Stalking Darkness
(V0.5—Formatted and cleaned up. NOT checked against the book. Some parts
remain garbled.)
"What is it? You look like you've just seen your own ghost."
A desperate ache lanced through Seregil as he looked down into Alec's dark
blue eyes.
Damn you, Nysander!
"I can't tell you, tali, because I'd only have to lie," he said, suddenly
dejected. "I'm going to do something now, and you're going to watch and say
nothing."
Taking the final page of the manuscript, he twisted it into a tight squib and
tossed it into the fire.
"But what about Nysander?" Alec asked. "What will you tell him?"
"Nothing, and neither will you."
"But—"
"We're not betraying him. You have my oath. I believe he already knows what
we just learned, but he can't know that you know. Not until I tell you it's
safe. Understand?"
"More secrets," Alec said, looking solemn and unhappy.
"Yes, more secrets. I need your trust in this, Alec. Can you give it?"

STALKING DARKNESS
LYNN FLEWELLING
A Bantam Spectra Book/March 1997
All rights reserved.
SPECTRA and the portrayal of a boxed's' are trademarks of
Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
Copyright ) 1997 by Lynn Flewelling
Cover art copyright ) 1997 by Gary Ruddell
Maps by Virginia Norey
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: Bantam Books.
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware
that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to
the publisher and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment
for this "stripped book."
ISBN 0-553-57543-0
Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada
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PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
For my sons Matthew and Timothy, who laugh at the same goofy things I do.
You're the best, guys.
Special thanks to Doug Flewelling, Darby Crouss,
Laurie Mailman, Julie Friez,
Scott Burgess, Anne Groell and the Bantam folks,
and my agent Lucienne Diver for all their support, input, and wonderfully
ruthless editing.
The lean ship smashed through foaming crests, pounding southwest out of
Keston toward Skala. By night she ran without lanterns; her crew, accomplished
smugglers all, sailed with eyes lifted skyward to the stars. By day they kept
constant watch, though there was little chance of meeting another ship. Only a
Plenimaran captain would chance deep water sailing so late in the year and this
winter there would be none so far north. Not with a war brewing.
Ice sheathed the rigging. The sailors pulled the halyards with bleeding
hands, chipped frozen water from the drinking casks, and huddled together off
watch, muttering among themselves about the two gentlemen passengers and the
grim pack of cutthroats who'd come aboard.
The second day out, the captain came above slobbering drunk. Gold was no use
to dead men, he howled over the wind; foul weather was coming, they were turning
back. Smiling, the dark nobleman led him below and that was the last anyone
heard of the matter. The captain fell overboard sometime that same night. That
was the story, at least; the fact was that he was nowhere to be found the next
morning and their course remained unchanged.
The mate took over, tying himself to the wheel as they wallowed along. Blown
off course, they missed Gull Island and sailed on without respite through
lashing sleet and exhaustion. On the fourth day two more men were swept away as
waves nearly swamped the ship. A mast snapped, dragging its sail like a broken
wing. Miraculously, the ship held true while the remaining crew fought to cut
away the tangled ropes.
Clinging among the frozen shrouds that night, the men muttered again, but
cautiously. Their finely dressed passengers had brought ill fortune with them;
no one wanted to chance attracting their eye. The ship plunged on as if helpful
demons guided her keel.
Two days out from Cirna the gale lifted. A pale sun burst through the
shredding clouds to guide the battered vessel westward, but foul luck still
dogged her. A sudden fever struck among the crew. One by one, they sickened,
throats swelling shut as black sores blossomed in the warmth of groins and
armpits. Those untouched by the illness watched in horror as the gentlemen's
men-at-arms laughingly tossed the bloated corpses overboard.
None of the passengers sickened, but by the time they sighted the towering
cliffs of the Skalan Isthmus the last of the crew could feel the weakness
overtaking them.
They reached the mouth of Cirna harbor in darkness, guided by the leaping
signal fires that flanked the mouth of the Canal. Still sagging at the wheel,
the dying mate watched the passengers" men strike the sails, lower anchor, and
heave the longboat over the side.
One of the gentlemen, the dark-haired one with a long scar under his eye,
suddenly appeared at the mate's elbow. He was smiling, always smiling, though it
never seemed to reach his eyes. Half-delirious, the mate staggered back, fearful
of being devoured by those soulless eyes.
"You did well," the dark man said, reaching to tuck a heavy purse into the
mate's pocket. "We'll see ourselves ashore."
"There's some of us still alive, sir!" croaked the mate, looking anxiously
toward the signal fires, the warm lights of the town glimmering so close across
the water. "We've got to get ashore for a healer!"
"A healer, you say?" The dark gentleman raised an eyebrow in concern. "Why,
my companion here is a healer of sorts. You had only to ask."
Looking past him, the mate saw the other man, the weedy one with the face
like a rat's, at work chalking something on the deck. As he straightened from
his task the mate recognized the warning symbol for plague.
"Come, Vargul Ashnazai, isn't there something you can do for this poor
fellow?" the dark man called.
The mate shuddered as the other man glided toward him.
Not once during the voyage had he heard this man speak. When he did now the
words were unintelligible and seemed to collect in the mate's throat like
stones. Gagging, he slumped to the deck. The one called Ashnazai laid a cold
hand against his cheek and the world collapsed in a blaze of black light.
Mardus stepped clear of the bile spreading out from the dead sailor's mouth.
"What about the others?"
The necromancer smiled, his fingers still tingling pleasantly from the mate's
death. "Dying as we speak, my lord."
"Very good. Are the men ready?"
"Yes, my lord."
Mardus took a last satisfied look around the deck of the ravaged vessel, then
climbed down to the waiting boat.
Cloaked in Ashnazai's magic, they passed the quay and custom house without
challenge. Climbing a steep, icy street, they found rooms ready for them at the
Half Moon tavern.
Mardus and Ashnazai were just settling down over a hot supper in Mardus'
chamber when someone scratched softly at the door.
Captain Tildus entered with a grizzled man named Urvay, Mardus' chief spy in
Rhiminee for the past three years. The man was invaluable, both for his skill
and his discretion. Tonight he was dressed as a gentleman merchant and looked
distinguished in velvet and silver.
Urvay saluted him gravely. "I'm glad to see you safe, my lord. It's nasty
sailing this time of year."
Mardus dismissed Tildus, then waved the spy to a nearby chair. "What have you
to report, my friend?"
"Bad news and good, my lord. Lady Kassarie is dead."
"That Leran woman?" asked Ashnazai.
"Yes. The Queen's spies attacked her keep about a week ago. She died in the
battle. Vicegerent Barien committed suicide over the matter and there are rumors
that the Princess Royal was implicated somehow, though the Queen's taken no
action against her. The rest of the faction has gone to ground or fled."
"A pity. They might have proved useful. But what about our business?"
"That's the good news, my lord. I have new people in place with several
influential nobles."
"Which ones?"
"Lord General Zymanis, for one-word is he's about to be commissioned with
overseeing the lower city fortifications. And one of my men just got himself
betrothed to Lady Kora's second daughter and has the run of the villa. But of
particular interest, my lord—" Urvay paused, leaning forward a little.
"I'm in the process of establishing a contact inside the Oreska House."
Mardus raised an eyebrow. "Excellent! But how? We haven't been able to get a
spy in there for years."
"Not a spy, my lord, but a turncoat. His name is Pelion i Eirsin. He's an
actor, and highly thought of at the moment."
"What's he got to do with the Oreska?" demanded Vargul Ashnazai.
"He's got a lover there," Urvay explained quickly, "a young sorceress said to
be the mistress of one or two of the older wizards as well. Her name's Ylinestra,
and she's got a bit of a reputation around the city; a fiery little catamount
with an eye for handsome young men and powerful old ones. This man Pelion is
evidently part of her collection. Through him we may be able to get to her and
perhaps others. She's not a member of the Oreska herself, but she lives there
and has rooms of her own."
"I hardly think we need the services of some slut to get into the place," the
necromancer scoffed.
"Maybe not," Urvay interrupted, "but this slut numbers the wizard Nysander
among her lovers."
"Nysander i Azusthra?" Mardus nodded approvingly. "Urvay, you've outdone
yourself! But what have you told this actor of yours?"
"To him, I am Master Gorodin, a great admirer of his work. I also understand
how important patronage is to a young actor on the rise, and to a certain
playwright who's willing to create roles especially for him. In return, my new
friend Pelion passes on whatever bit of gossip he picks up around town. He likes
the deal, and knows better than to ask too many questions. As long as the gold
flows, he's ours."
"Well done, Urvay. Spare no expense with him. We must infiltrate the Oreska
before spring. You understand? It is imperative."
"I do, my lord. Shall I make arrangements for you in Rhiminee?"
"No. Nothing's to be arranged in advance. I'll contact you when I need you.
For now, keep an eye on Pelion and his sorceress."
Urvay rose and bowed. "I will, my lord. Farewell."
When he was gone Mardus returned to his interrupted meal, but Vargul Ashnazai
found his appetite had fled.
The Oreska, he thought bitterly, fingering the ivory vial that hung from a
chain around his thin neck. That's where they'd gone, the thieves who'd stolen
the Eye from under his very nose.
Mardus had nearly killed him that night in Wolde. Worse yet, he'd threatened
to banish him from their quest. If Mardus had entrusted him with the disks in
the first place, of course, it would never have happened, but that was a point
not worth arguing. Not if he cared to live longer than his next word.
His standing with Mardus had eroded steadily ever since.
Even with the power of the Eye itself to aid him, he'd been unable to
exercise sufficient power over the fugitives to stop them. The Aurenfaie had
proven infuriatingly resistant to his magicks and when he'd finally succumbed to
the dragorgos attack at the inn, the boy, that wretched boy, had outmaneuvered
them, spiriting his partner away before Mardus and his men could reach the
place.
Still holding the vial between his fingers, Vargul Ashnazai pictured the
precious blood-soaked slivers of wood inside, slivers he'd gouged from the floor
of the Mycenian inn where his dragorgos had overtaken them.
The talisman he'd made with their blood was a powerful guide, so powerful
that he'd almost caught them at Keston. But then they'd slipped on ahead by sea
and another's power was growing around them, occluding his own. He'd recognized
the resonance of the magic at once. Oreska magic.
And so Mardus and his men had tracked them by methods thoroughly mundane,
while he, a necromancer of the Sanctum, rode along like so much useless baggage.
Mardus had been sanguine. They already knew where the thieves were headed,
result once again of Mardus' cold-blooded methods rather than his own. One of
the river sailors captured after the destruction of the Darter—this, at least,
was Vargul's work—had screamed out with his last breath what they'd needed to
know.
To be sitting here now, no more than two days ride from the stronghold of his
enemies, was maddening.
So close! he thought, closing his fist around the vial.
Mardus saw, and guessed his thoughts. "Why not scry for them again?"
Vargul Ashnazai shifted uncomfortably. "It's been the same for weeks now."
Mardus glanced over at him, much the way any man might look at another who's
said something mildly surprising. But Mardus was not just any man.
As his gaze met Ashnazai's, the necromancer felt a stab of fear. It was not
madness he saw in his companion's eyes—never that—but something worse, an
obdurate purposefulness steeped with the shadow of their god. Mardus might not
have magic, but he had power.
He was touched, chosen.
Held in that remorseless gaze, Ashnazai felt the blood slow in his veins.
Clasping the vial more tightly, he placed his other hand over his eyes and
summoned the image of the thieves.
For a moment he felt the reassuring pulse of his own considerable power. The
inner blackness flowed through him to the vial and beyond, using the essence of
the blood to seek its source. Ever since the thieves had reached Rhiminee,
however, a veil had dropped over them.
Someone had placed a protective spell over them, and the resistance to his
magic was fierce and decisive.
This time was no different. The moment he focused his concentration on their
location, he was blinded by a searing vision of fire and huge, leathery wings.
The message was clear enough: These people are under the protection of the
Oreska. You cannot touch them.
Gasping, Ashnazai let go of the vial and pressed both hands to his face.
"No change?"
Ashnazai could tell without looking up that the bastard was smiling.
"Then Urvay's actor is truly a blessing placed in our path. If these two are
still under the protection of the Oreska wizards, where better to seek them?"
"I hope you're right, my lord. When I find them, I'll crush their beating
hearts in my hands!"
"Vengeance is a dangerous emotion."
Looking up, Vargul Ashnazai saw a familiar blankness pass across his
companion's face, the touch of the god.
"You should be grateful to them for leading us to the completion of our
quest," Mardus continued softly, staring into the depths of his cup. "This actor
and his sorceress are the seal on that. Patience is the key now. Be patient. Our
moment will come."
Sleet-laden winds lashed in off the winter sea, racketing through the dark
streets of Rhiminee like a huge, angry child. Loose shingles and roof tiles tore
free and clattered down into streets and gardens. Bare trees swayed and clashed
their branches like dead bones in the night. In the harbor below the citadel,
vessels were tossed from their moorings to founder against the mores. In upper
and lower city alike, even the brothel keepers put up their shutters early.
Two cloak-wrapped figures slipped from a shadowed courtyard in Blue Fish
Street and hurried east to Sheaf Street.
"I can't believe we're out in this to deliver a damn love token," Alec
groused, shaking his wet, fair hair from his eyes.
"We've got the Rhiminee Cat's reputation to maintain," Seregil said,
shivering beside the boy. The slender Aurenfaie envied Alec his northern-bred
tolerance for the cold. "Lord Phyrien paid for the thing to be on the girl's
pillow tonight. I've been wanting a peek into her father's dispatch box anyway.
Word is he's maneuvering for the Vicegerent's post."
Seregil grinned to himself. For years, the mysterious thief known only as the
Rhiminee Cat had assisted the city's upper class in their endless intrigues; all
it took to summon him was gold and a discreet note left in the right hands. None
had ever guessed that this faceless spy was virtually one of their own, or that
the arrangement was as much to his benefit as theirs.
The wind buffeted at them from all sides as they pressed on toward the Noble
Quarter. Reaching the fountain colonnade at the head of Golden Helm Street,
Seregil ducked inside for a moment's shelter.
"Are you sure you're up to this? How's your back?" he asked as he stooped to
drink from the spring at the center of the colonnade.
Less than two weeks had passed since Alec had pulled Princess Klia from the
fiery room below the traitor Kassarie's keep. Valerius' malodorous drysian
salves had worked their healing magic, but as they'd dressed tonight he'd
noticed that the skin across the boy's shoulders was still tender-looking in
places. Not that Alec would admit it and risk being sent back, of course.
"I'm fine," Alec insisted as expected. "It's your teeth I hear chattering,
not mine." Shaking out his sodden cloak, he tossed one long end over his
shoulder. "Come on. We'll be warmer if we keep moving."
Seregil looked with sudden longing toward the entrance to the Street of
Lights across the way. "We'd be a hell of a lot warmer in there!"
It had been months since he'd visited any of the elegant pleasure houses. The
thought of so many warm, perfumed beds and warm, perfumed bodies made him feel
even colder.
Invisible in the shadows, Alec made no reply, but Seregil heard him shifting
uncomfortably. The boy's solitary upbringing had left him uncommonly backward in
certain matters, even for a Dalnan. Such reticence was unfathomable to Seregil,
though out of respect for their friendship he did his best not to tease the boy.
The fashionable avenues of the Noble Quarter were deserted, the great houses
and villas dark behind their high garden walls. Ornate street lanterns creaked
unlit on their hooks, extinguished by the storm.
The house in Three Maidens Street was a large, sprawling villa surrounded by
a high courtyard wall. Alec kept an eye out for bluecoat patrols while Seregil
tossed the grapple up and secured the rope. The roar of the storm covered any
noise as they scrambled up and over. Leaving the rope in a clump of bushes,
Seregil led the way through the gardens.
After a brief search, Alec found a small shuttered window set high in a wall
at the back of the house. Climbing onto a water butt, he pried back the shutter
with a knife and peered inside.
"Smells like a storeroom," he whispered.
"Go on then. I'm right behind you." Alec went in feet first and disappeared
soundlessly inside.
Climbing up, Seregil sniffed the earthy scents of potatoes and apples.
Squeezing through, he lowered himself in onto what felt like sacks of onions.
He reached out, finding Alec's shoulder in the darkness, and together they
felt their way to a door.
Seregil eased the latch up and peeked out into the cavernous kitchen beyond.
The coals in the hearth gave off enough of a glow to make out two servants
asleep on pallets there.
Deep snores sounded from the shadows of a nearby corner. To the right was an
open archway. Tapping Alec on the arm, Seregil headed for it on tiptoe.
The arch let onto a servant's passage.
Climbing a narrow staircase, they crept down a succession of hallways in
search of Lord Decian's private study. Not finding it, they moved up to the next
floor and chanced shielded lightstones.
By this dim light they saw that these nobles left their shoes outside their
bedroom door for a servant to collect and clean. Seregil nudged Alec and flipped
him the sign for "lucky." The lord of the house had only one daughter; it was a
simple matter to find the footgear appropriate for a maiden of fifteen.
A pair of dainty boots stood before a door at the far end of the corridor. A
stout pair of shoes next to them warned that the young woman did not sleep
alone.
Seregil stifled a grin. Alec was in for more than he'd bargained for, in more
ways than one.
Alec lightly fingered the latch, found the door unbarred. The delivery was
his task tonight, more training in the ways of the Cat. This sort of job, though
hardly as significant as their recent work for Nysander, required a high level
of finesse and he was anxious to prove himself.
Sliding his lightstone back into his tool roll, Alec took a deep breath and
lifted the latch.
A night lamp burned on a stand beside the bed. The hangings were open and
inside he could see a young girl with heavy braids asleep on the side nearest
the door, her face turned to the light. Beside her, a larger form, her mother or
nurse perhaps, stirred restlessly beneath the thick comforter.
Creeping to the side of the bed, he took out the token, a tiny scroll pushed
through a man's golden ring.
Left to his own devices, he'd simply have put it on the lamp stand and been
done with it, but Lord Phyrien had been very exact in his instructions. The ring
must be left on his sweetheart's pillow.
Bending over the girl, Alec placed the ring as specified. Too late he heard
Seregil's sharp intake of breath. The heavy ring immediately rolled down the
curve of the pillow and struck the girl on the cheek just beside her mouth.
Startled brown eyes flashed wide. Fortunately for Alec, she saw the ring
before she could cry out. Her look of fear changed instantly to one of mute joy
as she mistook his muffled form for that of her lover.
"Oh, Phyrien, you are bold!" she breathed, stealing a quick look at the
sleeping woman beside her. Grasping Alec's hand, she drew it gently but
insistently under the bedclothes.
Alec blushed furiously in the depths of his hood.
Like most Skalans, she slept nude. He didn't dare resist, however. Any kind
of struggle would not only seem suspicious, but probably shake the bed enough to
awaken its other occupant.
"You're so cold!" she said with a hushed giggle, pulling his hand still
lower. "Kiss me, my brave lover. I'll warm you."
Holding his hood in place with his free hand, Alec pressed his lips hastily
to hers, then motioned warningly at the other woman. Pouting prettily, the girl
released him and tucked the token away beneath her pillow.
With his heart hammering in his ears, Alec extinguished the lamp and hurried
back out into the corridor.
"Seregil, I—" he began in a whisper, but his companion cut the apology short,
grabbing him by the arm and hustling him off the way they'd come.
Damn, damn, damn!
Alec berated himself. A simple little delivery job and I cock it up.
Braced every moment for an outcry, they hurried down to the kitchen and
weaseled back out the storeroom window. Outside, Seregil was still implacably
silent. Climbing over the wall, he set off at a run. Alec followed, grimly
convinced he was in disgrace.
Three streets from the villa, Seregil suddenly stopped and hauled him into an
alleyway, then bent over, hands on knees, as if to catch his breath.
Braced for a scathing lecture, it took Alec a moment to realize that Seregil
was laughing.
"Bilairy's Balls, Alec!" he burst out. "I'd give a hundred sesters to have
seen the look on your face when that ring rolled away. And when she tried to
pull you into bed—" He sagged against the alley wall, shaking with laughter.
"But it was so stupid," Alec groaned. "I should have seen it would slide
off."
Seregil wiped his eyes, grinning. "Maybe so, but these things happen. I don't
know how many times I've pulled a blunder like that. It's the recovery that
counts and you did just fine. "Learn and live," I always say."
Relieved, Alec fell into step beside him as they headed for home. Before
they'd gone another block, however, Seregil let out another snort of laughter.
Leaning heavily on Alec's shoulder, he moaned in a lilting falsetto, "Kiss me,
my brave lover. I'll warm you up!" then staggered away, cackling into the wind.
Perhaps, Alec thought in exasperation, he hadn't heard the last of the matter
after all.
Back at Cockerel Inn, they nicked a late snack from Thryis' pantry and crept
up the hidden staircase on the second floor. Warding glyphs glowed briefly as
Seregil whispered the passwords.
At the top of the stairs, they crossed the chilly attic storeroom to their
own door.
The cluttered sitting room was still warm from the evening fire. Tossing his
wet cloak over the mermaid statue by the door, Alec shucked off soaked clothing
as he crossed to his bed in the corner by the hearth.
Seregil watched with a faint smile. The boy's considerable and, to his way of
thinking, unnatural degree of modesty had lessened somewhat over the months of
their acquaintance, but Alec still turned away as he stripped off his leather
breeches and pulled on a long shirt. At sixteen he was very like Seregil in
build: slim, lean, and fair-skinned. Seregil quickly busied himself sorting a
pile of correspondence on the table as the boy turned around again.
"We don't have anything in particular planned for tomorrow, do we?" Alec
asked, taking a bite from one of the meat pies they'd purloined.
"Nothing pressing," said Seregil, yawning hugely as he went to his chamber
door. "And I don't intend to be up before noon. Good night."
With the aid of a lightstone, he navigated past the stacks of books and boxes
and other oddments to the broad, velvet-hung bed that dominated the back of the
tiny room. Peeling off his wet garments, he slipped between the immaculate
sheets with a groan of contentment. Ruetha appeared from some cluttered corner
and leapt up with a throaty trill, demanding to be let under the covers.
It had been a busy year overall, he thought, stroking the cat absently.
Especially the past few months. Just realizing how long it had been since he'd
visited the Street of Lights underscored the general disruption of his life.
Oh well. Winter's here. There'll always be work enough to keep us occupied,
but plenty of leisure too for the pleasures of the town. All in all, I'd say we
earned a bit of a respite.
Imagining quiet, snowy months stretching out before them, Seregil drifted
contentedly off to sleep—only to lurch up sometime soon after from a nightmare
of plummeting into darkness, Alec's terrified cry ringing in his ears as they
fell down, down, past the walls of Kassarie's keep into the gorge below.
Opening his eyes with a gasp, Seregil was at once relieved and annoyed to
find himself slumped naked in one of Nysander's sitting-room armchairs.
There was no need to ask how he'd gotten there; the green nausea of a
translocation spell cramped his belly. Pushing his long, dark hair back from his
face, he scowled wretchedly up at the wizard.
"Forgive me for bringing you here so abruptly, dear boy," said Nysander,
handing him a robe and a steaming mug of tea.
"I assume there's a good reason for this," Seregil muttered, knowing very
well that there must be for Nysander to subject him to magic so soon after the
shape-changing incident.
"But of course. I tried to bring you earlier, but you two were busy burgling
someone." Pouring himself a mug of tea, Nysander settled into his usual chair on
the other side of the hearth. "I just looked in for a moment. were you
successful?"
"More or less."
Nysander appeared in no hurry to elucidate, but it was obvious he'd been
working on something. His short grey beard was smudged with ink near his mouth,
and he wore one of the threadbare old robes he favored for his frequent
all-night work sessions. Surrounded by the room's magnificent collection of
books and oddities, he looked like some down-at-the-heels scholar who'd wandered
in by mistake.
"Alec is looking better, I noticed," Nysander remarked.
"He's healing. It's his hair I'm concerned about. I've got to get him
presentable in time for the Festival of Sakor."
"Be thankful he came away no worse off then he did. From what Klia and Micum
told me, he's lucky to be alive at all. Ah, and before I forget, I have
something for the two of you from Klia and the Queen." He handed Seregil two
velvet pouches. "A public acknowledgment is impossible, of course, but they
wished to express their gratitude nonetheless. That green one there is yours."
Seregil had received such rewards before. Expecting another trinket or bit of
jewelry, he opened the little bag. What he found inside reduced him to stunned
silence.
It was a ring, a very familiar ring. The great, smooth ruby glowed like wine
in its heavy setting of Aurenfaie silver when he held it closer to the fire.
"Illior's Light, Nysander, this is one of the rings I took from Corruth i
Glamien's corpse," he gasped, finding his voice at last.
Nysander leaned forward and clasped his hand. "He was your kinsman and
Idrilain's, Seregil. She thought it a fitting reward for solving the mystery of
his disappearance. She hopes you shall wear it with honor among your own people
one day."
"Give her my thanks." Seregil tucked it reverently away in its bag. "But you
didn't magick me out of bed just for this?"
Nysander sat back with a chuckle. "No. I have a task which may be of interest
to you. However, there are conditions to be set forth before I explain. Agree to
abide by them or I shall send you back now with all memory of this meeting
expunged."
Seregil blinked in surprise. "It must be some job. Why didn't you bring
Alec?"
"I shall come to that presently. I can say nothing until you agree to the
conditions."
"Fine. I agree. What are they?"
"First, you may ask no question unbidden."
"Why not?"
"Starting now."
"Oh, all right. What else?"
"Second, you must work in absolute secrecy. No one is to know of this,
particularly not Alec or Micum. Will you give me your oath on it?"
Seregil regarded him in silence for a moment; keeping secrets from Alec was
no easy business these days. Still, how could something so shrouded in mystery
fail to be interesting? "All right. You have my word."
"Your oath," Nysander insisted somberly.
Shaking his head, Seregil held out his left hand, palm up, before him. "Asurit
betweenuth dos Aura Elustri kamar sosui Seregil i Korit Solun Meringil Bokthersa.
And by my honor as a Watcher, I swear also. Is that sufficient?"
"You know I would never impose such conditions on you without good reason,"
the wizard chided.
"Still, it seems to be happening quite a lot these days," Seregil retorted
sourly. "Now can I ask questions?"
"I will answer what I can."
"Why is it so crucial for Alec and Micum not to know?"
"Because if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell you,
I shall have to kill all of you."
Though spoken calmly, Nysander's words jolted him like a kick in the throat;
he'd known the wizard too long to mistake his absolute sincerity. For an
instant, Seregil felt as if he were looking into the face of a stranger. Then
suddenly, everything fell into place as neatly as a three-tumbler lock. He sat
forward, slopping hot tea over his knees in his excitement.
"It's to do with this, isn't it?" he exclaimed, tapping his chest. There,
beneath Nysander's obscuring magic, lay the branded imprint of the wooden disk
he'd stolen from Duke Mardus at Wolde—the same strange, deceptively crude disk
that had nearly taken his life. "You went white the night I told you about
showing a drawing of it to the Illioran Oracle. I thought you were going to fall
over."
"Perhaps now you understand my distress," Nysander replied grimly.
They'd never spoken of that conversation, but the dread Seregil had felt then
returned now in full force. "Bilairy's Balls! You'd have done it, too."
Nysander sighed heavily. "I would never have forgiven myself, I assure you,
but I would also have been furious with you for forcing me into such an act. Do
you recall what I said to you then?"
"To pray I never found out what that disk really is?"
"Precisely. And to undertake this task, you must continue to accept that as
my answer on the subject."
Seregil slouched glumly in his chair. "Same old answer, eh? And what if I say
no to all this? That if you don't tell me the whole story I want no part of it?"
Nysander shrugged. "Then as I said before, I shall remove all memory of this
conversation from your mind and send you home. There are certainly others who
could aid me."
"Like Thero, I suppose?" Seregil snapped before he could stop himself.
"Oh, for—"
"Does he know the Great Secret?" The old jealousy gripped Seregil's heart.
The last thing he wanted to hear was that the young assistant wizard knew more
of this than he did.
"He knows less than you," Nysander replied, exasperated. "Now do you want the
task or not?"
Seregil let out a frustrated growl. "All right, then. What's this all about?"
Nysander pulled a sheet of vellum from his sleeve and handed it to him. "To
begin with, tell me what you make of this."
"Looks like a page from a book." The vellum was darkened with age or weather.
Seregil rubbed a corner of it between his fingers and sniffed it, then examined
the writing itself. "It's old, four or five centuries at least. Poorly kept at
first, though later carefully preserved. And the vellum is human or Aurenfaie
skin, rather than kid." He paused again, examining the stitching holes on the
left edge. "These are still intact, showing that it was carefully removed from a
book, rather than torn. It was already damaged by dampness, though. Judging by
the color I'd say the page was steeped in poison after that, but that's
obviously been neutralized or we wouldn't be handling it."
"Quite so."
Oblivious now to everything but the task at hand, Seregil tugged absently at
a strand of hair.
"Let's see. The writing is Asuit Old Style and it's written in that language,
which originated with the hill people north of Plenimar. From that we can infer
that our author was either from that region or a scholar of languages."
"As you are, dear boy. I assume you can read it?"
"Hmm—yes. Looks like the ravings of a mad prophet. Very poetic, though.
"Watch with me, beloved, as demons strip the fruit from the vine." Then
something about horses—and "The golden flame is married with darkness. The
Beautiful One steps forth to caress the bones of the house " No, that's not
right. It's "the bones of the world.""
Moving to the table, he pulled a lamp closer.
"Yes. I thought it was just a few errors with the accent marks, but it isn't.
There's a cipher here."
Nysander passed him a wax writing tablet and a stylus. "Care to try it?"
Scanning back through the document, Seregil found sixteen words with
misplaced accents. Listing only the wrongly accented letters, he came up with
twenty-nine.
Frowning, he tapped the stylus against his chin, "This is a bitch of a
thing."
"More difficult than you know," said Nysander. "It took my master Arkoniel
and myself over a year to discover the key. Mind you, we were working on other
things at the time."
Seregil tossed aside the stylus with a groan.
"You mean to tell me you've broken this already?"
"Oh, yes. That is not the task, you see. But I knew that you would prefer to
work with the original and draw your own conclusions."
"So how does it work?"
Joining him at the table, Nysander turned the wax tablet over and began to
write rapidly. "To begin with, the accented letters come out to nonsense, a fact
it took a discouragingly long time to discover. The key is a combination of
syllabification and case. As you know, Old Asuit is an inflected language with
five cases. However, only three-the nominative, dative, and genitive—are used
for the cipher. For instance, look at the words making up the phrase 'of the
world." "
Seregil nodded thoughtfully, muttering to himself, "Yes, it was that
misplaced accent that threw me. It should be over the second vowel of the last
syllable, not the first."
"Correct. As 'world' is in the genitive case and the misplaced accent appears
in the antepenultimate syllable, you use the last letter of that word. If it
occurs in the same case but on the second, or penultimate, syllable, then you
use the first."
Seregil looked up and grinned. "I didn't know you were such an accomplished
grammarian."
Nysander allowed himself a pleased wink. "One learns a thing or two over the
centuries. It is truly an exquisite system, and one fairly secure from
inadvertent detection. In the nominative case, an erroneous accent over the
antepenult indicates that you take the last letter of the word immediately
following the one wrongly accented, and so forth. In the dative case only the
accents over the penult have any significance. The upshot of it all is that you
come out with just fifteen letters. Properly arranged—keep your eyes on the
writing now—properly arranged they spell out 'argucth chthon hrig.""
"Sounds like you're getting ready to spit—" Seregil began, but the words died
in his throat as the writing on the page swirled into motion. After a few
seconds it disappeared entirely, leaving in its place a circular design
resembling an eight-pointed star that covered most of the page.
"A magical palimpsest!" he gasped.
"Precisely. But look more closely."
Tilting the vellum closer to the lamp, Seregil let out a low whistle; the
entire design was made up of the finest calligraphic writing. "Our mad prophet
must have written this with a hummingbird's quill."
"Can you read it?"
"I don't know. It's so cramped. The script is Konic, used by the court
scribes in the time of the early Hierophants, but the language is different, as
if the writer wanted to approximate the sounds of one language with the alphabet
of another. Yes, that's exactly what he was doing, the clever old bastard. So,
attacking it phonetically—"
Muttering under his breath, Seregil slowly worked his way through the tangled
writing. Half an hour later he looked up with a triumphant grin. "Pure Dravnian!
Nysander, it's got to be Dravnian."
"Dravnian?"
"The Dravnians are a tribal people scattered through the glacial valleys of
the Ashek Range, north of Aurenen. I haven't been up there since I was a boy,
but I've studied the language. Great ones for sagas and legends, those Dravnians.
They have no writing themselves, but this captures the sound of it. This fellow
was certainly a student of obscure tongues. Once you untangle all this mess,
it's just the same few words written over and over again to form the design.
Written in blood, too, by the way and probably his own if he was loony enough to
create something like this."
"Perhaps," Nysander broke in. "But can you make out what it says?"
Seregil glanced up at him, then let out a crow of triumph. "Ah ha! So that's
what this is all about. You can't read it!"
Nysander affected a pained look. "I would remind you of the oaths you have
given—"
Seregil held up a hand, grinning smugly. "I know, I know. But after all your
restrictions and secrecy, I think I've earned the right to gloat a little. All
it says is, "Stone within ice within stone within ice. Horns of crystal beneath
horns of stone." Or vice versa. There's no way of telling which is meant to be
the first line. Why he would go to such extremes to hide anything as obscure as
this is beyond me, though."
"Not at all, not at all!" Nysander clapped Seregil on the shoulder, then
began pacing excitedly. "The palimpsest begins in Asuit Old Style, an archaic
language of Plenimar, which predates the Hierophantic settlements. The seemingly
meaningless hidden phrase "argucth chthon hrig" operates as the key word to the
hidden writing. This, in turn, is composed in the alphabet of the Hierophantic
court, based at that period on the island of Kouros, yet in the language of an
obscure tribe of the southern mountains across the Osiat Sea near Aurenen. I had
reason to suspect as much but you, dear boy, have provided the final clues. What
an amazing document!"
Seregil, meanwhile, had been doing some further pondering of his own. "The
Dravnian tribes keep to the highest valleys of the Ashek Range, building their
villages along the edges of the ice fields. "Stone within ice within stone
within ice." And the horns of stone part reminds me of a story the mountain
traders used to tell, something about a place up there where demons dance across
the snow to drink the blood of the living. It was called the Horned Valley."
Nysander halted in front of Seregil, grinning broadly. "You have a mind like
a magpie's nest, dear boy! I never know what odd bit of treasure will tumble
from it next."
"If the Homed Valley really exists, then all this"—Seregil tapped the stained
vellum—"it's not just some convoluted riddle. It's a map."
"And perhaps not the only one," said Nysander. "According to recent
intelligence from Plenimar, several expeditionary forces have been dispatched
west toward the Strait of Bal. We could not imagine what they were up to, but
the Ashek peninsula lies in that direction."
"At this time of year?" Seregil shook his head.
Crossing the Bal meant making for the southern rim of the Osiat Sea, a place
of dangerous shoals and forbidding coastlines in the best of weather. In the
winter it would be worse than treacherous. "So whatever this "stone within ice"
thing is, the Plenimarans want it pretty badly. And I take it you don't mean for
them to get it?"
"I hope that you will assist me in forestalling that event."
"Well, it would certainly help to know what I'm looking for. If it wouldn't
mean revealing too many sacred mysteries, that is."
"It is rumored to be a crown or circlet of some sort," Nysander told him.
"More importantly, it possesses powers similar to those of the coin, which you
have already experienced."
Seregil grimaced at the memory. "Then I'll be certain not to wear it this
time. But if your information is correct, haven't the Plenimarans stolen a march
on us?"
"Perhaps not. The fact that they sent several expeditions suggests that they
do not know the object's precise location. We, on the other hand, may have just
determined that. And I am able to transport you there in a much swifter
fashion."
Seregil blanched. "Oh, no! You can't—translocation from here to the Asheks?
Nysander, I'll be puking for hours."
"I am sorry, but this matter is too important to chance anything else. Which
brings us to the matter of Alec. Will he be difficult about being left behind?"
Seregil raked a hand through his hair. "I'll manage something. When do I
leave?"
"By midday if you can manage it."
"I think so. What will I need, besides the obvious?"
"How would you fancy playing an Aurenfaie wizard?"
Seregil gave him a wry look. "Sounds fun, so long as we aren't relying on my
magical abilities."
"Oh my, no," Nysander said with a laugh. "I shall provide you with items
necessary to give credence to the role, and those for the task itself." He
paused and clasped the younger man by the shoulders. "I knew you would not fail
me, Seregil."
Seregil raised an eyebrow wryly at the wizard. "Bet now you're glad you
didn't kill me, eh? What's the hour?"
"Nearly sunup, I should think. Regrettably, I must send you back the same way
you came."
"Twice in one night? Just be sure you drop me handy to a basin!"
Alec woke to the sound of sleet lashing across the roof. Ruetha had burrowed
under the covers sometime in the night. He stroked the thick white ruff under
her chin and the cat broke into a loud purr.
"What are you doing here?" he asked sleepily.
Sitting up, he saw Seregil's battered old pack sitting ready outside the
bedroom door.
Seregil's sword belt was draped over it, the newly mended quillon shining in
the milky morning light.
Alec eyed the tidy pile with rising suspicion; Seregil had obviously been up
for some time, making preparations for a journey. And he hadn't bothered to wake
him.
"Seregil?" Poking his head around his friend's door,
Alec found the normally cluttered little room utterly impassable.
"Morning!" Seregil called cheerily from somewhere beyond an overturned chest.
"What's going on? Have you been up all night?"
"Not all night." Seregil waded free of the mess with an armload of heavy
sheepskin clothing and dumped it by the pack. "I found this," he said, handing
Alec a dusty sack containing half a dozen complex locks. Some were still
attached to splintered fragments of wood.
"Thought you might like to have a go at these, since you've mastered most of
the others on the workbench. Be careful, though. Some of them bite."
Alec set the bag aside without comment and leaned against the door frame.
Seregil was dressed for traveling and still hadn't told him to start packing.
"What's going on?" he asked, watching as Seregil wrestled a pair of long
snowshoes out of a wardrobe. "Where are you going to find snow in this weather?"
"Give me a minute, will you?" said Seregil, checking the rawhide webbing.
"I've got a few more things to find, then I'll explain what I can."
Alec let out a sigh and went to the window over the workbench. The panes
rattled as a fresh gust of wind buffeted the inn. Outside he could see Thryis'
son Diomis hurrying across the back court. Curtains of icy rain rippled past,
obscuring all but the closest buildings. Behind him, he could hear Seregil still
rummaging about.
Fighting down his rising impatience, he pulled on a pair of breeches and set
about lighting the fire.
The coals had died in the night. He heaped tinder and kindling on the ashes
and shook out a firechip from the jar by the hearth. Flames leapt up and he
stared into them, trying to marshal his racing thoughts.
"You know, from the back your head looks like a disheveled hedgehog," Seregil
remarked, emerging at last. Ruffling Alec's ragged hair, he dropped into his
favorite chair by the fire.
Alec was not amused. "You're going off alone, aren't you?"
"Just for a few days."
There was a guardedness in Seregil's tone that Alec didn't like. "On a job,
you mean?"
"I can't say, actually."
Alec studied his friend's face. On closer inspection, he noticed that Seregil
looked rather pale. "Is this because of last night? You said—"
"No, of course not. This is something I can't speak of to anyone."
"Why not?" the boy demanded, stubborn curiosity mingling with disappointment.
Seregil spread his hands apologetically. "It's nothing to do with you,
believe me. And don't bother pressing."
"This is something for Nysander, isn't it?"
Seregil regarded him impassively. "I need your word you won't track me when I
go."
Alec considered further objections, then nodded glumly. "When will you be
back?"
"In a few days, I hope. You'll have to do that papers job for Baron Orante,
and anything else coming in that looks like a one man job. There's Mourning
Night to think about, too, if I'm not back in time."
"Not back in time?" Alec sputtered. "That's only a week away, and you're
holding a party at Wheel Street that night!"
"We are holding a party," Seregil corrected.
"Don't worry. Runcer sees to all the arrangements, and Micum and his family
will be here by then, too. You'll just have to play host. Remember Lady Kylith,
the woman you danced with our first night there?"
"We're sitting with her at the Mourning Night ceremony."
"Right. She'll see to your etiquette."
"People are bound to ask about you, though."
"As far as anyone knows, Lord Seregil is still away recovering from the shock
of his arrest. Tell anyone who asks that I was delayed. Cheer up, Alec. Chances
are I'll be back in plenty of time."
"This secret job of yours—is it dangerous?"
Seregil shrugged. "What do we do that isn't? The truth is, I won't know much
myself until I'm in the middle of it."
"When are you leaving?"
"As soon as I've had something to eat. Get dressed now and we'll have our
breakfast downstairs."
Alec smelled freshly baked bread as they crossed the lading room to the
kitchen.
The breakfast uproar was over. A scullery boy was scrubbing down the scarred
worktables while Cilia bathed Luthas in a pan. Old Thryis sat peeling turnips by
the hearth, a shawl draped over her shoulders against the damp.
"Well, there you are at last," the old woman greeted them, though she seldom
saw Seregil before noon. "There's tea on the hob and new current buns under that
cloth there. Cilia made them fresh this morning."
"And how's this lad today?" Seregil smiled, holding a forefinger out to the
baby. Luthas immediately grabbed it and pulled it into his mouth.
"Oh, he's feisty," replied Cilia, looking rather dark under the eyes. "He's
got a tooth coming and it wakes us all night."
Alec shook his head. One minute Seregil was speaking of mysterious journeys,
the next here he was playing uncle to the baby like he hadn't a care in the
world.
Not that his affection for Luthas wasn't genuine.
He'd told Alec how Cilia had offered him the honor of fathering her child
when she'd made up her mind to avoid conscription. Seregil had politely
declined. While his interest in women seemed marginal at best, Alec suspected
the real reason for Seregil's reticence was that it would have cost him his
friendship with her grandmother. Thryis had been a sergeant in the Queen's
Archers in her youth and despaired that neither her son nor granddaughter had
followed a military career before settling down.
Cilia had never revealed who the child's father was, but the man must have
been dark. She was fair, while her son's eyes and hair were as brown as a
mink's.
Going to the hearth, Alec leaned down next to Thryis and reached for the
teapot warming by the fire.
"You're looking down in the mouth today," Thryis observed shrewdly. "Going
off without you, is he?"
"He told you?"
The old woman gave a derisive snort "He didn't have to," she scoffed, deftly
quartering a turnip and pitching it into a kettle beside her. "There he is in
his old rambling boots, chipper as a sparrow. And you here with the long face
and still in your shirtsleeves? Don't take no wizard to figure that one."
Alec shrugged. Thryis had run the Cockerel since Seregil secretly bought it
twenty years before. She—together with her family and Rhiri, the mute ostler—were
among the select few who knew anything of Seregil's double life.
"Now, don't go fretting yourself over it," she whispered. "Master Seregil
thinks the world of you, and no mistake. There's none he speaks so well of 'cept
Micum Cavish, and those two have been friends for years and years. Besides,
it'll give you and me a chance to talk shooting again, eh? There's still a trick
or two I haven't shared and that fine black bow of yours shouldn't be gathering
dust."
"I guess not." Alec gave her a quick peck on the cheek and went to sit across
from Seregil at the breakfast table.
Studying his friend's face as Seregil joked with Cilia over breakfast, Alec
felt certain he saw small lines of tension around his eyes. Whatever this secret
job was, there was more to it than he was letting on.
There was no use asking further about it, though.
Upstairs in their room again, Seregil finished with his scant collection of
gear and clapped a battered hat on his head.
"Well, take care of yourself," he said, "especially on that job for the
baron. I don't want to find you in the Red Tower when I return."
"You won't. Want help getting all that down?"
"No need." Shouldering his pack, Seregil clasped hands with him. "Luck in the
shadows, Alec."
And with the flash of a crooked grin, he was gone.
Alec listened to his footsteps fading rapidly away. "And to you."
Seregil paused in the kitchen on his way out.
Pulling up a stool beside Thryis, he slipped her a flat, sealed packet.
"I'm leaving this with you. I've got to go off for a few days. If I don't
come back, this should take care of Alec and the rest of you."
Frowning, Thryis fingered the wax seals. "A will, is it? No wonder young Alec
was looking so dark."
"He doesn't know, and I'd like to keep it that way."
"You've never left a will before."
"It's just in case I meet with an accident or something." Shouldering his
pack, he headed for the door.
"Or something!" The old woman's mouth pursed into a skeptical line. "Mind
that a 'something' don't jump up and bite you on the arse when you're not
looking."
"I'll do my best to avoid it."
Outside, the sleet had turned to rain. Pulling the hood of his patched cloak
up over his hat, he dashed across the slick cobbles to the stable where Rhiri
had his new mare saddled and ready. Tossing the fellow a gold half sester,
Seregil swung up into the saddle and set off at a gallop for the Oreska House.
It was midafternoon before Nysander completed his preparations for the
translocation. "Are you ready, Seregil?" he asked at last, looking up from the
elaborate pattern chalked on the casting-room floor.
"As ready as I'm likely to be," Seregil said, sweating in his heavy
sheepskins. He carried his pack, snowshoes, and pole to the center of the design
and piled them on the floor.
"These should establish your reputation as a wizard."
Nysander held up a half-dozen short willow rods covered with painted symbols.
"When broken, each will produce a different gift for your hosts. But you must be
certain to keep this long one with the red band separate from the rest. It
contains the translocation spell that will carry you back."
Seregil tucked the red wand carefully away in a belt pouch, then slipped the
others inside the white Aurenfaie tunic he wore beneath his heavy coat.
"These are the most crucial items, however," the wizard continued, stepping
to a nearby table. On it sat a wooden box two feet square and fitted with a
leather shoulder strap and a strong catch. It was lined with sheets of silver
engraved with magical symbols and contained two flasks wrapped in fleece.
Seregil frowned. "What if this crown or whatever it is that I'm after is too
big to fit inside?"
"Do the best you can and return to me at once."
Seregil lifted the flasks. They were heavy, and the wax seals covering the
corks were also inscribed with more symbols. "And these?"
"Pour the contents around the crown and inscribe the signs of the Four within
the circle. It should weaken any wards protecting it."
A nasty twinge of uncertainty shot through Seregil's innards. "Should?"
Nysander wrapped the flasks carefully in the fleece and shut them in the box.
"You survived the magic of the disk with no assistance. This should be
sufficient."
"Ah, I see." Seregil glanced doubtfully at his old friend. "You believe the
same inner flaw that kept me from becoming a wizard protects me from magic as
well."
"It seems to be the case. I only wish it did not cause you such distress with
translocations. Considering the distance involved in—"
"Let's just get it over with." Seregil gathered his gear in his arms as best
he could. "The Asheks are far enough west that I should have a few hours of
light left, but I'd rather not press my luck."
"Very well. I have done a sighting and should be able to send you to within a
few miles of a village. It will be safest to drop you on the glacier itself,
rather than risk hitting the rocky outcroppings along the edge."
"That's very comforting. Thanks so much!"
Ignoring the sarcasm, Nysander placed his fingertips together in front of his
face and began the incantation.
After a moment a particle of darkness winked into being within the cage of
his fingers. Spreading his hands slowly, he coaxed it larger until it spun like
a dark mirror in front of them.
Seregil stared into it for a moment, already queasy.
Tightening his grip on his snowshoes, he took a resolute breath, closed his
eyes, and stepped forward.
The whirling blast of vertigo was worse than he'd feared. For most people, a
translocation was as simple as stepping from one room to another. To Seregil,
however, it was like being sucked down in some vile black whirlpool.
It seemed to go on endlessly this time, buffeting him with darkness. Then,
just as suddenly, he tumbled out into frigid brightness and sank up to his hips
in drifted snow.
Stuck fast, he bent forward and spewed out his scant breakfast. When the
spasms were over, he struggled free and crawled away from the steaming mess.
