact was that he was loyal, like most men, only to a
point. And after that point, he saw no reason to repay betrayal with more
loyalty. And his luck must be phenomenal, for he had managed to pull an amazing
victory out of a well that looked to hold only the bitter water of defeat.
But then, Tremane always had been unaccountably, inexplicably
lucky. Fortune always smiled on the man and doubled the effects of his adequate
competence. That was part of the reason why Melles hated him.
The liquor had enough effect on Charliss to get him to stop
babbling; he still pounded the arms of his chair, but now he focused on Thayer,
detailing the excruciating punishments he wanted Tremane and his men to endure
before they died. Thayer did not bother to point out that Tremane and his men
were quite out of reach of any Imperial punishments; he simply nodded gravely,
pretending to pay attention, when in fact he was probably just hoping that
Charliss' Healers would arrive before the Emperor erupted into incoherence
again. Finally the physicians did arrive, and in a moment they had taken over
from Thayer, swarming over the Emperor, pressing medicines on him, urging him
to calm himself. Since Charliss' energy had been fading as the strong dose of
liquor took effect, he was finally ready to listen to advice, to take those
medicines, to allow his servants to take him to his bedroom and put him to bed.
Thayer and Melles took the opportunity then to make their escape.
Thayer was in no mood to talk. "I was dragged away from
writing out orders for troop movement in the provinces," he told Melles
brusquely. "And I need to get those orders out, whether or not Emperor
Charliss has other duties he needs me for."
Melles nodded, hearing and understanding the things that Thayer
had not said. It would be best to get as many orders out as possible, quickly,
while Charliss was otherwise occupied. It was all too clear that the Emperor
was no longer entirely sane or stable. The problem was not that he was
disintegrating; Melles and Thayer between them could very easily take over if
he dropped dead this very night. The real problem was that he was not
disintegrating fast enough.
Until he either abdicated or died, the Imperial Guards would make
sure he remained the Emperor; that was their duty, and not only were
they trained and sworn to it, they were geased to it. He would not be
the only Emperor to have gone mad in the last few months of his life; the
Empire had survived such rulers before, and truth to tell, with the
difficulties facing the Empire now, being ruled by a madman was the smallest of
its problems. At the moment, his obsessions were harmless enough. As long as he
insisted on pursuing the twin goals of the destruction of Valdemar and the
punishment of Tremane, Melles would be perfectly content. If all that happened
was an occasional interruption of work, it would be a small price to pay to
have the Emperor harmlessly occupied and out of the way of real business.
Charliss was an Adept, and he did have an entire corps of mages who answered
only to his demands—and it was entirely possible, if he decided to sacrifice
all attempts to keep his anti-senescence magics working, that he could
find some way to destroy Tremane, Valdemar, or both. Granted, such powerful
magics would probably kill him and most of his mages, but that was to be
expected, and it wouldn't bother Melles in the least. He did not intend
to worry about anything as far beyond practical reach as Tremane, and Valdemar
was even farther than that.
The real danger to Melles and all he needed to accomplish was that
Charliss might recover his senses and his priorities enough to decide to meddle
in what Melles had planned. That would mean nothing short of disaster, for the
Emperor had his own nets of agents and spies that rivaled the ones Melles had
in place, and he would know very soon just what Melles was doing, overtly and covertly.
Most of it, of course, was simply good strategy, but there was that tiny
fraction designed to make Charliss into a villain and Melles into a hero, and
Charliss would probably not care too much for that.
Charliss would also have his own plans—which would not be a bad
thing, if the Emperor was still sane. But he wasn't and the situation was only
going to get worse as time went on. If he began to meddle, he could easily undo
everything that Melles and Thayer had worked so hard to establish.
Something would have to be done to keep that from happening.
All that flashed through Melles's mind as he stood in the frigid
hallway with General Thayer. He nodded slowly. "We both have work to
do," he replied. "We need to get our structure too solidly in place
to dislodge by any force."
That was an innocuous enough statement, but a brief flicker of his
glance toward the closed door of the Emperor's quarters brought an answering
glimmer of understanding to Thayer's eyes. "Jacona's under control,"
Thayer replied. "It's the rest of the Empire that we need to think about
now. And with your permission, I'll get to my part of it."
Melles clapped him on the shoulder. "And I to mine; after
all, what is the Empire but soldiers and civil servants of various
rank?"
The General nodded in agreement, and the two of them went their
separate ways; Melles hurried his steps to his own apartments with the
determination to get enough in place that no matter what mad schemes
Charliss came up with, it would make no difference.
He returned to his suite to find the ever-attentive Porthas
waiting, ready to remove the uncomfortable court robes and replace them with
loose, fur-lined lounging robes and sheepskin slippers. When he raised an eye
at that, Porthas shrugged.
"I assumed that my lord would be working late into the night
and would not wish to be disturbed. I had arranged for a meal to be brought
here, and declined invitations on my lord's behalf for a card party and a
musical evening." Even as Porthas spoke, he assisted Melles out of the heavy
over-robe.
The moment that Porthas mentioned the card party and "musical
evening"—the latter of which would probably be some idiot's wife,
unmarried sisters, and unbetrothed daughters, all performing popular ballads
with varying degrees of success—he shuddered. The card party wouldn't have been
much better; when he played cards, he played seriously, and it would be a dead
certainty that he would have been paired with an unattached female who either
bet recklessly or was too timid to make a bid.
"You were correct, Porthas," he replied, as the valet
eased him into the comfort of loose robes heated on a rack in front of the
fire. "And I do have a great deal of work to do."
Charliss' actions today had given him the spur that he needed to
make some fairly bold moves. That long report on the state of the rest of the
Empire had left him with uncertainty earlier, but it was clear now that he had
no time to waste.
First, the Empire; second, the Court. Thayer would have no part to
play in that second act of consolidation.
He sat down behind his desk, and pulled paper and pen toward him.
As he had already anticipated, local leaders throughout the Empire had already
secured their immediate territories wherever possible. In places where
the situation had not yet been secured, he had only to expand his existing
arrangements, and he wrote out those orders first. The drafts would go to
Thayer before they went to the clerks for copying, just to make certain that
they weren't going to step on each others' feet, but the plans were simply
extensions of what was already going on around Jacona.
Porthas placed a cup of hot mulled wine at his elbow; the
fragrance of the spices in it drifted to his nostrils. He reached absently for
it and sipped it, holding it with one hand while he wrote with the other.
The real challenges would come in dealing with those local
leaders, people who had made themselves the top wolf in their own little
territories, and would not care to hear from a bigger, tougher wolf than they
were. Somehow he would have to persuade them that he had authority and power,
perhaps in excess of what he really had, and that it was in their best
interest to begin taking orders from him.
If he couldn't achieve that objective, he was going to have to
eliminate them without direct confrontation, and put someone more amenable to
authority in their places.
He put the cup down, out of the way, while he contemplated his
options.
The real trick would be to get rid of them in ways that would not
be traced back and connected with him. Getting rid of people was never
difficult. It was doing so without leaving any tracks or signs pointing to who
was responsible that was the hard part. Those clever, perceptive, and skilled
enough to trace blame were few but devastating, and all plans had to be made
with the assumption that such a sleuth would be investigating, though the odds
were slim.
As with cards, duels, and death sports, look at the odds—but
consider the stakes.
He picked up the report, leafed through it, and scanned the list
of those local leaders and their brief dossiers again; his agents were good,
and it was possible to get some idea of who would cooperate and who would not
just from the thumbnail sketches of their personalities that had been provided
to him. He had a short list of assassins to chose from, "special
agents" who were adept at making deaths look like accidents or illness. It
was going to be difficult to get them into place, given the current conditions,
but it would not be impossible. With the help of the Army, he ought to be able
to get any individual to the right location within a few weeks.
It would probably be a good idea to place his best agents on his
most likely targets immediately, rather than waste time attempting to persuade
some provincial idiot with an overblown sense of his own competence. If the
blow came before he even contacted a given fool, it definitely wouldn't be
connected with him. That would leave the agent free to take on a second target
if a at persuasion of someone worth saving failed.
He switched ink and paper, to the special colors of both that
would tell these operatives that he had a job for them. The note he sent would
be commonplace greetings, of course; no special agent would ever trust primary
instructions that came written. This was a gamble on his part, for many of
these people were free-lance workers. When they heard what he had to say, they
might even turn him down; although they would be paid more for these
targets than any of them had ever gotten for a job before, getting to their targets
through the miserable conditions that existed now could be a real problem. And
again, that was the privilege of an agent who was as good as these were; you
couldn't persuade an artist to make a masterpiece by standing him in front of
an easel and threatening him with death. It might be possible to pick off one
or two of these provincial leaders with ordinary assassins, and if he came up
short on the number of agents he needed, that was what he would do.
But he really would prefer it if all of these operatives found the
jobs enough of a challenge to take them on. They were very good. He, above all,
should know; he used to be one of them, as did Porthas, and he had even trained
some of them in technique.
There was nothing like being able to call on old school ties...
As he wrote out his list of "invitations," it occurred
to him that he actually did have a way to fulfill the Emperor's demands and
"bring Tremane to justice," provided that the "justice"
came in the form of a swift, sure blade or the sharp bite of poison. There were
three of these assassins—four, if he counted Porthas, though he did not intend
to do without that worthy's talents right here, who could and possibly would
go to Hardorn and eliminate Tremane. Magical assassination being out of the
question, physical assassination would take a year or more, but it could be
done.
He paused to consider it, even though the idea did not appear to
be a particularly good one. There was a certain amount of personal satisfaction
to be had if he could somehow kill Tremane. How had the man managed to
wheedle his way into the hearts and minds of the Hardornens? It did not seem
fair that his old enemy should come through a situation that should have
destroyed him, only to be made a King. Granted, he would never see his home
again, and granted, Melles was going to be an Emperor, not a mere King.
Nevertheless, the prospect was galling. It would have been satisfying to bring
him down altogether.
Porthas took away the cup, and left a fresh one and a plate of
sliced fruit, bread, and cheese in its place. This was a subtle hint that he
should eat something. He took the hint, and ate without tasting any of it.
He weighed all the considerations. Given that the agent sent out
would be brilliant, crafty, and given every resource, the likelihood of anyone
from the Empire reaching the center of Hardorn was remote. Success would be
remoter still, for an agent of the Empire, without the magical aids that would
enable him to study the people and conditions surrounding his target, would be
operating blind in a foreign land. He would stick out like a single red fish in
a school of green fish.
In a way, it was possible to sympathize with the Emperor's
obsession. Tremane should be dead at this point. Normally, he did not
give in to his own emotions, but there was a sick anger in the bottom of his
stomach that twisted and bit as if he had swallowed a viper, and it would
probably never give him rest. He wanted Tremane dead, and he wanted to do
whatever it would take to get him there.
But even when he had been an operative himself, he had known that
there was a point past which it was inadvisable to pursue your target, no
matter what your employer said or offered. This was one of those times.
He got up from his desk and poured himself another drink, ignoring
for the moment the cup of mulled wine; not brandy this time, but a thick
cordial with no alcohol in it, made entirely of syrup and stomach-soothing and
gut-deadening herbs. He went back to his seat, let himself down into the
embrace of the chair, and tried to convince his heart of what his head knew
were facts.
When the enemy is "dead" to the world one inhabits, he
might as well be dead in totality.
That was something his teacher had told him, and it was as true
now as it was then. Tremane might as well be dead; his lands and possessions
were confiscated, his name erased from the records, and he could never return
here again. He would have to be content with a petty kingdom in a land of
barbarians.
Pursuit of Tremane was a waste of resources, which were in very
short supply, especially good operatives. There was no point in wasting a man
who could serve Melles better elsewhere. It was time to bury the past vendettas
with Tremane's name.
There was no point in following the Emperor into madness.
Every time a mage-storm washed over them, anyone with any
pretensions at being a magician felt it; there had even been clever daylight
robberies timed to coincide with the onset of a mage-storm, when the owner of a
building would be incapacitated. The Storms were bad enough when they came
during the daylight hours, but when they occurred at night, when everyone was
asleep, they were worse, for they became part of one's dream and turned those
dreams into nightmares.
Melles woke up in a sweat, clutching his blankets, out of a
nightmare of tumbling through empty space. But the waking reality was no
better, and he hung onto his bedding with grim recognition of what was behind
the dream. Complete disorientation, nausea, the feeling that he was on the verge
of blacking out and yet could not have the relief that unconsciousness would
bring—this was a mage-storm to him, and he was profoundly grateful that Porthas
and his guards were not mages and did not feel these effects.
At that, his own bouts with the Storms were not as bad as those of
some of the other mages he knew, though he had not ventured to ask the Emperor
how he weathered these things. He had a theory that the amount a mage suffered
was directly proportional to the amount of magic he had tried to work in the
interval between the Storms. If magic was tied to its caster, and the Storms
disrupted magic, it stood to reason that when the Storms hit, they would give
trouble to mage and magic together. As a consequence, he had tried to keep from
working any magic at all, even giving up his own rejuvenation magics when they
had not survived disruption.
When the Storm finally passed, and his dizziness and nausea
vanished as they always did, he let go of the covers and tried to relax back
into his goosedown mattress. With any luck, the Emperor would be
"indisposed" today after his bout with the storm, and with further
luck, the mage-storm would send his mental and physical state plummeting again.
It was too much to hope that the Storm had killed him, but it was certainly
possible that this time he might wind up bedridden.
That would be an excellent thing, for then Melles would have to
stand proxy and speak for him. It might even be possible to frighten him
into stepping down and making Melles the Emperor. He would not hope for it, and
he would not urge it, for the Emperor might well take such suggestions very
badly. It was a fine dream, though, and one he was loath to give up.
He closed his eyes and tried to relax in hope of resuming his
slumbers, but it was of no use. He could not get back to sleep again. He opened
his eyes and stared up at the canopy of his bed, or rather, at the darkness
within the sheltering curtains of the bed. No light penetrated those thick
velvet curtains, nor would it until morning, when the servants pulled back both
window and bed curtains to wake him. Now that there was no magical way to heat
Crag Castle, one needed those heavy curtains around the beds to keep the drafts
out, just as one needed goosedown comforters and featherbeds, and many
blankets. Even then, he often woke with a cold nose.
He was not a heavy sleeper, nor a long one, and never had been.
Some would say that a guilty conscience kept him awake, or the memories of all
of his victims, but the truth was simpler than that. Sleep, in his profession,
was a dangerous necessity, the one time when he was completely vulnerable and
had to entrust his safety to others. He had trained himself to wake completely
at the slightest disturbance, and once he was awake, his mind leaped into activity
whether or not there was any need for it. Once he was that wide awake, it was
difficult to get back to sleep again.
He wondered what time it was. If it was near enough to dawn, it
was hardly worth fighting to get back to sleep only to be awakened again.
He shifted his weight, and a scent of pungent herbs filled the
still air. Porthas had ordered the servants to add those herbs to the bedding,
in anticipation of problems when the vermin-repelling spells failed. That was
yet another example of Porthas' foresight; he'd seen some of the Councillors
scratching surreptitiously at the last meeting of the Grand Council, and
suspected fleas, since these were some of the same courtiers who kept dogs or
other pets and insisted on having them here at Court. Vermin spread, with or
without pets to spread them, unless one took precautions.
Fleas at Court! Well, they were not the only bloodsucking vermin
here, only the most honest about it. In some ways, Melles would have preferred
fleas to some of the other vermin he had to deal with on a daily basis.
That led his thoughts immediately to the current problem facing
him: the Court. He had always known there would be some opposition to him as
the Emperor's Heir, but he had not thought that all of his enemies would forget
their own differences to unite against him.
His only solid ally was Thayer; in Thayer he had the Army—but not
the Imperial Guards. Those were answerable only to the Emperor, and led by
Commander Peleun, who was not a great admirer of Melles. How Peleun had
managed to climb to the heights he had while still retaining a fair number of
illusions about honor and fidelity was quite beyond Melles, but he had, and he
was already causing some trouble. He didn't care for the idea of a former chief
assassin as an Emperor—although Melles was following in a long and
distinguished, if not openly acknowledged, tradition. He had preferred Tremane,
who at least pretended to honesty, and had a fine career in both the civil
service and the military behind him.
More important than Peleun, however, was Councillor Baron Dirak,
who was in charge of the Imperial Civil Servants. He had been one of
Tremane's staunchest allies, still defended him openly at Court, and was not at
all pleased with Melles' rise to power. He'd had some hope of wedding a sister
to Tremane, and was very bitter about losing that chance for power.
Either of these men alone could have caused him some small
difficulty, but with both of them allied, things could become serious. And if
his sources were correct, they were maneuvering to get Councillor Serais, head
of the tax collectors, into their corner.
He had to consolidate his power in the Court. There were other
candidates for the Iron Throne, many of them just as qualified as Melles. It
was entirely possible that someone could send an assassin out after Melles.
Peleun probably would be horrified at the thought, but Dirak would consider it,
and there were others who knew how to contact the same list of "special
agents" that Melles used. Melles hadn't been able to contact them all, and
that meant there were at least a few top-level assassins unaccounted for.
Peleun could use his power as the head of the Imperial Guard to allow anyone he
wished in to see the Emperor at any time, and given the right set of circumstances,
the end result of such an interview could be a brace of guards arriving to put
Melles under arrest. With the Emperor's mind so unbalanced, it wouldn't be too
difficult to persuade him that Melles was not enthusiastic enough in his
pursuit of Tremane. That alone would be enough to get him arrested and
replaced.
If he was arrested, his enemies would have the leisure to concoct
as much evidence as they pleased to prove whatever they wished, and he would
not be able to interfere. It was possible, of course, that Porthas would take
up the reins and act in his absence, but Melles preferred not to count on such
enlightened self-interest. It was far more likely that Porthas and all of his
special employees would offer their services to what they perceived to be the
winning side.
He was secure in the city; Jacona was quiet, and entirely his. He
had issued his orders and sent out his assassins and negotiators along with
Thayer's troops; within a few weeks he would know how successful he had been at
taking the rest of the Empire under his rule. Now, while he was waiting for
word from the countryside, would be a good time to consolidate the Court. That
was one thing that his enemies never counted on; that he would continue to work
on another aspect of his projects while waiting for results from the previous
phase. They always started on a phase and waited to see what would happen
before going on to the next, but that was a costly way to operate.
As for the Court—he would order no assassinations, at least not
yet, and only use it as a last resort. If anyone died in the next few weeks,
even if it was completely an accident, he would be the first to be suspected of
initiating foul play. But he had always used the knife as a tool, not an end,
and the skills that had made him the Emperor's most successful agent included
blackmail, information brokering, and—of course—rumor creation. He didn't need
to kill anyone to be effective. It was more effective to keep a small but
omnipresent fear of death in peoples' minds than to actually deliver the
blow itself.
Peleun, Dirak, and Serais; he would concentrate on those three,
who were outwardly his enemies. The little fish were probably waiting to see
who came out the victor, and the bigger fish, the equals of those three, had
not yet openly taken sides.
Peleun's weakness was his fortune, or rather, his lack of one; he
didn't have a solid financial situation and he had been speculating lately in
commodities. He had been doing very well, in no small part because he knew just
what commodities were going to be in short supply, thanks to his contacts with
the Army. The Army, of course, had taken over the Cartage Guild, and although
the Army did not own or profit directly from the cargoes carried, there were
Army records of what had just come in that Peleun could easily get access to
before the goods ever came on the market. Everything had to go through
inspection, weighing, and taxation before so much as a grain of wheat could be
sold, and that took several days, enough time for Peleun to purchase goods that
were going to be scarce before anyone else knew that supplies were going to
temporarily dry up until the next cargoes came in. That was a great weakness in
the current market situation, for there was no telling what might come in
besides staples. There was no way to effectively communicate back to the farms
and estates, so at some point, it might be impossible to find an apple, and at
another, there was nothing in the way of fruit in the market but apples.
All Melles had to do would be to see that Peleun saw the wrong records, or
completely falsified records, and within a few weeks he would be a ruined man.
Dirak was a very nervous gentleman, timid and altogether afraid of
his shadow; perhaps that was why he had gone into civil service in the first
place. The current situation had him gulping handfuls of calmatives on a daily
basis; surely there was something that Melles could do to further destroy his
nerves.
And as for Serais—did he but know it, he was the most vulnerable
of all. Some quick work among the Imperial tax records, and hundreds of
thousands of gold pieces that had never existed in the first place would
"vanish" from the treasury. Of course, the errors would eventually be
uncovered, but it would take a great deal of work and require referring to all
the original tax receipts, and Serais' reputation would be completely ruined by
the time it was over. With any luck, he was probably skimming a little off the
top anyway, and when Melles was through, that would have been uncovered as well.
That wouldn't be enough to keep the Court completely under his
thumb, though. He had to give the malcontents within the Court another target
than himself, just as he had done for the malcontents in the city. It could not
be a target for blame, however, but a target of profit and reward. It
would be very dangerous to blame the Emperor for anything, and there was
no point in spreading rumors accusing anyone else of wrongdoing, when those
rumors might well be turned on him. No, with all the uneasiness in the Court,
offering people hope and profit would be far more effective.
What would happen when the mage-storms were over? What, exactly,
would the Empire need? How could those courtiers who remained here profit from
the end of the Storms? If he could give them a direction—even an entirely
specious direction—that would get them too busy to concern themselves with him.
Last of all, he and Thayer should work together to at least make
his position look unassailable. Perhaps by tempting one of his three
targets to attempt to persuade the Emperor to do something—something that
Melles could come out against—something that Melles would know the
Emperor would never even consider. Reliable rumors that the Emperor was
actually in favor of the given action would spur the target onward. By urging
something the Emperor was against, the target would label himself as a
troublemaker and potential traitor in the Emperor's eyes.
He smiled to himself. And what better action could there be than
urging clemency for Tremane?
He felt his eyes growing heavier, and his body relaxing. He had a
plan. In the morning& he would implement it.
Now he could sleep.
Melles smiled and nodded graciously as one of Viscount Aderin's
six unmarried daughters blushed and dedicated her performance on the great-harp
to him. He watched her attentively—which had the effect of making her fumble
her fingerings—as she labored through a rendition of an old chestnut entitled
"My Lady's Eyes."
Musical evenings were the best cure for insomnia that he knew, but
attendance at this one was important. If one was going to plant information,
this sort of gathering was the place to do so—a room full of very minor
nobility, all of them hungry for advancement, all of them so eager for a crumb
from the tables of the great that they would listen to and believe practically
anything. They would never divulge where their information originated, in the
hope that those they imparted their choice bits to would think that it
originated with them and give them credit for enormous cleverness.
And none of them could be directly linked to him. He did not mix
with them socially, except at extremely large gatherings like this one, which
he had been urged to attend by the Emperor's Minister of Protocol. He was not
related to any of them. No one had any reason to assume that he had any reason
to give them information. For all intents and purposes, he was here to survey
Aderin's daughters as possible marriage fodder, not to chat with Aderin's
friends.
In fact, the girls weren't that bad. Three of the six were
discreet and submissive, able to entertain without embarrassing him, unlikely
to try to put themselves forward, attractive enough to satisfy him, and
tractable enough to smile and ignore any little excess of his own. He could do
worse, and very well knew it. This was probably why the Minister of Protocol
had suggested the gathering, at least in part. There was some nervousness among
the Ministers about the fact that he was not yet married and showed no signs of
wanting that particular state. There had been a single Emperor in the past who
had been uninterested in the opposite sex, and there had been trouble during
his reign that he could have resolved with a marriage of state but had not done
so. This had eventually led to a costly minor war, and at the moment, the
Empire could not afford a cheap minor war.
Of course, he could always make the ministers happy by doing what
the Sixth Emperor had done. With his reign starting on a shaky note, and
unwilling to offend anyone by picking one girl over another, he had handpicked
the daughter of a mere Squire, a very plain, very quiet child, and had educated
her to be the perfect Empress. She had offended no one in his Court, because
she had deferred to everyone; she had every skill needed in an Empress. Even
the fact that she was plain had been valuable, because it was quite clear to
everyone that she was the Emperor's place-holder and hostess, and nothing more.
The Emperor had been able then to appoint dozens of royal mistresses over the
course of his reign, all of them enjoying the same status, and he had threaded
his way through many intrigues on the basis of which mistress he chose to favor
at any one time.
That might be the best solution of all. And if he had to make a
state marriage eventually, well, the Emperor could divorce his wife and remarry
within a day and a night, and an insignificant place-holder would have no
family to make trouble later. In fact, such a girl would probably be very happy
to retire from Court with a generous settlement.
As he caught himself playing with the various possibilities of
such an arrangement, he sternly brought his attention back to the real reason
why he was here. He was going to plant rumors, and he had better get about it
before people began indulging themselves a little too heavily in the mulled
punch to properly remember what they heard.
Before the evening was over, he had started a whisper-campaign
about Serais and the "missing" tax money, had suggested several lines
of profit to be pursued when the Storms were over, and had hinted that when he
was Emperor, those who confined their attention to conservative ideas and
relied on "what always worked before" would take second place to
those with innovation and creativity. Since these folk were among the lesser
nobility, they had less access to rejuvenative magics, and hence the average
age here was much lower than for the Court as a whole. Melles knew that the one
thing he could do to attract the support of little fish like these was to
suggest that he would be more receptive to fresh, new ideas than his
predecessor. This indicated that there was room at the top—and that some old,
tired titles might find their Council seats and Ministerial offices taken by
those who had been languishing in their shadow.
It had been a profitable evening. And in addition, he had managed
to deflect any accusation that he was actually pleased at Tremane's downfall by
pretending to a low level of disappointment in "his old childhood
friend," thus lending another layer of obscurity to his motives. Now there
would be a substantial number of people with the impression that he and Tremane
had been friends for most of their lives rather than rivals. So when he laid
the trail to suggest that the Emperor might be willing to consider clemency for
the Grand Duke, there would be people ready to believe the suggestion since it
came from him.
This very evening, a bright young fellow who'd brought himself to
Porthas' attention by his brilliance with both forgery and "fixing"
account books had been smuggled into the tax office and was ensuring Serais'
downfall. Peleun had invested everything he had to spare, and some that he did
not have, in smoked ham, bacon, and fancy sausage, certain that the cargo that
had just arrived from Tival was frozen fish, not meat. Tomorrow the double
caravan of smoked ham, bacon, and fancy sausage that had arrived from Tival
would go on the market, and Peleun would be very lucky if he could hold onto
his house in the city.
And as for Dirak, well, Melles had something very special in mind
for him. Besides being nervous, Dirak was devout—or perhaps it was better to
say that he was superstitious. He was about to be the recipient of a great many
omens of bad fortune, together with many minor mishaps that might lend further
credence to those omens. If Dirak did not collapse with nervous exhaustion
before the end of a fortnight, Melles would be very much surprised.
Melles was feeling pleased enough with the way that things were
going that he dismissed Porthas early when he returned to his rooms. Porthas
had been responsible for setting up most of what Melles had planned for his
three enemies, and he was looking a bit worn, at least to Melles' critical eye.
"I can take care of myself for once," he told the man. "I'm going
to work for a few more hours, then go straight to bed."
"I would argue with you," Bors Porthas replied, rubbing
his hand across his eyes, "but I'm too tired. I know my limits, and I've
just reached them."
Melles uttered a short bark of laughter. "Good! I was
beginning to think you had no limits, and I was wondering when you were going
to set yourself up as my rival." He was only half joking about that; it
was something anyone in his position had to consider.
Porthas snorted. "No fear of that, my lord. You are a
target. I am not. To my mind, my position is the better one. Please
sleep lightly and put an extra guard on your door, my lord. And don't
try to dress yourself until I arrive to select your robes for the day. I do not
want a repetition of the day you wore the sapphire tunic with the emerald
trews. I would not be able to live down the shame."
Melles acknowledged the advice with a wave of his hand, and
Porthas bowed himself out.
Since he would be doing without his valet's silent attendance,
Melles set his desk up with everything he might need to work before he ever sat
down. A servant would come in to mend the fire, but otherwise he would be left
alone at his own orders until he chose to go to bed.
He had been working steadily on follow-up orders for his agents in
Jacona involved with the freedom movement, and similar, but more general orders
for similar agents in other cities of the Empire. He had noticed that the room
seemed to be getting colder, and had been about to ring for the servant, when
the servant finally came in, bearing a metal hod of coal.
He started to turn his attention back to his work, when something
about the young man's posture sounded a mental alarm in his instincts.
He was already out of his chair and had slipped free of the
cumbersome outer robe as he dove toward the floor, when the first knife hit the
back of the chair and stuck there, quivering.
He rolled to his feet beside the fireplace and snatched up a
fireplace poker as the youngster threw a second knife that he dropped down from
a hidden sheath in his sleeve. Melles easily dodged that strike, too, and his
lip curled with contempt. Arm sheaths—that was a trick for sophomores and
sharpsters! And against him! What kind of fools were they sending after
him anyway?
"'You might as well hold still, old man," the young one
whispered, pulling another knife from somewhere behind the back of his neck as
he went into a lithe crouch. "You're going to die anyway, so you might as
well make it easier on both of us."
Old man! Who did this young idiot think he was? But the stupid
speech—so melodramatic and such a waste of breath—told him the kind of
assassin he faced. He had to deal with nuisances like this one at least once a
year; youngsters who thought they were better and faster than the old masters,
and would use any excuse to take them on. He would have to kill this cretin; he
had no choice in the matter. If he didn't make an example of the fool, others
like him would think he'd gone soft and keep coming at him. Killing the boy
would mean that the others would leave him alone for about another year.
But anger boiled up deep in his gut, and not just because some
young freelancer, ill-trained and without even a nodding acquaintance with
discipline, had decided to show that the master had lost his touch. No, this
boy would never have come here if he had not been brought into the palace by
someone who belonged here. That meant he'd been hired.
And that was an insult that was hardly to be borne. How dared
someone send a rank amateur against him? Did they think his reputation,
was inflated? Did they think he could no longer hold his own against even a boy
like this one?
Were they that contemptuous of him?
They were about to discover that it was not wise to tease the old
basilisk; they would learn that it was only pretending to sleep.
He rushed the boy, startling him into skipping backward; he was
used to the flickering shadows cast by flames instead of mage-lights, but the
boy obviously was not. As he passed his desk, he feinted with the poker and
picked up the tray of sand he used to dry the ink on his documents. The boy's
attention was on the poker, not on Melles' other hand. Before he could get out
of reach, Melles flung the contents of the tray into his eyes, then threw the
tray itself at him. The boy deflected the tray clumsily with one arm; it hit
him and clattered to the floor. He could not deflect the sand.
So far neither of them had made enough noise to attract the
attention of the guards at the door, and Melles had no intention of calling for
help. If the guards came, they'd kill the fool before Melles had a chance to
find out who had sent him.
Blinded and in pain, the boy still had a few tricks left; with his
eyes watering, he threw the dagger he held at the last place Melles had been
standing, and rubbed at his face with one hand while groping behind his neck
for another blade. Of course, Melles wasn't where the boy thought, but had
dropped down below the level of a thrown blade. He lunged forward before the
boy could register where he was, and swept the poker out in a savage backhanded
blow at knee-height.
He shattered the boy's left kneecap, and the boy went down with a
strangled cry.
"Who sent you?" he hissed angrily, as he stood up
slowly, absently pleased that he was not at all winded. The daily workouts with
Porthas had been more than worth the effort.
The boy responded with a curse about Melles's sexual preferences,
rolled out of the way of another blow, and got his fourth knife into his hands
at the same time.
"No matter what you've heard, I don't take any pleasure in
that particular pastime," Melles said coldly. By now, his eyes had watered
so much that the boy could see again, although his eyes were bloodshot and
swollen. Melles was in no mood to take chances, even though he was facing a
partially disabled foe, so he watched the young fool warily. The boy did not
writhe or take his eyes off Melles, though the pain from his shattered knee
must have been excruciating. "I suggest you tell me who hired you, and
save yourself a great deal of pain."
The boy inched away, sliding over the slick floor, while Melles
moved cautiously toward him. This time the curse was a bit more colorful and
less accurate. Melles sighed, and shook his head, as the boy got into a
standing position with the help of a chair. What did he expect to accomplish
from there? He couldn't walk; his leg wouldn't hold him. And if he couldn't
walk, his balance would be off. Didn't he know that? Was he so desperate he'd
try anything, or did he really think he had a chance to escape?
Melles backed up, keeping his eyes on the boy at all times, until
he reached his desk. Without needing to look to see where it was, he pulled the
boy's first knife out of the back of the chair, weighed it in his hand for a
moment to get the balance, and threw it.
It hit precisely as he had intended, in the boy's gut with a wet thud;
the boy dropped to the ground again with a gurgle, unable to twist out of the
way in time, as his own knife clattered to the floor. Perhaps the fool had
thought he was going to try for the trickier hand shot. That was stupid of him,
if he had. A gut wound hurt more and wouldn't kill immediately.
Melles walked over to the boy and stood looking down at him, with
the poker held loosely in one hand. The boy had both hands on the hilt of the
knife, trying to pull it out, his breath came in harsh pants, and his eyes were
glazing with agony. "Who hired you?" he asked again.
The boy looked up, and spat at him.
He sighed. He was going to have to spend more time than he wanted
on this, squandering time that could have been better spent on his orders, but
there was no help for it. "You're going to tell me sooner or later,"
he said, without much hope for sense from this arrogant idiot, who still didn't
think he was going to die. "You'll be better off with sooner." This
time the boy responded with a suggestion for an unpalatable dietary supplement.
Melles brought the poker down on his other knee, and proceeded dispassionately
to inflict enough pain to extract the information he wanted.
In the end, he managed to get what he wanted without too much of a
mess, and the answer made him even more disgusted than he had been at the
beginning of the futile exercise.
Duke Jehan. An idiot with just about as little sense as the cretin
he'd hired.
And it was not for any great ideological reason, nor because Jehan
was avenging Tremane, or trying to put one of the other candidates in the
Heir's suite. No, it was because Jehan had somehow gotten the impression that
if he managed to assassinate enough candidates, he would manage to be
put on the throne because he was Charliss' second cousin!
Apparently he'd thought that if he used assassins to do his work
for him, no one would connect him with the deaths! Melles had no idea who Jehan
thought would get the blame if Melles himself was gone, but perhaps this
would-be King of Assassins had gotten his order of targets reversed and had
gone after the last on the list first.
He finished off the mewling thing on the floor with a single
thrust of the boy's own knife, threw the knife down next to the body, and wiped
his hands with a napkin, contemplating his next move. It wouldn't be enough to
make an example of this boy, or Jehan would think he'd gotten off undiscovered
and try some other way of ridding himself of his rivals. Melles had acquired
immunity to most of the common poisons, but that didn't mean he wouldn't get
sick if someone slipped a dose to him. That would cost still more valuable
time, and might incapacitate him long enough for one of his real rivals
to get in to the Emperor. No, he was going to have to give Jehan a real fright,
and make him into an example for anyone else at Court idiotic enough to try
something like this.
In the end, it took all of his skill to pull the job off—not to
get into Jehan's quarters without arousing anyone, but to get past his own
guards. The nurse who was supposed to be watching in Duke Jehan's nursery was
easily incapacitated with a needle dipped in a poison that sent one into a deep
sleep rather than death. Jehan's oldest son, slightly more than a year old, sat
up in his crib and looked with wide eyes at the stranger who came to lift him
out and place him on the floor. He didn't do anything more than babble, though,
when the stranger gave him several pretty toys to play with.
Melles dropped the body, wrapped in a bloody sheet, into the crib
in place of the child, and left the child himself sitting on the floor, happily
absorbed in the bladeless daggers that had been intended to kill Melles.
That was a somewhat melodramatic gesture in and of itself, but
Melles had the feeling that anything less wouldn't get Jehan's attention. He'd
considered leaving the daggers whole rather than snapping the blades off, but
if the baby was as stupid as its sire, it would probably have managed to kill
itself with one of them. While that would have been no loss for the Court or
the world, Jehan would have been so overwrought that the lesson would be
completely lost on him. And killing babies, or allowing them to be killed, was
bad for one's public image.
Melles slipped back across the palace and into his own rooms
again, feeling drained and no less disgusted. He had lost most of the working
hours of the night—and this late, although he had easily gotten the blood off
the stone floor with the sheet, he'd used up all the hot water in his suite to
do so. He'd have to wash himself in cold water; one more mark against Jehan.
He put himself to bed, chilled and angry, but at least he was
physically tired enough to sleep.
And hopefully, his little present would prevent Jehan and several
others from sleeping for many nights to come. It wasn't much in the way of
revenge, for him, but for now it would do.
Seven
"Amazing!" Silverfox shook his head and stepped away
from the teleson crystal, tossing his long, black hair to one side. "If I
had not seen this, I would not believe it was possible."
"I couldn't agree more," Karal said. He had been
watching over Silverfox's shoulder as the kestra'chern
spoke with Treyvan. The round crystal lens mounted on top of the teleson had
held a perfect image of the head and shoulders of the fascinated gryphon, and a
thin but distinct echo of his voice emerged from the matte-gray metal box that
held the crystal cradled in a quarter-moon-shaped depression on its surface.
This was even more impressive than the time An'desha had done long-distance
scrying on Grand Duke Tremane..
This was a distinct improvement over the original sets. A little
fiddling and the addition of the crystals on each set as well as the
mirrors—simple polished lenticular lenses that any glassworker could make—had
made it possible to have images and the audible voices of the two users. All
that had been in the notes that Lyam and Firesong had interpreted, but the
crystals had never been installed. Perhaps that was why the sets had been on
the workbench.
Karal gazed wistfully at the device, which was now being used by
Sejanes and one of the new Mage-Gifted Heralds. "This is quite amazing. I
wish you didn't have to have Mindspeech to use it."
"But you don't—" Silverfox began. "Or at least only
one of you does."
Karal only sighed, very quietly. Silverfox looked at him askance,
with a question in his blue eyes, but it was Sejanes who guessed what lay
behind Karal's comment.
"You'd like to use this to speak to that young lady of yours
without any of us eavesdropping, wouldn't you, lad?" he said shrewdly.
Karal blushed and didn't reply immediately, trying to think of an answer that
was noncommittal enough without being an actual lie.
"Well, you need to use it to confer with the others
back in Haven," he said, nodding in the direction of Sejanes, Firesong,
and Master Levy.. "That's important."
"And you aren't. Is that what you're saying?" Sejanes
graced him with a skeptical look.
"What you are talking about is important," Karal
replied, knowing that any declaration of how unimportant he was would only be
met with a counterargument. "Idle chatter with Natoli isn't. It's not as
if I really need to hear about what scrapes our friends are getting into, or
who's passed to the back room at the Compass Rose."
Sejanes didn't counter that particular response. Instead, he
provided a different answer. "We won't be using this device all the time.
Personally, if there is a way, I don't see any difficulty with you using it to
catch up on news with the young lady." He tilted his head at Firesong,
An'desha, and Master Levy in unspoken inquiry. All three of them nodded their
heads, completely in agreement with him.
"We all know that you would give it up to one of us if we
even looked as if we thought we might want to use it, Karal,"
An'desha told him. "If you could think of a way that you can make it work
without an eavesdropper, there's no reason why you can't use it, too. It's not
as if you're going to wear the thing out, or use it up."
:Pish. I can Mindspeak. And so can Florian.: Altra wrapped himself gracefully around
Karal's legs and looked up into his face. :For that matter, so can Need. We
certainly wouldn't embarrass you, would we?:
"The Firecat says that he, Need, or the Companion could hold
the connection for Karal," Firesong told all of them.
Karal started to protest, then shut his mouth, realizing that he
was wrong on all counts and he might as well be quiet. The others wouldn't need
to use the teleson all the time, Altra and Florian already shared most of his
secret thoughts so why not these, and there could not be any harm in talking a
little to Natoli now and then. His cheeks and the back of his neck grew hot.
"As long as you don't mind," he said diffidently.
A snort from Firesong was the only reply to that statement, as a
Herald in the teleson watched and listened with polite interest.
"Shall I see if Natoli can be found later?" the
far-off Herald asked. "If there's no one at the device, one of the
Mindspeakers can project to you until Need, the Firecat or the Companion can
come hold the connection."
:I would think that would be quite satisfactory,: Florian told Karal :And I think you
ought to tell him that, so that he can arrange for Natoli to come as soon as
the mages are finished.:
"Ah, Florian thinks that would be a good idea," Karal
said, trying to control his blushes. "Thank you."
He hurried away to find something to do before he got himself into
any further embarrassing situations.
The most useful thing he could do was to serve in his proper place
as a secretary, and right at this very moment the only person who needed the
skills of a secretary was Tarrn. The kyree
was down in the workroom, carefully describing everything before Firesong and
An'desha took it all to pieces. Lyam had already made scale drawings of each
workbench, and now he was making notes while Tarrn dictated. He gratefully gave
up his place to Karal, even though the notes would now be in Valdemaran rather
than Kaled'a'in. Tarrn didn't miss a beat, changing his Mindspeech from Lyam to
Karal as soon as Karal held the notepad and graphite-stick. Karal rubbed his
nose to keep from sneezing; they had stirred up quite a bit of dust just in
walking about. It was amazing how much dust found its way down here once the
hatchway was open.
"Why are you doing this, sir?" Karal asked, when they
completed one bench and moved on to another. "I'm just curious."
:A number of reasons,: the kyree replied
pleasantly. :Later, if we are trying to put together another device, we will
know what pieces were laid out on which bench in what order. We will have a
historical record of how the workshop looked if we ever wish to reconstruct it.
In this way, if for some reason the contents of the workbenches are ever
jumbled together, we will know what tool goes with what project. It is not
always intuitively obvious.:
Karal nodded, and made another note on the identity of an object.
All of that made perfect sense, but it would never have occurred to him to make
such detailed drawings, or to measure the distance an object was from the edge
of the bench.
:In a case like this, young scribe, records are always important,: Tarrn said. :The more, the better.
Once anything is moved, it is changed forever; perhaps that might not be
important, but at the moment, we can't know that. The thing is to make drawings
and notes on everything, and several exact copies of the documents we find:
Karal laughed, which seemed to surprise the kyree. "It is a good thing that Urtho was a neat man, or you
would be copying foodstains, I think, along with diagrams."
The kyree opened his
mouth in a wide grin. :It would not be the first time. I am a mere
historian; how am I to know what is a diagram and what was a long ago spill of
wine? Perhaps a semicircle of dark brown may not in fact be a ring from the
bottom of a mug, but rather a notation of where a teleson lens should go?:
Lyam, now freed to go make more of those exact copies of the
documents and notes they had discovered resting on the benches, trotted up the
stairs. Karal had been amazed to discover just how much he had in common with
the little lizard-creature over the past several days. Lyam was good-natured,
patient, uncomplaining, and about the same age as Karal. Like Karal when he had
first arrived in Valdemar, Lyam never expected to be anything more than a
secretary. Lyam was probably right, but if anything was to happen to Tarrn, it
would be Lyam who would apply the things he learned from the historian to
complete a given task.
Tarrn, on the other hand, was a little easier to work for than
Ulrich had been, largely because what Tarrn wanted and needed were simple
things. It was quite possible for Karal to anticipate Tarrn's descriptions just
by looking at the bench, although Tarrn often had a more succinct way of
describing something than Karal would have come up with. And Tarrn, although he
did have an air of quiet authority, was not as intimidating as Ulrich had been.
Since he was physically much shorter than Karal, and since he looked like a
friendly, shaggy sheep-herding dog, it simply wasn't possible to be intimidated
by him, no matter how intelligent and knowledgeable he was. On the other hand,
he seemed just a bit wary around Karal, which was not too surprising. The
Karsites had a reputation for being extremely insular people, and it would be
logical to assume that Karal harbored certain prejudices about fourlegged
"people." Tarrn could not have known about the Firecats, of course;
very few people outside of Karse even knew such things existed.
The work went slowly but steadily. Tarrn had refused to allow
anyone else to carry away anything after Firesong had taken the telesons and
their notes. Since there wasn't anything down here that was needed immediately,
the others had given in to his demands with good-natured humor. Since then, the
meticulous description and drawing had been going on every day. Tarrn permitted
people to remove articles from the benches only after he had finished with
them, but since it wasn't always obvious when he was done with a bench, so far
no one had moved much of anything.
Now they were down to the final bench, and Tarrn seemed very
pleased with all that had gone before. This bench was virtually empty except
for a few pots of dried-out paint and ink and some brushes and pens. :A
scribe's bench, I would guess,: Tarrn speculated. :Look at the height of
the stool—how close the inkwell and the pots are to the front of the bench.
Urtho never sat here, I'll wager.:
"I doubt that any human did," Karal replied, noting the
distances down on the diagram. "This is a backless stool, where all the
other seats are tall chairs, and to me, that says that whoever used this bench
might have had a tail. The seat tilts slightly forward and has an angled,
rounded cut-in toward the back, so, I'd say it was a hertasi that sat here. Probably Urtho's personal scribe or
secretary."
:Impressive deduction. I suspect you are correct,: Tarrn replied. :And this is good,
since it means Lyam can use this bench for his copying work instead of taking
an awkward position on the floor. Well, that is all we need from here. Do run
up and tell the others that they can come loot to their hearts' content, would
you please? Then if you would, tell Lyam about all of this, and could you help
him move his supplies down here?:
Tarrn gave the order carefully, phrased as a very polite request,
as if trying to avoid giving insult. Karal would have obeyed him no matter what
his attitude had been, but Tarrn probably wasn't taking any chances about
hurting his feelings since they all had to live together in a very crowded
environment. Lyam was very happy to transfer his work from the floor upstairs
to the bench downstairs, and Karal helped him carry his effects. As Karal had
thought, the backless stool was at the perfect height for the little lizard.
"This will be good," Lyam said, hissing his sibilants a
trifle as he tested the seat. "The stool is perfect." The brushes
proved to have failed to withstand the rigors of time; Lyam examined them,
pronounced them useless for scribing, and added that nothing had changed much
in the art of brushmaking over the centuries. It did give Karal a sense of awe
to hold in his hand something that had last been held so long ago, but Lyam was
right; the brush could have been made last week except for the fact that the
bristles were crumbling.
"I admit to having a special regard for the tools of my
trade," Lyam confided. The paint and ink in the pots were useless as well
and were consigned to part of another bench to await their fate. Lyam and Karal
cleared the top of the scribe's bench and set it up to Lyam's satisfaction. It
did not escape Karal's notice that the graphite-sticks, silverpoint sticks,
ink, pens, and brushes that Lyam arranged were in nearly the same places as
those that had once served that long-dead scribe. Together they swept and
cleaned out the corner, so that there would be no dust or dirt to smudge Lyam's
new-made copies.
"Ah!" Lyam finally said with satisfaction, stretching
his tail out and flexing his stubby hand-talons. "This is good, good
light, and a good position! I can be very happy here, I think! Thank you, gesten."
"You're very welcome. Really." Karal paused a moment as
it struck him again, in a moment of astonishment, that he was chatting amiably
with what could be loosely described as an intelligent dog and its lizard
secretary, in the ruins of a magic-blasted tower once ruled by a legend. His
musings were interrupted as the lizard secretary held up an ancient brush so
that the tarnished ferrule shone dully in the workshop's light. "You know,
simply by virtue of where this brush has been found, it could be worth enough
in trade to feed my family for a season, but its highest value is in what it
makes us think of when we see it."
The kyree looked over at
the hertasi with a look of pure
pleasure, saying nothing. Lyam held the old brush reverently in both hands and
continued. "An artifact of Urtho's own workshop. This is history itself,
Karal, as great as any carved monument or temple. History is in the small items
as much as the huge ones. When we see an edifice, we see what the ancients
wanted us to see, and that is important, but we find out so much more from what
was so familiar to them that they thought little of it. And one day, perhaps
historians will look back at our clothes, our brushes, and our everyday things,
and learn who we were, too!"
:Now you know why I enjoy Lyam's company so much, Karal. He is
truly a brother in spirit!:
Tarrn's mind-laugh was joyous.
"Oh! I—well. It is easy to be overcome by all of this. It is
wonder itself we are immersed in here," Lyam muttered, embarrassed, as he
gingerly set aside the brush that had been the focus of his oratory. Karal and
Tarrn exchanged knowing looks with each other. Even across time, species, and
cultures, the enjoyment of history's "wonder itself" could be shared.
Karal left Lyam bent over yet another copy of the ancient notes;
this batch seemed to be the jewelry designs. He would have offered to help, but
although his drafting ability was up to making sketches of benchtops and their
contents, it was not up to making copies of intricate jewelry patterns.
When he went back upstairs, Tarrn came with him, and immediately
engaged himself in conference with Firesong and An'desha over another copied
set of notes. Firesong and An'desha were chattering away, with odd breaks in
the conversation as they listened to Tarrn's Mindspoken replies. Master Levy
had replaced Sejanes at the teleson, and was talking to someone Karal did not
recognize, but who wore Trainee Grays instead of Herald Whites. Sejanes, who
was standing behind Master Levy, simply watching the conversation, turned at
the sound of Karal's footsteps and waved him over.
"I understand from Firesong that you were the Channel for the
last effort here," Sejanes said, when Karal was within earshot. The old
mage looked at him expectantly, motioning him to follow as he moved away from
the teleson and Master Levy's intensely technical conversation.
Karal nodded, wondering what Sejanes wanted. "Not that I have
any idea of what a Channel is or does, sir," he added. "I'm afraid I
put my faith in what I was told, that Channeling is instinctive." He felt
very diffident, telling such an experienced mage that he had no idea of what he
had been doing. He hoped that Sejanes wasn't going to be annoyed at him for
mucking about with things he didn't understand.
Sejanes pulled on his lower lip thoughtfully. "That's true in
a limited sense," he finally replied. "You could perfectly well go on
that way; many Channels prefer not to know anything about what causes what
they're doing. But there are things that can be learned that would make the
experience easier for you, and perhaps less frightening. I could teach you, if
you wanted to learn; that's why I asked about it. It could make an important
difference in how you feel afterward."
Karal's mouth went dry, and he swallowed as a tremor of fear
passed through him. How could he tell this old mage that the very last thing he
wanted was to have anything to do with more magic? On the other hand, Sejanes
seemed to understand how horrible it had been for him, and if there was a
"next time," wouldn't it he better to undertake it fully
prepared?" Well, sir, if I had a choice—I've done it twice, and I'd really
rather not ever do it again. But if I have to, anything that would make things
easier would probably be a good idea. So I guess I ought to take you up on your
offer."
The old man chuckled at his lack of enthusiasm and patted his
shoulder, as if to reassure him. "There's no shame in that reaction,"
he told Karal. "I've never Channeled, myself, but I've spoken to those who
have and they would probably agree with you on both counts. I can't blame you a
bit. Yet if we're going to start, I suspect we ought to do so before you lose
your nerve about it. If you have some time to spare, we could begin now."
Karal shrugged with a nonchalance he in no way felt. "I'd
rather not put it off and take a chance that I might need to channel power in
the next few hours. The way my luck runs, I would need what you might
have taught me if I hadn't delayed because—"
He stopped himself before he admitted how frightened he was, but
Sejanes saw it anyway. He left his hand on Karal's shoulder a moment longer.
"I told you, it is no shame to be afraid, young one," he said in a
low, reassuring voice. "Channels hold power as great as any Adept, and
sometimes greater; the only difference between them is that Channels don't
actually use what they carry. And perhaps that is what makes it harder for
them. They are used by the power, rather than using it. What sane creature ever
gives up control if he does not have to?"
Karal shuddered; he wouldn't ever want to use all that
power. It would be more responsibility than he ever cared to handle under any
circumstances, no matter how dire. "That's—that's quite a thought, sir.
We—we of the Sunlord give up control to Him as a matter of faith. But we are
still afraid sometimes, and He only helps those who try hard to deal with
difficulties themselves. And I'm afraid I don't know much about magic at all,
if it comes right down to it."
"Good. Then you have little or nothing to unlearn. And, yes,
your faith will help you." Sejanes led the way to the chamber they were
using for storage, purloined a couple of empty buckets and a pair of folded
blankets for cushions to sit on, and took Karal over to a quiet corner. When
they had made rough stools out of the upturned buckets and rested the cushions
upon them, he began. Karal experienced a disconcerting sense of familiarity and
an equally disconcerting sense of disconnection; Sejanes sounded like every
good teacher he had ever studied under, but the surroundings were nothing like
the classrooms of the Sun-priests where he had done all that study. And if he
closed his eyes, Sejanes sounded so much like Ulrich except for the accent that
it was uncanny.
"Mage-power, as we know and understand it, is an energy that
is given off by living things in the same way that fire gives off heat and
light in the act of consuming wood," he said, his manner easy and casual,
his tone exactly the same as if he were describing the weather and not a power
that could wreck kingdoms. "It tends to want to gather together, and tends
to follow well-worn paths. In that, it is more like rainwater than fire."
"And mages can see this power?" Karal asked, though his
mouth was dry with nervousness.
"That's what makes someone a mage," Sejanes replied.
"I can see that power any time I make the effort to—and someone like
Firesong has to make an effort not to see it."
Karal glanced over at Firesong, who looked no different from any
other absurdly handsome Hawkbrother, and shook his head. Seeing power all the
time... was it like seeing things with an extra color added? Was it like seeing
particles and waves swirling all around you like swimming underwater? And when
the power got too strong, did it blind you, like looking into the sun?
"Now, the power itself obeys rules," Sejanes continued.
"When the threadlike paths, or tiny streams, merge together enough to make
them of a different magnitude of strength, we call them 'ley-lines.' These tend
to be straight, at least in the short term, and that, besides strength of
power, is what makes ley-lines different from the trickles that feed
them."
"Is it the strength that makes them straight?" Karal
hazarded.
Sejanes looked pleased. "We don't know for certain, but that
is the theory," he said. "It makes sense; a trickle of water will
meander more than a powerful river. We think that after a certain point, the
power can cut through the world taking the shortest distance which, as Master
Levy will tell you, is always a straight line."
Karal nodded; no wonder Sejanes and Master Levy got on so well!
"Now, sooner or later, since power is attracted by power,
these lines will meet. The places where two or more ley-lines meet forms
something called a 'node,' where power collects." Sejanes looked at him
expectantly.
Karal hazarded another question. "It can't collect
indefinitely, though, can it?"
Sejanes looked very pleased. "No, it can't, and it
will either be used up or drain away into the Void, and we honestly don't know
what happens to it after that."
Karal seemed to recall An'desha telling him something about a
third option, something that the Hawkbrothers used called a Heartstone, but
that was a complication he didn't need right now. First, learn the rules, and
worry about the exceptions later.
"Now—about using power," Sejanes continued. "Mages
can use the power that they themselves produce. Mages can use the power given
off by things in their immediate vicinity. Mages can also store power for later
use in reservoirs; those can be available only to a single mage, or can be a
group effort, built by group contributions, for as long as the group
lasts."
"Everybody?" Karal asked, more than a bit alarmed by the
notion of a barely-trained Apprentice being able to use such power.
"Oh, no!" Sejanes chuckled. "No, fortunately, lack
of training and practice provides some control. The common titles for levels of
ability refer to what power they can tap, and not their absolute skill. As with
any venture, some people are more skilled than others, but I digress.
Apprentices can only use their own power or what is immediately available
around them below the level of a ley-line. Journeymen can use ley-lines.
Masters can use those reservoirs. If a mage is part of a particular school, he
is given the key to the reservoir built by the mages of that school at the time
he becomes a Master. At that point, part of his duty every day is to feed the
reservoir as much power as he has time to gather. Eventually, over the years,
with these reservoirs being filled more often than they are drained, they are
ready for anything the Masters might need, but that power is tame, like water
in a still pond."
"Because it isn't flowing anywhere?" Karal asked, and
was rewarded by Sejanes's nod. "But what about nodes?"
"That," Sejanes said with a shading of pride, "is
what only Adepts can do. Adepts don't need to bother with the reservoirs,
though they sometimes do simply because they are so still—for very delicate
work, for example, such as Healings. Adepts can tap into and use the raw power
of the nodes. The stronger the Adept, the larger the node he can control.
Ley-line power is harder to control than reservoir power or ambient power,
because, as you guessed, it is 'moving,' so to speak. But node power fights the
user, because it is moving swiftly, sometimes in more than one direction and is
wild and unconfined. Have you understood me so far?"
Karal nodded; so far this all seemed very straightforward. Perhaps
Altra would also be able to help him with this, since the Firecat seemed
something of a mage.
"Last of all of those who handle mage-power come the
Channels." Sejanes nodded at Karal. "As I said when I began, the one
thing that all life-path mages have in common is that they have what the
Valdemarans call the Mage-Gift, and that ability enables them to actually see
magic power. Channels, however, usually do not have Mage-Gift, or if they do,
it isn't very strong."
"Why?" Karal asked.
Sejanes rubbed the side of his nose. "I don't know if there
is a reason. There is some speculation that this is partly a protection for
them, and partly a protection against them. The ability to sense magic power
might be blinded the first time a Channel was used by very powerful magic. And
if you can sense something, you can use it, so it might be better for all of us
that anyone who can handle power stronger than any Adept would even dream
of touching cannot actually use that power himself."
Again, Karal nodded. If you went on the basic assumption that any
Karsite would—which was that it was Vkandis who granted such abilities—such a
system of checks and balances made complete sense. Vkandis would not have
placed extraordinary power within the capacity of mere mortals without some
curbs on the system.
The explanation might also simply be that the act of attempting to
actually use that much power rather than just direct it could be fatal. If
mages who were also Channels died before they could wed and bring forth
children with the Gift, such a combination wouldn't last for long. Look what
happened to those with mind-magic in Karse. They'd been gathered up and given
to the Fires for generations, and as a result, just before Solaris took power,
there were so few such "witches" and "demons" that there
hadn't been more than four or five Fires a year, with a single victim apiece.
Sejanes looked down at his hands for a moment, gathering his
thoughts. "Think of a funnel; the wide end catches scattered drops of
water or small pieces of matter, and focuses it down into a small, directed stream.
That's what a Channel does, and roughly how a Channel does it. And because a
Channel actually forces the power going through him to flow through a 'smaller
space,' he increases the force of that flow and its 'speed," if you will.
So what a Channel needs to work perfectly is someone to guide the power in,
however wild it may be, and someone to direct it as it goes out again. Remember
that directing something—much like shunting a stream a few degrees—is much
easier than using it."
Karal nodded numbly as Sejanes continued.
"Magic is much like water, Karal, but it is far more
versatile. It can be manipulated by force of will, by natural aptitude, by
specialized devices, and by other ways. Water, essentially, can only get things
'wet,' if I may use a crude analogy. Magic, however, can get things wet, turn
things to dust, set them ablaze, make them into stone, give them life, put them
somewhere else, and so on. But magic in its wild forms works in very gradual
and subtle ways. It is not until magic is manipulated by someone that it has
'quick' effects. Without mages, magic takes its natural course."
"Like a river," Karal offered. "And mages make
water wheels and dams and bridges."
Sejanes leaned back, apparently impressed. "That," he
said slowly, "is essentially it. Yes. That is what we do."
Karal bit at his lower lip and offered, "And what happened
here, is that long ago there was an explosion in the magic that—scooped a hole
out. And the water—I mean, the magic—is rushing back to fill the hole."
"Close," Sejanes nodded. "Very close. You are a
bright young man, Karal. Now, back to just what you are. A Channel. For
whatever reason, a Channel collects power that is brought 'to' him, and directs
it in a more purely directed, less stormy fashion."
"That's all there is to it?" Karal exclaimed. "I am
a funnel?"
Sejanes smiled. "That's all the theory," he
chided gently. "But now comes the practice that will help you keep parts
of yourself from interfering with or even fighting that stream of power. And it
will be all the harder because you will be dealing with something you yourself
can only sense dimly, like playing blind-man's bluff with an unruly stallion.
And to continue that analogy, I'm not going to show you how to catch and ride
the beast, because it will kill you if you try. Instead, I'm going to try to
teach you how to keep 'yourself' out of its way."
At the end of the lesson, Karal was quite certain that Sejanes'
analogy of a game with an angry horse was the correct one. The inside of his
head felt bruised, somehow, though certainly not as bad as he had felt after
the first time he'd acted as a Channel. The lesson was over when Sejanes
clapped him on the back and told him that he had done very well for his first
attempt.
"You aren't the worst Channel I've ever seen, and we tend to
use them more than you Westerners do," the old mage said cheerfully.
"I don't know if the ability occurs more often in the Empire or if we
Imperial mages are so lazy that we'd rather use Channels than focus power
ourselves, and so we make an active effort to look for the ability. But you
aren't the worst, that's for certain, and you've come to the lessons late in
your life, so that's encouraging."
:Faint praise, but better than none, I suppose,: Altra observed, wrapping himself around Karal's
legs. :Natoli is waiting to talk to you.:
"I'm going to assume that since my lord Altra is here, that
your young lady is ready to speak to you," Sejanes observed. "Go on,
off with you. By the by, you'll toughen up as you practice; this should be the
worst training session you'll ever endure."
:You'll notice he said training session,: Altra observed, as Karal got up from his
stool and followed the Firecat. :That doesn't say anything about the real
thing.:
That hadn't escaped Karal's attention, but he really didn't want
to dwell on it, not when he was finally going to get to see and talk to Natoli.
Karal took his place on the empty stool in front of the teleson;
Altra draped himself over Karal's feet, and the Herald in the crystal winked,
and stepped away. A moment later, Natoli moved into the place he had vacated.
She looked as if she had recovered from the boiler explosion. Her
hair was a little longer than it had been when he left, and she looked at him
as if she had forgotten why she was there. Suddenly he felt very shy.
"Hello, Natoli," he said awkwardly. "You look in
good health."
He winced as he listened to himself; was that any way to speak to
a girl he really wanted to be able to kiss?
"You don't," she said bluntly, peering at him.
"You're too pale, and too thin. What have you been doing to
yourself?"
That was so very typical of her that he had to laugh, and relaxed
immediately. "As to the first, we've been living underground, and we
mostly don't get to see the sun. And as to the second—have you ever
tasted Firesong's cooking?" He shuddered melodramatically, and she laughed
in return. "Seriously. We're mostly eating as the Shin'a'in do; it's not
that bad, just a little odd."
"And you don't often see a fat Shin'a'in," she said
shrewdly. "Things were quiet until Altra showed up with this contraption.
We Artificers all wanted to take it apart, of course, but when we were told
that the first person to try would be skinned, we gave up on the idea."
She grinned. "We'll have to make do with trying to duplicate it from those
manuscripts. If we can, we'll send one by fast Herald-courier to Solaris, and
then you'll get to talk to her on a regular basis."
"Must I?" he asked weakly. He was not ready to face
Solaris just yet. He wasn't sure he would be for quite a while, actually. Her
Radiance was not a comfortable person to speak to, face-to-face. For that
matter, she wasn't a comfortable person to communicate with, letter to letter;
he always had the feeling that he was reading something intended for an audience
rather than a personal letter.
"First we have to duplicate it," she pointed out, and
smiled. "You know, I'm very glad to see you again. Sometimes, in the
middle of the night, I'd wake up, and I'd wonder if you were—quite real."
Oddly enough, he knew exactly what she meant. "It's hard to
imagine someone being real who's that far away," he agreed. "It's as
if they never existed except in your mind."
She flushed a little, and looked away for a moment.
"Anyway," she continued awkwardly, "we've been busy, though it
doesn't have anything to do with the important things." She sounded
wistful. "There's just nothing we can do right now to help with
what you're doing, so we're back to the old projects like bridges and steam
boilers."
"There's nothing wrong with that," he countered.
"Don't these things have to be done no matter what disaster might be
looming?" He managed a crooked grin. "If everything else falls apart,
your bridges will be there to get people across rivers that can't be ferried or
forded. Surely that's worth something."
She shrugged but looked pleased. "At least what we're doing
is useful," she admitted. "It's odd, though. The folk around and
about Haven have the funniest attitude; you can tell them and tell them that
the protection we've given them from the mage-storms is only temporary, but
they act as if it's permanent. They aren't doing anything to prepare themselves
for the worst, they aren't even thinking about it." Now she sounded and
looked very frustrated. "When you ask them why, they just shrug and can't
give you an answer, or they say something stupid, fatalistic, or both."
"I think," he said slowly, "that ordinary folk just
can't imagine anything awful happening to them. It always happens to
someone else."
"Well, you'd think after years of war and bandits and all
they should know better," she replied acidly. "At any rate, now that
things have settled down, they aren't at all interested in asking us about
things they can do when the Storms come again, they just want to know how long it
is going to take before a bridge will be up. Or if the steam boiler is likely
to explode again."
"I hope you're on bridges," he said, trying not
to show alarm. "And not steam boilers."
"Actually, I'm on metal stress," she replied, running
her hand through her hair absently. "I get to make some very interesting
and loud noises. We're trying to make tougher alloys, but I don't want to bore
you with what we're doing. I spend some time in the forge, because at the
moment, work on steam boilers is stalled until we can find a better way to make
the boiler itself."
He sighed, resting his chin on his hands. "It wouldn't bore
me, but I'd be lost," he admitted. "Sejanes is trying to teach me
some specific kind of exercises for working with magic, and those would
probably mean about as much to you."
"Probably." The conversation died for a moment.
"Still, I hope you aren't—I mean, I don't want you to think that—"
her face twisted with frustration. "Just, if you're doing something
dangerous, don't take more on yourself than you can carry all right?"
He smiled. "As long as you promise to do the same," he
replied, and she laughed.
"Grain for the gander is good for the goose, hmm? Well, I'll
promise to try but my judgment is sometimes faulty."
"So is mine, so don't hold it against me." His smile
took on an ironic edge. "We can't all be infallible Sons of the Sun."
"Oh, even Solaris admits to fallibility," she chuckled.
"Believe it or not."
"Solaris?" he chuckled. "That would be an entry in
the annals, especially if she admitted that she was fallible to you
polytheistic barbarians."
"But she did!" Natoli protested, and as he continued to
regard her askance, she looked surprised. "Oh! I'll bet no one told you,
any of you! You will not believe what has happened with Grand Duke
Tremane!"
As she outlined the astonishing developments in Hardorn since the
arrival of Elspeth and Darkwind, Karal felt his eyes growing larger and larger.
No one had seemed to think that any of this was significant enough to pass on
to any of the other members of his party—
Which is probably because they all have their own preoccupations
and not a one of them thinks anything is important outside those
preoccupations! But you'd think someone would have said something to Sejanes!
"We have a Herald and a Companion stationed down in Karse in
Solaris'—court, I suppose you call it—" she added.
"Conclave," he corrected.
"Conclave, then. We sent him down so that we could get
information to her by way of his Companion and Talia's Rolan." She
laughed. "Actually, it's not just a 'Herald,' it's my father, and he seems
to be enjoying himself. Anyway, we sent her word about this, and the reply she
sent back was: 'Since he has voluntarily placed himself in the hands of a
higher judge of character than myself, I feel impelled to point out that
Natoli, An'desha, and Karal were correct in their assessment of his basic
character, and I was at least in part swayed by nothing more substantial than
emotion.' What do you think of that?" She grinned, as if she had somehow
won a great prize. Then again, winning a concession like that from Solaris
would have been a great prize, particularly as it was her father who had sent
the message on to Haven.
It's a small thing, but she just proved to her father that she
doesn't have to be a Herald to accomplish something important, he realized. And maybe she just
proved it to herself as well.
"I think she didn't use the ecclesiastic plural, which means
that she was speaking for Solaris and not for the Son of the Sun," he told
her, but he felt very pleased, nevertheless, for the sake of his own people.
Historically, it was a tremendous temptation for the Son of the Sun to always
think of himself as speaking for Vkandis, until even the most minor personal
opinions were incorporated as doctrine. Solaris appeared to have overcome that
particular temptation. "Which is not a bad thing."
"No, it's not." She appeared to have run out of things
to say, and another awkward moment of silence descended. "I suppose you'll
want to go tell all this to Sejanes.…"
He did, but he also didn't want to go, even though he didn't
really have anything to say. The silence lengthened and became more strained.
She glanced to the side, and her expression lightened a little with relief even
while it darkened with disappointment. "Oh, here's someone for Master
Levy. If Altra will hold the teleson open while you get him—"
"Of course!" he said, feeling both emotions himself.
"Natoli, take care of yourself! And I—I miss all of you."
He didn't dare say that he missed only her, but he hoped she got
that impression from his hesitation. "I—we miss you too," she
replied, with a smile more shy than usual, and vanished from the crystal. Karal
ran to get Master Levy, who nodded and hurried to the device carrying a sheaf
of notes as if he had been expecting to be summoned back.
Karal glanced around and couldn't find Sejanes in the upper rooms;
he listened carefully and heard the old mage's voice coming thinly from the
workshops below. He hurried down the stairs to find Sejanes chatting away
comfortably with Lyam, though Tarrn was nowhere in sight.
"Sir!" he called, "I've got the most amazing news
about Duke Tremane!"
"Well," Sejanes said, chuckling softly. "Well,
well, well." He was inordinately pleased with Karal's news, and Karal
could not help but wonder why.
That's an odd way to react, considering that Tremane has acted
quite unlike a proper Imperial officer. "I thought you might be upset, sir," he ventured,
tilting his head to one side. "Aren't you?"
"Upset? No, this is rather good news, all things considered,"
Sejanes replied, and chuckled again. "It seems that my former pupil has
learned at long last that there are things that do not always answer to his
logic. I am quite glad to hear this, truth be told. This is going to be a very
good thing for everyone concerned."
Karal kept his inquisitive expression, hoping to prompt more
information from the mage, and Sejanes enlarged on his statement.
"I am pleased for Hardorn, for that sad, maltreated land
could not have found a better caretaker." He blinked, and his eyes fixed
on some distant point beyond Karal. "I am pleased because Tremane could
not have found a better trust than Hardorn. He was wasted on the Empire; he has
the misfortune to be that rarest of Imperial creatures, a man of high rank who still
maintains a shred or two of integrity and compassion. That is not to say, at
all, that the military is composed of heartless men; far from that, in fact. He
might have done well had he remained within the military, but as Emperor, he
would have been a victim of one of three unpleasant fates—eaten alive by those
conspiring to use him, murdered, or corrupted."
"That much I can see," Karal replied. "It's quite
logical, but..." He faltered, unsure how to ask what he wanted to know
without being rude. Imperials were not—quite—irreligious, but they were hardly
as devout as even the average Valdemaran. And when compared with the average
Karsite, they were positively atheistic!
Sejanes seemed to understand what he wanted to know. "Not all
citizens of the Empire are so immersed in practicality as you think." His
gaze softened and turned inward for a moment. "Those most likely to become
cynical, believers in nothing that they cannot see, are the career courtiers.
Those least likely—probably the folk who live nearest the land, and those who
live by magic. My young protégé was poised between the cynic and the believer,
and he could have taken either path. He may be the rarest of all, one who can
see the truth in both."
Karal wanted badly to ask just what Sejanes believed in, but he
sensed that Sejanes would not tell him now. He might never. That was his right,
of course. And it would be horribly impolite of Karal to ask him. If he ever
wanted to tell Karal, he would.
"It is my own opinion, that whatever else has happened, Tremane
has discovered that there are those other paths. Perhaps that will open his
mind to those other possibilities." He rubbed his eyes for a moment, as if
they were tired. "And I am pleased that he has an outside governor in this
earth-binding, something to—shall we say—keep him from succumbing to other
temptations."
"He is that weak, then?" asked Lyam, with the careless
tone of one to whom Duke Tremane and his men were no more real than the folk in
the Chronicles of a thousand years ago.
They might not be. The Kaled'a'in are so different from the
Imperials that they must seem equally unreal to each other.
"Not weak," Sejanes amended, and his wrinkled brow
knitted, as he searched for words.
He's trying to explain Tremane to a couple of youngsters for whom
the Empire is only a name, who cannot even imagine the levels of intrigue that
someone like Tremane must negotiate every day. Karal waited for the aged mage to find
the right words. And he can't know that the Temple of Vkandis is—or was,
anyway—as much a hotbed of conspiracy as any court. I don't think Lyam could
ever understand the stresses that Tremane must have been under, but I do. I
wonder if Tremane ever got tired of it all, and wished for things to be
simpler? "No, he's not weak." Sejanes repeated. "The trouble
is that certain habits, certain ways of reacting, become ingrained. It would be
all too simple to revert to the ways in which business is conducted in the
Empire, without thought for what was good for Hardorn. That, more than
anything, would be the temptation; to take the way that is easiest, rather than
the one that is best for the people and the land, and doubly so when resources
are low."
Lyam looked baffled, but shrugged, accepting what Sejanes said for
the moment.
Karal nodded. "Trying to do things the way he was used to
would probably get him in great difficulties in Hardorn, wouldn't it?" he
asked. "It might even break up the peace, and he might not know why that
had happened. Now, he hasn't a choice, you see; he'll know what is best
and he'll have to do it, or he knows how he'll suffer for it. And you
know," he continued, feeling a certain amount of surprise at the insight,
"the thing is. since people will know he can't do anything
selfishly or maliciously, they're likely to be easier on his mistakes, if you
take my meaning. They'll be more likely to forgive and explain."
Sejanes flashed a mildly surprised but appreciative look at him.
"Exactly so. And I am very fond of Tremane; I should like to see him as
happy as anyone burdened with power and the ability to wield it can be. He has
a strong sense of responsibility, and this may be the one opportunity of his
lifetime to exercise that responsibility with people who are likely to
appreciate the care he will take." Once again, Sejanes' gaze turned
inward. "He had his estate. of course, but those on it were used to being
ruled gently. The folk of Hardorn were subjected to every ill imaginable. That
will make them grateful to a gentler hand."
Lyam uttered the breathy equivalent of a laugh, showing very
sharp, pointed teeth. "He will be finding himself burdened with more than
power, I think. Earth-sense is as jealous a mistress as responsibility."
"But the earth-sense and his own responsibility will work in
harness amicably, rather than pulling him to pieces between them," Sejanes
countered. "Had he risen to power in the Empire, he would have spent every
day being torn among fear, duty, responsibility, expediency, and the right. I
think it might have driven him mad. I know it would have changed him into
something I would no longer recognize."
The hertasi shrugged
again. "Good, then. We take what small victories we can. I hope that all
this gives him aid if we cannot stop the Storms. He shall need every help he
can muster to protect these people who are now depending on him."
"It might." Karal knew something about earth-sense,
though few Sun-priests had it. The ability was much valued among the farmers of
the Karsite hills, where the soil was poor and the weather chancy. If you knew
that it would be a bad decision to plant corn this year in a particular field,
and a good one to plant clover, you might prosper when your neighbors failed.
And if you shared your expertise with your neighbors, you might all be able to
pay the tithe in goods instead of your own flesh-and-blood, come harvest time.
It wasn't exactly a witch-power, and it wasn't exactly one of the
things that would get you sent to the Fires, but it also wasn't the sort of
thing that you spoke about to the Sun-priests. The Sun-priests in their turn
were careful not to ask about it, and all was well.
"Another small victory, then." Lyam nodded decisively,
and seemed to think that a change of subject was in order. "This Natoli,
who gave you this word—is she kin to you? Or something else?"
That was not the subject the young Karsite would have chosen, and
Karal felt himself blushing furiously, as Lyam's quick eyes and quicker wit
filled in the truth. "Ah—" the little lizard said, not without
sympathy, his head bobbing. "She is to you what Jylen is to me, I
think." He sighed gustily. "I do miss her company, but I would not
have her here. She could not have endured the journey, and I think she would
have felt herself useless, which is a bad thing for anyone to feel."
"Natoli would have felt the same," Karal admitted.
"Oh, I feel useless about half the time, and it makes me want to bite
something. I'd rather not think how she would react."
"Nor I, Jylen." Lyam laughed. "A trimmer tail there
never was, nor a more graceful snout, but neither belong to a maid with an
overabundance of patience."
He shared a glance of fellow-feeling with Karal, and the young
Karsite experienced a definite warming in the relationship between them.
"Well, Sejanes, I will take my leave of you," Lyam told
the mage. "And of you, Karal. My stomach has an overly-intimate embrace
with my spine, and I think I shall venture Firesong's cooking and see if it is
as terrible as you claim. Surely he learned something from his hertasi!"
"It's not Firesong tonight, it's An'desha," Karal
assured him, "And he and the Shin'a'in have agreed to share that
particular chore from now on."
"Thanks to the Hundred Little Gods!" Sejanes exclaimed
with clear relief. "Even enduring Shin'a'in butter-tea is preferable to
eating what Firesong cooks!"
"In that case, I will haste my steps!" the hertasi cried. "In case the other
starvelings aloft decide to leave me with naught but scrapings!"
He scrambled down from his stool and scampered up the stairs with
a staccato click of toenails on stone. Sejanes cocked an eyebrow at Karal.
"What about you?" he asked. "I was under the
impression that young men were never quite fully fed."
It was Karal's turn to shrug uncomfortably. His stomach was still
in something of a knot, and he wondered if Natoli was always going to affect him
that way. If so, he was destined to grow much thinner.
"Lucky in love?" the old man asked, softly, and with a
kindly and sympathetic manner. "Or unlucky? Either one can be hazardous to
the appetite."
"I—I'm not sure," Karal replied, feeling his cheeks burning.
"We don't know each other that well..."
Sejanes reached out and patted his knee. "Uncertainty can be
just as hazardous. But I take it that she is a trusted friend?"
"Oh, yes, absolutely," Karal said fervently. "There
isn't anyone I would trust more."
:Humph.:
Karal glanced hastily down at his feet, where Altra lay coiled
around the legs of his chair, hitherto unnoticed. How had the Firecat gotten
there? The last Karal had seen, Altra had been sprawled on the floor near the
teleson.
"There isn't a human I trust more. I trust her as much as I
trust Altra and Florian," he amended hastily. "And for a great many
of the same reasons."
:Better. Not perfect, but better.:
"That is an excellent beginning, then," Sejanes said,
his tone just as serious and his demeanor as sober as if he was discussing the
next solution to the mage-storm. "One should always begin with friendship,
rather than a more ardent emotion. The former will last, if the latter does
not. And one should also have enough in common with a young lady to be her
friend. Unless, of course, it is a case of a prearranged attachment, and in
that case, there is little that one can do besides hope that one's parents,
guardians, or other adults involved have some notion of what might appeal to
one in the way of a lifetime companion and attempt to find those things that
one has in common with her."
Karal had to chuckle at Sejanes' careful way of putting things. He
was delicately trying to learn if Karal and Natoli had been joined to one
another by parental agreement, or if they might be violating other such
agreements with their own acquaintance. "It's not prearranged, and I also
don't think her father, Rubric, will mind that we're—ah, friends—since he's
'the one who introduced us in the first place. He's the Herald who's been sent
into Karse as the liaison with Solaris. I think that Natoli doesn't make
friends easily."
Sejanes brightened. "This sounds more promising with every
word you add!" he said with real enthusiasm. "And your feelings at
the moment? Attracted, but confused?"
"Very much so." Karal was as amused as he was
embarrassed. Sejanes was certainly taking a very active interest in this
situation! And if Karal had not known him, it would be very tempting to dismiss
his interest as that of an interfering, old-maidish busybody.
But Sejanes had never interfered in anyone's private life, as far
as Karal knew; he was hardly old-maidish, and gave no evidence of being a
busybody, although he had intervened to offer to teach Karal something of
magic. No, this concern seemed to arise out of some genuine interest in Karal,
in the manner of a master with a protégé.
Just like Ulrich, his former master.
"You remind me in some ways of some former students of
mine," Sejanes said quietly, echoing his own thoughts. "And you can
tell me to go to the dogs if you think I'm prying where I have no right, but I
hope perhaps I can give you useful advice about Natoli." He grinned
conspiratorily. "I have had a number of lady friends over the years, and
most of them were as highly intelligent as she seems to be. I believe I can
remember what it was like to be young!"
Karal stared at him in mingled surprise and gratitude, for he'd
had no one to ask for such advice. An'desha was mostly concerned with Lo'isha
and the other Shin'a'in, when he wasn't working, as they all were, with the
dangerous magics here. Florian and Altra weren't human, and although Lyam
apparently had a lady friend, neither was he. Firesong—well, his advice
would hardly apply to Karal's situation, even if he wasn't already wary of
asking the Tayledras anything personal. He didn't know Silverfox well enough,
he was not going to ask romantic advice of Natoli's teacher Master Levy,
and the Shin'a'in were none of them approachable enough. The idea of coming to
Sejanes would never have occurred to him.
But Ulrich would have helped me...
Ulrich would have given him the same advice his father would have
given him, or an older brother if he'd had one. Vkandis did not require that
his priests be celibate, only chaste outside of marriage. Ulrich had told his
pupil more than once that he had been romantically attached twice, and that
only outside circumstances had prevented him from making either of those women
his wife.
Karal knew a bit more than just that, though it was still bare
bones. In the case of the second lady in his life, Ulrich and his intended had
an extreme difference of opinion over the internal politics of the priesthood,
and had not spoken again, not even after Solaris became Son of the Sun. The
first time, early in his life, the lady had suffered a short but fatal illness,
leaving him brokenhearted for many years.
Ulrich himself had never told Karal the stories; he'd learned of
both from some of the Red-robe priests who were longtime friends and colleagues
of his mentor. They had meant to compassionately keep him from inadvertently
touching salt to Ulrich's open wounds, and warned him of the things he must not
press unless Ulrich himself broached the subject.
But that had not prevented Ulrich from giving him some preliminary
advice about girls, and the possible pursuit thereof, though at the time he had
not been at all interested even in the idea. Perhaps Ulrich had a premonition
that one day, he would need that advice.
But it was far more likely that Ulrich had simply been offering
what he would give any lively young person who was his protégé; the suggestion
that he himself had enough experience in matters of romance to offer advice.
That set the scene for what was inevitable, and would have prevented him from going
to his less-experienced peers for advice that had as much chance of being
harmful as helpful.
Now Sejanes was offering the same thing, and Karal was only too
happy to accept the offer.
"Thank you, sir," he said simply. "Do you have any
ideas about what I should say to her?" He smiled sheepishly. "Don't
think that I'm ungrateful, but talking with her is all I can do right now,
given our current distance."
"That may be just as well," Sejanes replied mildly, but
with a twinkle. "And yes, I have a few suggestions."
That was precisely what he wanted to hear.
Karal and Lyam scribbled on identical sheets of foolscap, seated
side by side on a pallet bed, both of them taking full notes of this meeting.
The entire group sat on pallets in a rough, three-sided square around the
teleson, which was situated in front of Firesong. This was a new version of the
old Council sessions that they had held in the Council Room of the Palace at
Haven, and he wondered how many of the Councillors on the other side were
gazing at the teleson with bafflement. Surely the device must seem to them as
strange as any of the Storm-changed beasts that had been displayed for their
edification. A tiny image of Queen Selenay gazed solemnly at them from the
crystal lens. She had just asked Master Levy if he had any more information on
when the mage-storms would begin again.
"I can't speak for magic, but I can for mathematical
probability, and that has given us the ability to predict what is going to
happen up to a point. The mathematics is relatively clear on this," Master
Levy said gravely. "The cancellation effect of the power burst that was
released from here is gradually eroding; we'll be seeing the resumption of
stormlets in four days, but I don't think that even the most sensitive mage
will detect them unless he is looking for them. That's all we know right now,
and Treyvan will be in charge of the mages who will be looking for the
stormlets and attempting to measure their relative strength. Once we have the
resumption of stormlets that actually affect the physical world, we can measure
how much they increase in strength and decrease in interval. We'll be able to
calculate then how long it will take before the Storms have major physical
effects again, and how long until they are dangerous. Once they are dangerous,
however, they will build up to a repetition of the one released at the original
Cataclysm. I have absolutely no doubt of that."
In the crystal of the teleson, Selenay nodded gravely. Although
she alone was visible, the Haven teleson sat in the middle of the Council
Chamber, surrounded by a full Council at their horseshoe-shaped table. All of
them were able to hear what Master Levy said, although they only saw Firesong.
"Now we come to the question of the last Storm and the effect
here, where all of the force will be concentrated. Here is where Need,
An'desha, Sejanes, and I have performed our own calculations, and we're not
optimistic," Firesong said with uncharacteristic restraint. "It is
not good, Majesty. Although the shields of this place survived the initial, outward
release, we do not believe they will survive the impact of the energies
converging on this place. We think the shields will go down, and all the
weapons that have not been rendered harmless will go then, and that will be
bad."
"By 'go," just what is it that you are saying?"
asked one of the Councillors around the Haven teleson. "And just what
precisely does 'bad' mean?"
Karal restrained a nervous titter. How would you explain
"bad" to someone whose idea of a catastrophe was a major forest fire,
a great flood, or a landslide? How do you get him to believe that it was
possible to release forces that melted rock towers and dug craters the size of
some countries?
"I wish I knew," Firesong admitted. "We don't know
what most of them were intended to do, only that they were weapons deemed 'too
dangerous' to use. It would be supremely ironic to discover that they cancel
one another out, but I gravely doubt that we can count on that. Certainly the
area of destruction will cover the Plains, and since we have enough warning
this time, the Shin'a'in are evacuating."
The Shin'a'in are evacuating. The Shin'a'in, who never, ever left the Plains. Would that tell
the inquisitive Councillor just how grave the situation was? Karal didn't know.
"Whether the effect will carry as far as Valdemar, I couldn't
say, although if I were in your place, I'd count on it." Firesong held up
a hand in warning. "And don't ask, 'What effect?' because I don't know
that, either. We're trying to find out, but we're dealing with weapons created
in secret by a secretive mage and the only notes are in a language that was
current two millennia ago. We're doing the best that we can, and having more
people here would only slow things down, but what we do may not be enough, or
in time."
Karal noted the grumbling on the other side, but no one said
anything out loud. Probably because, as Natoli said, they just don't believe
it can happen. Sheer stupidity on their part, but there it is. In a way, he
couldn't blame them; they were new to true-magic, relatively speaking. For most
of them, the terrible things that Ancar's mages had done were only stories, and
the first time they had seen anything like magic was when the mage-storms
began. Nor could they imagine a force that could turn a flourishing country
into a smoking, glass-floored crater. He noted that down, in a sidebar. Tarrn
had told him that his observations could be important, so long as they weren't
of a personal nature, and to note them down.
Most people don't believe that a disaster is coming, or that it
can affect them, even when they're told repeatedly.
He was tremendously grateful that he no longer had to represent
Karse at the Council; one of the Sun-priests who had fought with the
Valdemarans against Ancar had come North at the same time that Natoli's father
had gone South. He had never been comfortable in such a position, had never
felt particularly capable of handling it, no matter what Solaris herself said.
And certainly about half the other members of the Council had doubts now and
again about his competence and even his integrity. But that Sun-priest had
certainly seen magic and believed in it with his whole heart. Perhaps he could
help convince the doubters.
"What about the weapons themselves?" someone else asked
intelligently. "If we can get rid of them harmlessly, we'd be able to
lessen the danger by that much. Is there any way of dismantling them?"
"When Urrrtho sssaid he could not?" That was
Treyvan, his, voice indignant. "When he left a warrrning to that effect?
Arrre you mad?"
Ah, the things a gryphon can get away with saying, just because
he's larger than anything or anyone else! Karal was glad that Treyvan and Hydona were there to say all the
rude things that needed saying.
"We are proceeding very slowly in our understanding of these
devices," Firesong said smoothly. "If there is a way to dismantle
them, we will. We may be very lucky; at least one of them simply disintegrated
with age, and time might have done what mortal hands could not."
It was interesting to Karal how Firesong had taken on the role of
spokesman for the group. Not that anyone else had rushed to volunteer, but
Firesong was by nature a bit lazy, and not apt to take on any more
responsibility than he had to.
Then again, if Florian or Altra had held the teleson link open,
the Councillors would have seen only Karal, the Companion or the Firecat, none
of which were good choices for inspiring respect. Sejanes had no mind-magic,
nor did Master Levy. An'desha did, but he was no better choice than Karal,
although thanks to his magic-whitened hair, he looked a bit older than Karal.
Need could have gotten respect, but if Need had held the link, they'd all be
seeing Firesong anyway. At least people respected Firesong; even feared him a
little. One good thing; his acidic wit made a fine weapon to wield against
intransigent or argumentative Councillors.
Then again, it is a chance for Firesong to be seen, appreciated,
and admired, and who else has he had as an audience lately?
"First we have to discover what, exactly, they are supposed
to do. Then how they do it. Then we might be able to judge if we have the
ability to disarm them," Firesong explained patiently. "If you think
of them as enormously complicated traps with a weapon in the middle, this will
make more sense to you."
"But—" someone began, and stopped.
"Fortunately," Sejanes picked up smoothly, "this
study does not at all interfere with our studies of the mage-storms, because
that is taking place up there, among you. Here we are still operating on the
assumption that we may have to trigger one of these weapons to counteract the
final Storm. We already know which are the best choices, and together with the
notes we found in the workshop below, we are studying them to see if the same
solution we found the last time is viable this time."
"And what if you can't find an answer?" That
voice sounded strained and somewhat panicked, So there was at least one person
on the Council who was taking this threat seriously! Karal only hoped it was
not someone who was inclined to take a panicked view of everything. Getting
people to organize their own defense would be easier if they did not think of
the person goading them to it as a chronic overreactor.
"You really ought to be operating on the assumption that we
won't, and that all we have done is to buy you time to prepare," Master
Levy replied truculently. He was very impatient with the Council, and
had said as much before this meeting began. "We told you that in the
beginning. When I left, the Artificers were devising a formula to predict the
pattern of the circles of damage."
"We're still working on it," said another voice.
"The model isn't perfect, but we expect to have an answer before the
stormlets start, and we'll check its accuracy with measurements as the stormlets
increase in strength. By the time there's real damage, the formula will be
tested and ready for use."
"So, there's your answer. If we can't come up with a simple
solution, you simply keep people and livestock out of those dangerous areas,
drain as much power as you can out of that stone under the Palace and shield it
with everything you have, and wait for the final Storm to pass." Master
Levy's tone said the rest; that any idiot should have been able to sit quietly
and figure that much out for himself.
"While you all sit there safe and sound in the Tower? someone
else accused angrily.
That was
a mistake. Karal braced himself for the riposte. Firesong was not in a good
mood, and there was going to be blood on the Council table in a moment, even if
it was metaphorical blood.
"Safe? Sound?" Firesong asked dangerously. "Where
did you come by that incredible notion? Would someone please remove that
man for incompetence and put him in the kitchen washing pans where he belongs?
If I were the lot of you, I'd throw him off the Council. I do believe in
encouraging those of lesser ability, but I think that appointing a congenital
idiot to a Council seat is going too far."
There was an indignant spluttering on the other side, then a
certain amount of commotion; Selenay continued to look serene, but her
attention was not on the teleson. It was maddening not to be able to see what
was going on.
"Well?" Firesong asked, when the noise had ended.
"We will take your recommendation under advisement,"
Selenay replied urbanely, and clearly as much for the benefit of her side of
the gathering as for Firesong's. "You are correct in one thing, if a
little less than tactful; this Council can no longer afford to seat members
whose attention is so concentrated on minor details within their own sphere
that they are paying no attention to the greater dangers that threaten us
all."
"Here here," said another voice, one that Karal
recognized after a moment as Kerowyn's.
Oh, my! That
was unexpected! And Karal could think of three or four Council members who
matched that particular statement, too! It seemed that after treachery and
invasion and war and Alliance and more war and mage-storms, even Selenay's
patience had begun to run short.
And about time, too. It was all very well to say that those three or four had been
loyal during the worst troubles, and that loyalty deserved reward, but there
was a limit. It was not wise to let the shortsighted continue to have authority
in a situation like this one. Better to find them some position with rank and
privileges and no authority, if Selenay still felt impelled to reward them.
Right now, being too shortsighted could very well cost lives.
She might not see any reason to continue to reward these people;
and that wouldn't be all that bad either. Sometimes the hand of censure needed
to be used in order to make people believe it would be used, even
against those who thought themselves above censure. In the words of the
Shin'a'in, "Use the whip to get the horses out of the burning
stable."
He was tempted to add that to the notes, but those were the kinds
of purely personal observations that Tarrn had warned him against, and he kept
them to himself.
:There are two Councillors that ought to be given the sack right
here and now,: Altra
observed with irritation. :One of them is not entirely certain he believes
in the intelligence of Companions. How can we expect him to plan for a
magic-fed disaster? And the other is so wrapped up in why his district needs
protection more than any other that he'll waste valuable time and probably try
to divert resources he's not entitled to.:
Altra didn't have to describe the offending members; Karal knew
them well enough from that notation of their personalities. :It's Selenay's
Kingdom and Selenay's Council,: he reminded the Firecat. :If you'd like
to make a recommendation as a Karsite representative, I'd do so privately to
her. I'm sure that she would have no difficulty speaking with you after this is
over.:
:I'm not such a fool as to make one publicly!: Altra snapped, and shook his head until
his ears flapped. :Now I'm more than ever pleased that you're out of there.
You don't need to have to deal with these idiots; they'd probably start blaming
you for the Cataclysm! And I don't need to be there either; I'd be tempted to wind
around their ankles as they started descending a staircase, and be certain of
getting them replaced by someone with a bit more reasoning ability than a brick
of cheese.:
He managed to send a mental image of himself coiling around the
legs of the stupidest of the two Councillors, and of the man pitching down the
staircase in a very comical fashion.