Collapsing on his back, one arm over his eyes, he lay very still as the world
spun sickeningly. The wind sighed over him, blowing fine ice crystals across his
lips. Rolling onto his belly, he retched again, then cleaned his mouth with a
handful of snow.
At least Nysander can aim, he thought, looking around.
The glacier hung in a steep valley. At its head a few miles away a pair of
high peaks towered above the rest, marking a narrow pass and giving the valley
the name Seregil had remembered.
Slanting sunlight reflected back from the white expanse before him, bright
enough to make his eyes water.
Frozen waves, wind scoured out of the hardpack, thrust glistening up through
the fresh powder to cast shadows as blue as the sky overhead.
Seregil's heavy outer garments kept the worst of the biting cold at bay, but
his nose and cheekbones were already numb. His breath condensed with every
exhalation, freezing in a glistening rime on the fur edging of his cap.
Untangling the snowshoes, he checked them for damage and quickly strapped them
to his boots.
His thick gloves were cumbersome, but it would be courting frostbite to
remove them even briefly.
With firmer footing on the snow now, he set out for a nearby rise to get his
bearings. Anyone backtracking his trail would discover that he had more or less
fallen from the sky, but that couldn't be helped; he was, after all, supposed to
be a wizard.
From the top of the rise he spotted thin columns of smoke marking a village a
few miles away on the western slope. Farther down the valley he could just make
out a second village. The first was closer to the "horns of stone," so he headed
west.
He was still nauseated and the thin, frigid air cut at his lungs, making dark
spots dance in front of his eyes. Setting himself a steady pace, he marched
along until he struck a trail leading toward the village. He was within half a
mile of it when a pack of children and dogs appeared, running out to meet him.
Seregil paused, leaning on his snow pole with a grin of relief. Dravnian
hospitality was legendary among those few who knew of it. Members of a
neighboring village were greeted as family, which they often were. Anyone from
beyond the limiting peaks was regarded as a veritable marvel. Goats were
probably already being slaughtered in his honor.
"May I visit your village?" he asked in Dravnian as the children crowded
excitedly around him.
Laughing, they shouldered his baggage and led him in.
Dogs barked, goats and sheep bleated from their stone enclosures. Villagers
hailed him like some returning hero.
The little settlement was made up of a collection of squat towers, round
two-story affairs of piled stone topped with conical felt roofs. The main doors
were set high in the upper level and reached by a ramp when the snow was not
piled up to the doorsill.
At the center of the village stood a tower broader than the rest. A sizable
crowd had already collected outside, hoping for a look at the newcomer.
The Dravnians were a short, broad-set people with black, almond-shaped eyes
and coarse, dark hair that they wore slicked back with liberal applications of
oil. A few among them, however, had lighter hair or finer features that spoke of
mixed blood—probably Aurenfaie, since few others found their way to these remote
valleys.
The headman of the village was one of these half castes. As he stepped
forward, smiling broadly, Seregil saw that the man's eyes were the same clear
grey as his own.
"Welcome in this place, Fair One," the fellow greeted him in a patois of
broken Aurenfaie and Dravnian. "I am Retak, son of Wigris and Akra, leader of
this village."
"I am Meringil, son of Solun and Nycanthi," Seregil answered in Dravnian.
Grinning, Retak lapsed back into his native tongue. "We've not seen one of
your tribe since my grandfather's time. You honor our village with your
presence. Will you feast with us in the council house?"
"You honor me," Seregil replied, bowing as gracefully as his thick clothing
allowed.
The upper level of the council house, used as a communal storehouse, was
floored over except for the large central smoke hole. Rough stone steps led down
to the lower chamber, where a huge fire of dried dung chips had already been
kindled in a fire pit surrounded by thick carpets and bolsters. Women bustled
excitedly around a cooking fire across the room, preparing the ritual meal.
Seated at the central fire with Retak and the other principal men of the
village, Seregil closed his eyes for a moment as his belly did a slow, uneasy
roll. The smell of slaughtered animals, mingled with the more immediate aromas
of unwashed bodies and greased hair, was overpowering after the clear mountain
wind.
Every available inch seemed to have been filled by curious villagers. People
talked excitedly on all sides, leaning across their neighbors to shout to
someone else or calling down from above for details. Children ringed the smoke
hole overhead, chattering like swallows. The women labored with noisy cheer,
wielding cleavers and clattering skewers and bowls.
Seregil felt all eyes on him as he stripped off his heavy outer garments.
Posing as a traveler from his native Aurenen, Seregil had worn traditional garb.
His long white tunic and close-fitting trousers were comfortable and unadorned
except for thin bands of patterned weaving at the hem and neck. To complete the
effect, he pulled a loosely woven head cloth from inside his tunic and wrapped
its many folds about his head with practiced skill, leaving long ends hanging
down his back. A small, ornate dagger hung at his belt, but he laid it and his
sword aside as a gesture of good faith.
An excited hum went around the room as he reclined at last and accepted a
bowl of llaki from Seune, the headman's wife. He sipped the fermented milk as
sparingly as good manners allowed.
His duty as guest was to repay hospitality with news and he slowly related
such events from the south as might be of interest to them. Most of it was
thirty years out-of-date, mixed in with snippets he'd picked up since his
banishment, but it was all fresh to the Dravnians and very well received.
When he'd finished, the traditional storytelling commenced. Great lovers of
tales that they were, the Dravnians had no system of writing. Each family had
its own special stock of stories that only members of that clan could relate.
Other tales were general property and were demanded of those who told them best.
The children frequently chimed in with familiar lines and the women were called
upon for the proper songs.
Seregil joined in with tales of his own and was quickly hailed as a biruk,
"one who remembers many stories"—highest praise in such company. By the time a
gigantic platter of roasted goat was set before them, he'd begun to enjoy
himself.
Roasted shanks, haunches, and ribs lay arranged on the communal platter in a
great ring surrounding cooked entrails, sweetbreads, and boiled goat's heads.
When the guest and council had eaten their fill, the platter would pass on to
the secondary guests, and after them the children and dogs. Seregil was served
by Seune and her eldest daughters.
The two girls knelt on his right, holding out slabs of dark bread that their
mother loaded with choice bits-of meat. Nodding polite acceptance, Seregil
picked up a chunk of meat and bit into it, signaling his hosts to begin.
The tough, savory meat settled the last of his queasiness and when the meal
was over he made a great show of presenting gifts to Retak and his village.
Motioning for the others to clear a space in front of him, Seregil secretly
palmed one of Nysander's painted wands from his sleeve and snapped it between
his fingers while making elaborate motions with his other hand. Several bushels
of fruit appeared instantly out of thin air before his delighted audience.
The baskets passed from hand to hand and up to the crowd overhead as the
people exclaimed over their good fortune.
Smiling, Seregil drew another wand, which produced a casket of silver coins.
The Dravnians had no use for currency, but were pleased by the glint of the
metal and the fineness of the designs. Subsequent conjurings brought bolts of
bright silk and linen, bronze needles, coils of rope, and bundles of healing
herbs.
"You are a Fair One of great magic and generosity, Meringil, son of Solun and
Nycanthi, and a true biruk," Retak proclaimed, clapping Seregil on the shoulder.
"You shall be known as a member of my clan from this day. What can we offer you
in return?"
"It is I who am honored by your excellent hospitality. My gifts are given in
thanks for that alone," Seregil replied graciously. "Though there is a matter in
which you may be able to assist me."
Retak motioned for the others to pay attention. "What has brought you so far
to our valley?"
"I've come seeking a place of magic spoken of in certain legends. Do you know
of such a place?"
The reaction was instantaneous. The elders exchanged hesitant looks. A woman
dropped a spit with a clatter. Overhead the children left off exclaiming over
their new treasures and leaned farther over the hole to listen.
Retak motioned with his staff and an ancient little man wearing a coat
decorated with sheep's teeth shuffled forward. In the firelight he looked like
an ancient tortoise, with a tortoise's leathery, slow-blinking gaze. Kneeling
slowly before Seregil, he held up a bone rattle in one tremulous hand and shook
it in a wide circle before speaking.
"I am Timan, son of Rogher and Borune," he said at last. "And I tell you that
there is such a place in this valley. It has been the duty of my clan to watch
over it since the time of the spirit's anger. It is a spirit home, deep in the
rock beneath the ice. How it came there no man knows. Sometimes the door is
there and sometimes it is not there, according to the will of the spirit."
"And this spirit has grown angry?" asked Seregil.
Timan nodded, shaking the rattle softly in time to his words. It was more of
a chant than a story, as if he'd told it many times before, and in exactly the
same words.
"The spirit made a chamber for men to dream in. Some had visions. Some did
not. Some heard the voice of the spirit. Some did not. All was with the will of
the spirit. When the spirit chose to speak, those who heard were called blessed,
bringers of great luck to their clan. But many generations ago the spirit grew
angry. Men came out maddened. They did deeds of terrible evil. Others never
returned and no trace of them could be found. A man of my clan was the first to
go mad, and so it has been the burden of my clan to guard the spirit home since
that time."
He stopped, wrinkled mouth moving in silence, as if he'd run out of sound.
"Why do you seek this place?" Retak asked.
Seregil stared into the fire for a moment, quickly weaving this new
information into a usable form. "I'd heard legends of this place and was curious
to see if they were true. You know that the Aurenfaie are people of great magic.
I have shown you my powers already. If you will show me this sacred place, I
will speak with your spirit and find out why it's so angry. Perhaps I can even
make peace between you again."
A murmur of approbation went around the cramped room.
Old Timan laid his rattle at Seregil's feet. "This would be a great feat
indeed. Many times I have tried to placate the spirit, but it has been silent to
me, or driven me out with terrible noises in my head. Truly, can you do such a
thing?"
"I'll try," Seregil replied. "Bring me to the spirit chamber at first light
tomorrow and I'll speak to your spirit."
The murmur changed to a roar of acclaim.
"The guest sleeps in my house this night," Retak announced proudly, ending
the feast. "The mountain nights are harsh for your kind, Meringil, but I have
many healthy daughters to keep you warm,"
Overhead the children shouted with delight as the older girls craned for a
better look at Seregil.
Seregil blinked, "What?"
"To get a round belly from a guest gives a young woman highest status," Retak
explained happily. "New blood brings new strength to the whole village. My own
grandfather was a light-eyed Aurenfaie, as you can see. But not a great magician
like you! Tomorrow Ekrid's clan will offer you hospitality, and then Ilgrid's
and—"
"Ah, of course." Seregil looked around to find mothers reckoning on their
fingers their place in the hierarchy. Clearly, there were a few Dravnian
guesting customs he'd forgotten about.
Ah, Nysander, he groaned inwardly, scanning the gaggle of moonfaced maidens,
reading clearly enough the greedy gleam behind their modest smiles.
This had damn well better be the right valley!
Alec lowered himself from the villa window, then whirled in alarm as a
menacing snarl erupted on his right.
There'd been no sign of a dog when he'd first climbed into the baron's
courtyard, but there was sure as hell one here now.
What he could see of it in the darkness was big, and the rising timbre of the
growl was enough for him to imagine the beast closing in on him, ears laid back,
teeth bared.
It was too far to the courtyard wall for a dash.
Racking his memory for the thief's charm Seregil had shown him, he raised his
left fist with index and little fingers extended. Snapping his hand to point the
little finger down, he whispered hoarsely, "Peace, friend hound."
The growling ceased at once. A cold nose thrust briefly against his palm,
then he heard the dog padding away.
It had never occurred to Alec to ask how long the charm lasted. Taking no
chances, he ran for the wall.
The top was studded with shards of glass and crockery set in mortar; in his
haste he reached carelessly and caught his left hand on one of the jagged
points, gashing the palm just above the wrist. Pain bloomed through his hand as
a warm trickle oozed down into his sleeve. Hissing softly through his teeth, he
slid down the far side and headed for home.
His route took him by Wheel Street and he halted a moment at the corner,
holding his torn hand to his chest. It would only take a moment to duck in
there, and he knew where Seregil kept bandages and salve.
The growing throb in his hand decided him.
Letting himself in the front door, he took out a lightstone and whistled
softly to the dogs, making himself known. A huge white shape materialized at
once. Marag padded out of the dining room, wagging a greeting as he sniffed
Alec's hand. His mate would be on patrol in the back court. Accompanied by the
hound, Alec walked through the main hall to the kitchen.
The supplies he wanted were on the shelf by the door. Carrying the rags and
salve pot to the table, he set his lightstone by them and examined the gash. It
was jagged and sore, but no major veins or tendons seemed to be damaged.
"This must be my unlucky hand," he muttered, rubbing his thumb over the shiny
circular scar left by the cursed disk they'd stolen from Mardus. They'd both
been branded by it—Seregil on his chest where it had hung, Alec on the palm of
the hand as he'd grasped it during their strange struggle at the inn.
He bandaged the cut as best he could one-handed, then sat back and stroked
Marag's silky head. The thought of his own bedchamber upstairs was tempting. He
was cold and tired and suddenly Blue Fish Street felt very far away. But there
was always the complication of appearances; Sir Alec and Lord Seregil were not
expected to arrive for several more days and it wouldn't do to have untoward
signs of occupation just yet. With a resigned shrug, he cleared away the
evidence of his visit and set out through the dark, cold streets.
Within a block of Wheel Street he suddenly sensed pursuit. Stealth was
difficult on the icy streets and whoever it was shadowing him was making a poor
job of concealing their movements. When Alec slowed, they came on. When he
increased his pace, so did they. It was too dark to see, but he could hear more
than one set of feet. One of them had metal nails on the soles of his boots; in
the silence of the street,
Alec could hear them scraping against the cobbles.
There was no question of returning to the house. Even if he could get back
past his pursuers, he couldn't risk leading them there.
Ahead of him, a street lantern burned at the intersection of Wheel and Golden
Helm. A right turn would bring him to the Astellus Circle and the Street of the
Sheaf. There was a chance of meeting with a Watch patrol there, but he couldn't
be sure of it.
A left turn would take him toward Silvermoon Street and the Palace.
At the corner he deliberately walked through the pool of light and swung
sharply to the right. Once beyond it, he doubled quickly back toward Silvermoon.
His pursuers caught the trick, however, and charged after him, their boots
clattering on the paving stones.
There was nothing left to do but run. Abandoning any attempt at stealth, Alec
pelted down the center of the broad boulevard, cloak flapping behind him.
High garden walls presented an unbroken barrier on either side, blocking any
hope of a quick sidestep. The pounding of his feet and those closing in on him
echoed like the clatter of dice in a cup.
Tearing his cloak strings loose, Alec let it fall away behind him. A muffled
curse rang out an instant later, and the sound of a man falling heavily.
Dashing past another lantern, he glanced back to see two swordsmen no more
than twenty yards behind.
He veered into Silvermoon Street and saw the wall surrounding the palace
grounds looming on his right. As he'd hoped, a watch fire burned in front of one
of the postern gates. He dashed toward it, lungs bursting.
A cluster of soldiers of the Queen's household guard were huddled around the
brazier. At the sound of Alec's approach, four came forward with swords drawn.
"Help!" gasped Alec, praying they didn't attack as he barreled into their
midst.
"Footpads—chasing me—back there!"
Two men grasped him by the arms, half restraining, half supporting him as he
skidded to a halt. "Steady, lad, steady there," said one.
"I don't see anyone," growled another, squinting in the direction Alec had
come from.
Looking back, Alec saw no sign of his mysterious pursuers.
The first guard ran a skeptical eye over his fine coat and sword. "Footpads,
eh? More likely an angry father or husband at this hour. Been up to mischief,
have you?"
"No, I swear," Alec panted. "I was coming home late from—from the Street of
Lights." The others grinned knowingly at this.
"Just the place to get your purse lightened, one way or another, eh?" the
sergeant said with a chuckle.
"Well, it's late for the nighthawks to be out, but they might just lurk
around for you. Do you live close by?"
"No, across the city."
"Then you're welcome to tuck up here with us round the fire 'til first
light."
Alec gratefully accepted a spare cloak and a pull from a water skin, then
settled down with his back to the wall, the warmth of the brazier warming his
face and chest. All in all, he thought as he drifted off to sleep, it wasn't the
worst end to an evening's work.
Retak's daughters bid Seregil a fond farewell as he and their father left to
meet Timan at the council house early the next day. To Seregil's dismay, a crowd
had already assembled and many had snowshoes and poles ready.
Timan presented a young man to him. "I am too old now to make the journey,
but my grandson, Turik, knows the place. He can guide you. These others will
carry your belongings and gift offerings for the spirit."
Seregil groaned inwardly. The last thing he wanted was an audience, but he
was too close to his objective to risk offending the village. Amid much cheering
and singing, they set off for the head of the valley.
The Dravnian youths marched along easily, talking and joking as they broke
trail. Seregil toiled doggedly in their wake, struggling with the thin air and a
poor night's rest. One of Retak's sons fell in beside him, grinning.
"You had good hospitality last night, eh? My sisters were happy this
morning."
"Oh, yes," wheezed Seregil. "I was kept very warm, thank you."
They reached the base of the pass just after midday.
Turik called a halt while an older man named Shradin went ahead to scout the
snow.
Turik pointed up the pass. "The spirit home is there, but it's difficult
going from here—fissures beneath the snow and avalanches. Shradin can read the
snow better than anyone in the village."
Squatting on their snowshoes, the others watched as the guide explored the
pass.
"Well, what do you think?" asked Seregil when Shradin returned.
The Dravnian shrugged. "It's only a little dangerous today. Still, it would
be better if just a few go on from here. Turik knows the way and I know the
snow. The rest of them better go home."
After some disgruntled grumbling, the others headed back to the village.
Shradin took the lead as they began their cautious ascent. Seregil and Turik
following in single file. Seregil watched in silent admiration as the man probed
ahead with his pole, leading them safely around deep fissures concealed just
beneath the deceptively unbroken snow. Glad as he was of this, however, Seregil
couldn't help glancing nervously up at the tons of snow and ice clinging
precariously to the mountainsides above.
As they neared the top of the pass, Turik took the lead. "We are almost
there," he said at last, pausing for Seregil to catch his breath.
Struggling up a last, steep face, Turik halted again and began casting around
where the lip of the glacier met the rock face. After frequent sightings up at
the peaks and much prodding with his pole, the young Dravnian raised his hand
and waved for the others
Hung with icicles and half drifted over with snow, the opening of the passage
resembled a fanged and sullen mouth. Digging with hands and snowshoes, they soon
cleared the opening and peered down the steep black tunnel that descended into
the ice.
Seregil felt a strange tingling in his hands and up his back as leaned over
it; strong magic lay below.
"The first part of the way is slick," Turik warned, pulling a sack of ashes
from his bag. "We'll need to scatter these as we go, or it's nearly impossible
to climb back out again."
"I have to go alone from here," Seregil told him. "My magic is strong, but I
can't be distracted worrying about the two of you. Wait for me here. If I'm not
back by the time the sun touches that peak, come down for me, but not before. If
your spirit kills me, give all my things to Retak and say he is to divide them
as he sees fit."
Turik's eyes widened a bit at this, but neither he nor Shradin argued.
Seregil took off his bulky hat and tied his long hair back with a thong.
Taking the small lightwand from his tool roll, he grasped the handle in his
teeth and shouldered an ash bag and the cumbersome box.
"Aura's luck be with you," Shradin said solemnly, using the Aurenfaie name
for Illior.
Let's hope it is, Seregil thought nervously as he began his descent.
The steep tunnel was narrow and slick as glass in places. Scattering ash in
front of him, he crawled down, dragging the box behind. By the time the ice gave
way to a more level stone passage, he was smeared black from head to foot.
The magic permeating the place grew stronger as he went down. The uncanny
tingle he'd first noticed increased swiftly. There was a low buzzing in his ears
and he could feel an ache growing behind his eyes.
"Aura Elustri malrei," he whispered, speaking the invocation to Illior aloud
to test the effect. The silence absorbed his words without an echo and the
tingling in his limbs continued unabated.
The tunnel ended at a tiny natural chamber scarcely larger than the passage
itself. The shards of a broken bowl lay against the far wall.
The ceaseless noise in his ears made concentration difficult as Seregil began
a careful search of the place. It wasn't a steady tone, but rose and fell
erratically. At times he seemed to catch a faint hint of voices beneath the
rest, but put it down to imagination.
Satisfied at last that no other passages were concealed by any method he
could detect, he tucked his chilled hands into his coat and hunkered down to
review the few facts he possessed.
"Horns of crystal beneath horns of stone. Stone within ice within stone
within ice," the palimpsest had said.
Seregil looked around, frowning.
Well, I'm certainly beneath horns of stone. And to get here I've gone through
the ice first, and then stone.
That left stone within ice still to go, but where? Though obscure in method,
the palimpsest had been quite specific in giving the necessary directions. If
there was some secret way beyond this point, then logic suggested that the final
clues leading to it were also concealed in that same document.
Massaging his throbbing temples, he closed his eyes and recalled the details
of the palimpsest's various inscriptions. Could he and Nysander have missed
something in the rambling prophecies? Or perhaps Nysander had been wrong in his
assertion that only one side of the document concealed a palimpsest.
Now there was an uncomfortable thought.
He was startled from his reverie by a blast of cold air. Opening his eyes, he
found himself lying in the snow outside the tunnel entrance with Turik and
Shradin kneeling over him with obvious concern. Over Shradin's shoulder he saw
that the sun was already low behind the designated peak.
"What happened?" Seregil gasped, sitting up.
"We waited as long as we could," Turik apologized. "The time came and went
for you to return. When we went down, we found you in a spirit dream."
"There's a storm coming," added Shradin, frowning up at the clouds. "They
come on fast this time of year. We need to get back to the village while there's
still light enough to go down safely. There's no shelter here, and nothing for a
fire."
Seregil looked around in sudden alarm. "My sword! And the box—Where are
they?"
"Here, beside you. We brought them out, too," Turik assured him. "But tell
us, did you speak to the spirit? Do you know the reason for its anger?"
Still chagrined at having fallen so easily under the spell of the place,
Seregil nodded slowly, buying time as he collected his thoughts.
"It's not your spirit who is angry, but another, an evil one," he told them.
"This evil one keeps the other prisoner. It's a very strong spirit. I must rest
and prepare myself to banish it."
Shradin looked up at the sky again. "You'll have time, I think."
Taking up their packs and poles, the Dravnian guides led Seregil back to the
village for another night of exhausting hospitality.
As Shradin had predicted, a savage blizzard roared in through the teeth of
the mountains during the night.
People fought their way through the howling wind to drive their livestock up
the ramps into their towers, then sealed their doors and settled down to wait
out the storm.
It raged steadily for two days. One house lost its felt roof, forcing the
inhabitants to flee to a neighboring tower.
At another, a woman gave birth to twins.
Otherwise, the time was given over to eating, storytelling, and general
husbandry. The Dravnians were philosophical about such conditions; what was the
use of complaining about something that happened every winter? The blizzards
were even beneficial. They piled snow around the house and helped keep the
drafts out.
One family in particular regarded this storm as a stroke of luck, for it kept
the Aurenfaie guest in their house for two nights.
Seregil was less complaisant about the-situation.
Ekrid had nine children, six of them daughters. One girl was too young,
another in the midst of her menses, but that still left four to contend with and
he didn't much like the competitive gleam in their eyes as they welcomed him.
To further complicate matters, the lower level had been given over to Ekrid's
herd of goats and sheep, and their bleating and odor lent little to the general
atmosphere. For two days, Seregil had to choose between evading the amorous
advances of the girls or trying to walk three feet without treading in shit. His
success was limited on both counts and his concentration on the problem at hand
suffered.
Stretched out with two of Ekrid's daughters still twined around him the
second night, Seregil stared up at the rafters and decided he'd had enough of
women to last him for some time. Shifting restlessly in their musky embrace, he
caught a hint of answering movement across the way where Ekrid's sons slept.
One of them had made long eyes at him the evening before—He gave the
possibility a moment's consideration, but resolved dourly that there was little
to be gained in that direction. The young man smelled as strongly of goat tallow
and old hides as his sisters, and lacked a front tooth besides.
Lying back, he allowed himself a moment's longing for his own clean bed and a
freshly bathed companion to share it. To his surprise, the anonymous figure
swiftly transformed into Alec.
Father, brother, friend, and lover, the Oracle of Illior had told him that
night in Rhiminee.
He supposed that, after a fashion, he had been father and brother to Alec,
having more or less adopted him after their escape from Asengai's dungeon.
Seregil smiled wryly to himself in the darkness; it'd been the least he could
do, considering that Alec was one of dozens of innocents captured and tortured
by Asengai's men during their hunt for Seregil himself.
In the months since then they'd certainly become friends, and perhaps
something more than friends.
But lovers?
Seregil had kept this possibility resolutely at bay, telling himself the boy
was too young, too Dalnan, and, above all, too valued a companion to risk losing
over something as inconsequential as sex.
And yet, lying exhausted among Ekrid's daughters, he suffered a guilty pang
of arousal as he thought of Alec's slender body, his dark blue eyes and ready
smile, the rough silken texture of his hair.
Haven't you had enough hopeless infatuations in your life? he scowled to
himself. Rolling onto his belly, he turned his thoughts to the palimpsest,
running through its cryptic phrases once again.
Horns of crystal beneath horns of stone. Stone within ice within stone within
ice.
Damn, but there seemed little enough to be wrung out of it at this point.
Slowly he repeated the phrase in its original Dravnian, then translated it into
Konic, Skalan, and Aurenfaie, just for good measure.
Nothing.
Start again, he thought.
You're overlooking something. Think!
After this came the directions to the chamber. Before it were the prophetic
ramblings: first the dancing animals, then the bones, and the strange words of
the unscrambled cipher that unlocked the secret—
"Illior's Eyes!"
One of the girls stirred in her sleep, running a hand down his back. He
forced himself to lie still, heart pounding excitedly.
The phrase! The phrase itself.
Those alien, throat-scraping words. If they were the key to the palimpsest,
then why not to the magic of the chamber itself?
Assuming he was correct, however, this raised other considerations. If the
words were simply a password spell, then he could probably use them without
danger to himself or anyone else. But if they worked a deeper magic, what then?
He could go back to Nysander now with what he already knew. Still, the
Plenimarans might be beating a trail up the valley at this very moment and
Nysander would be too drained from the first translocation spell to send him or
anyone else back immediately. Unless, of course, he enlisted the aid of someone
more magically reliable rather than risk mishap—Magyana perhaps, or Thero.
To hell with that! I haven't come this far for someone else to see the
mystery's end. First light tomorrow I'm going up that pass again, avalanches be
damned.
As he drifted happily off to sleep, he realized that the wind had dropped at
last.
Someone pounded on Ekrid's door just before dawn, waking the household.
"Come to the council house!" a voice shouted from outside. "Something
terrible has happened. Come now!"
Extricating himself from a soft tangle of arms and thighs, Seregil threw on
his clothes and ran for the council house with the others.
Faint, predawn light painted the snow blue, the towers black against it.
Snowshoeing through the icy powder, Seregil found the village almost
unrecognizable. The storm had buried the towers up to their doorsills, leaving
the exposed upper story looking like an ordinary cottage drifted up with snow.
Shouldering his way through the crowd at the council house, he hurried
downstairs to the meeting chamber.
The central fire had been lit and beside it crouched a woman he hadn't seen
before. Surrounded by a silent, wide-eyed crowd, she clutched a small bundle
against her breast, wailing hoarsely.
Retak's wife knelt beside her and gently folded back the blanket. Inside lay
a dead infant. The stranger clutched the baby fiercely, her hands mottled with
frostbite.
"What happened?" Seregil asked, slipping in beside Retak.
He shook his head sadly. "I don't know. She staggered into the village a
little while ago and no one has been able to get any sense out of her."
"That is Vara, my husband's cousin from Torgud's village," a woman cried,
pushing her way through the crowd. "Vara, Vara! What's happened to you?"
The woman looked up, then threw herself into her kinswoman's arms.
"Strangers!" she cried.
"They came out of the storm. They refused the feast, killed the headman and
his family. Others, many others, my husband, my children—My children!"
Throwing back her head, she let out a scream of anguish. People gasped and
muttered, looking to Retak.
"But why?" Retak asked gently, bending over her.
"Who were they? What did they want?"
Vara covered her eyes and cowered lower. Seregil knelt and placed a hand on
her trembling shoulder.
"Were they looking for the spirit home?"
The woman nodded mutely.
"But they refused the feast," he went on softly, feeling a coldness growing
in the pit of his stomach.
"They affronted the village, and you would not deal with them."
"Yes," Vara whispered.
"And when the killing started, then did you tell them?"
Tears welled in Vara's eyes, rolling swiftly down her cheeks. "Partis told
them, after they killed his wife," she sobbed weakly. "He told them of Timan and
his clan. He thought the killing would stop. But it didn't. They laughed, some
of them, as they killed us. I could see their teeth through their beards. They
laughed, they laughed—"
Still clutching her dead child, she slumped over in a faint and several women
carried her to a pallet by the wall.
"Who could do such things?" Retak asked in bewilderment.
"Plenimaran marines," Seregil growled, and every eye turned to him. "These
men are enemies, both to me and to you. They seek the evil that lurks in your
spirit home. When they find it, they'll worship it and sacrifice living people
to it."
"What can we do?" a woman cried out.
"They'll come here," a man yelled angrily.
"Partis as good as set them upon us!"
"Do you have any weapons?" Seregil asked over the rising din.
"Nothing but wolf spears and skinning knives. How can we fight such men with
those?"
"You're a magician!" shouted Ekrid. "Can't you kill them with your magic?"
Caught in a circle of expectant faces, Seregil drew a deep breath. "You've
all seen the nature of my magic. I have no spells for killing men."
He let disappointment ripple through the crowd for an instant, then added,
"But I may have something just as effective."
"What is that?" the man demanded skeptically.
Seregil smiled slightly. "A plan."
Retak called a halt at the base of the pass as the first lip of sun showed
over the eastern peaks.
Shradin went ahead to assess the danger. The others—every man, woman, and
child of Retak's village comwaited quietly for word to move on.
Mothers whispered again to their younger children why they must keep silent
in the pass. The infants had been given llaki to make them sleep.
Seregil climbed an outcropping and shaded his eyes as he looked back across
the snowfield. Blue shadow still lay-deep in the valley, but he could make out a
dark column of men closing in on the village. It wouldn't take long for them to
see that their prey had fled, or what direction they'd gone.
"There they are," he whispered to Retak. "We have to move on quickly!"
Hardly daring to breathe, they continued up the pass.
It was a fearsome journey. The villagers moved as swiftly as they could, some
bowed under loads of fuel and food, others carrying children on their backs or
aged relatives on litters. Only the muffled creak of snowshoes and pack straps
broke the silence.
Old Timan trudged painfully along near the rear, supported by Turik and his
brothers.
Mercifully, Vara had died and she and her child were hidden now in the drifts
beyond the goat enclosures.
But her death was not in vain; she'd given Retak's village time to prepare.
Shimmering veils of snow blew across the pass, dislodging small falls down
the slopes.
These gave out harmlessly in fine bits of crust, rolling down to leave mouse
trails across their path.
Ominous cracks and groans echoed between the cliffs overhead, but Shradin
gave no warning sign and Retak silently motioned his people on.
Trudging along in their midst, Seregil was deeply moved by the mix of fear,
trust, and determination that drove these people forward. They'd welcomed him—a
stranger-given him the best of all they had. When Retak claimed him as a member
of his clan, it was meant literally, hi the eyes of the Dravnians he was now a
blood member of the community for as long as he wished to claim kinship.
The Plenimaran marines pursuing them had been offered the same welcome.
Looking back as they neared the cave, he saw that the enemy had reached the
village and was now turning toward the pass.
You bastards! he thought bitterly.
You'd carve these people like sheep for whatever lies hidden at the end of
that tunnel. You slaughtered Vara's village. But you were sloppy my friends, and
that makes all the difference!
Up ahead Retak conferred briefly with Shradin, then motioned for a halt.
Seregil climbed up to join them.
"Do those men know how to read the snow?" he whispered..
"Let's hope not. Retak, tell the others to move a bit andl watch for your
signal. Are the young men in place?"
"They're ready. But what if this plan of yours doesn't work?"
"Then we'll need another plan." Feeling much less confident than he sounded,
Seregil went to take his own position.
The villagers nervously watched the Plenimarans. The sun was higher now, and
glinted back from spears and helmets below. What first appeared only as a long,
dark movement against the snow soon resolved into individual men toiling toward
them.
Whatever the Plenimarans think they're after here, they not taking any
chances, Seregil thought, counting over ?? men. He glanced briefly up the slope,
trying to make mouth of the spirit chamber tunnel and wondering again what could
be worth all this..
The Plenimarans were close enough for Seregil to make out the insignia on
their breastplates before Shradin and Retak. The headman raised his staff
overhead with both arms and let out a bloodcurdling yell. Every villager joined
in
screaming at the top of their lungs. At the same time Seregil, Shradin, and the
young men of the village shoved piles of loosened rock and ice chunks, sending
them ca down the steep slope.
For an instant nothing happened.
Then the first rumblings sounded along the western cimaran of snow and ice
sloughed off, plunging down on the
column.
Seregil could see the pale ovals of upturned faces. The soldiers realized too
late the trap they'd been drawn into. ?? column wavered and broke. Men foundered
in the snow, throwing aside their arms as they sought some direction of escape
it implacable wave bearing down on them.
The avalanche overtook them in seconds, carrying in dead leaves in a flood,
blotting them from sight.
A great cheer went up from the Dravnians and the sound brought down a second
deafening avalanche from the east wall. It crashed down the valley to lap over
the first with a roar of finality that echoed for minutes between the stark,
sun-gilded peaks.
Shradin pounded Seregil joyfully on the back. "Didn't I say it would fall
just so?" he shouted.
"No one could have survived that!"
Seregil took a last wondering look down at the massive slide, then waved for
Turik. "It's time I completed my work. This evil must be removed from your
valley so no others will come seeking it."
Amazingly, the tunnel opening was still clear, though drifts were piled
thickly around the spot. With the women singing victory songs behind him,
Seregil once again made his way down the slick, cramped passage. The noises in
his head and the tingling in his skin were as bad as before, but this time he
ignored them, knowing what he had to do.
"Here we are again," he whispered, reaching the chamber.
Refusing to consider the various ramifications of being wrong about the
nature of the magic, he hugged the box against his side and said loudly, "Argucth
chthon hrig. "
An eerie silence fell over the chamber. Then he heard a soft tinkling sound
that reminded him of embers cooling on a hearth. Tiny flashes like miniature
lightning flickered across the rock face at the far end of the chamber.
Seregil took a step back, then dove for the mouth of the tunnel as the stone
exploded.
Jagged shards flew up the tunnel, hissing like arrows as they scored the back
of his thick coat and trousers. Others ricocheted and spattered in a brief,
deadly storm around the tiny chamber.
It was over in an instant. Seregil lay with his arms over his head a moment
longer, then cautiously held up the lightstone and looked back.
An opening had been blasted in the far wall, revealing a dark space beyond.
Drawing his sword, Seregil approached and looked into the second chamber. It
was roughly the size of his sitting room at the Cockerel, and at the back of it
a glistening slab of ice caught the glow of his lightstone, reflecting it across
a tangle of withered corpses that covered the floor.
The constant cold beneath the glacial ice had drawn the moisture from the
bodies over uncounted years, leaving them dark and shrunken, lips withered into
grimaces, eyes dried away like raisins, hands gnarled to talons.
Seregil sank to his knees, cold sweat running down his chest beneath his
coat. Even in their mummified state, he could see that their chests had been
split open, the ribs pulled wide. Only a few months earlier his friend and
partner, Micum Cavish, had come upon a similar scene nearly a thousand miles
away, in the Fens below Blackwater Lake. But there some of the bodies had been
newly killed. These had been here for decades, perhaps centuries. Putting this
together with Nysander's veiled threats and secrecy, Seregil felt a twinge of
genuine fear.
The singing whine in his ears was much worse here.
Kneeling there at the mouth of the chamber, Seregil suddenly envisioned what
the victims' last moments must have been.
Waiting to be dragged into the killing chamber.
Listening to the screams.
The steam rising from torn bodies—
He could almost catch the sound of those tortured voices echoing back faintly
over the years.
Shaking such fancies off uneasily, he climbed in to examine the mysterious
slab.
The rough-hewn block of ice was half as long as he was tall, and nearly four
feet thick. The aura of the place was worse here; a nasty prickling sensation
played over his skin, like ants beneath his clothes. His head pounded. The
ringing in his ears swelled like a chorus of voices wailing an octave beyond the
scope of pain.
More disturbing still was the sudden flair of pain around the scar on his
chest. It burned like a fresh wound, driving a deep spike of pain at his heart.
Working swiftly, Seregil took the two flasks from the box, unwrapped them,
and poured out the dark contents of the first in a circle on top of the ice.
With his dagger, he scratched the symbols of the Four inside the circle: a
lemniscate for Dalna; Illior's simple crescent; the stylized ripple of a wave
for Astellus; the flame triangle of Sakor. They formed the four points of a
square when he had finished.
Unnatural flames licked up as the liquid ate into the ice and a soft,
answering glow sprang up in the center of the slab, revealing the outline of a
circular object embedded there.
A fresh blast of pain tightened Seregil's breath in his throat. He reached
into his coat and felt wetness there. Tearing open the neck of his coat and
shirt with bloodied fingers, he found that his skin had opened around the edges
of the scar.
There were voices all around him now, whispering, sighing, keening. His hands
shook as he quickly emptied the second vial onto the ice. More flames licked up,
guttering in the faint, unnatural breeze rising around him. Invisible fingers
brushed his face, plucked at his clothing, stroked his hair.
A first translucent point of crystal protruded from the shrinking ice,
quickly followed by seven more in a slanting ring.
The singing, at once tortured and exultant, rose to fill the cramped chamber.
Seregil pressed his hands to his ears as he crouched, waiting.
The magical liquid burned and boiled away until eight blade-like crystal
spikes were revealed, set in a circlet of some sort.
Seregil bent to pull it free and a drop of blood fell from his chest onto the
ice within the circlet.
He paused, strangely fascinated, as another followed, and another. A stone
shard had grazed the back of his hand and this, too, was oozing blood. A rivulet
of it ran down between his fingers onto the point he was grasping, streaking it
like ruby as it trickled to the little pool gathering in the center of the
crown.
The singing was clearer now, suddenly sweet and soothing and somehow
familiar. Seregil's throat strained to capture the impossible notes as the blood
dripped down from his chest.
Not yet, the voices crooned. Unseen hands stroked him, supporting him as he
stooped over the crown.
Watch! See the loveliness being wrought.
The gathering blood sank into the ice as an answering rubescent blush spread
slowly up through each crystal point.
Oh, yes! he thought.
How beautiful!
Their sides were sharp. They cut into his palms as he gripped them. More
blood trickled down and the crystal blushed a darker red.
But a new voice was intruding from a distance, rough and discordant.
Nothing, sang the voices.
It is nothing. There is only our music here.
Join us, lovely one, join our song, the only song. For the Beautiful One, the
Eater of Death.
It was distracting, this ugly new tone. But as he bowed his head, straining
against this raw new voice he found that it, too, was familiar.
He'd almost succeeded in blocking it out when all at once he recognized
it-the sound of his own hoarse screams.
The beautiful illusions shattered as searing bolts of pain slammed up his
arms, seeking his heart.
"Aura!" he cried out, wrenching the crown free with the last of his strength.
"Aura Elustri mdlrei!"
Staggering through a haze of agony, he thrust the crown into the silver-lined
box and drove the latch into place.
Silence fell like a blow. Collapsing among the corpses, he pressed his bloody
hands to the front of his coat.
"Mards Aura Elustri chyptir," he murmured thankfully as he slipped into a
half faint. "Chyptir maros!"
The Beautiful One, the voices had said. The Eater of Death.
Gradually he became aware of another presence in the chamber, and with it a
pervasive sense of peace mingled with sadness.
This, he realized, must be the true spirit, the one that had created this
place and inhabited it until the crown was hidden here. With an ironic grin, he
recalled the tale of warring spirits he'd concocted for Turik and Shradin the
first time he'd come out of the cave. It seemed he'd spoken the truth in spite
of himself.
"Peace to you, spirit of this place," he rasped in Dravnian. "Your sanctuary
will be properly cleansed."
The presence gathered around him for a moment, soothing away his pain and
weariness. Then it was gone.
Shouldering the box, Seregil crawled slowly back up the tunnel. Turik and
Timan were keeping watch at the opening when he stumbled out into the sunlight.
The old man clutched Seregil's arm wordlessly, tears of gratitude glittering
in his rheumy eyes.
"He lives! The Aurenfaie's alive! Bring bandages," Turik called to the
others, examining Seregil's hands with concern.
The cry passed from mouth to mouth and soon the whole village had gathered
solemnly around them.
"Terrible sounds came out of the ground, then all was still," Retak told
Seregil. "Timan said you had driven out the bad spirit, but he didn't know if
you'd survived the ordeal. Tell us of your battle with the evil spirit!"
Seregil groaned inwardly.
Bilairy's Balls, they want another story!
Climbing to his feet, he held up the box.
"I've captured the evil spirit that troubled you. It's imprisoned here."
Round-eyed, the Dravnians regarded the battered wooden chest. Even the
children did not venture to approach it. Filthy and exhausted, Seregil did his
best to look like a victorious wizard as he mixed fact and fiction to best
effect.
"In the time of Timan's ancestor, this evil thing came to your valley and
invaded the spirit home, holding the true spirit prisoner and troubling those
who entered the chamber. I found its secret lair and battled it there. It was a
strong spirit and it fought mightily, as you can see."
The villagers' eyes grew rounder as they pressed around him to see what sort
of marks a spirit left on a man.
"By my magic, and by the powers of sacred Aura and the true spirit of this
place, I vanquished and captured it. Your spirit came to me, easing my wounds
and asking that the sanctuary be cleansed so that your people may once again
come to it in peace. There are bodies there now, victims of the evil one. You
must not fear them. Take them away and burn them as is proper, so that their
spirits can rest. This is no longer a place of evil."
The Dravnians cheered wildly as he paused to catch up with his own invention.
By the time they'd settled down again, he was ready.
"If any man comes seeking the evil one, bring them to this place and tell
them how Meringil, son of Solun and Nycanthi, mage of Aurenen, captured the evil
spirit and took it away forever. Remember this day and tell the story to your
children so that they will remember. Let no person among your clans forget that
evil was cast out from here. And now I must go."
The villagers surged forward, imploring him to stay.
Unvisited maidens wept with disappointment and one of Ekrid's daughters threw
herself into his arms sobbing. Putting her gently aside, he gathered his gear
and palmed the last of Nysander's painted wands from the pouch at his belt. He
snapped it behind his back and the Dravnians shrank back in fear as the
translocation vortex opened behind him. Waving a last farewell, he forced a
smile as he stepped backward into emptiness.
Thero was on his way upstairs when a muffled crash halted him in his tracks.
There was no doubt where the sound had come from; every door along the curved
corridor—the bedchambers, the guest room—stood open except one.
The sitting-room door, with its magical wards and protections, was always
kept shut unless Nysander was inside. Nonetheless, putting his ear to the door,
Thero heard a low groan inside.
"Nysander!" he called, but his master was already hurrying down the tower
stairs, robes flapping beneath his leather apron.
"There's someone in there," Thero exclaimed, gaunt face flushed with
excitement.
Nysander opened the door and snapped his fingers at the nearest lamp. The
wick flared up and by its light they saw Seregil sprawled in the middle of the
room, his back arched awkwardly over the pack he wore, the strap of the battered
wooden chest tangled around one leg. His eyes were closed, his face colorless
beneath streaks of grime and blood.
"Get water, a basin, and linen. Hurry!" said
Nysander, going to Seregil and pulling at the front of his coat.
Thero hurried off to fetch the required articles.
When he returned a few moments later,
Nysander was examining a raw wound on Seregil's chest. "How bad is it?" he
asked.
"Not so bad as it looks," said Nysander, covering the wound with a cloth.
"Give me a hand with these filthy clothes."
"What happened to him this time?" Thero asked, gingerly pulling off the
unconscious man's boots.
"He's got the same sort of preternatural stench he had when he came back—"
"Very similar. Fetch the things for a minor purification. And, Thero?"
Halfway out the door already, Thero paused, expecting some explanation.
"We shall not speak of this again."
"As you wish," Thero replied quietly.
Focused on Seregil, Nysander did not see the hot color that leapt into
Thero's sallow cheeks beneath his thin beard, or the sudden angry set of his
jaw.
Later, with Seregil asleep under Thero's watchful eye, Nysander paid his
nightly visit to the lowest vault beneath the Oreska House. He was not the only
one who wandered here late at night. Many of the older wizards preferred to
pursue their research when the scholars and apprentices were out of the way.
Proceeding on through the long passages and down stairways, he nodded to those
he met, stopping now and then to chat. He'd never made any secret of his evening
constitutionals. Had anyone over the years ever noticed that he seldom followed
the same route twice? That there was always one point, one stretch of blank,
innocent wall, which he never failed to pass?
And how many of these others, Nysander wondered as he went on, kept watch as
he did over some secret charge?
Reaching the lowest level, he wended his way with more than even his usual
caution through the maze of corridors to the place, though his carefully woven
magicks kept all from perceiving the box he carried.
Satisfied that he was unobserved, he lowered his head, summoned a surge of
power, and silently invoked the Spell of Passage. A sensation like a mountain
wind passed through him, chilling him to the bone.
Hugging the grimy box to his chest, he walked through the thick stonework of
the wall and into the tiny chamber beyond.
Alec squinted as sunlight flashed off the polished festival gong under his
arm. Shifting his grip, he struggled the rest of the way up the ladder braced
against the front of the villa.
"Really, Sir Alec, this is not necessary. The servants always take care of
these details!"
Runcer dithered from the curb, clearly embarrassed by this display of labor
but powerless to countermand it.
"I like to keep busy," Alec replied, undeterred.
He'd reluctantly resumed his public role at Wheel Street the day before. The
Festival of Sakor began tonight and—Seregil or no Seregil—Sir Alec had to make
an appearance.
Runcer was stubbornly determined to defer to him as master of the house in
Seregil's absence, a role he was acutely uncomfortable with. He detested being
waited on, but every servant in the house seemed to take it as a personal
affront every time he so much as fetched his own wash water or saddled a horse.
Grasping the wooden brace set into the wall, Alec slid the gong's leather
hanging straps over it. They held and it swung gently in the morning breeze, a
rectangular battle shield displaying the elaborate sunburst design of Sakor.
Runcer handed up a swath of black cloth and Alec draped it carefully over the
shield face.
Similar gongs were being hung all across the city. Mourning Night, the
longest of the year, began with solemn ceremonies at the Temple of Sakor. The
symbolic passing of the old god would be enacted, and every fire in the city
extinguished except for a single firepot guarded by the Queen and her family at
the temple. At the first hint of dawn the following morning, the gongs would be
uncovered and sounded to welcome the resurrected god as runners carried the new
year's fire to every hearth.
Similar versions of the ceremony would be carried out all over Skala.
He was halfway down the ladder when a rider clattered around a corner down
the street.
Recognizing Seregil's glossy Aurenfaie mare, Alec jumped down and ran to meet
them.
Seregil reined Cynril to a walk and looked Alec over with a disapproving
frown as he continued up the street. "Out in your shirtsleeves like a common
laborer? What will the neighbors say?"
"I did remark upon it, my lord," Runcer commented blandly as they came up.
"I guess they'll say I'm more likely to do a lick of honest work than my fop
of a guardian," Alec said with a laugh, too relieved to see Seregil safely home
to care what anyone thought.
Wherever Seregil had been, he'd costumed himself carefully for the role of
returning lord. His mud-spattered boots and gauntlets were of the finest
chestnut-brown leather, his riding mantle lined with dark fur. Beneath it he
wore a velvet surcoat, and tall pheasant feathers bobbed at a jaunty angle from
the jeweled cockade of his cap.