:Bloody-minded today, aren't we?: Karal observed.
:Vkandis help any rodent within a league of here,: Altra replied. :When this session is
over, and after I've spoken to Selenay, I'm going hunting.:
:You won't have to go far,: Karal told him. :The Shin'a'in were complaining about mice in
the horse grain. Think you can lower your dignity for a bit of mousing?:
Altra just snorted.
The Council session proceeded with admirable dispatch after that
particular outburst. For his part, Karal admitted to himself that he was acting
in some ways precisely like those unfortunate Councillors who could not or
would not believe in the disaster threatening just below the horizon. He was
conducting some parts of his life—as in, pursuing his interest with Natoli—as
if nothing whatsoever was going to happen to change that life. And he was not
going about in a state of barely-suppressed panic either. But the truth was
that what he and Natoli did or did not do was not going to make a bit of
difference to the Storms or the resolution of the problem, assuming there could
be one. Neither was going about in a cloud of fear going to help resolve their
difficulties. Fear wasn't an emotion you could sustain for weeks at a time
either, so why try to keep himself in a continual state of near-panic?
But what he could do, he was doing, and at least one of his
observations might turn out useful. It had occurred to him that the workshops
had remained pristine and intact—more so, even, than the stored weapons—and
that there might be even more shielding on them. Or perhaps there was a natural
property of the stone, as there was of silk, that insulated everything inside
from the effects of magic. Since they had always kept the hatchway open, there
was no way to tell, and no one really wanted to volunteer to be shut inside
just now.
Natural or not, it would have made sense to have the workshops
protected from the possible effects of the weapons stored above—the more so as
the workshops could serve as a shelter in case something up here went wrong.
Or, alternatively, if something went wrong down there, the weapons
stored up here would be unaffected.
But the workshops would make the safest place for those who were
not involved to wait out the last Storm—and perhaps, for all of them to
do so, if it turned out that there was nothing they could do. There was room
enough for all of them, their supplies, and their attendant Shin'a'in friends
to wait in a fair imitation of comfort. It would be difficult for Florian and
the Shin'a'in horses to get down the staircase, but not impossible. The one
drawback the place had was that it was at a level lower than the tunnel in—and
if the stored weapons were affected—they might find themselves literally sealed
inside, as the rock melted and ran or the remains of the building shook itself
apart.
But if they waited in the tunnel or on the Plain outside, there
would be no escape. He'd already discussed using the workshops in this way with
the Shin'a'in, and they had agreed with him, going so far as to carry half of
the supplies down there and store them, and making plans to evacuate the camp
above into the workshops when the time came.
And as for the folk of the surrounding land, well, for the first
time since the Sundering of the Clans, Shin'a'in and Tayledras were living
together. More than three-quarters of the Clans were off the Plains and
distributed among the nearest Vales. Some others had chosen to go to
trade-cities and the like, where they had contacts or relatives.
Those remaining were heading South rather than North or West,
taking with them all of the breeding horses and other herds, for only the
baggage beasts and personal strings could be accommodated in the Vales. They
were under the escort of the fighters of Kerowyn's old mercenary company, the
Skybolts—those few who had retired or elected not to remain in Valdemar. They
had returned to Bolthaven and formed a smaller company with the sole duty of
guarding the Bolthaven mage-school run by Quenten, the town of Bolthaven, and
the annual Shin'a'in Horse Faire. The herds would be safe in the wide and
gentle Rethwellan valley below the fortified mage-school, as they would be safe
in the hands of those who had benefited from the generosity of Kerowyn's
Shin'a'in relatives in the matter of most excellent Shin'a'in-bred mounts.
Before too many more days had passed, the Plains would be empty of
almost everyone but the little group here in the heart of the crater that was
the Dhorisha Plains. A stranger would, for the very first time, be able to
cross from one side to the other without hindrance.
Not that anyone would be stupid enough to try. The weather alone
ought to prevent such an idiotic course. Only the Shin'a'in knew where game
lurked in the winter; only the Shin'a'in had fuel sources and tents made to
withstand the killing blizzards the Storms had brought. And in a landscape of
endlessly rolling white hills with no landmarks, it would be suicide for most
to try to navigate across the bowl of the Plains.
Besides, the Kal'enedral
who were left were not your normal border-guards. It was not too bloody likely
that anything would move into the Plains that they didn't know about the moment
the breach-of-border occurred. And under the current circumstances, it would
not be wise for anyone to assume that the Star-Eyed was not personally watching
the borders. She would not even have to intervene directly in the event of an
intruder; simply dumping a foot of ice on the cliffs ringing the Plains would
prevent anyone but a skilled ice climber from getting down into the Plains
proper. And dumping another foot or two of ice and snow on him while he was
climbing, or arranging for an avalanche along the cliff, would see to it that
not even an expert ice climber set a single living toe on the Plains below.
Good heavens, I'm as bloody-minded as Altra! Karal realized, as he serenely
contemplated the notion of intruders turned into ice sculptures. But then
again, they couldn't really afford to be anything less than ruthless now. The
escort of Kal'enedral who
remained to care for them had put their lives in the hands of their Goddess to
do so, and knew it. Not only was there a good chance that the Tower would not
survive the final Storm, but they were defending an indefensible position.
The Kal'enedral
had defended the Tower in the past by keeping people far away from it; if there
was a "lowest geographic point" to the crater that was the Dhorisha
Plains, this Tower was probably cradled in the bottom of it.
Most of the Swordsworn had remained with the Clans, and rightly,
to protect them during the evacuation. What if someone deliberately chose this
moment to come looking for the Tower with a mind to stealing one or more of the
weapons still in it? There would not be much that anyone could do to stop him
if he came with sufficient force. It would have to be someone who was
completely mad, but as the existence of Ancar and Falconsbane proved, there
were people who were that mad, that power-crazed, to take such a chance.
But given all that this little group of seekers represented, the
Star-Eyed would probably take care of such an expedition Herself—and if She
didn't, it was just possible that Vkandis would.
Just as he thought that, a lull appeared in the discussion, and
Karal decided to do more than add an observation to his notes. "It has
occurred to me just now," he said slowly, "that there is a source of
possible protection, at least for those of you outside the Tower."
"What's that?" someone asked warily.
His ears burned, for he might be stating the obvious, but it
seemed stupid not to mention this. "Ah... prayer," he said
diffidently. "Divine intervention. I mean, have you had people really concentrating
on asking for help from other sources?"
"That is no bad answer," Lo'isha interjected, before
anyone else could say anything. "If our Star-Eyed is like your gods, that
could be a fat hare to pursue. You see, She only responds to peril quite
impossible for mortals to deal with, and only if asked. Otherwise, She
allows us to handle it ourselves. Your gods may only be waiting to be properly
asked."
"Vkandis has traditionally been the same way," Karal
confirmed. "I don't know what the gods do in Valdemar, but what is the
harm in finding out?"
"None, of course," Selenay said gently. "And in our
own pride and insistent self-reliance, we often forget that option. We would
not be asking for aid for ourselves against other peoples, after all. We would
be asking for aid for all peoples against an implacable force we don't
completely understand. Thank you, Karal, for not being afraid to state what
should have been obvious. I will have the various notables draft up notices to
their Temples to that effect."
Now Karal blushed, but with pleasure, and Altra's deep purr vibrating
his feet, was all he needed to gauge the depth of the Firecat's approval. He
glanced sideways at Lo'isha to find the Shin'a'in gazing at him with a
thoughtful smile that broadened when their eyes met.
Well, let's see if they're still pleased with me after this...
"Please, Queen Selenay?" he added. "Don't exclude
the Empire in those prayers. The people of the Empire haven't done
anything to hurt us, and by now they must be in terrible straits. They've been
suffering the mage-storms all this time, and from all Sejanes has told us, they
need magic, they use it everywhere. For you, it would be as if fire suddenly
stopped giving off heat."
She nodded very slowly, with just a touch of reluctance. "I
will remember to phrase it that way," she promised. "And to remember
that we have no quarrel with all of the people of the Empire, only with those
who harmed us."
He stole a second glance at Lo'isha, then one at Sejanes. Lo'isha
still seemed pleased with him, and the old mage positively beamed.
And what about Altra, Vkandis' own representative?
:What of me? I think you have done a very good thing.: Altra's purr did not let up at all. :You
manage to keep in mind that a nation is made up of people, most of whom have
little or no control over what their leaders do. That is twice now, that you
have urged mercy, and that is very good.:
Even for Vkandis, notorious for being a vengeful god?
:Especially for Vkandis; please remember that religions are made
up of people, most of whom have very little control over what their priests
decree is doctrine. Keep in mind that given that the priests and the people
have free will and the means to exercise it, gods may not always be able to
control their priests either. So what the priests say, and the people believe,
is not always the whole truth.:
Karal blinked at that. Altra evidently decided Karal was ready for
a little more doctrine smashing.
:Time for a parable. Think of a very wealthy, very reclusive man
with a dangerous reputation; say a former mercenary. Assume he lives in a town but
seldom leaves his home. Nevertheless—and not wanting people to think he is
trying to buy good opinion—he sends his servants out secretly, day after day,
to help the worthy poor, the sick, the helpless. Then one day while he is
coming in his front gate, a woman with a baby is attacked by ruffians, and he
reacts as he was trained, draws his sword, and cuts them all down in the blink
of an eye. Say that later, in the inquiry, it was learned that those same
ruffians were old enemies of his, looking for his new home. Now what are the
townsfolk going to say about him?:
Karal knew very well what they would say. They would know nothing
about the countless acts of mercy and charity that defined the man, they would
know only the single moment of public bloodshed. At the least, they would call
him vengeful, they would fear his temper, and might avoid his company. If there
were those who envied him, it might even be whispered that he arranged for the
attack on the woman in order to have an excuse for killing the gang. And
although there would be a shred of truth in the stories of vengeance, it would
by no means be the entire truth.
:Vkandis—any god—is far more than His people make Him,: Altra continued. :It is the
responsibility of the priest to lead them to that understanding, so that they
do not attempt to limit Him to what they know.:
That was what he had been groping for, these past several weeks!
All the pieces for understanding had been there, but he just hadn't put them
together in so elegant and simple a whole.
:And just at the moment, the meeting is going on without your
note-taking,: Altra
added, bending to clean a paw with fastidious attention to detail. :Life is
attention to both the large and the small, little brother. Pay heed to the sun,
but watch your feet, or you'll fall ingloriously on your nose.:
He bent hastily to his paper, with a soft chuckle inaudible to
anyone else.
The meeting went on for far too long, but Firesong managed to
annoy enough useless Councillors to guarantee that the next meeting would be
much shorter.
It would have to be; Firesong had also cut short any attempt by
the Councillors to turn the meeting into an accusation-and-blame session (with
most of both being aimed at the group in the Tower). That, Karal found
difficult to believe the first time one of them started. They seemed to be
cherishing a variety of bizarre ideas about what was going on here, not the
least of which was that they would be safe when the final Storm hit, and
those outside the Tower would be the ones in the most danger.
"What was wrong with those people?" he asked Lyam in
amazement, as the members of their own group broke up and went off on their
interrupted studies. "Where did they get those ideas?"
The young hertasi
shrugged, his tail beating softly against the floor where they both sat,
organizing their notes and putting up their writing supplies. "They think
we wallow in luxury here, that we spend all our time in idle pursuits and
speculations that have no bearing on work or reality. They half don't believe
in the Storms; they think we've got a fabulous life here and we're prolonging
our stay here to continue to enjoy this glorious place and our freedom from
work and responsibility."
Karal glanced around at their "luxurious surroundings,"
taking in the elegant appointments. Well, the inlaid stone floors were
certainly beautiful, and there wasn't a ceiling like this one in all of Karse
and Valdemar combined. But in between—
True, the Shin'a'in pallets were colorful, and comfortable, but
they weren't the equivalent of anything in the guest quarters at the Palace at
Haven. And as for the rest, he didn't think that a single one of those
Councillors had ever eaten, slept, or lived like this, and he didn't think any
of them would ever want to. It wasn't as bad as the poorest Karsite inn workers
endured, and in some ways it was a little more comfortable than the conditions
of Vkandis' novices, but those highborn Councillors would probably think they'd
been exiled to hard living at the end of the world.
And what they'd make of butter-tea, I don't know. They might
consider it a form of penance.
"I don't know, Lyam," he said, finally. "Is this
some sort of delusionary illness they're under?"
The lizard did not have many facial expressions, but he could and
did cock up a brow ridge. "Actually, it's distance. A fair number of our
people back in White Gryphon assumed that because we had been given k'Sheyna
Vale that we must be living in the midst of incredible luxury. Anything that's
far off must be better than anything at home, you see." He snorted.
"Actually, if you want luxury I'd recommend the courts of the Black Kings.
I've been there, so I know. Silk sheets, private gardens, food worth dying
for—now that is what I would call luxury!" He smacked his lips, or
what passed for lips.
Karal sighed and shook his head, and Lyam patted his back.
"Cheer up! The ones who think we're shirking are all idiots, and Firesong
is going to get them to go away. If that Queen of theirs doesn't find them
something harmless to do to keep them occupied, that is. I know his kind. He'll
keep chipping at them until they quit."
Karal chuckled at Lyam's all too accurate assessment. "He can
be diplomatic when he wants to be," he felt impelled to point out.
"Of course he can, but diplomacy is for when you've got time,
and that's the one thing we're short of." Lyam shook his head as his
expression turned grave. "Karal, I'm going to get serious for a moment; I
want you to tell me something, and be honest. You've worked with these
people—Firesong, An'desha, Sejanes, and all—for a long time. Can they do this?
Can they really find an answer to the last Storm? Or should I look for a deep,
dark den to hide in and hope it doesn't get melted shut behind me?"
Karal closed his eyes for a moment, taken by surprise by the
sudden question. Perhaps that was why Lyam had asked it, so that he wouldn't
have a chance to prevaricate.
"If anyone can, they can," he said at last.
"An'desha holds the actual memories of Urtho's enemy Ma'ar, who was the
second-most-powerful mage of the time of the Cataclysm. I just don't know if
it's possible for mortal creatures to save this situation."
Lyam sighed. "I was afraid you were going to say that."
He slumped abruptly, and looked up at Karal with an unreadable expression.
"Let's talk about our girls," he suggested. "You and I can't do
a blazing thing to help them, so let's talk about our girls, eh?"
In a mercurial change of mood, he grinned, showing a fine set of pointed teeth.
"Nothing like girls to get your mind off your troubles."
"Or give you a different set of troubles to think
about!" Karal laughed, only too happy to oblige.
Tarrn found them both commiserating over the way that females had
to approach any difficulty sideways, like a crab, instead of meeting it
head-on, a trait it seemed both hertasi
and human females shared. He stood within earshot for some time, simply
listening, with his pointed ears pricked sharply upward, evidently waiting for
a natural break in the conversation before interrupting.
:Lyam, have you any notion where the Shin'a'in stored the gray bag
of books we brought with us?: he asked. :I find I need a reference.:
"It's easier for me to find it than tell you where it
is," the hertasi said, leaping
to his feet. "Stay right here; I'll bring the whole bag."
He scampered down the stairs to the workroom, and Tarrn turned his
attention to Karal. :You and my apprentice seem to be getting on well,:
he observed mildly.
"We have a great deal in common, sir," Karal replied
politely." As you probably noticed."
Tarrn's mouth dropped open in a lupine grin. :Young women, for
one thing. Alas, I fear I could never give you reasonable advice on that
subject; my kind are neuters, but by birth rather than by oath, as our
Shin'a'in friends are.:
That left Karal more confused than enlightened. "All kyree are neuters? And where do the Kal'enedral come into it?"
It took Tarrn a few moments to explain that, no, all kyree were not neuters, but that the
neuters tended to be the scholars, tale-spinners, poets, and historians. Then
it took him a bit longer to explain the oaths of the Sworn, and how the Goddess
herself rendered them literally sexless, which was why it was so very difficult
for anyone to be accepted by Her into Her service.
Karal was not precisely appalled, but he was certainly baffled.
"I can't imagine why anyone would want to be Sworn!" he said
to the kyree, "I mean, I beg
your pardon, but—"
:Don't apologize; I don't regret being neuter, and over the years
I've often considered myself fortunate not to have to put up with what you do,: Tarrn replied thoughtfully. :As for
the Sworn, whether Swordsworn or Goddess-sworn, I can well imagine any number
of circumstances where a human would find the burden of sexuality intolerable.
Such tales that brought them to that condition may be sad, even horrible, but
at least among the Shin'a'in they have a refuge. And for some—well if their
life has been spent entirely in the sphere of the intellectual, then there is
no sacrifice.:
Karal took a moment to look for An'desha, and finally found him,
deep in conference with—Lo'isha and another black-clad Shin'a'in. "I
suppose I can think of at least one case where memories might be
intolerable," he said slowly.
Tarrn followed his gaze. :The thought had occurred to me as
well. If we live...:
If. There was that word again, the one he thought about all the
time, but did his best not to mention. "Are we likely not to?" he
asked soberly.
As if called by his gaze, An'desha left the other Shin'a'in and
walked over to them, just in time to catch Tarrn's reply.
:I don't know.: Tarrn was quite sober. :I came here knowing that there was a
good chance we would not, and so did Lyam. It is possible that what we record
will serve to help others cope with the next Cataclysm in another millennia or
two. Or it may help the survivors of this one. It seems that the only way we
can be assured of survival is through the mechanism you yourself suggested.:
"Divine intervention?" he said, dryly. "Ah, but
there's a catch. We can't count on it; if we do, we certainly won't get
it."
An'desha nodded as he sat down beside Karal. "That is the way
of things with the Star-Eyed, at least, and this is the heart of Her
land. If we were to call upon anyone, it should be Kal'enel. But Lo'isha says
that She has been silent of late, as if She is no more certain of what is to
come than we are."
:So what are we to do?: Tarrn asked. :When the gods themselves are silent, what is a
mortal to do?:
"I don't know," An'desha admitted.
"You might try calling on old friends," suggested
a helpful voice from above their heads, as brilliant golden light flooded down
upon them.
Tarrn Jumped straight up in the air and came down with his eyes
wide and his hackles up. Lyam, whose head was just poking up out of the
hatchway leading to the stair to the workroom, had to grab for the edge of the
hatch to keep from falling. Even Karal, who had seen this phenomenon before,
and An'desha, to whom it was familiar, gaped with astonishment as they rose to
their feet.
Swooping down from the ceiling in a spiraling dance that involved
Firesong's ecstatic firebird Aya, were a pair of man-sized hawks with feathers
of flame. They landed with the grace of a dancer and the weightlessness of a
puff of down, and the moment they touched the ground, they transformed into a
man and a woman who still had a suggestion of bird about them. The man was
dressed as a Shin'a'in shaman, but the woman was all Hawkbrother.
The Shin'a'in present all reacted the same way; they did not drop
to their knees or grovel, but went rigid with the profoundest respect, and with
naked worship in their eyes.
:What—is—this?: Tarrn managed, every hair on his body standing straight out.
"I am Dawnfire, and this is Tre'valen," the woman
said, looking down at Tarrn with a smile. Her eyes were open wide, as were his,
and they were perhaps the strangest thing of all about the two, for those eyes
were the bright-spangled black of a star-filled night sky. "We're old
friends of An'desha."
Altra and Florian appeared from one of the farther rooms, and made
their way across the floor to the little gathering, and it seemed that they
were the only creatures in the building capable of moving. They paused a few
paces away from the bright creatures, and both made little bows of greeting in
unison.
"Tre'valen and Dawnfire are Avatars of Kal'enel, Tarrn,"
An'desha said, very quietly. "And although I would not have claimed the
privilege of saying they were my friends, they have been very good to me."
Tre'valen laughed. "Well, claim it or not, we are your
friends, little brother. And more than that, we're here to help you as much as
we can."
That astonishing statement broke the spell holding everyone frozen
in silence, and everyone in the Tower converged on the pair except for Karal,
who sat abruptly down.
We have Altra for Vkandis, Florian for the gods of Valdemar—and
now this. What is that Shin'a'in saying? Be careful what you ask for?
Well, he had asked for Divine aid; whether it would be enough
remained to be seen.
Eight
"All I know is this," King Tremane said, rubbing his
temple in a gesture of nervous habit, "I haven't even tried to light a
candle magically for weeks, but my mage-energy is going somewhere. If
you can tell me where, I'll feel a great deal better."
Darkwind nodded, squinting a little against the brilliant sunlight
streaming in through the windows of the King's Tower. That was what everyone
called it now—"the King's Tower," as Shonar had become, by default,
the new capital of Hardorn. It was a small and slightly shabby residence for a
King, but Hardorn itself had seen better days. It would do Tremane no harm to
be seen putting the welfare of his new country above his own comforts.
After a frenzy of make-do preparations, there had been a tiny
coronation ceremony, wherein Duke Tremane had become King Tremane, and had been
presented with a crown that (like the country) was rather the worse for wear.
It even appeared to have been flattened before someone managed to wrestle it
back into shape.
Still, it was—at least now—the authentic crown of Hardorn,
and there was something to be said for that.
Tremane had accepted it graciously, worn it for the coronation.
then immediately went to his private possessions and had a few things melted
down and made into a very slim, gold band with minimal ornamentation that bore
a remarkable resemblance to his ducal coronet.
That, in turn, had borne a remarkable resemblance to the slender
coronet that Selenay wore, but Darkwind didn't see any reason to mention that.
Frankly, the thin band looked dignified on Tremane's balding head, as opposed
to the heavy crown. Even if it hadn't been battered, the original crown still
looked rather silly, at least to Darkwind's eyes.
Crowns. This conference isn't about crowns. He turned his attention instead to
Tremane's statement. "I think," he said slowly, "that your
energy is going into the land—at least in making queries of where and what
problems there are—and that where it goes tells you what places are most
damaged. I suspect that those places producing monstrosities are the most
heavily damaged, which is how you have been managing to pinpoint their lairs.
You can probably stop the drainage if you choose."
Tremane considered that for a moment, then shrugged. "On the
whole, I don't see why I should bother. It isn't a critical drain, and it isn't
paining me or making me physically weaker. The only things I might want to do
magically are things the earth-sense is giving me anyway. I just wanted to know
where my energies were going; it could have been due to something more
sinister."
That was astute of him, and a reflection on the changes in his
thinking that he did not immediately assume it was something sinister and begin
looking for an enemy, "Tayledras Healing Adepts can send their energies
out to damaged land deliberately," Darkwind told him. "And they can
redirect energy from elsewhere, using themselves as a conduit. You seem to have
many of the same abilities, given to you by the earth-sense, rather than by
accident of birth or because of training."
"Interesting." Tremane replied, his brows knitting
slightly with thought. He leaned toward Darkwind as something occurred to him.
"You know, there's another thing; I had assumed that I'd have earth-sense
for all of Hardorn, from border to border, but every time one of those groups
comes in to give me their—their pledge—it seems as if I can sense more than I
could before. It's difficult to explain; it's as if I knew the place was there,
but it was blank or shadowed to me. It's analogous to seeing into a room that
was darkened and is now illuminated."
"That may be precisely what is happening," Darkwind
admitted. "When someone has an affinity for a given area—usually a
homeland, or at least the village they grew up in—a magical link naturally
forms between them and the place. Location and divination spells work just a
little easier when they involve that person's home area as a target, for
example, over places the person may have been to only once. When these people
open themselves up to your rule, they may also very well be opening up their
home-affinity connection to you, too. Or, well, it could also be that the earth
you take from them in the seisin ceremony links you to that place. It's fairly
obvious to me that the seisin ceremony itself is a primitive piece of
contamination-magic. As for details of how you can use that to advantage, I
don't know; you'd have to ask someone who already has the sense."
He hadn't missed the hesitation before Tremane picked the word
"pledge." Poor Tremane was enduring a great deal of personal
embarrassment for the sake of these people, if only they knew it. Little groups
were trickling in all the time to swear fealty to their new king, and they were
using an ancient ritual they referred to as "seisin," a ritual
probably as old as the earth-taking ritual. There was no doubt in Darkwind's
mind that it was just as potent as the earth-taking, and just as primitive.
And it profoundly embarrassed the urbane and efficient Tremane, as
most "primitive" rituals would embarrass him.
Nevertheless, it was effective, and he didn't think he needed to
point out to Tremane that the reason he could sense another new area every time
his new liegemen swore to him was that he literally was adding to the area he
had "taken." It was entirely possible that the pinch of earth he had
ingested at the ceremony that gave him this new power had been carefully made
of a bit of every soil the priests could get their hands on, for that very
reason, thus adding in the extra power gain from contagion.
"Speaking of your new subjects, Tremane, there's another
group coming in at the gate now," said Elspeth, who happened to be
standing by the window. "They're pretty heavily armed and I see someone
with a pennon at the front." She frowned and shaded her eyes with one
hand, looking down into the courtyard. "Is that—yes, it is, four sets of
strawberry-leaves. It's a baronial coronet on the pennon-head. Congratulations!
You've hooked one of the few big fish remaining in Hardorn."
Darkwind barely suppressed a smirk. :For the first time since
I've been with you, ke'chara, I've just seen a Herald... act as a
Herald.:
Elspeth just made a short choking sound, while Gwena tittered in
their heads.
Tremane sighed, but it was with visible relief. "I'd better
go right down and greet them properly, then," he said. "Can we resume
our meeting later?"
"No reason why not," Elspeth said for both of them.
"We'll meet you down there with Gwena and the full panoply. If you've
gotten a baron, we'd better confirm your treaty and association with the
Alliance."
Darkwind smiled; this was not, by any means, the first time that
Gwena, he, and Elspeth had dressed up and assembled to impress the new
liegemen. It had rather startled some of them to see a "horse"
indoors, until they saw Elspeth's white uniform and realized that it wasn't a
horse at all, but a Companion.
Tremane laughed unexpectedly; it seemed to Darkwind that the new
King laughed quite a bit more than he would have expected, perhaps because he
had a strong sense of humor about himself. "You should hear the things my
housekeeping staff has to say about hoofprints in the wood floors. Do you have
the same problem in Valdemar?"
"Sadly, all the time," Elspeth told him. "We've
never found a way to prevent them, and we've tried everything." She moved
away from the window with her arms crossed over her chest and a twinkle of
amusement in her eye. "A silver piece says this one will be more impressed
by Darkwind and Vree than by Gwena and me."
"I'll take that bet," Tremane responded easily. Darkwind
stood up, smiling mostly to himself. Tremane had become much more relaxed
around them since the earth-taking ceremony, treating them more often as
colleagues and equals than as foreign ambassadors. Darkwind thought he knew
why, although he doubted if Tremane himself was aware of the reason.
The land "knows" Elspeth and Gwena; the Valdemarans have
always been good stewards of the land and good friends to Hardorn since
Vanyel's time. It also "knows" me, since serving and healing the land
are what the Tayledras were born and bred for. Because the land knows and trusts
us, it is making Tremane feel comfortable around us and inclining him to trust
us as well.
Tremane's new link with Hardorn was going to affect him in any
number of ways that he was not always going to be conscious of, but Darkwind
didn't see anything but good in that prospect. Very occasionally Tremane grew
momentarily disoriented by some new information the earth-sense threw at him,
but for the most part he was coping well. Eventually, as Hardorn recovered from
the damage that had been done to it, Tremane would find that the land sustained
him in moments of stress, rather than the reverse.
There was a knock on the door, and Elspeth joined Darkwind as
Tremane's aide—now styled his "seneschal," though he still acted and
probably thought of himself as a military aide-de-camp—entered diffidently.
"Sir—I mean, Your Majesty—there is a party below who—"
"I know, I'll be there directly," Tremane interrupted.
"You know the drill by now; go see to the arrangements, and as soon as I
look appropriate I'll be down. Blasted crown," he muttered, as the aide
saluted, recollected again that Tremane was a King now and not a military
commander, and bowed himself out. "Where did I put it this time?"
"Where you always put it, Tremane," Elspeth laughed.
"Locked up in the chest."
"Right, with the robes that are too damned heavy to wear and
not warm enough to make any difference in the Great Hall." Tremane swore
with annoyance under his breath, and Darkwind wondered how he would ever have
survived being made Emperor if he disliked the panoply of rank so much. "I
won't miss winter one tiny bit. Thank you; I'll see you in the Hall and we can
get this nonsense over with. Again."
"Oh, this time it looks as if it will be more than worth the
effort," Elspeth assured him, as she preceded Darkwind into the hallway.
"Will it?" he asked her, as they descended the staircase
to their own quarters.
"I think he'll be pleasantly surprised," she said.
"I don't know much about Hardorn heraldry, but I think this new fellow may
be the highest-ranking native to survive Ancar, and that means he'll be
bringing a fair piece of the country with him. Not to mention his escort, and
they looked as if they probably represent some major armed forces."
"So how old is this baron?" Darkwind asked. He had a
good reason for asking; the surviving nobles of Hardorn tended to be mostly
very old, or very young. The former had survived by being no threat to Ancar,
and the latter by being hidden by their relatives, usually with reliable
farmers or other family retainers.
"I'd say early teens; fourteen, fifteen at the most,"
Elspeth replied.
"Hence the reason he'll be more impressed by a Hawkbrother
than a Herald. He may not even know what a Herald is, until someone
tells him." Darkwind shook a finger at her. "You're stealing
Tremane's silver, you little cheat."
"Then he shouldn't bet with me. He ought to know by now that
I never propose a bet unless I'm certain of the outcome." She nodded at
the guards on either side of their door and opened it herself. Their own guards
from Valdemar stationed inside the door brought their weapons up until they saw
who was entering; then they grinned sheepishly and returned to a deceptively
relaxed posture.
"Is that any way to treat a monarch?" Darkwind asked
her, and sighed as he began climbing the stair to their private quarters.
"Never mind; forget I asked. I suppose it won't hurt him."
"I never treat Tremane casually in front of anyone
else," Elspeth reminded him, taking the narrow staircase a little behind
him. "This is calculated behavior; it shows him that I consider him my
equal and will treat him as such. And as Mother often reminds me, the fact that
I abdicated in favor of the twins does not make me any less a princess. It's
not a bad thing in this case to have one of the Blood Royal acting as ambassador."
"True, all of it." The next floor was the purview of
their guards and staff, who were currently lounging about, engaged in various
off-duty occupations in the main room of their circular suite. Elspeth and
Darkwind both waved at the rest of their entourage as they passed through, but
did not stop on that floor. He continued the conversation. "Well, I take
it you think this latest delegation is worth bringing out the full formal
gear."
"Every feather, bead, bell and bauble," Elspeth said
firmly. "Full Whites for me, and the circlet, with badges and
medals. And don't pretend you don't like to dress up, my love."
"I wouldn't dream of it." The scent of the balsam
incense he used both to perfume the air of their private quarters and to
discourage pests met them as they reached their own floor. "Unlike you
so-called 'civilized' peoples, we Tayledras know how to create clothing that is
impressive, functional, and comfortable."
"Don't put me in that 'civilized' category!" she
protested. "We Valdemarans feel precisely the same way! Well, we Heralds
do, anyway, and that category includes the ruling family."
"Impressive?" He raised an eyebrow even as he went to
the chest containing his clothing and raised the lid. "I'll grant you the
functional and comfortable, but you Valdemarans have no sense of style, or at
least, you Heralds don't. You horrified my poor hertasi with your uniform, you know. They thought you were wearing
the sacks your clothes were supposed to be carried in."
They "argued" about clothing, style, and decoration
happily all the time they were changing into their formal clothing, she into
the Whites that he had redesigned, with the additions of rank, and he into the
most elaborate outfit he owned, although by the standards set by Firesong, he
was rather drab. His draped clothing of scarlet, gold, and warm brown was
augmented by a sculpted leather tunic with a padded shoulder, and when he was
dressed, Vree left his perch by the window and lofted straight to him, to land
on the shoulder with a fraction of the impact he would have used in making a
landing on a perch. Having Vree on his shoulder instead of his wrist served a
double function. First, no falconer would ever have let one of his birds sit on
his shoulder; that was a tacit invitation to facial scarring or losing an eye
if something startled the bird or if it suddenly decided that this was a good
time to strike out for freedom. This marked him to the knowledgeable as a
Hawkbrother with no doubt. Only a bondbird could be trusted to sit this way,
with no jesses, no hood, and no means of "control" over him. And
second, if the exotic clothing would not set him apart from the rest, then
Vree, who was much larger than any forestgyre or other gyrfalcon these people
had ever seen, certainly would.
Elspeth, who had a lifetime of rapid changes-of-outfit to fall
back on, waited with an exaggerated expression of boredom for him to finish his
belt adjustments. "Bring your head over here," Elspeth commanded, the
feathered and beaded ornaments meant to be braided into his hair dangling from
one hand. She already wore the beaded feather he had given her as a token of
love, one of Vree's own primaries, braided into her own.
"Should I leave the rest of me here?" he suggested. She
made an exasperated tsking sound, and pushed him down into a chair. Vree
flared his wings to stay balanced. She wove the feathered cords deftly into his
long hair, as cleverly as if she had been born in an ekele rather than a palace.
"There," she said, bending to kiss him, then rapping him
lightly on the top of his head with her knuckles. "Now you're
presentable."
"So I am. And so are you." He rose and headed for the
door, this time taking the lead down the stairs. The entire procedure, from the
time they entered the room to this moment, had taken a fraction of the time it
would take Tremane to get ready. But then again, they were not going to have to
be laced into ceremonial armor either.
Their own entourage was so used to this by now that there had been
no need for Elspeth to ask anyone to go get Gwena, drape her with her
ceremonial barding and bells, and bring her to the Great Hall. The Companion
was already waiting for them when they arrived at the side entrance they would
use to get in place before either Tremane arrived or the delegation was allowed
to enter. The members of Tremane's staff were quite used to seeing a
"horse" wandering about the halls now, and let her go her own way
when they saw her. Waiting with her were all of the dignitaries that could be
hurried into formal clothing or uniforms on short notice, though there was
always a chance that not all of them were what they were dressed up to be.
Once, after most of Tremane's staff had gone to a meeting with the town
council, Darkwind recalled, someone had actually borrowed an Imperial officer's
tunic and a handful of medals and coerced the cook into it for one of these
ceremonies! Since the folk coming to pledge their loyalty were likely never to
set eyes on Shonar again, it did no harm to anyone to have impersonators fill
in the ranks of Tremane's Court if it was necessary, to give the impression
that every petty lordling with a handful of men was being given the highest of
honors.
This time the reverse was true, for not only were all the real
Officials present, but the mayor of Shonar, Sandar Giles, had been on his way
for a meeting with one of Tremane's underlings when he saw the procession of
armed men heading for Tremane's manor. He'd sent a now-exhausted runner hastily
back to the town for his mayoral finery, and now stood waiting with the rest
while the servants did what they could to make the Great Hall bearable.
"One of Tremane's mages is in there, warming the place
up," Sandar was saying to Tremane's aide, who was looking distinctly
uncomfortable in his nonregulation, heavily embroidered tabard. It looked
like—and probably was—something that had been found in an attic and been
pressed into service as the "official" clothing of His Majesty's
Seneschal. A great deal of the Court garments had been made out of salvaged
material or dredged out of attics. For that matter, Sandar Giles' outfit showed
a touch of the moth's tooth around the squirrel-fur trim and the woolen hood,
as if he had gone to storage for his grandfather's mayoral outfit.
Small wonder Tremane has difficulty taking all this seriously. His
"court" is hardly up to the standards of even his Old ducal
household, I should imagine. Elspeth and I are the only ones who are not
threadbare and much-mended.
But none of the various delegations that had come riding or
walking in to Shonar had looked any better, and most had looked much worse. By
the current standards of the country, Tremane's Court probably looked
remarkably prosperous.
Before this is all over, we may look back on these times fondly,
as the days when we were all doing well. It was a grim thought, but one which he and Elspeth often shared.
If the mage-storms could not be held back—
Well, there was nothing to be gained by dwelling on that now.
Under Tremane's direction, people were readying themselves for worse to come,
and Hardornens, unlike Valdemarans, were perfectly willing to believe in
"worse to come." Once the ceremony was over, but just before the
delegation left for home, Tremane would give this new lot their directions on
surviving the final Storm, as he had every other delegation so far. That those
directions were mainly guesses hardly mattered; they would have direction and
confidence that he had the situation on the way to being under control.
The door opened, and a thin, gawky man came through it, a fellow
with thinning hair, who squinted at them from behind a pair of glass lenses set
in a lead frame that rested on his nose. "It's warm in there now, and it
should last through your ceremony," the mage said, and made shooing
motions as if they were a bunch of hens he wanted to drive before him. "In
with you now! The sooner you get the ceremony over with, less likely that the
spell will wear off before it's over!"
None of them needed a second invitation; the hallway was freezing,
and the promise of warmth was all the encouragement they required to move
quickly.
Elspeth and Gwena hung back until the others were inside, and
Darkwind remained with them. Gwena was quite careful whenever she came inside
the manor, and despite the complaints from Tremane's household staff, she left
very little sign of her presence after these ceremonies. Some of the Hardornen
warriors, who forgot to remove spurs or came striding in wearing heavy,
hobnailed boots, did worse damage than Gwena, who picked up each hoof neatly
and set it down again with the greatest of care.
Gwena was arrayed in the "riderless" version of
Companion full dress; no saddle, but with a blue and silver blanket cut like
her barding, decorated at all the points with silver bells, a blue-dyed leather
hackamore with silver tassels at the cheekpieces, and reins bedecked with more
silver bells. Had there been more time to ready her, the decorations included
even bells and blue ribbons to braid into her mane and tail, but she had to be
content with her mane and tail flowing freely.
"You look lovely, as always," Darkwind told her.
:Thank you,: she
replied coyly, and gave her head a tiny toss so that the bells chimed. :I'm
afraid we four are making a more impressive show than Tremane's own Court, but
that can't be helped.:
"At least we are making our support unmistakable," he
pointed out, as they took their appointed places among the rest.
There was some shuffling as the dignitaries of Tremane's Court
sorted themselves out, then the young Seneschal nodded his head and the main
doors were flung open to admit the latest delegation.
At the head of the procession was a youngster—no boy, but young,
too young to need a razor—of about fourteen. Under his scarlet cloak and
tabard, he wore full armor that had seen hard use, and his eyes were far too
old to belong to that young face. The dented and slightly tarnished baronial
circlet about his brow did not detract from the painful dignity with which he
carried himself, and by his build and the muscles beneath the armor, he was clearly
no stranger to real fighting. Behind him, more men in full armor followed in
pairs, ranging in age from powerful graybeards to men only a little older than
the boy-baron. One of the two immediately behind the boy carried a small wooden
box. They paraded in slowly, surveying every person there with suspicion, and
Darkwind smothered a smile as the boy's eyes lit on the Alliance envoys,
widened, and flitted from Elspeth to Darkwind and back, finally remaining on
Darkwind.
:I won,: she
mindspoke unnecessarily.
The entire delegation came to a halt at the foot of the low dais.
By now, several of the Shonar artisans were at work on a real throne for
Tremane, since the original throne of Hardorn had been lost in looting and
fires, but it would not be finished for another week or two. In place of a real
throne was a prop throne, made for an Imperial theatrical production, and
modified by those same artisans. They had sanded off the gilt paint, which had
probably looked fine at a distance but only looked cheap and shoddy up close,
and had removed all of the glass-paste jewels set into the back. What had been
carved wolves adorning the back were now hounds, the Hardornen symbol of
fidelity. The swords making up the legs and arms, and interlaced on the back
below the hounds, had become tree branches, and the wood had been rubbed with
oils and polished until it shone. The shabby cushions had been replaced with
brown velvet purloined from drapes taken from storage. However, in the course
of all the recarving, the wood had been pared down in some places to a
precarious extent, and Tremane had been warned to be very careful when sitting
on it. Everyone was going to breathe a sigh of relief when the new throne took
the place of the old. It could be taken for a terrible omen if Tremane's throne
collapsed beneath him in the middle of one of these ceremonies. Tremane had
good-naturedly commented that having a fake Imperial throne recarved into a
fragile Hardornen throne was entirely appropriate.
Tremane kept the delegation waiting just long enough for them to
get a good look at the rest of his Court, and to take in the banners on the
wall behind his throne, which represented those who had already come in and
brought him their pledges. Most of those who had sworn their oaths had taken
their banners from the arms of the former nobles of the region, although more
often than not there had been no one who actually qualified to take those arms.
Tremane had solved that quickly enough by confirming the delegates in their
places as the new lords, and bestowing the old titles upon them as soon as
their pledges were confirmed.
Sadly, besides a number of ancient titles going begging, there was
plenty of empty land lying fallow and abandoned, but Tremane had plans for
that, too. Once summer arrived, it would be settled, and former Imperial
officers who were ready to retire would be ennobled and put in place as
overlords. They would be allowed to take with them as many Imperial soldiers as
wished to retire to farming and had found brides among the Hardornens; these
would be given freehold-grants on reclaimed farms. Thus, the newly ennobled
would have garrison and work force in one, and the newly wed couples would have
more of a base for their start than most. After that particular announcement, the
number of engagements and handfastings had skyrocketed, and if some of the good
farmers and fathers of Shonar had been a bit reluctant to welcome Imperial
sons-in-law at first, their reluctance had evaporated when they learned of the
royal bride-price the foreign sons-in-law would bring, thanks to the foresight
of their new King.
Darkwind hid a smile as the young Baron kept taking covert glances
at him, as if the youngster had never seen anything so outlandish in his life.
Darkwind had been told that rumors of his presence and powers were circulating
out beyond Shonar's walls, rumors which got more and more fantastic with every
league distant from the city. He wondered what the boy had heard, to make him
look so wide-eyed.
There was a bit of a stir at the door just off the dais, and
Tremane's major-domo stepped inside.
The major-domo rapped three times on the floor with the butt of
his staff. "His Majesty, King Tremane of Hardorn!" the man announced
in ringing tones, his clear, commanding voice showing precisely why he had been
plucked out of the ranks to fill this position. "And his Majesty's Chief
Advisers!"
Tremane and his four Chief Advisers filed in with ponderous
dignity. Of course, his Chief Advisers were also members of his bodyguard, but
their weapons were not carried in an obvious fashion, and there was nothing
about them to advertise that fact. Tremane wore his ceremonial armor, the
Hardornen Crown, a tapestry tabard with his own arms (requisitioned from his
former squire), and was draped in a fine cloak of silk edged in heavily
embroidered silk trim purloined from the same curtains that had provided him
with material for the seat cushions of his throne. The cloak was also part of
the props for some unknown play; it was ridiculously long and required the
services of two small boys recruited as pages to carry the trailing end.
Both pages were from the group of five children that Tremane and
his men had rescued from the grip of the first killing blizzard; Tobe and Racky
were their names, and they took their duty as Tremane's pages very seriously.
They had been nicely outfitted in page costumes cut down from Imperial
officers' uniforms by their mothers, who nearly burst with pride at the notion
that their boys were serving the new King.
Tremane took his seat gingerly, which translated into a ponderous
sort of dignity to outside eyes. The pages arranged his royal mantle out before
his feet, like a peacock's tail, just on sanity's side of preposterous, and
retired to their positions behind the throne. The young baron tensed as Tremane
nodded to him.
"Baron Peregryn, I understand that you are from Adair,"
he said quietly. "You are a very welcome addition to the Court."
Darkwind watched the boy and his entourage to see if they noticed
the relative informality of Tremane's address. After much consideration, he had
decided to completely do away with the royal plural, because Ancar had been so
rabid in its use. Darkwind saw two of the older men exchange brief nods, and it
seemed to him that they wore expressions of satisfaction.
The young Baron took two steps to the foot of the throne and went
immediately to one knee, and the rest of his entourage followed his example in
dropping to theirs. "I have come to offer you my pledge, King
Tremane," the youngster said, in a high tenor that trembled only a little.
"And in token of this pledge, I bring you seisin of my lands, and those of
the men pledged in their turn to my service."
Young Baron Peregryn reached behind him without looking, and the
man carrying the small wooden casket placed it in his outstretched hand.
Darkwind watched their movements carefully, analyzing everything they did, and
making some guesses about the relationship the Baron had with his men.
He is the acknowledged leader, no matter how young he appears to
be, and he and the older men have worked and fought together a great deal. They
trust him—and he trusts them. He has youth, enthusiasm, and charisma, and they
have experience, and they all work to weave these things together. This one
will be worth watching for stories and songs of noble deeds.
The boy opened the casket and held it out to Tremane, who took a
double handful of soil from within and held it for a moment.
"Thus do I, Tremane, King of Hardorn, take seisin of the
lands of Peregryn, Baron of Adair, and of those who are pledged to him,"
he proclaimed in a voice suitable for a battlefield oration. He dropped the
soil back into the casket, and held out his hand to Tobe, the older of his two
pages. Tobe handed him a small dagger, and with his face completely
unflinching, he slashed his palm shallowly, held his hand over the casket, and
allowed his blood to run into it and mix with the earth inside.
"Thus do I, Tremane, King of Hardorn by acknowledgment of the
soil of Hardorn itself, give the pledge of my body to the lands of Peregryn,
Baron of Adair, and of those who are vowed to his service." The other
page, Racky, took the dagger and handed him a linen cloth, which he used to
bind the wound across his palm. Meanwhile Tobe took the casket from Peregryn,
mixed the soil and blood thoroughly with a miniature spade, and then used the
spade to divide the moistened soil between the original casket and a small box.
Tobe handed the casket back to Peregryn, who received it with the same
reverence as he would a holy relic. Tobe gave the box to the Seneschal, who
would take it to the cellars of the manor and add it to the urn of soil already
there.
All of this mixing and dividing gave Tremane a chance to recover
from the shock of adding yet another stretch of land to his "senses."
Darkwind knew that by the time he reached his own quarters again the slash
would be completely healed—and now was the moment when he would confirm his
right to be King by telling Peregryn what, if anything, was wrong with his
lands.
"If anything?" No, there will be a great deal wrong,
there. Adair is supposed to be in the north, and there would have been
reflections off the Iftel Border before Firesong and the rest instigated the
Counter-Storm.
Tremane's eyes had the glazed look that meant he "felt"
something very strong, which probably meant very bad. "Your lands, Baron
Peregryn, include a small river valley, bounded by a lake, a hill shaped like a
sleeping cat, and a forest of pines," he said slowly, as if he were talking
in his sleep. Peregryn's eyes widened, and several of the men behind him began
whispering urgently together. "Beneath that hill there is a cave, and
within that cave there is a place where magic is pooling and stagnating. Living
there is a beast, changed by magic into a monster. You cannot kill it directly;
it will cost too many lives. You cannot poison it. To kill it you must feed it
a cow which has been fed on datura-flower for three days. It will gorge itself,
and the action of the flower will make it sleepy and it will go to the cave to
hide. You must then collapse the cave or brick it up, sealing it inside."
Tremane went on, reciting the locations of several more pockets of
trouble, together with suggested solutions for eliminating the problems.
Peregryn wouldn't be able to implement all or even most of those solutions
until summer, but at least now he and his men knew where all the trouble spots
were, and would be able to deal with them one at a time. As Tremane spoke, more
and more of Peregryn's men began whispering together, their expressions taking
on the slightly stunned look of men who were hearing something they could not
believe, and yet could verify. Evidently several of Tremane's revelations
matched problems they already knew about—and knew that Tremane could not have
learned by any normal means. Finally, Tremane fell silent, then blinked, shook
his head a little, and his eyes cleared of their daze.
"I trust that will help?" he said dryly. He would
remember everything he had said, of course; this was not a true trance, more of
a state of intense concentration. And behind him one of his clerks had been
taking down every word and would give Peregryn a copy before he left. If
Peregryn was unable to deal with any of the problems Tremane had identified for
him, there would be a record of what the problem was and where, and eventually
Tremane's own men would move in to take care of it.
"More than simply 'help,' Your Majesty," Peregryn
replied shakily.
He would have said more, but one of the men of his group, overcome
with fervor and enthusiasm, leaped to his feet, brandishing his sword over his
head.
"Long life to King Tremane!" he shouted, his voice
actually cracking with excitement. "All gods bless King Tremane!"
That goaded everyone else in the entourage, and eventually
Peregryn as well, to get to their feet in an eruption of cheers. Tremane
remained sitting on his throne—in part, Darkwind knew, because he couldn't
stand just yet—and bent his head to them in gracious acknowledgment of their
accolade. Some of the oldest men were openly weeping; these were the ones who
eventually thrust themselves forward, flung themselves at Tremane's feet, and
kissed his hand with tears streaming down their faces. It was a moment of
extreme and powerful emotion, and Tremane himself was not unmoved by it. The
King took great care to clasp every man's hand, using both hands, listening to
him babble, until he was ready to rise again and let another take his place. It
was quite obvious to Darkwind that Tremane recognized these old warriors for
what they were, and knew how difficult it was to get any sort of accolade from
them, much less this kind of emotional outburst.
These older men always proved to be those who had survived the
purges and who had expected to die without ever seeing Hardorn return to peace
and prosperity. Darkwind knew very well why they wept, and so did Tremane.
"I have given them back their dreams and their hope," he had said, a
little in awe himself, after the first time this had happened. "They see a
future now, where their grandchildren can expect to grow up without fear of
being murdered on a royal whim."
And he was right; that was precisely what those old men saw: a
future, where before had been only darkness and doubt.
It took some time before the young Baron and his men managed to
calm themselves down, and more before all of the appropriate ceremonies had
been fulfilled. Tremane apologized for having to house them in a barracks; they
hastened to assure him that they would have been perfectly willing to camp in
the snow. Tremane directed his supply sergeant—who now bore the impressive
title of "Procurement Adviser"—to bestow upon his new liegemen the
"usual gifts" and they made a token protest. The "usual
gifts" were all surplus items, so much in surplus that their value in the
town would be seriously depreciated if any more came on the market. Surplus
Imperial clothing, surplus hand tools, surplus weapons. Some of Tremane's
people had argued against that last, pointing out that he would be arming those
who had lately been his enemies. But Tremane felt, and Darkwind agreed with
him, that giving them weapons demonstrated his trust in them. It was a gesture
worthy of a King.
Besides, these new liegemen needed the weaponry that
Tremane gave them. Their own supplies had been depleted in their war against
the Imperial forces. If they were going to rid themselves of their land's
boggles, they needed weapons.
This wasn't at all altruistic. Practically speaking, Tremane would
rather that they went after their boggles instead of turning to Imperial
soldiers for help. They knew the lay of their own land, where a boggle might
lair, where it could run. His men wouldn't, couldn't. Better to let the local
experts handle it, if there was any chance they could.
By the time the presentation was over, Baron Peregryn and his men
were, however, so happy they were beside themselves. They never even noticed
that Tremane had gone pale, and was sweating, his hands clenching the arms of
his throne so hard that the knuckles were white.
:He isn't getting up, because he can't,: Elspeth said, her Mindvoice sharp with
alarm. :It's more than simple disorientation this time. It's really striking
him hard.:
:What's wrong?: he asked, hoping she'd know.
:I can't tell, and neither can Gwena.: There was frustration there as well as
alarm. :All I can tell for certain is that he's in nearly the same state as
he was when his earth-sense was first awakened. This has something to do with
the earth-sense itself, and something to do with this new area he's taken
seisin of.:
Neither of them dared move to help him, not while the Baron and
his people were still present; Tremane was clearly attempting to conceal his
weakness and it was their responsibility to follow his wishes. He reached for
her hand as she reached for his; their hands closed on each other and they
stood waiting, tensely, while the last of the amenities were played out.
Finally the Baron and all of his men trooped out, to be
accommodated overnight in one of the barracks. In the morning, Tremane would
meet with them again and give them warning and instructions concerning what
everyone here was now calling the "Final Storm," and what to do to
weather it. Then, when everything had been organized for their return, they
would go back home with a small caravan of supply sledges. Only after the doors
closed behind them, could Tremane fold his body over his knees and his own
people rush to help him.
But he waved them away before they could do more than ask him what
was wrong.
"I'll be all right," he said, and Darkwind let out the
breath he had been holding, for he sounded normal, just a bit shaken.
"It's nothing physical, and I don't believe it's anything to worry about.
Just—something unexpected just happened; let me sit here for a moment or two
more while I get over it." He looked over at Darkwind and smiled ruefully.
"Quite frankly, it feels as if someone just dropped me off a very high
cliff, and I stopped just short of the ground."
Elspeth knelt at his side, and Darkwind joined her. "It's the
new Barony, isn't it?" she asked. "It's something there. Is it the
Storms starting again?"
As if her questions gave him a focus for his own sensations, he
seized on them. "Yes. No. Yes, it's Adair, and no, it's not the Storms. I
don't know what it is, but it's not—no wait." His eyes took on that
far-off gaze again. "It's the border, the northern border. Adair is on the
northern border, and something has happened up there. Something important.
Something that changes everything."
"What—" one of Tremane's generals began, but Tremane
just shook his head, dumbly.
"I don't know," he repeated. "I just know—it's
something completely new."
"What's on the northern border?" someone else asked, and
looked at Elspeth for the answer.
She had one for that question, but she had turned as pale as
Tremane. "Iftel," she said, and her hand clenched tight on
Darkwind's. "Iftel. The one place in this part of the world that no one
knows anything about."
"So that's the message?" Tremane said, his eyebrows
rising. "Just that? Nothing more?"
With his recovery, the meeting among Darkwind, Elspeth, and
Tremane that had been interrupted had been moved back to the office in his
quarters, but by now they had all forgotten whatever it was they had been
talking about, for a message had come by way of signal-towers from the North.
Unfortunately, it only confirmed that something had happened, and gave them
very little other information.
"That's all there was, sir—Your Majesty—" the aide
recovered from his mistake. "Just that the border with Iftel suddenly
opened, and a new delegation of something friendly was coming down here to meet
with you. I'm afraid," he continued apologetically, "that the signal
language is not very specific."
"The signal did say they were friendly, though? You're
sure you're not misreading that?" if Tremane's voice was sharp with
anxiety, Darkwind couldn't blame him.
"No, sir, that much is quite clear," the aide
said with certainty. "The old man at the signal did say that the term used
was one that he hadn't seen very often, but that it was definitely noted as
being friendly."
"Thank the gods for small favors," Tremane muttered, and
sighed, running a hand over his chin. "Well, now I know what it—ah—feels
like to have the Iftel Border open up. That's useful information. But how
whatever is coming expects to travel in this winter weather, I can't begin to
imagine."
"Peregryn and his men did," Darkwind pointed out.
"There's no reason to suppose others can't, but it will take time for them
to arrive, perhaps weeks on foot, ten days by horse."
"By then, I might even have a throne I can sit on without
worrying if it's going to break and drop me on my rump," Tremane sighed,
then laughed. "Listen to me complaining about a flimsy throne! As if that
was the worst thing we have to face!"
"A delegation from Iftel," Elspeth mused, twisting one
of the rings she wore around and around. "They've always allowed a single
envoy from Valdemar inside their land, so long as it was a member of the
Merchant's Guild—but never anyone from the Mercenary's Guild. And they would
never permit Heralds inside." She shook her head. "The envoy never
would tell us much, only that they 'preferred peace' but weren't particularly
interested in any exchanges with us."
"Very insular," Darkwind commented, quite well aware
that this was a case of the goose complaining that the swan had a long neck. One
can hardly call the Tayledras anything but insular.
"They could have good reason for being insular," Tremane
pointed out. "When was the first time people of Valdemar encountered
them?"
"Quite some time after the Founding," Elspeth admitted.
"Their barrier was already in place then, at least according to the
Chronicles. It was a merchant who was first allowed inside, and it has mostly
been merchants who crossed it since." She smiled deprecatingly. "They
may be insular, but like the rest of us, they enjoy buying things."
Darkwind hid his own smile. for that last shot had been meant for herself. She
had been unable to resist spending some of her own money on a few odd trifles
that had turned up in the loot of the Imperial storehouse.
"So they could have encountered someone or something
extremely dangerous before they ever saw you," Tremane pointed out, his
eyes speculative, as he probably tried to envision what could have been so
terrible that it caused an entire country to erect a magical barrier to keep
out intruders. That it was a barrier that had survived centuries and baffled
the magic powers of Ancar, Falconsbane, and the Empire alike made it all the
more intriguing.
"They probably did," Darkwind put in. "In those
early days, there were terrible things that far north. There was at least one
Tayledras Vale somewhere about there, and our Chronicles report that at
some time while they lived there, they encountered and defeated a Dark Mage
much like Ancar's servant Falconsbane, but with a larger following."
He did not add that this mage probably had actually been
Falconsbane in one of his earlier incarnations. Tremane neither knew about
Falconsbane, nor likely cared; the only person still concerned with
Ma'ar-Falconsbane was An'desha, and only because An'desha still held those
critically-important memories. But as for the rest of them...
Falconsbane is dead, with the past, and this time he will stay
that way. And about damned time, but we have more important things to worry
about. The sober
glance that Elspeth cast his way said virtually the same thing. For now, the
situation was grave enough that even isolated Iftel was opening her borders and
sending representatives to them; there was no leisure to dwell on the past.
"I don't know what, if anything, these representatives of
Iftel might offer you," Darkwind cautioned.
"If nothing else," Tremane mused, "perhaps we can
get them to part with the secret that makes up their Border. It's shielded them
from the worst of the Storms so far; it might be able to shield us as
well."
"Provided these people arrive here before the question
becomes academic," Gordun, Tremane's chief mage, reminded him dryly.
"It's a long way to the northern border and the going is difficult; by the
time they get here, the Final Storm could have left us in ruins here."
Tremane nodded ruefully. "A good point, though it was an
entertaining thought while it lasted. Well, that brings up the next decision;
what shall we tell our newest Baron tomorrow about the Final Storm?"
"Hide, and finish your card games quickly?" one wag
suggested. There was a general, strained laugh, and then the discussion moved
into the serious channel of what to do in the immediate future. Eventually,
late that night, precisely what should be told to the Baron and his entourage
had been worked out; enough to make him understand the gravity of the
situation, but not so much that he would panic. Panic would be bad for Peregryn
and his people as well.
Over the course of the next couple of days, the Baron got his pick
of surplused supplies, was given a review of troopers interested in resettling
up north, and got his briefing and warnings about the Final Storm. He and his
own advisers were philosophical about that last; there was nothing they could
do to stop it, and they could only hope that the physical effects were limited
to places with no human populations. During the first of the storms, caught
both by the initial storm waves and the reflected waves from the Iftel Border,
they had suffered more damage than anyone yet reporting in. "We have
already had a half-dozen people unfortunate enough to be caught in one of the
things we are calling 'change-circles,' and they were changed even as beasts
are," Peregryn said, with a shrug of deeply felt helplessness. "The
fortunate died."
"And the unfortunate lived," added one of his advisers
grimly. "Though often, that was not long, when they made the mistake of
approaching others for help. It wasn't always their bodies that changed, at
least not outwardly."
Tremane exchanged a significant look with Darkwind. This was
something he and his people had thought of at about the same time the potential
for trouble occurred to the Allies. But while those in Valdemar had been
concerned with prediction of where the change-circles would occur, and thus
preventing people or large animals from being caught in one, the people in and
around Shonar had planned on what to do when a human became a monster.
Until this moment, that had been nothing more than a possibility.
Now they knew that there were transformed humans somewhere out there in
the north, and it was time to put some of those plans into action in case the
hapless victims trekked south. Tremane wrote something on a small slip of paper
and passed it to a page to take to his clerks. The orders, already written out,
would go into the troops' daily briefing. In essence, they were simple enough; Humans
have been caught in the Storms and changed. If a boggle shows intelligence and
no aggression, be wary—but leave it alone long enough for it to show its
intentions.
There had been some debate on the subject, with a minority
objecting to the mere idea of giving a boggle the chance to attack first, and a
second minority wanting to make attempts to communicate with every boggle that
even paused for a moment before attacking. Finally, to end the debating,
Tremane had exercised his royal prerogatives and decreed the language of the
order, which predictably did not entirely satisfy anyone, not even Tremane himself.
Darkwind had noticed, however, that Tremane had applied enough of
the Imperial manner not to care if anyone was satisfied (including himself), so
long as his decree did the job for which it was intended.
Neither of them could ever have guessed the immediate effect of
that simple order.
Not more than two days after sending Baron Peregryn and his
entourage and gift sledges off, during yet another ceremony of seisin—this time
for the benefit of a very old Squire who had sent his informal pledge some time
earlier, but who had not felt equal to taking the winter journey until now—they
learned exactly why the signal-towers had said that something was coming
down from Iftel.
No one there could have expected just what the somethings
were.
Tremane had just added his blood to the soil that old Squire
Mariwell had brought with him, when a great clamor arose up on the walls of the
manor. Darkwind started and looked up automatically, although he wouldn't be
able to see a thing through the stone walls and ceiling. With great presence of
mind, Racky took the casket of earth from Tremane's hands, mixed the contents
quickly, divided them and handed the old man his own casket back, while all
about him, his elders were behaving skittishly, staring and muttering among themselves,
hands on empty scabbards. Before Tremane could send to find out what the cause
of all the ruckus was, and right after Racky pressed the casket of soil back
into its owner's shaking hands, one of the King's bodyguards came bursting into
the Great Hall, his face as white as the snow outside.
"Boggles over the castle!" he cried. "Oh, by the
gods! Great, huge, flying boggles! So many they cover the sky! Oh, gods, help
us..."
Elspeth held up her hand to shade her eyes, and squinted up at the
dark shapes hovering in the brilliant blue sky above the courtyard. It was too
soon yet to say just what these "boggles" looked like, other than the
fact that they were winged, but there was something about those black V shapes
and the way that they swooped and soared that looked tantalizingly familiar.
They remind me of Treyvan and Hydona, but they don't fly exactly
the same way. Could they be gryphons? There've been rumors of gryphons in the
north for years now...
"Remember your orders, men," Tremane called to the nervous
sentries on the walls and towers above. "No shooting without
provocation."
Pray they don't take simple swooping as provocation!
"There're exactly twenty-one of them," Darkwind said
absently from her right, as he peered upward into a sky blindingly bright. He
bit his lip and she sensed that he was thinking hard for a moment, then his
eyes narrowed as if he had just made a decision. He extended his gloved hand to
Vree, who transferred his perch from the shoulder to the gauntlet with that
intensity of gaze that told Elspeth he was getting silent instructions from his
bondmate.
A heartbeat later, Darkwind flung Vree upward, and the bondbird
pumped his wings skyward, heading straight for those twenty-one mysterious Vs.
"I'll know in a moment just—" He began, his eyes half closed.
Then, unexpectedly, he laughed, the sound echoing across the
otherwise silent courtyard and making just about everyone in Tremane's escort
jump and stare at him as if they suspected he had gone mad. He brushed his
snow-white hair back from his forehead, and pointed up at the
"boggles," then at Vree, who had reversed his climb and was making a
leisurely descent.
"Tell your men to put their weapons away, King Tremane,"
Darkwind called, holding out his gloved fist for the returning forestgyre. Vree
flared his wings, ruffling Darkwind's hair, and landed as lightly as a bit of
thistledown, settling his talons gently around the leather-covered wrist.
"I suspect that's your delegation from Iftel up there, and if they can see
half as well as my old friends Treyvan and Hydona can, they aren't about to
land until there's no chance that they'll wind up becoming feathered
pincushions."
:They are gryphons, then?: Elspeth asked, feeling a strange thrill of excitement. :Could
these be more of the "missing Companies" from the days of the Mage
Wars?:
:Could be; even with the distortion of looking through Vree's
eyes, these gryphons don't look quite like the ones we've seen. Millennia of
separation from the parent stock would do that, I suspect.: Darkwind continued to peer upward as the
Imperial guards reluctantly put down their weapons at Tremane's shouted orders.
:It's either that, or some unbelievably clever Adept managed to duplicate
the gryphons we know, and I doubt that's possible.:
Whatever was or was not possible, it was soon obvious that
Darkwind was right about the gryphons' eyesight. As soon as the last spear was
grounded and the last arrow put back in its quiver, the hovering specks above
descended with a speed that put Vree to shame, and made Elspeth recall what her
mother's falconer had once said: "If you want to know what the fastest
bird in the world is, ask the falconer who's just had his prize peregrine
carried off by a stooping eagle."
Not only did the gryphons descend with breathtaking speed, they
did so with artistry. They dropped in a modified stoop that followed a tightly
spiraling path down into the relatively small courtyard, one after the other in
a precise formation, like beads on a string. As the first of them backwinged
hard, kicking up a wind that drove debris all over the courtyard and made those
who had not been prepared for the amount of air those huge wings could push
shield their faces, Elspeth wanted to applaud the theatrical entrance. The huge
creature landed on the cobbles of the court as lightly as Vree on Darkwind's
glove, touching down with one outstretched hind-claw first, then settling
neatly an eyeblink later, posed and poised with wings folded, like a guardian
statue in the middle of the expanse of stone.
The next followed a moment after, and the next, until the
remaining twenty were ranged in a deliberate double half-circle behind their
leader, all in the same precise, regal posture.
As Darkwind had indicated, they did not look quite like the
gryphons of k'Leshya. These creatures were heavier of beak, neck, and chest;
like eagles, rather than stocky and broadwinged like hawks, or lean,
large-eyed, and long-winged like falcons. In color they were quite unlike the
gryphons of k'Leshya, who were as varied in color as the creatures they had
been modeled after. These gryphons were a uniform dark brown from beak to tail,
a color with some patterned shading in a lighter brown, but nothing nearly like
the malar-stripes or masks of the falconiform gryphons, or the variegations of
the hawk-gryphons, with their bright yellow beaks and claws. The effect was
very impressive to someone who had never seen any two gryphons who looked
precisely alike; as if someone had deliberately made up a wing of gryphons that
matched in every way, like a matched set of horses in a parade group. They
looked every bit as intelligent as Treyvan and Hydona, and their yellow eyes
watched every move made by the humans before them with calculation and
speculation. The heavier beaks made their faces look oddly proportioned, at
least at first, but Elspeth found herself swiftly growing used to the new
variation.
Each of them wore a harness and pack very similar to the ones the
Kaled'a'in gryphons often wore, made of highly polished leather of a rich
reddish brown, with polished brass fittings. The apparent leader also wore a
neck-collar and chestpiece that looked as if it had been derived from armor
some time in the far distant past. Now it served only to bear a device of three
swords, hilts down, points up, with a single heraldic sun above the middle.
Elspeth glanced at Darkwind, who shook his head slightly; whatever it
signified, he didn't recognize the symbology.
The gryphons waited, motionless except for the rising and falling
of their chests, watching for someone among the humans to make the first move.
The Imperials and Hardornens, one and all, stared back at them, faces pale and
limbs rooted to the spot. Elspeth thought of her first sight of gryphons, and
couldn't blame them for not moving. Here were creatures, twenty-one of them,
with sickles on their front and hind claws, and meat hooks twice the size of a
man's head in the middle of their faces—she wouldn't have been eager to rush up
and embrace them in the name of brotherhood either.
"I suppose it's up to us," Darkwind said, a touch of
amusement in his voice. He stepped forward, Elspeth a scant pace behind him,
Gwena following at Elspeth's side, until he stood in comfortable speaking range
of the leader, who regarded him with the unwavering, scarcely blinking gaze of
the raptor.
"Welcome to Shonar, capital of Leader Tremane of Hardorn, in
the name of the Alliance," he said in careful Kaled'a'in. "I am
Darkwind k'Sheyna, representative of the Clans of the Tayledras of the
Pelagirs, the Shin'a'in of the Dhorisha Plains, and the Kaled'a'in of k'Leshya
Vale and White Gryphon. This is Elspeth, daughter of Selenay, ruler of
Valdemar, and Companion Gwena, representatives of the peoples of Valdemar,
Rethwellan, and Karse. Behind me are Leader Tremane, of Hardorn, and his
officials and advisers."
Elspeth knew only enough Kaled'a'in to follow what Darkwind was
saying, she could not have hoped to make the same speech herself. Kaled'a'in
was handicapped by not having a word for "king;" the closest was
"leader" or "ruler," and it gave no sense of the size of
what was ruled. Darkwind's three peoples freely borrowed whatever local term
applied, but she suspected that he was afraid that the gryphons before him
would have no idea what the Hardornen titles meant. The chief gryphon listened
attentively and with great concentration, and waited for a moment after
Darkwind had finished to see if he would add anything. When Darkwind said
nothing more, but made a slight bow, the gryphon opened his beak. He replied in
a clear enough voice, but his words were in a form of Kaled'a'in so drastically
different from anything she knew that she could only recognize the origin and
not what the envoy said. Now it was Darkwind's turn to listen, closely, and
with immense concentration, brows knitted into an unconscious frown as he
followed the carefully enunciated words. She did not venture to break his
concentration by Mindspeaking to him.
:I don't suppose you're picking up anything from them, are you?: she asked Gwena, as Darkwind made a reply
of which she only understood half the words, none of them in sequence. She
guessed that he was elaborating on who was what, and to whom the gryphon needed
to apply for reception of his delegation.
:Not a thing, they're shielded, and shielded hard,: came the helpful reply. :It would be
useful to have an Empath with us at the moment, but I don't think there's
anything other than a fairly reasonable level of anxiety in them at this
point.:
In the gryphon's reply, Elspeth caught the word,
"Hardorn," and Darkwind's face cleared. "It would be a great
deal easier if you could speak in the language of Hardorn, sir," he
replied in that tongue. "I fear that time has changed the language you
speak from the one taught to me."
"A grrreat deal of time, young Brrrother-To-Hawksss,"
the gryphon rumbled, with evident amusement. "A verrry grrreat deal of
time by anyone's measurrre. I am Tashiketh pral Skylshaen, envoy from the land
you know as Iftel to the court of King Tremane, who we have been told has been
chosen for his office by the land, as it was in the old days." He waved a
huge taloned hand in an expansive gesture at the twenty gryphons poised behind
him. "This is my wing. These are the representatives of the twenty hrradurr
of Iftel, courageous and worthy of their offices, who each won the right to fly
in my wing in the bahathyrrr."
The hrradurr were evidently subdivisions of Iftel—though
what the bahathyrrr could be, Elspeth could not even begin to guess. She
made a quick hand-gesture behind her back, hoping Tremane would take the hint
and come up to be presented, but he was already moving before she gestured.
With quick wits, he had already anticipated what was needed the moment that the
gryphon began to speak in Hardornen.
He walked forward with grace that could only be trained into
someone who began learning the peculiar "dance" of court movement at
a very early age. When he reached Darkwind's side, he bowed his head in a
slight acknowledgment to Tashiketh. The gryphon in his turn made a deep
obeisance to the King, then carefully extracted a packet of folded papers from
a pouch at the side of his harness and handed them to Darkwind who in turn gave
them to Tremane.
"The land of Iftel sends greetings to Hardorn's new ruler,
oh, Tremane, once of the House Imperial," the gryphon said, in his
strangely accented Hardornen. "We have been sent by the Assembly of
Peoples and He Who Made The Barrier to bear the greetings of our Assembly and
our Peoples, and to offer you our personal assistance in current and future difficulties.
We are," he added, with a lift of his head, "authorized to assist you
in any way."
Elspeth could guess at the thoughts running through Tremane's head
at the moment, though he gave no sign of them as he gravely thanked Ambassador
for his greetings and his offer.
He can't take this offer seriously. Likeliest is either that
Tashiketh is not aware of what he is actually promising, or that this is a
polite custom of Iftel, a standard speech, and the offer is not meant to be
anything more than an expression of polite esteem.
That, of course, was only logical. As welcome as the aid of a full
wing of gryphons would be, how could an ambassadorial delegation be expected to
perform any services that did not directly benefit their own land? And
certainly there was no reason to believe that such a blank card had been given
to King Tremane to fill in as he cared to. He could, conceivably, ask them to
do something too dangerous for his own men to try. If they were harmed, he
would have to face the consequences, but it made no sense to think that Iftel
would be willing to put its citizens in danger.
Of course, Darkwind and I and our entourage are perfectly willing
to put ourselves in danger—and do—but that's because we aren't really just
envoys, we're representatives of the Alliance and we're performing as Hardorn's
military allies as well as our other duties. In a sense, we're a very small
military unit as well as ambassadors.
The next thing that must be running through Tremane's head
as he surveyed the half-circle of twenty-one very large gryphons, was
where on earth was he going to put them?
He couldn't put them in the stable nor in one of the
barracks, surely he must see that. The stable simply wasn't suitable, even if
her Companion and Darkwind's dyheli
Brytha were willing to put up with it, and the earth-sheltered barracks
buildings would probably give creatures of the air great screaming fits of
claustrophobia. She considered the gryphons, their size, and their probable
needs. They would all fit in the Great Hall; could that drafty barn of a
room be made habitable as well as elegant? Each of the several towers of the
manor would probably hold four or five gryphons in each of the topmost rooms,
which were mostly used as armories and weapon storage for the sentries that were
posted there; would the gryphons consent to being split up? If they would,
there was at least access to the air from the trapdoors in each of the tower
roofs. Fortunately, thanks to the spacious barracks now available, and the fact
that a large number of staff persons (mages, Healers, and other auxiliaries)
now were housed in the city rather than in the manor itself, the overcrowding
that had been making life so difficult in the early days here had been
overcome. There was room in the manor for the gryphons, at least on a
temporary basis. But from Tashiketh's speech, this was intended to be a
permanent delegation, and they would need permanent housing.
Tremane made a graceful, rambling speech of welcome, probably
while he was trying to think of housing options.
There are still some unused buildings in Shonar. Would the
gryphons be willing to be housed in an "Embassy" in the city?
But if they did, what would they use for servants? Gryphons
required a lot of tending; there were any number of things that they couldn't
do for themselves. Lighting fires, for instance; talons were not good at
manipulating firestrikers, and feathers were dismayingly flammable. The
gryphons of k'Leshya had specially trained trondi'irn to see to their
health and well-being; Treyvan and Hydona had done without such help,
officially at least, for several years—but the k'Sheyna hertasi had helped them unofficially. What would these gryphons do?
Did they even guess that the people of Hardorn and the Empire were unready to
host them?
Tremane finally ran out of things to say, and so did Tashiketh.
They stood on the cobblestones and looked politely at one another for a moment,
and it was Tremane who finally broke the silence.
"Now I must confess that I and my people are simply not
prepared for anything other than strictly human ambassadors," he said, in
a burst of that un-Imperial frankness that was becoming a welcome
characteristic of his. "We were somewhat thrown off-balance when the
Alliance sent two nonhumans, the Companion Gwena here, and her collegue the dyheli
Brytha, who intends to present himself to you later. We were completely
unprepared for them, but they were gracious and generous enough to accept the
stable as perfectly adequate, though it was scarcely that."
Gwena bowed in graceful acknowledgement of the compliment, and
Tashiketh glanced at her curiously, then returned his attention to Tremane.
"To be honest, Ambassador Tashiketh, I do not know what we
are going to do for the comfort of you and your entourage," Tremane
confessed ruefully. "I can only think of three possibilities, and none of
them are ideal. There are four tower rooms that might do, if you'd be willing
to split up into groups of four or five?"
At Tashiketh's headshake, he went on doggedly. "Then there is
only the Great Hall, or taking a building in the city itself—"
"But that was what we had intended to do, take a building and
make of it our permanent Embassy," Tashiketh interrupted gravely. "We
have brought with us the hire of the building, of staff. We knew that your
resources are stretched, and had no intention of straining them further. If we
could just spend a few days here, somewhere, that would be enough, surely. As
soon as we have established our own place, we will remove to it."
If Tremane sighed with relief, he was schooled enough not to show
it. "We shall be happy to house you in the Great Hall for as long as it
takes for you to establish your Embassy," he replied with commendable
ease, as out of the corner of her eye, Elspeth saw the young Seneschal breaking
away from the rest of the group and pounding at a dead run toward the nearest
doorway to put Tremane's intentions into effect. She hid a smile; that was one
benefit of having a staff composed entirely of military people. Instead of
arguing that something couldn't be done, they ran off and made it happen.
"If you would be so kind, then, I would ask you to send a
messenger to some representative of your city, that we might establish
ourselves as quickly as possible?" Tashiketh asked, and she thought she caught
a sly glint of humor as he added, "And in the meanwhile, perhaps you have
someone who would conduct us in a tour? This is the first time I have seen a
wholly human city; the differences are apparent even at a distance."
Elspeth tried not to choke, for this was so clearly a
diplomatic gesture to ensure that Tremane's people had time to get suitable
quarters for the gryphons ready! Tashiketh and his wing must be exhausted and
were probably also ravenous; to ask for a tour under those conditions bespoke a
consummate diplomat. :Volunteer to give him the tour yourself; I'll go help
advise Tremane's people on the care and feeding of gryphons,: she quickly
told Darkwind, who smoothly volunteered his services as soon as she made the
suggestion.
The Iftel delegation and their reception committee quickly broke
into three groups; one of humans, one of mixed humans and gryphons, and one of
gryphons only. Tashiketh, Darkwind, and an escort of amused Valdemaran Guards
and two solemn and militant gryphons went off for a brief tour of the grounds
as built and fortified by Tremane's people. The rest of the gryphons stationed
themselves in the courtyard like a group of sober and businesslike young
Guard-trainees to wait for their leader's return. Gwena returned to the stable
by herself, as Elspeth went with Tremane and his people, and volunteered her
expertise as soon as they were out of gryphonic earshot.
Within a relatively short period of time, the Great Hall had been
stripped of the trappings of power and refurbished as temporary housing for
twenty-one gryphons. This turned out to be a great deal easier than she had
thought it would. Remembering what Treyvan and Hydona had done, Elspeth and the
Supply Sergeant went over the lists of surplus and stores, until they found
enough equipment to make the gryphons reasonably comfortable, then she
commanded a squad of sturdy fighters in carrying out every bit of furniture.
Stage curtains and painted backdrops were sent for, to help keep the chill of
the stone walls at bay, and a rainbow of rugs brought in to soften floors.
Every featherbed that could be spared was brought in once the rugs were down
and the draperies up, until there were twenty-one good "nests"
covered with as many thick blankets and throws as a gryphon could want. Twenty
of the nests were arranged along the walls, with the twenty-first up on the
dais, and hastily-rigged curtains put up that could partition off that part of
the room to make an individual chamber. As privacy, it wasn't much, but at
least it was a good gesture in that direction, and if Tashiketh preferred to
keep the curtains open, he could.
The largest soup kettles available were brought and filled with
fresh water for drinking, with large, deep soup bowls arranged on a table
beside the kettles in case these gryphons preferred to drink from a small
vessel rather than plunge their prodigious beaks into a larger one. That took
care of drink, and Elspeth advised the cook what kinds of raw meat, fowl, and
fish best suited their new guests. The room looked quite odd by the time they
were done, but strangely, not at all shabby. There was a curious sort of
harmony in the painted canvas scenery backdrops, separated by velvet stage
curtains, covering the walls, and between the bewildering variety of rugs, blankets,
and throws covering the floor and the nests, the end effect was something like
being inside an extremely luxurious tent.
:We're ready,: she
told Darkwind. as the last of the carpenters cleared their ladders and
equipment out, and the first of the kitchen staff began arriving with whole
sides of beef and baskets of fish.
:That's good, because I'm running out of things to show them, and
I doubt they're going to be able to express even polite interest in warehouses
and latrines.: Darkwind
sounded distinctly amused, and Elspeth had the feeling that Tashiketh was
proving to be quite good company.
She cleared out herself, leaving the young Seneschal to do the
honors on behalf of Tremane, and decided that she had best report what she had
so cavalierly ordered to the King himself.
But someone had already gone to fetch him, for he met her at the
door, with his escort and hers in tow.
He surveyed the transformed room with some surprise and a great
deal of relief. "Bless you, Herald Elspeth," he said with feeling. "I'd
have had my carpenters trying to cobble up gigantic cadges or floor perches, or
something of the sort—which wouldn't have been a disaster, but it would have
delayed things while Tashiketh explained what they really needed. Will this be
warm enough, though?" he added, looking at the hangings with a slight
frown of uncertainty. "This place is notoriously drafty."
"It will do," she replied. "Their feathers keep
them as warm as our winter cloaks do, and they really only need to stay out of
extreme cold and drafts. The hangings will block the drafts well enough, and
they can wrap themselves in rugs and blankets to sleep. Add charcoal braziers
carefully tended, and they should be fine. They'll need one of your Healers—a
good, brave person, who will find them a challenge and not something to be
afraid of—and about four servants to run errands, watch the braziers, and fetch
things at all times."
"A Healer?" Tremane asked with surprise, signaling to
one of his aides. "Why a Healer? They look healthy enough to me."
"Gryphons have peculiar strengths and weaknesses; the ones I
know always try to have a specially trained helper around them to keep them
healthy," she explained. "A Healer is the closest we have to that,
and I expect that Tashiketh will be willing to explain their needs." She
coughed, hiding her expression behind her hand. "The hardest part will be
finding a Healer and a handful of servants brave enough to come tend to
'boggles.'"
But it was Tremane's turn to smile knowingly. "Not as hard as
you might think, Elspeth of Valdemar," he said lightly. "We of the
Empire are made of sterner stuff than that."
And so it proved; Tremane had not one, but two Healers
eager to have access to the gryphons, and there was no problem in getting
volunteers from the ranks for the light duty of acting as servants to the
Ambassador and his entourage. As soon as Tashiketh and his corps had been
installed, pronounced themselves "delighted," and dined, they had
their Healer and their servants waiting for orders.
Tashiketh had displayed surprise when he saw the quarters, if an
onlooker knew what to look for; he had shown more surprise and pleasure at the
quality of the hospitality. He dismissed the would-be trondi'irn and
three of the four servers as soon as he and the others had eaten, with thanks
and the information that they all needed to rest after their journey. He asked
the fourth server to stay, to watch the braziers, and in case any of them
required something after they retired, which the man was not at all loath to
do. The other three made themselves comfortable in a niche in the hall close
by, and got out the inevitable dice.
"Are they going to sleep, really?" Tremane asked
Darkwind as the King and his small entourage left the gryphons to their
privacy.
"Probably so," the Hawkbrother replied. "Even given
that they flew here in order to reach us, that was a tremendous distance they
covered in a very short time. Judging by the amount they ate, they're going to
sleep the sleep of the sated until well past sunrise tomorrow."
Tremane ran his hand over the top of his balding head, looking, at
the moment, nothing like a King. "I thought that having earth-sense
dropped on me was confusing," he said, slowly, looking honestly
bewildered. "They're huge and like nothing I've ever been near before. Now
what do I do? How do I treat them?"
"You have dinner with Elspeth and me, and you simply accept
them as any other foreign ambassadors," Darkwind advised. "This is a
great honor, yes. It is also the first time Iftel has sent out representatives
who were not human. This can't be any easier for them than it is for you. You
may not be used to having gryphons as ambassadors, but they aren't used to
being ambassadors in the first place."
Tremane looked at him oddly for a moment, then began to laugh. And
if there was a faint edge of hysteria to his laughter, Elspeth couldn't blame
him.
Tremane's men trampled their way purposefully through the snow,
hauling burdens, readying sledges and animals, shouldering packs and weapons.
Darkwind guided Tashiketh and his ever-present gryphon-guards through the gates
and toward the worst of the congestion, stopping often to allow someone with a
more urgent task get past them.
"What is all this excitement concerning?" Tashiketh
asked, watching the activity swirling around them with curiosity brimming over
in his large golden eyes.
"I was about to explain it to you," Darkwind replied,
quickly stepping out of the way of a man burdened with an entire bundle of
spear shafts. "We had a very unexpected and unpleasant message last
night."
"Ah! Now I regret vacating our palace quarters so soon!"
the gryphon said brightly. Tashiketh and his own entourage had established
themselves within two days of their arrival in an old inn very near the manor,
cheerfully vacated by the owner at the sight of the odd, octagonal gold coins
offered for its purchase by the treasurer for the gryphons. They had chosen the
inn because of its large rooms on the second floor, each of which had its own
balcony, and several of the staff were quite willing to stay on and serve such
relatively undemanding masters. Now Tashiketh and his escort of two moved
between the inn and the manor every day, taking part in daily Court and Council
sessions, showing extreme interest in everything Tremane did. So far, they had
neither interfered in the business of Hardorn nor done anything other than
tender an opinion when asked for one. It was Darkwind's thought that they were
acting in very similar fashion to the way that Treyvan and Hydona had behaved
when they first came to k'Leshya Vale—willing to offer advice, but making no
move to push in where they might not be wanted.
But the cause of this particular uproar had occurred very near
midnight, long after the gryphons had retired for the night. The gryphons
Darkwind knew did not find it necessary to be purely daylight creatures, but
Tashiketh and his group had not been trained from their youth to be explorers
and navigators of the unknown, and their experiences here were probably wearing
them down. Between the cold and their strange surroundings, they felt much more
comfortable taking to their own, warm quarters after dark, and not stirring out
until daylight. So when the messenger pounded in on an exhausted horse last
night, reporting that one of Tremane's newly-sworn liegemen was under attack by
one of his neighbors, the gryphons were blissfully asleep. In the excitement,
no one had bothered to wake them or even send them a message, and by the time
anyone thought of doing so, it was already daylight and Darkwind was on his way
to the gates to escort Tashiketh inside.
There was nothing in the simple attack of one set of humans upon
another that would have alerted Tremane through the earth-sense, so the attack
came as a complete surprise. A substantial amount of last night had been
devoted to planning a defense, and with dawn the men in the chosen barracks
were roused, briefed, and moving by the time Tashiketh appeared at the gates.
Darkwind, who met the gryphons here every morning, explained the
situation to him. Tashiketh stopped, just out of the way of traffic, and stared
at him in perplexity.
"But it will be very difficult to fight in this season, will
it not?" he asked, very slowly. "And with the possibility of the
mage-storms resuming soon, that could make it more difficult yet."
Darkwind nodded. "How could it not be?" he replied.
"But if King Tremane does not come to the aid of this liegeman, then every
other bandit who thinks to make himself King in place of Tremane will think
himself free to do what he wills."
"But why did Tremane not call upon us?" Tashiketh asked,
with a surprised and even injured expression. "Did we not offer to be of
all assistance to him? And would his enemies not find the sight of a gryphon
wing descending upon them enough to terrify them into submission? Why, look you
how frightened his own people were when they knew that we were
coming—how much more so must his enemies be?"
Now it was Darkwind's turn to stop in his tracks and stare at
Tashiketh with shock and incredulity. "But you are ambassadors!"
"We are allies," Tashiketh replied firmly.
"Even as you, Brother-to-Hawks. I am not only the Ambassador, I am the
leader of this force, which members have drilled and trained together. Is it
not preferable to quell disturbance with the application of a small force,
rather than to wait and meet war with a greater one?" He clicked his beak
and then gryph-grinned, in the way that Darkwind was so familiar with in
Treyvan. "Besides, we are bored. It will be good to show our fighting
prowess. It is what we are born, bred, and trained for."
"I thought that there was no fighting in Iftel,"
Darkwind blurted, as activity swirled all around them. "I thought that
your Border prevented any such thing!"
Now Tashiketh sobered. "Simply because we do not make war on
other nations, nor permit those nations to make war upon us, that does not mean
that we do not prepare ourselves for war or for the day when the Barrier might
fail us. I cannot tell you how long we have trained...." He shook his head
"All my life, all the life of my father, and his, and his, and so far back
I cannot begin to count the years. We have always trained and contested, and
will always train and contest. And when the need is there, we fight."
Then he roused up his feathers, and moved so quickly that Darkwind
was left behind completely unprepared. "Come!" he shouted. "We
go to this King, and we tell him in a way that will make him believe!"
As Darkwind knew, even when on the ground, gryphons could move
very quickly when they chose. He was left behind as Tashiketh and his escort
charged into the manor, bent on offering themselves as potential victims on
Tremane's altar. And he was afraid, terribly afraid, that Tremane would accept
them.
But when he reached the council chamber, he found that although
Tremane had accepted their offer, it was with conditions—and
reservations.
"Tell the men to stand down," he was ordering as
Darkwind entered. "I'll try Tashiketh's way, but—but—" he
said, turning to the exultant gryphon and raising his voice. "You, sir,
will obey the orders of your commander, that is, me, and you will make
the preparations that I tell you to and adhere to the conditions that I
set."
Darkwind could hardly believe the transformation that a few
moments had made in the dignified gryphon. Tashiketh and his two escorts were
wildly excited, hackles and eartufts up, eyes flashing as their pupils expanded
and contracted rapidly, their talons flexing against the wooden floor and
leaving gouges that would be the despair of Tremane's housekeepers. These were
no longer the strange ambassadors of an even stranger culture, these were
warriors, and he wondered how they had kept their nature hidden beneath those
serene exteriors.
"We have the time, if you and your wing are determined to fly
a warning against these people, to take the precaution that is needed to
prepare you," Tremane said sternly, every inch the commander. And now
Darkwind wondered at the transformation in the King as well. Here and now,
there was no uncertainty, no hesitation. This was the Imperial
Commander, a man who knew both planned warfare and scrimmage fighting, the man
who had been entrusted with the conquest of Hardorn. "There is time enough
for you to see what maps we have of the area and speak with those of Shonar who
have relatives in the contested area. I would have you see my armorer, so that
he can make you breast- and side-plates to protect you from arrows, and helmets
to defend you from slung shot, if there were time enough." Tashiketh
opened his beak to protest, and Tremane swiftly overruled him. "Not a
word, sir! I am your commander, I have been fighting these people, as
you have not, I know what they can and cannot do, and I will decree the
terms under which you will fight. I will not dictate your tactics, sir, for
that is your purview, but I can and will decree what I need for your
safety!"
He looked so black and angry that Darkwind thought for a moment
that Tashiketh would take offense. But one of the two escorting gryphons
muttered something under his breath, and Tashiketh burst into laughter.
"What did he say?" Tremane asked, his anger fading.
"He said, 'What a surprise, to find after all these
centuries, a commander who is more concerned with saving our blood than
spending it!' And he is right." Tashiketh bent his head in submission to
Tremane's will. "We will follow the wishes of the commander who does not
waste anything. I'll send Shyrestral to bring the rest, and we will see your
maps and plans rather than improvising solely upon what we find there."
In so short a time that Darkwind was astonished, the gryphons were
lined up in three ranks for a none-too-hasty briefing. Only one somewhat
bewildered man, who had only visited the place once, could be found to tell the
gryphons about the lay of the land in that area. He found himself overwhelmed
by the gryphons' relentless questioning over details of the region's wind
currents.
On the fourth day after the messenger had arrived, the gryphon
wing flew off to confront the enemy, and Darkwind and everyone else watched
them fly off with mingled hope and dread. The gryphons seemed full of
confidence and good humor; they might have been going off on a pleasure jaunt.
Except that their behavior showed Darkwind very clearly that their
hunting and killing instincts were roused. When they were not moving, they were
intensely alert, heads up, eyes taking in everything, bodies poised. When they
moved, it was with bewildering swiftness and utter sureness, as deadly and
beautiful as the dance of warrior and sword. They took no notice of the snow beneath
their claws, of the cold breeze; their eyes were on the blinding blue sky, and
they could not wait to be up and out. When they took to the air, they leaped
up, catching the shivering wind in their talons and conquering it.
"You're sure they will have a chance?" Tremane asked, as
the wing vanished into the blue distance. "I keep feeling as if I'm
sending them to their doom."
"Gryphons were originally created as fighters," Darkwind
replied slowly. "Very versatile ones. It's in their blood, and a millennium
or two isn't going to change that."
"They may have been created as fighters, but are they
trained?" Tremane said, his voice sounding strained. "I know what my
men can do—but these creatures? Granted, their opponents aren't as
well-equipped or skilled as my men, yet it only takes a single well-aimed arrow
to kill someone. And you tell me that Iftel has kept war away from her borders
for as long as the Valdemarans have known them. How can they be ready for this?
Surely—"
"'Forgive me for interrupting you, but has Tashiketh told you
how his twenty wingmen were chosen?" Darkwind replied, before Tremane
could voice much more in the way of anxiety.
The King shook his head.
"'I thought not. Let's go inside where it's warm,"
Darkwind told him, as the sharp wind cut through the seams of his coat and
chilled him. He shivered involuntarily and stamped his numbing feet to warm
them. "I believe I'm about to surprise you."
The group retired to Tremane's study; several of his other staff
members, who had overheard the exchange, had managed to tag along. The gryphons
had excited a great deal of interest among the Imperials and Hardornens alike,
and Darkwind didn't at all mind assuaging some of their curiosity. It was a
close fit for all of them, but Tremane gave no hint that he wanted any of them
to leave.
"I've managed to learn a bit about the way things are done in
Iftel, at least as far as the gryphons are concerned," Darkwind told the
group, once they were all settled in a circle of chairs, Tremane's only a
little larger and more elaborate than the rest. "It's not the peaceful
paradise you and I might have imagined."
"Oh?" Elspeth said. "But they won't even let the
Mercenary's Guild establish a Guildhall there!"
Darkwind could only shake his head. "I don't know of their
origin, but because of what I have learned from Tayledras history and some
Kaled'a'in information, I have a few guesses. Tashiketh either doesn't know the
answers, or has been ordered to pretend that he doesn't, so this is
speculation."
Tremane uttered a scornful little cough. "Darkwind, at times
your insistence on hedging is maddening. Tell us! Don't keep saying it's
only your opinion."