"Ah well, we must forgive him his rough ways," Seregil said, throwing an arm
around Alec's shoulders as they went inside. "These northern squire's sons are
badly raised—too much honest labor in their youth. How's everything here?"
"Come see for yourself."
Inside, the main hall was still swarming with servants.
The carpets were being rolled back in preparation for the night's dancing and
fragrant garlands of plaited wheat and winter greenery festooned the walls. Rich
aromas had been floating out from the kitchen since dawn. The feast after the
ceremony would be cold, but well laid on.
"What about the lightwands?" asked Seregil as he sat to tug off his boots.
"They arrived from the Oreska House yesterday, my lord," Runcer informed him,
hovering close at hand. "Nysander i Azusthra and Lady Magyana a Rhioni have
confirmed that they will contribute to the evening's entertainment again this
year."
"Good. Any word from the Cavishes?"
"They are expected this afternoon, my lord. I prepared the upstairs guest
chambers myself."
"We'll leave you to it, then. Come on, Alec, you can give me the news while I
freshen up."
"Nysander's invited the Cavishes to sit with him," Alec told him as they went
up the stairs to Seregil's room, adding wistfully, "I wish we could."
"I know, but Kylith's group is likely to be more informative. Besides, you
need practice playing nobility."
Seregil's bedchamber overlooked the garden at the back of the villa. Unlike
the other rooms, it was furnished in Aurenfaie style, with walls whitewashed
rather than frescoed, and the furnishings were done in pale woods and simple
lines. In contrast, the cushions, carpets, and hangings around the bed were
vibrant with pattern and color.
The shutters had been opened and a fire crackled invitingly in the marble
fireplace.
"Runcer's right, you know," he went on, tossing his cloak over a clothes
chest and going to the fire.
"It's not good for you to be seen out there in your shirtsleeves. When you're
playing a role—"
Alec sighed. "You play it to the bone, I know, but—"
"No excuses. It's part of the game." Seregil leveled a gloved forefinger at
him. "You know as well as I do that it doesn't matter at the Cockerel or half
the time around here, but on a real job something like that could get you
killed! When you play Sir Alec, you must be Sir Alec. Either live it from the
heart, or stand outside yourself like a puppet master and direct every movement.
You've seen me do it often enough."
Alec stared glumly out over the snow-dusted garden.
"Yes, but I doubt I'll ever be as good at it as you."
Seregil let out an impatient snort.
"Horseshit. That's what you said about swordplay, and look how you've come
along. Besides, you're a natural actor when the role doesn't go against your
stiff-necked, Dalnan yeoman's pride. Relax! Flow with the moment."
Seregil suddenly grabbed him by the arm and whirled him into an eccentric jig
around the room. Alec hadn't even heard him approach. But he recovered swiftly
and took the lead.
"But Sir Alec is a stiff-necked Dalnan yeoman," he said, laughing as he
clomped through the steps of a country dance Beka and Elsbet had taught him.
"Wrong!" Grinning wickedly, Seregil yanked him into a formal pavan. "Sir Alec
is stiff-necked Dalnan gentry. Besides, he should be picking up a few of Lord
Seregil's airs along the way."
Alec leaned back in mock horror. "Maker's Mercy, anything but that!" Still
gripping Seregil's gloved hand his thumb found a ridge beneath the thin leather.
Frowning, he felt at it. "What's this? A bandage?"
"It's nothing, just a few scrapes." Seregil stripped off the gloves and
showed him thin strips of linen across each palm. "And what about you?" He
turned Alec's left palm up and examined the scab there.
"I cut myself going over a wall the other night," Alec told him, letting
Seregil's obvious evasion go without argument, knowing it would be futile to
press him. "I got chased on the way home afterward, too, but I got away all
right."
"Any idea who it was?"
"Footpads, probably. I didn't get much of a look at them."
"How many 'thems' were there?"
"Three, I think. I was too busy rabbiting to take count."
"Let's hear it."
Dropping into a chair by the fire, Alec launched into a well-rehearsed and
somewhat embellished account of his escape down Silvermoon Street.
"That was quick thinking, using the palace guard for protection," said
Seregil when he'd finished. "And speaking of the Palace, I've got something for
you—a little thank you from the Queen and Klia, I think."
He took a small pouch from his coat and tossed it to Alec. Opening it, the
boy found a heavy silver cloak brooch fashioned to look like a wreath of leafy
branches surrounding a deep blue stone.
"Silver leaves." Alec smiled slightly as he admired it. "The first time I met
Klia up in Cirna I was calling myself Aren Silverleaf."
"That's a good stone," Seregil remarked, looking at it over his shoulder.
"You could get a fine horse for that, if you ever need to. Just be sure not to
let on where it came from, or why. We've got reputations to hide."
Ilia Cavish burst into the hall like a small, happy hurricane just after
midday. "Uncle Seregil! Alec! We're here!"
From the musicians' gallery, Seregil watched as she tackled Alec, who'd just
come out of the dining room.
"I can stay up for the party this year because I'm six now," she announced,
hugging Alec excitedly.
"And I got new shoes and a real gown with a long skirt and two petticoats
and—Where's Uncle Seregil?"
"I'm on my way," Seregil called. Going down the steep narrow stairs from the
gallery, he strode across the hall and claimed a hug of his own.
"Did you ride in from Watermead all by yourself, madame?"
Illia pulled a long face. "Mother's still being sick from the baby, so she
had to ride in a cart with Arna and Eulis. Father and Elsbet and me all had to
ride slow. But he let me come ahead when we got to your street. I'm the van
soldier!"
"I think you mean vanguard," Alec corrected with a smile.
"That's what I said, silly. Do Elsbet and I get to sleep in the room next to
yours, Uncle? The one with the dragon-shaped bed and the ladies painted on the
walls?"
"Of course you do, so long as you don't pop out at the guests once you've
been put to bed the way you did last year."
"Oh, I'm much too old for that now," she assured him, taking him and Alec by
the hand and drawing them toward the door. "Come on, now. Father and Mother must
be here by now."
Wheel Street was thick with traffic, but Seregil quickly spotted Micum's
coppery head bobbing toward him through the press, followed by his second
daughter and a covered cart driven by a pair of servant women. Old Arna spied
him and waved.
"I see Illia found you," Micum said with a grin as they dismounted in front
of the house.
Seregil embraced his old friend, and then Elsbet, dark and shy in her blue
riding gown. "You're just in time. Alec's done all the work."
"We'd have been here sooner if I could have ridden," Kari complained,
struggling from a nest of cushions and robes in the cart. Weeks of morning
sickness had thinned her face, but the journey had put the challenging glint
back in her dark eyes. Micum helped her down and she embraced Alec and Seregil
happily.
Seregil eyed her rounding belly. "Breeding agrees with you, as usual."
"Don't tell her that before breakfast just yet," Micum warned.
Old Arna made a blessing sign in her mistress' direction. was "The sicker the
mother, the stronger the son."
Kari rolled her eyes behind the old woman's back. "We've heard that at least
three times a day for the past month. Even if it's another girl, I expect the
child will be born with a sword in her hand."
"Another Beka," Alec said, grinning.
"And what about you?" Seregil asked Elsbet.
"Last I heard, you were going to stay on at the temple school."
"That's right. Thank you for recommending me. It's what I've always wanted to
do."
"First Beka's commission with the Queen's Horse Guard, and now Elsbet a
scholar." Kari slipped an arm about Elsbet's waist and gave Seregil a dark look.
"Thanks to you, I'll be lucky to get any of my girls married off before they're
old and grey."
"Scholars marry, Mama," Elsbet chided.
"I'll get married!" Illia chimed in, still clinging to Alec's hand. "I'm
going to marry you, Alec, aren't I?"
The boy gave her a gallant bow. "If you still want me when you're grown up a
beauty like your mother and sister."
Elsbet blushed noticeably at this. "How are you, Alec? Father told us you
were hurt saving Klia."
"I'm pretty well healed, except for this," he replied, running a hand
ruefully over his ragged hair. "Klia came out of it looking worse than I did."
"It was very brave of you. To run into the fire like that, I mean," she
stammered. Blushing more hotly than ever, she hurried after Arna into the house.
Alec turned to Kari with a perplexed look. "Is she all right?"
Kari slipped her arm through his with an enigmatic smile. "Oh, she's just
turned fifteen, and you're a hero, that's all. Come along now, brave Sir Alec,
and let's see what can be done about your hair. We don't want you looking like
the tinker's boy in front of Lord Seregil's fine lady friends tonight."
Lady Kylith's tapestry-draped box commanded an excellent view into the Sakor
Temple portico. Seregil and Alec reached the Temple Precinct an hour before
sunset and found their hostess and six other guests already chatting over
dainties and wine.
It was a frosty evening and everyone's breath puffed out in little clouds as
they talked. All were warmly swathed in black cloaks or robes out of respect for
the occasion, but gold and jewels caught the light on wrists and circlets.
"Ah, now our little party is complete!" Kylith rose smiling to kiss Seregil.
He returned the kiss with genuine affection. They'd been lovers for a time
years ago, and friends ever since.
Kylith must be nearing fifty now, he realized, but time had refined both her
famous beauty and wit.
All of these were in full force as she turned to Alec, still hanging shyly
back. "And you and I meet again under far more pleasant circumstances, Sir Alec.
I trust no one will be arresting Lord Seregil tonight?"
Alec executed a perfect bow. "I believe he's rescheduled all arrests until
tomorrow, my lady."
Well done, Sir Alec, Seregil thought to himself with a smile.
From the corner of his eye, he saw several of the others exchange discreet
glances. Most of Rhiminee knew he'd been taken from his villa in chains only a
few weeks before. Kylith had deftly removed any tension surrounding the incident
by making light of it.
"Seregil, you'll sit there by Lord Admiral Nyreidian," she said, waving him
to a seat beside a portly, black-bearded noble. "He's overseeing the outfitting
of the Queen's privateer fleet and I know you'll want to hear all about it. Sir
Alec, you sit here between us so that we may renew our acquaintance. But first
you must be properly introduced—Lord Admiral Nyreidian i Gorthos, Lady Tytiana e
Reva and Lady Breena e Ursil of the Queen's court, Sir Arius i Rafael, and my
very dear friend Lady Youriel e Nikiria."
Pausing, she placed her hand over that of a uniformed woman on her right.
"And this is Captain Julena e Isai of the White Hawk Infantry, the newest
addition to our little salon."
Seregil eyed the captain with discreet interest; she was rumored to be
Kylith's latest paramour.
"My friends, you all know Lord Seregil i Korit," she continued. "And this
charming young man is Lord Seregil's protege, Sir Alec i Gareth of Ivywell. His
late father was a knight of Mycena, I believe."
Alec's spurious pedigree elicited the hoped-for lack of interest. Leaving him
to stumble charmingly along through Kylith's courtly flirtations, Seregil turned
his attention to the other guests, where more interesting game was afoot.
"I expect war will be a relief for Phoria," Lady Tytiana was saying. As
Mistress of the Queen's Wardrobe, she was a valuable and generally reliable
gossip. "She's still under a bit of a cloud, you know, after that horrible
business with the Vicegerent's suicide—Oh, Lord Seregil, forgive me. I didn't
mean to be indelicate."
"Not at all, dear lady." Seregil flicked a crease from his black mantle. "My
name was cleared, so my honor is no more blemished than usual."
A ripple of laughter went round the little circle.
He'd cultivated his reputation as a charmingly dissipated exile carefully
over the years. While his distant relation to the royal family granted him
access to most of the more fashionable salons, it was generally supposed that
his foreign birth and dilettante ways kept him safely outside the complex
intrigues of the city. As a result, he was taken lightly but told a great deal.
"As I was saying," Tytiana went on, "I shouldn't wonder that she'd be
relieved to go off to war. Nothing like a few victories to improve one's
popularity. And just between ourselves, Phoria could use some goodwill among the
people, even without that other unpleasantness. An heir apparent with no
offspring is always awkward."
"She's a fine cavalry commander, though," said Captain Julena.
Admiral Nyreidian leaned back and laced his fingers over his considerable
paunch, "True, but she'll be at a disadvantage unless the Plenimarans are
foolish enough to attempt overrunning Mycena. Plenimar is a naval power, always
has been. I've advised the Queen so and she agrees. The lower city defenses are
being built up as we speak."
"Only yesterday I overheard Queen Idrilain ordering two hundred wagonloads of
fine red clay from Piorus to slake the slopes below the citadel," Lady Breena
chimed in. "That's not been done since her great-grandmother's day."
"Surely they wouldn't be so bold as to attack Rhiminee directly?" Seregil
ventured over his wine.
Nyreidian cast a rather patronizing look his way. "They've done it before."
"So you are preparing to meet them on their own terms. It must be an enormous
undertaking."
"I believe I've seen every sailor, fisherman, and pirate that ever sailed
between here and the Strait of Bal!" the admiral replied. "The harbor's alive
with them. And investors, too. Privateering is a lucrative venture. Have you
considered backing a vessel, Lord Seregil?"
"Sounds like an interesting mix of patriotism and profit. Perhaps I should
look into it."
"Vessels are getting scarce already, I must warn you. Every shipbuilder in
Skala has all the work he can handle, refitting old ships and building new. But
the real trick is to find a decent captain."
"And yet war has not been officially declared. How can the Queen send out
privateers without giving provocation? Surely she doesn't mean to precipitate a
conflict?"
Nyreidian stiffened perceptibly. "I'm sure our Queen does nothing without the
best interests of Skala in mind."
"But of course," murmured Seregil. "The fact that the Queen has entrusted you
with this undertaking is ample proof of the gravity of such measures."
Alec breathed a sigh of relief when Kylith turned her attention to her other
guests. His repertoire of invented history was slim and he was out of his depth
for small talk. Luckily, no one else seemed particularly interested in him.
Seregil was still busy with the fat admiral, so he leaned his elbows on the
rail to watch the spectacle unfolding before him.
The tiers of viewing boxes where he sat stood at an angle on the south side
of the square, just in front of the Dalnan temple grove. Across the square
another set of tiers partially obscured the fountain courts and delicate,
brightly colored archways of the Temple of Astellus. The Temple of Illior was
hidden by the back wall of the box to the east.
Cordoned-off pathways between the four temples quartered the broad square.
Black-robed festival goers were already packing the open areas and crowding into
the courtyards and porticoes of the other temples. Gulls wheeled overhead,
mingling with flights of brown doves from the Dalnan grove.
Before him, the black Temple of Sakor stood massive and stark against a
riotous sunset. Broad bars of light spilled out between the square pillars of
the portico, silhouetting the gongs that hung between them.
Inside stood an altar of polished black stone.
A great fire burned on it, illuminating the huge golden shield that hung
suspended just behind. This,
Seregil had explained earlier, was called the Aegis of Sakor. It was twenty
feet high and its sunburst device was set with hundreds of smooth-polished
rubies that seemed to pulse with life in the flickering firelight.
An honor guard was massed in formation on the broad stairs in front of the
temple; somewhere in those faceless ranks Beka Cavish was standing watch with
her regiment. He envied her just a little. The soldier's life seemed an
uncomplicated one to him; no pretending, no disguise—just honor, duty, and the
bravery to stand by your comrades in battle.
"I suppose they do not celebrate the Sakor Festival with such display in
Mycena?" Lady Kylith remarked, breaking in on his thoughts.
"No, my lady," Alec replied, raising his voice for Seregil's benefit. "Even
the Harvest Home at the end of Rhythin isn't a patch on this."
"Lord Seregil will have explained to you, I am sure, about the extinguishing
of the flames?"
"Yes. I imagine this will be an uncomfortable night."
"The soldier's vigil is very weary." Kylith cast a regretful glance in
Julena's direction and Alec guessed the captain would be going back on duty
soon. "But for the rest of us, it's a merry time. Moonlit parties, blind games,
and chases. It's a fine night for lovers, as well. They say half the people born
in Rhiminee can count back from their birth to this night."
Her perfume drifted over him as she leaned closer. "And who will be keeping
you warm in the darkness, hm?"
A sudden fanfare from the temple spared him the necessity of a reply.
A hush fell over the crowd as a long procession of priests filed out from the
interior of the temple.
Chanting and playing reed flutes, sistrums, deep-throated horns, and timbrels,
they formed themselves into two ranks flanking the Aegis. The skirling music had
an ancient, mournful sound.
"The Song of Passing, sung in the original Konic tongue," Seregil whispered.
"Most of this ceremony dates back at least a thousand years."
At the end of the chant, an ornately robed figure was carried forward on a
litter, face covered by a golden sun mask, an unsheathed broadsword lying across
his knees.
"That's the oldest of the Sakor priests, dressed to represent the dying god,"
Seregil went on.
"He brings the great Sword of Gerilain."
"Was it really hers?" Alec whispered. Gerilain was the first of Skala's
hereditary queens instituted by the prophecy of Illior six centuries before.
"Yes. The Queen's reinvested with it each year."
When Old Sakor had been positioned in front of the altar, a priest stepped
forward and addressed him in the same ancient tongue.
"She's imploring Sakor not to abandon the people,"
Seregil interpreted. "This next part goes on and on, but the gist of it is
that Sakor appoints the Queen as their guardian and gives her the sacred firepot
and sword."
As predicted, Sakor's reply took some time. The lower portion of the sun mask
was constructed to amplify his voice, which was rather thin and creaky. When
this dialogue was completed, horns sounded and the grand procession began.
Contingents of priests emerged from the other temples, each bearing a figure
representing their patron deity on a litter.
The Dalnans came first, with Valerius playing Dalna. Seated beneath an arch
of laurel and ivy, the irascible drysian was uncharacteristically resplendent in
a green robe heavily embroidered with gold and carried a ceremonial staff
wrought in ivory and gold. Someone had managed to tame his wild hair into some
semblance of order beneath his circlet, but his beard bristled as aggressively
as ever as he glared out over the crowd.
"I'm no Dalnan, of course, but I don't think Valerius presents a particularly
comforting figure as the Maker," Seregil murmured, eliciting chuckles of assent
from several of the other guests, including Alec.
Astellus would serve as Sakor's guide on his journey to the Isle of the Dawn.
A plump blond priestess dressed in a simple blue and white tunic and
broad-brimmed hat played this role, complete with wayfarer's staff and wallet.
Grey-backed gulls, living emblems of the Traveler, rose up from the fountain
courts of the temple and circled overhead as she was carried forth.
Illior was also being played by a woman. She sat stiffly in her flowing white
gown and serene golden mask, right palm raised to display the elaborate circular
emblem that covered her palm.
The three groups met at the center of the square to await the final
contingent. Horns sounded again. A squadron of cavalry in ceremonial scarlet and
black advanced from the entrance of the Temple Precinct, followed by the royal
family.
"Is that her? Is that the Queen?" Alec whispered, craning for a better look.
"That's her."
Grey-haired and solemn, Idrilain sat her charger like the warrior she was.
Her golden breastplate was emblazoned with an upraised sword and the crescent of
Illior; an empty scabbard hung at her side.
With her rode the Consort Evenir, her second and much younger husband. Behind
the royal couple came her sons and daughters. Among these rode Klia, resplendent
in the dress uniform of the Queen's Horse.
Alec's hand rose to the silver brooch holding the ornamental cloak at his
shoulder as he watched her in the distance. Until now he'd seen her only as
another cheerful, mud-spattered soldier, someone who'd treated him like a
comrade, never standing on ceremony. Watching her now—among her true kind and
against the pageantry of the ceremony—like seeing a stranger.
The procession advanced at a stately pace to the steps of the temple, where
Idrilain dismounted and strode up to stand opposite Old Sakor and the other
priests, her consort and children behind her. From this point, the ritual
proceeded in the modern tongue.
Idrilain's voice was clear and steady as she spread her arms and performed a
chant hailing Sakor as Protector of the Hearth and the Sword of Peace.
"Let not the darkness come upon us!" she cried at its conclusion.
The massed crowd took up the cry, repeating it in a great voice until
Valerius stepped forward and raised his staff in both hands. When the crowd
quieted again, he sang the Song of Dalna, his deep, resonant voice carrying well
in the open air.
Alec knew this song well. When the crowd repeated the closing line, "The
Maker has made all, and nothing can be lost in the hand of the Maker," he joined
in gladly, ignoring the glances he attracted from Kylith's other guests.
Astellus and Illior helped Old Sakor to his feet and the assembled priests
commenced a low keen.
"Who shall keep watch?" the priests of Sakor sang. "Who shall guard the
Flame?"
Masked Illior answered, reciting the revelation of the Afran Oracle. "So long
as a daughter of Thelatimos' line defends and rules, Skala shall never be
subjugated."
The Queen stepped forward and was exhorted by Old Sakor to keep watch over
her people through the long night and the new year to follow. Bowing solemnly,
she pledged herself and her generations to the guardianship of Skala and was
given the Sword of Gerilain and a large firepot. When she turned, holding both
aloft, the crowd erupted into cheers of assent.
The last of the day's light was fading from the western sky as two priests
led out a black bull. Handing the firepot to Phoria, Idrilain raised the sword
in her right hand and placed her left on the animal's brow, pressing gently as
she spoke the ritual greeting.
The bull snorted and twisted its neck, nicking the edge of her mantle with
the tip of one horn.
A restless murmur rippled through the crowd like wind across a barley field;
an unwilling victim was a poor omen.
The animal showed no further sign of resistance, however, as the priests
pulled its head back and Idrilain slashed its throat. Dark blood spurted out,
steaming in the cold air, and the animal collapsed without a struggle. Idrilain
extended the blade to Old Sakor, who dipped a finger in the blood and anointed
his forehead and hers.
"Speak to your people, O Sakor!" she intoned. "You who pass away from all
living things and return renewed. What is your prophecy?"
"Let's see what they've come up with this year," someone murmured.
"You mean it's not real?" Alec whispered to Seregil, rather shocked.
Seregil gave him a hint of the crooked smile.
"Yes and no. Divinations are gathered for months from all the major temples
around Skala. They vary in form from year to year, but they're generally quite
supportive of current policy."
Standing before the Aegis, Sakor faced the people and raised his hands.
But before he could speak, a sudden wind gusted through the square, billowing
robes and snatching at cloaks and scouring dust and dead leaves up in little
whirlwinds.
Banners whipped loose from the fronts of boxes.
Shield gongs swung on their long chains, clashing ominously against the
pillars of the temple.
Startled from their evening roosts, gulls and doves burst into the air again
in a flurry of wings, only to be met by scores of ravens. Swooping out of the
surrounding gloom as mysteriously as the wind that bore them, the black birds
attacked in a frenzy, stabbing with thick beaks, tearing with taloned feet.
The spectators below watched helplessly as black wings beat against white or
brown; upturned faces were spattered with blood and sticky scraps of feathers.
Then startled cries rang out as broken bodies plummeted down around them.
In the temple, Idrilain stood with sword drawn, fending off scores of ravens
that dove at the sacrificial bull. Phoria and her brothers and sisters leapt to
her aid, driving the carrion birds off.
Beside them, Valerius laid about with his staff. Even at this distance
Seregil and Alec could see the crackling white nimbus that glowed dangerously
around its ivory head. The Illioran priestess, still inscrutable behind her
mask, raised her hand again and a brilliant, multihued flash blazed out, leaving
inert mounds of black feathers scattered in its wake. Soldiers closest to the
temple ran back up the steps to assist the Queen, while others tried to maintain
order as thousands wailed and screamed and sought to flee.
A thick cloud of ravens circled the square now, diving and slashing like
hawks. Others flocked boldly on railings and temple pediments. One large bird
flapped down to perch on the edge of Kylith's box and seemed to regard Alec
thoughtfully with one black, unblinking eye.
Seregil raised his hand in a warding sign and Alec saw his lips move,
although it was impossible to make out the words over the chaos around them. The
raven uttered a mocking croak and flapped away.
Then, as quickly as they'd come, the baneful black horde retreated, pursued
by the surviving gulls. The doves had been no match for their attackers; soft
brown bodies lay scattered around the precinct by the dozens.
As the noise of the birds subsided, a new and ominous sound boomed forth from
the temple.
The Aegis of Sakor, untouched by any hand, rang with a low, shivering roar.
In front of it, the flames of the alter fire flared from yellow to deep
bloodred.
Four times the Aegis sounded, and then four times again.
"Hear me, my people!" cried Idrilain. "Sakor speaks, sounding a call on the
Aegis itself. Attend to the prophecy!"
The multitude stood motionless as Old Sakor was helped forward again, swaying
visibly as he raised a trembling hand.
"Hear, O people of Skala, the word of Sakor," he called in his reedy old
man's voice. "Make strong your walls, and let every sword be whetted. Guard well
the harvest and build strong ships. Look to the east, O people of Skala. From
thence comes thine enemy—" He paused, and the trembling seemed to worsen. "From
thence—"
He sagged heavily against Valerius for a moment, then straightened and took a
step forward unaided. In a voice of star fling clarity, he cried out, "Prepare
you in the light, and in the shadow. From thence comes the Eater of Death!"
"The what—?" Alec looked to Seregil again, but found him white-faced and
grim, one gloved hand clenching the side of the rail where the raven had
perched.
"Seregil, what's wrong?"
His friend sat up abruptly, as if waking from an evil dream, and warned him
off with a discreet but emphatic hand signal.
"We have heard your word, O Sakor!" said the Queen, speaking into the silence
that still gripped the crowd. "We shall be prepared!"
Another roar of acclaim went up as Old Sakor was carried down the stairs of
the temple to begin the long march to the waterfront in the lower city. There,
accompanied by Astellus, he would set sail ostensibly for the Isle of the Dawn
to be reborn and return on the morrow in the guise of a much younger priest.
The altar fire dwindled and went out and a hundred deep-throated horns
sounded from the roof of the temple, signaling for every fire in the city to be
extinguished.
The remaining priests joined the procession while the Queen took her place
before the altar to begin the sacred vigil.
"What a remarkable performance!" said Lady Youriel with an uneasy laugh. "I
think they rather overdid it this year, don't you?"
"Most impressive," Kylith agreed lightly as servants appeared at the door of
the box with lightstones on long wands to assist their departure.
"But I suspect Lord Seregil has something equally impressive planned for us
at his gathering. Will you two share my coach?"
Seregil rose and bent over her hand. "Thank you, but I think we'll wait here
until the crowd thins a bit, then ride back."
"Games in the dark, eh?" She brushed his cheek with her lips, then Alec's.
"I'll meet you at Wheel Street."
Seregil sat motionless for some moments after the others had departed,
resting his elbows on the rail.
"What's the "Eater of Death"?" asked Alec uneasily. "It sounded like a
threat, or a warning."
"I'm sure it was," Seregil muttered, gazing down into the square. It was full
dark now, and the moon and stars shed pale brilliance over the city, casting the
world into sharp contrasts of silvery light and inky shadow. Lightwands bobbed
here and there in the hands of those wealthy enough to afford them, and faint
laughter and cries of "Praise the Flame!" echoed up to them as people jostled
each other in the darkness.
Something in his friend's face made Alec still more uneasy. "Any idea what
the priest meant by it?" he asked.
Seregil pulled his hood up against the night's chill as he rose to go. Alec
couldn't see his face as he replied, "I can't say that I do."
The Wheel Street house was already full of music by the time they returned.
Alec handed his dark cloak to a servant at the entrance and followed Seregil
into the hall. A number of guests were already enjoying the wine and food. Each
had been presented with a brightly ribboned lightwand upon arrival and these
provided a cool, shifting light as people danced or strolled about the room.
A flurry of applause greeted them as Runcer gravely announced their arrival
from his station by the door.
"Welcome to my home on this dark, cold night!" Seregil called out. "For those
of you who've not yet met my companion, allow me to present Sir Alec i Gareth of
Ivywell."
Alec made a graceful bow and quickly scanned the room for familiar faces.
Kylith's party was there, but there was no sign yet of Nysander or the Cavishes.
In a far corner, however, he spotted a knot of officers in the green and white
of the Queen's Horse Guard. Klia's friend and fellow officer, Captain Myrhini,
saluted him with her lightwand from their midst and Alec waved back, wondering
if Beka was with her.
He was just heading over to find out when Seregil slipped a hand under his
arm and steered him off toward a group of nobles.
"Time to play the gracious hosts."
Together, they made a circuit of the room, moving smoothly from one
conversation to another, most of which centered around the omens at the
ceremony.
"I thought they rather overdid the thing this year," sniffed a young nobleman
introduced as Lord Melwhit. "What doubt is there that war is coming?
Preparations have been going on since summer."
A grave, blond woman turned from a conversation with Admiral Nyreidian and
greeted Seregil in Aurenfaie.
"Ysanti maril Elustri, Melessandra a Marana," Seregil returned warmly. "Allow
me to present Sir Alec. Lady Melessandra and her uncle, Lord Torsin, are the
Skalan envoys to Aurenen."
"Ysanti bek far, my lady," Alec said with a bow.
"Ysanti maril Elustri, Sir Alec," she returned. "Lord Seregil is instructing
you in his native language, I see. There are so few nowadays who speak it well."
"And fewer still who speak it so well as you, dear lady," added Seregil.
"It's a pretty language, if one can manage it," Nyreidian rumbled. "I
wouldn't dare attempt it in front of you, Lord Seregil. I'm told my
pronunciation is grotesque."
"It is!" Melessandra agreed, laughing. "Forgive our interruption, Lord
Seregil, but we were just debating whether the portents at the temple tonight
were genuine. Would you care to venture the Aurenfaie view?"
Alec watched with interest as Seregil struck a thoughtful pose. "Well, to
question the omens' veracity would be tantamount to casting doubt on the Oracle
itself, wouldn't you say?"
She gave the admiral a pointed look. "Many would not hesitate to do so."
Seregil tactfully changed the subject. "I understand your uncle accompanied
the remains of Corruth i Glamien back to Viresse?"
"Yes, and allow me to offer my sympathies for the loss of your kinsman," said
Melessandra. "It must have been a terrible shock in the midst of your own
difficulties."
"Thank you. The reports given by the Queen's agents who found him were
chilling, to say the least. Yet some good may come of it. Have you heard what
the council's reaction was in Aurenen?"
Melessandra rolled her eyes. "Complete uproar. You know the old guard still
contends that Skala is accountable for the actions of the Lerans. Yet there are
those among the younger members who argue more and more for an end to
isolationism. Adzriel a Illia is one of the chief proponents for
reconciliation."
"Illia?" asked Alec, pricking up his ears at the familiar name.
"Certainly," Seregil said, giving him a level look that warned discreetly
against questions. "What else would it be? Unless you're confusing her with
Adzriel a Olien again?"
"Oh-yes. I suppose I must be," Alec managed, wondering what blunder he'd
committed this time. "Family names are so much simpler in Mycena,"
Seregil went on lightly. "Poor Alec is still struggling with all our lengthy
patronymics and matronymics and lineages."
Melessandra appeared sympathetic. "It must be overwhelming if you're not born
to it. But there's Lord Geron and I must speak with him at once. Erismai."
She gave Alec a last, rather puzzled look, then strolled away accompanied by
Nyreidian and the others.
"I said something wrong, didn't I?" Alec whispered hurriedly, before some
other guest descended on them.
"My fault," Seregil replied with a slight smile. "If I'd been here this last
week I'd have thought to prepare you better. Illia was my mother's name. My
eldest sister, Adzriel a Illia, was recently made a member of the lia'sidra."
"Sister?" Never, in all the time Alec had known him, had Seregil mentioned
his family, or almost anything else about his past in Aurenen. Alec had come to
assume that his friend was as much an orphan as himself.
"And eldest? How many do you have?"
"Four, actually. I was the only boy, and the youngest," Seregil replied
somewhat tersely.
"Little brother Seregil?" Alec smothered a grin as his entire perception of
his friend subtly shifted. He could sense the old barriers going up again,
however, and prudently changed the subject. "It sounds like the Skalans want
Aurenen as allies again, like they were in the Great War."
"They do, but bad blood over Corruth will get in the way. Our recent
discovery may make things worse rather than better, at least for now."
"But it's been almost three hundred years since Corruth disappeared."
"Remember who we're talking about, Alec. Many of the most powerful people on
the lia'sidra were his friends and contemporaries. They haven't forgotten the
reception he received from the Skalans when he married their queen, or his
suspicious disappearance after her death. If Lera hadn't had the poor sense to
leave her half sister Corruthesthera alive, there might have been war between
the two nations then. As for a new alliance, I'm afraid that may depend more on
the Plenimarans in the end. If they join with Zengat—"
"Oh, Lord Seregil! There you are!"
A gaggle of young nobles crowded noisily around them, wreathed in expectant
grins.
"We thought you'd never come home," chided a young woman, wrapping her arm
through Seregil's. "You missed my autumn revel this year, you know."
Seregil pressed a hand dramatically to his heart. "As I stood on a rolling
deck under a full red moon that night, my thoughts were all of you. Can you
forgive me?"
"It was a crescent moon; I recall it perfectly. But I'll grant you a
conditional pardon if you'll introduce me to your new friend," she fluttered,
looking boldly across at Alec, who'd been crowded to the edge of the circle.
Alec smiled his way through an onslaught of complex introductions, noting as
he did so that his polite greetings were not always returned with the same
grace.
A number of them, in fact, were decidedly cool.
Seregil hesitated as he came to a handsome, auburn-haired dandy surrounded by
an entourage of admirers. "Forgive me, sir, I don't believe I've had the
pleasure?"
The man gave an elaborate bow. "Pelion i Eirsin Heileus Quirion of Rhiminee,
dear sir."
"Not the acclaimed actor, who just played "Ertis" at the Tirarie?" gasped
Seregil.
The man puffed visibly. "The same, my lord. I pray you'll forgive my
intrusion, but my companions insisted."
"On the contrary, I'm delighted! I hope you'll let me know when you next
perform. By all reports, you're the next Kroseus."
"I've been fortunate, was Pelion demurred modestly.
"And well patronized," a man beside him announced. "Do you know that his
current role was written specifically for him?"
"We knew you wouldn't mind," a sallow youth confided smugly to Seregil. "Poor
Pelion is in love, you see, and his lady friend may turn up here tonight. It's
all very tragic and impossible. But we've got another treat for you. Donaeus has
composed the most cunningly subtle epos in twenty-three parts. It's a marvelous
piece of art!"
Seregil turned to the poet in question, a petulant-looking giant in worn
velvets.
"Twenty-three parts? What a monumental undertaking."
"It's glorious," a girl effused. "It's all about the death of Arshelol and
Boresthia, but done in the most original fashion. And of course, he'll need a
patron. You really must hear it."
"Donaeus, read it for him at once!" cried the sallow one. "No one appreciates
the new verse styles so well as Lord Seregil. I'm sure Sir Alec could spare him
for a bit."
The slight was not lost on Alec. There were a few suppressed titters, but he
maintained his composure.
"Go on, by all means." He smiled, locking gazes with his ostensible rival.
"The significance of poetry has always eluded me. Honest ballads and sword
fights are more to my taste."
"Well then, let's go up to the library," said Seregil, giving Alec an amused
wink as he ushered them upstairs.
Turning, Alec nearly collided with Myrhini and Beka Cavish, who'd drifted
over with their uniformed comrades.
"Arrogant little turds, aren't they?" Beka muttered, glowering after the
poet's entourage. "I run into a bit of that myself now and then."
"What could they have against me?" Alec burst out, not knowing whether to be
more amused or insulted.
"Nothing, except that you had the poor taste to be born north of the Cirna
Canal."
"There are always a few like that." Myrhini shrugged, then skillfully snagged
a tray of wine cups from a passing server. "Scattering a few teeth usually
quiets 'em down. In your case though, it's more likely just whey-blooded
jealousy. There's more than a few among that set who'd like to be in your
boots."
She paused to run an eye over him. "You're looking fitter than last time I
saw you. Klia's at the Vigil, and sends her regards. I go on duty in a few
hours, but felt honor-bound to assess the new recruit here, seeing as how she's
under my command. Rider Beka tells me you've crossed blades a time or two- But
here's someone else we know!"
"Valerius of Colath, Drysian of the First Order and High Priest of the Temple
of Dalna at Rhiminee," Runcer announced.
Valerius strode into the room still clad in his ceremonial robe and circlet,
though he'd exchanged the ivory staff for his old wooden one.
"The blessing of Dalna be on this house and those within it," he intoned,
thumping the floor.
Alec hurried forward to greet him. "Welcome. Seregil just went upstairs to
hear a poet, but he should be back soon."
The drysian let out an inelegant snort. "That fool Donaeus, no doubt,
spouting his doggerel in twenty-three fatuous farts? He must still be scratching
around for a patron. He read bits of the mess at Lady Arbella's banquet last
week. Fairly took away my appetite. If he corners Seregil with the whole of it,
we're not likely to get him back before dawn."
"Maybe Alec should go rescue him," suggested Beka.
"No, leave him. Serves him right for encouraging that pack of pedantic
buffoons. What knavery have you two been up to these days? Learning swordplay, I
hear, Alec?" The drysian lowered his voice to a confidential rumble. "You'll
need it, considering the company you've fallen into."
"And look at you!" he exclaimed, glowering at Beka. "Running off to join
regiments instead of getting married like a good Dalnan girl? This young fellow
here is about your age, isn't he?"
"Leave off, you," Myrhini cried, laughing as Beka shifted uncomfortably.
"She's the best rider I've had this year and I don't want to lose her to the
hearth."
"Valerius!" Seregil called as he came down the stairs, apparently having
escaped from the poets on his own. "Did you get Old Sakor safely launched?"
Valerius chuckled. "There's considerable chop on the harbor tonight. Poor old
Morantiel was as green as a squash before they left the mooring, but I suspect
he'll survive."
"I thought he sounded rather unsteady during the prophecy," Seregil remarked
casually, signaling for a wine server.
"After all these years of shamming, I imagine it was a bit of a shock when
something mystical actually occurred."
"Then you believe it was genuine?"
Valerius raised a bristling eyebrow. "You know as well as I do it was. I
don't know what that "Eater of Death" business was all about, but I didn't like
the feel of those ravens." At the door, Runcer stepped forward again and
announced, "Nysander i Azusthra Hypirius Meksandor Illandi, High Thaumaturgist
of the Third Oreska, with the Lady Magyana a Rhioni Methistabel Tinuva Ylani,
High Thaumaturgist of the Third Oreska. And Sir Micum Cavish of Watermead, with
Dame Kari and daughters Elsbet and Illia."
Nysander and Magyana, normally the least ostentatious wizards of the Oreska,
had put on the rich ceremonial robes befitting their status in honor of the
occasion. Behind them, the Cavishes were as splendidly rigged out as any lord in
the room.
Illia clung to her mother's hand, squirming with excitement in her new dress.
Elsbet looked poised and solemn in burgundy velvet.
"Didn't you invite Thero?" Alec whispered teasingly to Seregil.
"I always invite Thero! But watch. We're in for a treat."
At his signal, the musicians stilled their instruments. The other guests
stepped back as Nysander escorted Magyana to the center of the room.
With a slight nod to their host, he waved a hand about in a swift, careless
gesture and the painted walls sprang to life.
The high chamber was frescoed from floor to ceiling to imitate a forest
glade. The branches of life-size oaks hung with flowering vines extended across
the vaulted ceiling overhead. Between their grey trunks distant vistas of
mountain and sea were visible. Even the stone gallery at the back of the room,
where the musicians softly played, was carved and latticed to resemble a leafy
bower.
At Nysander's command, golden light from some unseen sun glowed across the
scene. A soft breeze stirred around the room, carrying with it the scent of
flowers and warm earth overlaid with a hint of the distant painted sea. The
painted trees stirred in the breeze, dappling shadows across the floor. Painted
birds left their places and fluttered through the branches, filling the air with
song.
A murmur of delight greeted the display, but the wizards were not finished.
Magyana drew a crystal wand from her sleeve and wove the tip of it in the air,
conjuring a perfect sphere of iridescent light the size of a pomegranate.
"Come, my lord." She smiled, motioning to Seregil.
"As host, the honor belongs to you."
"An honor which I in turn bestow on Sir Alec on this, his first Mourning
Night with us."
Amid a flurry of applause, Alec followed Magyana's whispered instructions and
reached out a finger as if to burst a child's soap bubble.
At his touch the sphere burst in a brilliant scintilla of light. Seconds
later the thud of hooves against turf sounded near the gallery as a herd of
white deer materialized in the painted forest and galloped once around the room
before settling to graze near the dining-room archway.
Rainbow-winged serpents swooped up from a painted cavern, singing with
beautiful voices. Winged sprites and willow branch maidens peeped shyly from
tree trunks.
Laughing and clapping delightedly, the guests spun around to take in the
spectacle. Illia pulled loose from Kari and ran to Beka, leaping into her
sister's arms.
"It's magic, Beka! Real wizard magic! And you've got your uniform. You're a
horse guard!"
Beka hugged her back, grinning. "That's just what I am."
"We must have proper music!" cried Seregil.
"Fiddlers, give us "The Shepherd's Idyll'!"
The musicians set to with a will and couples paired for the sprightly dance.
"Here you are!" Kari exclaimed, coming to embrace her eldest daughter.
"She was afraid we wouldn't see you before tomorrow," Micum explained. "She's
been fretting about it all afternoon."
"Oh, I was not," snapped his wife. "Turn around, girl. Let me see all of
you!"
"Thero was otherwise engaged, I see," Seregil remarked with a sly glance at
Nysander.
"Ah, hello, Valerius," said Nysander, escorting Magyana over to them again.
"You acquitted yourself bravely in the sanctuary this evening. were the ravens
saying anything intelligible?"
"We were just discussing that," the drysian replied.
"Heavy-handed as the Sakorans are with their "oracles," they weren't
responsible for the birds, or that business with the Aegis, if I'm any judge."
"It was unquestionably magic of some sort," mused Magyana. "It may be a
portent from Sakor, but it bodes ill nonetheless."
"It certainly bears looking into," agreed Nysander, "but just now I cannot
seem to resist the music. Do you think we have a dance or two left in us, my
dear?"
"I think they'll have to chain your feet together to keep them still when
they bury you," Magyana replied with a twinkle.
Valerius watched with gruff fondness as the pair danced away. "Ridiculous,
that Oreskan celibacy of hers. Those two should have married centuries ago."
Then something else appeared to catch his eye and a wry grin spread in the
depths of his black beard. "Now there's someone I didn't expect to see here
tonight. And just look who he's with!"
"Ylinestra a Maranial Wisthra Ylinena Erind, Sorceress of Erind," announced
Runcer.
"And Thero i Procepios Bynardin Chylnir Rhiminee, Wizard of the Second Order,
of the Third Oreska."
"Well, well!" murmured Seregil.
Thero did look uncharacteristically sanguine, standing at the head of the
chamber with Ylinestra on his arm. The sorceress' silk gown glittered with
jeweled beading and the bodice, fashionable in the extreme, showed pink
half-crescent hints of nipple beneath the heavy necklace of pearl and jet she
wore over her bared breasts. Her ebony hair was caught back in a similar jeweled
web, exposing a graceful white neck.
Seregil propelled Alec forward with a gentle nudge. "Come on, Sir Alec. Let's
greet our illustrious guests."
"Welcome to my home, lady," he said, stepping up to kiss her hand.
"Thank you, Lord Seregil," she replied with a cool nod. "And this must be
your new companion I've been hearing so much about?"
"Alec of Ivywell," Alec told her, wondering with sudden discomfort whether
she recalled their first brief, tempestuous meeting soon after his arrival at
the Oreska House. If she did, however, she gave no sign of it. Extending her
hand, she enveloped him with a heart-stopping smile.
"Ah, a Mycenian. How delightful."
She clearly meant for him to kiss her hand and he bent dutifully over it. A
faint perfume rose in his nostrils, subtle yet strangely compelling.
Her hand, so warm and soft, lingered in his, and as he raised his head, his
eyes swept across her breasts to her lovely violet eyes with a studied enjoyment
he wouldn't have imagined himself capable of. Still she held him, and her
low-pitched voice sent an unfamiliar tingle through his body when she spoke.
"Nysander speaks so warmly of you. I hope that we may know one another
better."
"I'm honored, lady," Alec replied, his voice sounding distant in his ears.
She withdrew her hand at last and the world returned to normal.
"Good evening," Thero said stiffly, looking somewhat less than pleased to be
there.
"Forgive Thero's bad grace," Ylinestra murmured, once more wrapping Alec in
the warm embrace of her eyes. "He is here only as a favor to me, I fear, and is
being quite sulky. Come, Thero, perhaps wine will improve your disposition."
As he escorted her into the throng, the actor Pelion stepped into their path
with an elaborate bow, which Thero evaded with a curt and proprietary nod.
Pelion fell back a pace, then followed Ylinestra with lovesick eyes.
"Ah, so that's the actor's hopeless love," Seregil noted with a smirk. "He's
certainly got some competition tonight. And if Thero gets any stiffer, he's
likely to fall over and break."
"She was kind of abrupt with you, I thought," observed Alec.
"Well, I'm not exactly her type. Evidently you are."
Alec colored warmly. Her perfume still clung to his fingers. "I only greeted
her."
The musicians struck up a reel and he turned to watch the dancers. Micum
swirled by with Kari, laughing and smiling; Nysander and Magyana followed close
behind. One of the poets had somehow captured Elsbet and she blushed happily as
he swept her along. Across the room, Ylinestra was chatting with the actor while
Thero hovered close at hand with badly concealed impatience.
"What's she doing with Thero?" Alec wondered aloud.
"Judging by the look of him, nothing he'd want Nysander to know about,"
Valerius remarked.
"Nysander knows," said Seregil. "I think he was getting bored with her,
anyway, but I still say it was bad manners for her to grab Thero next."
"I doubt if she was the only one doing the grabbing," scoffed Valerius. "If
he wants to stick his head in the dragon's mouth, let him. Just see that young
Alec here keeps a safe distance."
"I just greeted her, for—" Alec sputtered, but was interrupted by Myrhini and
Beka.
"I'm off for the Vigil," said Myrhini. "Hope to see you all at the
investiture tomorrow."
As soon as the captain was gone, Beka turned to Alec with a knowing grin.
"Ylinestra's very beautiful, wouldn't you say?"
Alec groaned. "What was I supposed to do, knock her down?"
"For a minute there I thought you were going to."
"Well, I'm sure I'm no danger to her, when she can obviously have her pick of
any man in Rhiminee," he countered. "What about you, though? Can you dance in
uniform?"
Beka looked down at her tabard and boots. "I think we can manage."
They made a passable business of the reel and went on dancing when the next
song began, in truth, Beka was in such high spirits over her commission that
Alec thought she could probably fly if the notion struck her. They soon caught
each other's rhythm and went on dancing with scarcely a break until Micum cut in
to say that Kari and the younger girls were retiring for the night.
"I didn't realize how late it had gotten," Beka said, letting go of Alec's
hand with evident regret. "I'll go up and visit with Mother a while before I
head back to the barracks. I've got to be up early for the ceremony."
Giving Alec a quick peck on the cheek, she added, "You and Seregil are
coming, aren't you? There'll be hundreds of us, of course, so you probably won't
even see me."
"With that hair?" Alec teased, tugging at the end of her coppery braid.
"You'll stick out like a drunkard's nose!"
"I'll remember that remark the next time we work on your swordplay," Beka
warned with a dire grin. "Until tomorrow, then."
Left to his own devices again, he looked for Seregil and spotted him on the
far side of the crowded floor. No sooner had he worked his way through the
crowd, however, when Seregil was waylaid by a noble complaining at length about
some shipping venture he and Seregil were involved with. Alec listened politely
for a time, but his attention soon wandered.
Looking around, he realized that the number of guests was dwindling. Off for
more "games in the dark," as Kylith had teased. Nysander and Magyana were still
there, moving with stately grace through the circle of a galliard. Thero was
dancing as well, but not with Ylinestra.
"Where's she gotten to?" Alec wondered, looking around again.
In the garden.
The soft, caressing whisper came at his very ear, for him alone to hear.
Come into the garden.
There was no question this time; it was Ylinestra's voice.
The mysterious summons came again, and with it a delicious languor. A couple
walked past, lightwands in hand, and he marveled at the rainbow corona
surrounding each glowing stone. The whole room, in fact, had taken on a warmer
tone.