Darkwind chuckled, not at all offended. "Certainly. I think
that the citizens of Iftel are descended from some of the forces that were cut
off when the Mage of Silence's stronghold was overrun. There were gryphon-wings
with several of the armies, and since female gryphons by and large are a bit
larger and heavier than the males, females always fought alongside males, often
their mates, so there would have been a breeding population."
"You mean some of these gryphons are female?" one of the
generals blurted, looking completely taken aback.
Darkwind laughed. "You didn't even look between their
haunches, eh? Yes, some are female. Probably half; males also spend as much
time tending the young as females, since they feed their young the way young
hawks are fed." He raised an eyebrow at the general's stunned expression.
"Oh, come now—you didn't think anything with a beak like that could suckle
milk, did you? I wouldn't want to see the result if one tried!"
The general winced, and Tremane himself made an expression of
sympathetic pain.
"As for the concept of females being poor fighters, I would
not venture that opinion around Herald Captain Kerowyn of the Skybolts if I
were you," Elspeth added crisply. "She is likely to invite you to
have a practice session with a few of her ladies—or worse, with her!"
Darkwind watched the general in question as he took a second and
third glance at Elspeth, finally saw the calluses and muscles, and
realized that Elspeth was not the pampered princess he had thought. "So
much for physiology; I am assuming that they must have come from Urtho's
people, because gryphons are created creatures, and I can't imagine where else
they could have originated. We know from Kaled'a'in stories that some of
Urtho's people were cut off from their own forces—they knew what was going to
happen when the enemy overran the last stronghold," Darkwind continued.
"I guess that they threw up hasty Gates—Portals, to you—and just tried to
get as far away as possible. They succeeded, and ended up in fairly hostile
country and then the Cataclysm happened and the Storms began. At some point,
something put up the Barrier; Tashiketh isn't being very forthcoming about that
either. The problem with putting a wall around you, though, is that it walls
you in as well as other people out. So, in order to keep from killing each
other or losing such self-defensive abilities altogether, the Peoples of Iftel
organized their aggressions."
Tremane looked troubled. "Organized? How?"
Darkwind sighed, for he was of two minds about what he had
learned. He understood why, and sympathized, but he wasn't happy about what
they had chosen to do. "Games, but games that verge on being blood-sport.
If Tashiketh is telling the truth, no one has to participate, but in the
highest and most competitive levels, there is real possibility of serious
injury and even death. Serious wargames; Tashiketh says that in his part of
Iftel there are several deaths among participants in every round of
competition. That was how his wing was formed; every single one of these
gryphons is the winner of contests in his district that pitted him against
opponents of his own and other races, coming at him singly and in a group, and
using weapons that were merely blunted, not rendered harmless."
Tremane blinked. "Oh, he said, thoughtfully.
"Interesting. They aren't as inexperienced as I assumed."
"That isn't all, of course," Darkwind went on. "Each
preliminary winner was required to participate in intellectual contests as
well; what those were, I don't know for certain, but they probably included
memory tests and logic puzzles. Tashiketh was the overall winner of everything.
And the reason that the delegation is made up entirely of gryphons is that only
gryphons would have been able to get here before the Storms started again. Now
you know the gist of everything that I have learned or guessed."
Tremane and the others seemed somewhat taken aback by the fact
that the right to be an ambassador had been determined by a series of
often-deathly-violent contests, but Darkwind privately thought that was a more
logical means of choosing someone for an important post than some other methods
he had heard of from supposedly "civilized" lands. Picking someone to
whom you owed a favor, or someone whose family was important, or worst of all,
giving the job to whoever paid the most for the honor—all those were recipes
for sheer disaster, and whoever used such means probably got the disasters he
deserved. Granted, most ambassadors didn't have to compete in highly dangerous
war games, but then, most ambassadors weren't also authorized to participate in
their allies' real conflicts, either. He just wished that the contests weren't
so lethal.
"Are you confident in their ability as a fighting unit?"
Tremane asked him bluntly. Darkwind nodded.
"I know my gryphons, and I know that these are
well-trained," he replied. "I also know they aren't stupid. I don't
think they would have been nearly so eager to volunteer if they thought your
opponents had working magic."
"Ah!" Tremane exclaimed, and chuckled. "I see. They
don't expect to come within range of a normal distance-weapon, is that
it?"
"Probably not; they can stay out of range of arrows
and drop large, heavy objects down on the enemy." Another of the generals
started to chuckle, as if he found the idea vastly amusing. "Or spears, or
firepots—"
"Or any number of things that are inconvenient when crashing
through one's roof," Elspeth interrupted, before the good gentleman could
wax eloquent. "But telling you that they were going to do that
would not have sounded nearly as heroic as they wanted to appear."
"So, we will let them believe that we are still cherishing
the illusion that they flew off to battle talon-to-sword with our foes,"
Tremane said firmly. "If they choose to tell us what their tactics
are, we will then praise their cleverness. Otherwise, we will be effusive in
our praises of their bravery. In either case, they will succeed in making it
clear to troublemakers that we have a formidable ally that they do not;
they will accomplish what they set out to do, which is to win this single
scrimmage, and that may be all we need. I would rather have a bloodless victory
than any other kind."
"I've taken the liberty of ordering a congratulatory feast of
wild game, sir," the Seneschal said diffidently. "I was afraid that
if we left it too long, we would never get the meat thawed in time."
Tremane nodded his agreement absently, which relieved the poor
lad, who was still afraid to order anything on his own that might have a
serious impact later. In this case, ordering a feast might lead to a
shortage later. Darkwind privately doubted that, having seen the stores of
frozen meat himself, but it was a possibility. Perhaps more than a possibility,
when he recalled the sheer mass of food that Treyvan and Hydona could put away
without hesitation. But now that Tremane had given his approval, the young
Seneschal clearly felt much easier in his mind.
I do miss Treyvan and Hydona, and their two little feathered
fighters. I miss tumbling and playing with the little ones, and feeling Hydona
preen my hair, and watching Vree dive after Treyvan's crest-feathers. And I
miss their deep voices, their affection, and advice.
"Now, gentlemen and ladies," Tremane said, his tone
turning somber, "Let us consider what we must do if our allies fail."
"It isn't likely, I don't think," Darkwind offered.
"A single gryphon, half-asleep, can defeat a squad of fighters with less
effort than it takes to preen. This is a group of twenty-and-one, fully awake
and eager!" Several of the attendees laughed, looking quite convinced of
that by what they had seen of the creatures. "But you're correct, of
course. Preparations should be made for less than total victory."
The rest of the day was spent making plans for just that
contingency, but as sunset reddened the skies to the west, the victors came
winging home, quite intact, and with the foes' leader's personal banner, a letter
of surrender, and a pledge that he would come in person to swear his
allegiance, all clutched proudly in Tashiketh's talons.
The cheers that rose to greet them as they replicated their
previous graceful landing in the courtyard were prompted as much by relief as
by joy in the victory, but they didn't need to know that.
Darkwind assured one and all that a tired gryphon was a starving
gryphon, and Tashiketh's second in command nodded firmly. At the feast, to
which the tired gryphons were immediately ushered, Tashiketh formally presented
the surrender and pledge, and then modestly revealed the secret of their
victory.
"First we dropped rocks through their roofs," he said,
with a faintly cruel chuckle. "Then we dropped one firepot on a
thatched outbuilding, and circled in three subwings of seven each. After six
passes, we threatened to drop more. That got their attention long enough for us
to claim that we were a mere fraction of the winged army that King Tremane
could command if he chose. And I hinted that we weren't too particular about
waiting for provisions to arrive in a case like that, and were inclined to help
ourselves. The idea of hundreds of us descending out of the sky,
smashing big holes in every roof, setting fire to things, and snatching and carrying
off who-knew-what to eat, had them in a panic. If that idiot leading them
hadn't surrendered on the spot, I think they might killed him and served him to
us on a platter with a good broth on the side!"
Several of the generals laughed heartily at this, and even Tremane
smiled. Darkwind thought it best to interject a cautionary note.
"It won't do to make them think you're going to carry off
children for snacks," he warned Tashiketh under cover of the laughter.
"How could they trust a King who'd let his 'monsters' feed on
children?"
"No fear of that," Tashiketh soothed. "I made sure
we were eying the sheep when I said that, and added a bit about how tasty
fresh, fat mutton was, and allowed as how we could decimate their every flock
and herd in a matter of days and just feel stronger for being so well fed. For
a people on the edge of starvation, accepting surrender in place of that sounds
very appealing. Our rules of combat have always stressed that we're not to
intimate that we eat thinking beings. We might not have done this in earnest
before, but we've had plenty of training."
"Good." Darkwind relaxed enough to chuckle. "I wish
I'd seen their faces when you told them that you were only the vanguard. And of
course, they would never know when you were bluffing."
"It wasn't all bluff." Tashiketh said smugly, then
suddenly took an extreme interest in his food, as if he realized that he had
said too much.
Well. Well!
Darkwind took an interest in his own meal, as if unaware that Tashiketh had let
fall something important. So Iftel has more interest in Tremane's welfare
than I thought. Enough that they would back him with a significant force? It
certainly sounds that way.
If they would send an army to help him, what else would they be
willing to offer? The secret of the Barrier? Other secrets?
And how much of that would be of any use against the coming
Storms, especially the Final Storm?
Or would so little be left after that last blow that none of this
would matter?
"You could not possibly have conceived of anything more
likely to have turned you into the Army's favorites," Elspeth told
Tashiketh, as a roar went up from the watching crowd. Five of Tashiketh's
subordinates climbed, crawled, flew, leaped, and contorted themselves across a
torturous obstacle course under the bright noontime sun. It was cold enough to
numb feet encased in boots and several layers of stockings, but that hadn't
prevented the now-usual crowd from showing up as soon as the contest began.
Typically, the former Imperial soldiers had gathered to watch, cheer—and then
bet on the outcome. This was probably the most exciting entertainment in the
entire country about now.
There was not a great deal in the way of entertainment in Shonar,
in spite of the presence of the King here; every time the one and only Bard in
the town composed a new song, the tavern where he played was crowded to
capacity for days, and the soldiers did their best to enliven otherwise dull
days and nights with mixed results. One of the highest-priced items to be had
among the soldiery was a deck of cards. But now there was a new and novel
source of spectacle in their midst, one with all the finest attributes of a
fair, a race, and a real contest. Since Tashiketh never participated except to
practice alone, the outcome of any given competition was always subject to the
whims of chance, which made it perfect for wagering. That in turn made it more
attractive yet, if that was possible.
"Would it harm me in your esteem if I confessed that this was
a deliberate choice, making our contests public affairs?" Tashiketh asked
Elspeth, gravely.
"Hardly. I would simply congratulate you on your
intelligence," she replied promptly. "The only question I have is why
stage these obstacle things at all? There are other ways of keeping you all in
fighting trim."
"Because we must. Our hierarchy changes as the results of the
contests change, and as our own ranking changes, so will the rankings of our
various counties. And that, at year's end, will decree where
discretionary tax funds are spent." Just as he made that surprising
assertion, Tremane joined them, relatively anonymous in a plain brown soldier's
cloak with the hood pulled up against the bite of the cold wind. Tashiketh did
not turn his head or appear to notice, but a few moments later, he addressed
the King directly.
"So, King of Hardorn, I am given to understand that you are
exceedingly curious about my people. I finally have leave to answer your
questions, for you have proven yourself to be an honorable ally and worthy to
hear the full tale of our land." Now Tashiketh moved his head to gaze into
Tremane's astonished face with mild eyes. "Ask," he said. "The
time for secrets is past."
Whatever Tremane's faults, an inability to think quickly was not
one of them. "Darkwind k'Sheyna believes that your people were descended
from one part of the armies of the mage his people served, specifically the one
called Urtho," he said. "Are you?"
Tashiketh laughed, a deep rumble that came from somewhere down in
the bottom of his chest, and he roused his fathers with a shake. "Yes. The
shortest version of the tale is this. Our several Peoples were all serving the
Third Army. Urtho made it his policy to group all the folk of a particular land
into one Army, rather than dividing all of them amongst his Armies. However,
the humans of the Third, serving a God who decreed that those who had magic
power should be His priests, had no mages of their own. They had no prejudice
against working with those of other faiths, and so had a group of mages
assigned to them, mages who had nothing whatsoever m common with them, not even
nationality. Also attached to the Third were a wing of gryphons with their trondi'irn,
a pack of kyree, a surge of ratha,
a knot of tyrill, and a charge of dyheli."
What am I hearing? Tyrill? Ratha? How did they get into this story?
"And these are your Peoples of Iftel?" Tremane asked.
"What is a ratha?" Darkwind asked, at the same
moment.
Tashiketh wasn't the least perturbed by being bombarded with
questions. "These are our Peoples, yes. Ratha are from the far
north, and are to the mountain cats what kyree
are to wolves. Tyrill I think you know already. Brother-To-Hawks."
"Only by legend," Darkwind replied, feeling a bit dazed.
"'They were one of Urtho's last creations. a larger race of hertasi, and there weren't many of
them."
"But, oh, they breed with such enthusiasm!" Tashiketh
laughed, tossing his head so that the freshening wind ruffled his feathers.
Behind him, another cheer rose (together with some groans) as one of the other
gryphons did something clever. "They learned it from us gryphons. There
are plenty of them now! Well, to make this as brief as possible, the Third,
whose emblem I wear, was cut off from Ka'venusho at the time of retreat. They
chose to Gate to the remotest place the mages could think of, hoping they would
be beyond the reach of Ma'ar and the destruction that would ensue when Urtho's
Tower was destroyed by its master. But there was a problem."
"Not enough power," Tremane guessed shrewdly.
"Nowhere safe to go?" asked Elspeth.
"No Adepts," hazarded Darkwind.
"A little of all three. the Ambassador explained. "Their
Priests—the humans—had remained behind in their own land to protect their
people. The only Adept with them strong enough to raise a far-away Gate was
someone who, at the time, was thought to be a barbarian shaman from the far
north. They had to go to the remotest place he knew of—his home, not the
gryphons' home, nor that of their human charges, not anywhere near it. There
wasn't much choice; they took the escape that was offered, ending in the north
of what is now Iftel. They thought to wait out the destruction, then be
reunited with the others. But no sooner had they all gotten across, then
something terrible happened, worse by far than anything they had
expected."
"The Cataclysm," Darkwind said aloud. "The Tower
and Ma'ar's stronghold destroyed, and the interaction of the double release of
terrible forces."
"And needless to say, they did not know the cause for many
years. They only knew that things were impossible, that there would be no way
to find their friends and fellows, that there would be no way for the humans of
the Third to find their way home. And almost as bad, it soon became
obvious that they had not gone far enough; they ran into a fresh Army of
Ma'ar's." Tashiketh shook his head. "It must have seemed as if they
had come to the end of the world, that everything evil had won against them,
and was about to annihilate them. Battered by the mage-storms that followed, on
the verge of attack by superior forces, and unable because of the high number
of wounded to travel to someplace where they might escape the worst of the
effects, they did the only thing they had left to do. The humans prayed to
their god, Vykaendys—"
That name struck Darkwind like a blow to the head. "Who?"
Darkwind blurted, as Elspeth's eyes widened.
"Vykaendys," the Ambassador repeated. "The Holy
Sun, from whom all life—"
Elspeth interrupted. "Ambassador Tashiketh, do the humans of
your land use a different language from the gryphons?" The huge gryphon
nodded. "The sacred language is different," he replied. "The
shared language is a combination of several tongues, and Old Gryphon is very
like that tongue you spoke to me when first we met. Do I take it you wish to
hear something of the Sacred Tongue of Vykaendys?"
"Please," said Elspeth and Darkwind together.
Tashiketh rattled off a few sentences, and Darkwind looked to
Elspeth, who had a better command of languages than he did.
She listened very closely, as her eyes widened further until the
whites showed all around. "I'm not a linguist," she said when he has
finished, "But I would say that this is to Karsite what the Iftel gryphon
tongue is to Kaled'a'in."
Darkwind whistled. :No wonder Altra kept insisting that the
Border would only recognize himself, Karal, Ulrich, or Solaris! The God of
Iftel and the God of Karse are one and the same! Isn't that going to put a
Firecat among the pigeons!:
Gwena chose that moment to add her own observation. :Oh, this
is interesting indeed. Solaris doesn't know this, but Altra does. I wonder why
and why he hadn't told her?:
"They prayed for protection, right?" Elspeth asked the
Ambassador." And the god established the Border to keep their enemies
out?"
"Precisely," Tashiketh agreed. "And of course
Vykaendys did exactly that, answering their prayers. He is the one who ordained
that we send our representatives beyond the Border to help as we could with the
current crisis. He sent us to Hardorn once He knew that Hardorn again had a
King who had been bound to the land. Otherwise, given the gravity of the
current situation, we would, of course, have been sent into Valdemar. All
creatures must work together to survive the last Storms, but Vykaendys is
pleased to welcome the land that lies between the two that He governs, as a brother-country
rather than an enemy-state."
Elspeth shook her head. "Of course," she replied.
:I can't help wondering what Solaris is going to make of this when
she finds out about it,:
Elspeth added to Darkwind. :Although, in retrospect, it's fascinating, the
ways in which gods answered the prayers of their followers—the Star-Eyed
creating the Dhorisha Plains for the Shin'a'in who had renounced magic, and
granting the Tayledras the power to protect themselves with their magic while
they healed the land a bit at a time. And now the Sun Lord, creating a barrier
around Iftel—:
Darkwind wondered if He had done something similar for Karse just
to hold through the Cataclysm itself. The Karsites were certainly close enough
to the source of the Cataclysm to have needed such protection. But wait; the
Sun-priests are mages. Maybe the Sun-priests are their equivalents of the
Tayledras, and Vkandis gave them access to great power to protect themselves
the way the Tayledras did. The greatest dangers after the Cataclysm lay in
the monsters that had been created. Could that be where and why the
Sun-priests got the ability to summon and control demons so effectively? Now that
was an intriguing thought!
There was no way of knowing without having Karal to ask, and even
then it might not be canonical information. But Altra was obviously privy to
noncanonical truths, and if he was inclined to share them with nonbelievers—
If he is, we might learn more than we ever wanted to know.
But Elspeth had been thinking further ahead than he. As Tremane
asked more detailed questions of Tashiketh, she drew Darkwind and Gwena into a
close mind-link.
:What are the odds that we can involve gods in all of this?: she wanted to know. :Vkandis,
Kal'enel, either or both? The power of a god might save us.:
:Or it might cause a whole lot more trouble than any mage storm,
however powerful,: Darkwind
warned. :We can't know.:
:But I can ask Florian to ask Altra,: Gwena said. :And perhaps he can ask
An'desha as well.:
Darkwind shook his head doubtfully. :Don't count on any real
help,: he told them. :The Star-Eyed is disinclined to interfere, Vkandis may
be fundamentally the same. They may be able to help us only after the disaster
strikes, and be unable to do anything to prevent it from coming—because we have
that power, if only we make the correct choices, and They will not take that
right to choose from us.:
Gwena nodded mentally, but Elspeth's mind-voice seethed with
frustration. :But how can we make the right choices if we don't know what
they are?: she fumed.
:If we knew what to do, then they wouldn't be choices, they would
be plans,: Darkwind
chided gently.
He didn't blame her, and he didn't have the heart to tell her that
the "right" choice, from the point of view of a god, might not be the
one that prevented a second Cataclysm. Gods tended to take a much longer view
of things than mere mortals, and what they considered to be good in the long
run might be pretty horrible for those who had to live through it.
I'm sure that Baron Valdemar's people heartily wished him to the
bottom of the Salten Sea during that first winter in the wilderness, he thought soberly. And certainly it
was terrible for the last Herald-Mages of Vanyel's time to be the last of their
kind. But in the long run, those were good things for most of the people of
Valdemar.
This was probably not the time to point this out to her, however.
:All we can do is what we've always done,: he told her with utmost sincerity. :We
must do our best. Then, even if things turn out badly, we will know it was not
from any lack of trying on our part.:
She sighed. :I do wish you weren't right so often,: she
said forlornly. :I rather enjoyed being able to rail against Fate and the
Unfairness Of It All.: But she pulled herself a bit straighter and nodded. :Whatever
happens, we'll survive it, and we'll build on what's left.: She glanced
around, and her mouth twisted wryly. :All our peoples do seem to be rather
good at that.:
He squeezed her hand in agreement. :And we will do it together,
ashke.: He could not help thinking about the group at center of
Dhorisha, picking through the remains of the Tower, without experiencing a
feeling of chill. Whatever happened—yes, he, Elspeth, and the others here would
probably survive it.
But what of his friends in the Tower? Would they?
As he turned his attention back to the conversation at hand, his
stomach gave a sudden lurch, his eyes unfocused for a moment, and he felt very
much as if the ground had dropped out from underneath him. Then the world
steadied again, but as he looked from Tremane to Elspeth and back, and saw the
same startled look in both their eyes turn to sick recognition, he knew what
had just hit him.
The mage-storms had begun again. Hints of their building power
were beginning to overcome the Counter-Storm. They were not strong enough yet
to cause any problems, but it was only a matter of time.
Darkwind understood.
This was the first sign of the coming Final Storm, and their
respite before it struck would be measured in, at best, weeks. Their survival
was in doubt, and even if they did survive, whether they would prosper
afterward was in deep question. There were hundreds of variables, and just as
many major decisions. There were key uses of power and defense, solving of
mysteries and understanding of connections. Like each segment in a spiderweb,
the failure of any of those elements could collapse it all, and cost every one
involved—everything.
Nine
"What is wrong with your friend Firesong?" Lyam asked
Karal in a whisper, as Firesong went off to a remote corner of the Tower to
brood—or as he called it, "meditate"—for the second time that day.
"The others are all working together over the notes for the cube-maze, but
he keeps going off by himself, he says to think. Is that usual for him? Is he ill,
do you think? Or have the frustrations begun to weigh upon his soul?"
"I'm not sure," Karal replied, although this behavior of
Firesong's wasn't particularly news to him. Living together as closely as they
all were, it, wasn't possible for any of them to deviate from normal behavior
without the others noticing. And Firesong was certainly acting oddly—though not
with that selfish oddness that made him so dangerous before.
There were several signs that this bout of solitary brooding was
far different than the last. For one thing, Aya kept cuddling close to him,
tucking his head up under Firesong's chin while Firesong held him and scratched
gently under his wings, and it had been Aya's avoidance of his bondmate that
had been one sign that his temper and thoughts were tending in dangerous
directions. He wasn't tinkering with odd magics either; he was sitting in
out-of-the-way corners, staring into space, as if Firesong sought the privacy
in his mind that he could not get in the Tower. But those bursts of
"meditation" always seemed to end in a sharp and thoughtful glance at
Karal, and given some of the past difficulties between them, that didn't make
Karal feel entirely easy about his possible thoughts.
"Huh," Lyam said, and scratched the top of his head with
a stubby, ink-stained talon. "Well, he doesn't seem to be getting much
done, an he's giving me collywobbles with the way he just sits and stares. If
he's gotten into a blue funk, maybe one of you ought to shake him out of
it."
Karal made a face. "I'm not sure any of us want to shake
Firesong out of anything, but I suppose it can't hurt if I talk to him. If
there's a problem, maybe Silverfox could help him with it. or something. Or
maybe it's a problem he doesn't want to get Silverfox involved with, and maybe
I could help him." He made a face. "After all, I'm supposed to be a
priest, and that's the sort of thing that priests are supposed to do,
right?"
Having said that, he knew he had talked himself into the position
where he was going to have to do something about the situation. Lyam nodded
encouragingly to him at that last statement, so before he could find a reason
to put it off, he got to his feet and trailed off after Firesong.
Altra invited himself along, sauntering casually at Karal's heels.
As Karal glanced inquisitively down at him, Altra blinked guileless blue eyes
at him. :I thought I'd come along, too, just in case you needed me,: the
Firecat said idly. Karal did not ask "for what?" since he knew the
answer already. There wasn't a great deal that Altra couldn't shield him
against, if Firesong turned angry or dangerous, or both.
He found the Adept in the chamber containing one of the mysterious
contrivances (one made of wire, odd plates of some sparkling material, and
gemstones) that looked far too delicate to warrant the label of
"weapon." Aya was with him, cuddling inside his jacket. Aya's long
tail trailed comically down from beneath the hem, as if the cascade of feathers
belonged to Firesong. The Adept stared at the softly glowing stones with an
intense look on his face. He turned to face the entrance when he heard Karal's
deliberate footstep, but he did not seem particularly surprised to see the
Karsite.
Karal approached him gingerly, but there was nothing in Firesong's
slight smile to indicate anything other than welcome. As he edged around the
wire-sculpture weapon, Karal tried to think of a lateral approach to the
subject, and failed to come up with a good one. So he decided to go straight to
the heart of the matter, and make no attempt at being clever.
"You've been wandering off by yourself for the last couple of
days, and we're a little concerned about you," he said bluntly. "It
didn't seem right to go behind your back and pester Silverfox to see if you
were all right, so I decided to ask you directly. Is there anything
wrong?"
"Other than everything?" Firesong asked archly. "We
are in a very precarious position here, you know."
"Well, yes, but—" Karal fumbled. "I mean—"
"There's nothing wrong, or rather, nothing wrong with me,
Karal," Firesong interrupted, with a smile for his bondbird, as Aya stuck
his head out of the front of the Adept's jacket, saw who it was that Firesong
was talking to, and tucked himself back inside. "But I'm glad you came to
find out, because I have a few questions that really concern only you. Here,
sit." He patted the floor beside him, and Karal lowered himself down
warily. "Karal, Karse and Valdemar fought a generations-long war, and I
can understand that anyone from Karse might feel very negative about certain
figures of Valdemaran history, but you are bright enough to reason things
through for yourself and not just take everything you are told in without ever
examining it. So, given that, here's a history question; what do you know and
what do you think about Herald-mage Vanyel Ashkevron?"
Karal stared at him, a bit confused by the abrupt change of
subject, for the initial question Karal had asked about Firesong had nothing
whatsoever to do with a figure of ancient history like Vanyel Ashkevron.
But it was a very interesting question, given all of the changes
Karal's own life and thoughts had been going through. It might, on the surface,
seem like the question had no relevance in any way to the situation in the
Tower, but he knew Firesong better than that, and Firesong had to have an ultimate
purpose in asking it.
"I'm going to have to think aloud, so bear with me,"
Karal said, finally. "As you probably guessed, according to our
history Vanyel Demonrider was absolutely the epitome of everything that was
terrible about Valdemar. Every child in Karse used to be told that if he was
bad, Vanyel would come and carry him off. He was a Herald, a rider of a
demon-horse, and the implacable enemy of all Karse stood for. He was a mage,
which was anathema, of course, and he had the audacity to be a very powerful
mage, one who could turn back the demons that the most highly skilled
Priest-mages could raise, which made him even worse. And if that wasn't bad
enough, it is said by some chroniclers of the time that he could break the
compulsions that the Priests put on their demons and send them back against
their own summoners, which made him the King of the Demons so far as our people
were concerned."
"That's your history," Firesong replied, watching Karal
with peculiar intensity. "How do you feel about it?"
"I'm getting to that." Karal rubbed the back of his own
neck, trying to sort out his thoughts as he loosened tight muscles. "I do
think it's supremely ironic that the worst accusations about Vanyel have to do
with him riding a demon-horse and being a mage, when our own Priests were mages
who summoned demons and controlled them."
Firesong's sardonic smile had a note of approval in it. "No
one has ever dared to claim that the causes of warfare and the sources of
prejudice are ever rational." He scratched Aya under the chin, and was
rewarded by a particularly adorable chirrup. "And religious fervor is
often used as an excuse for a great many socially unacceptable behaviors."
"That's religion as an excuse. Sometimes it seems to me that
when religious fervor enters the mind, the wits pack up entirely and fly out
the ear," Karal replied a bit sourly. "But worst of all is when
powerful, ruthless people use the religious fervor of others to further their
own greed."
Aya poked his head out of the jacket again, as if he found what
Karal was saying very interesting. Altra settled himself at Karal's feet, and
there was nothing in the Firecat's demeanor to make Karal think his own
religious guide disapproved of anything he had said so far.
"All that is true in my experience." Firesong replied
with one of his brilliant, perfect smiles. "Though I'm not that much older
than you. So, what do you think Vanyel was really like?"
Karal shrugged. "Of course, I am sure that he must be a very
great hero to the Valdemarans; the fact that my people considered him to be
such an evil enemy would make that a simple conclusion to come to. Given that
he was fighting what I now know to have been very power-hungry and
entirely amoral men, most notably one of the worst Sons of the Sun we ever had
in all our history, I suppose that he was only doing his duty to protect his
people against the rapacious land grabbing of mine. I—cannot say that I like
that thought. It fills me with shame, in fact." He paused, and a final
thought floated to the surface, one that seemed to define the situation.
"I can only say that not even his enemies in Karse ever tried to claim
that he led any armies over the border into our land, and the same
cannot be said of the Karsite commanders. Now, I can't pretend to tell who was
right and who was wrong in those areas where both sides claimed to have been
attacked first, or were provoked into attacking, or where magic, sabotage, and
assassination were allegedly employed, but I can tell that the Valdemarans
never took armies into Karse, but my people certainly waged war up into
Valdemar."
"Very even-handed," Firesong replied approvingly.
"No side is always in the right. Now, we'll change the subject again. I
need a religious opinion from you. What do the Sun-priests have to say about
ghosts?"
"As in, what?" he asked. "Unquiet dead? Haunts?
Spirits who return to guide?"
"All of those," Firesong said, making a general gesture.
"Some religions deny that any such manifestations exist, and some
religions are written around them as a form of ancestor worship. What does the
Writ of Vkandis say?"
"The Writ says very little." He frowned, trying to think
of what it did say. "Now that I come to think of it, what it does
say is rather interesting. According to the Writ, no one who is of the Faith,
whether the purest soul or the blackest, could possibly become a ghost. Anyone
born or brought into the Faith will be taken before Vkandis and judged—'sorted'
is the word used in the Writ. And the good shall be sorted from the evil; no
spirit shall escape the sorting. The evil will be cast into darkness and great
despair, into fear and pain, to repeat their errors until they have learned to
love and serve the Light of Vkandis. And the good shall be gathered up into the
rich meadows of Heaven, to sing His praises in the everlasting rays, to drink
the sweet waters and bask forevermore in the Glory of the Sun. That's the
actual quote. There's a great deal more about who shall become what rank of
angelic spirit, and what each kind does, but I have a suspicion that all of
that is a clerkly conceit. I've got an earlier version of the Writ that doesn't
have any of those lists in it."
"Some people even have to have their afterlife ranked,
arranged, and organized," Firesong chuckled. "I hate to say this, but
being gathered up to lie in a meadow sunbathing and singing for all eternity is
not my idea of a perfect afterlife. I should be screamingly bored within
the first afternoon."
Karal laughed. "Maybe not for you, but think about the poor
shepherds who were the first Prophets, living in the cold, damp hills of Karse,
with rain and fog and damn poor grazing most of the time."
"I suppose for them, rich meadows and sun forever would be
paradise, wouldn't it?" Firesong raised his eyebrows. "All right, so
Karsites can't become ghosts—but what about other people?"
"Well, that's not in the Writ. But there is a tradition that
the unblessed dead become the hungry, vengeful ghosts who roam the night.
That's why most Karsites won't venture out after dark without a Priest to secure
their safety." But Firesong's question had asked about more than mere
Karsite tradition, it had been about what Karal himself thought. "As a
Priest, I can exorcise ghosts, in theory. I'm supposed to be able to send any
unblessed spirit to the sorting even if they aren't of the Faith, if they want
to go. The Writ is kind of vague about what happens to heathen who have the
misfortune to worship someone besides Vkandis. Most people assume that they'll
be sent to eternal punishment, even if they are good people, but the Writ
really doesn't say that, it just says that they will be sorted and sent
to 'their places.' It doesn't say what those places are. For all I know,
those places could be right here on earth."
Tre'valen and Dawnfire are ghosts of a kind, and if what Lo'isha
and An'desha have been saying is true, then some of the Kal'enedral
are ghosts, too. Or if they aren't ghosts, they certainly aren't physically
alive the way Florian and Altra are. So there's no reason why Kal'enel couldn't
have "sorted" them Herself, and decreed that their "place"
was here.
"Well, what about the Avatars?" Firesong asked, echoing
his thoughts. "Do they count as ghosts?"
"If they aren't, I wouldn't know what else to call
them," Karal admitted. "And even if they aren't 'blessed' in the
Karsite sense, they are anything but evil or hungry. They certainly aren't
vengeful either, so there's no reason for me to interfere with whatever they
are doing." He thought a bit harder. "The thing about exorcism is
that if you want to be exact about it, there are two kinds. One kind just
throws the ghost out of whatever it's possessing and bars it from coming
back—it can still go possess something else somewhere else. The other kind
blesses the ghost, opens a path for it so it can see where it's supposed to be
going, and gives it some help to break the last bonds with the world and send
it on its way if it's ready. But it has to be ready. Most Priests combine both
kinds, hoping that once the spirit is cast out, it will see the Light and realize
it shouldn't be here, but I've also seen reports about spirits that just seemed
confused about the fact that they were dead, and in that case, the Priest only
used the second kind of exorcism."
"All very well, but suppose you were to see something that
you knew was a ghost—not an Avatar, or anything obviously under the direction
of anyone's god. What would you do about that?" Firesong asked.
"Would you feel that you had to do something about it?"
It was a good question. According to some Priests, he would have
to try exorcising anything that looked or acted like a ghost, but that would
include the Kal'enedral and the
Avatars, and he dashed well knew that he wasn't going to even breathe the word
"exorcism" around them! "Personally, I suppose I would try to
exorcise anything that was harmful, send on anything that was ready, and leave
everything else alone."
He still didn't see what relevance any of this had to their
current situation, but presumably Firesong had some idea where he was going
with all of this.
Firesong appeared to make up his mind about something, for his
expression became a bit more animated and less contemplative. "Look,"
he said, "I've been asking you all these questions because I need your
help, yours and Altra's, and there are some religious problems involved. I made
the—acquaintance—of some real ghosts, and you wouldn't mistake them for
anything else. One of them is an ancestor of mine. Physically, they're bound to
a place up north, right up at the northern border of Valdemar."
Oh, no... he must be afraid that when the Final Storm hits, these
ghosts of his are going to be destroyed or hurt in some way. Karal interrupted him. "Firesong, I
hope you weren't planning on asking me to exorcise them. I mean, I'm sorry that
one of your ancestors is physically bound to the earth, and if I could, I would
be glad to help him, but I don't think it's possible. I told you, all I would
be able to do without the spirits being ready, is to force them out of the
place they were bound to. Even so, I doubt I could do anything for them at such
a great distance."
Now it was Firesong's turn to interrupt him. "No, Karal, that
was not what I had in mind!" he exclaimed, but he seemed more
amused at the conclusion that Karal had leaped to than annoyed. "Hear me
out. An'desha, Sejanes, and I all agree that we simply need more mages
here at the Tower, powerful mages, and we're just not going to get them here to
us in time. We need Adepts at the least, and every Adept within physical range
of the Tower is needed right where he is. We can't build Gates to bring in
human or nonhuman Adepts from farther away, and Altra can't bring in anyone mortal—but
what about ghosts?"
Ghosts. One of Firesong's ancestors. North of Valdemar. And an
Adept. The trend
of the questions suddenly formed into a pattern, and Karal stared at him in
mingled horror and fascination. "This ghost—this ancestor—it wouldn't be
Vanyel Ashkevron, would it?" he asked, his voice trembling in spite of his
effort to control it. He felt the hair on the back of his neck rise. Discussing
Vanyel Demonrider in abstract was one thing. Seriously discussing bringing him
here was another!
He wanted to beg Firesong to tell him that it was not
Vanyel Ashkevron he was talking about, but one look in Firesong's face told him
differently.
:I think it would be a very good idea, Karal,: Florian said diffidently. :Vanyel is
an Adept. If it is possible, I think it should be done.:
"I won't ask how this came about," Karal said flatly.
"I won't ask how you discovered that Vanyel Demonrider was still... in
existence." He closed his eyes and shook his head. "I cannot believe
I am hearing this."
:Boy, if you require more votes on this, you have mine,: said the sword Need. :I've met the
man, though I doubt he'll recall it. He and Stefen would be a tremendous asset
to the group here. They might even give us that edge we need to beat this
thing.:
Firesong smirked. "The sword is saying that we need an edge.
How appropriate. In any case, the Avatars actually suggested it. There are some
things in the cube-maze notes that suggest we're going to need—well, more
skilled people than the last time. The only way we can think of to get the
spirits down here is to send Altra," Firesong said. "We think that
Vanyel, his Companion, and his friend can link themselves to something small
enough for Altra to transport."
"We?" Karal asked weakly. "How many of you
discussed this?"
"All of the mages," Firesong told him. "That
included Need and the Avatars. And we all agreed. We think we're about to find
our answer on the cube-maze device, which is our first choice, but we need more
help to make it work."
Karal looked down at Altra, who gazed back up at him with
interest. "And what do you have to say about this?" he asked the
Firecat.
:Seriously? I think it might work, but I don't know for certain.
I'm not a mage as you think of one, but the others seem convinced. There is
only one consideration, and that is why they wanted to talk to you.:
"So you were already a party to this?" Karal sighed.
"I might have known. What's the consideration?"
:A very practical one. This borders on interference; if I were to
just do as you ask, I would be exceeding my own authority. In order for me to
do this, we would need permission from a higher authority, and I cannot be the
one to ask for permission.:
"I have the feeling that you are not referring to Solaris
when you speak of needing permission from a higher authority." Karal bit
his lip.
:You are correct, and you are the only Sun-priest here,: Altra
said calmly. :So you are the one who must make the petition. I cannot, and I
cannot do such a thing without that permission. I may advise, guide, and run
limited errands up to a point, but this is past that point. I hate to sound
like a copper-counting clerk, making a fuss about a technicality, but if these
spirits were Karsite and not Valdemaran, there would be less of a problem.:
"Because of the old enmity?" Karal asked, surprised.
"But it was the Sunlord Himself who ordered truce with Valdemar in the
first place!"
:No. Because these spirits were bound where they are for a reason,
and I don't know that this reason has been fulfilled. They may not even know
that. Now, even if their purpose not yet fulfilled, they could choose to come
here anyway, disobeying the One who offered them the task. But without first
receiving permission of Vkandis, I cannot choose to help them come without the
risk that I would be disobeying as well, and I do not choose to take that
risk.:
"I wouldn't ask you to," Karal replied. "I suppose
that means I don't have much choice in the matter."
:Judging by the way your friends are staring at you, I would say
not.:
Karal looked up, already feeling pressured and guilty, to meet
three sets of eyes—
Well, Need didn't have eyes as such, but he sensed her
looking through Firesong's, and Florian stood in the doorway, gazing at him
with a completely heartrending expression in his huge blue eyes.
The combined weight was too much to bear. "I'll have to go
outside," he gulped, and managed not to stagger as he passed Florian.
He remembered somehow to
find his coat, heavy boots, and gloves and pull them all on, but the trip up
the tunnel was a complete blank in his mind. He knew very well what he had to
do; he'd witnessed many petitions offered up by Solaris and her most trusted
Priests, and had studied the form as part of his own education in the
priesthood. Like many of the core portions of the Sunlord's Faith, a petition
to Vkandis was deceptively simple.
The only requirement was that a petition must be made in the full
light of day. In the Great Temple, this was accomplished, of course, by virtue
of the many windows cut in the upper dome. Here, of course, Karal had only to
walk outside. As befitting a religion founded by poor shepherds, who had little
but what they could carry on their backs, or perhaps the back of a single
donkey, there were no special vestments or vessels, no trappings of any kind.
The only vessel needed was the Priest, and the only "vestment" a pure
and single-hearted belief that the prayer would be heard. It might not receive
a "yes," but it would be heard.
Karal, more than many, had every reason to hold that faith in his
heart. He knew that Vkandis would hear him; did he not have Altra with him to
prove that? His only question was if he was ready, was worthy, to be
answered in any way, even with a "no."
He walked a little distance off into the snow, putting a tall
drift between himself and the Shin'a'in camp, until there was no sign of
activity but his own footprints trailing behind him. Beside him was the Tower, looming
over everything, as it loomed over their lives. All around him was the dazzling
whiteness of the snow, no less than knee-deep in some places, and deeper than
that in most. This was a thicker snowpack than he had ever seen before.
It was also thicker than the Shin'a'in had ever seen it before, or
so he'd been told. This was a terrible winter, and it could so easily get
worse—assuming that the Plains themselves survived the Final Storm and what
might happen to those ancient weapons still in the Tower.
Even if I'm not worthy, the cause is, he finally decided, and turned his face
up to the sun, spreading his arms wide.
Some took great care with each word when they made prayers for a
particular purpose, but Karal and his mentor Ulrich had never seen the sense in
that. "They are like courtiers, trying to find the most unctuous phrase in
hopes that their prince will throw them a bauble," Ulrich had said in
disgust. "There is nothing in the Writ about making fine speeches for
Vkandis' ear. Vkandis understands us far better than we could ever find words
for."
So Karal simply stood with every bit of him open to the light of
the sun, the light that stood for the greater Light, and let that Light become
all that he was. He kept his petition to the bare facts.
This is how we stand. This is what we have been doing. This is
what we need to do. We know that this will not guarantee our success, but we
think it is necessary. Will You grant Your permission for Your servants to do
this?
This was the first time he had ever made such a prayer alone, and
he trembled all over at his own audacity. He made of himself nothing but the
question, and waited, like an empty bowl, for the answer.
The sun burned on in the endless blue of heaven, as he struggled
to lose himself in the Light. And in the moment that he actually did so,
Vkandis showed His face.
The sun blazed up, doubling, tripling in size; he felt the light
burning his face even as he held his gaze steady and unflinching.
You can bear the Light. But can you bear the place where there are
no sheltering shadows?
The sun split into two, three, a dozen suns, surrounding him in a
circle of suns, creating a place where there could be no hint of darkness and
nowhere to hide. The suns settled upon the earth around him, dancing upon the
face of the snow, but neither melting nor consuming it. Still he waited, all
fear burned out of him, empty of everything but faith and the waiting, and he
breathed steadily and deeply once for every dozen heartbeats.
You can bear being without shadow. But can you bear being only in
Light?
The dozen suns blazed up again, and began circling around him,
faster and faster, until they blurred into a solid ring of white light. Then
the ring flared and he had to cover his eyes for a moment; and when he looked again,
he stood, not in the snow of the Plains, but in the heart of the sun, with
light above and below, and all about him, in the heart of the Light and the
Light became part of him.
But this, he realized, was not a completely new experience.
Although he had not had the memory until this moment, this was what had
happened when he acted as a Channel for the release of the great energies of
the first weapon they had triggered. The Light had taken away his fears then,
and it did so again, then illuminated every corner of his heart. Yes, there
were faulty places, poorly-mended places, even spots of faint shadow—Karal saw
and acknowledged those, as he renewed a pledge to see them made good. But,
he said silently to that great Light, what I am does not matter. This thing
that I ask is not for me, nor even for these few who are here with me. This is
for all our peoples; and for peoples we do not even know.
The Light answered him with a question of its own. Is this also
for those of the Empire?
He replied immediately, and simply.
Yes.
Had he not already pointed out that most of the people living in
the Empire had nothing to do with the terrible things their leaders had done?
Why should they not be protected?
Even your enemies? came the second question.
He answered it as he had the other. Yes.
If protecting his enemies was the cost of protecting the innocent,
then so be it. Fanatics said, "Kill them all, and let God sort them
out." He would rather say, "Save them all, and let God sort them out,
for we have not the right to judge."
There was a timeless moment of waiting, and the Light flooded him
with approval.
Then that is My answer, came the reply. Yes.
The Light vanished.
He found himself standing in the snow, his feet numb, his eyes
watering, with his entire being filled with the answer.
He was a scintillating bowl full of Yes, and he carried
that answer back to the Tower as carefully as an acolyte carried a bowl of holy
water.
"You don't remember anything?" Lyam asked, alive with
curiosity, as he helped Karal carry a new set of notes up to the storage
chamber. Karal shook his head regretfully, and watched where he was putting his
feet. The last few steps out of the workroom were worn enough to be tricky.
"All I remember is going out into the snow. After
that—nothing, until I woke up again with the answer." He made an
apologetic face. "Sorry, I know you'd love to note all of this down, and
it's not a priestly secret or anything, but I just can't remember what
happened."
The hertasi lashed his
tail, perhaps with impatience. "You could have just gone out, come back,
and pretended to have the answer," Lyam began. "Not that you
would have, but—"
"That wouldn't be as easy as you think. I might have fooled
anyone but Florian and Altra, but never either of them," Karal
replied firmly. "And I'm not sure it would have fooled Need; I think she
was a priestess before she was a sword, and if she was, she'll have ways of
knowing when people make up answers they say are from their gods."
"If you say so," Lyam said, though his tone was dubious.
"And it wouldn't ever have fooled the Avatars," he
continued forcefully. "How could it? How could you ever fool them about
something like that?"
Lyam conceded defeat at that; although he might not be completely
convinced of the supernatural nature of Florian, Altra, or Need, he was entirely
convinced that the Avatars were something altogether out of his experience. He
regarded them with a mixture of his usual intense curiosity mingled with awe
and a little uncertainty. Karal found that mildly amusing. He had the distinct
feeling that right up until the moment the hertasi
first met the Avatars, little Lyam had been something of an agnostic—willing to
admit in the reality of something beyond himself, but not at all willing to
concede that it had anything to do with him and his everyday world. Like many
another historian before him, Lyam was only convinced by verifiable facts. That
was what would make him a good historian, rather than someone who was content
to repeat all the same old erroneous gossip. The hertasi and his mentor Tarrn believed passionately in the truth,
would do anything to find out the truth, and would probably do anything to
defend the truth. They might find exonerating reasons for a friend who robbed
another of property, but if that friend falsified historical documents or
concealed relevant facts, they would show him no leniency.
Karal and Lyam arranged the notes in order with the last batch and
sealed up the now-full box and put it with those holding Tarrn's precious
chronicles. "If you've got a moment, could you give me a hand?" he
asked Lyam. "You're better at handling hot rocks than I am."
"That's because you humans are poorly designed," the hertasi replied with a toothy grin.
"You should have nice thick skin on your hands, preferably with a
toughened outer hide or scales, so you can pick up things without hurting
yourselves."
"Remind me to ask for that option, the next time I order a
new body," Karal countered, as Lyam followed him into the bedchamber.
"Then again, isn't that why you were created?"
"To make up for your human shortcomings?" Lyam laughed.
"Why, yes. Someone besides divine beings needed to. And just try
getting some ghost or Avatar to cook a good meal or mend clothing! We're
indispensable!"
Karal laughed with Lyam, and had decided, given the sad condition
that Altra had been in when he'd come back from delivering the teleson to
Haven, that he would be prepared for a similar situation. When Altra returned
from the Forest of sorrows, he would find food, good water, and a warm bed
waiting for him, already prepared and standing ready. The guess was that Altra
could return at any time after two days had passed, so in the afternoon of the
second day Karal had arranged for all those things. The moment Altra returned
he could eat and sleep without even having to ask for food or a warm bed. Karal
kept heated stones tucked into the bed he'd made up, and as the warm,
meat-laden broth he prepared got a little thick and past its prime flavor, he
was usually able to find someone willing to eat the old while he prepared a new
batch.
Lyam had been the latest beneficiary of Karal's cooking, and so he
wasn't at all averse to helping Karal place more heated stones into the
bedding. "So, what do you think of all this?" the hertasi asked. "Doesn't it seem
kind of strange to be bringing in ghosts? I've never even met anyone
who'd ever seen a ghost before this, had you?"
"It's no stranger than the Avatars, and they're ghosts, I
suppose," Karal replied honestly. "I've never seen a ghost either before
I got here, but it really doesn't bother me."
Lyam rolled his eyes with disbelief. "How can you be so calm
about this? Firesong is planning on bringing a spirit here, and an
ancient hero at that! Why, that would be like—like calling up Skandranon, or—or
Baron Valdemar, or—or the first Son of the Sun! Aren't you excited? Or
scared?"
Logically, Karal knew he should be both those things, and yet he
couldn't manage to dredge up any real feelings about the situation. It just
didn't seem real enough to him, or, perhaps it was only as real as he'd gotten
used to. It was not that he was precisely numb about these sorts of events, it
was just that long ago he had crossed over his threshold of amazement and now
things were only a matter of degree. "Vanyel Ashkevron lived a long
time ago, Lyam," he said after a long moment of thought. "I know that
you're quite passionate about history and to you things that happened hundreds
of years ago are as vital as things that happened last year, but honestly, I
can't get very emotional about this. Especially not after having met living
people who were considered to be very serious enemies of Karse before the
Alliance, and discovering that they were really quite like people I knew at
home. You know, I'll believe these spirits are going to be here when they
arrive, and until then, I don't see any reason to get excited."
"What do you mean, you discovered enemies of Karse were like
people you knew?" Lyam wanted to know, as he tried unsuccessfully to
juggle three recently-smoking stones. They thudded one by one onto the ground
and he scuttled after one that was rolling away, then tucked the last of the
hot rocks into Altra's bedding. He flicked his tail as his only comment.
"I actually know people who lost family members to
Captain Kerowyn's mercenaries, and then, she turned into one of my teachers
when I got to Haven," Karal told him. "I found out that she didn't
actually eat babies, and she wasn't any more of a monster than any good
military commander. And another one of my teachers was a gentleman called
Alberich, who actually deserted Karse and his position as a Captain in the
Army. He was Chosen, by a Companion who smuggled himself right into Karse! They
called him 'the Great Traitor' before the Alliance, and yet I found out later than
he was instrumental in bringing the Alliance about. If you believed everything
you heard, he was half demon and half witch and was perfectly capable of any
atrocity you could name. He turned out to be a great deal like Kerowyn, except
maybe his sense of humor is darker than hers."
"Interesting," Lyam said, his eyes lighting up. "I
don't suppose you'd be willing to tell me about all that?"
He reached into the pouch that never left his side and took out a
silverpoint and paper as he asked that, and Karal didn't have the heart to
refuse him. He told the story of his own journey into Valdemar, which seemed to
have occurred a hundred years ago, and to some other person entirely. He
answered Lyam's questions as best he could, and as honestly as he could, even
when the answers made him look rather stupid. Since Lyam was very interested in
the details of his thoughts as his opinion of Valdemar and its inhabitants
changed, he was as open as possible.
In many ways, he was a bit surprised at the change in himself as
he tried to explain himself to Lyam. The talking and questioning helped to fill
the time and allay his anxieties, too, and for that reason alone he would have
been glad of Lyam's company.
There was always the possibility that all of this would be for nothing;
Altra could go and request help, even present Firesong's personal petition to
his ancestor Vanyel, but that didn't mean that the spirits were going to
cooperate. For one thing, they might not be who they claimed they were. For
another, they might not be very interested in helping old enemies. After all,
Altra was a representative of Vanyel's old nemesis—and for Vanyel, what was
ancient history to Karal was very much a part of his personal memory. This
could all be a plot. They could be constructing a trap to hold the spirits
here, far from Valdemar and the border they were supposed to be guarding.
The spirits might also be unwilling or unable to leave what had
been their home. They hadn't in all this time, so why would they now? They
might simply not be able to help, and why make the long and dangerous journey
to the Tower just to sit and do nothing?
They might not be willing to take the chance that this might start
out to be a need for their services, but turn into a situation where Karal
could eliminate them entirely. After all, once they were here and in his
power, Karal might change his mind about them and take it into his head to try
an exorcism.
Then shortly after dawn on the third day, Altra returned, and all
the doubts were resolved.
Karal was in his bed, and Lyam shook him out of a dark, deep, and
dreamless slumber. It took him a moment to understand what the hertasi was trying to tell him.
He scrambled out of his bedroll and pulled on his cloth's from the
night before as soon as it penetrated into his sleep-fuddled mind that Altra
was back. He filled a bowl with the hot, rich meat broth he had waiting on a
little charcoal brazier, and followed Lyam out into the main room.
Not only was every member of their own party gathered around the
Firecat, but a goodly number of the Kal'enedral
as well. And if Altra had looked worn out when he brought Sejanes and Master
Levy in, he looked positively flattened now. He lay on the floor, panting and
disheveled, surrounded by people who all seemed to be talking at once. Without
paying any attention to anything else, Karal pushed in among the others and
placed the bowl of hot broth under Altra's nose. The Firecat cast him a look of
undying gratitude and plunged his face into it, taking great gulps of the
liquid rather than lapping it up daintily as he usually did.
:They need a physical link to the real world,: he said as if he was continuing an
earlier statement. Karal reflected that being able to Mindspeak was a great
advantage in mealtime conversation; you could go right on talking and no one
would ever accuse you of bad table manners. It was also fascinating to him that
Tarrn, Altra, and Florian could all make their thoughts heard even by those,
like Sejanes and Master Levy, who did not have the Gift of Mindspeech
themselves. :So there it is; and I do wish there had been an easier way to
transport that bit of wood here than by having me fetch it. It will take them a
bit of time to use it to bring themselves here, so be patient. If I'd had to
bring them as well, I would have run the risk of losing them in the Void.
Besides, Vanyel doesn't particularly care for Gates, and Jumping is a lot like
Gating, especially now.:
"Why wouldn't an Adept care for Gates?" Sejanes wondered
aloud when the Firecat's Mindspeech had been related to him.
"Let's just say that I had some unpleasant experiences
involving Gates in the past," replied a new voice, a pleasant and
musical tenor that had the peculiar quality of sounding as if it came from the
bottom of a well, a quality that it shared with some of the Kal'enedrals' voices.
Karal looked where everyone else was looking, but saw no new
person there, only an old, decrepit, weather-beaten wreck of a musical
instrument. It might at one time have been a lute or a gittern or some such
thing; there was no trace at all of its original finish, nor its strings or
tuning pegs, and it had probably not been playable for centuries. If this was
the physical link that Altra had brought with him, it was certainly a peculiar
choice.
"On the whole, I would just rather not have to deal with
Gates at all if I have any choice in the matter," the voice continued,
and the air above the old instrument began to shiver. "You'll have to
give us a few moments here, as my new friend Altra said. None of us are used to
drawing our energy from ley-lines and nodes anymore, and we're rather out of
practice."
"We're in no hurry, Ancestor, and we have had some
interesting experiences involving you and Gates ourselves," Firesong
replied calmly, as the hair on the back of Karal's neck began to crawl of its
own accord. It had been all very well to tell Lyam that he was neither excited
nor afraid when the arrival of these spirits had been an abstract concept, but
now...
Now there was an atavistic chill running down his spine, a cold
lump in his stomach, and the knowledge that he would really rather be anywhere
but here, as the shimmering air developed three glowing forms, which took on
substance even as he watched. First, there were only two vaguely human shapes
and another, larger one that might have resembled a horse. Then the shapes
became more defined and detailed, although they never actually attained the
solidity of the Kal'enedral or
the fiery substance of the Avatars.
Maybe that was why he was suddenly afraid; the leshy'a
Kal'enedral looked just like any of the others, and the Avatars were so
exotic as to fit in the same categories as Firecats and other manifestations of
the gods. But there was nothing solid about these, nor so alien that he could
bear them because they were so new to him.
The first to become really clear was a strikingly handsome man,
and if this was Firesong's ancestor Vanyel, it was obvious where he got his
beauty. There was no color to any of these spirits, so Karal could not have
told if the clothing this spirit had chosen to "wear" happened to be
antique Herald's Whites or not, but the cut was like nothing he had seen in his
lifetime. The spirit had long hair, though not as long as Firesong's or
Silverfox's, and "wore" no jewelry of any kind. He searched the group
gathered around him, and his gaze lit on Karal and remained there. In spite of
the ghost's smile, Karal was not reassured.
"So this is our young Sun-priest," the spirit
said, as Karal froze. "If I ever have the opportunity, remind me to
tell you of another young servant of Vkandis that I met, who proved to me that
not all of the folk who used Vkandis' Name to justify their actions should be
lumped together into a single category." The spirit's smile
widened—quite as winsome a smile as anything Firesong had ever produced—and
some of Karal's chill melted away. But not, by any means, all of it. For some
reason—perhaps simply that these beings looked, acted and sounded
exactly like what they were supposed to be—Karal found Vanyel entirely
unnerving.
As the second spirit manifested, Karal didn't find him any easier
on the nerves, perhaps because he couldn't seem to make up his mind whether to
look like a muscular, square-jawed fellow who was a bit taller than Vanyel, or
a slight, triangular-faced, large-eyed lad who was shorter and more slender
than the Herald-Mage. Just looking at him made Karal feel dizzy, and when the
third shape came into focus, it didn't help any, for it wavered between the
form of a Companion and that of a determined woman with a firm chin and the
look of a hunter about her.
:If you all don't mind, I'd like to see that bed Karal has been
keeping warm for me,:
Altra said firmly, and when Karal looked down, he saw that the Firecat had
polished off every drop of the broth, and was on his feet, swaying a little.
"You go ahead, my friend," Vanyel said genially.
"We three need to have our first consultation with the mages, and
having too many people trying to explain things at once is not going to get us
anywhere. We will try to keep the noise down so you may rest better."
Since Altra did not look at all steady, Karal picked him up bodily
and carried him to that waiting bed, with Florian pacing alongside him,
offering a shoulder for support. Lyam cleared the way ahead of them, quite
authoritative for such a short fellow. Altra was quite limp with exhaustion,
and Karal wondered if he should say anything forbidding Altra to make any more
Jumping expeditions. Did he have the right to demand such things?
:That's the last. That is absolutely the last,: Altra said weakly as Karal laid the
Firecat in his warmed bed. :I know you aren't seeing any physical
manifestations of the Storms right now, but believe me, where I have to go,
they're there. It was like trying to swim a river in flood, and cats are not
particularly suited to swimming, let me tell you. I do not have the strength to
try that a second time.:
"Good, because I was going to ask you not to," Karal
replied. "I don't think I could stand losing you."
:Well, you won't. That's that advantage of having a Cat instead of
a Horse as a partner; we don't go running off to sacrifice ourselves at the
sound of the first trumpet call,: Altra said, feebly winking at Karal on the side opposite of
Florian. :We're sensible. And right now, my sensible side demands some
cosseting. I want sleep:
:Oh, do go right ahead and sleep,: Florian said with mock-indignation. :Don't
mind us, we just want to gather worshipfully around your slumbering form and
tell stories about your bravery and virtue.:
:Fine, you do that, and about time,: the Firecat replied in the same spirit. :Just
don't wake me up.:
And with that, he closed his eyes, his even breathing seeming to
indicate that he had fallen straight asleep.
"Well, what do you think?" Karal asked the
Companion, certain he was about to get a litany of praise thinly disguised as a
lesson in Valdemaran history.
:I think that I'm hoping our latest visitors remain unmanifest
most of the time,:
Florian replied promptly, his uneasiness quite apparent in his mind-voice. :Yfandes
gives me the—what's Lyam's term for it?—the collywobbles, that's it. They're
all three dreadfully intimidating.:
"Really?" Karal arched an eyebrow at him. "I didn't
think you could be intimidated by anything!"
:I can, and she's it.: Florian was quite serious, and it was Karal's turn to put a
steadying hand on his shoulder. :Not even a Grove-Born gives me the urge to
kneel and knock my head on the ground the way she does!:
"Well, don't do that," Karal advised. "For one
thing, you'll hurt your head. For another, I'm sure you have nothing to feel
inferior about."
He knew how Florian felt, though, and he sympathized. Hopefully
these newcomers would stay invisible; if he couldn't see them, maybe he
wouldn't keep having the urge to do some bowing and scraping of his own.
"Ghosts and spirit-swords, Avatars and leshy'a Kal'enedral—we have more not-mortal things
around here than we have mortal ones!" he complained. "And when you
add in bondbirds and hertasi and kyree and Companions, the weird
creatures outnumber ordinary humans to the point where we're a minority!"
:It could be worse,: Florian pointed out pensively. :This could be a Vale. Or
k'Leshya Vale! Then you'd have dyhell and tervardi and gryphons,
and I don't know what all else. Only the gods know what weird pets the K'Leshya
brought up out of the South with them.:
Karal just sighed and sat beside Altra with his chin on his hand.
"The worst part of it is that a mind-talking horse is the most normal of
all the folk around here!"
Florian only whickered, and mind-laughed weakly.
* * *
Fortunately for Karal's peace of mind and Florian's sense of
profound inferiority, the three newcomers mostly remained
"unmanifest" to save energy, and simply tendered advice to Firesong
by means of Mindspeech. Karal had the feeling that Vanyel was a little hurt
that the Karsite was so nervous in Vanyel's presence, but there was no help for
it. Karal himself wasn't entirely sure why Vanyel made him so edgy. It might
simply have been that the Herald-Mage was everything that Karal was not, but
without the somewhat inflated self-esteem of his descendant Firesong. It might
have been unconscious residue from all the "Demon Vanyel" stories
he'd been told as a child. And it might only have been that Vanyel was so
obviously everything that a Karsite feared about the night, and although Karal
had been working with stranger beings, Vanyel's presence was simply the one bit
of strangeness that was too much.
He had his own problems that were similar to Florian's—the fact
that of all of them, he was really the most ordinary, and aside from his
ability as a Channel, apparently the least necessary. He was not brilliant like
Master Levy nor a mage like Sejanes or Firesong; he could not translate the
ancient texts as Tarrn and Lyam could, nor had he the knack of amusing everyone
and helping them see solutions to their problems as Silverfox did.
It was Silverfox, however, who made him realize that the things
about him that were the most commonplace were the ones that made him the most
valuable in this group of those who were out of the ordinary.
"I'm glad we have you here, Karal," Silverfox said to
him the next day, as he shared stew that Altra had not been awake to eat with
the kestra'chern.
"Me?" he said with surprise. "Why?"
"Because your strength is that you are forced to handle
wildly extraordinary events and people—and you just do it, without
complaint. You set the rest of us an example. After all, if you can handle all
this, we should certainly be able to."
Karal made a face. "I think I'm being damned with faint
praise," he replied ironically.
"It isn't meant to be faint praise," Silverfox said
earnestly. "What I mean is that you are finding great strength and grace
inside yourself, and you prove to the rest of us that we should be able to do
the same." He gazed into Karal's eyes with intense concentration.
"You keep us centered, reminding us that there is a world out there beyond
these walls. You give us perspective in this rather rarefied company, and help
keep us all sane." His smile was just as charming as anything Firesong
could conjure. "In your own way, my dear young friend, you are a constant
reminder of everything normal and good about the world that we are trying to
protect."
Karal blushed; that was all he could do, in the face of words like
that.
:He's right, you know,: Altra seconded. :It isn't the great mystics and saints who do
the real day-to-day work of keeping people's faith firm, it's the ordinary
priest—the good man who goes on being good, no matter what he has to face.
Ordinary people know in their hearts that they could never withstand the trials
that a saint undergoes, but if they see a person who is just like they are, and
watch him bearing up under those trials, they know that they can do it, too.
And as for the great ones, when they see an ordinary man bearing extraordinary
burdens, they are inspired to take on far more than they might otherwise do.:
Now he was blushing so hotly his skin felt sunburned.
"Meanwhile, we are having to face a crisis,"
Silverfox continued, his smile fading as he sobered. "And it is coming on
us swiftly. Firesong wanted me to tell you that they're going to use the
cube-maze, after all."
That cooled his blushes in a hurry, and he nodded. Silverfox
reached for his chin and tilted it up, looking deeply into his eyes, then
nodded as if satisfied by what he saw there. "You know that this is the
best choice of all of them," he stated. "Firesong says that of all
the weapons, this offers the most gain." He said nothing about risk, but
he didn't have to, for Karal already knew that the risk of using any of those
weapons was great, and they really could not know how great until they
triggered one.
Karal nodded. "And I knew that it was quite likely I would
have to work as a Channel again. It's all right; I'm not afraid this
time."
Strangely enough, he wasn't. "He wanted me to tell
you, so that you would know he doesn't intend you to have to bear any more than
any of the rest of them." Silverfox's ironic expression filled in the
rest—things best left unsaid. Karal knew, though, that Firesong would not be
able to lie successfully to the kestra'chern,
and Silverfox would not allow him to put Karal in for more than an equal share
of peril. In a sense, Silverfox was vouching for the Adept.
Karal shrugged awkwardly. "The cube-maze was their first
choice the last time, they just couldn't come up with enough information to
make it work. I'd rather be channeling for something that is their first
choice, rather than their third or fourth."
He didn't pretend to understand half of what the mages were
talking about, but the device they called a "cube-maze," which
resembled a pile of hollow cast-metal cubes stacked rather randomly atop one
another, was supposed to have had a nonliving core to do the channeling. Either
Urtho could never get the thing to work correctly in the first place, or else
the core was no longer functioning. In either case, there was no one here that
was capable of making a device to act as the channel. That meant Karal was the
only hope of making this thing work. It might work better with a living
channel; that might have been one of the reasons it had failed in the first
place. A living channel could make decisions; a nonliving channel couldn't.
Like the other devices here, the cube-maze didn't look anything
like a weapon. It was rather pretty, in fact; there was an odd sheen or patina
to the blue metal surface that refracted rainbows, like oil on water. One of
the truly strange things about all of these weapons was that none of them
looked alike. It was difficult to imagine how the same mind could have come up
with so many dissimilar devices.
"Karal!" Master Levy hailed him from the main room.
"The teleson is free, and Natoli is on it."
Silverfox cut short Karal's attempt at excusing himself politely.
"Go, off with you!" the kestra'chern
said. "You can talk to me anytime, and I'm not half so pretty as Natoli
is."
That last comment made him blush all over again, but this time he
didn't care. His long-distance romancing of Natoli appeared to charm everyone.
They all stayed discreetly out of the way when he spoke to her, and they all
seemed to go out of their way to give him occasions to talk to her on the
teleson.
Altra followed on his heels, to act as the facilitator for the
conversation. It was amazing that Altra didn't ever tease him about anything
that passed between himself and Natoli, but even Altra apparently regarded the
growing relationship as a private matter between the two of them, and not for
any outsider, not even a Firecat, to intrude upon. No matter what either of the
two said to each other, Altra never commented on it, either during the
conversation or afterward. In fact, Karal was able to completely forget about
Altra's presence most of the time.
But Natoli had disturbing news for him that had nothing whatsoever
to do with their personal matters. "Elspeth and Darkwind reported that
they are already getting Storms in Hardorn," she said gravely. "They
aren't dangerous yet, but it's only a matter of time before things degenerate.
We have already started preparations here to handle whatever comes up."
"That's probably why the mages and all finally made up their
minds which device to use," he told her. "I suppose Master Levy must
have agreed on their choice, since he is the one doing the mathematical
modeling for the solution." He hesitated, and looked down at his hands a
moment, then looked back up and told her the truth. "I'm going to have to
be a Channel again."
She didn't say anything, but her face grew pale and she bit her
lip. "Well," she finally managed, "that's what you're there for.
You have to do your job, just as I have to do mine." She rallied a bit.
"Speaking of my job, I'm in charge of some of the emergency plans. We're
going to have to evacuate the Palace at the very least, and maybe even parts of
Haven, just in case that node under the Palace goes unstable. All the highborn
have gone home, and as of today they've dismissed the Collegia and sent the
trainees home as well. Even the Healers have dispersed. The trainees that don't
have homes to go to are supposed to go off with their Masters if they're Bards,
off to one of the Houses of Healing as Healer-trainees, or riding circuit with
full Heralds if they're still in Grays. It's a little crazy around here, since
things still have to get done, and it's getting to be that whoever has a pair
of hands free just does whatever it takes. They say that the gryphons will stay
until the last moment and set spells to keep out looters, then they'll fly
away. It'll be a relief when everyone is actually gone."
He didn't have to ask why she was still there; she could not sit
back while others were in danger any more than he could. She would probably
remain there until the very end because that was what her father would do.
Herald Rubrik was in Karse, so perhaps she felt it was up to her to take on the
familial duties. "Well," he replied. "You do what you have to,
right? If your job is to be there, then you need to do it." Clumsy words,
but he hoped they told her what he wanted to say—that he still would never ask
her to stop doing what she considered to be her job just to be
"safe." If there even was any place "safe" anymore.
"I want you to know that I really don't think any of us here are in any
more or less danger than you are," he continued, trying to give her
reassurance. "The one thing I am concerned about is that after the
last time, the others here are all so fiercely determined to protect me that
I'm more afraid for them than I am for myself."
She smiled tremulously. "You would be anyway. Just promise me
that you'll let them take care of you. Not at the expense of getting the job
done, but let them protect you from what they can."
"If you'll do the same," he demanded. "Before you
go flinging yourself into exploding boilers, wait and see if someone more
suited to that particular job is already doing it! You know, it just might
be that, capable as you are, someone else would manage that particular rescue a
little better than you!"
"You drive a hard bargain," she retorted, and shook her
head, a little of her old humor returning to her eyes. "All right, I
promise."
"And so do I," he pledged softly, and basked in her
smile.
The wind of a full-scale blizzard howled and whined outside the
windows of his suite, and icy drafts forced their way past windows and thick
curtains, but Baron Melles didn't care. Enveloped in one of the heavy woolen
tunics that had become fashion out of necessity, with a second layer of knitted
winter silk beneath that, he brooded pleasantly over the reports of his network
of spies within the households of the members of the Court. Virtually every one
of those pieces of paper reported a new attitude toward him on the part of
anyone of any importance.
Fear. He
was delighted at their reaction. They might hate him, they might envy him, they
might (rarely) even admire him for his ruthlessness—but they all feared him
now, and feared to have even the appearance of opposing him.
He shifted his weight in his chair, and repositioned his feet on
the warming pan beneath his desk. His last object lesson was more effective
than he had thought it would be, and had spread far beyond the immediate
household and friends of his target. Clearly it was much wiser and more
expedient to show that the children of his would-be enemies were vulnerable
than it was to threaten the enemies themselves. And as for those who had no
children, well, there wasn't a single one of them who didn't have some
other person for whom they cherished tender feelings. Anyone who would threaten
a child obviously would have no difficulty with targeting an aged and infirm
parent, or a sibling, or a lover. Even Tremane had dependents he would have
been very upset at losing—that old mage, Sejanes, for one.
It was ironic in many ways, for it would have been very easy for
any of them to make him or herself invulnerable. There had not been another
person besides himself here at Court who had read and understood the lesson old
Charliss had given to them in the course of his own life: Trust no one, care
for no one, depend on no one. They had all persisted, even in the face of
obvious disadvantages, to fall in love, make friendships rather than alliances,
and allow themselves the cracks in their armor that relationships made.
Tremane never knew that he made me what I am today, even as he
made me his enemy when we were cadets. He betrayed me to the Colonel, and
ruined my career in the Army. And for what? Because I was doing what everyone
else wanted to do, but didn't have the intelligence or the audacity to try. I
trusted him because he said he was my friend, and he betrayed me. Without that,
if I had remained in the cadet corps as he did, I would not have seen Charliss'
example for what it was.
He had stopped being a sheep that day and had become one of the
wolves—as any of them could have. Well, that was all their own fault, and their
stupidity, and that was why he was the Emperor's Heir and not one of them.
Not even the memory of that long-ago humiliation of being cast out
of the corps could spoil this triumph. He had finally achieved the goal he had
set for himself that day—to make anyone of any importance look at him and fear.
It was in this mood of unusual good humor that General Thayer found him, and
destroyed his mood with a single sentence.
His valet Bors showed the General in; Thayer wore a regulation
Army cloak over his uniform tunic, and fingerless gloves to keep his hands
warm. Melles greeted him with pleasure, although he did not rise.
But Thayer had not come to make a social call. "Melles, we're
in trouble," he rumbled. And as usual, the General came straight to the
point without even waiting to take the chair that Melles offered him.
Where had that come from? "How can we be in trouble?"
Melles asked, with more than a bit of surprise. "We've got order in the
smaller cities, and the larger ones are coming around. Food is getting in, and
you're even making a small profit. Rioting has stopped in most places, and the
subversives are beginning to be regarded as lunatics. We might have lost the
lands Charliss brought under the Imperial banner and some of the provinces,
but—"
"But the Army doesn't want you in charge," Thayer
replied, bluntly. "That last little trick you played was one too many. The
word from the field is that they don't intend to establish order just to put a
baby killer on the Iron Throne. Word of your power play has been traveling
farther and faster than either of us thought it would. I don't know how, but in
spite of everything, virtually everyone I've contacted already knows all about
it, and knows that you were the one who put the body in the crib." He
scowled. "That was a stupid ploy, Melles. Your average soldier may be a
hard man, but the one thing he won't put up with is threatening a baby."
Melles frowned. "But there was nothing to link me with that
incident," he objected.
Thayer snorted with utter contempt, as the wind rattled the
windowpanes and a draft made the candle flames flicker. "Please. Not
everyone is an inbred idiot, especially not in the Army. You're an assassin,
however much you pretend not to be; everyone knows it, and everyone knows
you're the only one who not only could have done what you did, but who is
cold-blooded enough to follow up on the threat if you had to. And I repeat to
you; the Army won't support a baby killer, and there's an end to it."
A cold anger burned in the back of Melles' throat, as cold as the
howling winds outside. "That's fine sentiment from people who kill for a
living," he said with equal contempt. "I'm sure they ask the age of
every peasant with a boar-spear who opposes them in the field, and make certain
to leave insurgent villages untouched in case they might kill a few
children."
Thayer's face flushed with anger, but somehow he kept his temper
even in the face of Melles' provocative words. "I could point out that the
Army operates under certain laws, and that when a soldier kills someone, he
does it openly, under conditions where his opponent has an equal chance of
killing him. But that would be specious and we both know it—and it's not
the point."
"Oh?" Melles asked sardonically. "And just what is
the point?"
"The point is that the average soldier believes all
those things," Thayer said, pounding the desk for emphasis. "Whether
or not they are true. Truth has no bearing on this, and you damned well know
it. The average soldier thinks he is going to defend the honor of the Empire
against adult enemies, and that makes him feel superior to any assassin,
and vastly superior to someone who not only threatens the safety of a child,
but threatens a child of his own people."
"Never mind that this same noble soldier would skewer the
children of a rebellious village without a second thought or a moment of
hesitation," Melles grumbled, although he saw the logic in Thayer's
argument. Thayer was right. The truth didn't matter here, and he, who was a
practiced hand in manipulating perception, should have known that. "Very
well. What's to be done?"
Thayer sighed, and finally sank into the chair Melles had offered.
"I don't know," he admitted. "It's not only the Commanders that
are talking rebellion, it's the Generals, and the rank and file, and they
aren't amenable to the kinds of coercion you can use on the nobles of the
Court. Unless we can do something about this, we're going to loose them, and
the moment Charliss becomes a Little God, they're going to put someone of their
choice on the Iron Throne and you and me in the ground."
Melles ground his teeth in
frustration, for Thayer was right. Although, unlike Tremane, he had never
gotten out of the cadets to serve in the military forces of the Empire, he knew
the structure and makeup. The Generals were mostly men who had made a career of
the military, as had their fathers before them. Their wives were the daughters
of similar men, their families all related to other military families. They
employed former military men as guards and servants, employed the wives of such
men as maids and housekeepers. Their positions were embedded in multiple layers
of protection, and they could not be dismissed or demoted out of hand. The High
Commanders could be eliminated, for they were mostly nobles like Grand Duke
Tremane, but there was no getting rid of the Generals. They were like a wolf
pack; you couldn't separate a victim, for none of them stood alone, and if you
made a move against one, the whole pack would consolidate long enough to tear
your throat out before going back to their own internal jockeying for power.
"You can't touch them, Melles," Thayer warned in an echo
of his own thoughts. "If you try, they'll destroy you. They won't put up
with that kind of threat, and they'll close ranks against you. Press it too
far, and they'll call a coup against you. Not even your personal guard can
protect you against an entire Company coming to kill you."
"It's gone right down to the rank and file, you say?" he
asked, his thoughts swirling as wildly as the snow outside.
Thayer nodded, and Melles cursed them all in his mind. He couldn't
even order every General within reach of the capital to come to a meeting, seal
the room, and kill them all at once. If he tried, the entire Army itself would
rise up in revolt. It was only when the Generals were corrupt and hated by
their men that you could get away with a tactic like that.
"We're only in trouble, we aren't defeated yet," he said
at last, as a few ideas began to form out of the chaos. "They might have
good communications, but I have better ones. I have a few more throws of the
dice coming, and I can pick the dice." He began to smile as he saw
how he could completely subvert the entire problem.
Thayer regarded him curiously, and with a certain grudging
admiration. "Have you got something up your sleeve that you haven't told
me about?"
He nodded. "I'm not even going to try to deny their rumor,
instead I'm going to give them something else entirely to think about. I always
have more up my sleeve that I haven't told anyone about," he replied
smugly. "And you should never underestimate the power of the clerical
pen."
"What you can't find, you can manufacture, hmm?" Thayer
hazarded. "Just what, exactly, do you have in mind? Are you going to give
them a different enemy to concentrate on?"
Melles just laughed. "I won't have to manufacture anything.
With enough records to search, I can find just about anything I need, and you
know yourself that this Empire creates enough paperwork to fill entire
warehouses. Give me a few days and I can find all the right evidence to
convince the Army that I'm the one they should be supporting, show them that
having a so-called 'baby killer' on the throne is the least of the things they
should be worrying about, and in the meantime, I can woo them."
"Woo them? Like reluctant girls?" Thayer made a rude and
suggestive noise, but Melles wasn't offended, now that he had the bit in his
teeth.
"Wait and see," he responded, plans already growing in
the back of his mind that would probably astonish the older man. "Just
wait and see."
Thayer was not convinced, but was certain enough of Melles'
competence to be willing to buy him some time to work on the schemes that he
promised. Thayer stood up, saying so in as many words.
"Just remember that I can't give you too much more
time," he warned. "And it's going to take a great deal to overcome
the way they feel about the baby incident. I'm still not certain you're taking
that seriously enough."
"Just remember what I told you about the common man and what
he needs and wants," Melles replied. "Then remember that the Army is
composed of those same common men—just with a little more training and a bit of
discipline."
"Hmm." Thayer looked thoughtful at that, and took his
leave. As soon as he was gone, Melles called in all five of his private
secretaries.
They were all men, like his valet, of varied talents and some
interesting training. All five of them were so nondescript that no one would
ever notice them in a crowd. And all of them were adept at getting into even
the most carefully guarded records, simply by knowing how to impersonate
virtually any type of clerk in the Empire and how to forge anything but the
Imperial Seal. When a clerk arrived with appropriate documentation and a
request to see something, or even to carry it away, it took a hardier and more
independent soul than existed in the Imperial Civil Service to challenge him.
"You—" he said, pointing to the first in line. "I
want you to go over the military pay records, find out all the units with pay
in arrears, and who is in charge of their pay." He pointed to the next
two. "You and you—go through the records of the units sent to take
Hardorn. I want you to match up the requests for supplies and reinforcements
with the orders issued to fill those requests. I also want the record of every
request that was denied, and on whose authority." He pointed to the last
two. "You two get access to Emperor Charliss' private papers, or at least
the ones that are in the Archives. I want all the correspondence between
Tremane and Charliss from the time he left for Hardorn to his last known
message. Go!"
The five clerks departed, scattering like quail before the hunter.
He didn't need to give them any further orders about how to get access
to those papers; one of the reason that these men were no longer in the
civil service was that they had initiative. Neither initiative nor creativity
were rewarded in the Imperial Civil Service, and those with both often grew
frustrated and looked for employment elsewhere.
Melles next called in his private treasurer.
"You get down to the Imperial Exchequer. I want to know how
much out of the military budget can be spared in hard coin and how much in
goods. Tell the Exchequer that I suspect the Army's pay has been bollixed up,
and we may have to make good in a hurry if we don't want trouble on our
hands." He thought for a moment, and dredged up the relevant fact from his
memory. "If he balks at telling you, just say something about the road
budget; it doesn't matter what, just work it quickly into the
conversation."
The man nodded, grinning; every Imperial Exchequer skimmed a
certain amount off the top, it was expected, so long as they were clever enough
not to get caught at it. But if they were caught, the penalties were
severe. Melles knew precisely where the current Exchequer was skimming and even
had a rough idea of how much; he had made it his business to know, planning to
use the information at the right moment. There could be no better moment than
now. A good card was no better than a bad one if you never played it.
The treasurer left, and Melles called in his final choice in this
campaign of seduction, one of his odder employees. This rather elegant specimen
was ostensibly Melles' personal poet and playwright, but although the man was
mediocre creatively, he was an absolute genius at propaganda. Melles didn't use
him often, but he was, like the valet, the appropriate scalpel for certain
types of surgery. Melles was doubly fortunate in that the man enjoyed the
writing of manipulative propaganda almost as much as poetry. He had told his
patron once that when he wrote the former, he considered that he was writing a
different kind of drama, one in which the words manipulated the actors, instead
of the other way around. He enjoyed seeing how his works played out on the
larger stage of the real world.
And as a peculiar kind of reward, Melles regularly financed the
production of poetry readings in opulent surroundings, seeing to it that the
right critics were flattered, fed, and given enough strong and exotic drink to
make even the worst drivel seem inspired.
"I hope you aren't in the throes of creation," Melles
said cautiously, for this was one individual who could not be coerced, only
persuaded. But his loyalty to Melles was based on firm self-interest and was
utterly trustworthy. When bought, he stayed bought—and no one aside from Melles
himself knew that he was anything other than a peculiar affectation. It was
expected that someone of Melles' status patronize the arts in some way, and a
poet was the cheapest and least intrusive sort of artist to have on one's
staff. "I have a rather extensive job for you," he continued. "I
hope you aren't preoccupied."
The man smiled urbanely and crossed his legs with conscious
elegance. He was something of a dandy and rather fancied himself as a popular
man with the ladies. His salary from Melles enabled him to cut quite a figure
of sartorial splendor among not only his peers but also his superiors.
"What do you need my skills for? As a repairer of reputation? I've been
planning what to do for you since the moment the rumors began to fly." He
shook his head, and then waggled his finger in mock-admonition. "My dear
patron, you have been very injudicious. This could ruin you yet, if it isn't
carefully handled."
Melles did not make the retort he felt hovering on his tongue. The
man was worth his weight in gold, and was arrogant enough to be quite aware of
it. Instead, he got right to the point. "It isn't the Court I'm worried
about; they're ineffectual enough, and like sheep, they'll follow anyone with
the right bell around his neck. No, it's the Army that's giving me
trouble." He leaned forward over his desk, to emphasize how serious he
felt the situation was. "They've decided they don't care for the idea of
someone with my ethics on the Iron Throne."
The poet pursed his lips. "That could be troublesome. I don't
know quite how to handle the Army—unless you already know what you want to
say?"
"I do. Believe it or not, I want you to report the exact truth."
Melles smiled thinly at the poet's surprise. "We're going to concentrate
on the plight of my old rival, Tremane," he continued lightly. "I
want you to spread the story of how he and his command were abandoned out
beyond the farthest reach of the Empire. Be creative; go on about the horror of
being sent off to die in utterly unknown lands. Find the right words to
convince people that I had nothing to do with the abandonment of Tremane and
his men in Hardorn. Then convince them that I had no idea that I would be
Charliss' next choice for his successor. Say that I feel that the times are so
radically changed that I have changed with them. Say I personally am so busy
trying to keep the Empire together that I have no interest in pursuing my old
vendetta against Tremane himself."
That last could get him in a certain amount of difficulty with the
Emperor if Charliss got wind of it, but he was willing to take that particular
chance.
The poet pursed his lips in thought. "It's a novel
approach," he admitted. "And it just might distract soldiers from the
stories of dead bodies in baby cribs. After all, you didn't actually kill the baby,
you only dumped the body of an assassin there. Whereas Tremane and his men were
abandoned in Hardorn; that's without a doubt and with no particular reason to
leave them out there."
"That's exactly what I'm looking for," Melles
encouraged. "And soldiers have more in common with other soldiers than
with brats in cribs. They will have empathy for Tremane's forces. Why weren't
they called back while it was still possible to construct Portals that worked
between the Storms? Don't place any blame yet, but raise as many questions in
peoples' minds as you can, particularly in the Army."
"I can do that," the poet said decisively, losing a
great deal of his languid pose as his own imagination set to work. "I'm
very good at questions. What about answers?"
"I'll give you more to work on when I have facts,"
Melles promised. "For right now, this will be enough. Get people talking,
get their minds on something else besides my little jokes." He signaled
that the man could go.
"Gossip and rumor, opiates of the dull, can for the clever be
the stuff that dream are made of," the poet said sardonically, as he
smiled, standing up as gracefully as he had sat down.
"My dreams, at any rate," Melles chuckled, watching the
man's elegant way of walking—elegant, but not at all effeminate. It was rather
like a wolf at the stalk, and he made up his mind to copy it.
The first of his seekers came back within hours with an accurate
account of the Army pay records. As he had suspected, since every district
governor was individually responsible for seeing to it that the units within
his jurisdiction actually were paid (even though the pay actually came out of
the military budget), there were several instances where pay was in arrears,
sometimes significantly. As he went over the figures with his own accountant,
the secretary he had sent to interview the Imperial Exchequer also returned.
That gave him his first move in the new game.
He waited until the next day, then descended on the major figures
of the Imperial Civil Service, trailing a string of clerks all bearing stacks
of paper. With great fanfare and a fine speech written by his pet poet, he
"revealed" the terrible injustice that had been done to the loyal
soldiers of the Empire.
"But it is not your fault," he continued, before anyone
could get angry at having yet more work heaped on him. "You are doing the
best you can in terrible circumstances!" He went on at some length,
praising the overworked clerks for sticking at their jobs even when they had to
wade through blizzards to get to their desks, shiver in the drafts when they
arrived, and fight worse weather to go to a cold home with short rations once
they returned at the end of a long day's work. "I have brought you the
help of my own clerks to see you through this crisis," he said, as his men
took over empty desks or any other flat space with a chair. "I am sure you
do not want our brave soldiers to suffer, but I do not want you to suffer
either!"
With that, he set off a frenzy of paper pushing to get every
soldier's records and pay up to date. Some of the pay had to be made in goods
rather than coin, but he made certain that the clerks arranged it so the goods
in question were more valuable on the gray market than the actual pay they were
substituting for.
It was all taken care of in a single morning; not too difficult,
when he doubled the existing workforce and had all of them concentrate on the
one task, putting all other work temporarily aside. He then formally went to
the Commanders and promised to personally make up for the other deficiencies
that had cropped up, usually in the way of resupply. He made a great show of
embarrassment, as if he had only now discovered these problems. He didn't know
if anyone believed him, but he made a point of assigning his own people to make
certain that existing problems were corrected and further ones reported to him
so that he could see that they were dealt with.
As he had hoped, although there was some suspicion that he was
trying to buy the Army's favor, he began to get some grudging acceptance. This
was especially true once the stories began to circulate of how he had uncovered
all these problems personally.
Then his poet went to work, sending out his insidious little
stories and questions, making the ordinary Imperial soldier wonder just what
"supposed mistake" could have left Tremane's people out in the cold,
so to speak. An added bonus came when he got word back that the rank-and-file
had a few other, unanticipated questions. Such as—a question of whether the
late pay was really just bureaucratic bungling, or if Certain Parties had
ordered the pay held back as a form of punishment. After all, if Grand Duke
Tremane and all his men could be abandoned, what was a little delay in paying
out wages?
But the crowning touch to the entire plan finally went into effect
when Melles' clerks found that correspondence between Charliss and Tremane. And
he could not have manufactured a better final letter than the one that arrived
for the Emperor's personal perusal just before the Portals went down and stayed
down.
It was bad enough that Tremane had begged, over and over again,
for critical supplies that were never sent, for more men, and especially for
more mages. But it was the final letter that made Melles positively gleeful
both from the standpoint of seeing his old enemy brought low, and for the
strength of the "ammunition" it gave him.
For in that letter, which was accompanied by strategic maps,
Tremane begged the Emperor to allow his men to retreat, vowing that he himself
would remain behind and attempt to hold what had been taken with a corps of
volunteers. He pleaded with the Emperor not to visit punishment upon men who
had done nothing to deserve it, and to permit them to escape while it was still
possible to hold Portals to the Empire open long enough for them to pass
through.
And although Melles himself was no strategist, it was painfully
obvious from the maps that Tremane's position was utterly untenable. No one,
not even a military genius, could have saved the situation.
In a handwritten directive, the Emperor ordered his secretaries to
make no response to this desperate plea, on the grounds that Tremane would have
to solve the situation in order to prove his worth, thus condemning Tremane's
forces with him. At that point, the best outcome for them was exile—and the
worst was massacre.
He took that letter with the note in the margin to General Thayer,
who in turn leaked the information to his own Commanders, who sent it on down
the line. He managed to conceal his triumph in a show of distress so perfect he
even fooled Thayer.
By this time the Army was outraged. The Emperor had betrayed them,
betrayed the sacred bond that was supposed to bind the Emperor and the men who
served him. The rumors of Melles the "baby killer" were forgotten in
this new, and far more personal outrage, and even the lowest private began to
recall how it was Melles who saw that the pay was put right, and Melles
who made sure the supply wagons got through.
Melles, and not the Emperor. And in that moment, he had them.
That was the point where he got an odd invitation from General
Thayer; an invitation to dinner, but not in the Palace. This was to be a
private dinner, in an upper room of a very well-known and luxurious inn usually
frequented by wealthy bachelors who didn't care to keep staff or cooks.
There were just a few things "wrong" with this
invitation—the most obvious being that Melles was not and had never been part
of the social circle that made use of this particular facility. The inn itself
was suffering some of the privations of every other eatery; the fare now was
far from the former standards, and in fact was inferior to anything he could
get in Crag Castle. And it was halfway across the city; the mage-storms struck
twice a day now, with the result that the weather was utterly unpredictable,
and there were often "things" prowling the streets, animals and even
humans changed by the Storms into misshapen creatures that bore little
resemblance to what they had been. The once-rats were bad enough, but the other
creatures required that one travel with an escort of heavily-armed men after
dark.
He turned the invitation over and over in his hands, considering
it. It could be a trap, of course, designed to get him where he would be
vulnerable and eliminate him. But somehow, he didn't think so. To meet in a
public tavern in so remote a place suggested a need for secrecy. The private
salons of these large inns had separate, outside entrances, so that people
could come and go without being seen. This had the earmarks of a conspiracy.
I had better go. If anyone is going to make an attempt on the
Emperor—assuming that is why they want me—I had better be in a position to
advise them.
It wasn't the best plan, but it was better than allowing them to
make an attempt that would fail, and would alarm Charliss. The Emperor was
already unstable, and it wouldn't take a great deal to set him off on a
campaign to purge the Court.
And if necessary, I can always turn them in myself, proving my
loyalty to Charliss. That
would be the court of last resort, however, if he could not persuade them to
hold off until he was ready. Betraying them to Charliss would cost him so much
difficulty once he was Emperor that such a move was not advisable unless
there was no other possible course of action.
There was the possibility that this invitation was the setup for
an assassination attempt on him, but he didn't think that they would be that
stupid. An assassin himself, as they well knew, he would be a very difficult
man to take down. Granted, a large number of men could overpower him, but as he
had already proved, he was, despite all appearances, still perfectly capable of
defending himself and killing or maiming several of them before they managed to
kill him. Such an affair would be noisy and leave many witnesses who would have
to be silenced or eliminated. He would have his own men with him, who would
also have to be silenced or eliminated, and those men would have the superiors
they reported to and families of their own who would miss them. It would turn
into a nightmare of murder, and be impossible to cover up. They had to be aware
of all of that.
With great reluctance, he called his valet and ordered clothing
for the cold, arranged an armed Imperial escort to take care of the hobgoblins,
alerted his personal bodyguard, and ordered a carriage-on-runners; nothing else
could handle the icy streets now. People had to step up from their doorsteps to
the street instead of down, for there was rock-hard, packed snow to the depth
of the knee on most of the streets, snow that would not be gone until spring.
He was just glad that he had invested every bit of his mage-craft
in shielding; mages who had not done so were in a state of near-collapse every
time a Storm passed through. He barely noticed; he got a headache just before
each Storm, a bit of disorientation during it, and a touch of nausea afterward.
Nothing was bad enough to even interrupt his reading. But another Storm was due
about the time he expected to be on the street, and anyone who was likely to be
severely affected by the Storms could find himself in deadly danger in a
situation of that nature. A person walking alone could collapse and freeze to
death, he could be set upon and robbed, and a person riding in a conveyance
could still freeze to death without his escort noticing.
He wondered how many marginally Talented mages had been caught and
hurt or killed that way. If so, that simply cuts down on the number of
idiots with mage-power, he reflected, as he pulled on a second set of
gloves over his first set, and worked his feet into heavy sheepskin-lined
boots. It was difficult to be both dressed for warmth and for elegance, and he
opted, at least in his outermost garments, for the first.
The journey to the inn was something of an unpleasant ordeal, and
he wondered at the number of people who still continued to make their daily
trips from home to place of employment, went out shopping, or indeed, did anything
that took them out of doors. The weather was hideous, as it was more often than
not now. There was the usual blizzard blowing, driving snow deep into the
fabric of one's clothing, making it impossible to see the linkmen bearing
lanterns who lit the way for the driver, if they got more than a few paces
ahead of the carriage. And yet there were other people out on the
street, including some women, which amazed him. His escort changed places
regularly, so that some rode while others walked.