Perhaps Nysander and Magyana were tinkering with their creation? Skirting the
dancers, he slipped unnoticed into the dining room and on out into the darkened
garden.
Here. Come to me.
The voice guided him to a far corner of the garden screened by a small arbor.
He heard a faint sigh of silk and Ylinestra's pale face resolved from the
darkness. Her hands found his and lifted them to rest just above her hips.
She was slender and supple between his hands and he spread his fingers to
better appreciate the sensation of her warmth beneath the cold fabric.
"My lady, I don't understand," he whispered, some small, distant part of him
distinctly alarmed at his own actions. He'd never felt like this in his life.
"What is there to understand, lovely boy?"
How small she seemed, here in the darkness. Her lips brushed his chin as she
spoke, her violet eyes pools of night just below his own.
"But Nysander—Thero? I thought—"
She laughed softly, and the sound drowned his own trepidation in another rush
of voluptuous sensation.
"I do as I please, Alec, and I take what I want. And just now, I want you."
Her hands found his again, holding his palms flat against her as she slid
them upward. The roughness of embroidery met his touch, then the netted web of
the necklace over her breasts.
"You're trembling. Does my little magic frighten you? Do still frighten you?"
Alec drew a ragged breath. "I-I don't know."
Part of him sensed a snare, a trap, yet his whole body was gripped by a
yearning unlike anything he'd ever known. Her scent
filled his nostrils again as she slipped his fingertips beneath the edge of her
necklace to press the bare, yielding swell of a breast.
"You have only to ask, Alec. I'll release you if you ask. Shall I free you?"
She slipped a hand to the back of his neck to rest where Seregil's so often
did. Then she kissed him again, her lips parting, tongue gently seeking entrance
and gaining it as her other hand stroked his side. Pulling him closer, she
kissed her way to his neck.
"So young, so smooth," she murmured, the touch of her breath sending a
profound warmth to his loins. "So beautiful. Have you known a woman? No? So much
the better." She shifted slightly, bringing a half-exposed nipple against his
fingers. "Tell me, shall I release you now?"
"Yes! No- I don't know—"
Alec groaned softly, then embraced her. Magic or not, newly awakened passions
suffused him and he found her lips again, returning kiss for kiss.
"Close your eyes, my darling," she whispered.
"Shut them tight and I'll show you another trick."
Alec obeyed, and was startled to feel himself falling, tumbling onto
something soft. When he opened his eyes again, the two of them were lying in the
heavily draped enclosure of a huge bed. The forbidden glow of candlelight
filtered through layers of colored silk, just bright enough for him to see that
somewhere in the transition, their clothing had been left behind.
"Something wrong, my dear?" asked Nysander, seeing Magyana frowning over his
shoulder as they danced.
"I was just watching Thero. He's looking dour again, and he seemed to be
having such a pleasant time.
Has Seregil been teasing him again?"
"Not that I observed."
Thero hovered grimly in a far corner, oblivious to the band of nymphs dancing
on the wall just behind him as he scanned the room.
"I suspect Ylinestra has found more spirited companionship for the evening,"
he guessed.
"Mmm. Well, that is a great deal less surprising than seeing them together in
the first place. What in the world does she want with him?"
"He is not such a bad-looking lad," Nysander said. "And he is young."
"Yes, but he's also your assistant," sniffed Magyana. "I realize you don't
mind, but it still seems rather tactless of them."
Nysander chuckled knowingly. "Passion is seldom governed by such niceties."
Just then, however, he caught sight of Seregil standing by the cider barrel.
He was fiddling absently with a mug and looking rather perplexed.
"Come, my dear, you must be thirsty," said the wizard, steering her in
Seregil's direction.
"You haven't seen Alec in the last few minutes?" Seregil asked as they joined
him.
The gloves were gone, Nysander noted, but a spotless strip of linen still
bound each hand. He wondered what sort of explanation he'd concocted for his
guests.
"Why, no. Is he missing?" replied the wizard.
"I don't know. It's been almost an hour since I last saw him. I've just been
all over the house and he's not here. It's not like him to wander off. Could you
take a look?"
Nysander closed his eyes and sent a seeking through the house and surrounding
neighborhood, then shook his head.
"You don't suppose-?" Magyana gestured discreetly in Thero's direction.
Reluctantly, Nyander sent another of the spells to Ylinestra's chamber,
intending nothing more than a brief glimpse to ascertain the boy's presence.
As he'd feared, Alec was there, but the energies surrounding him were not
sexual.
"What is it? Is something wrong?" Seregil asked beside him.
Nysander held up a warning hand without opening his eyes. "He is well. But I
shall need a few moments—"
Intensifying the spell, he found Ylinestra crouched over Alec, who appeared
to be asleep, sprawled on his back among the disheveled blankets with a blissful
smile on his face. In contrast, Ylinestra's face was a hard mask of
concentration as she wove an unfamiliar sigil in the air above him. As it took
form, the peaceful expression drained from Alec's face. At first he simply
looked blank, then his brow furrowed as he unconsciously turned his face away, a
low sound of protest rattling in his throat. The sorceress leaned closer,
enlarging the glowing symbol, then struck him sharply on the cheek in
frustration.
"That will be quite enough, Ylinestra!"
She whirled in surprise. The sigil snapped out of existence.
"Nysander? How dare you spy into my chamber!" she hissed, eyes wide with
outrage at his disembodied intrusion. "You have no right!"
"More right than you, to work magic on an unwilling subject," Nysander
retorted sternly. "Send him back at once or I shall fetch him myself."
"Such a fuss," she purred, stroking a hand down Alec's belly, knowing he
would see. "I assure you, I did him no harm."
"That remains to be seen."
A moment later Nysander felt a ripple of magic from upstairs. When had she
mastered the translocation spell?
With Seregil and Magyana close behind, he went up and found Alec deeply
asleep in his own chamber. Satisfied that the boy was unharmed, he placed a
protective ward over the bed to curtail any further mischief and quietly closed
the door.
"Well, I suspect I won't be teasing him about his virginity anymore," Seregil
said, sounding a bit wistful. "He certainly fell in to the spirit of the evening
in a hurry."
"I doubt it was entirely his own doing," Magyana said, wrinkling her nose in
prim distaste. "If it turns out he was coerced, I want to know about it. There's
no place for that sort of behavior in the Oreska."
"Certainly not," Nysander said, thinking more of the mysterious sigil she'd
been using. "Still, if it was his choice to go off with her, we must not make a
fuss. He is old enough to decide that sort of thing for himself."
Seregil let out an abrupt laugh. "I suppose he is, really. But it may cause a
bit of a chill between him and Thero."
Just gold.
The roar of festival gongs woke Alec at dawn. Blinking, he gazed up in groggy
confusion at the bed hangings, a pomegranate pattern worked with scarlet.
He'd gone to sleep beneath layers of colored silk lit by candle glow.
Ylinestra had been looking down at him, her eyes vague with pleasure.
A delicious ache ran through him at the memory, but with it came a twinge of
anxiety that he couldn't immediately explain.
Stretching himself fully awake, he sat up to find Seregil dozing in an
armchair beside the bed. He was still wearing last night's breeches and shirt.
Slouched to one side, arms crossed tightly across his chest, he looked
profoundly uncomfortable.
Alec shook him gently by the elbow and he jerked awake, rubbing painfully at
his neck.
"How'd I get here?" Alec asked.
"She sent you back, I guess." The beginnings of a dangerous grin played at
the corners of his mouth.
"Ylinestra, eh? And after all Valerius' warnings. Enjoy yourself?"
"Oh-yes. I mean, I did, I guess—"
"You guess?"
Alec fell back against the pillows with a groan. "It's just that, well—I
think she used some magic. At first, anyway."
"So that's what it takes." Chuckling, Seregil leaned forward and touched a
finger to Alec's cheek.
"And the kind that leaves marks, too. You all right?"
Alec brushed his hand away, feeling more awkward than ever. "Yes, of course
I'm all right. It was great. Just sort of—strange." He hesitated. "Do you dream?
Afterward, I mean?"
"I usually talk. Why, did you?"
"Yes. I remember thinking that I was falling asleep but not wanting to. And
then I saw the spinning dagger."
Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow. "The what?"
"The spinning dagger that Nysander used when I swore the Watcher's oath. It
was right in front of my face, just like before, and I was afraid to say
anything for fear it would cut me. I could hear Nysander's voice, too, but like
it was coming from far away. I couldn't understand what he was saying. There was
something else, too." He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to seize the elusive
fragment. "Something about an arrow."
Seregil shook his head. "You're whisked away and made love to by the most
exotic woman in Rhiminee and it gives you nightmares? You're a strange creature,
Alec, a very strange creature." He grinned. "I just hope you're not too worn
out. This is the biggest celebration of the year. And we'd better get ready. The
Cavishes are probably already at breakfast downstairs."
Alec lay in bed a moment longer after he left, trying to sort out his
feelings about the previous night's unexpected climax. He knew better than to
imagine that Ylinestra considered him anything more than a virginal conquest; he
doubted she'd give him a second glance the next time they met.
At least he hoped not. Pleasurable as the physical act—or rather, acts—had
been, the whole affair had left him feeling low and begrimed.
Seregil's well-intentioned ribbing had only underscored his own confusion.
The sorceress' scent rose from his skin as Alec threw back the covers and got
up. Wrapping himself in a robe, he called for the chambermaid, asking her to
prepare a bath and see to it that his bedding was changed.
The bath helped considerably and he headed downstairs in somewhat better
spirits. His one remaining qualm was that Seregil had already blabbed his
exploits to Micum or Kari. But no one gave signs of being any the wiser when he
joined the cheerful group around the dining table, although Seregil did raise a
questioning eyebrow at his damp hair.
Illia was too excited by the prospect of a day in the city to let anyone
linger over their morning tea. As soon as the meal was finished the whole party
set off for the Temple Precinct.
Kari and the girls rode in a comfortable open carriage, with the men riding
attendance on horseback.
In contrast to the austerity of Mourning Night, Sakor's Day was celebrated
with wild abandon.
Horns blared, ale flowed, bonfires blazed at all hours.
Looking around as they rode, it appeared to Alec that there was a performance
of some kind-animal trainers, jugglers, troops of actors performing out of skene
wagons, fire dancers, and the like—on virtually every street corner. Food
sellers, gamblers, whores, and pickpockets mingled with the revelers, plying
their trades.
"It's all so loud and exciting!" exclaimed Elsbet, riding along beside him.
"You'll get used to it," Alec replied.
The girl grinned. "Oh, I look forward to that."
The main event of the day was the annual investing of new troops at midday.
Sakor was the patron god of soldiers and the recognition of new troops was at
once a martial and religious occasion.
In the Temple Precinct, the tiers of seating had been cleared away to make
room for the ranks of new soldiers formed up in front of the Sakor Temple.
The day was a cloudless, bitter one and even Alec was glad of the heavy,
fur-lined cloak he wore over his velvet surcoat. Seregil chatted idly with other
nobles, introducing Alec to this one or that as the fancy took him.
"I've never seen so many new recruits, have you?" Kari asked Seregil, shading
her eyes with one hand as they stood together on the steps of the Temple of
Illior.
He shook his head. "No, never."
"Where's Beka?" Illia demanded, bouncing excitedly on her father's shoulder.
"Over with those in green there." Micum pointed out the Queen's Horse,
raising his voice to make himself heard.
Glancing at Kari, Alec thought she looked rather sad and thoughtful. As if
sensing his gaze, she looked over at him and held a hand out for his.
By the time the last ranks had marched in, the close-packed regimental
groupings looked like colored tiles in a huge mosaic. The Queen's Horse was a
block of green and white directly in front of the Temple of Sakor.
"Look, there's the Queen," said Micum.
"They'll start now."
Looking solemn and proud despite her long vigil, Idrilain took her place
between the pillars of the Sakor Temple. She wore flowing robes of state and an
emerald diadem and carried the Sword of Gerilain upright on her shoulder like a
scepter. The golden Aegis gleamed behind her as she stood motionless before the
troops, the faint vapor of her breath visible on the cold air. The tableau was
intentional; there was no doubt to whom the oath was to be given. The priests
might be allowed their mysteries in the darkness, but here, in the light of day,
stood the embodiment of Skalan power.
Placing the sword point downward in front of her,
Idrilain grasped the hilt in both hands and began the ritual.
"Come you here to swear the Oath?" she cried, her voice carrying clear and
harsh as if across a field of battle.
"Aye!" came the response from a thousand throats, thundering in the stone
confines of the precinct.
From the corner of his eye, Alec saw Micum and Seregil drop their hands to
their sword hilts, as did many around them. Without a word, he did the same.
"To whom do you swear?"
"To the throne of Skala and the Queen who rules!" returned the initiate
soldiers.
"By what do you swear?"
"By the Four, by the Flame, by our honor, and our arms!"
"Swear then to uphold the honor of your land and Queen!"
"Aye!"
"Swear then to give no quarter to the adversary."
"Aye!"
"Swear then to spare the supplicant."
"Aye!"
"Foreswear all that brings dishonor upon your comrades."
"Aye!"
Idrilain paused, letting a moment pass in stillness. Then, in a voice that
would have done credit to any sergeant, she barked out, "Display arms!"
With a ringing of steel, the various regiments brandished their weapons:
swords and sabers glinted in the sunlight; small forests of lances sprang to
attention; archers beat arrow shafts against longbows, producing a strange
clacking sound; artillery soldiers held catapult stones aloft. Standards
unfurled on cue to snap brightly over the throng.
"Then so are you all sworn together!" cried Idrilain, raising her sword
overhead. "By the Four and the Flame, by land and Queen, by honor and arms.
Warriors of Skala, sound your cries!"
A deafening roar filled the square as each regiment shouted its own battle
cry, vying with the others to make their voices heard.
"The Queen's honor!"
"Sakor's Fire!"
"Honor and steel!"
"The Flame on the Seal"
"True aim and well sped!"
"The White Hawk!"
Drummers and pipers stepped from behind the temple pillars, setting up a
martial tattoo. Great horns as long as the men that sounded them blared and
bellowed on the rooftops as the ranks turned and began to march out of the
square.
"It all makes you want to join in with it, doesn't it?" Alec grinned, pulse
quickening with the beat of the drums.
Laughing, Seregil threw an arm around Alec's shoulders and drew him away,
shouting over the din, "That's the whole idea."
The clamor at dawn went unheard by Nysander.
Seated cross-legged on the floor of the casting room, a long dead candle
guttered out before him, he floated in the dim oblivion of meditation.
Images came and went, yet nothing substantial came into his grasp.
After seeing Magyana to her tower door the previous night, he'd made his
usual tour of the vaults beneath the Oreska, then found himself leaving first
the House, then the sheltered gardens, to stalk alone through the windy streets.
Hands clasped behind his back, he walked aimlessly, as if trying to escape
the anger that had been building slowly inside him from the moment he'd found
Ylinestra hovering over Alec in her chamber.
Much of this anger was directed at himself. Ylinestra had meant no more to
him than a voluptuous diversion possessed of a mind of uncommon ability. Yet he
had allowed his carnal desires to blind him to the true depths of her cupidity.
Her sudden dalliance with Thero had reawakened his lulled sense of prudence.
What he'd witnessed this night strengthened his suspicions.
He let out an exasperated growl. The Black Time was coming, he knew, coming
in the course of his own Guardianship. Was he prepared?
Hardly.
He had an assistant he could not completely trust and yet hardly dared
release. A sorceress twenty decades his junior had him passion-blind.
And Seregil!
Nysander clenched his hands, digging the nails into his palms. Seregil, whom
he loved as a son and a friend, had very nearly condemned himself to death
through his own obstinate inquisitiveness. Alec would prove no different in
time—that much was already clear.
For the first time in years, he found himself wondering what his own master
would have to say about all this. Arkoniel's craggy face came to him as readily
as if he'd seen him only the day before.
He'd been old when Nysander had first met him and never seemed to change. How
fervently the young Nysander—that desperate, quick-tempered urchin of the
streets, plucked starving from the squalor of the lower city-had tried to
emulate the old man's patience and wisdom.
But from Arkoniel he'd also inherited the burden of the Guardianship, that
dark thread of knowledge that must be kept at once intact and concealed. A
thread that the events of the past few months, beginning with Seregil's finding
the cursed disk and culminating tonight with the omens at the ceremony, showed
to be nearing its end.
Finding no answers in the night, he'd returned to his tower and prepared for
a formal meditation. Dawn found him motionless and seemingly serene. He'd been
dimly aware of Thero's arrival and respectful withdrawal.
As the last light of Sakor's Day faded above the tower dome, Nysander opened
his eyes, no wiser than when he'd begun. Denied inspiration, he was left with
facts. Seregil had stumbled across the disk, ostensibly by accident, then found
his way to the Oracle of Illior, who'd recited a fragment of a prophecy no one
but Nysander himself had any business knowing about. Last night the same
words—"Eater of Death"—had been spoken by the priest of Sakor following the
strange omen of carrion birds.
Rising, he worked the stiffness from his joints and set off for the Temple
Precinct again.
A cold sliver of moon was just sliding up from behind the white dome of the
Temple of Illior when he arrived. Taking this as a favorable sign, he entered
the temple and donned the ritual mask.
He'd sought the counsel of the Oracle only a few times before, and then more
often in the spirit of curiosity. His devotion to Illior took a different form
than that of the priests.
But now he hurried onward with a growing sense of anticipation. Snapping a
light of his own into existence, he made his way down the twisting, treacherous
stairway to the subterranean chamber of the Oracle. At the bottom he
extinguished the light and strode on through the utter blackness of the
corridor, more convinced with every step that the poor, mad creature at its end
had answers to offer.
A lumpish, disheveled young man squatting on a pallet bed looked up as he
entered. This was not the same Oracle Nysander recalled, of course, yet all the
rest was as before: the profound silence, the dim, cold light, the attendants
seated motionless on either side of the idiot vessel of the Immortal,
featureless silver masks gleaming from the depths of their cowls.
"Greetings to you, Guardian!" he cried, vague eyes locking with Nysander's.
"You know me?"
"Who you are is nothing," the Oracle replied, rocking slowly from side to
side. "What you are is everything. Everything. Prepare, O Guardian. The ordeal
is close at hand. Have you preserved what was entrusted?"
"I have." Nysander suddenly felt weary beyond words.
How many times had he walked through the dusty labyrinth beneath the Oreska
House, feigning absent curiosity? How many years had it taken to cultivate his
reputation as an eccentric, albeit powerful, dabbler? How much had he sacrificed
to uphold the trust of generations?
"Stand ready, O Guardian, and be vigilant," the Oracle continued. "Your time
approaches out of darkness and hidden places. The minions of the Adversary ride
forth in secret glory. Your portion shall be bitter as gall."
The silence closed over them again like the surface of a pool. Into that
silence Nysander slowly recited words that, to his knowledge, had not been said
aloud in nearly five centuries. It was a fragment of the "Dream of Hyradin," the
one faint ray of hope he and all his predecessors had clung to down the long
years of their vigil.
"And so came the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the
world.
First clothed in Man's flesh, it came crowned with a helm of darkness and
none could stand against this
One but Four.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness.
Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the
Guide, the Unseen
One, goes forth. And at last shall be again the
Guardian, whose portion is bitter, as bitter as gall."
The Oracle said nothing to this, but gazed up at him with eyes that held no
alternative.
After a moment, Nysander bowed slightly and went back the way he'd come, in
darkness and alone.
Alec had hoped that their stay at Wheel Street would be brief—a week perhaps,
to satisfy appearances. But the week stretched into two, and then lengthened to
a month. Seregil had "daylight business" to attend to, as he called his numerous
legitimate interests around the city. They spent a great deal of time in the
lower city, where he met with ship captains in warehouses smelling of tar and
low tide, or haggled with traders at the customs houses. This meant that for the
time being their comfortable rooms over the Cockerel were generally off-limits;
they couldn't chance a connection being made between Lord Seregil and the inn.
The business transactions bored Alec, but he contented himself with observing
how Seregil played the role. Despite his affectations, he had the common touch
that invited confidence and respect. He also had a reputation for openhandedness
in certain matters; tradesmen were happy enough to pass on whatever rumors were
current and there was little going on, legal or otherwise, which Seregil didn't
soon hear of.
Equally important were the evening salons. Once it was known that the elusive
Lord Seregil was home at last, a veritable deluge of scented, wax-sealed
invitations poured in.
Thrown together night after night with nobles of all degrees, Alec gradually
learned the gentle art of conversational thrust and parry so necessary to
navigate the intricate waters of Skalan politics.
"Intrigue!" Seregil laughed when Alec groaned over manner once too often.
"That's our bread and butter, and the only intrigue that pay are those of the
wealthy. Smile nicely, nod often, an less-than keep your ears open."
Alec's presence excited a certain amount of comment at first and rumors
regarding his relationship with Seregil circulate
hotly. The higher-minded accepted that he really was—Seregil's ward, or perhaps
his illegitimate son, though the majority of opinion tended toward less
altruistic possibilities. Alec was mortified, but Seregil shrugged it off.
"Don't let it bother you," he counseled. "In these circles the only thing
worse than being slandered is not being talked about at all. In a month or two
they'll forget all about it and think you've been around for years."
To this end, they made a point of frequenting the better theater and gambling
houses. The Tirade Theater in the Street of Light was a favorite haunt of
Seregil's, particularly when Pelion i Eirsil was on stage.
Alec was an instant aficionado of drama.
Brought up on ballad and tavern tales, he was amazed to see stories played
out by a fill cast in costume. Whether he understood the story line or not—he
frequently didn't—the pageantry of it was enough to keep him enthralled through
the entire performance.
And through it all, Alec's education continued—lock work and swordsmanship,
etiquette and lineage, history and disguise, the picking of surcoats and the
picking of pockets—together with a hundred other skills Seregil deemed
indispensable for an aspiring spy.
One grey morning several weeks after the Festival Seregi handed Alec a sealed
note from the pile of new correspondence a his elbow as they sat over a late
breakfast.
Breaking the seal, he read a hastily scrawled note from Beka Cavish.
Can get free a few hours this afternoon. Fancy a ride? If so, meet me at the
Cima Road gate at noon.
-B.c.
"You don't need me this afternoon, do you?" he asked hopefully, passing the
note to Seregil. "I haven't seen her since the investiture."
Seregil nodded. "Go on. I think I can manage without you."
Arriving at the Harvest Market well before the appointed time, Alec found
Beka already waiting for him by the city gate. The way she sat her horse, reins
held casually in one hand, her other elbow cocked out at a jaunty angle beneath
her green cloak, spoke volumes; she looked born to soldiering.
"Aren't you still the fine young dandy?" she called as he maneuvered
Windrunner through the market crowd.
"Seregil's making a gentleman of me, after all." He struck a haughty pose.
"Soon I'll be too good to hang about with the likes of you."
"Then we'd better get on with it while we still can. I need a good run," she
said, grinning at him.
Nudging Wyvern into a trot, she led the way through the gate.
As soon as they were past the curtain wall beyond, they kicked their mounts
into a gallop and rode north along the cliffs. The frozen roadway rang like
metal under their horses' hooves; the sea gave back a metallic sheen beneath the
pale winter sky. To the east, the mountain peaks gleamed white against the
lowering sky.
Side by side, cloaks streaming out behind them, Alec and Beka raced along the
highroad for a mile or more, then veered off into a meadow overlooking the sea.
"That's quite a harness you've got on Wyvem,"
Alec remarked, noting the leather breastplate and frontlet.
"That's to accustom him to the feel of it," she explained. "For battle, the
leather's replaced with felt pads and bronze plates."
"How do you like military life? And what do I call you now?"
"We all start as riders, although those of us with commissions are actually
officers from the start. I'll be a lieutenant when we ride off to the war. Right
now all the new riders are divided up into training decuria. I'm in the first
turma under Captain Myrhini. Lieutenants lead three decuriae, but it's the
captain more often than not who leads the drills—"
"Hold on!" Alec interjected, reining in. "You soldiers speak a different
language. What's a turma?"
"I'm still getting it all straight myself," she admitted. "Let's see, now—ten
riders make a decuria, which is led by a sergeant. Three decuriae to a turma,
commanded by a lieutenant; three turmae to a troop and four troops to a
squadron; two squadrons to the regiment. What with officers, sutlers and the
like, there's about eight hundred of us altogether. Captain Myrhini has command
of First Troop of the Lion Squadron under Commander Klia. Commander Perns
commands the Wolf Squadron. And the Queen's oldest son, Prince Korathan, is the
regimental commander."
"Sounds like a pretty exclusive bunch."
"The Horse Guard is an elite regiment; the officers are all nobles. The
riders all have to provide their own mounts and prove themselves at riding and
shooting, so most of them are from well- to-do families as well. I'd never have
gotten a commission without Seregil's help. Still, elite or not, you should see
some of the young blue bloods tumbling off their horses as they try to draw! I
tell you, I've never appreciated Father's training so much as now. Sergeant
Braknil thinks Captain Myrhini will want to keep me in her troop when I've
finished training. I'll have thirty riders under me. But how about you? I
suppose Seregil's keeping you pretty busy?"
"Oh, yes." Alec rolled his eyes. "I think I've gotten all of ten hours sleep
this week. When we're not arguing with traders or going off to some fancy
gathering, he's got me sitting up half the night memorizing royal lineages. I
think he secretly means to make me into a scribe."
A little pause spread out and in it he felt the distance opening between them
as they headed down their divergent paths. What he really wanted to tell her
about were their nocturnal adventures, but Seregil was adamant about secrecy
outside Watcher circles. At some point, he thought, Nysander ought to recruit
Beka.
Looking up, he found her studying his face with a faint smile. It occurred to
him that having grown up around Micum and Seregil, she probably had a fair idea
of his unspoken life.
"Did I tell you Seregil's teaching me Aurenfaie?" he said, anxious to
reestablish common ground.
"Nos eyir?"
He laughed. "You, too?"
"Oh, yes. Elsbet and I were always pestering him to teach us when he came to
visit. She had a better head for it, naturally, but I know a little. I suppose
you'll need it, too. It's all the fashion among the nobles."
"Seregil says most of them sound like they're talking through a mouthful of
wet leather when they try. He's making certain I get it right.
"Makiry 'torus eyair. How's that?"
"Korveu tak melilira. Afarya tos hara'beniel?" she replied, wheeling her
horse and kicking it into a gallop.
Assuming it had either been an insult or an invitation to another race, Alec
galloped after her.
Dusk was settling outside the windows of Seregil's bedchamber when Alec
strode in with flushed cheeks and new snow melting in his hair. The sweet tang
of a cold ocean wind still clung to him.
"Tell me we don't have to dress up tonight!" he pleaded, dropping down on the
hearth rug by Seregil's feet.
Seregil laid his book aside and stretched lazily. "You look like you've had
quite an afternoon."
"We rode for miles! I should have taken my bow—we ended up in the hills and
there were rabbits everywhere."
"I may have some other hunting for you." Seregil pulled a small scroll from
his belt and brandished it between two long fingers. "This was left at the Black
Feather for the Rhiminee Cat. It seems Lady Isara has lost some compromising
letters and she wants them back. She thinks Baron Makrin's study is a good place
to start looking."
"Tonight?" Alec asked, all weariness instantly forgotten.
"I think that's best. It's a pretty straightforward burglary, nothing fancy.
Midnight's soon enough. We'll have to wait until the household's settled down,
but I don't want to be out in the cold any longer than we have to."
The wind tugged at their cloaks as Seregil and Alec set off for the baron's
villa on the west side of the Noble Quarter. They wore coarse workman's tunics,
and old traveling cloaks covered the swords slung out of sight over their backs.
They'd gone only a few blocks when Seregil suddenly sensed someone on the
street behind them. Touching
Alec lightly on the arm, he turned a corner at random and caught a hint of
motion in the shadows behind them.
"Just like that time I was chased into Silvermoon Street," Alec whispered,
glancing back nervously.
"I had the same thought, though it's probably just someone out for a midnight
stroll. Let's find out."
Leaving the baron for later, he turned right at the next corner, heading east
into the heart of the city.
A slice of moon broke free from the clouds, giving just enough light for
Seregil to make out a large, dark form trailing them from a discreet distance.
Not so innocent after all, he frowned to himself. Keeping up a steady pace,
he strode on into the increasingly poorer streets of the southeast quarter.
Their man still kept his distance, but matched them turn for turn.
"Do you hear that?" Alec asked softly.
"Hear what?"
"That little scraping sound, when he walks over a patch of bare cobbles. I
heard it that other time, too."
"Well then, we'd better let him introduce himself."
Wending his way into a disreputable warren of darkened tenements and
warehouses, Seregil spotted a familiar alleyway. Pretending to stumble, he
reached out and grasped Alec's elbow and signed for him to follow.
Ducking into the alley, he quickly tore off his cloak and tossed it behind a
pile of refuse, then pulled himself through a crumbling window frame overhead.
Alec was up beside him in an instant. From this vantage point, they watched as
their man hesitated, then drew a falchion and went slowly on into the shadows of
the alley. From this angle, Seregil couldn't make out his face.
An amateur, but persistent,
Seregil thought, watching as he went half the length of the alley before
realizing that it was a dead end, and that his quarry was nowhere in sight.
As he turned, Seregil and Alec dropped lightly to the pavement and drew their
swords.
"What do you want?" Seregil demanded.
Undaunted, their pursuer took a step forward, weapon at the ready. "If ever
you called yourself Gwethelyn, Lady of Cador Ford, and Ciris, squire of the
same, then we've a matter of restitution to discuss."
"Captain Rhal!" Alec examined.
"The same, boy."
"You're a long way from the Darter," said Seregil, hoping he didn't sound as
shaken as he felt.
"And a good thing, too," Rhal retorted stiffly, "seeing that she lies rotting
at the bottom of the Folcwine River."
"What's that to do with us?"
Rhal advanced another step, flinging his hat aside. "I've traveled a long way
to ask you that. Two days below Torburn we put in for water at a little place
called Gresher's Ferry. A pack of swordsmen were waiting for us there, and who
do you suppose they wanted?"
Alec shifted uncomfortably beside him.
"I'm sure I have no idea," Seregil replied. "Who were they looking for?"
"Two men and a boy, they claimed, but it was you they meant, sure enough. If
I hadn't caught you out of your woman's riggings I might not have tumbled, but
it was you."
"You're mistaken, though I suppose you set them after us anyway?"
"By the Old Sailor, I did not!" Rhal retorted angrily. "I might have saved
myself the loss of a fine ship if I had."
Certain disturbing questions had occurred to Seregil during this exchange,
but before he could ask any the three of them were startled by a sudden
commotion behind them at the mouth of the alley.
A gang of back alley toughs materialized out of the shadows armed with
swords, cudgels, and daggers. Seregil saw in an instant that there were enough
of them to be trouble.
To his surprise, he found Rhal at his side, sword leveled at the newcomers.
Alec cast him one questioning look, then fell in beside the captain as the
ambushers charged in at them.
Rhal took the center, striking right and left with workmanlike efficiency.
Seregil had just time enough to pull the poniard free of his boot before he
found himself fighting two-handed against a ruffian wielding a quarterstaff.
The alley made for close quarters fighting and the three of them were soon
being forced back inch by inch toward the dead end at their backs.
"Trouble above!" Rhal bellowed as a hail of stones and roof tiles clattered
down from overhead.
"Press the bastards!"
A heavy tile struck his arm, jarring his sword from his hand. A tall footpad
closed in, but Seregil whirled and buried his poniard between the man's ribs.
Beside him, Alec struck another across the face. Rhal rolled hastily out from
under their feet, scrambling through the dirty snow for his weapon.
More stones rained down but thanks to the darkness or someone's poor aim,
most of this load landed among the attackers. In the resulting confusion,
Seregil and the others broke free to the street, the gang hot on their heels.
Freed from the confines of the alley, he rounded on the man nearest him and
ran him through, then blocked a swing from a quarterstaff. He'd lost sight of
Alec, but a fierce yell just behind told him the boy was holding his own.
Seregil was just facing off with two of the footpads when the shrill alarm of
a Watch trumpet rang out nearby. A moment later a Watch patrol galloped into
sight down the street, weapons drawn. The footpads left off at once and melted
away into the shadows like sea smoke before a freshening breeze.
"Come on!" Seregil hissed at Alec and Rhal, and bolted off in the opposite
direction.
"What are we running for?" Rhal panted.
"So we don't spend the night inventing lies for some thickheaded bluecoat,"
Seregil snapped.
Dodging into the next side street, he spotted a sagging bulkhead at the base
of a tenement just ahead.
Hoping for the best, he yanked up one of the flat doors and tossed in a
lightstone. Worn steps led down to a disused cellar.
"Down here!"
Alec and Rhal dove for cover and he followed, pulling the door shut overhead
again.
Crouched tensely in the musty darkness, they listened as the Watch made a
cursory search of the area and then moved on.
Seregil looked over at Rhal. "Now, you were saying?"
For the space of a few heartbeats Rhal stared blankly back at him, then burst
out laughing.
"By the Mariner, I came here to stick a knife in you and now I'm indebted to
you for my life. You two had no call to cover me as you did just then."
"You had no call to let us go that night on the Darter"
Seregil replied, picking up the light and heading for the stairs. "But you
did, and here we are. The boy and I have some business to attend to just now,
but I'd like to continue our earlier discussion. Meet us at the inner room of
the Bower in Silk Street, say in an hour's time?"
Rhal considered the invitation, then nodded. "All right then. An hour."
Seregil lifted the bulkhead door cautiously, then climbed out with Alec close
behind.
"Are we really going to meet him?" Alec asked as they hurried away.
"He tracked us to Wheel Street. I think we'd better find out how he managed
that, don't you?"
Seregil scowled, making no effort to mask his concern. "And who it was that
came to him looking for us, although I think I can guess."
The answering look of fear on Alec's face told Seregil that he could, too.
Their unanticipated run-in with Rhal had sapped every ounce of enjoyment from
the night for Alec. He floundered through the job in a daze of apprehension.
Seregil had said nothing more on the matter so far, but he couldn't shake the
conviction that his own callow ignorance aboard the Darter had somehow led Rhal
to them after all these months. And if he'd tracked them, then why not Mardus?
Luckily for him, the burglary was not a particularly challenging one.
Evidently a smug, unimaginative fellow, Makrin had hidden the letters in a
locked box behind a bit of loose woodwork in his study. Seregil spotted it while
Alec was still sorting through the contents of the writing table. With Lady
Isara's letters in hand, along with a few other items of interest, they stopped
briefly at Wheel Street to deposit the goods, then set off on horseback for the
Bower.
This was a discreetly respectable establishment Seregil often used for
assignations. A yawning pot boy led them to a room at the back. Rhal was already
there, but not alone; Alec immediately recognized the two men with him as the
helmsman and first mate from the ill-fated Darter.
They recognized him as well, and returned his greeting with guarded nods,
weapons close at hand.
Rhal pushed a wine jug over to them as he and Seregil joined him at the
table.
Seregil poured himself a cup, then said without preamble, "Tell me more about
Gresher's Ferry."
Rhal eyed him knowingly. "As I said, a pack of armed men was laying for us
there."
"A rough-lookin" crew," the helmsman, Skywake, added darkly, "They didn't
have no uniforms, but they sat their horses like soldiers."
Alec's heart sank still lower, though Seregil's face remained a carefully
neutral mask.
"They came asking after two men and a boy, said they'd stolen the mayor's
gold up in Wolde," Rhal continued. "When I told 'em I hadn't carried any three
such as they described, they pulled swords and swarmed all over my vessel, bold
as you please. Then their leader—a big, black-bearded son of a whore with an
accent thick as lentil porridge—he laid into me, calling me a liar and worse in
front of my own crew. The more he went on, the less I liked it. By the time he
stopped for breath, I'd sooner been drowned than give him satisfaction. So I
kept mum and finally they rode off.
"We went on downriver and I thought that was the end of it, but that same
night a fire started in the hold and burned so fierce we couldn't even get down
to douse it. Everyone got off, but my ship lies burnt and broken against the mud
bank below Hullout Bend. That's just a bit too much of a coincidence for my
taste, especially since we were carrying silver and bales of vellum that
voyage."
"Not the most flammable of cargoes." Seregil regarded Rhal impassively over
the rim of his cup. "And so you came looking for us."
"You're not going to tell me you were traveling in disguise just to make a
fool of me?" Rhal snorted.
"No."
Nettles slammed his fist down on the table. "Then it was you they was looking
for!"
"I don't know anything about that," Seregil maintained. "What I'm interested
in is how you found me."
"Not much trick to that," Skywake told him, jerking a thumb at Alec. "This
boy of yours asked around amongst the crew how to get to Rhiminee just before
you got off."
Idiot! Alec silently berated himself, his worst fears confirmed.
"Who did he talk to?" asked Seregil, not looking at him.
"There were a bunch of us on deck that day, as I recall," Nettles replied.
"Skywake, you was there, and the cook's boy."
"That's right. And Applescaith. He was the one wanted him to go overland the
whole way, remember?"
"Aye. Him, too. And Bosfast."
Alec sat staring down at his wine cup, mouth set in a grim line. How could he
have been so green?
He might just as well have drawn their pursuers a map.
Seregil took another sip of wine, considering all this. "And so, with nothing
more than a few tenuous suspicions, you chuck everything and head off for Skala
to stick a knife in me?" He shook his head in evident bemusement. "Rhiminee's a
big place. How in the world did you expect to find us?"
Rhal scrubbed a hand over his thinning hair and gave a short chuckle. "If you
aren't the damnedest creature for brass. All right then, I'll tell you straight.
You're looking at a ruined man. All I came away with was my instruments and
this."
Rhal held up his left hand, displaying a large garnet ring on his little
finger. Alec recognized it as the one Seregil had worn while playing Lady
Gwethelyn, but what was Rhal doing with it? Looking at Seregil for a reaction,
he saw the hint of a smile tugging at the corner of his friend's mouth.
"With the Darter beyond fixing and winter coming on, I didn't see too many
prospects for me in the north," Rhal went on. "I was a deepwater sailor in my
youth. I took up the Folcwine passage when my uncle willed me his ship and the
chance to be my own master. Now with the war brewing up for spring, I figured I
maybe could sign on with the navy.
"To tell you the honest truth, I didn't really expect to find you. Then I
caught sight of your boy back around the time you had all that trouble with the
law. Since then, we've kept watch on that fancy house of yours, hoping to have a
quiet chat, as it were. You're a hard pair to track down, though."
"It was you that chased me that night," said Alec.
"That was us." Rhal rubbed a knee with a rueful grin. "You're a tricky little
bugger, and fast. I'd figured you two for soft gents and didn't think you'd give
us much trouble. After seeing the way you handled yourselves in that alley,
though, I believe I'm glad those footpads showed up when they did."
Seregil gave him the crooked grin. "It may be good fortune for all of us,
meeting up again."
"How do you figure that?"
"You two"—Seregil turned to Skywake and Nettles—"do you fancy signing on as
common sailors with a war coming?"
"We go where our captain goes," Skywake replied stoutly, though it was clear
neither he nor the former helmsman were enthusiastic about the prospect.
Seregil looked back to Rhal. "And you, Captain—I'd think it would be
difficult to serve after having a vessel of your own."
Alec began to suspect where this conversation was headed.
"Of course, I'd be the last person to discourage anyone from fighting the
Plenimarans," Seregil drawled, "but it seems to me there are more rewarding ways
of going about it. Have you considered privateering?"
"I've considered it." Rhal shrugged, studying the other man's face with a
sharp trader's crafty interest, "but that takes a strong, swift ship and more
gold than I'm ever likely to see."
"What it takes," Seregil said, reaching into his belt pouch, "is the proper
investors. Would this get you started?"
Opening his hand, Seregil showed them an emerald the size of a walnut glowing
in the hollow of his palm.
It was one of many such stones Seregil kept handy as a conveniently portable
form of wealth.
"By the Sailor, Captain, did you ever see the like of that!" Nettles gasped.
Rhal glanced down at the stone, then back at Seregil. "Why?"
Seregil placed the stone in the center of the table. "Perhaps I appreciate a
man with a sense of humor."
"Skywake, Nettles, wait outside," Rhal said quietly. As they left, Rhal made
a questioning gesture in Alec's direction.
Seregil shook his head. "He stays. So, what do you think of my offer. It
won't be repeated once we leave this room."
"Tell me why," Rhal repeated, picking up the gem. "You've heard my story and
told me nothing, yet you offer me this. What's it really paying for?"
Seregil chuckled softly. "You're a clever man, away from the ladies. Let's
understand one another. I've got secrets I prefer to keep, but there are surer
ways than this to protect them, if you take my meaning. What I'm offering you,
all I'm offering you, is a mutually beneficial business proposition. You find a
ship, see to the crew, the provisioning, everything. I provide capital, in
return for which I receive twenty percent of the take and passage wherever I
say, whenever I require it, which will most likely be never. The rest of the
profits are yours to be divided in whatever fashion you see fit."
"And?" Still skeptical, Rhal put the stone back on the table.
"Information. Any document confiscated, any rumors from prisoners, any
encounter that seems out of the ordinary—it all comes to me directly and not a
word to anyone else."
Rhal nodded, satisfied. "So you're nosers, after all. Who for?"
"Let's just say we consider Skalan interests to be our own."
"I don't suppose you have any proof of that?"
"None whatsoever."
Rhal drummed his fingers lightly on the tabletop for a minute, calculating.
"Ship's papers in my name alone, and I run my vessel as I see fit?"
"All right."
Rhal tapped the emerald. "This is a good start, but it won't pay for a ship,
nor get one built before midsummer."
"As it happens, I know of a vessel being refitted at a boatyard in Macar. The
principal backer's been having second thoughts." Seregil produced a stone
identical to the first. "These should be ample evidence of good faith. I'll make
arrangements to have all further funds paid out to you in gold."
"And what if I just slip the cable tonight with these?"
Seregil shrugged. "Then you'll be a relatively wealthy man. Are we to say
done to it or not?"
Rhal shook his head, looking less than satisfied. "You're an odd one, and no
mistake. I've one last condition of my own, or it's no deal."
"And that is?"
"If I'm to keep faith with you, then I want your names, your true names."
"If you've tracked me to Wheel Street, then you've already heard it; Seregil
i Korit Solun Meringil Bokthersa."
"That's a mouthful by half. And you, boy. You got a fancy long hook, too?"
Alec hesitated, and felt Seregil's foot nudge his own beneath the table.
"You'll have heard mine, too. Alec, Alec of Ivywell."
"All right, then, I'm satisfied." Pocketing the gems, Rhal spit in his palm
and extended his hand to Seregil. "I say done to it, Seregil whoever-you-are."
Seregil clasped hands. "Done it is, Captain."
Alec was very silent as they rode back to Wheel Street. Passing through the
glow of a lone street lantern, Seregil saw that he was looking thoroughly
miserable.
"It's not as bad as all that," he assured him.
"Anyone looking for Lord Seregil knows where to find him."
"Sure, but what if it hadn't been Wheel Street he followed us to?" Alec shot
back bitterly.
"We're much more careful about that. No one's ever tracked me there."
"Probably because you were never stupid enough to give them the damn
directions!"
"Still, considering the circumstances—me too sick to think straight, you not
knowing the country—I don't know what else you could have done, except maybe
have waited until we were off the ship to ask the way. You didn't know any
better then. You do now."
"A fat lot of comfort that'll be when some other old mistake of mine catches
up with us," Alec persisted, looking only slightly less miserable.
"What if the next one who shows up is Mardus?"
"Even if those were his men that boarded Rhal's ship—and I admit, it sure
sounded like them—he didn't tell them anything."
"Then you think we're safe?"
Seregil grinned darkly. "We're never safe. But I do think if Mardus had
tracked us down, we'd have heard from him by now. I mean, he'd have to be insane
to hang about in Rhiminee for any length of time the way things are now."
Sarisin wore into Dostin, tightening winter's embrace on the city. Snow
gusted down out of the mountains, only to be followed by icy rain off the sea
that reduced it all to thick, dirty slush and churned ice, treacherous
underfoot. Smoke from thousands of chimneys mingled with the fog and hung in a
grey haze over the rooftops for days at a stretch.
Preparations for war continued amid a constant stream of rumor and minor
alarms. Skalan merchants were harassed in Mycenian towns, warehouses were rifled
or burned. Plenimaran press gangs were reported on the prowl in ports as far
west as Isil. Word circulated that more than a hundred keels had been laid down
in Plenimaran shipyards.
No major host could be raised before spring, but the forces already billeted
in Rhiminee were more visible than usual as they worked on the city's defenses
and drilled outside the walls. Seregil and Alec often rode over to view the
Queen's Horse at their maneuvers, but their friends there seldom had time for
more than a brief hello.
At Macar, Rhal's ship was progressing rapidly under the captain's sharp eye.
As Seregil had anticipated, once assured of the good faith between them, Rhal
looked out for his silent backer's interests as if they were his own.
It would be another two months before the vessel could be launched, but he
already had Skywake and Nettles combing seaports up and down the coast for
sailors.
The one subject he kept silent on was the vessel's name. When Alec asked,
Rhal only winked, telling him it was bad luck to say before she was launched.
Though by no means oblivious to the import of the events unfolding around
him, Alec moved through the grey midwinter days in a state of increasing
contentment. He'd gradually settled into the role of Sir Alec and had lost most
of his awkwardness around the nobles. He was happiest, though, honing his more
illicit skills as he worked side by side with Seregil as the Rhiminee Cat or on
Watcher business for Nysander.
He also came to appreciate the amenities of life at Wheel Street. In his
former life, wandering the northlands with his father, winter had always meant
hardship—slogging up and down trap lines, sheltering in brushwood huts, and the
snowy solitude of the forest.
Here, fires burned at all hours against the ever-present damp and cold. Thick
carpets covered the floors, food and wine were there for the asking, and warm
baths—for which he had finally acquired a taste—could be had at any hour in a
special room just down the hall. Some of his fondest memories of those days
would be sitting by a snug fire on a stormy day, enjoying the sound of the rain
lashing against the shutters.
As always, life with Seregil had a charmed quality; his enthusiasm and
irreverent good humor buoyed Alec along as a seemingly endless progression of
lessons were placed before him. The more Alec learned, the more he found he felt
like a man who'd thirsted for years unknowing, only discovering his need when it
finally began to be slaked. In return, Alec tried to teach Seregil archery and,
despite all evidence to the contrary, stubbornly refused to give him up as a
hopeless cause.
One stormy afternoon Seregil discovered Alec in the library, frowning
pensively as he scanned the shelves.
"Looking for something in particular?"
"Histories," Alec replied, fingering the spine of a thick volume. "Last night
at Lord Kallien's salon, someone was saying how this war may be as bad as the
Great War. I got to wondering what that one was like. You've told me a bit about
it, but I thought it would be interesting to do some reading on it. Do you have
anything?"
"Nothing much, but the Oreska library does," Seregil replied, inwardly
delighted at this show of scholarly initiative. Alec generally preferred more
active pursuits. "We could ride over if you'd like, and see Nysander, too. It's
been days since we've heard from him."
Sleet pelted wetly down on them as they galloped through the streets of the
Noble Quarter to the Oreska House. As soon as they entered the enchanted gardens
surrounding it the sleet turned to warm, gentle rain.
Turning his face up to it, Seregil wondered if any of the wizards ever got
bored with the perpetual summer that surrounded the place.
Crossing the second-floor mezzanine on their way to Nysander's tower, Alec
nudged Seregil and pointed to the walkway across the atrium.
"Look there," he murmured with a slight grin.
Following his nod, Seregil saw Thero and Ylinesrra walking along arm and arm.
As they watched, Thero threw his head back and let out a genuine laugh.
"Thero laughing?" Seregil whispered in amazement.
Alec watched as the pair disappeared down a corridor. "Do you think he's in
love with her?"
"He probably is, the poor idiot. Or maybe she's magicked him."
He'd meant it as a joke on Thero, but Alec's sudden blush made him wish he'd
kept it to himself.
The boy never spoke of his own apparently cataclysmic tryst with the
sorceress, or betrayed any sign of jealousy when speculating on her other
attachments, but he was rather brittle about the circumstances.
Magyana answered their knock at the tower door.
She had a few willow leaves caught in her silvery braid and a smudge of damp
earth on her chin.
"Hello, you two!" She exclaimed, letting them in. "I just dug some lovely
orris root in the garden and brought some up to Nysander, but he's not here.
Wethis says he's off visiting Leiteus i Marineus again."
Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow. "The astrologer?"
"Yes, he's been spending quite a lot of time with him these last few weeks.
Evidently there's some sort of conjunction they're both interested in. I've got
a potion on the boil back at my workshop so I can't linger, but you can come in
and wait for him."
"No, we've got other business while we're here. Maybe we'll catch up with him
later."
"I see." She paused, studying his face for a moment in the most unsettling
way. "You haven't seen him lately, have you?"
"Not for a week or more," Alec told her.
"We've been pretty busy."
There was something hovering behind the old wizard's eyes that looked very
much like concern, though she seemed to be masking it. "Is something wrong?"
asked Seregil.
Magyana sighed. "I don't know. He just looks so worn-out all of a sudden. I
haven't seen him look this tired in decades. He won't talk of it, of course. I
wondered if he'd said anything to you?"
"No. As Alec said, we've hardly seen him since the Festival except over a few
quick jobs. Maybe it's this business with Leiteus. You know how he drives
himself when he's working on something."
"No doubt," she said, though without much conviction.
"Do look in on him when you can, though." She hesitated again. "You two
aren't angry with one another, are you?"
A sudden image leapt in Seregil's mind; the night they'd unraveled the
palimpsest together, and Nysander suddenly looking at him with a stranger's eyes
as he warned—if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell
you, I shall have to kill all of you.
He pushed the memory away before it could show in his face. "No, of course
not. What would I be angry about?"
Leaving Nysander's chambers, Alec followed Seregil back down through the
warren of stairways and corridors to the ground floor.
"The Oreska library is actually scattered all over the building," Seregil
explained as they went. "Chambers, vaults, closets, for gotten cupboards, too,
probably. Thalonia has been the librarian for a century and I doubt even she
knows where everything is. Some books are available to anyone, others are locked
away."
"Why, are they valuable?" asked Alec, thinking of the beautifully decorated
scrolls Nysander had lent him.
"All books are valuable. Some are dangerous."
"Books of spells, you mean?"
Seregil grinned. "Those, too, but I was thinking more of ideas. Those can be
far more dangerous than any magic."
Crossing the atrium court, Seregil swung open the heavy door to the museum.
They hadn't been in here since Alec's first visit during Seregil's illness. As
they passed the case containing the hands of the dyrmagnos, Tikarie Megraesh,
Alec paused, unable to resist peering in at them in spite of his revulsion.
Recalling the trick Seregil had played on him last time, he kept his friend
carefully in sight.
The wizened fingers were motionless, but he could see freshly scored marks in
the oak boards lining the bottom of the case beneath the cruel nails.
"They look quiet enough—" he began, but just then one of the hands clenched
spasmodically.
"Bilairy's Balls, I hate those things!" He shuddered, backing hurriedly away.
"Why do they move like that? Aren't they and all the other pieces of him
supposed to be dying?"
"Yes." Seregil looked down at the hands with a puzzled frown. "Yes, they
are."
Alec followed Seregil through a stout door at the back of the museum and down
two sets of stairs to a series of corridors below the building.
"It's this one here," said Seregil, stopping before an unremarkable door
halfway down the passage. "Stay here, I'll go find a custodian to let us in."
Alec leaned against the door and looked about. The walls and floors were made
of stone slabs, laid smooth and tight together. Ornate lamps were fastened in
brackets at intervals, giving enough light to see clearly from one end of the
corridor to the other. He was just wondering whose job it was to keep all those
lamps full when Seregil came back with a stooped old man in tow.
The custodian rattled the door open with a huge iron key and then handed Alec
a leather sack. Inside were half a dozen large lightstones.
"No flames," the old man warned before creaking off again about his business.
"Just leave them outside the door when you've finished."
The chamber was a large one, and filled with closely spaced shelves of books
and scrolls.
Holding one of the stones aloft, Alec looked around and groaned. "It'll take
us hours to find anything here!"
"It's all very logically arranged and docketed," Seregil assured him,
pointing out little cards tacked to the shelves here and there. On each, a few
words in faded script indicated general subject areas. "Histories of the Great
War" took up several bookcases at the back of the room. Judging by the
undisturbed layers of dust on most of them, there had been little interest of
late in the subject.
Seregil clucked his tongue disapprovingly. "People ought to make more use of
these. The past always sets the stage for the future; any Aurenfaie knows that."
Alec looked at the closely packed tiers in dismay. "Maker's Mercy, Seregil. I
can't read all these!"
"Of course not," said Seregil, climbing a small ladder to inspect the
contents of an upper shelf. "Half of them aren't even in your language and most
of the others are ponderously boring. But there are one or two that are fairly
readable, if I can just remember where to look. You browse around down there;
stick to things less than two inches thick to begin with—and see if you can read
them."
If there was a system to the arrangement of the books, it eluded Alec. Books
in Skalan stood check by jowl with those in Aurenfaie and half a dozen other
languages he couldn't begin to guess at.
Seregil appeared to be right at home, though.
Alec watched as his companion went busily to and fro with his ladder,
muttering under his breath as he went, or exclaiming happily over old favorites.
Alec had already extracted half a dozen suitably slim volumes when the ornate
binding of a thicker one caught his eye. Wondering if it had illustrations, he
pulled it out. Unfortunately, this one served as a sort of keystone, for the
ones on either side of it let go and most of the shelf cascaded to the floor at
Alec's feet.
"Oh, well done!" Seregil snickered from somewhere beyond the next shelves.
Alec set his books aside with an exasperated sigh and began replacing the
others. He hadn't been all that interested in the war in the first place; his
simple query was turning out to be considerably more trouble than it was worth.
As he slid a handful of books back into place, however, he noticed something
sticking out from behind some others.
Curious, he carefully pulled it free and found that it was a slim, plainly
bound book held shut with a latched strap. Encouraged by its size more than
anything else, he tried to open it, but the catch wouldn't give.
"How are you making out?" asked Seregil, wandering back with a book under his
arm.
"I found this in back of some others. It must have fallen in behind." On
closer inspection, he saw that it was actually a case of some sort. There was no
writing anywhere on it to suggest what its contents might be. "I can't get it
open."
Alec jiggled the catch a last time, then handed it to him.
Seregil glanced it over and passed it back. "There's no lock; the catch is
just corroded good and tight. It can't have been opened for years. Oh, well, it
probably wasn't anything very interesting anyway."
He gave Alec a challenging grin, one Alec had seen often enough before.
"What, here?" he whispered in surprise.
Seregil leaned against a bookcase and gave a careless shrug. "It's not much
good to anyone that way, is it?"
After a quick, rather guilty look around to make sure the custodian hadn't
returned, Alec drew the black-handled poniard from his boot and worked it under
the strap. The deadly sharp blade cut easily through the leather. Sheathing it
again, he gently opened the cover and found a loose sheaf of parchment leaves
inside. They were badly stained and scorched along the bottom edge, some burned
half away.
Small, close-packed script covered each on both sides.
"Aura Elustri!"
Grinning excitedly, Seregil lifted out the first sheet. "It's in Aurenfaie.
It looks to be a journal of some sort—" He read a few lines. "And it's
definitely about the war."
"It's so weathered I can hardly make it out," said Alec, taking up another
page. "Not that my Aurenfaie's all that good to begin with."
"Anyone would have a hard time making this out." Seregil squinted down at the
cramped text a moment longer, then closed it and tucked it under his arm with
the other book he'd chosen. Sorting through the ones Alec had selected, he
discarded all but two and hurried Alec upstairs again, obviously eager to tackle
the journal.
Back at Wheel Street again, they retreated to Seregil's chamber with a supply
of wine and fruit. When the fire had been replenished and the lamps lit against
the early evening gloom, they began sorting through the sheets on the hearth
rug.
Taking up a page, Seregil studied it closely. "Do you know what this is?" he
exclaimed with a smile of pure delight. "These are fragments of a field journal
kept by an Aurenfaie soldier during the war. Alec, it's an eyewitness account of
events six centuries old! Just wait until we show Nysander. I'll bet no one even
knew this was there, or it would have been in a different vault."
The pages were badly shuffled in places and it took some doing to sort them
out. The translation from Aurenfaie to Skalan was easy enough; deciphering the
crabbed and often smeared writing while searching through mismatched pages was
another matter. Seregil finally found what appeared to be the earliest entry and
settled back in a nest of cushions on the floor to read it aloud.
They soon pieced together that the author had been a young archer, part of a
regiment of well-to-do volunteers raised by a local noble. He'd been a faithful
diarist, but the entries dealt mostly with skirmishes and fallen comrades. It
was clear that the Aurenfaie had hated their Plenimaran adversaries, who were
consistently depicted as harsh and brutal. There were several mercifully terse
descriptions of their barbaric treatment of captured soldiers and camp
followers.
The first series of entries ended with a detailed description of his first
sight of Queen Gerilain of Skala. Referring to her as "a plain girl in armor,"
he nonetheless praised her leadership. He spoke only Aurenfaie, it seemed, but
quoted several lines of a powerful rallying speech she'd given before the Third
Battle of Wyvern Dug, which someone had translated for him. He described the
Skalan soldiers admiringly as "fierce and full of fire."
Stretched out on the carpet, watching the shadows playing across the ceiling,
Alec let the words paint scenes in his imagination. As Seregil read about
Gerilain, the first warrior queen, he found himself picturing Klia, although she
was anything but plain.
The second fragment had been written in Mycena during the battles of high
summer, when the regiment had been joined by a contingent of Aurenfaie wizards.
This was followed by an intriguing line about "the necromancers of the enemy,"
but the rest of the page had been destroyed.
Muttering again, Seregil sorted through the few remaining pages. "Ah, here we
are. Part of it's missing, but it begins, "and our wizards have moved to the
front, ahead of the cavalry. The Skalan captain met these forces only two days
ago and cannot speak of them without paleness and trembling. Britiel i Kor
translated for us, saying he tells of dead men rising from the field to fight
the living."
"Just like in the legends," Alec murmured, forgetting for a moment that this
was a factual account and not some bardic tale.
"We've heard this account too often now to call him mad," Seregil read on.
"The Skalan captain claims Plenimar has a terrible war god. We have heard
wounded enemies calling upon Vatharna. Now learn this is their word for god even
they will not name. Nor will Skalans speak it, saying instead with great hatred,
Eater of—"
He faltered to a halt.
"Eater of Death!" Alec finished for him, scrambling up to his knees. "That's
it, isn't it? Just like in the prophecy at the Sakor Temple. We've got to find
Nysander. The Eater of Death must be that death god you told me about, the bad
luck one, Seri—"
Seregil lunged forward, pages scattering as he clamped a hand over Alec's
mouth.
"Don't!" he hissed, face white as chalk.
Alec froze, staring up at him in alarm.
Seregil let out a shaky breath and dropped his hand to Alec's shoulder,
gripping it lightly. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to scare you."
"What's the matter?"
"Be still a minute; I have to think." Seregil felt as if a black chasm had
suddenly opened beneath them.
Seregil if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell you,
I shall have to kill all of you
— join our song, the only song. For the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death—
For an instant the only thing that made any sense was the solid feel of
Alec's shoulder, the warm brush of the boy's hair as it fell across the back of
his hand.
Memories crowded in on each other, treading dangerously on each other's heels
as they threatened to coalesce into a pattern he didn't wish to see.
The palimpsest, telling of a "Beautiful One" and leading to a crown
surrounded by the dead. Micum's grim discovery in the Fens. The ragged leather
pouch that Nysander had burned. And the coin, that deceptively prosaic wooden
disk that had nearly killed him with madness and dreams-dreams of a barren plain
and a golden-skinned creature that embraced him, demanding a single blue eye
that winked from a wound over his heart. Voices singing-over a barren plain, and
deep in the depths of a mountain cavern as blood dripped down to pool on the
ice. Nysander's threat-a warning?
"Seregil, that hurts."
Alec's soft, tense voice brought him back and he found himself clutching the
boy's shoulder. He hurriedly released him and sat back.
Alec closed cold fingers over his own. "What is it? You look like you've just
seen your own ghost."
A desperate ache lanced through Seregil as he looked down into those dark
blue eyes.
if you let slip the slightest detail Damn you, Nysander!
"I can't tell you, tali, because I'd only have to lie," he said, suddenly
dejected. "I'm going to do something now, and you're going to watch and say
nothing."
Taking the final page of the manuscript, he twisted it into a tight squib and
tossed it into the fire.
Alec rocked back on his heels, watching in silent consternation as the
parchment blossomed into flame.
When it was consumed, Seregil knocked the ash to bits with the poker.
"But what about Nysander?" Alec asked. "What will you tell him?"
"Nothing, and neither will you."
"But—"
"We're not betraying him." Seregil took Alec by the shoulders, more gently
this time, drawing their faces close together. "You have my oath on that. I
believe he already knows what we just learned, but he can't know that you know.
Not until I tell you it's safe. Understand?"
"More secrets," Alec said, looking solemn and unhappy.
"Yes, more secrets. I need your trust in this, Alec. Can you give it?"
Alec looked sidelong at the fire for a long moment, then locked eyes with him
again and replied in halting Aurenfaie, "Rei phoril tos tokun meh brithir, vri
sh 'ruit 'ya. "
Though you thrust your dagger at my eyes, I will not flinch. A solemn oath,
and one Seregil had pledged him not so long ago. Seregil let out a small,
relieved laugh. "Thank you. If you don't mind, I think I'll take a rest. Why
don't you go have a look through those books we found?"
Alec got up to go without a word. But he paused in the doorway, looking back
at Seregil still sitting by the fire.
"What does tali mean? Is it Aurenfaie?"
"Tali?"
A ghost of the old grin tugged at one corner of Seregil's mouth. "Yes, it's
an Aurenfaie term of endearment, rather old-fashioned, like beloved. Where'd you
pick that up?"
"I thought—"
Alec regarded him quizzically, then shook his head. "I don't know, at one of
the salons, probably. Sleep well, Seregil."
"You, too."
When Alec was gone, Seregil walked to the window and rested his forehead
against one cold pane, staring out over the dark garden.
Stone within ice. Secrets within secrets.
Silences inside of greater silences.
In all the time he'd known Nysander, he had never felt such distance between
them. Or so alone.
Several days passed before Alec realized that they were not going to talk of
the matter again. Despite his oath, it troubled him greatly. This silence toward
the wizard seemed to create a small cold gap in a relationship that had been so
seamlessly warm and safe.
For the first time in months he found himself wondering about Seregil's
loyalties.
Try as he might to banish such thoughts, they nagged at him until at last he
came out with it as they were out walking in the Noble Quarter one evening.
He'd feared that Seregil would evade the question or be annoyed. Instead, he
looked as if he'd been expecting this discussion.
"Loyalty, eh? That's a large question for a thinking person. If you're asking
if I'm still loyal to Nysander, then the answer is yes, for as long as I have
faith in his honor. The same goes for any of my friends."
"But do you still have faith in him?" Alec pressed.
"I do, though he hasn't made it easy lately. You're too smart not to have
noticed that there are unspoken things between him and me. I'm trying hard to be
patient about all that, and so must you.
"But maybe that's not the real issue here. Are you losing faith in me?"
"No!" Alec exclaimed hastily, knowing the words were true as he spoke them.
"I'm just trying to understand."
"Well, like I said, loyalty is no simple thing. For instance, would you say
that you, Nysander, and I are loyal to Queen Idrilain and want to act in the
best interests of Skala?"
"I've always thought so."
"But what if the Queen ordered us, for the good of Skala, to do harm to
Micum? Should I keep faith with her or with him?"
"With Micum," Alec replied without hesitation.
"But what if Micum, without our knowledge, had committed treason against
Skala? What then?"
"That's ridiculous!" Alec snorted. "He'd never do anything like that."
"People can surprise you, Alec. And perhaps he did it out of loyalty to
something else, say his family. He's kept faith with his family but broken faith
with the Queen. Which outweighs the other?"
"His family," Alec maintained, although he was beginning to feel a bit
confused.
"Certainly. Any man ought to hold his family above all else. But what if his
justified act of treason cost hundreds of other families their lives? And what
if some of those killed were also friends of ours—Myrhini, Cilia, There. Well,
maybe not Thero—"
"I don't know!" Alec shrugged uncomfortably.
"I can't say one way or the other without knowing the details. I guess I'd
just have to have faith in him until I knew more. Maybe he didn't have any
choice."
Seregil leveled a stern finger at him. "You always have a choice. Don't ever
imagine you don't. Whatever you do, it's a decision and you have to accept
responsibility for it. That's when honor becomes more than empty words."
"Well, I still say I'd have to know why he did it," Alec retorted stubbornly.
"That's good. But suppose, despite all his kindness to you, you discovered he
really had betrayed your trust. Would you hunt him down and kill him as the law
required?"
"How could I?"
"It would be difficult. Past kindness counts for something. But say you knew
for certain that someone else would catch him—the Queen's officers, for
instance—and that they'd kill him slowly and horribly. Then wouldn't it be your
duty, as a friend and a man of honor, to see to it that he was granted a quick,
merciful death? Looked at from that angle, I suppose killing Micum Cavish might
be the greatest expression of friendship."
Alec stared at Seregil, mouth slightly ajar. "How the hell did we come to me
killing Micum?"
Seregil shrugged. "You asked about loyalty. I told you it wasn't easy."
The hands moved more often now. As Nysander gazed down at them through the
thick sheet of crystal that covered the case, a trick of the light superimposed
his reflection over the splayed hands below, creating the illusion that his head
lay within the case, gripped in the withered talons of the dead necromancer. The
face he saw there was a very old one, etched with weariness.
While he watched, the hands slowly curled into fists, clenching so tightly
that the skin over one knuckle split, showing brown bone beneath.
Continuing grimly on through the deserted museum, Nysander half expected to
hear the Voice from his nightmares, roaring its taunting challenge up through
the floor from the depths below. Those dreams came more often now, since
Seregil's return from the Asheks.
Summoning an orb of light, Nysander opened the door at the back of the museum
chamber and began the long descent through the vaults.
He'd wooed Magyana here in the days of their youth.
When she'd remained obdurate in her celibacy, they had continued to share
long discussions as they wandered along these narrow stone corridors. Seregil
had often come with them during his ill-starred apprenticeship, asking a
thousand questions and poking into everything.
Thero came with him occasionally, though less often than he once had. Did
Ylinestra bring him down here to make love, Mysander wondered, as she had him?
By the Four, she'd warmed the very stones with her relentless passion!
He shook his head in bemusement as he imagined her with Thero; a sunbird
embracing a crow.
He'd never completely trusted the sorceress.
Talented as Ylinestra was at both magic and love, greed lurked just behind
her smile. In that way she was not unlike Thero, but Thero was bound by Oreska
law; she was not.
The fact that she had gone from his bed to Thero's troubled Nysander in a way
that had nothing to do with former passions, though he had been unable to
convince Thero of that. After two tense, unpleasant attempts, Nysander had
dropped the subject.
Other wizards might have dismissed an assistant over such a matter, he knew,
yet in spite of their growing differences, Nysander still felt a strong regard
for Thero and refused to give up on him.
And mixed with that regard, he admitted once again in the silence of the
vaults, was the fear that many of his fellows in the Oreska would be glad to
take on Thero if he let him go. Many were critical of Nysander's handling of the
talented young wizard, and thought Thero was wasted on the eccentric old man in
the east tower. After all, he'd ruined one apprentice already, hadn't he? Small
wonder Thero seemed discontent.
But Nysander knew the boy better than any of them and believed with every
fiber of his being that given his head at this stage of training, the young
wizard would ultimately ruin himself. Oh, he would earn his robes, of course,
probably in half the time it would take most. That was part of the problem.
Thero was so apt a pupil that most masters would joyously fill his head with all
they knew, guiding him quickly through the levels to true power.
But more than a keen mind and flawless ability were needed to make so
powerful a wizard as Thero would undoubtedly become. Ungovemed by wisdom,
patience, and a compassionate heart, that same keen mind would be capable of
unspeakable havoc.
So he kept Thero with him, hopeful to change him, fearful to let him go.
There were moments, such as the night he found him tending to Seregil's
injuries after the misadventure in the sewers, when Nysander caught a gleam of
hope—signs that Thero might be coming to understand what it was that Nysander
was asking of him beyond the mere learning of magic.
Reaching the door to the lowest vault, he shook off his reverie and hastened
on.
Few had reason to go to this lowest vault, which for time out of mind had
been the Oreska's repository for the forgotten, the useless, and the dangerous.
Many of the storerooms were empty now, or cluttered with mouldering crates.
Other doors had been walled up, their frames outlined with runic spells and
warnings. But as he walked along, the sound of his footsteps muffled on the dank
brick underfoot, he could hear the bowl and its high, faint resonance, audible
only to those trained to listen for it. The sound was much stronger than it once
had been.
The wooden disk had had little effect on it; its power was incomplete
separated from the seven others Nysander knew existed somewhere in the world.
The crystal crown was a different matter. As soon as he'd placed it here, the
resonance of the bowl had grown increasingly stronger, and with it his
nightmares.
And the movements of the necromancer's hands in the museum.
How Seregil had survived his exposure to the disk unprotected by anything but
his own magical block was still a mystery. Equally mystifying was how little
protection all Nysander's carefully prepared spells and charms had been for
Seregil from the effects of the crown. In the first case he should have died, in
the second he should have had absolute protection, yet in both cases he had
sustained wounds but survived.
All this, taken together with the words the Oracle of Illior had spoken to
Seregil, left Nysander with the uneasy conviction that much more than mere
coincidence was at work.
Stopping, he faced the familiar stretch of wall yet again. With a final check
to be certain no eyes, natural or otherwise, were upon him, he spoke a powerful
key spell and cast a sighting through stone and magic to the small hidden room
beyond.
Immured in the darkness of centuries, the bowl sat on the tiny chamber's
single shelf. To the uninitiated, it was nothing more than a crude vessel of
burnt clay, unremarkable in any way. Yet this homely object had dominated his
entire adult life, and the lives of three wizards before him.
The Guardians.
To one side of the bowl lay the crystal box containing the disk; on the
other, still smeared with the ash of Dravnian cook fires, was the flat wooden
case holding the crown.
For no better reason than curiosity, he spoke the Spell of Passage and
entered the chamber.
Magic crackled ominously around him in spite of the wards and containment
spells. Taking a lightstone from his pocket, he held it up and regarded the bowl
solemnly for a moment, thinking again of his predecessors. None of them, not
even Arkoniel, had anticipated ever adding to the contents of this hidden and
most guarded chamber. Now he had, not once but twice, and their combined song
was a pulse of living energy.
His hands stole to the containers on either side of the bowl.
What would that song be if I opened these, brought even these three fragments
together without the rest? What could be learned from such an experiment?
His right thumb found the catch on the wooden box, rubbed tentatively at it.
Nysander jerked back, made a warding sign, and retreated the way he'd come.
Alone in the corridor, he broke the Spell of Passage and slumped against the
opposite wall, his heart pounding ominously in his chest.
If just three fragments of the whole could force such thoughts into his mind,
then he must be all the more vigilant.
Forced those thoughts into your mind, old man, a niggling inner voice chided,
or revealed them there? How many times did Arkoniel warn you that temptation is
nothing more than the dark mirror of the soul?
Inevitably, regret followed hard on the heels of memory. Arkoniel had taught
him well and early the responsibility of the Guardians, allowing him to share
the weight of the secret they preserved.
Whom did he share it with?
No one.
Seregil could have been trusted, but the magic had failed him. Thero had the
magic, but lacked—what?
Humility, Nysander decided sadly. The humility to properly fear the power
contained in this tiny, silver-lined chamber. The more apparent Thero's
abilities became over the years of his apprenticeship, the more certain Nysander
was that temptation would be his undoing. Temptation and pride.
Feeling suddenly far older than his two hundred and ninety- eight years,
Nysander pressed a hand to the wall, bolstering the warding spells, changing and
strengthening them to conceal what must remain concealed. It was a task he'd
once thought he would pass along as his master had passed it to him. Now he felt
no such certainty.
Seregil and Alec were lingering over a late lunch one bright afternoon toward
the middle of Dostin, when
Runcer entered the room with a ragged young girl in tow.
Seregil looked up expectantly, recognizing her as the sort who made her
living as a message carrier.
"Beka Cavish sends word that the Queen's Horse is riding out at dawn
tomorrow," the girl recited stiffly.
"Thanks." Seregil handed her a sester and pushed a plate of sweets her way.
Grinning, the child snatched a handful and hid them away in the folds of her
ragged skirt.
"Take this message to Captain Myrhini, of the Queen's Horse," he told her.
"As Beka Cavish's patron, I'm honor-bound to give her and her turma a proper
send-off. The captain is asked to attend and keep order. She may bring anyone
else she likes, so long as she gives Beka and her riders a night out. Got that?"
She proudly repeated it back word for word.
"Good girl. Off you go." Turning back to Alec, Seregil found his young friend
frowning worriedly.
"I thought you said nothing would happen before spring?" Alec asked.
"The war? It won't," Seregil replied, somewhat surprised by the news himself.
"The Queen must have some reason to think the Plenimarans mean to move in early
spring, though, and wants troops near the border in case of trouble."
"This doesn't give us time enough to send for Micum and Kari."
"Damn! I didn't even think of that." Seregil drummed his fingers on the
polished tabletop a moment.
"Oh, well. We'll ride out tomorrow with the details. In the meantime, we've
got a party to prepare for."
Word soon came back by the same messenger that Captain Myrhini would release
Lieutenant Cavish and her riders for the evening, with the expectation that
sufficient food and drink were included in the offer.
Seregil had already turned his attention to the preparations with an
efficiency that astonished Alec.
Within a few hours, extra servants had been engaged, a raucous group of
musicians was installed in the gallery with their fiddles, pipes, and drums, and
a steady stream of deliveries from the market had been whipped into a proper
feast by the cook and her crew.
In the meantime, the salon was cleared of all breakables and three long
trestle tables set up, together with hogsheads of ale and wine set on pitched
braces at the head of the room.
Beka and her turma rode into Wheel Street at sunset. They were an impressive
sight in their spotless white breeches and green tabards sewn with the
regimental crest.
A little daunting even, thought Alec, standing next to Seregil at the front
door to welcome them.
He'd always envied Beka just a little, being part of such an elite group. The
idea of riding into a pitched battle surrounded by comrades had a certain
romantic appeal.
"Welcome!" Seregil called.
Beka dismounted and strode up the front steps, her eyes shining almost as
brightly as the burnished lieutenant's gorget hanging at her throat.
"You do us a great honor, my lords," she said loudly, giving them a wink.
Seregil bowed slightly, then looked over the crowd of riders milling behind
her. "That's a rough-looking bunch you brought. Think they can behave
themselves?"
"Not a chance, my lord," Beka replied smartly.
Seregil grinned. "Well then, come on in, all of you!"
Alec's awe diminished somewhat as the men and women of Beka's command filed
past into the painted salon.
He'd only seen them at a distance on the practice field before-dashing
figures clashing in mock battle. Now he saw that most of them were scarcely
older than he. Some had the bearing of landless second sons and daughters or
merchant's scions; others—those who stood gaping at the opulent room—came from
humbler backgrounds and had earned their place by sheer prowess and the price of
a horse and arms.
"I'd like to introduce my sergeants," Beka said.
"Mercalle, Braknil, and Portus."
Shaking hands with the trio, Alec guessed that most of them had come up
through the ranks. Sergeant Mercalle was tall and dark-complected. She was also
missing the last two fingers of her right hand, a common wound among warriors.
Next to her stood Braknil, a big, solemn-looking man with a bushy blond beard
and weather-roughened skin. The third, Portus, was younger than his companions
and carried himself like a noble.
Alec wondered what his story was; according to Beka, it seemed unlikely that
he would not be an officer of some rank.
Seregil shook hands with them. "I won't embarrass your lieutenant by telling
you how long I've known her, but I will say that she's been trained by some of
the best swordsmen I know."
"I can believe that, your lordship," Braknil replied. "That's why I asked to
serve with her."
Beka grinned. "Sergeant Braknil's too tactful to say so, but he was one of
the sergeants assigned to train the new commissions when I came in. I started
out taking orders from him."
"A title may guarantee an officer's commission, but it doesn't guarantee the
officer's quality," Mercalle put in rather sourly.
"Especially if there hasn't been a real war to winnow out the chaff in a
while. I've seen a good many sporting the steel gorget who won't see high
summer."
"Mercalle's our optimist," Portus chuckled, and Alec heard the remnants of a
lower city accent behind the man's smooth words.
"It's early for you to be sent north, isn't it?" he asked ingenuously.
"There are rumblings from Plenimar already," Beka told him. "Queen Idrilain
and the Archons of
Mycena all want troops in place near the west border of Plenimar before the
roads thaw into mud holes next month. They're not making any secret of it,
either. The Sakor Horse Regiment and a squadron of the Yourkani Horse have
already headed up to Nanta. We'll be going farther east."
"First in, last out," was Portus said proudly. "That's been our motto since
Gerilain's day."
"The Queen's Horse Guard started as the token group of soldiers King
Thelatimos gave his daughter after the Oracle said a woman was to lead the
country," Seregil explained. "She surprised everyone when she led them
successfully in battle."
Braknil nodded. "One of my ancestors was with Gerilain and there's been at
least one of my family with the Guard ever since."
Stationed by the front door, Runcer announced gravely, "Captain Myrhini and
Commander Perris, of the Queen's Horse, my lords."
Myrhini strode in, accompanied by a handsome uniformed man Alec had seen
around the drilling field. Beka and her riders instantly snapped to attention.
Myrhini introduced her companion as Commander Perris, who led one of the
other squadrons of the regiment, then looked around, scowling. "What, no one
drunk yet? Lieutenant Beka, explain yourself."
"I'll see to it at once, Captain!" Beka replied, coloring a bit.
Seregil laid a hand on her arm. "I thought perhaps some of your soldiers
might be a bit self-conscious dancing with each other, so I took the liberty of
inviting a few other guests to liven things up."
At his gesture, the musicians struck up a sprightly tune and a score of
richly dressed men and women entered from the dining room, streaming out to
partner the soldiers.
"Who are they?" asked Beka, her eyes widening in surprise.
Seregil exchanged an amused look with Alec.
"Oh, just a few friends of mine from the Street of Lights who think the
Queen's best regiment deserves nothing less than the best."
Myrhini covered a smile as Beka's eyes went wider still as she recognized the
significance of the colored tokens each elegant "guest" wore discreetly on their
clothing or in their hair-white, green, rose, or amber.
Alec leaned closer to Beka. "From what I
understand, you'll want to stick with amber."
"From what I understand, Sir Alec, I think I'll stick with you," Beka
retorted, slipping her arm through his. "Come on and show a soldier a good time,
eh?"
"You are a generous patron," Commander Perris noted with amusement. "Mind if
I join in? I see a familiar face or two."
"By all means," Seregil said, smiling.
Myrhini followed Seregil to the table and accepted a cup of wine. "They can
do with a bit of spoiling," she said, watching the milling throng with obvious
affection. "It'll be cold camps and long riding for us between now and spring."
"And then?" asked Seregil.
Myrhini glanced at him over the rim of her cup, then sighed. "And then it
will get worse. Most likely a lot worse."
"Will this lot be ready?"
"As ready as green soldiers can be. These ones here are some of the best, and
so is Beka. I just hope they can stay alive long enough to get seasoned. Nothing
but battle experience can do that for them."
By midnight Alec was drunker than he'd ever been in his life and not only
knew all the riders and courtesans by name, but had danced with most of them.
He'd just staggered through a reel with a blue-eyed, tipsily amorous rider
named Ariani when Corporal Kallas and his twin brother Aulos grabbed him and
hoisted him onto one of the tables.
"Lieutenant says you're lucky,"
Kallas bawled, pulling off his tabard and handing it up to Alec. "So we're
making you our mascot, young Alec my lad."
Alec pulled on the uniform and made the company an exaggerated bow. "I am
honored!"
"You are drunk!" someone shouted back.
Alec considered this, then nodded solemnly. "I am that, but as the Maker
teaches us, in the depths of the cup lies the back door to enlightenment—or
something like that, anyway." Snatching up a half-full bottle of wine, he waved
it in their general direction. "And the drunker I get, the braver and worthier
you all look to me!"
"A visionary of the vine," Kallas exclaimed, spreading his arms in mock
reverence. "Give me your blessing, O beardless sage!"
Alec obligingly slopped some wine on the man's face. "Long life and a hollow
leg, my S on "*" S "Ponied
Laughing and cheering, the rest of them asked for his benediction. Quite a
number were mi8ment f??? as were most of the courtesans.
?????
His he not and so
He sprinkled the supplicants liberally until he came to the last, Beka. Her
freckled face was ??
and dancing; her wild red hair had escaped S fl his shed, with wisps around it,
toward your sister, was going off
"Come on, mascot, don't you have any better luck left for me?" she demanded.
Grabbing up a fresh bottle, Alec said.
"Long life, luck in the shadows," her head
Beka sputtered and laughed and those ??
"Well done, mascot," Kallas said . "A blessing that wet's likely to make her
immortal!"
"I hope so," Alec whispered, looking down at her. "I do hope so."
"Master Micum, there's riders coming up the hill," a servant shouted to him
across the snowy pasture.
Standing atop the hayrack, Micum shaded his eyes against the late afternoon
sun and quickly scanned the frozen river boundary. Two horsemen were riding up
from the bridge a mile below.
He'd been leery of unannounced visitors since returning from the northlands
that past autumn.
Despite all Nysander's assurances to the contrary, he still didn't feel easy
in his mind about Mardus and his gang.
So he studied the riders with a chary eye. Seeing that they kept to the main
track, and rode at an unhurried canter with weapons sheathed, he ruled out enemy
or messenger. They were still too far away to make out faces, but he soon
recognized the horses.
Frowning, he pushed his way through the colts milling around the hayrack and
set off for the house. More often than not, unexpected visits from Seregil meant
a summons to Watcher business. Kari was three moons gone now and the sickness
had passed, leaving in its wake the glowing bloom of mid term pregnancy.
Nonetheless, she was older this time and he disliked the thought of leaving her.
A farm hand met him apologetically in the courtyard. "Illia run ahead with
the dogs to meet 'em soon as she made out who it was, Master Micum. I didn't
think it no harm."
"Not this time maybe, Ranil, but I don't like her getting in the habit of
it," Micum retorted gruffly.
Seregil and Alec clattered into the court a few moments later, with Illia
perched proudly on Alec's saddlebow. They were both looking a little pale, Micum
noted, but they seemed in good spirits otherwise.
"So I might have to marry Alec when I'm grown," Illia was prattling across to
Seregil. "I hope that won't hurt your feelings too much."
Seregil slapped a hand over his heart like a troubadour in a mural. "Ah, fair
maiden, I shall slay a thousand evil dragons for you, and lay their steaming
black livers at your dainty feet, if only you will restore me to your favor."
"Livers!" Illia buried her face against Alec's shoulder with an outraged
giggle. "You wouldn't bring me livers, would you, Alec?"
"Of course not," Alec scoffed. "What a disgusting present. I'd bring you the
eyeballs for a necklace, and all their scaly pointed tongues to tie your braids
with."
Shrieking with delight, Illia slid off into her father's arms.
"Hey, little bird, what are you doing running off by yourself?" he asked
sternly.
"It's just Uncle Seregil and Alec. And I wasn't alone," she added coyly,
shawl askew as she spread her arms grandly over the pack of great shaggy hounds
jostled around them, like a general over her troops. "Dash and all the others
came with me."
"You know the rules, young miss," Micum remonstrated. "Run in now and tell
your mother who's here."
"What brings you two up?" he asked, turning back to the others with a twinge
of relief; they were dressed for visiting rather than traveling.
Seregil waded through the dogs to hand him a stitched packet of letters.
"Beka asked us to bring this out to you. Her regiment left at dawn."
"What, today? We should have been there to see her off!"
"There wasn't time," Alec explained quickly, coming up beside Seregil. "The
orders came yesterday. We gave her and her riders a proper send-off last night,
though." He rubbed his head with a rueful grin. "I think I'm still a little
drunk."
Seregil ruffled Alec's hair with playful impunity. "Runcer will be a couple
of days clearing up the wreckage. Between that, and the complaints from the
neighbors, we figured it might be a good time for Lord Seregil and Sir Alec to
lay low for a few days. We thought we'd put up here, if that's agreeable."
"Yes, of course," Micum replied distractedly, fingering the packet of
letters. "Where were they headed?"
"The western border of Mycena," Seregil told him. "Word is Idrilain wanted
them in place before the Klesin thaws muck up the roads next month. The Queen's
Horse was the first to go, but the city was swarming with soldiers by the time
we rode out. Idrilain isn't taking any chances."
Micum shook his head, wondering how Kari was going to take this news. "Ranil,
see to their horses. If you two will excuse me a minute, I want a look at
these."
Seregil laid a hand on his arm as he turned to go.
Casting a quick glance toward the door, he said in a low voice, "There's
something else. Rhal tracked us down in Rhiminee about a month ago."
Micum tensed. "That river trader?"
Seregil nodded. "Some foreign-sounding swordsmen showed up looking for the
three of us after Alec and I had gotten off. Rhal covered our tracks, and soon
after the Darter went down under questionable circumstances. We've been careful
since, and there's been no sign of trouble so far, but with spring coming on—you
never know. That's another reason we want to move back to the inn."
"What's Nysander say to all this?"
Seregil shrugged. "He's keeping a wizard eye out for trouble. So far he
hasn't spotted anything."
"They must have lost us in Mycena," Alec put in, sounding as if he and
Seregil had had this discussion before. "Otherwise, we'd have been approached or
attacked."
"So you'd think," Micum allowed. "Still, you're smart to be careful. Go see
to your gear. I'll break the news to Kari."
"We won't hurry, then, eh?" Seregil said, giving him an understanding look.
Kari took the news of Beka's departure more calmly than Micum had feared.
Reading over Beka's letter, and those from Elsbet, she merely nodded and then
folded them carefully back into the wrapper.
Old Arna and the other household servants joined them by the central fire in
the hall as Seregil described Beka's departure in glowing detail.
"They looked grand, riding out of the city by torchlight," he said. "Klia and
the high officers rode at the fore in full uniform, helmets and all. And there
was our Beka at the head of her turma with a steel lieutenant's gorget at her
throat. The horses had bronze chest plates and cheek pieces that jingled like
bells as they rode."
"She wrote that she's in Captain Myrhini's troop," noted Kari, stroking
Illia's dark head as the little girl leaned against her knee.
"Myrhini's as good a captain as there is," Micum said, pulling her close.
"The frontier will be quiet for a while yet, too. The Plenimarans couldn't get
that far west much before mid-Lithion at the earliest and probably not until
early summer. She'll have time to find her feet before any trouble starts."
"I hope so," murmured Kari. "Will there be more letters?"
"Dispatch riders go back and forth as often as possible," Seregil assured
her.
"That's good, then."
Micum exchanged uneasy glances with the others, but after a moment she simply
tucked the letters away and rose with her usual briskness.
"Well, Arna, you and I had better go see to the supper. Micum, tell the men
to set up the tables. You two chose a good night to come, Seregil; we've got
venison pie and apples baked in cream."
The meal was the usual noisy communal affair and the guests were summoned to
give news of the absent daughters between mouthfuls. Watermead was a country
household, close-knit and loyal. The servants wouldn't be satisfied until they'd
had descriptions of Beka's regiment twice over and a detailed account of
Elsbet's studies at the temple school.
Later, when a loudly protesting Illia had been put to bed and the servants
had spread their pallets in the warmth of the hall, Micum and Kari joined
Seregil and Alec in the guest chamber.
"Tell me about your reunion with this fellow Rhal," Micum said when he'd
poured hot spiced cider for everyone.
Sprawled crossways on the bed, Seregil launched into what sounded like a
highly colored tale of their ambush of Rhal and the subsequent battle with a mob
of alley toughs. Alec's prowess was featured in such flattering detail that the
boy, who was sitting close beside Kari, flushed with surprise.
"Well done, Alec," Kari laughed, hugging him.
"This Captain Rhal of yours sounds like a man worth knowing," Micum said.
"I've thought so ever since you told how he let you go that night."
"Micum told me something of your trip, but I'd like to hear your version of
it," said Kari. "Did he really fancy Seregil, Alec?"
Alec grinned. "I half fancied him myself, when he was all prettied up. As it
was, I had all I could do to keep the two of them at arm's length."
With frequent interruptions from Seregil, he went on to describe Rhal's
attempts at seduction, and Micum noticed that both of them skillfully omitted
any mention of the wooden disk, or the influence it had exerted over Seregil. In
this account, Rhal had simply walked in on Seregil in an unfortunate state of
undress. It all came out sounding a great deal more humorous than the original
version Micum had heard in Nysander's tower.
"Ah, Seregil," Kari exclaimed, wiping her eyes with the corner of her apron.
"I've never known anyone who could get himself into such messes, and then right
back out again!"
"It would have been considerably more difficult if Alec hadn't been such a
faithful defender of my virtue." Seregil gave Alec a courtly nod.
"My lady," Alec murmured, rising to give him a bow of such elaborate
solemnity that they all burst out laughing again.
"I was watching Seregil's face tonight," Kari said as they lay together in
the darkness that night. "He's in love with Alec, you know. He wasn't last time
they were here, or even at the Festival, but he is now."
"Are you surprised?" Micum yawned, resting a hand lazily on the roundness of
her belly, hoping to feel the new life fluttering there.
"Only that it took so long. I doubt he knows it yet himself. But what about
Alec?"
"I don't think such a thing would occur to him, with his upbringing and all."
Kari let out a long sigh. "Poor Seregil. He has such rotten luck when it
comes to love. Just once, I'd like to see him happy."
"Seems to me you had your chance about twenty years back," Micum teased,
nuzzling her bare shoulder.
"When it was you he fancied, you mean?" She rolled quickly on top of him,
pinning him playfully as she straddled his thighs. "And if I had relinquished my
claim to you, sir?" she challenged. "What would you have done then, eh?"
"I can't say," he replied, pulling her mouth to his with one hand, finding
the generous curve of her hip with the other. "Perhaps it would've been handy,
having a bed mate who's good with a sword."
"It's true I don't bring anything sharp into bed with me."
"Mmmmm-I can feel that," Micum rumbled contentedly. "Perhaps it's just as
well things worked out the way they did."
Kari moved over him like a blessing, her lips hot against his brow. "I like
to think so."
Seregil hadn't shared a bed with Alec since their last visit to Watermead.
He'd thought nothing of it then; such arrangements were common, especially in
old country houses.
But this time was different.
He wasn't certain just when his feelings had gotten away from him, or why.
Months of close living and shared dangers, perhaps, together with the genuine
affection
Seregil knew had existed between them almost from the start.
It figures, he thought dourly as they undressed for bed. He never could seem
to love anyone who could return the favor.
Not that Alec didn't care for him in his own honest, Dalnan way. Seregil had
no doubt of that. But he did doubt that Alec's heart skipped a dizzy beat at the
mere thought of sliding in between shared sheets.
Out of deference to Alec's modesty—or so he told himself—he kept his long
shirt on and pulled up the coverlet.
The old bedstead, built for company, was a wide one and Alec kept to his side
of it as he climbed in.
"You're quiet all of a sudden," he remarked, oblivious to Seregil's inner
turmoil.
"All that wine last night left me tired."
Seregil mustered a yawn. He could go sleep in the hall, he supposed, but that
would take some explaining later on. Better to stay here and hope he didn't talk
in his sleep.
Alec settled against the bolsters with a sigh of contentment. "Me, too. At
least we can get some rest while we're out here. So quiet. No jobs or midnight
summons. No worries—"
His eyes drifted shut and his voice trailed off into deep, even breathing.
No worries.
Seregil sat up to extinguish the lamp, but paused, caught by the sight of
Alec's thick, honey-gold hair fanned out across the pillow. His expression was
peaceful, guileless. His lips curved in a faint smile as if good dreams had
already come to him.
For an instant Seregil wondered what it would feel like to have that golden
head against his shoulder, the warmth of Alec's body against his own.
If it had been simple lust Seregil felt, he could easily have driven it off.
But what he felt for Alec at that moment went far beyond that.
Seregil loved him.
Little more than the length of a tailor's yard separated them, but it might
just as well have been the breadth of the Osiat Sea. Allowing himself nothing
more than a deep, silent sigh, he blew out the lamp and lay back, praying for
sleep.
Rising early the next morning, Micum found Alec stacking wood in the kitchen.
The boy had changed his city clothes for plain garb and was sharing some joke
with Arna and young Jalis. Watching a moment from the doorway, Micum was struck
again by how easily Alec seemed to fit into the rhythm of the household.
Or anywhere else, come to that, he amended, thinking of all the roles and
identities Alec had played in the time he'd been with Seregil. They were like
water, those two, always shifting shape.
"It's a fine day for hunting," he announced. "The deer have been thick up on
the ridge this year. His lordship up yet?"
Alec brushed dirt and bark fragments from his tunic. "He was still buried
somewhere under the covers last time I looked. I don't think he slept well last
night."
"Is that so?" Micum went to the kitchen door and reached outside for a
handful of loose snow. "Well then, he wants waking up, doesn't he? I'm sure he'd
hate to miss such a beautiful morning."
Mirroring his grin, Alec got himself a handful and followed Micum to the
bedroom.
The shutters were still closed, but there was enough light for them to make
out the long form beneath the quilts on
Seregil's side of the bed.
Together, Micum signed to Alec.
Stalking in silently, they threw back the quilts and launched their assault,
only to find they'd ambushed a bolster.
The shutters banged open behind them and two familiar voices shouted, "Good
morning!"
Startled, Micum and Alec looked up just in time to catch a faceful of snow
from Seregil and Illia, laughing victoriously outside.
"Sneak up on me, will you?" Seregil jeered as he and the girl fled.
"After them!" cried Micum, scrambling out through the window.
An ungainly chase ensued. Illia wisely dodged into the kitchen and was
granted asylum by Arna, who brandished a copper ladle at all would-be abductors.
Seregil wasn't so lucky. Never at his best in a daylight fight, he stumbled
over one of the excited dogs who'd joined in the hunt and was tackled by Alec.
Micum caught up and together they heaved Seregil into a drift and sat on him.
"Traitor!" he sputtered as Alec thrust a handful of snow down the back of his
shirt.
Micum cut him short with another handful in the face. "I believe I owed you
that," he chortled, "and here's another with interest."
By the time they let him up, Seregil looked like a poorly carved sculpture
done in white sugar.
"What do you say to a hunt?" Micum asked, attempting to brush him off a bit.
"Actually, I had more of a quiet day by the fire in mind," Seregil gasped,
shaking snow from his hair.
Grabbing him, Micum tossed him easily over one broad shoulder. "Find me a
fresh drift, Alec."
"There's a good one right there."
"I'll go, I'll go, damn you!" howled Seregil, struggling.
"What did I tell you?" laughed Micum, setting him on his feet.
"I knew he'd want to."
With dry clothes and a quick breakfast, the three of them set off into the
hills above Watermead with bows and hounds.
The dogs struck the trail of a boar first, but Micum called them off that,
since they hadn't brought spears.
For the rest of the morning they found nothing but birds and rabbits. At
Alec's insistence, Seregil had brought a bow and no one was more surprised than
he when he managed to hit a roosting grouse.
They were just thinking of stopping for a midday meal when the dogs flushed a
bull elk from a stand of fir. They chased it for nearly half an hour before Alec
put a broadhead shaft into the great beast's heart, dropping it in midleap.
"One shot, by the Maker!" Micum exclaimed, swinging out of the saddle to
inspect the kill.