When they were about a third of the way to his destination, a pack
of hobgoblins attacked—hairy things that scrabbled through the snow on all
fours, drooling and howling with hunger, their ribs clearly prominent even
through their heavy brindled coats of fur. This time, it appeared that they
were Changedogs, rather than Changechildren, which made it a bit easier on the
escort; the men had a difficult time killing things that cried like babies and
had human eyes or faces. It wasn't too difficult to beat the pack back, leaving
a few bleeding, furcovered bodies in the snow. So far, Changed creatures were
routinely less intelligent than the creatures they had been changed from,
and Changedogs were probably the most stupid of them all; they kept charging
straight ahead even when that tactic clearly did not work. The exception was
Changerats, which were more cunning and vicious, and swarmed in packs of
several hundred. There were laws about Changed animals and people now; if your
pet or relative was Changed, the only way to keep it (or him) was to take it to
an Imperial examiner who would verify that it was no danger to humans or
livestock. There were few Changechildren being kept and sheltered by relatives.
Most were actually killed by their own families the moment they Changed, for
the horror stories circulating about the bloodbaths some of the Changed had
wrought in their own households did not encourage compassion. A few who found
themselves Changed had killed themselves. Most of the Changechildren who roamed
the streets as hobgoblins had come from the streets—were beggars,
thieves, and other street people who had no relatives to eliminate them and no
interest in anything other than survival.
The rest of the journey was spent nervously watching for another
pack of attackers. When they finally did arrive at the inn, it was fully dark,
and in the interest of keeping his employees satisfied enough to keep their
mouths shut, he distributed a generous purse among them so that they could
entertain themselves in fine style in the common room while he met with Thayer
and Thayer's guests in the private room above.
His men entered the common room at the side entrance; he entered
the main entrance, stepping out of the screaming wind and snow into a
sheltering foyer, softly lit and blessedly warm and attended by a discreet
footman. Music played faintly somewhere; a full consort of wind and string
instruments. The footman directed him up a staircase to the right to another
foyer, this time attended by one of Thayer's personal servants, who took his
snow-caked outer clothing and directed him inside the door behind him.
He was not at all surprised to see that besides Thayer, virtually
every other important military leader in the area of the capital was there
already, waiting, with an excellent supper (as yet untouched) set up on a
sideboard. All eyes were on him as he entered, and the murmur of talk that had
been going on stopped for a moment, then resumed.
He took his place beside Thayer, was introduced to those he did
not know personally, and Thayer's servants proceeded to serve all of the
guests. He watched them carefully, and noted that they only served him food
from dishes that everyone shared, and only after stirring up the contents
within his sight, so that there could be no "special" little spot
that had been prepared for him with poison. He kept his approving smile to
himself, and pretended not to notice. Dinner conversation was not precisely
light, since a great deal of it had to do with the roving packs of hobgoblins
and suggested means of eradicating them, but it had nothing whatsoever to do
with politics. There was another peculiarity of Thayer's servants; they never
handled knives themselves, deferring to Thayer for carving of meat, and they
were unarmed. As for Thayer's guests, they were conspicuously unarmed.
Everything that could have been done to reassure a professional killer that he
was safe among them had been done.
So. it wasn't to be an assassination attempt after all. That meant
it was a conspiracy.
And the moment that the meal was over, the dishes cleared away,
the wine poured and more left in decanters on the table, and the servants sent
off, the conspiracy was revealed.
They wanted to be rid of Charliss before he did any more damage,
and they were perfectly willing to send him on to Godhood a little sooner.
He listened to them with great patience, making no comments, only
nodding occasionally when they seemed to require it. They were understandably
angry at many of the things that had been going on, and his revelations
concerning Tremane had essentially been the trigger for all their pent-up
frustrations. They were quite prepared to eliminate the Emperor themselves, and
had a good, solid plan for doing so. He told them as much, and commended them
for having a plan that took care of almost every aspect of the situation.
"Almost," he repeated with emphasis. "But I
would be remiss if I did not point out the major flaw in your plan. And I do
not blame you gentlemen for not considering the aspect I have in mind."
"'Which is what, exactly?" asked General Thayer, who was
acting as the primary spokesman.
"Magic." He held up a hand to forestall any objections.
"I know that, given how your own mages are acting with the increasing
severity and frequency of the mage-storms, that mages seem an insignificant
aspect to you. Please believe me; they are not. You have determined that the
spells binding the Imperial Guard to Charliss are broken and have not been
replaced; that is good news, but those are not the only magics you need to
worry about. Charliss himself is a powerful mage, and his power is augmented by
an entire corps of lesser mages whose minds have been his for many years. They
spend themselves to ensure his continued prosperity, and that is what
you are not seeing in dealing with your own mages, who would do no such thing.
Surely you gentlemen recall seeing Charliss' mages before—that group of rather
blank-eyed individuals who trail about after him like so many adoring, mindless
maidens trailing about after a handsome warrior?"
He looked around the table, and saw to his satisfaction that
although there was disappointment in their faces, there was reluctant agreement
there as well, and nods all around.
"At the moment, Charliss is only moderately inconvenienced by
the Storms, as opposed to the vast majority of mages, who are prostrated by
them." He steepled his fingers together thoughtfully, and considered his
next words. "As a mage myself, let me explain to you, if I may, the true
effect the Storms are having on mages—and that is primarily in our choice of
actions. The choice for a mage at the moment is simple: Preserve all of your
own power for shields, or work other magics and have each Storm that passes
send you to your bed for hours, recovering." He saw more nods, as the
Generals recognized the effects he had just described. "Because Charliss
is using the power from his corps of mages, he can shield and work other
magics, and not suffer. That is what makes him dangerous, still. You might well
get past his guards, even past his personal bodyguards; you might get past the
protections put in by his personal mages, but by then he will be alerted and
you will never get an assassin past his own defenses."
There were still a few of the generals who were not convinced;
Melles saw it in their closed expressions.
"There is one more factor to be considered here, and that is
what would happen afterward," he continued. "The old man still
retains the loyalty of too many people—including most of the truly powerful
mages of the Empire—who consider me to be an upstart. As it happens, most of
them favored Tremane, who was a personal favorite of the mages who taught him,
many of whom are now quite influential. I do not know if the truth of what
happened to poor Tremane would turn their opinion against the Emperor, but if
you remove him now, you will not give that truth a chance to work in their
minds."
Now he had all of them; the last of the skeptical looks was gone,
replaced with resignation.
"Please wait," he said, at his most persuasive.
"The Emperor has made no attempt to say or do anything about the truths
that are spreading about his treatment of Tremane. I suspect this is because he
is living in a very narrow world of reasoning at the moment. He wants revenge
on Tremane for 'betraying' the Empire, and he may believe that people assume he
cut Tremane off after that 'betrayal' rather than before. The Hundred Little
Gods know that by now he may even believe that himself!"
A couple of the oldest of the Generals pursed their lips and
looked just a touch regretful; some of the youngest only looked smug. Both
expressions were probably prompted by the same thought—how far the Emperor
has fallen! The old were thinking that Charliss' mental deterioration could
easily be something they would experience if they were unlucky; the young were
thinking only that it was terrible for someone that old, in that state, to
still be in power.
Melles continued, seeing that he was bringing them to the line of
thought he wanted them to follow. "Charliss looks physically worse
with every day that passes. He may die soon on his own; his life is sustained
by magic, and that is eroding no matter how desperately he shores it up. Let
things take their natural course." He allowed himself a small, modest
smile. "After all, I am the one who is really holding the reins
now; Charliss is too busy concentrating on survival. Waiting will harm nothing
in the long run. With time, I may be able to persuade those same mages that
Charliss is using them with no regard for the cost to them, and no regard for
the real enemy we face—the Storms."
Thayer looked around the table, and seemed to take some kind of
unspoken consensus from his colleagues. "Very well," he said.
"We will hold our hands. We agree that the real danger to the Empire is
the mage-storms and the continuing refusal of the Emperor to adequately deal
with them. You must see what you can do to convince the mages that Charliss is
no longer capable of dealing with the true priorities of this situation."
He sat back in his chair and nodded. This was exactly how he
wanted everything to fall out, and he relished the moment even as he
relished a single sip of wine. If he were to prosper as Emperor, the Empire
itself must survive and prosper; in order for that to happen, he must
redirect the energies and attention of the Empire on the Storms and their
effects. Just now, the energies and attentions of the Empire were seriously
divided between one selfish old man who had outlived his usefulness, and the
struggles to survive through worsening conditions. Either Charliss must go, or
the Empire, for only one would survive through the Storms.
"I will deal with the mages, and believe me, we must have
them," he said. "Remember, Tremane is our key. Even as the Army
realized that Charliss had betrayed and abandoned one of their own, I believe
that with time, I can persuade the mages of the same."
"Good." Thayer held out his hand. "Strange times
make for strange allies, but sometimes those are the best. The Army is with
you."
"And I," Melles pledged, with no sense of irony,
"am with you as well. It is a pity that poor Tremane did not have as many
firm allies."
Elspeth had just finished describing the latest results from the
group in the Tower, as relayed from Rolan to Gwena, when Tremane's face
suddenly went white. "Gods," Tremane said through gritted teeth.
"Here comes another one."
He meant another mage-storm; he felt them first, as they traveled
over the face of Hardorn. They made him tremble all over, churned his stomach,
and muddled his head. But that gave Elspeth, Darkwind, and Tashiketh time to
brace themselves before the onset of the Storm hit them as well. At the moment,
the effects were still not too bad, although every mage endured some
unpleasant physical symptoms in direct proportion to how powerful he or she
was. But the circles of changed soil had already begun to appear again, and it
could not be too much longer before the weather shifted back to the terrible
blizzards that had ravaged the countryside, and before more "boggles"
appeared as living creatures were changed by wild magic. They were just glad
they had the formula to predict where those circles would appear.
Elspeth grasped the arms of her chair and clenched her own jaw; it
didn't help, it never did, but at least it gave her something to do while the
Storm rolled over her. Meanwhile, Father Janas watched them all with worried,
wondering eyes, for he was no mage, and felt nothing when the Storms came.
This was a short, intense Storm. When it was over, she let out the
breath she had been holding, let go of the arms of the chair, and put her head
down on her folded arms on the table.
"Oh, I do not like that," Tashiketh sighed.
"I do not know how you bear it."
"You bear what you must," Darkwind replied
philosophically. "And there are worse things to contemplate than having
one's lunch jump about in one's stomach."
"And that brings us back to the topic we were
discussing," Tremane said, his clenched hands slowly loosening as color
returned to his face. "I do not wish to cast aspersions upon the ability
of your friends, Lady Elspeth, but I feel we must assume that the party
in the Tower will not find a solution to the Final Storm. My concern is and
must be for this land and these people; how am I to protect them? Is there any
way that I can take in the damage myself, instead of having it come upon the
land? Can I use earth-magic and the earth-binding to instruct the land to heal
itself and to prevent the creatures here from being twisted out of all
recognition? Have you any ideas at all?"
Father Janas shook his head. "You could take the ills of the
land upon yourself, my son, but not for long before it killed you. You cannot
bear what the land could and live."
"We don't have any ideas yet, but we have several kinds of
magic that we can incorporate," Elspeth mused aloud. "Tremane, I
don't think the damage to the land is going to be that terrible, but what I am
afraid of is that the nodes are going to—go to a critical point where they
cannot be controlled. That they are going to become rogue. I'm very much afraid
that the Final Storm is going to turn them into something like the rogue
Heartstone that Darkwind and I dealt with."
"That is my concern also," Tashiketh agreed. "I
fear that is precisely what may occur, and such a thing would be very like
having a continual Storm in one place. As power fed into it, it would continue
to grow. This would be a very bad thing."
"Shelters, shields," Darkwind muttered, frowning and
glaring at nothing. "The trouble with such things is that they are going
to fail; I don't know how we could possibly make them strong enough to survive
what is coming."
Elspeth got up and paced restlessly beside the windows. The
weather in Hardorn had deteriorated again, but it was not yet as foul as it had
been before the last protection went into place. They were currently between
snowstorms, and the sun shone down with empty benevolence on the dazzling fresh
snow. Elspeth was not looking forward to the resumption of blizzards, but at
least the increase in the number of snowstorms was keeping the number of
curiosity seekers down. Virtually everyone who could come in himself to
pledge to Tremane had, and a few days ago, their old friend Father Janas
appeared with another casket of earth, collected from all of those who wished
to pledge themselves and their land to their new King and could not come in
person. Now Tremane "felt" virtually every part of his realm, which
was both an advantage and a disadvantage. He knew where every trouble spot was,
and when a Storm began its march across the face of Hardorn, Elspeth was
personally quite glad that it was Tremane who experienced the sickness of his
land, and not her.
But now the system of signal-towers was fully functional again,
and at least warning could be sent out when something did go wrong out in the hinterlands.
The precise locations of where the circles of altered land would fall were sent
out well in advance of the Storms by means of the towers. If things were not
precisely under control, at least they were in a better state than they had
been. There was one authority in Hardorn again, and resources were not
being wasted on warfare. A few skirmishes with Tashiketh's gryphons had put an
end to further fighting.
There was still the pressing problem of how to protect the nodes
and the Tayledras Heartstones. She was all too conscious of the Heartstone
right under the Palace at Haven; if that went rogue, it could very well
destroy the Palace, all the Collegia, and perhaps a good section of Haven as
well. The loss of life would be horrendous. The Palace complex had been
partially evacuated, but with mixed results and quite a bit of ongoing
confusion. She had seen enough magical destruction in the capital of Hardorn;
she had no trouble envisioning the same level of destruction visited on her own
home.
She started to shake, just thinking about it, and turned her gaze
to look out the window for a moment so that no one in the room would see her
face and the expression she wore. As so often happened these days, her timing
was just right. She was the first to see and recognize the latest arrival to
Tremane's court.
The procession was just entering the courtyard as she glanced down
at the gates, and the glitter of the sun on shining metal and blinding gold and
white trappings caught her eye first. Then she saw the standard, and who rode
beneath it, and she gasped, catching the attention of everyone else.
"Oh, gods—" she said, feeling as if she had just been
struck a numbing blow to the head and had not yet felt the pain. She wondered
wildly for a moment if she was hallucinating; there was no way that she should
be seeing what she saw out the window. "Oh, ye gods, this cannot be
happening! This is too strange even for me."
"Elspeth?" Darkwind said, catching the timbre of her
voice without knowing what caused it. "Ashke, what's wrong?"
The chair legs grated on the wooden floor as he hastily shoved his seat back.
He got up and hurried to her side; unable to speak, she simply pointed out the
window.
His eyes widened, and he choked, completely unable to get even a
word of exclamation out.
"King Tremane," Elspeth managed to say as Darkwind was
struck dumb, "You have a very important visitor, and I think you had
better get down to the courtyard now."
"Why?" he asked, a little resentfully, for he had gotten
rather tired of meeting so many delegations in the cold over the past several
weeks.
"You should just—do what she says," Darkwind managed to
croak.
Tremane looked skeptical. His tone took on an edge of sarcasm.
"Who's here? The Emperor?"
"No," Elspeth replied. "Solaris, High Priest of
Vkandis and Son of the Sun and her entourage." She glanced down again.
"And the Firecat Hansa," she added.
Behind her, there was a muffled curse, and the sound of a chair
clattering against the floor as it fell over, and by the time she had turned to
see what Tremane was doing he was already gone.
"We'd better go down there, too," Darkwind finally
managed to get out. "We should be there to welcome her." She nodded,
and gestured to the fascinated gryphon to accompany them.
By the time they reached the courtyard, however, Tremane had
already given Solaris as respectful a welcome as anyone could have wished, even
the Son of the Sun and the Mouth of Vkandis, given that she had arrived with no
warning. And she in her turn had remained polite, which was all that Elspeth
could have hoped for, given the circumstances.
"I have been traveling for many days at the express orders of
Sunlord Vkandis," Solaris was saying, as Elspeth got within earshot.
"It was, I believe, at precisely the moment when you were bound to the
land of Hardorn that—"
Then she caught sight of Tashiketh—who had reared up on his hind
legs and was holding his foreclaws extended in a peculiar manner that was
obviously a ritual salute. And Solaris stared at the gryphon with a look of
shock and complete disbelief on her face, her hands automatically moving to
form a similar salute.
That's odd; she's seen gryphons before. So why is she looking at
Tashiketh as if he were some new kind of creature?
As she stared at him in complete disbelief, Tashiketh intoned
something in that odd gabble that Elspeth thought sounded like Karsite.
Evidently, so did Solaris, who blinked and stammered something back. It was the
very first time that Elspeth had ever seen the Son of the Sun taken aback by
anything.
:Evidently Vkandis has a streak of the practical joker in Him
after all,: Darkwind
commented with a touch of amusement. :Otherwise, He would have warned her.:
:Perhaps this is meant to be an object lesson. That just because
she is the Mouth of Vkandis, she doesn't necessarily know everything about the
Sunlord,: Elspeth
answered.
Tashiketh replied, and Solaris responded. Evidently they were
going through a set series of greetings and responses. Finally the little
ritual came to a close; Tashiketh dropped back down to all fours again, and
made a very courtly bow.
She looked from Tremane to Tashiketh and back again. "How
long, sir, have you had this gentleman at your Court?" she asked very
carefully.
"Since a few days after I was bound to the earth,"
Tremane replied. "Tashiketh informed us that he and his entourage were
sent because of that particular event."
"As was I," Solaris murmured, still staring at
Tashiketh. "And now I know why I was sent here, rather than being
told to send representatives as I did to Valdemar."
:I have the feeling that it wasn't just to consult with Tremane,: Darkwind said wryly. :Now she knows
that her God has been sharing his attentions. This could be rather amusing.:
The Firecat Hansa, who was sitting very patiently on the front of
Solaris' saddle, reached out and patted her on the shoulder with his paw. :We
are about to have a blizzard descend, Sunborn,: he said politely. :If
you would all be so kind, good people, it would be best if we could move
inside.:
As with his compatriot Altra, Hansa could apparently make himself
"heard" in Mindspeech even to those who did not share that Gift.
Elspeth saw startled looks all over the courtyard, as even Tremane's guards
experienced someone talking inside their minds for the first time in their
lives.
"I beg your pardon, Sir Hansa, of course we can,"
Tremane said instantly, and with commendable aplomb. "Allow me to conduct
you to appropriate quarters myself." At that moment, to confirm Hansa's
prediction, the warning horns blew from the walls, signaling that a physical
storm was moving in quickly from the west.
And Tremane did escort them, probably thanking his Hundred Little
Gods that he had set up one of the towers as guest quarters for important folk
and their followers. The last set of guests had just vacated the premises; the
tower was clean and waiting for the next set. It was a matter of moments to
take them there, turning over the entire tower to Solaris and her relatively
small entourage. Although Darkwind excused himself, Elspeth went along as the
official representative of Selenay, and because she was anxious to talk to
Solaris if she could. Solaris' escort consisted of a few very
professional and tough-looking guards, and several Sun-priests. Just as the
last of their baggage came up from below, the blizzard Hansa had warned was
coming did indeed descend, and Tremane took his leave of them to see that the
usual precautions were in place.
The moment he left, Solaris dropped some of her detached and
"official" manner. Looking at Elspeth and Tashiketh, she raised an
eyebrow in an inquiring manner. "Would you care to remain while my people
get us settled in? I should be glad of the company; it has been a stressful
trip."
"I think we would both be pleased to remain, Holiness,"
Elspeth said carefully, and Solaris laughed, tossing her cloak aside and
removing the heavy gold collar she was wearing. A robed attendant took both and
carried them away.
"Just 'Solaris,' little sister," the High Priest
replied. "There are few enough who can call me by that name, and you are
certainly one who has that right." She removed a few more pieces of
regalia and set them aside, then sank down in the chair nearest the fire while
the wind shook the walls. Hansa immediately leaped into her lap and settled
there. "Do take a seat, Elspeth," Solaris continued. "Sunborn
Tashiketh, I am not certain what to offer you."
"The floor will do, Most Holy," the gryphon said with
careful courtesy, and settled himself there as Elspeth chose another chair.
"I hope you will forgive me, but how is it that you did not know that
Vykaendys was—"
"Was watching over both our lands? I suspect it is partly
because that knowledge was lost while corrupt Priests held the Sun Throne. As
to why Vkandis did not choose to reveal this fact to me until now—" She
spread her hands wide. "The God moves in His own way, and in His own time.
Presumably He had a reason for sending me here to be hit over the head with
this revelation."
"I suspect that He sent you here for more than that reason,
Most Holy," Tashiketh replied respectfully.
"If you are here, who is holding the Sun Throne?"
Elspeth blurted, unable to restrain her curiosity. "I thought you couldn't
leave for any length of time, that there were still those you did not entirely
trust."
"Oh, that is a tale in itself, and some day I will
tell you all of it, but in short, I am here because Vkandis Himself sits on the
Sun Throne at this very moment," Solaris said. As Elspeth started with
surprise, Solaris nodded. "I mean that quite literally. It is the second
great Miracle of my reign; the great statue of Vkandis came to life again
during a Holy Service over which I was presiding, then ordered us all to follow
and walked out of the Temple, shrinking as He moved, until He reached the
throne room, where He took the throne."
Solaris spoke so matter-of-factly that she might have been
discussing the terrible blizzard outside, rather than something that was, quite
clearly, a miracle in every sense of the word. Elspeth was as fascinated by her
attitude as by what had happened. She saw no reason to doubt anything that
Solaris told her, for Solaris would not have left Karse without a compelling
reason and an unshakable guarantee that her Throne would be waiting for her
when she returned.
"When He had seated Himself, He let it be known that I was
traveling into Hardorn on a life-or-death mission at His behest, and that in
token of the fact that I was His true-born Son, He would be holding the Sun
Throne until I returned," she continued. "He swore His protection to
Karse against the Storms. At that point, the statue became a statue again
except, of course, it was literally rooted to the Sun Throne. It wasn't an
illusion either; the great statue is quite gone from the pedestal, and the
smaller version in place on the Throne. And in addition, there is a peculiar
barrier around Karse itself. People can come and go through it, but it is quite
visible, and it seems to resemble the barrier around Iftel that Karal described
to me." She smiled a bit wryly. "Now it seems clear why it
resembles that barrier. The Sunlord has had practice."
Solaris might seem to be matter-of-fact, but as Elspeth
listened and watched, she realized that Solaris was profoundly moved and awed.
Elspeth found this a great deal easier to understand; how could anyone not
feel awe at such an occurrence?
"I doubt that anyone will have the temerity to claim your
place, given that particular demonstration," Tashiketh said dryly.
"'And so Vykaendys directed you here?"
"Precisely, and it was not the easiest journey I have ever
undertaken, though not the worst either. Our robes earned us respect and safe
passage, though no one really recognized us as Sun-priests." One corner of
her mouth twitched. "I will admit it came as something of a shock to learn
that Tremane had been Bound to Hardorn. That puts him on an equal basis with
me, in some ways, and it was not what I would have expected to see happen.
Still, it is probably good for Hardorn." She laughed softly. "I also
have a confession that I might as well make to you both. I am taking a certain
amount of sadistic pleasure in this. He is going to suffer physical discomfort,
even terrible pain from time to time, he agreed to this, he even volunteered
for it, and I think that between this and his geas of Truth-speaking, he
just might be able to atone for his actions in the past."
"He spoke to me in private of what he had done, sending the
assassin," Tashiketh admitted. "I believe he regrets his actions more
with every passing day."
"Well, he should," Solaris said firmly. "I cannot even
begin to describe the anguish he caused, not only to myself and Karal, but to
those who knew and cared for all of his victims. But although I am not prepared
to forgive him yet, I am willing and ready to work with him. I am an
Adept of a peculiar bent, as I suspect you have guessed. I think we may be able
yet to find ways to protect ourselves through this crisis."
"I hope so," Elspeth said fervently. "I hope
so."
"With Vykaendys' help," Tashiketh replied with absolute
certainty, "we shall."
Ten
Firecats had a real cat's ability to make a person feel as if she
was a particularly stupid student and the cat was a teacher fast losing
patience. :Vkandis' protection is temporary,: Hansa said firmly, looking
for all the world precisely like the Cat statue at the feet of Henricht, the
first Son of the Sun. Poor Henricht, even as a statue, looked singularly
unprepossessing; the Cat, however, looked as if he should have been
sitting on the Sun Throne. :It cannot last through the Final Storm. The
nodes in Karse are as vulnerable as any. The protection is only meant to
prevent people and beasts from Changing, and to prevent the greater part of the
priesthood from falling ill twice and thrice a day.: He bent his head then,
and washed a paw with great daintiness. :You and your priests will have to
do your share like everyone else. If nodes go rogue, you will be dealing with
the unfortunate results.:
Solaris sighed, but not
with disappointment. Elspeth thought that her sigh sounded more like someone
who had just heard unpleasant news she had nevertheless expected.
"Shields," Darkwind muttered, pacing, as Vree followed
his movements with interest from his perch in the corner. "That has to be
the key. But how do we create a shield that will hold through even the Storms
we have now?"
Elspeth pummeled her mind for something she remembered out of—a
Chronicle? No, it was a story that Kerowyn had told about one of the mages her
grandmother had trained. "Why only one shield?" she asked.
"Why not layered shields, shields within shields? Kerowyn told me about
something like that; the mage layered lots of weaker shields instead of one
strong one, and kept replacing them from the inside as they were taken down
from the outside. If you could do that, keep replacing the innermost shield
every time the outermost was destroyed—"
"Interesting, and yes, it has been done before, and quite
successfully," Darkwind said, knitting his brows in thought.
"Multiple shields are more effective than one strong shield. But we
can't put a mage beside every node, and if we don't, how could we keep
replacing shields as they came down? You can't shield from the outside
once the initial shield is up, and how would we do it from the inside? That is
the problem of course, and a spell—or series of spells—would have to be crafted
for that."
"If we could. How would we continue to supply the energy to
create the shields in the first place?" Tremane objected. Solaris gave him
a withering look. "You would be sealing the perfect energy source within
the shield," she replied, with an unspoken "fool" hanging off
the end of the sentence. "that would be the least of our problems. And if
the energy were to be exhausted and all the shields fail, well, an exhausted
node would be no more dangerous than no node. If there's no power to act upon,
there will be nothing to go rogue."
"Apologies, but things work somewhat differently where I am
from, and we did not handle magic wells that way," Tremane offered.
Tremane did not take offense at her manner, perhaps because she was at least
participating in these experimental sessions and demonstrating that she was not
going to take out her animosity toward him on Hardorn and its people in
general. He grimaced as if he was getting a headache. "Then if we could
simply find a way to keep a node spawning its own shields until the energy ran
out—"
"This is all very nice in theory," Elspeth pointed out
impatiently. "But even if we could do that, we haven't the time or the
resources to run about the countryside slapping a shieldspell over every
node!"
"Well, actually, we wouldn't have to do that, at least not
here—" began Tremane.
"There are Priests enough in Karse to shield every node
there," said Solaris at the same time.
"And that works for Hardorn and Karse." Elspeth frowned.
"But what about Valdemar? And the Pelagirs? And elsewhere?"
"Hmm," Tashiketh rumbled, moving his gaze from Solaris
to Tremane and back again. "There is an answer to that question already in
our hands."
Hansa and Father Janas switched their gazes between the two rulers
also, as Solaris and Tremane exchanged a very peculiar look.
There was something rather odd going on there, and Elspeth hadn't
a clue to what it was all about, but the tension between those two suddenly
increased a hundredfold.
"I do not like you," Solaris burst out, as she
abruptly got to her feet and stood, glaring at Tremane. "I do not like you
at all! Ever since you and your heathen army came here, you have stood for
everything I find detestable—expediency above honor, craft above wisdom, guile
above truth, self-reliance above faith! I do not like you!"
And with that, she gathered her robes about her and swirled out,
Hansa padding in her wake. The heavy silence that followed her outburst made
even their breathing seem loud.
"What in hell was that all about?" Elspeth asked,
bewildered. She had never seen Solaris lose control like that before.
Tremane looked at the door that Solaris had closed—not
slammed—behind herself. "I'm not sure," he replied, "but it
might have to do with a solution that involves a personal compromise on the
part of the Son of the Sun." He appeared to make up his mind about
something and stood up. "If you four can work on the problem of a
self-renewing shield-spell that can take power from a node-source without the
intervention of an Adept, I will go and speak with Solaris, and see if my guess
mirrors actuality rather than just an outburst of frustration."
He nodded at all of them, and left as well.
Darkwind snorted. "A self-renewing shield-spell that takes
power from a node without an Adept. At least he was only asking the
impossible!"
But Elspeth wasn't so certain. "Don't Tayledras Heartstones
do self-renewing spells, like the Veil? And they don't need an Adept around to
make them work."
Darkwind started to object, then got a thoughtful look on his
face. Tashiketh rested his beak on his foreclaws, looking expectant. "They
do," Darkwind replied slowly. "And I was about to say that nodes
aren't Heartstones, but Heartstones are a kind of node. Let me think
about this one for a moment."
Father Janas simply shrugged. "I haven't the least idea of
what you're all talking about," he said cheerfully. "Tremane asked me
to sit through this because I know how the earth-binding and earth-magic works.
Other than that, my friends, I'm fairly useless. But it does seem to me that
for your controlling factor, you could use earth-energy, the very slow and
subtle energies that underlie everything, the ones even hedge-wizards and
earth-witches use. Those are fundamentally unaffected by the Storms."
Tashiketh raised his head and nodded eagerly; Darkwind looked at
Father Janas as if he had unwittingly uttered something profound.
Elspeth had come late to magic and thus undergone a forced-growth
process like a hothouse plant. She had never actually worked with such
primitive energies as Janas described. But the theory seemed reasonable to her,
and both Tashiketh and Father Janas obviously were familiar in detail with how
those magics operated. "Well, why don't we just pursue that particular
hare until we either catch it or it goes to cover?" she asked decisively.
"It is these energies with which Vykaendys created the
Shield-Wall," Tashiketh said thoughtfully. "This is why there is less
magical energy to spare within Iftel itself than there is in other lands. It is
constantly going to renew the Shield-Wall. If this works, there will be little
energy to spare in any of the lands when the Final Storm has passed."
"And the alternative?" Elspeth replied. "I don't
think any of us want to contemplate that. Most of us have been doing
without a great deal of magic ever since the Storms started, and I doubt that
it is going to be too much of a hardship."
"Except for the Vales," Darkwind sighed. "But as
you said, the alternative is a great deal less pleasant." He regarded the
three of them with an expression so mournful that it almost made Elspeth want
to laugh. "I will need your help in asking me very stupid questions, for
we will somehow have to unravel the processes by which Tayledras make
Heartstones and link them into spells like the Veil. I am so used to being able
to do such things that I cannot tell you how I do them. This," he
concluded with resignation, "is going to be a very great deal of difficult
work, all of it mental."
He was right; it was. They were still only in the earliest stages
when Solaris and Tremane returned, and Darkwind remarked via Mindspeech to
Elspeth that since there were neither knife wounds nor signs of violence on
either of them, the talk must have gone well. Neither of them said anything,
and both of them acted as if they did not particularly wish to discuss what had
occurred.
The group was not able to get beyond the most basic of
understandings that day, nor for several more days, although they all worked
feverishly to put together their solution. Only Tremane did not spend every
waking hour of the day deep in research and testing; Solaris remarked
cryptically that he didn't need to, since his presence was only necessary when
they had a solution ready to try. Whatever had passed between them had cleared
the air considerably, for Solaris had stopped making her acidic comments and
was even distantly friendly to him at times.
Perhaps, not so ironically, it was the discipline and methodology
they had learned from Master Levy and the other Master Artificers that enabled
them to dissect magic logically, apply the laws they had learned, and find the
fundamentals that allowed the magic to work in the first place. Finally, they
had all the pieces of a solution; thanks to Darkwind, they all knew how to make
a node behave like a very weak Heartstone and how to tie one into a
self-sustaining spell. Unlike a Tayledras Heartstone, nodes could only support
one such spell, but one was all they would need. They knew how to use
earth-energy to power the second spell that would control the first, triggering
the spawning of a new shield when the outermost collapsed. Now came the
question to which they had no answer, unless Solaris and Tremane already knew
it—how to reach every node at the same time.
Then, at last, Tremane rejoined the group.
"Earth-binding," he said succinctly. "Every
Tayledras Vale will be able to control the nodes in the territory of that Vale;
Solaris will be able to reach the nodes in Karse, the King in Rethwellan the
nodes in his land, and so forth. Those leaders will have to undergo the ritual,
but the gods know it's simple enough, and once they do, they can immediately
protect their nodes."
Elspeth looked askance at him, but Father Janas nodded. "I
thought so," he said with satisfaction. "This is one of those few
times when the King can affect the land, rather than vice versa."
"I am not looking forward to this," Tremane added
bitterly. "When we take this to the next level and involve the entire
country, it is going to be extremely unpleasant. But it isn't going to kill me,
and I would rather spend a week recovering from the aftereffects of this than
have my people face a single node gone rogue. So, let us test our theory on the
nearest node to Shonar, and if it works, we will then make all of Hardorn into
our second test."
Something about his tone made Elspeth think that the effects of
the full-country test were going to be something worse than merely
"extremely unpleasant;" she had the feeling that this was going to
require every bit of courage Tremane possessed. But there was nothing she could
do about it, and she knew very well that her mother would have willingly
sacrificed herself in the same cause, as would Solaris, or any other good
ruler.
The test on the single node was far less difficult than Elspeth
had envisioned; first the controlling-spell was set in place, then the node
itself was altered to allow for the linkage of a shield-spell directly to it.
This was the part that only an Adept could do, so it was up to Darkwind as the
most practiced of all of them in this particular kind of magic, while Solaris
"watched" with single-minded intensity.
Then, when everything was in readiness, Darkwind triggered the
spell, just before the next Storm came through.
If Elspeth had not been "watching" at the time, she
would never have believed that it was possible, for between one moment and the
next, the node disappeared, and in its place was a shielded spot into which
ley-lines fed but nothing came out. Then the Storm swept in, and they all
waited out the effects.
When they had recovered and were able to "look" again,
the node was exactly as it had been before the Storm, shielded and safe.
Tremane looked very much like a man who has received both
incredibly good news and incredibly bad news at the same time. "Well, he
said, "we know it works."
"How soon do you want to try protecting all of Hardorn?"
Father Janas asked him gently.
"Now," he said decisively. "We have until late
tonight before the next Storm comes in, and I don't want to be able to sit and
brood on this."
Solaris sat straight up and looked him in the eyes. "Tremane
Gyfarr Pendleson of Lynnai, don't you dare sit there and pretend to be a
martyr! What you are about to endure, I will also have to, and Prince
Daren of Valdemar, and Faramentha of Rethwellan, and whoever it is in
Iftel—"
"Vykaendys-First Bryron Hess," Tashiketh said helpfully.
"The Son of the Sun in Iftel, and a half-dozen Hawkbrothers
and at least one Shin'a'in," Solaris concluded.
:Not to mention as many other leaders we can reach as we think
will have lands in jeopardy,: Hansa added helpfully. :There will be a great many leaders
with dreadful headaches before this is all over.:
"Exactly! You will not be alone in this, and although you may
feel fear because of the justifiable guilt you bear for your other actions in
the past, I can assure you that the land will not let you die!" She
rose to her feet, full of anger and some other emotion that Elspeth could not
put a name to. "If you are afraid, then be a man and admit it, and let us
help you through it! You should know that if you are too afraid, the
land will resist what we are about to do. We may not be able to overcome that
resistance, for the land takes its cues from you."
:That's Solaris talking, but it's also something else,: Darkwind said, in Mindspeech tightly
focused and tense. :I wonder if Tremane realizes it?:
:Vkandis?:
Elspeth asked, but even as she said it, she knew that it was the wrong answer.
:Since when does a male use all of someone's names to scold him?: Darkwind asked, a little of the tension
ebbing. :No, Solaris is acting as a Mouth for a different power, and I
suspect that if you asked Father Janas, he'd be very familiar with it. Probably
her annoyance with Tremane and her familiarity with being a Mouth opened her up
to acting as an inadvertent channel for it.:
Elspeth sent silent agreement, after casting a quick glance at the
priest, who was watching the little scene with a faint smile on his lips.
Darkwind was right. Only a woman—a mother—would scold someone using every one
of his names. And wasn't the earth often referred to as Mother? Looked at in
that light, there were some subtle physical changes in Solaris that gave more
clues. For one thing, she looked more—feminine—than Elspeth had ever seen her.
The scolding did what it was supposed to do, which was annoy him
enough to make him willing to admit to a weakness; and in a way Elspeth could
feel very sorry for poor Tremane, who hadn't asked for any of this, and had
borne up very well under it all. He stiffened his back, looked up into Solaris'
eyes, and said, with quiet dignity, "You are right, Solaris. I am
terrified. I am accustomed to using power, not having it use me, and the
prospect of giving up control over myself to anything gives me the
horrors. Doing it with the lives of thousands of innocents in the balance is
terrible beyond my ability to articulate."
Whatever had Solaris let her go, and the anger faded as she sat
down. "It isn't so bad, being used by this kind of power," she said
softly. "You will be exhausted when it is over; perhaps a little ill,
though I don't think it will be very bad. I think the power will use you
gently, if you don't resist it. Sometimes giving up control in a greater cause
is the noblest thing one can do in one's life." She hesitated a moment
longer, then it looked as if some wall inside her gave way. Her expression
changed completely. "Perhaps you are rightfully afraid that some of us,
who have grievances with you, may not protect you with a whole heart. You would
have been correct in fearing that not very long ago; I might not have moved to
help you if I saw that you were in danger." She took a deep breath and
plunged on. "That is no longer true; I forgive you, Tremane of Hardorn,
and if it is any more comfort to you, young Karal, who has greater cause to
hate you than I, forgave you before I did. The man who loosed the assassin that
murdered our friend was an Imperial Commander, subject to the orders and whims
of an Emperor with no morals and no scruples, and you are no longer that man."
Now she looked shamefaced for a moment. "The Sunlord himself told me that
I must forgive you if we were to succeed, but until this moment, I could
not."
Tremane looked at her with astonishment, and offered her his hand;
she took it in a firm handclasp that said far more than words could have.
"Thank you for that; I know what it cost you," was all he said.
Then he released her hand and looked at the others. "Well?
Shall we begin?"
As far as Elspeth was concerned, there was very little for her to
see or do, other than to feed mage-power to Darkwind, who in his turn did
things with it that she could neither see nor follow, although she knew in
theory what he was doing. She was what they all called the "anchor"
and she brought in the power, directed, and refined it. Tremane searched for
the node, and "held" them all there when he found one. Darkwind built
the node into a matrix that would permit a single spell to be linked into it.
Father Janas constructed the controlling spell that triggered the main spell, using
the loss of a shield as the guide for activation. Solaris built the main spell,
which created the nine nested shields using power from the node, and Darkwind
linked it in. Then, once that node "disappeared" because it was now
shielded, Tremane moved their viewpoint on to the next node. In the end, by the
time they were done, Tremane was so completely exhausted that he could not even
move, but as Solaris had promised, he was neither ill nor in pain. They had
worked through him to reach every node in Hardorn and replicate the same
shields and spells they had tried on the first node. This was the only way they
could have reached all of the nodes without going to them physically; in a
sense, since Tremane was bound to all of Hardorn in a very physical fashion
because of the blood and soil he had ingested, they actually were working there
physically.
They completed their work just as the next Storm came through, and
had the satisfaction of seeing their work hold. And Tremane got a small reward
out of it after all; since the nodes were no longer being battered by the
energies of the Storm, he was suffering only about half of the physical
effects he had been enduring with every Storm-wave. This made him feel half
again better.
"That in and of itself made this all worth while," he
said weakly, but with a smile, and then they sent him off to bed.
"He feels as though he will sleep for a week, but it won't be
more than a day or so," Father Janas said with weary satisfaction.
"He'll be back on his feet and hard at work shortly. Now do you need
anything to alert the peoples in your homes?"
"I will send two of my fastest flyers—mages both—back with
the exact instructions in the morning," Tashiketh rumbled, his eyes alight
with pleasure at their success. "And if you will permit me, Most Holy,
more will convey you and Hansa back to your own land to save you as much time
as possible; as many of your escort as care to remain here can, I suppose, and
the rest can follow you at their own pace."
Solaris gave him a puzzled look. "I would appreciate it no
end, but how do you intend to do this?" she asked. "I assume you mean
me to fly with them, but I can't imagine how that could work properly."
"A basket, suspended between them. It is perfectly
safe," Tashiketh assured her. "There are some minor spells on the
basket to make it and the contents light; you can renew these easily enough,
and the only thing you will need to take care with is that you go to ground
during Storms."
"Our gryphons use the same means," Darkwind seconded.
"It's safer than you'd think. You'll be able to cross into Karse within a
few days, even with having to land twice or three times a day as a Storm
passes."
"Then I thank you, for I will have to seal off the Temple as
well as our nodes, and whether or not Tremane will believe that, it will be a
harder task than this." Her words were still a little sardonic, but she
smiled, and Elspeth sensed that Solaris would no longer be able to say in truth
that she hated Tremane of Hardorn.
"And you?" Father Janas asked Elspeth and Darkwind.
Darkwind answered for both of them.
"It is already accomplished," Darkwind said, his voice
heavy with tired content. "Gwena has sent the word to Rolan; Rolan has
sent it on to Skif's Cymry, who will detail it to the Kaled'a'in of k'Leshya
Vale. They will see to it that Tayledras and Shin'a'in alike have the
information, and our nodes and Heartstones will be protected within days.
Messages will go from Valdemar to every White Winds mage in every land, and
from there—wherever the word needs to go."
"Your Companions are useful friends," Father Janas said
with envy. "Perhaps there will be room for them in Hardorn in the
future." He looked shyly at Solaris. "And there should be room for
Temples to the Sunlord as well, I should think. When it all comes down to it,
what is done for the cause of Good is done in the name of every Power of the
Light."
She smiled; the first open, unshadowed smile that Elspeth had seen
on her face since she arrived here. "And on that very optimistic note, I
shall thank you and beg leave to go to bed myself," she said, getting to
her feet. "Hansa and I have a long journey in the morning."
"Room for everyone," Darkwind echoed, as he and Elspeth
walked slowly to their own quarters. "That is not so bad a way to conduct
one's land."
"I know," she replied saucily. "We've been doing it
that way in Valdemar for some time now."
And now, at least, we have some assurance we will continue to be
able to, she
thought. And now we can spare some prayers and energy for Karal and the rest
where they are. May all our gods help them, for we cannot.
Emperor Charliss sat in, not on, the wooden Throne in his private
quarters, and plotted revenge, for revenge was all he had left to hold him to
life. His mind was clear, despite the hellish mix of drugs his apothecary had
concocted on his orders, to dull his pain and sustain his failing body. That
was because the mix included drugs to keep his mind from becoming clouded.
Outside his quarters, a physical blizzard raged, as it had raged for the past
three weeks. The mage-storms, too, passed through Crag Castle several times
every day, leaving most mages shuddering with the aftereffects. He wasn't
suffering from that difficulty, though; or if he was, it was insignificant in
the light of the degeneration of his body.
Although he did not appear to take any notice of what was going on
outside this suite, such was not the case. He knew very well what Melles was up
to; discrediting the Emperor even with the Imperial Army, spreading truths,
half-truths, and lies to make it appear that only Baron Melles had the welfare
of the Empire in his heart. He was also quite well aware that Melles was doing
a fine job of holding the Empire together, even if it was with devious and
dubious means. He knew that Melles was using the Emperor's treatment of Tremane
as a weapon to bring the feuding political factions of the Empire together
under Melles' control. It was a ploy that would not have occurred to Charliss,
but in retrospect, given that Melles was detested by at least a quarter of the
Great Players in the game of Empire, and feared by another quarter, the only
way he could have united them was to find a common enemy they could hate worse
than him.
None of that mattered, for he no longer cared what Melles or any
other living man did. His priorities were different, and much more personal.
The spells that kept his worn-out body going, that reinforced
failing organs, were themselves failing. Each time a Storm came through, he
lost more of them and was unable to replace all the spells that were lost.
He saw no way of being able to save himself; he was dying, and he
knew it. He could no longer move under his own power anymore; his servants
carried him from bed to Throne and back again, all within the confines of his
private quarters. The long, slow decline he had anticipated had accelerated out
of all recognition.
He was not afraid, but he was angry, with the kind of
calculating, all-consuming anger only a man who had lived two centuries could
muster. He had been cheated of the last, precious years of his life, and he
knew precisely where to lay the blame for it.
Valdemar.
He had sent his scholars on a search for that benighted land and
its origin, and had learned things that gave him all the more reason to assume
that it was Valdemar that had unleashed these Storms across the face of
the land. Valdemar had been founded centuries ago by rebellious subjects of the
Empire who had escaped into the wilderness too deeply to follow. But time and
distance were no barriers to revenge, as he himself very well knew. The rulers
of Valdemar had probably been plotting this attack against the Empire ever
since their land was founded. A plot such as this one would have taken
centuries to mature, centuries to gather the power for. These Storms could not
have been generated by anything less than the most powerful of Adepts working
together in concert; such a weapon was fiendishly clever, diabolically
complicated.
In the end it might have been his own actions in reaching for the
land of Hardorn that triggered the long plots of Valdemar and gave them the
opportunity to destroy those who had driven them out of their homes so long
ago. He should have read the return of his envoy from Hardorn, dead, with the
blade belonging to Princess Elspeth between his shoulders, for the serious
warning it really was. You're too close, and we'll finish you; that had
been the real message. Like a nest of bees, he had ventured too near, and now
the insects would swarm him and destroy him.
It didn't really matter what the cause for their actions was, nor
did it matter whether he could have done anything to prevent this. The Storms
had been unleashed, he was dying, it was all the fault of Valdemar, and
he was going to see to it that Valdemar didn't outlive him—at least, not in any
form that the Valdemarans themselves would recognize. Like a wild bear making a
final charge, in his death throes he would destroy those who were destroying
him.
He had everything he needed; all of the magic of the local nodes,
plus all that of his coterie of mages, plus a great deal he had hoarded in
carefully-shielded artifacts. Every Emperor created magical artifacts, or
caused them to be created; he could drain every one of them. Every mage he had
ever worked with, whether he was one of Charliss' private group or not, had a
magical "hook" in him, one that tied him back to Charliss. The moment
Charliss cared to, he could pull every bit of that mage's personal power and
use it as if the mage was one of his personal troupe. The smartest of the mages
had, of course, discovered and removed that hook—but most of them hadn't, and
Charliss could use them up any time he cared to.
But his own time was rapidly running out. The shields protecting
those hoarded objects weren't going to last through too many more Storms, nor
were the resources of his mage-troupe, nor of the mages he had hooks in. If he
was going to use this power, it would have to be soon.