"Quick and clean," said Alec, kneeling to inspect the shot. "That way they
don't suffer."
Alec had dropped armed men with the same merciful economy, thought Micum,
inspecting the red-fletched shaft protruding from the animal's side.
They built a fire and began dressing out the carcass. It was messy work; the
snow around them was soon stained a steaming scarlet. Opening the belly, Micum
tossed the entrails to the dogs and presented the heart and liver to Alec, his
due for the killing shot.
"We'll need more water before we're done," Micum remarked as they set about
the skinning.
Alec wiped his bloodied hands in the snow. "We passed a stream a ways back.
I'll go refill the water skins."
Seregil paused in his work, following Alec with his eyes until the boy had
ridden out of sight between the trees. Beside him, Micum smiled to himself,
thinking of what Kari had said.
"He's grown up a lot, hasn't he?" he ventured presently.
Seregil shrugged, going back to his skinning.
"He's had to, running around with the likes of us."
"You've come to think quite a lot of him, I'd say."
Seregil saw through his flimsy words in an instant and his smile faded to
hard, flat denial. "If you think I—"
"I'd never think ill of you for the world. I just think that heart of yours
leads you down some hard trails, that's all. You haven't said anything to him,
have you?"
Seregil's face was a careful mask of indifference, but his shoulders sagged
visibly. "No, and I'm not going to. It wouldn't be— honorable. I have too much
influence over him."
"Well, he loves you well in his own fashion," Micum said, unable to think of
anything more optimistic.
The silence spun out between them again, less comfortable this time.
Loosening the last bit of hide, Micum set his knife aside. "Do you have any idea
what Nysander is up to? I haven't heard a thing from him since the Festival."
This time there was no mistaking the troubled look in his friend's eyes.
"Secrets, Micum. Still secrets. He's driven me half-mad with them," Seregil
admitted, warming himself at the fire.
"Have you found anything out on your own?"
Seregil stirred the embers with a branch, sending up a little flock of
sparks. "Not much. And I'm oath-bound not to talk about it. I'm sorry."
"Don't apologize. We both know how the game works. How's Alec handling it,
though? He's smart enough to put things together and I'd say he's about as easy
to put off a scent as you are."
"True." Seregil gave a humorless laugh. "I'm worried, Micum. Something really
bad is coming down the road and I can't tell who's in the way."
Micum hunkered down beside him. "If anyone can look out for him, it's you.
But there are some other things you could be telling him. He has a right to
know."
Seregil shot to his feet and waved at Alec as he rode out of the trees toward
them.
"Not yet," he said, his voice too soft for Micum to tell if the words were a
command or a plea.
After three days at Watermead, Alec and Seregil returned to the city under
cover of night and made their way quietly back to the Cockerel.
Runcer would keep up appearances at Wheel Street; Lord Seregil was in town,
but not always available.
Thryis and the others had gone to bed when they arrived, but the aromas still
lingering in the darkened kitchen—new bread, dried fruit, garlic, wine, and ashy
coals banked on the hearth—were enough welcome for Alec.
Ruetha appeared from somewhere and followed them up to the second floor. Alec
scooped her up and held her until Seregil had disarmed the succession of warding
glyphs that protected the hidden stairway leading to their rooms. Alec grinned
to himself as Seregil whispered the passwords that had once sounded so
exotically magical.
The command for the glyph at the base of the stairs was
Etuis midra koriat|an cyris.
"Your grandmother insults the chickens."
Halfway up:
Clarin magril.
"Raspberries, saddle."
For the hidden door at the top of the stairs the word was
Nodense:
"Almost."
The nonsense was intentional, making it virtually impossible for anyone to
guess the secret words. Only the final command, the one for the door into the
sitting room, had any meaning.
Bokthersa was the name of Seregil's birthplace.
Seregil crossed the room with the aid of a lightstone and lit the fire. As
the flames leapt up, he surveyed the room in surprise. "Illior's Hands, don't
tell me you cleaned the place up before you left for Wheel Street?"
"Just enough so I could walk across the room safely," Alec replied, going to
his neat, narrow bed in the corner near the hearth. He didn't particularly mind
Seregil's chaotic living habits, but he did dislike stepping on sharp objects
barefoot, or having heavy things fall on him from shelves. Hanging his sword and
bow case on their nails above the bed, he stretched out with a contented sigh.
Seregil collapsed on the sofa in front of the fire. "You know, it strikes me
that this is all a bit of a comedown for you. After having your own chamber, I
mean. Perhaps we should think about expanding our accommodations here. There are
empty rooms on either side of us."
"Don't bother on my account." Yawning, Alec crossed his arms behind his head.
"I like things just as they are."
Seregil smiled up at the shadow of a dusty cobweb wavering overhead. "So do
I, now that you mention it."
Their pleasure at returning to the inn was marred by a sudden scarcity of
jobs. The few that had come in during their absence were petty matters, and over
the next week new ones were slow to follow. For the first time in their
acquaintance, Alec saw Seregil grow bored.
To make matters worse, late winter was the dreariest season in Rhiminee
despite the lengthening days. The icy rains brought thicker fog in off the sea,
and a grey dampness seemed to get into everything. Alec found himself sleeping
well past dawn, and then nodding off over whatever he was doing in the evening
with the sound of the rain lulling him like a heartbeat. Seregil, on the other
hand, became increasingly restless.
Returning from a visit with Nysander one dank afternoon near the end of
Dostin, Alec found Seregil working at the writing desk. The parchment in front
of him was half-covered with musical notations, but he appeared to have lost
interest in the project. Chin on hand, he was staring glumly out at the fog
slinking by like a jilted lover.
"Did you check with Rhiri on your way up?" he asked without turning his head.
"Nothing new," Alec replied, unwrapping the books the wizard had lent him.
"Damn. And I've already checked everywhere else. If people keep behaving
themselves like this we'll be out of a job."
"How about a game of bakshi?" Alec offered. "I could use some practice on
those cheats you showed me yesterday."
"Maybe later. I don't seem to be in the mood." With an apologetic shrug,
Seregil returned to his composition.
Suit yourself, thought Alec. Clearing a space on the room's central table, he
settled down to study the compendium of rare beasts Nysander had given him. The
text was somewhat beyond his ability, but he stubbornly puzzled it out, relying
on the illustrations for clues when the gist of a passage eluded him. With cold
mists swirling against the windowpanes, a fire crackling on the hearth, and a
cup of tea at his elbow, it was not an unpleasant way to occupy an afternoon.
It did require considerable concentration, however, which quickly proved
difficult as Seregil abandoned the desk and began wandering around the room.
First he toyed with an unusual lock he'd picked up somewhere, grinding noisily
away at the wards with a succession of picks. A few moments later he tossed it
onto a shelf with the others and disappeared into his chamber, where Alec could
hear him rummaging through the chests and trunks piled there and muttering
aloud, either to himself or the ever faithful Ruetha.
Presently he reappeared with an armload of scrolls. Kicking the scattered
cushions into a pile in front of the fire, he settled himself to read. But this
pursuit was equally short-lived.
After a brief perusal involving considerable rustling of parchments and
muttered asides, each document was relegated in rapid succession into the fire
or onto a dusty pile beneath the couch. With this task completed, he lay back
among the cushions and began to whistle softly between his teeth, keeping time
to his tune by tapping the toe of one boot against the ash shovel.
Not even Nysander's excellent bestiary could withstand such distraction.
Realizing he'd just read the same sentence for the third time, Alec carefully
closed the book.
"We could do some shooting in the back court," he suggested, trying not to
let his exasperation show.
Seregil looked up in surprise. "Oh, sorry. Am I disturbing you?"
"Well—"
He stood up again with a sigh. "I'm not fit to be around today, I'm afraid.
I'll get out of your way." With this he returned to his room, emerging a few
moments later wearing his best cloak.
He'd changed his rumpled tunic for a proper surcoat and breeches, too, Alec
saw.
"Where are you off to?"
"I think I'll just walk awhile, get some air," Seregil said, avoiding eye
contact as he hurried to the door.
"Wait a minute, and I'll go with you."
"No, no, you go on with your reading," Seregil insisted hurriedly. "And tell
Thryis not to wait supper for me. I could be late."
The door closed after him and Alec found himself in sole possession of their
rooms.
"Well, at least he didn't take his pack this time," he grumbled to Ruetha,
who'd stationed herself on a stack of books beside him. Tucking herself into a
neat loaf, the cat merely blinked at him.
Alec opened his book again, but found he couldn't concentrate at all now.
Giving up, he made another pot of tea and looked into Seregil's bedroom while
it steeped; no clue was immediately apparent in that chaotic jumble.
What's he up to, dashing off like that?
Except for that one mysterious journey, Seregil had included him in every job
since the Festival. But he hadn't acted like he was going out on a job just now.
The parchment was still on the desk. Bending over it, Alec saw that it was
the beginnings of a song. The words were badly smudged in places, and whole
lines had been struck through or scribbled over. What remained read:
Shelter awhile this poor tattered heart.
Cool my brow with your kiss.
Tell me, my love, you will lie with me only.
Lie to me all night like this.
Sweet is the night, but bitter the waking
When the sun harries me home.
Others there'll be, who drink at your fountain
While I toss cold and alone.
Yellow as gold, the hair on your pillow,
Green as cold emeralds, your eyes.
Dear as the moon, the cost of your favors,
Below this half a dozen lines had been struck out with what appeared to be
increasing frustration.
The margins of the sheet were filled with half-completed sketches and
designs-Illior's crescent, a perfectly drawn eye, circles, spirals, arrows, the
profile of a handsome young man. In the lower left coiner was a quick but
unmistakable sketch of Alec scowling comically over his books, which Seregil
must have drawn from his reflection in the windowpane.
As he set the sheet aside, a familiar binding caught his eye among the books
stacked on the workbench next to the desk. It was the Aurenfaie journal case
they'd discovered in the Oreska library. He'd assumed Seregil had returned it
with the others; he certainly hadn't said anything more about it, or about their
discovery of the reference to the mysterious "Eater of Death."
Opening it, Alec gently turned the fragile pages over. Though he couldn't
read them, they all looked just as he remembered them.
He replaced the case as he'd found it, and for the first time wondered if
Seregil's restlessness lately was due to something more than just bad weather
and boredom.
Come to think of it, he'd been restless at Watermead, as well. Those nights
they'd shared the guest chamber bed, his friend had often tossed and muttered in
his sleep. He hadn't done that before.
What secrets was he wrestling with?
"Or maybe he's just pining for his green-eyed mistress?" Alec speculated
aloud, scanning the parchment again with an amused chuckle.
Ruetha appeared to have no opinion on the matter, however, and he found
himself pacing as he rehearsed various nonchalant comments he could use to
broach the subject when Seregil returned.
Whenever that turned out to be.
Lost in the quiet of the murky afternoon, he went back to his book and read
until the light failed. When he got up for a fresh candle, he saw that the rain
had stopped. Beyond the courtyard wall, the street lanterns glowed enticingly
through the mist.
Suddenly the room seemed close and stale. There was really no reason he
shouldn't go out. Why hadn't he thought of it sooner? Throwing on a surcoat and
cloak, he headed downstairs.
The door between the kitchen and lading room was open.
Through it he could see Cilia serenely nursing Luthas in the middle of the
dinnertime bustle, sorting through a basket of apples with her free hand as she
did so. The baby sucked greedily, tugging at the lacings of her open bodice. Her
exposed breast throbbed gently with the rhythm of his demand.
Alec's experience with Ylinestra had considerably altered his reaction to
such sights. He colored guiltily when she looked up and caught him hovering in
the doorway.
"I thought you'd gone out already," she said.
"Ah-no. I was just, that is—It's stopped raining, you see, and I'm just going
out for a walk." He gestured vaguely toward the door behind him.
"Could you hold the baby a minute before you go?" she asked, pulling Luthas
off the nipple and holding him up. "My arm'll break if I don't shift over."
Taking the child, Alec held him while Cilia moved her baskets and uncovered
her other breast.
It was swollen with milk; a thin stream jetted from the nipple as she moved.
Alec was close enough to see the pearly drops that fell across the deep red
skins of the apples. He looked away, feeling a little dizzy. Luthas let out a
sleepy burp and nuzzled at the front of Alec's cloak.
"The way he eats, you'd think I'd not have a drop to spare, but just look at
me!" Cilia exclaimed merrily, taking the child back and putting him to breast on
the other side. "Maker's Mercy, I've got more milk than Grandmother's goat."
Unable to think of a suitable reply to this, Alec nodded a hasty farewell and
turned to go.
"Hey, Alec. Take this for your troubles," she said, tossing him an apple.
Feeling wetness beneath his fingers, he tucked it into a pocket and retreated
to the back courtyard.
There, with the fog cool on his face, he allowed himself a moment's guilty
pleasure replaying the scene in his mind. Cilia had never treated him as
anything but a friend and until just now it had never occurred to him to think
otherwise of her. Of course, the fact that she was at least six years older than
he made it unlikely that her opinion would change.
Settling his sword belt against his hip, he pulled his hood well up and set
off through the back gate with no particular destination in mind. The fog
carried the smell of smoke and the sea. He tossed a corner of his cloak over one
shoulder, enjoying the feel of the cold night air.
Skirting the Harvest Market, he strolled through Knife Maker's Lane to Golden
Helm and followed it, watching the evening traffic bustle past.
As he reached the Astellus Circle, he was suddenly struck by a new and
unexpected inspiration.
Across the busy circle, beyond the pale, templelike fountain colonnade, stood
the gracious arch that marked the entrance to the Street of Lights. He'd been
down this street many times on the way to the theater and gambling houses there,
and Seregil had often jested about stopping in at a brothel afterward, but
somehow it had never happened.
He'd never imagined it would.
Until now.
The colored lanterns-rose, amber, green, and white- glowed softly through the
mist, each color signifying what sort of companionship was available within.
Rose meant women for men, he knew, and white was women for women; amber meant a
house for women, too, but the prostitutes there were male.
Most enigmatic of all, however, was the green lantern, signifying male
companions for male patrons. Worse yet, some houses showed several colors at
once.
There's no reason to be nervous, he thought as he crossed to the arch. After
all, his clothes were presentable, his purse was heavy, and thanks to Ylinestra,
he wasn't completely inexperienced. As his friends never seemed to tire of
pointing out, he was of age for such diversions. There was no harm in just
having a look around, anyway. Nothing wrong with being curious.
As usual, the street was busy. Riders on glossy horses and carriages
displaying the blazons of noble houses and wealthy merchants clattered past as
he strolled along, looking with new eyes at the establishments showing the pink
lantern. Groups of rich young revelers seemed to be everywhere, their boisterous
laughter echoing in the darkness.
A woman wearing the uniform of the Queen's Household Guard was bidding a
lingering good-bye to a half-dressed man in a doorway beneath an amber lamp as
he passed. Next door, a well-heeled sea captain and several of his men burst
from one house showing the rose light and, after a moment's consultation,
stormed off across the street to one with a green. Lights glowed in nearly every
window; muffled laughter and strains of music drifted everywhere, adding to the
festive feel of the place.
It occurred to him as he walked along that the color of a lantern was not a
lot to go on for such a decision.
No doubt Seregil could have suggested a few likely places, but that wasn't
much good to him now. At last, he settled on a house near the middle of the
street for no better reason than that he liked the carvings on the door. Just as
he was about to go in, however, a door swung open across the street and a group
of young men spilled out in a flood of light and music. A man was singing
inside, and the voice stopped Alec in his tracks. The clear, lilting tenor was
unmistakably Seregil's.
"Yellow as gold, the hair on your pillow,
Green as cold emeralds, your eyes.
Dear as the moon, the cost of your favors,
But priceless, the sound of your sighs.
Well, well! So here you are, thought Alec.
And you figured out that last line, too.
Wondering what role his friend was playing tonight, he crossed the street and
hurried up the stairs and into the spacious vestibule beyond. In his haste, he
collided with a tall, handsomely dressed man just inside the door.
"Good evening," he exclaimed, catching Alec lightly by the shoulders to
steady himself. His hair was streaked with silver, but his long, handsome face
was youthful as he smiled down on Alec.
"Excuse me, I wasn't looking where I was going," Alec apologized.
"No harm done. I'm always glad to meet anyone so anxious to enter my house.
You've not been my guest before, I think. I'm Azarin."
The man's blue eyes swept over him in what Alec sensed was well-practiced
appraisal.
He'd given no patronymics and Alec's name was not asked for.
Evidently he'd passed muster, for Azarin slipped his arm through Alec's and
drew him with gentle insistence toward a curtained archway nearby.
"Come, my young friend," he said warmly, drawing aside the curtain. "I
believe you'll find the company most congenial."
"Actually, I was just—"
Taking the room in at a glance, Alec froze, all thought of Seregil
momentarily forgotten.
Beyond the curtain, a broad staircase led down into an opulent salon. The air
in the softly lit room was heavy with incense. The walls were painted in Skalan
fashion with superb murals and, while erotic themes were not uncommon, these
were unlike any Alec had encountered before.
Green, he thought numbly, heart tripping a beat as he gazed around.
The murals were divided into panels, and each presented handsome male nudes
intertwined in passionately carnal acts. The sheer variety was astonishing. Many
of the feats depicted appeared to require considerable athletic ability and
several, thought Alec, must have been pure fantasy on the part of the artist.
Dragging his gaze from the paintings, he swiftly took in the occupants of the
astonishing chamber. Men of all ages reclined on couches arranged around the
room, some embracing casually as they gave their attention to a young lute
player by the hearth, others laughing and talking over gaming tables scattered
here and there. Couples and small groups came and went up a sweeping staircase
at the back of the room. There was no unseemly behavior, but many of them wore
little more than long dressing gowns.
The patrons seemed to be mostly noblemen of various degrees, but Alec also
recognized uniforms of the
Queen's Archers, the City Watch, several naval tunics, and a red tabard of the
Oreska Guard.
He even recognized a few faces, including the poet Rhytien, who was currently
holding forth to a rapt audience from the embrasure of a window.
The courtesans, if that was what one would call them, were not at all what
he'd expected; some were slight and pretty, but most of them looked more like
athletes or soldiers, and not all of them were young.
He hadn't heard Seregil's voice again since he'd entered, but he saw him now
lounging on a couch near the hearth. He had one arm around a handsome,
golden-haired young man and they were laughing together over something. As the
courtesan turned his head, Alec recognized him—it was the same face Seregil had
sketched on the margin of the song. Even from this distance, Alec could see the
fellow had green eyes.
His heart did another slow, painful roll as he finally allowed himself to
focus on Seregil.
His friend wore only breeches beneath his open robe and his dark hair hung
disheveled over his shoulders.
Slender, lithe, and completely at ease, he could easily have been mistaken
for one of the men of the house.
In fact, Alec silently admitted, he outshone them all.
He was beautiful.
Still rooted where he stood, Alec suddenly felt a strange division within
himself. The old Alec, northern red and callow, wanted to bolt from this
strange, exotic place and the sight of his friend stroking that golden head as
absently as he'd petted the cat a few hours earlier.
But the new Alec, Alec of Rhiminee, stood fast, caught by the elegant
decadence of the place as his ever-present curiosity slowly rekindled.
Seregil hadn't noticed him yet; to see him like this in such a place made
Alec feel as if he were spying on a stranger.
Seregil's strange, virile beauty, at first unappreciated, then taken for
granted as their familiarity grew through months of close living, seemed to leap
out at him now against the muted backdrop of the crowd: the large grey eyes
beneath the expressive brows, the fine bones of his face, the mouth, so often
tilted in a caustic grin, was relaxed now in sensuous repose. As Alec watched,
Seregil leaned his head back and his robe fell open to expose the smooth column
of his throat and the lean planes of his chest and belly.
Fascinated and confused, Alec felt the first hesitant stirring of feelings he
was not prepared to associate with his friend and teacher.
Still hovering at his elbow, Azarin somewhat misinterpreted his bedazzled
expression. "If I may be so bold, perhaps you lack experience in such matters?"
he asked. "Don't let that trouble you. There are many hours in the night, take
your time."
He swept a graceful hand at the murals.
"Perhaps you'll find inspiration there. Or have you a particular sort of
companion in mind?"
"No!" Startled out of his daze, Alec took a step backward. "No, I didn't
really- I mean, I thought I saw a friend come in here. I was just looking for
him."
Azarin nodded and said, ever gracious, "I understand. But now that you are
here, why not join us for a while? The musician is new, just in from Cirna. I'll
send for wine."
At Azarin's discreet summons, a young man detached himself from a knot of
conversation nearby and came up to join them.
"Tirien will attend you in my absence," said Azarin.
Giving the two of them a final, approving look, he disappeared back into the
vestibule.
"Well met, young sir," Tirien greeted him.
Thick black hair, glossy as a crow's wing, framed his face and a soft growth
of new beard edged the hollows of his cheeks. His smile seemed genuinely
friendly. He was dressed in breeches, boots, and a loose shirt of fine linen;
for a moment Alec mistook him for a noble. The illusion was shattered, however,
when Tirien stepped closer and said, "There's a couch free near the fire, if you
like. Or would you prefer to go up at once?"
For one awful moment Alec was speechless; what in Illior's name was he to do?
Glancing past Tirien's shoulder, his eyes happened to fall on one of the panels.
The young prostitute turned to follow his gaze, then smiled.
"Oh, yes, I'm quite good at that. As you can see, though, we'll need a third
man."
Seregil's eyes widened in genuine amazement at he caught sight of Alec framed
in the salon entrance, amazement followed at once by a bittersweet pang of
something deeper than mere surprise.
The boy had obviously stumbled into Azarin's house by mistake. The tense
lines around his mouth and faint, betraying color in his cheeks attested as
much.
I'd better go rescue him, he thought, yet he remained where he was, letting
the scene play on a bit longer.
A quick glance around the room confirmed that Alec was attracting the notice
of other patrons, as well.
And no wonder, Seregil thought with a stab of something dangerously close to
possessiveness. For a moment he allowed himself to see Alec through the eyes of
the others: a slim, somberly dressed youth whose heavy, honey-dark hair framed a
finely featured face and the bluest eyes this side of a summer evening sky. He
stood like a half-wild thing, poised for flight, yet his manner toward the young
prostitute was almost courtly.
Tirien leaned closer to Alec and the boy's mask of composure slipped a bit,
betraying-what? Alarm, certainly, but hadn't there been just a hint of
indecision?
This time Seregil couldn't deny the hot flash of jealousy that shot through
him. Thoroughly annoyed with himself, he began disentangling himself from
Wythrin.
"Do you want to go back up now?" the young man asked hopefully, sliding a
warm hand up his thigh.
This gave him pause. Seregil touched the back of one hand to Wythrin's cheek,
savoring the faint roughness of it. This one, a favorite for some time now, had
charms of his own, and talents that spared Seregil's heart even as they
satisfied his need.
Wythrin, and others like him, offered safe, guiltless passion, free of
obligation.
"In a moment. There's someone I need to talk to first."
He'd get Alec out of whatever jam he'd stumbled into, whether that sent him
upstairs with Tirien or not, Seregil told himself sternly, then lose himself
once more in Wythrin's deep bed. It was as simple as that.
Alec quickly realized that Tirien had no intention of being put off. His own
increasingly embarrassed protestations that he had no experience in such matters
only seemed to whet the courtesan's interest. It wasn't the first time Alec had
run into this attitude; country virgins seemed to be a rare and much
sought-after novelty in Rhiminee.
For a fleeting instant it occurred to him that Tirien was attractive, but he
dismissed the treacherous thought at once; that sort of thinking was not going
to get him out of this mess.
To his relief, he saw Seregil coming his way.
Clearly amused, he gave Alec a discreet need help? sign. Alec answered with a
quick nod.
At that, Seregil strode up to them and slipped an arm around Alec's waist.
"There you are at last! Forgive me for intruding, Tirien. My friend and I have
some business. Will you excuse us for a moment?"
"Of course." The young courtesan withdrew with a graceful bow, betraying only
the faintest hint of disappointment.
Alec braced for the inevitable ragging as they withdrew to the vestibule, but
Seregil simply said, "I didn't expect to see you here."
"I heard you singing. I mean, I thought it sounded like you and—well, I just
came in." Aside from the fact that he was stammering like an idiot, Alec was
suddenly all too aware of the fact that Seregil's arm was still around him.
Strange, enticing scents clung to his friend's skin and hair, unlike his usual
clean smell. The troublesome new feelings stirred again, closer to the surface
this time, but just as confusing. "I didn't think to check the lantern. I just
came in."
Seregil chuckled softly. "Curious as usual, eh? Well, now that you're in, are
you going to stay? Tirien's an excellent choice. Azarin knows his business."
"No." Alec glanced at the young prostitute, still waiting hopefully nearby,
then hastily back to Seregil. There was no hint of challenge in his friend's
face, just bemusement. Why then, held in the calm gaze of those grey eyes, did
his own agitation increase? The situation was well past his ability to explain.
"No, I was just looking for you. I'd better go. This place makes me feel
strange."
"There's more than incense burning in those bowls. But I assume if you were
just passing by, then you're here on business of your own? Let's see now, how
long has it been?"
"I was thinking of it," Alec admitted. He could feel the warmth of Seregil's
skin through the thick silk of the robe now. "I don't know—I might just go on
home."
"Don't be silly," Seregil said, releasing him at last. "I was planning to go
back upstairs, but that can wait." The grin flashed again, and Alec abandoned
all hope of escape. "There's a place just down the street that's probably more
to your liking. And long overdue, too. I'll be right back."
Returning to the main room, he said something to Tirien. The man gave Alec a
last wistful look, then drifted away.
Leaning in the shadow of the arch, Alec watched Seregil take leave of his
companion, who was clearly dismayed by his departure. After a brief, animated
exchange, Seregil pressed him back on the couch with a deep, lingering kiss,
then disappeared up the stairs.
He came down again a few moments later fully dressed, sword belt slung over
one shoulder.
"Come along," he said jauntily, leading the way to a villa down the block.
Well, at least there's a pink lantern here, Alec thought, nervous again as
Seregil urged him up the stairs.
Seregil appeared to be well known here. A number of women greeted him
enthusiastically as he led Alec into the salon. This establishment was quite
similar to Azarin's. Erotic tapestries and statuary adorned this room and lovely
women in various states of dishabille entertained their patrons, brilliant and
lovely as rare birds.
As they handed their cloaks and swords to a page, a richly dressed woman left
a knot of conversation and rushed to embrace Seregil. Her skin, generously
exposed by the blue silk gown she wore, had a golden olive tone Alec had never
seen before. Thick black ringlets hung in a shining cascade to her waist.
"Where have you been keeping yourself, you rogue," she cried with obvious
delight.
"A million places, Eirual, my love, but none so pleasant as here," Seregil
replied, kissing her throat lasciviously.
She laughed, then pushed him away, dark eyes widening in mock reproach. "I
know that scent. You've been to Azarin's already. How cruel you are, coming to
me with your fires already spent."
"Spent? My fires?" Seregil caught her close again. "And when, my lovely one,
have you ever known that to be the case?"
"I'd like to put you to the test—upstairs."
"I accept your challenge gladly, madame, but first we have to find
companionship for my young friend."
Alec had been gazing around the room during this exchange, his heart pounding
in a manner even his old, Dalnan-bred self could find no argument with.
"I think he's found someone already," Eirual said with an amused smile.
Alec nodded shyly at a slender, blue-eyed brunette in burgundy silk. "She's
very pretty."
"Myrhichia?" Eirual shot Seregil an arch look as she summoned the woman. "He
has excellent taste, this friend of yours."
"He hasn't disappointed me yet," Seregil replied, giving Alec a wink.
Myrhichia glided over, wrapped in perfume and mystery. She was older than
Alec had supposed, older than he, but that didn't matter—there was something
familiar about her, something that made him wave aside the offer of wine and let
her lead him up the stairs to her room.
It wasn't until she turned to speak to him over her shoulder that he realized
how much she resembled Seregil, or rather Seregil as he'd looked playing Lady
Gwethelyn aboard the Darter.
It was an unsettling revelation and he did his best to put it out of his mind
as they entered her chamber.
Looking around, Alec felt the last of his trepidation giving way to sensuous
anticipation.
A fire cracked invitingly on the hearth, its flames softly illuminating the
small, elegant room. The bed was high and draped with patterned hangings. Huge
cushions were piled near the hearth, together with a few oddly shaped stools. An
elaborate washstand was half-visible behind a painted screen in a shadowy
corner.
Myrhichia stood demurely at the center of the room, offering him the choice
of where to begin. "Does it please you?" she asked, cocking her head prettily.
"Yes," he whispered. Closing the door, he went to her and loosened the
jeweled pin holding her hair.
It tumbled free over her shoulders in dark, sandalwood-scented waves.
Where his experience with Ylinestra had been out of his control from the
first, this woman seemed content to let him direct things. He touched her face,
her hair, then hesitantly brought his lips to hers.
Her hands found his face, his shoulders, then slid slowly lower.
The fastenings of her gown were no challenge for Alec's expertly trained
fingers; her clothes and his were soon in a pile at their feet.
"Shall I light a lamp?" she whispered as he took her hungrily in his arms.
He shook his head, pressing his body against the yielding roundness of
breasts, belly, and thighs, letting the feel of her envelop him. "The fire's
enough."
Still holding her, he sank down onto the cushions by the hearth. The warring
sensations of the long, confusing evening seemed to coalesce and clarify as he
at last abandoned himself to the powerful simplicity of desire.
Eirual was half Zengati, Aurenen's traditional enemy. It was that, together
with the dark beauty of her race, that had first attracted Seregil.
Though hardly more than a girl at the time of their first meeting, she'd been
a fiery lover and he'd entertained notions of taking her away for himself.
She'd been the one who'd dashed that plan; she liked her work, she'd told him
firmly.
What's more, she planned to own a brothel of her own one day, just as her
mother and grandmother had before her. Although his pride had been somewhat
jarred, Seregil had respected her wishes and over the years they'd become
friends.
She'd achieved her dreams. She was now the owner of one of the city's finest
and most nobly patronized pleasure houses. This often brought interesting bits
of information her way and, though she was no gossiping whore, she was aware of
Seregil's supposed connections to Rhiminee's mysterious "Cat" and had often
found it lucrative to pass on certain facts and rumors.
Their reunion this night had been spirited in spite of Seregil's earlier
activities. Afterward, they lay tangled together in the damp, disheveled sheets
and laughed together over little things.
Presently she sighed, then said, "You know, I saw something rather odd a few
weeks ago."
"And what was that?" he murmured, contentedly admiring the contrast of his
skin against hers as he stroked her thigh.
"I entertained a new visitor last week, a stranger. He was well turned out
and behaved himself, but I could tell from his way of speaking and the state of
his hands he wasn't upper class, just a common fellow who'd come into gold and
meant to treat himself. You know the sort."
"But he was handsome and broad-shouldered and smelled of honest labor,"
Seregil teased. "Sounds delightful. Let's have him in."
"As if I'd share you! But I admit I was intrigued at first, though he turned
out very ordinary in the end. No, I think you'd be more interested in what fell
out of his coat than what fell out of his breeches."
"Oh?" Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow, knowing better than to hurry her.
She always enjoyed spinning out a tale.
"He'd thrown his clothes every which way, so when he was snoring
afterward—which was all too soon, I might add—I decided to tidy up a bit. A
letter fell from his coat when I picked it up. The ribbon had come loose and I
took a quick peek. He stirred a moment later and I had to put it away, but I had
time to recognize the handwriting, and the seal at the bottom."
"Did you, you clever girl? Whose was it?"
"Lord General Zymanis."
"Really?" Zymanis had recently been appointed to oversee the defenses of the
lower city. "How do you know it wasn't a forgery?"
Eirual traced a playful finger around his navel.
"Zymanis is a very dear friend of mine, as you well know. Two months ago he
knocked his ring against that bedpost there behind you and chipped the stone
seal. It was a tiny piece, really, but he made such a fuss over it! Quite
spoiled the mood. This chip makes a tiny flaw in the impression, so tiny that
most people wouldn't even notice it. But I knew what to look for and it was his,
all right. What do you think of that?"
Seregil cupped her full breast in his hand like a goblet and kissed it
reverently. "I think, in your place, I'd have found some way of inquiring where
this lover of yours could be found again."
Eirual pressed closer with a luxuriant sigh.
"Sailmaker Street in the lower city. A tenement with a red and white lintel.
His name is Rythel, a big, blond fellow with a lovely soft beard, very
handsome."
"And you don't think this visitor of yours ought to have such a letter?"
Eirual shook her head. "For starters, it was addressed to Lord Admiral
Nyreidian. I've never met the admiral, but I'd bet a month's gold he doesn't
have fresh calluses on his hands and stained fingernails."
"Or a yellow beard," mused Seregil, thinking of the man he'd met at the
Mourning Night ceremony. Nyreidian had spoken of his own commission from the
Queen, too, overseeing privateering ships.
"Zymanis wouldn't let a fellow like this step on his shadow, much less write
letters to him." She gave him a sly sidelong glance. "I thought maybe your
friend the Cat might be interested?"
"He just might."
"I could tell him myself," she wheedled, not for the first time. Over the
years the unseen Rhiminee Cat had taken on a glow of romance for many, who
envied Seregil his apparently favored status.
Seregil kissed his way slowly across her chest.
"I've told you before, love, he's not what you think. He's a nasty, weedy
little man who spends half his time wading through the sewers."
"Last time you said he was a hunchback," she corrected, stroking his head.
"That, too. That's why he keeps out of sight, you see, because he's so
hideous. Why, his boils alone are enough—"
"No more!" Eirual laughed, admitting defeat.
"Sometimes I think you're the Cat, and you just make all the rest up to hide
it."
"Me? Wading through sewers and running errands for bored nobles?" He pinned
her down, feigning outrage. "Fancy me mincing across the roof slates!"
"Oh, yes," Eirual gasped, giggling helplessly at the thought. "You're the
terror of the town."
"You've pegged me wrong, my girl. There's only one thing I put that kind of
effort into."
"And what's that, may I ask?"
Seregil leered down at her. "I'll show you."
The candle had burned to a stub when he slipped from her bed.
Eirual stirred drowsily. "Stay, love. I'll be cold without you."
He drew the comforter up under her chin and kissed her.
"I can't tonight. I'll send a nice present tomorrow."
"All right, then." She smiled, already half asleep again. "Something with
rubies and I might forgive you."
"Rubies it is."
He dressed quickly and blew out the candle. Closing her door quietly behind
him, he headed for Myrhichia's room down the corridor.
He had to knock several times to get a response.
She opened the door a few inches at last, peering out with a resentful pout.
"He's sleeping," she informed him, pulling her dressing gown closed.
"How inconsiderate." Pushing past her, Seregil strode into the bedchamber.
Alec lay sprawled on his back in the bed, his sleeping face the picture of weary
bliss.
Looks like he managed to enjoy himself after all, he thought with a mix of
pride and wistfulness, glancing around at the disordered room.
Ignoring the courtesan's simmering displeasure, Seregil leaned down and shook
him by the shoulder.
Alec stirred drowsily, murmuring something amorous as he reached to pull
Seregil into bed.
When his fingers encountered wool rather than whatever he'd been dreaming of,
however, he snapped fully awake.
"What are you doing here?" he gasped, sitting up.
"Sorry." Seregil crossed his arms, grinning.
"Terrible timing, I know, but something's come up and I may need your help."
Alec glanced quickly from him to the girl. "A job? Now?"
"I'll wait for you downstairs. Don't be long."
Alec let out an exasperated sigh. Before he could get up, however, Myrhichia
dropped her robe and slipped back into bed beside him. "Does he always barge in
like that?"
"I hope not," muttered Alec.
"Are you going to leave me now?" She nibbled teasingly down the side of his
neck as her hand slipped up his thigh to more sensitive regions.
He could picture Seregil pacing impatiently downstairs, waiting for him, but
Myrhichia was putting up a persuasive argument under the covers.
"Well," he sighed, letting her push him back against the bolsters, "maybe not
right this second."
Seregil had the bones of a workable plan in mind by the time he got
downstairs. Strolling into the cloak room, he found it conveniently unattended.
He soon had what he wanted; he returned to the salon with an officer's mantle
and a wineskin concealed beneath his own cloak, Alec's sword belt and cloak over
his arm.
To his surprise, Alec had still not come down. Rather annoyed, he settled in
a chair near the door to wait.
It was late now. A few girls remained in the salon, playing bakshi to pass
the time while they waited for whatever late-coming patrons might show up.
Having seen Seregil come down, they paid little attention to him.
Minutes passed and still no Alec.
Seregil was just about to leave without him when the boy came down the
staircase. His loose shirt flapped around his legs as he struggled with his
coat, one sleeve of which appeared to be inside out. Getting himself more or
less sorted out at last, he hurried to join Seregil.
"Delayed, were you?" Seregil inquired with a smirk, tossing him his cloak and
sword.
"Myrhichia isn't very happy with you," Alec grumbled, flushed and out of
breath. He wrapped his sword belt around his hips and fastened the buckle. "I'm
not so sure I am, either. If this is just another silly lover's token—"
Seregil tugged Alec's collar straight, still grinning. "You think I'd ruin
your fun for that? Come on, I'll tell you about it on the way."
Outside, he glanced around quickly, then whispered, "I think Eirual may have
put us onto a spy."
Alec brightened up at once. "That's worth getting out of bed for."
"Did you ride?"
"No."
"Good, we'll hire horses and abandon them if we have to. I'll explain as we
go."
Leaving the warm glow of the lanterns behind, they hurried into the embracing
darkness.
"Where are we going?" Alec asked as Seregil headed west through the dark
streets.
The quickest way to the lower city was down the Harbor Way.
"I need a very special horse for this one," Seregil explained. "There's an
ostler over by the Harvest Gate who's likely to have what I want, and still be
hiring out at this hour."
Pausing, he opened the wineskin and took a sip, then sprinkled a more liberal
libation down the front of his surcoat. Evidently satisfied with the effect, he
passed it to Alec.
Grinning, he did the same. "Drunk, are we?"
"Oh, yes, and I'll be worse off than you. You'll be playing the sensible
friend."
"Don't I always?" Alec took another fortifying sip and capped the skin.
A lantern was still burning in front of the ostler's stable. Seregil fell
into a loose, unsteady walk as they stepped into the circle of light.
"Ostler!" he called, striking an arrogant pose, fists on his hips. "Two
gentlemen need mounts. Show yourself, man."
"Here, sirs," a man replied, opening a side door a crack for a wary look at
the late customers.
Seregil shook his purse at him. The ring of coins had the desired effect; the
ostler swung the stable doors wide and held the lantern while they inspected the
half-dozen horses inside.
Alec quickly found a decent mare and the man saddled her for him.
Seregil was longer at it. After much pacing and muttering, he finally settled
on a rawboned grey.
"I'm not one to tell a lord his business, but he's made a poor choice with
that one," the worried ostler whispered to Alec. "Old Cloudy there has been off
his feed for days and Jias a cough. If you'd speak to your friend for me, I'll
see to it he has the best of my stable."
Alec gave him a reassuring wink and counted out a generous stack of silver.
"Don't concern yourself. We're going to play a joke on a friend and your grey is
just what we need. We'll take good care of him, and have them both back before
dawn."
They set off at a trot, but before they'd gone a quarter of a mile Seregil's
cob stumbled to a halt, nearly throwing him over its head. Jerking its head
down, it let out a hollow, braying cough.
"Poor old fellow." Seregil patted the animal's neck. "You're better than I
could have hoped for. We'll have to send a drysian to look at him."
"What do you think this spy of yours is up to?"
Alec asked as they continued at a walk.
Seregil shrugged. "Hard to say yet. Eirual thinks this fellow Rythel has some
documents that he shouldn't. I want to see if she's right."
"Do you think he's a Plenimaran?"
"Too soon to say. At times like this it's best to keep an open mind until you
have hard facts. Otherwise, you just run around trying to prove your own theory
and overlooking important details that may turn up in the process. It could be
there's nothing to it at all, but it's more interesting than anything else we've
seen in the last few weeks."
Well-dressed, slightly intoxicated lords heading down to the lower city for a
roister were of little concern to the guards at the Sea Gate. The
sergeant-at-arms waved them through with a bored look and returned to the watch
fire.
At the bottom of the Harbor Way they rode east along the waterfront past the
custom houses and quays into a moderately respectable street lined with
tenements.
A few lights showed behind shuttered windows, but most of the neighborhood
was asleep. A dog howled mournfully somewhere nearby, the sound carrying eerily
through the streets. Seregil's horse twitched its ears nervously, then let out
another rattling cough in a jingle of harness.
"Here's Sailmaker Street," said Seregil, reining in at the mouth of an
unmarked lane.
Unclasping his mantle, he threw it to Alec and shook out the mantle he'd
brought from Eirual's.
It belonged to a captain of the White Hawk Infantry and bore a large,
distinctive device.
"Who'd you steal that from?" Alec asked, watching him put it on.
"Borrowed, dear boy, borrowed," Seregil corrected primly.
Alec peered up and down the poorly lit street.
"That must be the house there," he said, pointing to one at the end of the
lane. "It's the only one with a striped lintel."
"Yes. You hang back and be ready for trouble. If it comes to any sort of a
chase, I'd better ride with you. I don't think poor old Cloudy has much run left
in him."
Seregil emptied the last of the wine over his mount's withers, bunched the
mantle awkwardly over one shoulder, and pulled one foot loose from the stirrup.
Settling into a loose, drunken slouch, he nudged the horse into a walk. Riding
up to the door, he kicked loudly at it.
"You! In the house!" he bawled, swaying precariously in the saddle. "I want
the leech, damn him. By Sakor, send out the bastard son of a pig!"
A shutter slammed back just above his head and an old woman popped her head
out, glaring down indignantly.
"Leave off with that or I'll have the Watch down on you," she screeched,
swinging a stick at his head. "This is an honest house."
"I'll leave off when I've got his throat in my hand," Seregil yelled, kicking
the door again.
"You're drunk. I can smell you from here!" the old woman said scornfully.
"Who is it you're after?"
Just then, the grey jerked its head down in another racking cough.
"There, you hear that?" Seregil roared. "How in the name of Bilairy am I
supposed to explain this to my commander, eh? Your leech has ruined the beast.
Gave him a dose of salts and half killed him. I'll run my sword up his arse,
that pus-faced clod of shit! You send out the leech Rythel or I'll come in after
him."
"You whoreson drunken mullet!" The old woman took another swing at him with
her cudgel. "It's Rythel the smith that rooms here, not Rythel the leech."
"Smith?" Seregil goggled up at her. "What in the name of Sakor's Fire is he
doing dosing my horse if he's a smith?"
Lurking in the shadows at the mouth of the street, Alec shook with silent
laughter. It was as good a performance as any he'd seen at the theater.
"Half the men on the coast are called Rythel, you fool. You've got the wrong
man," the old landlady sputtered. "Smith Rythel is an honest man, which is more
than can be said for you, I'm sure."
"Honest man, my ass!"
"He is. He works for Master Quarin in the upper city."
She disappeared and Seregil, no doubt with knowledge born of long experience,
reined his horse out of the way just as she emptied a chamber pot over the sill
at him.
Seregil made her an ungainly bow from the saddle. "My humblest apologies for
disturbing your rest, old mother."
"You'd best sleep on your belly tonight," the old woman cackled after him as
he rode unsteadily away.
"That wasn't exactly subtle," Alec observed, still laughing as they headed
back to the Harbor Way.
"A drunken soldier making a ruckus at the wrong house in the middle of the
night on Sailmaker Street?" Seregil asked, looking pleased with himself. "What
could be subtler than that? And successful, too. Now we know that this Rythel is
a journeyman smith of some sort. Which leaves us still asking what he's doing
with gold enough for the Street of Lights and a lord's papers in his pocket."
"And why he had that much gold on him with the papers still in his pocket."
"Exactly. And what does that suggest?"
"That he's been up to whatever he's doing for a while already," replied Alec,
looking back toward the waterfront. "We'll have to get into his rooms, and we'd
better find out who Master Quarin is."
"We'll start tomorrow. Hold up a minute."
Seregil's grey was wheezing dejectedly now.
Reining in by a lantern at the foot of the Harbor Way, he dismounted and took
the animal's head between his hands. "I'd better ride double with you, Alec.
This poor old fellow's at the end of his strength. I'd better change cloaks,
too."
Alec kicked a foot out of the stirrup and held his hand down. Grasping it,
Seregil climbed up behind him and wrapped an arm around his waist.
Alec felt another unexpected twinge of sensuality at his touch, faint as a
bat's whisper, but unmistakable. There was certainly nothing seductive in the
way Seregil gripped a handful of his tunic to keep his balance, yet suddenly he
had an image of that same hand stroking the head of the young man at Azarin's
brothel, and later embracing dark-eyed Eirual.
Seregil had touched him before, but never with anything more than brotherly
affection. Alec had seen tonight what sort of companions his friend
chose-Wythrin and Eirual, both of them exotic, beautiful, and undoubtedly
skilled beyond anything Alec could conceive of.
What's happening to me? he wondered dejectedly. Maker's Mercy, he could still
smell Myrhichia's lush scent rising from his skin. From some neglected corner of
his heart, a small voice seemed to answer silently, You're waking up at last.
"Anything wrong?" asked Seregil.
"Thought I heard something." Alec nudged the horse into a walk.
Seregil bunched the stolen cloak out of sight beneath his own. "I suppose we
really should return this. I don't want any of Eirual's women getting into
trouble on my account. I don't suppose you'd mind going back there twice in one
night?"
Alec couldn't see his friend's face, but he could tell by his voice that he
was grinning.
"Me? Where will you be?" asked Alec.
"Oh, not too far away."
Alec shifted uncomfortably in the saddle. "You're going back to Azarin's."
He heard a throaty chuckle behind him. "Fowl never tastes as savory when
you're hungry for venison."
At least you know what you want, Alec thought grudgingly.
Cilia was just stirring up the fire when Seregil returned to the Cockerel the
next morning. "Is Alec back?" she asked.
"I haven't seen him since yesterday afternoon. You haven't gone and lost him,
have you?"
"Let's hope not." Grabbing a few apples from a basket, he headed for the back
stairway.
"Hang on, I've got something for you," Cilia called after him. She pulled a
small, sealed packet from behind the salt box on the mantel and gave it to him.
"Runcer sent this over from Wheel Street. A regimental courier from the Queen's
Horse delivered it there."
Pocketing the apples, he examined the packet as he continued upstairs. The
folded parchment was sealed with candle drippings and covered in smudged finger
marks. Directions to Lord Seregil's house were written across the front in Beka
Cavish's impatient, upright hand.
Opening it, he read the brief letter inside.
Dear S. and A.
Dostin-Have reached Isil. Tomorrow we move into Mycenian territory. One of
the other turmae lost a rider at bridge over the Canal at Cirna when his horse
bolted and threw him over the edge. Horrible.
The weather is foul. It's still very much winter up here.
The worst enemy we've faced so far is boredom.
Capt. Myrhini and some of the other officers break the monotony with their
war stories. Some of the best come from the sergeants, however.
Billeted tonight in stables of Baron of Isil's estate. The glory of a
soldier's life, eh, Seregil?
-B. Cavish
Reaching their rooms, he found Alec asleep on his narrow cot, clothes dropped
in a careless heap on the floor. Seregil sat down on the clothes chest at the
end of the bed and tapped him on the foot.
"Good morning. We've got news from Beka."
Alec growled something into the pillow, then rolled over. He blinked sleepily
at the morning light streaming in at the windows, then at Seregil. "You just
getting in?"
Seregil tossed him an apple. "Yes. Tirien asked after you, by the way, and
sends his regards."
Alec shrugged noncommittally and bit into his apple. "What's Beka say?"
Seregil read him the letter.
"Maker's Mercy!" Alec muttered, hearing of the man lost off the Canal bridge.
He disliked heights and Seregil had to coax him across the bridge the first time
he'd traveled over it.
"Let's see," said Seregil when he'd finished, "if they were in Wyvern Dug two
weeks ago and headed southeast from there, they could be across the Folcwine
River by now."
"Sounds like she's doing well with it all."
"I wouldn't expect anything else of her. Beka's as good with people as she is
with horses and swordplay. I'll bet you a sester she's wearing a captain's
gorget the next time we see her."
If we see her again, skittered at the back of his mind as he said this, but
he pushed the doubt away. He thought he saw a shadow of the same thought cross
Alec's face, and the same quick denial.
"Where do we start today?" Alec asked, pushing a handful of tousled hair back
from his eyes.
Seregil went to the hearth and stirred up the remains of last night's fire.
"I'd like to find this Master Smith Quarin first. Unfortunately we don't know
what kind of a smith he is, do we? Goldsmith, silversmith, swordsmith,
blacksmith—"
Alec chewed thoughtfully, watching him. After a moment he said, "How about an
ironsmith?"
Seregil glanced down at the poker in his hand, then saw that Alec was looking
at it, too.
"You said Lord Zymanis is in charge of the lower city defenses, so he's more
likely to need an ironsmith than a goldsmith, right? And Eirual said he had
rough hands."
"You've got a clearer head than I do this morning," Seregil said, chagrined
not to have thought of it himself.
"I imagine I got more sleep."
Seregil glanced over at him in surprise, fancying he heard an edge of
disapproval in Alec's tone. After last night's evident success with Myrhichia,
he'd assumed the boy was cured of any undue scruples.
Evidently he still retained his Dalnan attitude toward establishments like
Azarin's.
Well, that's just too damned bad for him.
"There are ironsmiths scattered all around the city but they all belong to
the same guild," he said aloud, letting the moment pass. "I'll have Thryis send
one of the scullions over to ask after Quarin. In the meantime, I think I'll
have a bit of a rest."
By midday they'd learned that Master Quarin's shop lay in Ironmonger Row near
the Sea Market Gate. They set off soon after, dressed as ragged cripples.
Alec's face was half-obscured by a dirty bandage. Seregil wore an old wreck
of a hat tied on with a scarf so that the brim curved down to his chin on either
side. Their disguises had the desired effect. As they crossed the back court
Rhiri saw them and shook a rake threateningly in their direction.
"Ah, the ubiquitous beggar," Seregil chuckled when they'd scuttled out the
gate. "No one is ever surprised or glad to see you anywhere in the city."
Begging bowls in hand, they set off for Sheaf Street, the broad avenue that
ran through the city between the Harvest and Sea Market gates.
As expected, they attracted little attention as they made their way through
the crowded streets. Carts and wagons rumbled past endlessly. Tinkers and knife
grinders chanted their availability in singsong voices. Dirty children dodged
through the crowds, chasing dogs or pigs or each other.
Soldiers were everywhere, along with malodorously genuine beggars and a few
early whores importuning passersby.
Watching for their chance, they stole a ride on the back of a hay wagon and
clung to the tail posts as it jolted over the cobbles.
"Look there," said Seregil, pointing behind them.
Alec looked and winced inwardly. Half a block back, five heads swayed on
pikes set upright in the back of a rough wooden cart surrounded by a grim
formation of the City Watch. He'd seen such displays before; this was the fate
of traitors and spies in Rhiminee. Their decapitated bodies would be lying in
the cart below, on their way to the city pit.
"Maker's Mercy, that's getting to be a common sight," he muttered. "If we're
right about our man—"
"Then he'll come to the same end." Seregil eyed the heads impassively. "I
wouldn't dwell on that, if I were you. I don't."
Especially since you came within spitting distance of ending up that way
yourself. Alec thought grimly. He still had nightmares about that sometimes, and
what would have happened if he and Micum had failed to clear Seregil's name from
the Leran's carefully contrived treason charges. He wondered if Seregil did,
too.
As soon as the brightly colored awnings of the Sea Market came into sight,
Seregil jumped down from the cart and led the way into Ironmonger Row, a
twisting side street of open-sided workshops and smoke-stained buildings.
Playing his role, he doubled over into a crabbed, sidelong limp and grasped
Alec's arm.
In spite of the name, metal workers of all sorts plied their trade here,
taking advantage of the proximity to both the port and the marketplace.
Acrid fumes stung Alec's eyes as they made their way through the din. Inside
the workshops he could see half-naked men silhouetted against the red glare of
the forges, looking like vengeful demons as their hammers struck sparks from
glowing metal.
Apprentices ran here and there with tools and hods of coal; others sweated
over the bellows, pumping until the forges glowed yellow-white. Pots, swords,
tools, and bits of armor hung over doorways advertising the wares being crafted
within.
Pausing at the first they came to, Seregil limped up to an apprentice and
asked after Quarin.
"Master Quarin?" The boy pointed farther down the narrow lane. "His place is
way down near the wall, biggest on the block. You can't miss it."
"Many thanks, friend," croaked Seregil, taking Alec's arm again. "Come along,
son, we're nearly there."
For a single, disorienting instant Alec stared down at him. They hadn't
discussed their roles in detail—hearing himself unexpectedly called "son" so
many months after his father's death sent a sickening chill through him. Guilt
followed hard on the heels of it; he hadn't thought of his father in weeks,
perhaps longer.
Seregil peered up at him from under his hat, one sharp grey eye visible. "You
all right?"
Alec stared straight ahead, surprised at the stinging behind his eyelids.
"I'm fine. It's just the smoke."
Dodging heavy wagons and wrathful shouts, they finally located Quarin's shop.
It was a huge establishment, much larger than the rest, and housed in a
converted warehouse.
Seregil hung back a moment, sizing the place up through the open door. "Two
forges that I can see from here," he whispered. "See those fellows with the
metal studs across the top of their aprons? They're all master craftsmen. Master
Quarin must be well established to have a crew like that under him. Let's go see
what he knows of our friend Rythel."
Just inside the door, they found a woman in a studded apron putting the final
touches on an elaborately decorated gate. Catching sight of them, she paused,
resting her hammer on one knee.
"You want something here?" she called.
Seregil lowered his voice to a windy growl. "Is this Master Quarin's shop?"
"That's the master, there at the back." Hefting her hammer again, she pointed
out a bluff, white-haired old man standing behind a worktable with several other
smiths, metal stylus in hand.
"It's a Master Rythel we was sent to find," Alec told her. "We've a message
to deliver and we was told he works here."
The woman sniffed scornfully. "Oh, him! He and his crew are down at the
western sewer tunnel in the lower city."
"Friend of yours, dearie?" Seregil wheedled, giving her a wink beneath the
cracked brim of his hat.
"He's nobody's friend here. Upstart nephew of the master, is all. That sort
always nabs the plums, and damn all to the rest of us. Be off with you, and I
hope you charge him double for the message. The bastard can well enough afford
it."
Alec gave her a respectful bob of the head. "Thanks and Maker's Mercy to you.
Come on, Grandfather, we've got a long walk ahead of us."
"Grandfather, eh?" Seregil eyed him wryly as they continued on toward the Sea
Market.
"You could be anything under there. That smith didn't seem to care much for
Rythel, did she?"
"I noticed that," said Seregil, straightening up and stretching his back.
"The guild smiths are a proud, stiff-necked lot and seniority is everything to
them. Sounds like Quarin put some noses out of joint giving the job to a
relative."
"Why would anyone begrudge him working in the sewers?"
"If they're in the sewers, then they must be replacing the iron grates that
guard the channels coming down from the citadel. Who do you suppose ordered that
job?"
"Lord General Zymanis."
"By way of whatever underlings handle the details, anyway, which would make
it a particularly lucrative contract, with extra pay for the smith in charge of
the repairs and his crew. She said he'd "nabbed the plums," remember?"
"That still doesn't explain why Rythel would have papers with Lord Zymanis'
seal."
"No, but it does establish the beginnings of a plausible connection. The
letter he had was addressed to Admiral Nyreidian. We met him at Kylith's
gathering at the Mourning Night ceremony, if you recall."
"The lord who'd just been commissioned to oversee the privateers!" Alec
exclaimed. "That has to do with the war, too."
"Which means we're probably right about Rythel being a noser of some sort."
They walked on in silence to the Harbor Way.
Presently Seregil looked up again and said, "If we're right, then I may need
to play with this Rythel a bit, see what I can get out of him. When we get down
there, I'd better stay out of sight and let you play messenger. If he is a
fellow professional, then I don't want to chance him recognizing my voice later
on."
At the harbor they made their way west beyond the last quays and warehouses
to a stretch of rocky land that hugged the base of the cliffs. A freshly rutted
wagon track led on out of sight among the twisted jack pines and hummocks.
Following it for a quarter of a mile or so, Alec and Seregil found Rythel's crew
at the head of a steep, malodorous gully.
From where Alec and Seregil stood, the entrance to the sewer channel was
about five hundred feet up the cut. The opening was the same size and shape as
an arched doorway, tall enough for a man to walk through without ducking his
head. A noisome grey torrent flowed out over its threshold and on down through a
stone sluiceway to the sea beyond. A foul odor hung over the rocky cleft and
Alec noted that the workmen wore wet rags over their noses and mouths.
Vinegar cloths, he guessed, to protect them from the evil humours of the
place.
A forge had been set up near the opening and the black smoke from it
collected sullenly on the damp air. A small wagon stood nearby and half a dozen
armed bluecoats were lounging against it.
"What are they doing there?" Alec asked as they looked out from behind the
cover of a boulder.
"Watching for gaterunners and spies. The sewers go everywhere under the
city."
"What are gaterunners?"
"Thieves, mostly, who know how to get past all the gates and grates and
travel the tunnels. They know more about where those channels lead than anyone,
even the Scavenger Guild. You'd better go have a look."
Leaving Seregil behind the-rock, Alec hugged his rags about himself and
followed the stony track up toward the forge.
"What do you want here?" a soldier demanded, looking more bored than
suspicious.
"I've got a message for one of the smiths," Alec replied. "Man named Rythel."
"Go on then, but be quick about it," the guard said, waving him on.
At the forge two apprentices were doggedly pumping the bellows, while another
held an iron rod in the coals with heavy tongs. Behind them, a smith was shaping
a glowing spike of iron on the anvil. Short and dark-haired, he didn't match the
description Eirual had given Seregil.
Alec waited until the man paused in his hammering, then stepped up and
touched his brow respectfully.
The smith eyed his rags suspiciously. "What do you want?"
"Begging your pardon, master, but I've got a message sent for Master Rythel,"
Alec replied with a beggar's unctuous civility.
"Tell it quick and be off with you. The guards don't like anyone hanging
about."
"That I can't, sir," Alec told him plaintively, twisting the hem of his tunic
in his hands. "Begging your pardon, but I was given good silver to deliver it to
nobody but Rythel his self. It'd be worth me livelihood if word got around I
passed on private messages to anyone as demands to know 'em."
The smith was less than sympathetic. "Bugger your livelihood. Rythel would
have my hammer if I let you go wandering around in there."
This exchange appeared to be a welcome diversion for the sentries. "Aw, he
looks harmless enough," one called over, taking Alec's side. "Let him wait out
here, why don't you? The message is for Rythel, after all."
"Aye, and one he'd be none too happy to miss, if you take my meaning."
Grinning, Alec made a lewd two-fingered sign.
"All right, then, but it's on your heads," the smith growled, finding opinion
against him. "Sit on the end of that cart, you, and don't stir."
Alec's champions lost interest in him as soon as they'd had their victory.
Perched on the back of the open cart, he swung his feet idly and hunted
imaginary lice among his rags.
The cart was loaded with iron grates. These were simple, sturdy affairs of
upright bars and crosspieces. Apparently they were made at the shop in the upper
city, then carried down for final fittings here. At the forge, the smith and his
helpers were putting the last touches on one, trimming the crosspieces to fit
caliper measurements and fashioning hot iron from the forge into the final bars.
When they'd finished with that, heavy metal flanges were fastened to the
outermost uprights, top and bottom. The lower flanges had heavy pins protruding
down from them; the upper did not.
Presently several workmen came out of the tunnel.
Their faces were covered with the vinegar cloths, but one was noticeably
taller than the rest, and bushy blond hair showed beneath the rim of his leather
cap.
"Ordo, we'll want those rivets when we go back in," he called to the smith at
the forge.
"Are they hot yet?"
"Whenever you're ready for 'em, Master Rythel. And this young fellow's been
waiting for you." The smith hooked a thumb in Alec's direction, adding
pointedly, "Sergeant Durnin said it was all right."
Rythel pulled off his face cloth and scrubbed a hand over the thick,
well-trimmed beard beneath it. "What do you want?"
Alec jumped down and bobbed an anxious bow.
"I've a message for you, master, from a woman."
The man's scowl lessened appreciatively.
Waving for Alec to follow him, he moved away from the others.
"What woman and what message?" he asked.
"A dark-haired bawd in the Street of Lights, master. She says she prays you
remember her fondly, and that you'll come back to her soon as ever you're able."
"Did she give her name?" Rythel asked, looking pleased.
"No," Alec told him with a worried frown, then, as if suddenly remembering,
added, "but she's in the House of the Swans."
"I know the one," Rythel said, recognizing the name of Eirual's
establishment. "Anything else?"
"That's the whole of it, just as she sent. And if may say, master, I was
lucky to find you—"
"Yes, yes!" Reaching into a wallet at his belt, Rythel dropped a few coins
into Alec's outstretched palm. "Tell your lady I'll see to her when I can. Now
off with you."
"Maker's Mercy to you," said Alec, hurrying away. As he passed the soldiers
he looked at the coins Rythel had paid. They were all coppers.
Showing them to the grinning soldiers, he spat sideways and muttered, "Stingy
son of a bitch. Let him carry his own messages."
Their laughter followed him up the gully.
At the boulder Seregil fell into step beside him and Alec told him all he'd
seen as they walked back along the track.
Seregil rubbed his hands together with satisfaction.
"Well, now we know what our noser looks like."
"We still don't know much about him, though."
"But if that woman at the shop is anyone to go by, I think we can find those
willing to gossip. You carried that off well, as usual. I think maybe we'll use
you for the jilt again tonight."
Alec grinned happily at the praise. "What will I be this time?"
"A doughty, fresh-faced country lad, looking for an apprenticeship and a few
friends."
Alec's grin widened. "That has a familiar ring to it."
Standing at the end of Ironmonger Row, the Hammer and Tongs was a traditional
gathering place for the smiths in that part of town. Most outsiders were
actively discouraged by that close-knit fraternity, who considered the alehouse
their personal sanctuary and unofficial guildhall, but no one objected to the
little wayfaring minstrel who came in out of the storm that evening. Such
musicians, hardly more than beggars, were common enough in the city, playing for
pennies in taverns and market squares. His cloak, stitched all over with scraps
of colored cloths and cheap beads, and the flutes protruding from various
pockets granted him entrance and a place near the fire.
Selecting a long wooden flute, Seregil piped out a simple tune and then sang
the verse in a voice that would have made Rolan Silverleaf cringe.
Fortunately, his present audience was less discriminating and a small crowd
had soon gathered at his end of the room. Rythel was not among the company, but
he soon found Alec, looking the perfect bumpkin with his homespun tunic and
scrubbed, beardless face. The boy gave a slight nod, signaling that all was
well.
From his seat by the fireside, Seregil could see that Alec had been adopted
by a group of drinkers, and that the woman they'd spoken with at Quarin's shop
was among them. Judging by how they included him in their jests, he had
obviously made a favorable impression.
Seregil piped on, keeping an ear open for useful tidbits of conversation
around him until Alec left. He played a few short ditties, collected his
coppers, and followed.
Alec was waiting for him at the public stable where they'd left horses.
Stripping off their disguises in the shadow of an alley, they put on plain
clothes and rode to a dram house near the north wall of the Ring.
"I didn't have much luck, unless you want to know the current price of pig
iron," Seregil said as they sat down at a corner table. "How did you make out?"
"You were right about noses being out of joint among Quarin's people," Alec
told him. "Maruli and some of the other smiths gave me a real earful. Not only
is Rythel Quarin's nephew, but he hasn't been with him that long. He had a shop
of his own down in Kedra, but it burned four months ago. That's when he showed
up here."
"Is Quarin fond of his nephew?"
"Not anymore. Old Alman Blackhand told me things were friendly at first, but
that there've been hard words. Quarin's hardly spoken to him since he handed him
the sewer job. And some think it's strange that Rythel lodges apart from his
uncle."
"Interesting. were any of those you spoke with part of Rythel's crew?"
"A few, and they don't much like him either. He has a sharp tongue and treats
them like first-month apprentices, always looking over their shoulder. Early on
in the job he found fault with the way the grates were being secured. Now he
does most of the final fitting himself."
Seregil raised an appraising eyebrow. "I'll just bet he does."
"They've been at it for a little over three weeks. All the old grates had to
be pulled out and the masonry knees repaired. That's why the guards are there.
They're putting in the new grates now. Alman is in charge of measuring the part
of the sewer tunnel where the grate will be, so that the flange pins and holes
will set in properly, but Rythel does the final seating and pinning. And the
grates are fixed, not gated. That's about it, except that I've been told to see
Quarin about an apprenticeship."
"Hopefully it won't come to that."
Alec leaned closer, lowering his voice. "Do you think Rythel could be
tampering with the grates?"
"Judging by his behavior, we can't afford to overlook the possibility. The
question is how, and whether any of the other workmen are in on it. And who's
backing this whole thing, of course."
"It's got to be the Plenimarans."
"I mean specifically who, and whether or not Rythel knows who's running the
show. We've got to move very carefully, Alec. We don't want another cock-up like
the raid at Kassarie's. We got the big snake there, but all the little ones
slithered safely away. We'd better go talk to Nysander. This looks to be Watcher
business."
He must still be keeping company with Ylinestra, Alec thought wryly as Thero
let them into Nysander's tower. Several long scratches were visible on the young
wizard's neck just above the collar of his robe. She'd left similar marks on
Alec during their single encounter.
He's welcome to her, Alec decided.
Having let them in, Thero returned to a worktable spread with open books.
"Nysander's downstairs," he told them.
"You'd better come down with us," said Seregil as he started down the stairs.
Thero shot Alec a look of surprise.
"Watcher business, maybe."
Alec was pleased to see the hint of an expectant smile cross Thero's face as
he hurried to join him. He was a cold fish, and no mistake, but in the months
since he'd helped secure Seregil's release from prison, albeit grudgingly, Alec
had come to feel a certain sympathy for the stiff young wizard, and respect. He
was talented, and his arrogance seemed a shield for his own inner loneliness.
As for the rivalry between him and Seregil, Alec had quickly learned that
this was as much Seregil's fault as Thero's.
They found Nysander in his favorite sitting-room armchair, the floor around
him covered in charts of some sort.
"Well, there you two are," he exclaimed, looking up with a pleased smile.
"How long has it been? Two weeks?"
"Closer to four," Seregil said. "Business has been slow lately, but we may
have run across something interesting."
With Alec's help, he quickly sketched out what they'd learned over the past
two days. Thero sat a little apart, arms crossed, nodding silently to himself as
he listened.
"Dear me, that does sound suspicious," Nysander said when he'd heard their
report. "I seem to recall "hearing that one of Lord Zymanis' valets disappeared
not too long ago. I had not heard of any stolen documents, though. Most curious.
I assume you mean to make a closer investigation?"
Seregil nodded. "Tonight, but we'll have to be careful. So far Rythel is the
only fish in our net. I don't want to get the wind up him before we find out
who's behind all this."
"Have you looked into his lodgings?" asked Thero.
"Not yet. Tenements are terrible for housebreaking—every room occupied and
half the time no corridors, just a series of rooms letting one onto another. I
thought we'd have a look at the sewer tunnel first, then proceed from there."
"Yes, that seems to be the logical course," said Nysander.
"How do you propose to get in with the tunnel so carefully guarded?"
"The lower end is, where they're still working," said Alec. "But it shouldn't
be at the upper end, where they started. There's no need, since the grates are
fixed and they started at the top and worked down toward the lower city end.
Seregil figures there must be at least five or six between the city wall and the
sea."
"Anyone planning to bugger about with any of the grates later on would have
to do them all," Seregil added.
"I know of an access passage near the south wall that should lead down to the
head of the channel. If we can get to it from this end, we should be able to
find out what they've been up to."
"When will you go?" asked Nysander.
"Tonight seems as good a time as any," replied Seregil, standing to go. "I'll
let you know if we need any help."
"Luck in the shadows," said Thero as he passed.
Seregil raised an eyebrow in mild surprise, then touched a finger lightly to
one of the scratches on Thero's neck. "And to you."
Tamir the Great's builders had laid down the sewers of Rhiminee before a
single building was constructed, thereby sparing the new capital the unpleasant
and often unhealthy filth common to most large cities. So extensive was it, and
so often modified and enlarged to accommodate the growth of the city over five
centuries, that now only the Scavenger Guild knew the full extent of it. Even
among the Scavengers, most knew only the section that they maintained, and they
guarded their knowledge jealously.
Alec and Seregil waited until the second watch of the night before making
their way to the southern ward of the city. Though armed, they went cautiously,
fading silently into alleys or doorways whenever a Watch patrol happened by.
The entrance they'd targeted was located in a small square behind a block of
tenements by the south wall of the city. Half-covered by an unkempt clump of
mulberry bushes, the low, iron-strapped door was set into the wall itself. The
small grate near the top of it reminded Alec uncomfortably of a prison door, but
he kept this to himself as they set down the torches and pry bars they'd brought
with them.
He stood behind Seregil and held his cloak out with both hands to hide the
light of his companion's light-wand. Kneeling in front of the door, Seregil
probed the keyhole with a hooked pick, soon producing a succession of grating
clicks.
The door swung in on blackness. Gathering their gear again, they slipped
inside.
Alec tacked a square of heavy felt over the grate, then looked around the
little entrance chamber. In front of them, stone steps led downward through an
arched passage and out of sight. The faint stench already permeating the air
left no doubt they were in the right place.
"Here, we'd better put these on now." Seregil pulled vinegar-soaked face rags
from a leather pouch and handed one to Alec. Leaving their cumbersome cloaks,
they lit their torches with a firechip and started down, Seregil in the lead.
"Why did they build it so big?" Alec whispered; the arched passage was nearly
ten feet high.
"For safety. The poisonous humours that can collect down here rise. The
theory is that this design lets them collect overhead, with good air below. Keep
an eye on the torches, though; if they burn blue or gutter, the air's bad."
The stairway led down to a tunnel below. Narrow walkways bordered a central
channel, full to the brim now with a swift, evil-smelling stream.
Turning to the right, they followed the tunnel for several hundred feet. The
recent rains had swelled the flow, and it had overflowed whole sections of the
raised walkway, forcing them to wade ankle deep in the foul, frigid waters.
Suddenly they heard high-pitched growling and squeaking coming from the
darkness ahead. Seregil edged forward, torch held high, until they came to an
iron grate fixed across the width of the tunnel.
The lower ends of the vertical bars extended down into the channel and the
body of a small dog was caught against them, held there by the pressure of the
stream as it flowed through. Dozens of fat, snarling rats swarmed over the
carcass, tearing at it and each other. Others paddled down the channel toward
the feast or perched on the crosspieces of the grate. They paid little attention
to the human interlopers as they fed, beady eyes glaring red in the torchlight.
"This one is gated," whispered Seregil, driving off the closest rats with the
burning torch. "It's locked up, but it's nothing we can't manage. Want to do the
honors?"
"Go ahead," Alec rasped, not wanting to have to squeeze past his companion in
such a narrow place.
Jiggering the lock, Seregil swung back a narrow section of grate on
protesting hinges and stepped through, Alec close on his heels.
There were more rats beyond, rats everywhere. The chuckle of the flowing
water and the sounds of the rats echoed in the silence as they paused at a sort
of crossroads where another channel flowed into the one they were following.
Leaping the four feet to the other side, they continued on to a second hinged
grate. Beyond this the way began to slope downhill noticeably.
No other tunnels intersected theirs and finally they came to a fixed grate.
The ironwork was new and of the same design Alec had seen at the work site.
The broad flanges set at the four corners of the grate rested against stone
knees jutting from the walls of the tunnel and were held in place by thick iron
pins set in holes drilled into the stone.
"Here we are," Seregil whispered, setting down his bundle. "Light your torch
from mine and go check that side."
"What are we looking for, exactly?"
"I don't know, so be thorough. It could be some fault in the iron or the
stone."
Alec jumped across the channel and began his examination of the ironwork,
looking first for something as obvious as bars sawn through. They seemed sound
enough, however. The sockets for the pins had been sealed with rivets hammered
in hot and the lower flanges, which bore the weight of the grate, rested solidly
against the stone knees.
"Let's try moving it," said Seregil.
Grasping two crosspieces, they braced their shoulders against the bars and
lifted. The grate lifted an inch or two.
"Push!" Seregil grunted, shaking his side of it.
But the grate was solidly held in place by the pins. Giving up, they let it
fall back into place with a dull clank.
"I thought maybe he'd sawn off the lower pins,"
Seregil panted, flexing his arms. "I guess not."
"It did move, though." Alec squinted up at the flanges overhead. It was
impossible to see anything from this angle, so he climbed the crossbars for a
closer inspection, torch in hand.
Across the channel, Seregil was about to do the same, but his torch was
burning low. Pulling a fresh one from his belt, he paused to light it from the
old one. "See anything?"
"There's nearly three inches of pin exposed up here," Alec replied, clinging
one-handed to the top of the bars.
"I'm no expert, but that seems like a lot. How does it look?"
"Like a metal pin." Alec held his torch closer. "No marks or cuts. Hold on.
Hey, it's melting like wax and there's—"
"Be careful!"
Searing white sparks erupted inches from Alec's face with an angry spitting
sound. With a startled cry, he dropped his torch and threw an arm across his
face.
"Alec! Alec, get down," Seregil yelled.
Alec crouched awkwardly, one leg jammed between the bars. Overhead, sparks
still rained down from the sizzling corona of light.
Dark spots danced in front of Seregil's eyes as he launched himself across
the channel. Grabbing Alec, he dragged him to the floor and tried to roll him
onto his belly to smother the smoldering patches on his tunic.
"My eyes!" Alec gasped, struggling away in pain and confusion.
"Hold still," Seregil began, but Alec's foot found sudden purchase against
the wall and, with a final lurch, he toppled Seregil backward into the icy
channel.
Fortunately, Seregil had the presence of mind to clamp his mouth shut as he
went under. For a horrifying second he tumbled helplessly against the side of
the channel, unable to find the bottom with his feet. Fetching up against the
grate, he righted himself and used the crossbars to pull himself back onto the
walkway.
Sputtering and retching, he grasped Alec by the back of the tunic and hauled
him out of range of the sparks, then held him forcibly still while the white
light faded slowly to a small orange glow. One torch still burned, and by it he
could see the thin pall of smoke curling lazily near the roof.
Alec groaned again, hands pressed over his face.
Fearing the worst, Seregil dug the lightwand from his sodden tool roll and
pulled the boy's hands away to inspect the damage.
Alec's hair and the vinegar mask had protected most of his face from the
sparks, but half a dozen tiny blisters were already bub-bling up on the backs of
his hands. Tears streamed down his cheeks as he turned his head from the light.
"Can you see anything?" Seregil asked anxiously.
"I'm beginning to." Alec pressed one sleeve across his eyes, then blinked.
"Why are you wet?" A look of shocked realization slowly spread across his face.
"Oh, no. Oh, Seregil, I'm sorry!"
Seregil managed a tight grin, trying hard not to think about the water
dripping down his face toward his mouth.
"What was that light?" Alec asked.
"I don't know." Going back to the grate, he climbed up to inspect the damage.
"The pin is burned completely away, stonework cracked from the heat, top of the
flange warped. And whatever it was, it must work on the other side, too, or you
still couldn't move the grate."
Jumping the channel, he gripped the handle of the lightwand between his teeth
and climbed up to inspect the upper corner.
"Tell me again what you saw."
Still blinking, Alec came across and picked up the torch. "I held the flame
close to the pin, trying to see if it had been cut. It must have been the heat,
because the surface of the pin began to melt and run like wax. I think I saw
something white underneath, just before it flared up the way it did."
Craning his neck cautiously, Seregil found several inches of exposed pin
between the flange and the stonework above. Using the tip of his dagger, he
scraped gently at the surface of the pin. Curls of some black, waxy substance
shaved off easily, revealing a white layer below.
"You were right. A band of silvery white metal has been set into the pin."
The white substance cut easily as lead.
Extracting a tiny sliver, he handed it down to Alec on the tip of his blade.
"Put it on the floor and light it."
Alec set the sliver gingerly on the floor and, standing well back, held the
torch to it. It burst at once into a brief, sputtering blaze of light that left
black burns on the stone.
Alec let out a low whistle. "Bilairy's Balls, I think we found what we're
looking for."
"There must be enough iron in the center of the pin to strengthen it, but
this stuff burns right through it."
"Is it magic?"
Seregil cut away another small sample of the white substance.
"Maybe. I've never seen anything like it, but Nysander might know."
Seregil placed the shavings carefully in the little ceramic jar he'd carried
the firechip in, then handed it down to Alec.
"I sure made a mess of that corner," Alec said, casting a worried look at the
blackened stonework.
"True." Seregil climbed down to join him.
"Our saboteurs are bound to come checking sooner or later and even if they
don't, there are the
Scavengers to consider. We'd better get Nysander down here, or Thero."
Alec's sight slowly returned to normal as they cleaned up the site as best
they could and started back.
"What about the locks?" he asked, reaching the first of the gated barriers.
"Best leave 'em as we found 'em," Seregil replied. "I'll scout ahead to the
next one. You catch up."
The lock was rusty; swearing softly under his breath, Alec ground a pick
against the wards until something dropped into place.
Seregil was out of sight beyond a bend in the tunnel by then. Anxious to
leave the rats and echoing dampness behind, Alec hurried after him.
He'd just caught sight of him ahead near the intersection of channels when
Seregil suddenly collapsed sideways into the water with a startled grunt. The
torch he'd been carrying hung precariously over the edge and by its light Alec
saw two ragged, hooded figures jump out from the side tunnel, cudgels raised as
they reached for Seregil's floating form.
Without stopping to think, Alec let out a yell, drew his sword, and charged.
The gaterunners were caught by surprise, but the one closest to Alec got a
long club up in time to block the first downward slash. Alec jumped back a pace
and braced, ready to fight.
The narrowness of the walkway kept the fight to a one against one affair, but
it also severely restricted the range of Alec's swings. His opponents were more
accustomed to such conditions. The second quickly jumped across the channel to
outflank him from behind. Alec did the same, keeping his face toward them. He
couldn't see Seregil anywhere.
The current must have swept him back the way we came, he thought, and for a
sickening instant he pictured the dog's carcass and its attendant rats trapped
against the lower bars of a grate. The gaterunners didn't allow him time to
dwell on the image, however. The one on his side of the channel was advancing,
cudgel at the ready. From the corner of his eye, Alec saw the other reaching
into his tattered tunic for something, presumably a knife or dart.
Suddenly, however, the runner slumped against the wall with a high- pitched
wail, clutching at a throwing knife protruding from his shoulder.
"Hammil!" the one facing Alec cried out, and he realized it was a woman.
"Let's not anyone be stupid," said a familiar voice from the shadows
downstream.
Alec and the woman both turned in time to see Seregil step into sight on the
far side. He was wetter than ever but held a second dagger at the ready as he
walked slowly toward the wounded runner.
The boy scuttled weakly back, still clutching his arm.
"We don't mean any harm here," Seregil said calmly, motioning for Alec to
back slowly away.
The woman pushed her hood back, showing a harsh, deeply lined face. "Get away
from my boy," she growled, shaking her club threateningly in Alec's direction.
"You started this. What do you want?" asked Seregil, stopping a few paces
from the boy, dagger in hand.
"Nothin'," the woman replied. "You's just strangers is all, and strangers is
getting to be a hazard down here. We've lost friends to strangers down here
lately."
Seregil sheathed his knife. Bending over the fallen boy, he examined the
wound, then pulled the small throwing blade out. "It's not too bad a cut," he
told the woman over his shoulder. "You're lucky my aim was off."
"I'm alright, Ma," the young gaterunner gasped, cringing away from Seregil.
By the dying light of the torch, Alec saw that he was younger than himself. He
could also make out a thin ribbon of blood running down Seregil's right cheek.
"You all right?" Seregil called over.
"Yes. Are you?"
Seregil nodded, then stepped over the wounded boy and addressed his mother
again. "I'll leave yours if you'll leave mine," he told her, holding his hands
out palm up.
Without a word, she sprang across, grabbed the boy up, and hurried him away
into the shadows.
Alec crossed over and reached to inspect the cut on Seregil's scalp. "That's
quite a lump she raised."
"Serves me right," he muttered through chattering teeth. "Illior's Fingers!
Jumped by a pair of gaterunners. If the cold water hadn't brought me around I'd
have drowned."
"I'm glad you didn't kill him. He couldn't have been more than twelve."
Seregil braced one arm against the wall and let out a long sigh. "Me, too.
It's strange for them to have attacked in the first place. Runners are usually a
pretty elusive lot. They steal and spy, but they generally avoid a fight."
Frowning, Alec pulled off his face rag and pressed it to the cut on Seregil's
head. "Are you sure you're all right? You're looking kind of shaky."
Seregil closed his eyes for a moment, resting one hand on Alec's shoulder.
Then, taking the cloth from him, he held it himself and continued on down the
tunnel. "Come on, let's get out of here. I've had all the swimming I care for
tonight."
They reached the upper entrance behind the mulberry bushes without incident,
but the combined effects of cold and the blow were beginning to take their toll
on Seregil.
"You go for Nysander," he said, shivering even with his dry cloak pulled
tightly around him. "I'd better stay and make sure no one tumbles to our little
adventure in the meantime."
To his surprise, Alec balked.
"No, you go," he stated flatly. "Your head is still bleeding and I can hear
your teeth chattering from here."
"I'll survive," Seregil retorted. "I don't want you here alone. What if
someone does show up?"
"All the more reason for you to hurry," Alec said stubbornly. "I'll stay out
of sight—they'll never know I'm here. You're the one needs looking after. Go
on!"
Seregil could tell by the set of Alec's jaw that his mind was made up.
Cutting a small strip from the hem of his cloak, he handed it to Alec. "Hang on
to this. Nysander can use it to find you. And keep out of sight no matter what,
understand? No heroics."
"No heroics."
Seregil let out a defeated sigh. "If I'm not back soon, you get back to the
Oreska, understand?"
"All right, yes! Will you just go? I don't want to be here all night."
Pulling up his hood, Alec melted back into the shadows.
The pounding in Seregil's head worsened as he dashed through the darkened
streets toward the Oreska, but he managed to ignore the pain by worrying about
Alec instead. Despite his faith in the boy's quick wits, he couldn't seem to
shake off visions of Alec being caught unawares by the Watch or stealthy spies
returning to check their handiwork.
Arriving at the Oreska filthy, wet, and bloody, he argued his way past the
watchman and hurried up the twisting stairs to Nysander's tower.
Thero opened the door and recoiled, covering his nose with one full sleeve.
"By the Four!" he gagged, blocking the doorway. "You smell like you just crawled
out of the sewers."
"Very observant of you. Get out of my way."
"You're not coming in here like that. Go down to the baths first."
"I don't have time for this, Thero. Now move or I'll move you."
The two glared at each other, years of mutual dislike laid open between them
without the gloss of banter or social nicety. Either could have done the other
considerable harm if it came to open confrontation, and they both knew it.
"Alec's alone out there, and we need Nysander's help," hissed Seregil.
With a last disgusted look, Thero stepped aside and let him through to the
workroom. "He's not here."
"Where is he?"
"Out for his nightly walk, I imagine," Thero replied stiffly. "Or perhaps
you've forgotten about those?"
"Then summon him!" Seregil paused, took a deep breath, and said through
clenched teeth, "If you please."
Thero conjured a message sphere with a casual wave of his hand. Balancing the
tiny light over his palm, he said to it, "Nysander, Seregil needs you right
away. He's in the workroom." The light shot away through the floor. He waved
Seregil to a wooden bench near one of the tables, but remained standing himself.
The young wizard was immaculate as ever, Seregil noted sourly, his robe
spotless beneath his leather apron, his curly black hair and beard neatly
trimmed, blunt-fingered hands unsullied. The thought that he'd inhabited that
angular frame himself, if briefly, still made him cringe inwardly. That Thero
had had the use of his body didn't bear thinking about.
"You're bleeding," Thero said at last, stepping reluctantly toward him. "I'd
better have a look."
Seregil drew back from his touch. "It's just a scratch."
"You have a lump the size of an egg over your ear and fresh blood on your
cheek," Thero snapped.
"What do you think Nysander would say if I let you sit there like that?"
Wethis, the young servant, brought clean water and dressings and Thero set
about cleaning the wound.
Nysander returned just as he was finishing. "What an unprecedented tableau,"
the wizard exclaimed, hurrying in between the stacks of manuscripts. He was
dressed in a threadbare surcoat and trousers. Seregil noted with a twinge of
pride how kind and unwizardly his old friend looked in comparison to his stiff
assistant.
"By the Light, Seregil, what an appalling stench! When you have finished
there, Thero, please go and find him a clean robe."
Folding the bloodied towel next to the basin, Thero disappeared down the back
stairway to their quarters.
Nysander smiled, examining his assistant's handiwork.
"He does surprise me sometimes. But where is Alec?"
"Take this." Seregil pulled out another scrap of cloth he'd cut from his
cloak and pressed it into Nysander's hand. "We found what we were looking for,
sabotage in the tunnels, but made one hell of a mess doing it. I need you to fix
it up for us. Alec's waiting by the entrance, so we'd better hurry."
Nysander shook his head. "Yes, of course, but I see no reason to drag you out
again. You are still chilled to the bone, and a translocation would not be the
best thing for you after such a knock on the head."
Seregil rose to protest and was very surprised to feel the floor lurch
beneath his feet in a decidedly unpleasant manner.
"There now, you see?" Nysander chided, pressing him back down on the bench.
"You go downstairs and sit by the fire. Alec can show me whatever it is I need
to see."
"I can't just sit here," Seregil insisted again, though his head was still
spinning. "We ran into one pair of gaterunners down there already tonight. There
could be others, or worse."
Nysander raised a shaggy eyebrow at him. "Are you suggesting that Alec would
not be safe in my company?"
Seregil sank his head in his hands as Thero reappeared with clean garments
over his arm.
"I leave Seregil in your able care," Nysander told him. "I suggest a cup of
hot wine and, by all or any means necessary, a bath." Clasping the scrap of
woolen cloth Seregil had given him, he traced a series of designs on the air and
disappeared into the wide black aperture that opened briefly beside him.
When Nysander opened his eyes again, he was in a small deserted square.
"There you are," whispered Alec, crawling out from behind a clump of leafless
bushes. "Is Seregil all right?"
"Yes, just a bit dizzy. He says you have something to show me."
"Something we need fixed," the boy replied with a familiar grin. "Follow me."
This was the first time he'd actually seen Alec at work, and he was impressed
with his quickness and efficiency.
"My, but Seregil has been busy with you!" Nysander remarked as Alec let him
through the second gate.
"Ruint me for honest work, he 'as," Alec replied, making a passable stab at a
dockman's accent. "It's not far now."
Reaching the damaged grate, Nysander climbed up to inspect the damaged stone
and ironwork, then moved across to see the intact corner.
"I see," he murmured to himself, peering closely at the remaining pin. "Most
ingenious. And ingenious of you to have discovered it. Yes, I am quite
satisfied.
Well done."
"Can you fix it?"
"Can I fix it?" Nysander snorted, climbing down again. Grasping the bars with
both hands, he closed his eyes and listened to the voice of the cold iron.
Letting his own energy pass into it through his hands, he visualized the
metal, felt it stir under his hands.
Standing beside him, Alec felt a powerful ripple pass through the rank air.
There were no flashes of light or magical signs, just the brief scrape and whine
of metal. For a moment it seemed to Alec that the metal came alive, like a
plant, growing and moving as it healed.
Looking up, he saw that the damaged corner now looked as it had before.
"Illior's Light!" he gasped, hardly able to believe his eyes.
Nysander laughed. "I hope you did not expect me to come down here with a
hammer and anvil." Opening his hand, he showed Alec a long iron pin. It was
scored along its length where it had been driven through the flange and
blackened from forging, except where the white metallic substance showed through
near one end.
Without a word Alec scaled the left side of the grate to find a solid pin in
its place.
"That's amazing," he exclaimed, tapping the iron with his knife blade.
Nysander shrugged. "It is only magic."
Seregil grudgingly accepted the willow bark infusion Thero prepared, then
went down to the baths. As soon as he was clean and dressed, however, he
returned to the workroom and refused to be moved, despite Thero's obvious desire
that he wait elsewhere.
Anxious and impatient, Seregil prowled the crowded room, fiddling with bits
of delicate apparatus.
"Give me that!" Thero snapped, snatching away a cluster of fluid-filled glass
spheres. "Drop that and we'll be up to our eyes in swamp sprites. If you won't
go downstairs then for Illior's sake, sit down."
"I know what it is." Scowling, Seregil climbed the stairway to the catwalk
overhead and stared out through the thick glass panes of the dome, watching the
movement of lights below.
By the time Nysander and Alec materialized neatly in the center of the room,
it would have been difficult to say which of the two looked more relieved.
"There you are!" Seregil exclaimed, bounding down.
"Any trouble?"
"No, everything looks as good as new," Alec told him, grinning.
"Shall I fetch fresh clothing?" Thero inquired, wrinkling his nose again.
"Yes, in a moment," said Nysander. "First, however, I must congratulate our
two able spies on a most valuable find." He shook the iron pin from his sleeve.
"I will keep this for now. Seregil, Alec tells me you took a sample of this
curious white material?"
Seregil held up the small container. "Right here. Want to see it work?"
"Yes, but not here, I think. Too many flammable items." Taking a crucible
from a nearby shelf, he ushered them into the casting room.
Placing a few of the white shavings in the crucible, Nysander set it on the
floor and touched a candle flame to its contents. A small fountain of white
sparks flew up and scattered across the floor.
"Incredible!" murmured Thero, nudging the remaining shavings about with a
small glass wand.
Seregil watched him surreptitiously, recognizing the sudden light of
enthusiasm in those pale eyes. At such moments he could almost see what
maintained Nysander's hopes for the young man—the keen and wondering mind that
underlay Thero's cold facade.
"Have you ever seen anything like this before?" Thero asked, turning to
Nysander.
The older wizard lit another fragment, then sniffed at the smoke left behind.
"It's a sort of incendiary metal, I believe. It's called Sakor's Bite or Sakor's
Fire for obvious reasons. Very, very rare but"—Nysander paused to raise one
bushy eyebrow at Seregil—"found in greater quantities in certain regions of
Plenimar."
Seregil exchanged knowing grins with Alec.
"Looks like we've got ourselves a decent bit of work at last."
Over the next few days Alec and Seregil shadowed their man closely, but
learned little more than that Rythel was annoyingly regular in his habits. He
rose early, gathered his crew, and worked the day through without leaving the
site. At night he took supper at his lodgings and turned in early.
Lounging across the street from the Sail-maker Street tenement the fourth
evening, they saw a broad, ruddy young man step out into the street.
"That's the landlady's grandson," Seregil whispered to Alec. "He's been down
to that tavern on the corner every night so far."
True to form, the fellow set off for the corner tavern, stopping to chat with
neighbors along the way.
Seregil stood up and stretched, still following the young man with his eyes.
"He looks like a talker to me. I think I'll nip in for a pint and try to strike
up a conversation."
It was a clear, windless night, but cold. Moving restlessly from one cold
doorway to another, Alec watched the house, and the half moon sailing slowly
over it. It had gained the chimney by the time Seregil reappeared, chuckling to
himself and smelling warmly of beer.
"You look pleased with yourself," Alec muttered, shifting his frigid feet.
"I am." Seregil threw his cloak back and presented him with a wooden cup of
the Dog and Bell's best lager. "Let's go home. Rythel's unlikely to stir out for
another couple of nights yet."
Alec took a grateful swallow of the watery beer as they headed back to the
court where they'd left their horses. "Then you did get something out of the
grandson?"
"Our smith appears to be equally disliked by almost everyone who knows him,
with the exception of his landlady, who judges her tenants solely by how
punctual they are with their rent. Her grandson, young Parin, has had a few
run-ins with him around the house. Apparently harsh words were exchanged when
Parin entered the smith's rooms unexpectedly one day. "Mind you" "grinning,
Seregil mimicked Parin's somewhat slurred complaints—""he was only messin" about
with some drawerings. Not like he was tupping nobody or nothin'. Just
drawerings, for the love a' hell! He's a queer one, and a miser, for all his
high and mighty ways."
"A shrewd judge of character, our Parin," Seregil said with a chuckle. "He
wasn't much help about the nature of the 'drawerings," but he did tell me that
Rythel always keeps to his rooms on work nights, but come end of the week he
goes on a regular spree."
Alec's hunter instincts stirred. "Tomorrow night."
"That's right. According to Parin, he appears downstairs in gentlemen's
clothes, sends Parin next door to hire a horse, tips like the miser he is, and
rides off not to be seen again until dawn or the next night."
"That explains how he came to be in the Street of Lights."
"And I'm willing to bet he makes a few other stops along the way. I think
it's time Lord Seregil put in an appearance."
Alec shot him a sharp look. "Just him? What about me?"
Seregil threw an arm around his shoulders and playfully ruffled his hair.
"Well now, if Master Rythel is out gambling and whoring all night, what better
time for a bit of housebreaking?"
The following evening Rythel rode out from Sailmaker Street just as expected.
The streets were busy, making it an easy matter for Seregil to follow him up to
the main city. A heavy cloak masked the fine surcoat and breeches he'd put on
for the evening's role.
The smith rode easily, apparently enjoying the evening air, and ended up at
the Heron, a stylish gambling house on the eastern fringe of the Merchant's
Quarter.
That's a lucky turn.
Seregil grinned to himself, watching from a distance as Rythel disappeared
inside. Lord Seregil was well known at the Heron from the days when he'd made
his living in such dens. And gaming-house friendships were easy enough to
manage.
Leaving Cynril with a groom, he strode inside.
The elderly doorkeeper took his cloak with a bow.
"Good evening, my lord," the old man said. "It's been some time since we last
saw you. Will anyone be joining you?"
"No. A canceled engagement has left me at loose ends." Pausing, he slipped a
discreet coin to the man, murmuring, "Any new blood tonight, Starky?"
Stark palmed the bribe and leaned closer. "A few, my lord, a few. Young Lady
Lachia has become quite addicted to bakshi since her marriage, but her husband's
with her tonight and he may know you rather too well from times past. There's a
country knight, Sir Nynius, with plenty of gold and a passion for eran stones
who plays badly as a rule. And there's a third, a newcomer. Not noble, but well
turned out. Calls himself Rythel of Porunta."
"How will I know him?"
"He's tall and fair, with quite an impressive beard. I expect you'll find him
in the card room. A bold player, as I hear it, though not always clever. He's
become a regular over the past month or so and takes both wins and losses
philosophically."
Seregil slipped him a second coin and a wink.
"Hlior's luck to you, my lord."
The Heron was a modestly opulent establishment divided into a number of large
rooms. Those near the front featured various sorts of games open to all corners;
smaller rooms at the back were reserved for private affairs.
Seregil found Rythel in one of the latter, settled down to a round of Rook's
Gambit with several rich merchants and a few officers of the Queen's Archers.
A number of them knew Seregil and invited him to join in. He took the empty
chair nearest Rythel and set his purse on the table.
"Good evening, Lord Seregil," Vinia the wool merchant greeted him, gathering
up the brightly painted cards for a new deal. "The hazard is three gold sesters,
the limit eight. As the new player, you begin the bid."
Keeping one eye on Rythel's style, Seregil played conservatively for the
first few rounds, managing to collect a modest pile of winnings. He chatted with
the others as they played, spicing the light banter with investment advice and
allusions to recent successful ventures, including an interest in the privateer
fleet being overseen by Nyreidian.