He sat supported by the tall back and heavy arms of his mock
Throne, and contemplated the methods of vengeance. What could he do to finish
them, these upstart Valdemarans? What form should his attack take? He wanted it
to be appropriate, suitable—and he wanted it to do the most damage possible.
What would the best allocation of his resources be? It's
obvious. Release all the power at once, he decided. Release it as the
wave-front of the Storm passes, and use it to augment what the Storm does. Make
it the worst Storm that the face of this old world has ever seen.
The results of that should be highly entertaining, and since he
would release it as the Storm passed from east to west, most of the Empire
would be safe.
But Valdemar—ah, Valdemar would have no idea that the blow was
coming. The results of such an enormous release of power would be
devastating—and amusing, if he lived to watch it, and to collect his
information.
Everything from Hardorn to far beyond Valdemar, and from the
mountains in the North to the South of Karse, would erupt with Nature driven
mad. The weather was already hideous; this would make it unbelievably worse.
Earthquake—there would be earthquakes in regions that had never known so much
as a trembler, as the stresses in the earth built to beyond the breaking point.
Fire—volcanoes would erupt out of nowhere, pouring down rivers of molten rock on
unsuspecting cities. Physical storms would spawn lightning that in turn would
ignite huge forest fires and grass fires. Blizzards would bury some areas in
snow past the rooftops, while floods would wash away the country elsewhere, and
mudslides make a ruin of once-fertile hills. Mountains would fling themselves
skyward, and the earth would gape as huge fissures opened underfoot. Processes
that normally took millennia would occur in a single day or less. There would
be no place that was safe, no place to hide. And when the wrath of Nature was
over, the Changed creatures would descend on the demoralized and disorganized
survivors.
It would be everything he could have wished for. He just wished he
was going to live long enough to properly gloat over it; once the energy was
released, Charliss would have no more magic to sustain him, and he would die.
But so would most of his enemies. Anyone and anything that lived through it all
would probably wish for death before too very long.
Tremane would be caught in all of this, of course. which would
give him revenge on the faithless traitor—revenge that Melles had been too
cowardly or too lazy to take. Lazy, probably; Melles never had been one to
pursue targets that were out of his immediate reach; he could always manufacture
excuses to obviate any need to do so.
Well, he would take matters into his own hands, then.
It was possible that the extra energy released wouldn't just wipe
Valdemar off the world—it might rip through the Empire and its allies as well.
The chaos he was about to unleash could have far-reaching effects.
He didn't care. He was long since over caring about things that
meant no immediate improvement in his well-being.
Why should my Empire outlive me? he asked himself, seething with resentment over the fact that the
Empire as a whole was not willing to make the sacrifices to sustain him. I
gave them my life and my attention—my entire life. Was I appreciated? Beloved
for being stern with them? No. Not at all. They took and took. Now they pay for
their greed. They should have thought ahead and appeased me.
And there was no reason to make life any easier for Melles either.
Let him patch something together from what was left, if, indeed, there was
anything left. Let Melles see if he could actually do something with the crumbs
and shards. It would serve that effete bastard right.
He smiled slowly, thinking of how Melles would react. The Baron
had been progressing so well in imposing order on the chaos left in the
wake of the Storms. He must feel so proud of himself, and be so certain that he
had everything under control now. It would be delicious to see how he crumbled
as everything he had worked so hard for vanished before his eyes.
Revenge; on Valdemar, on Tremane, even on Melles for daring to
succeed—that was all Charliss had left, and he would take it. By the time he
was finished, the known world would be driven down to the level of
cave-dwelling, nomad-hunter survival. If Melles reclaimed anything at all as an
Empire, it would be an Empire no bigger than this city.
I will destroy it all. His hands clutched the arms of his chair, and he felt his dry
lips cracking as his smile widened. When he set off the final cataclysm, when
he ignited nations to form his funeral pyre, he would prove he had been the
greatest and most powerful Emperor to ever live.
No one would ever surpass him as he burned the world to light the
way to his grave, and the darkness that followed would be a fitting shroud.
Karal felt peculiarly useless at this moment in time, although in
a little while he would be just as important as anyone else in the Tower. He
watched the others making last-minute preparations, and wished wistfully that
he could use the teleson to talk to Natoli; it might have relieved his nerves.
He sat quietly where he'd been told to sit, immersed in a peculiar mixture of
terror, resignation, and anticipation. He knew he could do what they were going
to ask of him, but he couldn't think past that. Even when he tried, he was
unable to imagine a single moment after their task was done. Was that
only because he was frightened, or because once it was over it would be
over for them, forever?
He was still acting as the Channel for this "weapon,"
but this time he would not be in the physical center of the group. This time
the main participants—himself, Firesong, An'desha, and Sejanes—would stand in
square formation around it, and it didn't seem to matter what direction each
stood in, so long as they were spaced equally around it.
There was another difference this time. Each of the "mortal"
participants would be shielded by those who were not. Karal had Florian and
Altra; An'desha would be protected by the Avatars, Firesong by Need and
Yfandes, and Sejanes by Vanyel and Stefen. Yfandes had attached herself to
Firesong without comment, perhaps, so that each of the participants would have
two protectors. Aya was to be kept strictly out of the way, in the care of
Silverfox, with the rest of those who were not participating. They would
all be in the workroom below, with the hatch closed. Firesong and Sejanes had
determined that the shields on the workroom were as much purely physical as
magical. There were properties in the stone that insulated from magical energy.
The workroom had been cleared of anything remotely magical in nature, and
stocked with tools, food, and water, so that if the worst happened and the
survivors were sealed inside, they had a chance to dig themselves out.
The cube-maze was the exact opposite of whatever device was used
to unleash the Cataclysm in the first place, and the Adepts had surmised that
it had been created as a fail-safe. As they now understood it, all of Urtho's
magic had been released at once when he dissipated the bonds of all of the
spells on everything that was not inside the specially shielded areas of the Tower.
At the same time, a similar device had done the same to all of Ma'ar's magic in
his stronghold, thus creating the Cataclysm as the two reacted together in
violent and sometimes unexpected ways. They had partly replicated that when
they set up the Counter-Storm.
This time, if their research and planning paid off, they were
going to reverse that; they were going to open up something that would swallow
all of the magic energies converging on this spot and send it all out into the
Void. At least, they hoped that was what would happen. They didn't know what
was going to happen at the other original release point, but Ma'ar had not been
the tinkerer that Urtho had been, and had not been known for having workshops
to experiment in. There were probably not any of the dangerous devices there
that there were here—and in any case, the site was at the bottom of Lake
Evendim. Whatever happened there would take place under furlongs of water, and
far from any populations of human or other beings.
No one knew what would follow when they closed the device as the
last of the energies were swallowed up. They all had some theories. Master Levy
insisted that since no energy could be destroyed, it would all go elsewhere;
his suggestion was that it would become a kind of energy-pool in the Void that
mages could all tap into. He also warned that resistance to energy flow usually
manifested as heat, and there was a very real possibility that despite their
best efforts all here would be charred to death partway through. This earned
the mathematician a few sour looks, which were returned with an apologetic
smile. Both Lo'isha and Firesong were of the opinion that all the energy would
come right back into the "real" world, as if a flood was swallowed up
and came back out of the sky as rain, like the water in a fountain, endlessly
cycling from pond to air and back again.
Whatever happened, the only certainty was that all the old rules
of magic would go flying right out the window. No one even knew if all of this
energy was ever going to be accessible anymore. They might end up with a world
that was fundamentally without magic, though that was fairly unlikely.
As Urtho had said in the placards that he had left, this would
have been a suicidal device to use as a weapon; once it was opened, it would
have proceeded to swallow all the magic in its vicinity—in fact, it was quite
likely to drain all the rest of the weaponry in here dry—and it might even have
swallowed up the mages who opened it. But with the tremendous energies of this
Storm breaking over it, the device would probably have all the energy it could
possibly handle.
The plan was to take down the Tower shields and open it as the
Final Storm hit, feed it all the energy of the Storm until it couldn't take any
more or melted down, and close it again under control if it was still active.
Storms were coming in all the time now, and although the Tower
shields were still holding, they had been forced to evacuate the remains of the
Shin'a'in camp some days ago as a blizzard like none of their hosts had ever
seen before raged across the Plains. Similar weather ravaged Valdemar, Karse,
Hardorn, the Vales—
Probably everywhere else, too, Karal thought, listening carefully. And it's supposed to be
spring out there. If he paid very close attention, he could ignore all the
sounds coming from inside the Tower, and was able to pick out, very faintly,
the howling of the winds outside. You couldn't even stand out there, the wind
would knock you to the ground in a heartbeat. It was a good thing that they had
evacuated the Plains weeks ago; tents wouldn't take this kind of pounding, and
no horse, sheep, or mule would survive exposed to a storm like this.
As for the Vales—Firesong said that the Tayledras were
incorporating the magic that shielded nodes with the one that formed the Veil
that protected each of their Vales. Hopefully, these would hold; if not, they
would have to live as the scouts did from now on, exposed to the elements,
without their little lands of artificial summer.
Karal wished he knew what was going on in Karse; Altra would only
say that Solaris had the situation well under control, and that most of the
people were being well cared for. He hoped that his family was all right,
though since they were living in a fairly prosperous village, they should be.
The ones in real danger would be the remote farmers and shepherds who, isolated
and alone out in the hills and mountains, might not have gotten warning in time
to get to adequate shelter.
He hadn't thought about his family in a long time; the Karal that
had helped his father in the inn's stables was another person entirely, and he
knew that if his mother or father were to pass him in the street, they would
not recognize him. And he would have nothing whatsoever in common with them. He
had always expected to change as he grew up—but not this radically.
He tucked up his legs and rested his chin on his knees, thinking
wistfully about all he had left behind—all he would leave behind if this effort
failed. When it came right down to it, there were only a handful of people who
would actually miss him if he didn't come out of this, and most if not all of
them would recover quickly enough. Natoli probably wouldn't exactly recover,
but she would manage, and go on to make something good out of her life. And
meanwhile, he would have done something important with his life, and
there weren't too many people who could actually say that. The thought, though
bleak, was curiously liberating.
He had made his good-byes to everyone except those who were still
in the Tower itself, down in the workroom; he still had time, and this might be
the moment to take care of that little detail.
He got to his feet and slipped down the stairs, hoping to find
Tarrn and Lyam alone. He was lucky; Lo'isha, Master Levy and Silverfox were
still up above, with the handful of Shin'a'in who were still here, wedging
doors to other weapon rooms open and helping to drag the cube-maze out of its
little room into the main one. No matter what else happened here, they were at
least going to accomplish one thing Urtho could not; they were going to render
every other weapon in the Tower inactive.
Their industry left the workroom mostly untenanted. Only Aya sat
nervously on a perch in the corner, while Lyam and Tarrn puttered about,
storing things away more efficiently.
He stood uncertainly on the stairs, and it was Tarrn who noticed
him first. :Well, young one, it is nearly time,: the kyree said, looking unusually solemn.
"I know," he replied, sitting down on the bottom steps.
"I came to tell you both that I'm very glad I knew you, and I learned a
lot from both of you."
They left what they had been working on to join him. "I am
very pleased to have been your friend, Karal," Lyam said earnestly, taking
Karal's hand in his own dry and leather-skinned claw-hand. "I hope we will
be able to continue that friendship after Tarrn and I have gone back to
k'Leshya."
:And you figure prominently in my Chronicles, young scholar,: Tarrn said gravely, with a slight bow of
his graying head, giving Karal what the young Karsite knew were the two most
important accolades in the kyree's
vocabulary—being called a scholar and being told he had a prominent place in
the history Tarrn was writing. :In days to come, cubs will be astonished
that I actually had the privilege of your friendship.:
An awkward silence might have started then, but at that very
moment, Silverfox came trotting down the stairs, followed by all the rest.
"It's time, Karal," the kestra'chern
said, and gave Karal a completely unself-conscious hug. "They're waiting
for you."
"Good luck, boy," Master Levy called, and cracked an
unexpected smile. "Don't disappoint Natoli; she's expecting you to take
careful notes and tell her all your observations."
Lo'isha only clasped his hand warmly and looked deeply and gravely
into his eyes, and the rest of the Shin'a'in paused long enough to give him the
nod of respect they normally only accorded to Lo'isha.
Each of them in his own way was saying farewell—giving him what
encouragement they could—without doing anything that might unnerve him or shake
his confidence. He knew that, and knew that they knew it as well. And he knew
that he should be afraid, but somehow all his fear had passed away as he
made those farewells, as if each of them was taking a little bit of it with
them, so that he could be freed to do his task.
He walked quickly up the stairs; Firesong and An'desha waited up
there to lower the hatch down into place, once again sealing it behind shields
both magical and physical. The cube-maze was the first thing he saw as his head
came up out of the hatchway; placed in the center of the room, it was curiously
dwarfed by the sheer size of the place.
It looked very pretty, a piece of abstract art, gleaming with blue
and purple reflections in the light from overhead. Sejanes was already in his
place, flanked by the two wisps that were Vanyel and Stefen. Dawnfire and
Tre'valen, looking far more solid, waited on either side of An'desha's
position, and another white wraith stood beside the place where Firesong would
stand. Firesong already had Need in a sheath on his back, and as he took his
stand, he drew the mage-sword and held her.
An'desha moved to his place between the two Avatars, a closed-in
expression on his face, as if already concentrating on what he was going to do.
Sejanes had his eyes closed and his hands cupped in front of him. As Karal took
his own place, flanked by Florian and Altra, Firesong made a little movement
that caught his attention, and as he glanced at the Hawkbrother, Firesong gave
him a wry grin and a one-handed sign for encouragement. Somehow, that made him
feel better than he had all day, and he set his feet with more confidence.
As the terrible energies broke over them, Firesong was to open the
device, and hold it open; next to being the Channel, his was the most dangerous
task. An'desha and Sejanes were to act as funnels and control the energies as
they converged on Karal, keeping a steady flow. Surges would be particularly
dangerous; if a surge of power overwhelmed Karal, he might block the flow. If
that happened, it would feed back on all of them. It was also the job of
Sejanes and An'desha to "homogenize" the incoming energies by mixing
them, for a flood of only one kind might do the same thing. Karal would
actually transmute them before feeding them into the device.
"Are we ready?" Firesong asked, looking around the
circle at all of them. Each of them nodded, and Karal saw for a moment, in each
of their faces, the same resignation that he himself felt.
They all think in their hearts that they are going to die. They're
putting on a brave face for the rest of us.
And he did the same. Despite all their care and planning, this
could go horribly wrong, and if it did, it wouldn't just be one of them
that would take the brunt of the punishment, it would be all of them.
:Here it comes,: warned Altra, and then there was no time to think of anything
else.
Charliss waited, tense with anticipation as he had not been in
decades. This would be perhaps the most powerful spell that had ever been cast
in the history of the world since the Cataclysm; it would certainly be the most
powerful spell ever cast in the history of the Empire. And for all that, it was
such a deceptively simple thing—just a spell that released all of the energy of
every magical object and person within Crag Castle that Charliss had any
control over. This would probably kill all of his mages. If it didn't, it would
certainly leave them disabled for many weeks, and might well destroy their
minds. That had a certain piquant pleasure to it, for this spell would
definitely kill its caster, and Charliss was not at all averse to taking an
escort with him when he died.
The only emotion within his breast now was rage; it left no room
for anything else. It really left no room for any thought but revenge.
He might well be the last Emperor, and that thought had the
sweetness of revenge. More so since no one would ever know that he was the one
who had done this—those few who knew he was spell-casting thought it was of the
usual sort, that he was trying to extend his life a little longer.
They would probably blame Melles for this, since the mages who
would die would all be mages closely allied with Charliss. That was even
sweeter. Melles would have all the blame as the man who had destroyed the
Empire, and Charliss would acquire the virtues that Melles did not have in
contrast. Melles would be the terrible villain, and Charliss the saint that he
destroyed.
What a subtle revenge!
The only thing that would make it better would be to know for
certain that he was taking Tremane down with him. But never mind. One couldn't
have everything—and if Tremane didn't actually die in the catastrophe
that Charliss unleashed, he might well be among those who wished he had.
Charliss gathered the threads of his power in his hands, and
waited for the Storm to break.
* * *
It was a strange little gathering, here in the Great Hall of
Tremane's manor. Tashiketh and the four gryphons that were left with him, part
of Solaris' escort of Sun-priests that had remained behind to help, Elspeth and
Gwena, Darkwind and Vree, Brytha the dyheli,
all of Tremane's mages, the two old weather-wizards from Shonar itself, and
Father Janas, all arranged in concentric circles around Tremane. Anyone with
even the tiniest bit of Mage-Gift was here, and they would all be working on a
single task; to create and hold a shield. If they could hold it over Shonar,
they would—if that proved impossible, they would try to hold it over the
castle, and if that failed, just over themselves.
The scene looked and felt unreal and dreamlike, but Elspeth was
doing her best to control a fear that was as deep and all-pervasive as the fear
in a nightmare. For once, the menace looming over Elspeth was invisible,
implacable, and faceless. There was no villain, no Ancar, no Falconsbane; only
a terrible thing that had been loosed millennia ago and was now coming home,
too ancient, impersonal, and powerful to grasp, yet too real not to terrify.
Nevertheless, the danger was real enough, and it would be worse if
the group in the Tower failed. There had been a blizzard howling across the
face of Hardorn for the past three days, the strangest such storm that Elspeth
had ever seen. Greenish lightning somewhere up above the solid curtains of snow
illuminated the entire sky in flashes, yet revealed nothing but white. There
were reports of whirlwinds, and of spirits riding the wind, strange creatures
blowing before it. None of these reports had been verified, but Elspeth would
not discount any of them.
Every time that Storms came through, the effect was worse—although
every one of the node-shields held with no apparent problems. But this Storm
was going to be worse, much worse, than any of the previous lot. This was the
return of the initial blast that had caused all of the storms, so long ago.
As for what would happen if the group at the Tower failed—no one
could predict that, except that it would be terrible. Nature already raged out
of control; could they deal with years of this?
Never mind. It was out of her hands, and that was what felt the most
unreal of all. She had never been in a position where she was utterly helpless
to do something about her own peril before, never been in a case where she had no
control over what was going to happen. She felt demoralized and impotent, and
she didn't like it one bit.
Darkwind squeezed her hand, and Gwena rubbed her soft nose against
Elspeth's shoulder. Well, at least she wasn't facing this alone; no one else in
this room had any more control over the situation than she did.
"It's time," Tremane said hoarsely. "it's
coming."
And now it was too late to think about anything but joining mind,
heart, and power with the others, disparate as they were, and shield and hold
with grim determination...
"Now," Firesong said between his clenched teeth, as the
Storm broke over them. Around them, the stone of the Tower rumbled and groaned,
like a carriage-spring being twisted beyond its ability to return to normal.
This time was unlike all the previous experiences with the energy of the Storm,
in that it had a distinct sound—a hollow, screaming roar accompanied by a
steady increase in air pressure. Firesong held Need up between himself and the
cube-maze, spoke some apparently private words to the sword, and did something
to the taut fabric of magic that Karal half-saw, half-felt—
Then the cube-maze scattered motes of light along its surfaces,
toward the apex of the topmost cube, and a ring spread outward to the farthest
edges of the device—and all inside that ring vanished, and in its place was
what could only be described as a great Darkness. The Void. The Pit.
Karal sensed it pulling on him and let it; Florian and Altra held
him anchored as he let some inner part of himself meld with that awful darkness
in the center of their circle. Then there was nothing but Light and Dark; the
Pit in the center, and a coruscating, scintillating, rainbow-hued play of light
and power all about it. Karal felt part of himself opening to it, sensed that
he had become the conduit to send that power down into the Pit, which swallowed
it hungrily but did not yet demand more than he could feed it.
All of his attention was on the Pit before him; he sensed
explosions of energy behind and to all sides, and the energies around him
oscillated furiously.
He tried to contain them and shove them into the dark maw, but the
Pit had reached the limit at which it could accept them.
He heard shouting; it sounded like An'desha's voice, but he
couldn't make out what the Shin'a'in was trying to tell him. Off to his right,
a shining shape emerged from the chaos of swirling, flashing light, growing
brighter with every moment.
It was Firesong, with Need glowing white-hot in his hands. He
trembled in agony but refused to give in to the obvious pain of his blistering
flesh.
Melles paused outside the Emperor's doorway—for once unguarded,
thanks to the complicity of the Emperor's personal guard. With the geas
binding them in loyalty to the Emperor now quite gone, they were all of them
able to think for themselves, including Commander Ethen, who had replaced the
now nerve-shattered Commander Peleun. In the past several weeks, they, too, had
seen and heard enough—not quite enough to take things into their own hands, but
enough to make them willing to leave their posts for a carefully staged
"emergency."
There was no sound in the white-marble corridor except for the
ever-present screaming of the wind. Even sheltered inside their glass chimneys,
the candle flames that had taken the place of mage-lights flickered in icy
drafts strong enough to have earned the name of "breeze." But these
gusts were no zephyrs, and the blizzard out there wasn't half as powerful as
the Storm now breaking over them was likely to make it.
The Emperor was going to be utterly engrossed in his spellcasting;
over the past several days, Melles had made a point of going in and out of the
Emperor's chambers and the Throne Room on one pretext or another during a
Storm, and he knew that Charliss was completely oblivious to everything around
him when he was spell-casting.
If the Emperor had put half the effort on holding his crumbling
Empire together that he was spending on maintaining his crumbling body, Melles
would not have felt so impelled to remove him now.
If he had done so, Melles would not have half the allies he now
had either.
He walked boldly into the Emperor's quarters, as he had any number
of times over the past few days, as if in search of an official paper or
something of the sort. He ignored the unconscious mages sprawled over the
furniture in the outer room, taken down either by the Storm itself or the
Emperor's ruthless plundering of their energies.
The Emperor would not be here or in his bedroom; Melles already
knew that Charliss had ordered his servants to carry him into the empty,
cavernous Throne Room and placed him in the Iron Throne itself. He made a tiny
hand-sign to the two bodyguards standing on either side of the door, a pair of
bodyguards from his own retinue, inserted into the Emperor's personnel with the
collusion of the Guard Commander. They acknowledged his presence with a slight
nod and stood aside. He opened the door to the Throne Room carefully, a
fraction at a time, as he sensed the Storm building to an unheard-of fury and a
new and oddly-flavored spell building inside the room in concert with it.
He wasn't certain why the Emperor had taken to casting his
magics while in the embrace of the Iron Throne, wearing the Wolf Crown, but it
made his own task easier. There would be no witnesses and a dozen entrances
through which a murderer could have made his escape, assuming that there were
even any murmurs of foul play. He frankly doubted that would be the case.
People were far more likely to point to all of the loyal bodyguards on duty,
each within eye- and ear-shot of the next pair, and believe the report of
suicide.
Despite the roaring fires and a half-dozen charcoal braziers
around Charliss' feet, the room was icy, but not still. Charliss could already
have been a wizened corpse, hunched over in the cold embrace of the Throne,
eyes closed, white, withered hands clenched on the arms. only the yellow
gem-eyes of the wolves in the Crown watched him, and he fancied that there was
a look of life in those eyes, as they waited to see what he would do. But
wolves protected only cubs and territory and they had no interest in protecting
individuals once those individuals were detrimental to the welfare of the pack.
They would not hinder Melles in what he intended to do.
There was a tightly-woven, furiously rotating spell building up
around the Emperor, a spell somehow akin to the Storm outside. Did Charliss
think to tap the power of the Storm now to bolster his failing magics? If so,
he was mad.
The spell neared its peak. After years of watching Charliss
spell-cast, Melles knew the Emperor's rhythms and patterns. If he was going to
strike, he had better do so now. He slipped a sharp dagger, pommel ornamented
with the Imperial Seal, out of the hem of his heavy, fur-trimmed tunic. He had
purloined this very dagger out of the Emperor's personal quarters two days ago;
it was well known to be one of Charliss' favorite trophy-pieces and virtually
every member of the Court would readily identify it as his and no one else's.
Now. Before Charliss woke from his self-imposed trance, realized
his danger, and turned all that terrible energy on him.
As only a trained assassin could, Melles flipped the dagger in his
hand until he held only the point between his thumb and forefinger, aimed, and
threw.
The dagger flew straight and true, with all the power of Melles'
arm and anger behind it. With a wet thud, it buried itself to the hilt in
Charliss' left eye. The Emperor was killed instantly, left with a slack-jawed
version of his self-absorbed expression.
But the spell he had been about to unleash did not die with him.
For one instant, Melles felt the chill hand of horrified fear
clutch his throat, as it had not in decades, and he waited to be pounded to the
earth as the rogue spell lashed out at him.
The gathered energies, with no direction, and no controls, whirled
in a vortex of light around the Emperor's body for a moment, obscuring him.
Rays of light shot upward, punching holes through the darkness, leaving
scorched spots in the ceiling. Other sparks jumped and careened, arcing back to
the sword points arrayed in ominous fans behind and around the Iron Throne. The
crackling sparks disappeared with a flash and a soft sizzle. Then suddenly, the
vortex stilled, and a moment later, the gathered energy invested itself in the
Iron Throne, leaving it glowing for a moment before returning—apparently—to its
original state.
Melles let out his breath in a hiss, walked tentatively over to
Charliss, and reached for the Wolf Crown. He touched it for just a moment, and
he could have sworn that the pack-leader on the front of the crown grinned at
him.
Then he removed the dagger from the dead man's eye; a thin trickle
of blood followed the removal of the blade, but it took less force to pull it
out of the skull than Melles had feared. The corpse of the former Emperor was
already falling to pieces. He examined the wound; it could be made to look less
serious. He made a few more facial wounds with quick stabs, as if Charliss had
cut himself about the face in a mad frenzy. Then he placed the dagger in
Charliss's hands, clenched both the flaccid hands around the hilt, pressed the
point to the Emperor's breast, and shoved, piercing the heart.
He checked to make certain that he had not gotten any blood on
himself, more as a reflex than anything else; he had been a professional for
too long to have made so foolish a mistake.
Then he strolled casually out the door, nodding to the guards as
he passed. In a few more moments, they would go in, find Charliss, and report
that the Emperor, distraught and deranged by his failing magic and crumbling
health, had committed suicide.
And long live the new Emperor, may he reign a hundred years.
Karal was on his knees. Altra was beside him, a glowing cat-image
under his groping hand. Florian stood braced between him and the Pit, a
horse-shape of Fire against the darkness. To his right, looming out of the swirling,
fluctuating energies, Firesong still stood like a blinding statue of a warrior
with upraised sword—a high keening sound that somehow penetrated the roar in
Karal's ears came from Need, as if the sword had somehow acquired a voice. To
his left, there was no sign of An'desha, but two bird-human shapes with
feathers of flame wove a restless web all about a shadowed core. He couldn't
see Sejanes at all across the Pit.
He sensed the energies around them were winning. They couldn't
feed the Pit fast enough, and their protectors were burning out.
And yet, he was no longer afraid. Even if they didn't survive,
they had fed enough of the terrible power into the Pit to prevent a
second Cataclysm. As he gazed on the burning image of Florian, great peace
descended on his heart, and he faced the terrible, glorious, mystical fire
without flinching. Once again, he stood in the heart of the Sun and knew he was
welcome there. He opened himself up to it fully, and lost himself there, past
fear, past pain, past everything but the Light.
And then his awareness of self evaporated, and there was nothing
more.
The light was gone; the Light was gone. There was nothing but
darkness, yet Florian's image still continued to bum against that dark.
He was lying on his back. His groping hands encountered rough
blankets over him, then warm fur.
"I think he's awake," said Lo'isha in a low voice.
He coughed, cleared his throat, and replied, "I am awake. How
is everyone? Did the light fail?"
His question was answered with the kind of heavy silence that only
occurs when someone has unwittingly asked a question that has an answer that
will make him very unhappy.
"Firesong has been... hurt," Silverfox said gently.
"An'desha and Sejanes are quite all right, only tired."
He tried to sit up, and felt hands on his chest holding him down.
"How badly hurt is Firesong?" he asked urgently. "Can I see him?
Where's Florian? Haven't you got any lights going yet?"
Again, that awkward silence, and then the answer came to him, to
his last question at least, as Lo'isha asked, very softly, "What can you
see?"
"Nothing," he whispered, stunned.
"Only—Florian—"
"It seems that those whose guardians were entirely spirit
fared the best," said Lyam in that dry way of his.
The fur draped over his legs moved. :Florian is gone, Karal,:
Altra said, in the gentlest tones that Karal had ever heard him use. :I am
the only one of the protectors to survive the experience. I am sorry.:
Karal moved his head, and still saw nothing but darkness and the
fiery image of Florian in reverse silhouette against it. He swallowed, as the
full impact of realization hit him, and felt hot tears burning their way down
his face. Florian—gone? Protecting him? He blinked, but nothing changed in what
he saw—or rather, what he didn't see.
"You see nothing, Karal?" Lo'isha persisted. He shook
his head dumbly.
"What about Firesong?" he asked, around a cold lump in
his gut and a second lump in his throat. "Is he—like me?"
"No, but—the sword, Need—she exploded in a mist of molten
metal in his hands. His face and hands are badly burned." That was Lyam.
"I just sent Silverfox back to him."
Although tears of mourning continued to trickle down Karal's face,
he nodded. "Good," he managed. "I don't really need a
Healer..." He let his voice trail off, making a kind of question out of
it.
"No, Karal," Lo'isha said, with a comforting hand on his
shoulder. "I'm afraid a Healer won't do you any good right now."
"Then, just leave me with Altra for a bit, would you?"
he asked, and after a while, he heard them get up and move away. He felt Altra
settle on his chest and legs, and began gently scratching the Firecat's ears.
Tears slid down his cheeks, and Altra continued to rasp them away.
:Karal?:
Altra asked, after a long silence. He answered the Firecat with a fierce hug.
"Just stay with me," he whispered.
:I'll never leave you, Karal,: Altra promised. :Never. Not for as long as you live.:
Firesong remembered the exact moment when Need lost her battle to
shield him, which was right after Yfandes had evaporated into motes of energy.
She had screamed—a warning, he thought—and he had let her go and flung one arm
over his eyes to protect them. All he remembered after that was pain.
He hadn't ever lost consciousness, and right now, loss of all
awareness would have been a blessing. Silverfox had given him something that
turned the terrible agony into bearable agony, but he still hurt. Almost
as bad was the knowledge of what had happened to him. He knew what he
looked like—and worse, he knew what he was going to look like. No Healer would
be able to keep scar tissue from forming, and his face—
He struggled to keep back tears, tears of pain, tears of loss. Yes
he had been vain, and why not? His face had won him all the lovers he had ever
wanted, and now no one would ever give him a second glance.
A touch on his arm made him start and open his tightly-closed
eyes. "Ashke, I am here," said Silverfox, his face full of
concern. "Are you in pain?"
"Better to ask, what doesn't hurt," he replied,
trying to make a feeble joke of it. "I am trying not to scream; it is very
impolite, and would frighten An'desha."
"We have sent the Kal'enedral
out for stronger pain drugs," Silverfox told him tenderly, resting one
hand on the part of his arm that was not burned. "They should be back
soon. The blizzard stopped, and the snow is melting, and in a little we will
have gryphons or horses here to take you to k'Leshya. Kaled'a'in Healers are
very good." He hesitated, then added, "It is a pity they are not good
enough to help Karal."
That snapped him out of the slough of self-pity he was wallowing
in. "What about Karal?" he asked sharply.
"I think—he has lost his sight." Silverfox looked away
for a moment.
Lost his sight? For one bitter moment, Firesong actually envied him. Better to
lose his sight than to go through life, scorned and pitied, to have people look
away from you because they could not bear the sight of you—
But even as he thought that, he rejected the thought with anger at
himself. You fool, he told himself scornfully. You vain,
self-important fool! You are alive with all your senses; you are neither
crippled nor incapacitated, and you still have Aya.
As if to underscore that last, the firebird trilled a little from
his perch beside Firesong's pallet.
Poor Karal,
came the thought at last. "Poor lad," he sighed, "Florian, and
this—" then involuntarily whimpered as the movement sent pain lacing
through the burns on his face. He felt tears start up, and soak into his
bandages.
Silverfox cupped his hands at Firesong's temples, and started into
his eyes with fierce concentration. As Firesong looked into his eyes, some of
the pain began to recede, and he almost wept again, this time with relief.
"I will be glad—" he gasped, "—when those pain drugs
arrive."
"They cannot arrive soon enough for me," Silverfox
muttered, then managed something of a wan smile. "You are being much
braver than I would. I cannot bear pain."
"It is not too bad, except when I am alone," Firesong
said, still gazing into those warmly compassionate eyes.
And somehow, those eyes softened further. "In that case, ashke,
I will never leave you." the handsome kestra'chern
said softly. "If you think you can bear to have me here."
And for a moment, Firesong forgot any pain at all.
An'desha lay curled up with his face to the wall, and Karal could
tell by his shaking shoulders that he was weeping silently. The view through
Altra's eyes was rather disconcerting, given that Altra's head was about at
knee-height, and he had to look up to see peoples' faces when they stood. But
at least now, with Altra glued to his leg and lending him the view, he wasn't
bumping into things, nor tripping over them.
Karal knelt down beside An'desha's pallet, and put a hand on his
shoulder. "If you keep this up much longer," he said, trying not to
dissolve into tears himself and make things worse, "you're going to be
sick."
An'desha only shook his head violently, and Karal tried to
remember exactly what it was that Lo'isha had told him.
"An'desha blames himself for the loss of the others,
especially the Avatars," the Kaled'a'in had said. "You must
persuade him to walk the Moonpaths, or—or it will be bad for his soul, his
heart. I have not been able to persuade him."
The older man had left it at that, but there was no doubt in
Karal's mind that he knew how An'desha had managed to help him through his own
crisis of conscience. Altra had seconded the Shin'a'in's request as soon as
Lo'isha was off tending to some other urgent problem. After that, how could
Karal have possibly refused?
"There wasn't anything you did or didn't do that would have
made a difference for the better," Karal persisted. "How could there
have been? We tried to do more than Urtho could, and it still came out
better than we had any reason to expect!"
"I should have known about those other weapons," An'desha
said, his voice muffled by his sleeve. "I should have known what they'd do
when they started to fail."
"How?" Karal asked acerbically. "Those were Urtho's
weapons, not Ma'ar's! How could you have known what they were going to do?
Foresight? When not even the Foreseers were able to give us decent
advice?"
One red eye emerged from the shelter of An'desha's sleeve.
"But—" he began.
"But, nothing," Karal said with great firmness.
"You aren't a Foreseer, and you don't have Urtho's memories, you have
Ma'ar's. And if you'd go walk the Moonpaths, you'd find out from the leshy'a
that I'm right."
An'desha winced, blanching, which looked quite interesting though
Altra's eyes. "I can't—" he began.
Karal fixed him with what he hoped was a stem gaze, even though he
couldn't feel his eyes responding the way they should. "That sounds
exactly like what someone who's been thrown says," he replied. "What
do you do when a horse throws you?"
"You get back on," An'desha said faintly,
"but—"
"You've already used 'but' too many times." Karal patted
his elbow. "Try saying, 'all right," instead."
"All right," An'desha replied obediently, then realized
he'd been tricked. Karal wasn't about to let him off.
"Go," he said, and got unsteadily to his feet again.
Instead of looking down, he sensed that his head was in a position of looking
out, echoing Altra's head-posture. "Go walk the Moonpaths. I want you to,
Lo'isha wants you to. That ought to be reason enough, right there."
Having finished what he had to say, and having partly tricked
An'desha into agreement, he left and returned to his own pallet, far from the
others, where he sank down onto it, exhausted by holding back his own emotions,
and cried himself to sleep.
"Karal."
He looked around, startled. He wasn't in his bed in the Tower
anymore; he was standing in the middle of—of nowhere he recognized. There was
opalescent mist all around him, and a path of softly glowing silver sand
beneath his feet. Not only that, but it was his own eyes that he was looking
out of, not Altra's.
Where was he? This wasn't like any dream he had ever had before.
In fact, it was rather like the descriptions that An'desha had given him of the
Moonpaths. But that was a place that only Shin'a'in could reach, wasn't it?
Wasn't it?
"Of course not," said that voice again, teasingly
familiar. "Anyone can come here, they just see it differently. But
Altra thought that after all you've been through, you probably wouldn't want to
visit Sunheart for a little."
This time, when he turned around, there was someone there—or
rather, four someones, two male and two female. Two of them, the ones standing
hand-in-hand, with vague bird-forms swirling about them, he recognized
immediately.
"Tre'valen!" he exclaimed "Dawnfire! But—"
"Oh, heavens, you didn't think we'd burned up or some such
nonsense, did you?" Dawnfire laughed. "It takes more than a
storm of mage-energy to destroy a spirit! We just lost the parts of ourselves
that held us in your world, that's all."
"You did?" said someone else, incredulously,
"That's all?" Karal found, without any surprise at all, that An'desha
had somehow come to stand beside him. "But, why didn't you come back when
I called you then?"
"Because—well—we can't." Tre'valen actually
looked shamefaced. "I'm afraid that we overstepped the bounds of what
we were actually permitted to do to help you. The Star-eyed wasn't precisely
put out, but...."
Dawnfire interrupted him. "You'll have to come here to
meet us from now on," she said ruefully. "But if you're going
to be a shaman, you ought to get all the practice you can in walking the
Moonpaths anyway."
"All I can think of is how glad I am that I didn't—"
An'desha began, but it was the strange young man that interrupted him this
time. He looked very familiar, but Karal could not imagine why. Thin and not
particularly muscular, but with a build that suggested agility, he had sandy
brown hair that kept flopping into his blue eyes, and a friendly, cheerful
manner.
"Nothing you did or didn't do made any difference in what
happened to us, An'desha," the young man said. "Part of it was
purest chance, and the rest was that we took on more than we had any right to
think we could handle. and we managed to carry it off anyway. We dared. Right,
Karal?"
At this point, Karal had an idea that he knew who the young man was,
and he gave voice to it. "Right—Florian," he replied, and was
rewarded by a wink, a flash of a grin, and a nod. "But if this is where
all of you came—after—where are Vanyel, Stefen, and Yfandes?"
"Free of the forest for one thing, and high time, too, if
you ask me," Florian replied. "And probably if you ask them. I
suppose it seemed like a good idea at the time, but I suspect they were stuck
there a lot longer than they thought they would be."
Karal hadn't the faintest idea what Florian was talking about, and
some of his bewilderment must have shown on his face. Florian chuckled.
"Never mind," he said. "Basically,
they've made decisions about their destinations, and they didn't have a lot of
time to make sure they got properly placed, so they've already gone on. I can't
tell you what they decided, but it's going to be fine. As for me," he
continued with a wink, "I've made mine, too, but I wasn't so picky. It
should be obvious if you think about it, but don't tell any Heralds, all right?"
Karal nodded solemnly; Florian's decision was obvious,
though he doubted that his friend was going to look anything like he did at the
moment when he returned to the world.
Then again, maybe he would. Karal branded that face into his
memory. If in fifteen or twenty years' time, Karal—or rather, Altra—saw a
Herald who looked like this, they would both know who it was.
I'd better remember that he won't remember, though, and not go
rushing up to him and greet him as my long-lost friend.
Even though that would be precisely what he was.
"'Florian—" he faltered, and continued. "I've never
had a friend like you."
"Well, you'll have one again in time," the
irrepressible Florian interrupted. Evidently he was in no mood for sorrowful
good-byes or recriminations. He cut short any other attempts at speech by
embracing his friends. "Now, you go back to Valdemar and get into as
much mischief as possible with Natoli, and I'll go take care of my business,
and eventually we'll meet again. It's not 'good-bye,' Karal, it's 'see you
later.' All right?"
What else could he do but agree, and return the hearty embrace?
With a cheery wave, Florian faded into the mist, and was gone, leaving Karal
behind with tears in his eyes and a smile on his lips.
Now he was alone with An'desha and the old woman.
This must be Need, he realized, listening to her give An'desha some tart and
intelligent pieces of advice. "And as for you, young man," she
said at last, turning her clever gaze on him, "I heartily agree with
that young scamp, Florian. You're too sober by half, and just because you can't
see things for yourself, that's no reason to go back to that gloomy country of
yours and sit in a corner and mope. Go get into mischief with that young lady
of yours; I had plenty of apprentices like her in my time, and I suspect she'll
keep you hopping and she won't let you feel sorry for yourself."
"Probably not, my lady," he replied politely, thinking
that her assessment of Natoli was remarkably accurate for someone who didn't
actually know her.
"Now, since you asked earlier, as for me, I'm taking a
long-delayed rest. Maybe you'll see me and maybe you won't, but I'll be damned
if I ever go sticking myself into a piece of steel again!" She gave
both of them a brief hug. "Now, you both stop ruining good pillows with
salt water, and go and get some living done."
And with that, she turned and stalked off into the mist, leaving
him and An'desha alone. Tre'valen and Dawnfire had already vanished while their
attention was on Need.
"Now what?" he asked.
He looked at his friend, who shrugged, but with some of his old
spirit back. "I suppose we'd better do as she says," An'desha said.
"You know her. If we don't, she's likely to turn around and kick us
out." He toed the soft silver sand for a moment, then added, "I'm
glad you made me come here."
"I'm glad you let me," Karal replied, and smiled,
feeling more peace in his heart than he had ever expected to have again.
"Now, let's go home."
* * *
Karal looked back through Altra's eyes, over the tail of his
Shin'a'in riding horse, a lovely and graceful palfrey. It felt very strange not
to be riding Florian, but he supposed that he would get used to it after a
while. Firesong rode behind him, supported by a saddle that the Shin'a'in used
for riders who were ill or disabled, watching everything around him with his
eyes shining behind the eye-holes of the mask covering his half-healed face.
Firesong's mask was a wonder, not only because it was as extravagant and
beautiful as one of his elaborate robes, but because he and Lyam had made it of
materials they had scavenged from things in the Tower during the fortnight they
had waited. With a base of leather and adorned with bits of crystal, wire, and
feathers that Aya himself had carefully pulled from his tail and brought to
Firesong while he still lay half-healed in his bed, it probably would have
fetched a small fortune from a collector of such things. But Firesong was
dissatisfied with it, and was already designing new ones.
All around them, the Plains were blooming in a way that the
Shin'a'in said they had not seen since the Star-Eyed herself walked there. One
could hardly see the grass for the flowers, which painted the landscape in wide
swathes of color. The land had gone from deepest winter to the heart of spring,
all in the space of a fortnight. Through Altra's eyes, Karal took in the
incredible beauty with a sense of awe and wonder. According to the messages
that Altra had brought from Solaris in Karse, all their friends in Haven, and
Elspeth in Hardorn, the phenomenon was not confined to the Plains. All the
world was in blossom, as if to make up for the ravages of the Storms.
Sejanes and An'desha had been working to discover just how magic
operated, and as soon as he was able, Firesong had joined them. It had not been
long before they discovered that there were no ley-lines anymore, no nodes, no
huge reserves of mage-power. Magical energy had been dispersed fairly evenly
across the landscape; and there wouldn't be any large magics for a very long
time. That meant no Gates, of course, but it was no hardship to ride through a
countryside where the sun shone down with kindly benevolence, where birds
serenaded every step of the way, and there was such an all-pervasive perfume of
flowers, both night-and day-blooming, that it even permeated their dreams at
night. And once the clever Kaled'a'in found the means to make the carry-baskets
light using the small magics that still worked, they would make the rest of
their journey by air.
Karal had been given the choice of going home to Karse—a shorter
journey by far—or back to Valdemar. But when all was said and done, it had not
been a difficult choice. One of the first messages from Solaris had been
strictly for him, commending his actions, and asking him if he would, as a
personal favor to her, resume his work in Valdemar both as the Karsite envoy
and as the head of the Temple outside Karse. "With the visible evidence of
your sacrifice," she had written, "no one in Valdemar will question
your authority. Additionally, you will be dealing with the representatives of
Iftel—creatures I confess I find somewhat unnerving. The Sunlord has decreed
some odd things in Iftel, and I frankly do not think that outside of you there
is a single Priest in the entire Temple who could treat these peoples as
anything other than heretics. I do not want to offend these new brothers and
sisters in any way, but I fear that if I assigned anyone else to Valdemar and
Iftel, there would be blood spilled before long. However, if you want to come
home, I will understand, and find a way to cope."
The message had come on the day when they were all deciding
whether to go to their homes or back to Haven.
Tarrn and Lyam had elected to return to k'Leshya, which was no
surprise at all. Silverfox and Firesong, however, were going with them. Karal
had half expected Firesong, at least, to want to return to his own people, but
the Adept had smiled behind his mask and simply shaken his head, the crystals
and bits of metal dangling from the mask tinkling softly.
"No one remembers what I looked like before in k'Leshya, he
said quietly. "And—besides, Silverfox wants to be there, and it is
a familiar Vale." It was plain in his voice, burned lips or not, that
being with Silverfox was the primary reason.
An'desha rode with them, but he would not be leaving the Plains.
He had elected to remain and study with Lo'isha, taking the vows of the shaman.
Karal had been surprised at that as well, especially as he had been earnestly
practicing magic alongside Sejanes and Firesong during the time that they
waited for their hosts to put a caravan together for them.
"There is no prohibition on magic among the Shin'a'in
now," An'desha explained with a chuckle. "There is no reason for one.
I suspect that Lo'isha has it in mind for me to be the teacher to the new mages
among us, in time. I should like that," he finished softly, with a tone of
contentment in his voice that Karal had never heard before. "Ma'ar in all
of his incarnations gave nothing of himself. I shall perhaps be able to balance
that, eventually."
So Lo'isha and An'desha would leave them at the edge of the
Plains, and Silverfox, Firesong, Tarrn, and Lyam at k'Leshya Vale. Master Levy
and Sejanes were going on, of course, and they would be joined by the Heralds
who had carried the messages from Haven telling the mages and rulers of other
lands how to keep their nodes from going rogue.
And Karal would be going with them. After all the advice from the
spirits on the Moonpaths, he was hardly surprised when Natoli sent him a
message of her own, asking him to come back to Valdemar. "I can be your
eyes, too," she had written. "And you can be my good sense, which I
seem to have a distinct lack of. I think I need you." Confused grammar,
but not confused thoughts. He had been afraid for a little that despite the
surety of others, she might not want to see him as less than he had been; he
knew now that he should have given her more credit than that.
So he would be going on with Master Levy and Sejanes; back
to duty, back to love. But most of all, back to a place he was already thinking
of as home.
Altra would stay with him to provide him with "eyes,"
but he had the love of friends, awareness of himself, and hope for the future
to give him vision, vision without sight, perhaps, but as true and clear as
anyone could imagine.
The End