Rythel listened with polite interest, saying little until the deal came
around to him again.
"I suggest a change of game," he said, gathering the pack. "Sword and Coin?
There are enough of us to partner two games."
The other players were agreeable and when the chairs and tables had been
shifted, Seregil was not surprised to find himself sitting across from Rythel.
With a silent nod to Illior, he settled down to make his partner a richer man.
The less circumspect players were soon winnowed out as Seregil, no stranger
to creative card shuffling, gently tipped the scales in his and Rythel's favor.
Rythel, too, showed signs of certain talents; in an hour's time the two of them
had exhausted the resources of the other players.
Seregil gave him a slight bow as they rose to divide their winnings and
extended his hand.
"Well played. I'm Lord Seregil, as you may have gathered. And you?"
"Rythel of Porunta, my lord." His hand was hard in Seregil's, but not as
stained and roughened as he'd expected. The man had obviously taken pains to
hide his current occupation.
"Porunta? That's down near Stoneport, isn't it? What brings you so far north
this time of year?"
"I'm in commerce there, my lord, in a modest way."
Rythel paused, giving Seregil a disarmingly open smile. "I must confess, some
of the ventures you've mentioned tonight interest me."
"A man of vision, eh?" Seregil said with a knowing wink. "I'm a great admirer
of ambition, and our brief partnership tonight didn't do my purse any harm.
Perhaps you'd like to discuss things further over a bit of supper?"
"I'd be honored, my lord," Rythel replied, just a hint too eager.
"Anyplace in particular?" Rythel shrugged. "No, my lord. I've no plans for
the night."
Damn, thought Seregil.
Looks like we'll spend the evening plying each other with drink and fishing
for secrets.
A harsh, clear dawn was breaking when Seregil returned to the Cockerel. Alec
was asleep on the couch, legs stretched out toward the ruins of a fire.
He awoke with a start when Seregil flopped wearily down beside him.
"Well, how did it go?"
Seregil shrugged, running both hands back through his hair. "He's not the
greatest spy in the world, but he knows how to keep his mouth shut. We spent
most of the night drinking at the Rose, then he decided he wanted a woman. I
hoped maybe he needed to meet someone at a brothel, but instead he was ready to
take up with the first pair of clapmongers we passed in the street. I finally
managed to steer him into the Black Feather."
"The Feather? That's quite a comedown from Eirual's."
"The same thought occurred to me. Either he was putting on an act for my
benefit, or his fortunes fluctuate considerably from week to week. It's
something to keep an eye on. At any rate, we parted company there a few hours
ago and I followed him down to Sailmaker Street. He didn't go out again."
"Sounds like a wasted evening."
"As far as this sewer business goes it was. Still, you can't spend a whole
evening drinking and whoring with a person and not learn something. He's passing
himself off as some well-heeled merchant and, to tell you the truth, he carries
it off so well that I wonder if some of it isn't true. I'd say he's Skalan born,
and has done a bit of this kind of work before-a small-time noser. The
Plenimarans know how to find that type and use them."
Alec gave him a wry grin. "So do you."
"It's too soon to tell with this one, though."
Seregil stretched wearily. His night at the Feather had left him feeling
gritty and in need of a bath. "Although Lord Seregil clearly made quite an
impression on him. I let a few details slip about privateers and suddenly he was
my boon companion. I passed on a few rumors; it'll be interesting to see where
they pop up later. How'd you do?"
Alec pulled a flattened roll of parchment from inside his tunic and waggled
it triumphantly.
Carrying it to the table, he pinned the corners down with books. As he
reached to secure an upper corner , Seregil saw a ragged tear in his left sleeve
that appeared to be stained with blood.
"What happened to you?"
Alec shrugged, avoiding his eye. "It's nothing."
"Nothing?" Grasping his friend's hand, he pushed the torn sleeve back. A
rough bandage was tied around the boy's forearm and stained through with a
circle of dried blood the size of a two- sester piece. "Nothing doesn't usually
bleed like that."
"It's just a scratch," Alec insisted.
Ignoring Alec's objections, Seregil drew his dagger and cut away the
dressing. A shallow, jagged cut began at a puncture just below his elbow and
ended dangerously close to the delicate tendons just above Alec's wrist.
"Illior's Fingers, you could get blood poisoning with a cut like that!" he
gasped, fetching brandy to clean the wound. "What happened?"
"I just slipped going over the roof to his window,"
Alec admitted with a grudging sigh. "I figured that would be the safest route
in, but it was a little steeper than I thought, and the slates were really
slick—"
"Ever heard of rope?"
"By the time I realized I needed one, I was already up there. Anyway, my
sleeve caught-a nail sticking out of the gutter—"
"The gutter?" Seregil sputtered, feeling his stomach give a little lurch.
"You went over the edge? It's a forty-foot drop to stone paving! What in the
name of Bilairy's—"
"Actually, there's a shed right under his window," Alec corrected. "It
would've broken the fall—"
"Oh, so you had it all carefully planned, then?" Seregil said with heavy
sarcasm.
Alec shrugged again. "Learn and live, right?"
Illior's Light, that must be the same look I give Micum or Nysander when
they're berating me for surviving some stupid escapade!
Shaking his head, Seregil turned to inspect Alec's work, a crude, gridlike
drawing done in charcoal and smudged here and there with blood.
"This is a copy of a map I found in a hollowed-out post of Rythel's bed,"
explained Alec, frowning down at it. "It's not very good, I know, but I knew I'd
never remember any of it unless I marked it out somehow."
"You didn't steal this parchment from his room?"
"Of course not! I remembered what Parin said about drawings in his room and
thought I might need to copy something. I took all the materials with me."
"Except a rope."
At first glance Alec's map, done in a feverish haste by an unpracticed hand,
seemed little more than a meaningless scrawl of lines.
"I think it's a map of the sewers," said Alec.
"There wasn't any writing on it, just marks here and there, but it looked a
lot like those plans we found at Kassarie's, remember?" He pointed to a circle
near the bottom of the sheet. "I'd say this represents the outlet where they're
working, and this is probably the top of the channel, where we found the
sabotaged grate."
Seregil nodded slowly, then tapped a spot just beyond where a number of lines
radiated out from a single terminus. "Several large channels come together here.
One goes west, toward the Noble Quarter; this one here probably leads under the
middle of the city—Is this exactly what you saw, line for line?"
"I think so, but I didn't get all of it. It was really complicated and I was
jumping at every noise. Finally I did hear someone coming, so I just grabbed
what I had and rabbited. Sorry."
"No, no, you did well," Seregil mused, still puzzling over the layout. "This
is solid grounds for arresting him, but how in hell did he get this much
information?"
"Could the Plenimarans use it to attack the city through the sewers?"
"Not a mil-scale attack, but they could cause plenty of other mischief-enemy
sappers opening gates from inside, assassins popping out of the royal privies,
or anywhere else in the city, for that matter." Straightening up, he thumped
Alec proudly on the shoulder. "Good work. This is more than I came up with."
Alec colored, grinning. "The smiths I talked to from his crew expect to be
done in a couple of weeks. That means that Rythel has to complete whatever work
he has left on this by then." He paused. "What I want to know is how he learned
all this if he never goes out at night and never leaves the work site?"
"That's the real question, isn't it? Exploring and mapping out all these
tunnels would take weeks, months even. But what if you find someone who knows
already?"
"Like a Scavenger!"
"Or a gaterunner. What did that one who jumped me say?"
"Something about strangers in the sewers, someone she was afraid of."
"Right." Seregil looked down at the smudged parchment, tapping his chin
thoughtfully. "I wonder what Tym's up to these days?"
"Tym?"
"You must remember him, the thief who cut your purse for me that time?"
Alec grimaced. "I remember him, all right. He's not a gaterunner, is he?"
"No, but he has connections there, and just about everywhere else among the
poor and the criminal. That's what makes him so useful to us."
"I didn't think it was his charm," Alec remarked sourly.
"How do you know he'll come?" Alec asked as they climbed to the empty room
over the nameless lower city slophouse the following evening.
"He'll come." Seregil eyed the greasy table with distaste, then sat down on
one of the stools next to it. "He's probably already around somewhere."
He hadn't been hard to contact An informal network permeated the lowest
classes of the city like the roots of a tree; a coin and discreet word with the
right party was usually sufficient.
Almost before Seregil had finished speaking, they heard a light step on the
stairs behind them. Tym paused in the doorway, scanning the room suspiciously.
With a deferential nod to Seregil, he sauntered in.
Alec eyed the thief with carefully guarded dislike.
The last time Alec had seen him was outside the city that day with Micum and
Beka. Cocky with his new skills, Alec had surprised him in a crowd, hoping to
pay him back for cutting his purse.
Instead, Tym had nearly knifed him.
He was still thin and dirty as ever, and still cloaked in an air of hungry
arrogance. Slinging one leg over the bench opposite Seregil, he favored Alec
with a long, appraising sneer.
"Still with 'im, eh? Must be gettin' something you like."
Alec returned the look impassively.
Tym snorted a brief, humorless laugh and turned his attention to Seregil.
"You asked after me?"
Seregil rested one fist on the table and slowly opened it to display a thick
silver half sester.
"Any queer customers about?" he asked, using the common slang for spy.
Tym snorted again, a harsh, ugly sound. "What do you think?"
Seregil snapped his hand closed over the coin, opened it again. A second coin
glittered in the hollow of his palm. "Are you working for any of them?"
Tym eyed the coins, an almost thoughtful look smoothing his narrow face for
an instant. "Think I'd tell if I was?"
Seregil's hand closed, opened. Four coins.
Alec studied Tym's face. The aloof mask stayed firmly in place.
"Could be," Tym replied cautiously.
Close. Open. No coins.
That got a reaction. Tym sat forward, looking like a man who'd just
overplayed his game. "Bugger! No, I ain't working for nobody, but there's them
that might be."
Seregil opened his hand again. Five coins.
"Rat Tom come by a stash real suddenlike, wouldn't say where from," Tym
confided, all crafty compliance now.
"Where's Rat Tom now?"
Tym shrugged. "Turned up dead in an alley not two weeks ago, throat cut."
"Who else?"
"Fast Mickle claims he did a papers job in Helm Street."
"What house?"
"Don't know."
"Where could I find Fast Mickle?"
Tym shrugged again. "Ain't seen him for a while."
Seregil snatched the coins away with a disgusted sigh and rose, motioning for
Alec to follow. "Let's go. There's nothing to be learned here."
"There's talk," Tym added hastily.
Halfway to the door already, Seregil turned with an exasperated frown. "What
talk?"
"It's the gaterunners mostly. Some turn up flush all of a sudden, then they
turn up dead or not at all."
Alec exchanged a quick look with Seregil, thinking of what the woman had told
them in the sewers.
"Madrin, Dinstil, Slim Lily, Wanderin' Ki, all of 'em dead one way or another
just in the last month," Tym continued.
"Tarl's been lookin" for Farin the Fish for a week now."
"I thought Farin was a breaker?" Seregil returned to the table. Alec remained
standing just behind him.
"He is, but still it's funny he's gone. Him and Tarl been together for
years."
"Any others?"
"Virella maybe, she's another runner, but you don't never know with her. And
that young breaker, Shady—they found her floating in the harbor out past the
moles. Some are even wondering about the Rhiminee Cat, but he's another you
don't never know about."
Seregil jingled the coins in his fist. "Who's supposed to be doing all this
killing?"
For the first time Tym looked uneasy. "Don't know. Don't nobody know, and
that is strange. The snuffers claim ain't none of them doing it. Folks is
gettin' nervous. You don't hardly know whether to take a job or not."
"I have a job, if you're interested," Seregil told him, sliding the silver
enticingly closer.
Tym looked hungrily at the stack of coins. "This wouldn't be a running job
would it?"
"No, just a snoop. There's a house near here I want watched. If you see
anyone you know go in—breaker, runner, keek, anything —I want to know about it.
Or anyone you think doesn't fit with the neighborhood. Is that clear?"
"Breakers and runners?" Tym's eyes narrowed again. "This got to do with the
killings?"
"Maybe he's scared," Alec suggested quietly, speaking for the first time.
Tym lurched up, gripping the hilt of his knife. "Maybe I ought to fix that
pretty face of yours!"
"Sit down!" barked Seregil.
Alec stiffened, but remained where he was. Tym sullenly obeyed.
"Now," Seregil resumed calmly, "do you want the job or not?"
"Yeah, I want it," Tym growled. "But it'll cost you."
"Name your price."
"Two sesters a week."
"Done." Seregil spat in his palm and clasped hands with the thief. As Tym
tried to withdraw his, Seregil gripped it tight.
"You've never turned on me yet. This would be a poor time to start." Seregil
smiled, but that only made the threat implicit in his tone more ominous. The
force of it drove the cocky sneer from Tym's face. "If anyone tumbles and offers
you more to turn to them, you smile and you take their money, then you come
straight back to me."
"I will, sure I will!" Tym stammered, wincing. "I ain't never turned on you.
I ain't going to."
"Of course you aren't." Seregil relinquished his hold at last, but the
imprint of his long fingers glowed for a moment in white, bloodless stripes
across the back of the thief's hand. "The house is the tenement in Sailmaker
Street with the red and white striped lintel. You know the one?"
Tym nodded curtly, flexing his hand. "Yeah, I know it."
"You can start now. Report to me in the usual way."
Alec shook his head incredulously as Tym disappeared down the stairs. "You
actually trust him?"
"After a fashion. He just needs the occasional reminder." Seregil drummed his
fingers lightly on the table. "In his own way, Tym trusts me. He trusts that
I'll pay. He trusts that I won't double-cross him, and he trusts that I'll hunt
him to the ends of the earth and slit his throat if he turns on me. You'd do
well to watch your step with him, though. That was no idle threat just now."
"I was just trying to push him along," Alec began, but Seregil held up a
hand.
"I know what you were doing, and it worked. But you don't understand people
like him. He respects me because he fears me. I nearly killed him once and he's
the sort that takes to you afterward because of it. But he'd slice you open in a
minute and worry about my reaction later. Insulting him the way you did is
enough to make him your enemy for life."
"I'll keep that in mind," Alec said. He'd never quite gotten around to
telling Seregil of his last confrontation with Tym. Now didn't seem to be the
right time, either, but he stored away the advice.
Through the next week the dreary Klesin rains rolled in off the sea in
earnest, melting away the last of the filthy snow still lingering in the shelter
of alleyways and corners, and insuring that Seregil and his company were
perpetually damp.
Tym kept watch over the Sailmaker Street house, but reported nothing beyond
Rythel's expected movements between there and the sewer site.
Work for the Rhiminee Cat—a papers job—came in at midweek. This fell to Alec,
who spent the next few days scouting the household of a certain lord whose
estranged wife wanted certain papers stolen. During the evenings, however, he
became a welcome regular at the Hammer and Tongs.
Whether Rythel would remain in his uncle's shop once the work was completed
seemed to be a matter of speculation, though it was unclear whether this was
grounded in some hint from Rythel or mere wishful thinking on the part of the
other smiths. Meanwhile, Seregil set to work on the connection between the smith
and Lord General Zymanis, but his discreet inquiries yielded little beyond what
Nysander had already told them.
A young valet had disappeared four months before, but there was no evidence
that he'd stolen anything.
At week's end the winds changed, shredding the clouds into tatters of
vermilion and gold against the late afternoon sky.
"Rythel will be going out soon. What's the plan for tonight?" asked Alec,
gazing out the window beside the workbench.
Seregil looked up from a pick he'd been repairing and smiled. The slanting
sunlight bathed Alec's profile as he leaned against the window frame, striking
fiery glints in his hair and casting his cheekbones and the folds of his
clothing into fine relief.
A painter should capture him like that, all light and eagerness.
"What are we going to do?" Alec asked again, turning to look at him.
"Since we don't have any new information, I think I'll shadow him this time,"
Seregil replied, sliding the pick back into Alec's tool roll and handing it to
him. "Why don't you go ahead with that papers job for Lady Hylia?"
Alec grinned. "On my own?"
"You've done all the legwork. You're sure Lord Estmar will be away until
tomorrow?"
"That's what his cook says. It looks like an easy job, too. Lady Hylia's
instructions to the Cat said the papers she wants are hidden in the wine cellar.
The door leading down to it is in the second pantry, which has a decent-sized
window."
"All the same, take your time and be careful," Seregil cautioned. "The cook
knows your face. You can't afford to get caught."
"I know, I know," Alec muttered happily, only half listening as he checked
his tools and tucked the roll away in his coat. "I expect I'll be done by
midnight, in case you need me later on."
"I'll look for you here if I do."
Either he's following some plan, or he's the most dismally predictable spy in
Rhiminee, Seregil thought, watching from a discreet distance as Rhythel went
into the Heron.
A few coins to the doorkeeper, Stark, bought Seregil hourly reports on the
goings-on inside. Rythel asked after Lord Seregil and expressed regret at not
finding him among the company. He soon consoled himself by falling in with
another young noble, the son of Lady Tytiana, Mistress of the Queen's Wardrobe.
They parted company early, however, and Seregil shadowed him to the Maiden's
Laugh, a moderately respectable tavern and brothel near the center of the city.
Settling in with the tavern crowd downstairs, Seregil soon charmed a weary tap
girl into confiding which girl Rythel had gone up with, which room was hers, and
that he'd paid for the entire night.
After giving the pair time to settle in, Seregil slipped through the
boisterous crowd and made his way unnoticed up the stairs to a dim third-floor
corridor. Waiting until he was alone in the passage, he went to the door at the
end of it and peered through the keyhole.
Inside, Rythel and his woman were attending earnestly to business. The tiny
room had no window or other exit that Seregil could see.
Paid for the whole night, did you? Seregil thought, stealing back the way
he'd come.
Outside, he unhobbled his mare and glanced up at the moon; just past
midnight. Alec was probably back by now, waiting for word from him. Gathering
the reins, he headed for the Cockerel.
Alec was home. Seregil found him pacing morosely in front of the fire. He was
still wearing his cloak, and there were twigs and dead leaves tangled in his
hair.
"Problem with the job?"
Alec paused, scowling. "Lord Estmar is out for the night, but his new lady
friend isn't. Seems she decided to have a few hundred friends in while he's
gone. The whole damn place was lit up bright as noon. I skulked around the
garden for hours, thinking things might die down. I gave up when fresh musicians
showed up just before midnight. Anything new with Rythel?"
"Only his choice of whores," Seregil replied. "Come on. I've had enough of
trailing around after this bastard. Show me this map of his."
"All right." Alec arched an eyebrow knowingly, then went to his bed and
pulled a coil of rope from beneath it. "And this time, I'm prepared."
Galloping through the darkened city under a wan, lopsided moon, Alec felt a
hunter's-thrill of anticipation. The seemingly fruitless days of stalking Rythel
wouldn't be wasted if they could use him and his map to bring down larger game.
And for once, he was the one to lead. He was rather proud of himself for finding
the hollowed bedpost on his own and was looking forward to showing Seregil.
Just as they came within sight of the Sea Market, however, one of Nysander's
tiny message spheres materialized suddenly in front of Seregil. Although Alec
could not hear it, he knew by the way his friend reined sharply to a halt that
there was about to be a change in plans.
"What did he say?" he asked when the little light had winked out.
Seregil pushed his hood back and Alec saw that he was frowning. "He wants us
at the Queen's Palace immediately. He didn't say why, just that I should come
right away, and bring you if you're with me."
"Damn! Look, you could go back and I'll meet you—"
"He asked for both of us."
"But what about the map? And what if Rythel does come back and then heads out
somewhere else?"
"I know, I know—" Seregil shrugged. "But Watchers can't ignore a summons to
the Palace. Besides, Rythel's out for the night and Tym's clever enough to keep
an eye on things until we get back. Come on now. Back we go!"
But Rythel did return to Sailmaker Street, and not long after Seregil and
Alec turned back toward the Palace.
What the bloody hell are you doing home on this fine night?
Tym thought. More surprising yet was the fact that the smith was not alone. A
lantern still burned over the door and by its light Tym caught a glimpse of the
two men with him. They had their hoods pulled forward, but the gleam of their
fine boots in the lamplight told him they were not denizens of the area.
Reaching behind him, he gave a rough shake to the small ragged boy dozing
against the alley wall just behind him.
"Skut, wake up, damn you!"
The child jerked up, instantly tense and alert. "Yeah, Tym?"
"You ever see any gentleman types go in there?"
"Naw, nothing like that."
Watching a house was child's work, and it hadn't taken Tym long to find a
child to help him do it. Having survived to the lucky old age of nine, scrawny,
gap-toothed little Skut knew all the Folk as well as he did himself and feared
Tym's wrath enough to be dependable. It was Skut, in fact, who'd spotted a
gaterunner called Pry the Beetle late that same afternoon while Tym was off to
his supper. The Beetle had shown up soon after the smith returned from work that
evening and, by Skut's estimation, stayed long enough for a decent conversation.
Learning this, Tym had gone off again to track the Beetle down and soon found
him already half-drunk in one of the filthy waterfront stews the runner
frequented. A little silver loosened the man's tongue and Tym judged the
resulting information well worth the price. It seemed a certain tenant on the
top floor of the Sailmaker Street house was buying information about the sewers,
information only a Scavenger or runner was privy to, so to speak.
Tym allowed himself a wolfish grin; that was just the sort of information
Lord Seregil might loosen his purse strings for.
Returning to Sailmaker Street, he'd settled in for another uneventful
evening, but here was something else unexpected. And lucrative, no doubt.
He waited until light showed through a chink in the shutters of the smith's
room, then turned to Skut again.
"I'm going up for a listen. You keep your eyes open down here and give the
signal if anyone comes along that might see me," he whispered, punctuating his
instructions to the boy with a light cuff over the ear. "You doze off while I'm
up there and I'll strangle you with your own guts, you hear?"
"I ain't never dozed on nobody," Skut hissed back resentfully.
Unwittingly following the same route Alec had taken several days before, Tym
clambered up the rickety wooden stairs at the back of the house and crept over
the slates to the edge of the roof just over Rythel's window. Stretched out on
his belly, he peered carefully over for an upside-down view of the window below.
A crack at the top of the left shutter showed only a thin slice of the room, but
he could just make out scraps of the conversation going on inside.
"Three more days." That was the smith; Tym had heard him speak in the street.
"Well done," said another man. "You'll be well rewarded."
"I have another letter, as well."
"Are you certain no one—" a third man broke in, and this voice carried a
strong Plenimaran accent.
Tym heard movement inside and the voices dropped too low for him to make out.
Cursing silently, he kept still, hoping they'd move closer to the window.
He was just wondering if he should chance opening the shutter a bit more for
a peek when some inner alarm sent an uncomfortable prickle down his spine.
Gripping the lead gutter with one hand, his knife in the other, he twisted
sharply around, scanning back up the steep pitch of the roof.
There, just to the left of a chimney pot, the black outline of a head was
visible above the roof peak.
More of the figure rose up, moving with uncanny silence.
There's something wrong about him, was Tym's first thought.
The other stood in full view now, a long black stain against the starry sky.
He looked unusually tall, and he didn't move right, either. There was none of
the ungainliness of a cripple-and what in hell would a cripple be doing up
here?—but a queer set to the shoulders of the silhouette, the crooked thrust of
the torso over the legs—
The other suddenly jerked his head in Tym's direction. The thief could still
make out no more than the stranger's outline, but he knew instinctively that
he'd been spotted.
The figure stooped, bent down as if making Tym a ridiculously low bow. But
that was not the end of it, and Tym's mouth suddenly went dry.
The other somehow curled himself downward, arms still at his sides, until his
hooded head touched the roof slates below his feet. Down he went, and down,
sinuous as an eel-chest, belly, legs, all bent at angles chillingly wrong. And
like some huge and loathsome eel, the long black shape began slithering down
toward him.
A coldness that had nothing to do with the weather reached Tym, driving a
numbing ache into his bones that left his hands as stiff and useless as an old
man's. Still, it wasn't until the stench hit him that he began to suspect the
sort of nightmare that was bearing down on him.
For the first time in his hard, rough life, Tym screamed, but the ignominious
sound came out of his throat as a faint, futile squeak.
The thing came to a halt scant inches away from where he crouched and coiled
upright again.
Instinct overrode terror. Still clutching his knife, though he could scarcely
feel it in his fist, Tym lunged up and slashed at the apparition and felt his
hand pass through a vacant coldness where the thing's chest should have been.
The attack overbalanced him on the slick slates and he crouched again, wobbling
for balance.
The black thing hovered motionless for a moment, radiating its icy stench.
Then it laughed, a thick, bubbling laugh that made Tym think of rotting, bloated
corpses floating in foul water.
The hideous thing raised long, wrong-jointed arms and he braced for a blow.
But it didn't strike at him.
It pushed.
Standing faithful watch in the shadow of the alley,
Skut saw a dark form topple from the roof.
Plummeting down, headfirst, the falling man struck the cobbled pavement of
the yard with a dull thud.
Skut froze, waiting for an outcry. When none came, he crept out to the body,
squinting down at it in the waning moonlight.
Tym was unmistakably dead. His head had been smashed into a terrible lopsided
shape. His chest was caved in like a broken basket.
Skut stared down in shocked disbelief for an instant, then burst into tears
of frustration. The bastard hadn't paid him yet!
Tym carried no purse, no valuables. Even his long knife was missing from its
sheath.
Wiping his nose on his arm, Skut gave the body a final, furious kick and
disappeared into the night.
Vargul Ashnazai moved restlessly around Rythel's tiny room while the smith
was making his report to Mardus. So far the man's spying attempts had turned up
little of any significance, for all his self-important airs. But his sabotage of
the sewer channels had been brilliantly carried off and, more importantly still,
his compilation of the map of sewer channels beneath the western ward of the
city.
Mardus had it before him now, making a final painstaking check before paying
the smith for its delivery.
Ashnazai's job was to maintain a cloaking glamour about the two of them;
through Rythel's eyes, they were fair, heavyset men with Mycenian accents. He
also had a dragorgos on watch, ranging the courtyard outside—an especially
taxing task for a necromancer of his degree, but a necessary one, as it turned
out.
Soon after their arrival, he suddenly felt a silent call from the dragorges.
Closing his eyes, he sent a sighting through his dark creation and discovered
the intruder on the roof overhead, a rough-looking young fellow with a knife.
Vermin, he thought.
A common thief.
With a barely perceptible smile, he mouthed a silent command. A moment later
he felt the stalker lunge and heard a satisfying thud from the yard below.
Mardus glanced up from the document the smith was showing him.
"It's nothing," Ashnazai assured him, going to the window and pushing back
one of the warped shutters. As he looked down at the body sprawled below, a
small figure darted over to it from the deep shadows across the street. Ashnazai
sent a quick stab into this one's mind: a child thief, too grief-stricken at the
loss of his compatriot to notice the ripple of blackness flowing down the side
of the building toward him.
The dragorgos gave a hungry, questioning call. Ashnazai was about to release
it for another kill when his hand brushed something on the windowsill, something
that sent an unpleasantly familiar tingle through his skin.
Incredulous, he forgot the child completely as he bent to scrutinize the
sill.
There, so faint no one but a necromancer would ever have noticed, was a thin
smear of blood. And not just any blood! Pulling out the ivory vial, he compared
the emanations of its contents to these.
Yes, the boy! Known here as Alec of Ivywell, minion of the Aurenfaie spy,
Lord Seregil.
That much they'd learned since their arrival in Rhiminee. Urvay had tracked
the troublesome thieves as far as a villa in Wheel Street, where they acted the
fine gentlemen as they consorted with nobles and royalty.
Ashnazai had seen them several times since then, could easily have had them
at any point, but the two were still under Oreska protection; any move against
them would alert the real enemies in the Oreska House. So he had stayed his hand
and soon after the Aurenfaie and his accomplice had dropped maddeningly from
sight yet again.
Vargul Ashnazai clenched a hand around the vial for a moment, using its power
to detect other traces of Alec's blood around the room: droplets on the shutter,
a smudge on the table by Mardus' elbow, a tiny brownish circle dried on the
floor near the hollow bedpost that Rythel thought such a clever hiding place,
and none of it more than a day or two old.
Standing there, surrounded by the essence of the hated boy, Ashnazai
experienced a brief twinge of the fear a hunter feels realizing that the prey
he's been stalking has circled to stalk him. In the midst of his silent fury, he
was startled to hear Rythel speak the Aurenfaie's name.
Seated at ease across the table from the smith, Mardus was regarding his spy
with polite attention.
"Lord Seregil, you say?" Mardus inclined his head slightly as if greatly
interested, but Ashnazi saw through the pose; at such moments Mardus reminded
him of a huge serpent, chill and remorseless as it advanced unblinking upon its
prey.
"A lucky meeting, my lord," the smith told him proudly. "I happened across
him in a gambling house one night last week. He has quite an interest in the
privateering fleet and likes to brag about it. A puffed-up dandy, full of
himself. You know the sort."
Mardus smiled coldly. "Indeed I do. You must tell me everything."
Ashnazai bided his time impatiently as the smith described how he'd courted
the supposed cully, and the information he'd had from him. He made no mention of
the boy.
Standing behind the smith, Ashnazai caught Mardus' attention, pointed to the
window, and held up the vial with a meaningful look. The other gave a slight
nod, betraying no reaction.
"You've surpassed all expectations," Mardus told Rythel, passing him a heavy
purse in return for the sewer map, together with a packet of the sabotaged grate
pins. "You've done an excellent job with the map, and I believe I can arrange an
additional reward once you've completed your work in the tunnels."
"Another week and it'll be done," the smith assured him, eyes alight with
greedy anticipation.
"If there's anything else I can do for you, you just say the word."
"Oh, I shall, I assure you," Mardus replied with a smile.
Unseen and unheard under the cover of Ashnazai's magic, he and the
necromancer made their way down through the crowded rooms and stairways of the
tenement to the yard.
The thief's body lay where it had fallen, twisted like a child's discarded
doll.
Mardus turned the corpse's head with the toe of one boot. "The face is
damaged, but it clearly isn't one of them."
"No, my lord, just a common footpad who blundered into the dragorgos by
chance. But the boy has certainly been here within the past day or two. His
blood is all over the room. He must have been wounded."
"But not by Rythel, I think. There was nothing in his demeanor to suggest he
was hiding anything of the sort."
The necromancer closed his eyes for a moment, his pinched face narrowing
still more as he concentrated.
"There's blood on the eaves above the window. He must have cut himself
breaking in."
Mardus looked down at the dead man again.
"Two thieves in as many days? Rather a lot, don't you think, even for this
part of the city." He watched with satisfaction as a fish hook of anxiety tugged
in the necromancer's cheek. "A pity we weren't here the night our young friend
made his visit," he continued.
"Then it could have been him lying here dead and unable to be questioned,
instead of this useless piece of meat. Get rid of it before it attracts any
attention."
Vargul Ashnazai muttered a summons through clenched teeth and the darkness
beside them convulsed. A second dra'gorgos materialized, a wavering, faceless
presence that hung like smoke for an instant before streaming down into the dead
man's mouth and nose. The body gave a convulsive jerk, then lumbered clumsily to
its feet. There was no semblance of life in the face; the dead glazed eyes
remained fixed, the one on the ruined side of the head bulging grotesquely from
its smashed socket.
Mardus regarded the thing with detached interest. "How long can you maintain
it in this state?"
"Until it decomposes, my lord, but I fear it would be of little use. So much
of the magic is consumed simply to animate it that it lacks the dra'gorgos'
strength. That, of course, will not be the case once our purpose has been
accomplished."
"Indeed not." Mardus touched a gloved hand briefly to the corpse's chest,
feeling the black emptiness of death within—such power in that void, and so
nearly in his grasp.
The necromancer spoke another command and the corpse loped away in the
direction of the nearby harbor.
Still cloaked by the necromancer's spell, they rode up to the main city. The
few folk they passed in the streets at that hour were aware of little more than
a momentary chill, a fleeting bit of movement caught from the corner of the eye.
"It's of little consequence really, even if they do discover Rythel's work in
the sewers," Ashnazai ventured nervously as they rode down Sheaf Street toward
their lodgings near the Harvest Market. "The map is the important thing, and we
have that. Still, it's unsettling, having the two of them both nosing around
Rythel."
"On the contrary, I see the hand of Seriamaius at work in it," said Mardus.
"It seems our journey has been a long spiral path, one narrowing quickly now to
tighten around our quarry. You may have been correct after all about these
thieves being of some importance, Vargul Ashnazai. They wouldn't be crossing our
trail so often unless there is some greater purpose in it. We have only to bide
our time until the others arrive. Meanwhile, I think it's time to deal with
Master Rythel. Arrange something unremarkable, would you?"
Nearing the market, Mardus reined in. "I'm to meet with our new friend,
Ylinestra. I shouldn't be long."
"Very good, my lord. I'll check on Tildus and the others at the inn."
Parting ways with the necromancer, Mardus turned his mount down a side lane.
Halfway down it, he glanced at the fine pair of brass cockerels decorating the
entrance to an inn of the same name.
He'd passed through Blue Fish Street several times since arriving in Rhiminee
and the figures, each holding a lantern suspended from an upraised claw, often
caught his eye.
A Watcher password got them by the guards at the same postern gate Alec had
used as a refuge a few months before. Riding through the palace grounds, they
dismounted at a tradesman's door near the Ring wall of the Palace.
"I feared you would not come," Nysander said, hurrying them inside. As he
reached to close the door behind them, Alec noticed the hem of a finely
embroidered robe beneath the wizard's plain mantle.
"You caught us in the middle of a job," Seregil told him.
"I suspected as much, but I had no choice. Come, there is little time."
Nysander inscribed a faint sigil in the air over their heads, then led the
way silently down a servant's passage. They hadn't gone far when a serving woman
came around a corner ahead of them carrying an armload of linen. She looked
directly at Alec as she passed, but gave no sign that she'd seen him.
Magic?
Alec signed.
Seregil motioned him onward with an impatient nod. still hope I don't have to
find my own way out of here, Alec thought as Nysander hurried them up stairways
and through more corridors and increasingly lavish public rooms. Climbing a
final, curving stairway, they reached a closed door. Nysander took a key from
his sleeve and let them into a long, dimly lit gallery.
An ornate balustrade screened by panels of wooden fretwork ran the length of
the right side of the room. Light streamed up through the openings, casting
netted patterns on the ceiling overhead.
Nysander raised a finger to his lips, then drew them to one of the panels.
Putting his face close to the fretwork, Alec found himself looking down into a
brightly lit audience chamber.
He'd seen Queen Idrilain only once before, but he recognized her at once
among the small knot of people gathered around a wine table at the center of the
room. Phoria sat at her left with several other people in Skalan court dress. To
Idrilain's right sat a man and two women dressed in a fashion he'd never seen
before.
All three wore tunics of soft white wool accented only by the polished jewels
glowing on their belts, torques, and broad silver wristbands.
Two of them, the man and the younger woman, wore their long dark hair loose
over their shoulders beneath elaborately wrapped head cloths. The older woman's
hair was silvery white, and on her brow was a silver circlet set with a single
large ruby in a fan of blade-shaped gold leaves.
Intrigued, Alec turned to Seregil but found his friend pressed rigidly to the
screen, his face a mask of anguish washed with stippled light.
What's he seeing?
Alec wondered in alarm, looking down at the strangers again. Just then,
however, the younger woman turned her head his way and Alec felt his breath
catch in his throat as he recognized the fine features, dark shining hair, and
large, light eyes.
Aurenfaie.
Still staring down, he reached for his friend's shoulder, felt the slight
trembling there before Seregil shrugged him away.
The conference below continued for some time. At last the Queen rose and led
the others out of the chamber.
Seregil remained where he was for a moment, forehead resting against the
screen as a single tear inched down his cheek. Wiping it quickly away, he turned
to face Nysander, who'd stood silently behind them all the while.
"Why are they here?" Seregil asked, his voice husky with emotion.
"The Plenimaran Overlord died today," the wizard replied. "The Aurenfaie had
the news before we did and translocated a delegation here tonight. There is
still no official alliance between Plenimar and Zengat, but both Aurenfaie
intelligence and our own suggests that secret agreements have in fact been
made."
"What's that got to do with us?" Seregil's face was stony now, the naked
sorrow too thoroughly erased.
"Nothing, as yet," said Nysander. "I summoned you here because the lia'sidra
has granted permission for you to speak with her briefly. There is a small
antechamber just through that door behind you."
Still rigidly expressionless, Seregil stalked away into the next room.
As soon as he was gone, Alec let out a pent-up gasp. "Illior's Hands,
Nysander-Aurenfaie!"
"I thought you should see them, too," Nysander said with a rather sad smile.
"Who's he meeting?"
"That is for Seregil to tell you. And with any luck, before you wear a trench
in this excellent carpet."
Seregil paced the small, well-appointed sitting room, one eye on the side
door. And as he paced, he fought to maintain some semblance of inner calm. There
was a looking glass on the wall and he paused in front of it, ruefully
inspecting his reflection. His hair was tangled and windblown, and a week of
puzzling over Rythel had left dark circles under his eyes. The old surcoat he'd
thrown on that evening was frayed at the cuffs and one shoulder was torn.
Don't I look the ragged outcast? he thought, giving the glass a humorless
smile as he combed his fingers through his hair.
Behind him the side door opened and for a moment another face was reflected
next to his, the two images so similar, yet worlds apart. When had his eyes
grown so wary, the lines around his mouth so harsh?
"Seregil, my brother." Her pure, unaccented Aurenfaie washed through him like
cool water.
"Adzriel," he whispered, embracing her. The scent of wandril blossoms rose
from her hair and skin, blinding him with memories. She had been both sister and
mother and suddenly he remembered what it had been to be a child, smelling her
special scent as she comforted him or carried him home from some moonlit
festival. Now she felt small in his arms and for a long moment he could do
nothing but cling to her, his throat tightening painfully as he blinked back
four decades of unshed tears.
Adzriel stepped back at last, still holding him by the shoulders as if afraid
he'd disappear if she didn't.
"All these years I've carried the image of that unhappy boy looking down at
me from the deck that awful day," she gasped, her own tears flowing freely. "O
Aura, I missed seeing you grow into a man! Now look at you; wild as any Tirfaie
and wearing a weapon in the presence of your kin."
Seregil quickly unbuckled his sword belt and hung it over a nearby chair. "I
meant no offense. It's like another limb to me here. Come, sit down and I'll try
to remember how civilized people act."
Adzriel stroked a hand through his unkempt hair.
"And when were you ever civilized?"
Sitting down next to him on a divan, she drew a small bundle of scrolls from
her tunic. "I have letters for you from our sisters and your old friends. They
haven't forgotten you."
More memories held at bay pressed in, and with them a pang of long suppressed
hope. Swallowing hard, he examined the heavy silver bracelet of rank on her
wrist. "So you're a member of the lia'sidra now. And an envoy, too. Not bad for
someone who hasn't seen her hundred and a half birthday yet."
Adzriel shrugged, though she looked pleased. "Our family's tie to Skala may
be useful in the coming years. Idrilain welcomed me as a kinswoman when we
arrived, and spoke highly of you. From what little your friend Nysander i
Azusthra had time to tell me, I gather you've been of some service to her?"
Seregil studied her face, wondering how much Nysander had said about their
work. Little enough, evidently.
"Now and then," he told her. "What did your companions make of that, I
wonder, Seregil the Traitor praised by the Skalan Queen? I remember old Mahalie
a Solunesthra, but who's the other?"
"Ruen i Uri, of Datsia Clan. And you needn't worry about either of them;
they're both moderates, and good friends of mine."
"And you're here because of Plenimar?"
"Yes. All recent reports indicate an alliance being attempted with Zengat and
there can only be one reason for that."
"To keep Aurenen too busy defending her western borders to ally with Skala.
But if the Plenimarans had just left things alone, wouldn't the Edict of
Separation have done their work for them?"
"There's been considerable progress against the Edict since you left. The
recent discovery of our kinsman Corruth's body—well, you can imagine the effect
that has had in the lia'sidra."
Seregil watched her again; no, she didn't know the part he'd played in that,
and his oath as a Watcher prevented him from telling her. "Total uproar, I
hope," he said with a smirk. "All those years of accusing every Skalan in sight
of foul play. Old Rhazien's faction must be choking on their own isolationist
rhetoric."
Adzriel chuckled. "Nothing so dramatic, but it has tipped the scales a bit
for those of us who want to renew the old alliances. With Petasarian gone and
his successor, young Estmar, already rumored to be the puppet of his own
generals and necromancers, I don't think we can afford to stand alone any
longer."
"Adzriel?" He hesitated, knowing what he must ask next, but dreading the
answer. "Does this have anything to do with why you've been allowed to see me?"
"The lifting of your banishment, you mean?" Adzriel smoothed a thumb over one
of the jewels in her bracelet. "Not officially. The time isn't right. Not yet."
Seregil jumped to his feet, clenching one hand against his side where his
sword usually hung.
"Bilairy's Guts, I was a child. Willful, misguided, guilty as hell, but still
a child. If only you knew what I've done since then." We found their precious
Lord Corruth, Alec and I! The words burned his throat. "I know the Skalans,
their culture and politics, their language, better than any envoy."
"Yes, but whose interests would you be representing?" Adzriel's level gaze
stopped him in his tracks.
"So I'm to sit idle here while the Zengati boil out of the hills and descend
on Bokthersa once again?"
Adzriel sighed. "I hardly think you'll be idle, not when the might of
Plenimar is pounding against your shores and their armies roll across Mycena to
batter at your northern borders. And mark my words, it will come to that before
it's over. I understand your pain, my love, but you've spent more than half your
life here." She paused. "I sometimes wonder if things haven't worked out for the
best, somehow."
"My being exiled, you mean?" Seregil stared at her. "How can you say that?"
"I'm not saying I'm glad you were taken from us, but in spite of all the
loneliness and pain you must have known, I wonder if life among the Tirfaie
doesn't suit you better? Truly now, could you ever be content to sit under the
lime trees at home, telling tales to the children, or debating with the elders
of the Bokthersa Council whether the lintel of the temple should be painted
white or silver? Think back, Seregil. You were always restless, always demanding
to find out what lay over the next hill. Perhaps there's some purpose in it."
Rising, she took his hands in hers. "I know you've paid for your mistakes.
Believe me, I want your exile lifted, but you must be patient. Changes are
coming for Aurenen, great ones. Make your stand here for now, in this dangerous,
wonderful land of yours. What say you, my brother?"
Still frowning, Seregil muttered, "Silver."
"What?" asked Adzriel.
"Silver," Seregil repeated, looking up with the crooked grin that had always
won her over. "Tell the elders of the Council I said the lintel should be
silver."
Adzriel laughed, a wonderful, radiant sound. "By Aura, Father was right! I
should have beaten you more. Now where is this Alec i Amasa Nysander told me of?
He interests me greatly."
"You know about Alec?" Seregil said, surprised.
"More than he does himself, it would seem," Adzriel chided.
Seregil gave her a chagrined look. It seemed Nysander had packed a great deal
into a short conversation.
If Nysander hadn't been with him in the gallery, Alec would have been
hard-pressed not to eavesdrop. As it was, he could hear a steady murmur of
voices from beyond the door where Seregil had gone.
After what felt like an interminable length of time, the door opened and
Seregil came back into the gallery, accompanied by the young Aurenfaie woman.
His air of anguish was gone, erased by an almost sheepish grin.
Alec knew before his friend spoke who she must be. Her lips were fuller and
had none of the hard set of Seregil's, but the beautiful grey eyes were the
same, with the same expression of appraising intelligence.
"This is my eldest sister, Adzriel a Illia Myril Seri Bokthersa," said
Seregil.
"Adzriel, this is Alec."
What little Aurenfaie Alec knew deserted him.
"My lady," he stammered, making a passable bow.
The woman smiled, holding out her hands for his. "My people seldom use such
titles," she said in heavily accented Skalan. "You must call me Adzriel, as my
brother does."
"Adzriel," Alec amended, savoring the sound of it, and the feel of her cool
hands in his.
Rubies and moonstones glowed in the rings she wore on nearly every finger.
"Nysander tells me you are my brother's valued companion, a person of great
honor," she said, gazing earnestly into his face.
Alec felt his cheeks go warm. "I hope so. He's been a good friend to me."
"I am glad to hear such things said of him." Bowing gracefully to him and the
wizard, she stepped back toward the door. "I hope one day soon I may greet you
all in my own land. Until then, Aura Elustri matron."
"So soon?" Seregil asked, his voice hoarse with emotion.
Alec looked away in embarrassment as the two embraced, speaking softly to
each other in their own language.
"Aura Elustri matron, Adzriel tali, " Seregil said, releasing her
reluctantly.
"Phroni soutua neh noliea. " Adzriel nodded, wiping her eyes. Nysander went
to her side and offered his arm.
"Aura Elustri mdlron, dear lady. I shall accompany you back to the others."
"Thank you again, Nysander i Azusthra, for all your assistance in this
matter." As she turned to go, however, she spoke once more to her brother in
their own language, glancing at Alec as she did so.
"Quite right," Nysander said. "It is the boy's right to know; he should hear
it from you."
With that, he escorted Adzriel back the way she'd come.
Turning to Seregil, Alec found his friend looking pale and uncomfortable
again. "What did they mean?"
Seregil pushed a hand back through his hair and sighed. "I'll explain
everything, but not here."
The unexpected reunion with his sister had shaken Seregil to the core of his
soul. A fierce sorrow seemed to emanate from him as they left the Palace, and
the weight of it left Alec feeling mute and helpless. What could he say, what
could he offer in the face of this? And what was it Nysander had meant, that
Seregil had something to tell him?
He trailed anxiously in his friend's wake, the sound of their horses' hooves
echoing from the ornate walls of villa gardens as the misshapen moon sank slowly
toward the western rooftops. Alec couldn't forget the sight of that single tear
rolling slowly down Seregil's face. He'd never imagined him capable of weeping.
Seregil paused long enough to steal two flasks of sweet red wine from a
vintner's shop, then rode on until they reached the wooded park behind the
Street of Lights. Dismounting, they led their horses along a path to an open
glade beyond.
A small fountain stood at the center of the little clearing, its stone basin
filled now with rain and dead leaves. Sitting down on the rim of it, Seregil
handed Alec a flask, then uncorked his own and took a drink.
"Go on," he told Alec with a sigh. "You'll need it."
Alec found his hands were shaking. He took a long swig of the sweet, heavy
wine, felt the heat curl down into his belly. "Just tell me, will you? Whatever
it is."
Seregil was quiet for a moment, his face lost in shadow, then he gestured up
at the moon. "When I was a child, I used to sneak out at night just to walk in
the moonlight. My favorite times were in the summer, when people would come from
all over Aurenen to the foot of Mount Barok. For days they'd gather, waiting for
the full moon. When it rose over the peak, we'd sing, thousands of voices raised
together, singing to the dragons. And they'd fly for us across the face of the
moon, around the peak, singing their answering songs and breathing their red
fire.
"I've tried to sing that song once or twice since I've been here, but do you
know, it just won't come? Without all those other voices, I can't sing the Song
of Dragons at all. As things stand now, I may never sing it again."
Alec could almost see the scene Seregil had described, a thousand handsome,
grey-eyed folk in white tunics and shining jewels, massed beneath the round
moon, voices raised as one. Standing here in this winter-ruined garden, he felt
the crushing weight of distance that separated Seregil from that communion.
"You hoped your sister was going to say you could go home, didn't you?"
Seregil shook his head. "Not really. And she didn't."
Alec sat down beside him on the rim of the fountain.
"Why were you sent away?"
"Sent away? I was outlawed, Alec. Outlawed for treason and a murder I helped
commit when I was younger than you."
"You?" Alec gasped. "I-I can't believe it. What happened?"
Seregil shrugged. "I was stupid. Blinded by my first passion, I allowed what
I thought was love to cut me off from Adzriel and all the others who tried to
save me. I didn't know how my lover was using me, or what his intent really was,
but a man died all the same, and the fault was rightly mine. The details don't
really matter—I've never told anyone else this much, Alec, and I'm not going to
say more now. Maybe someday—At any rate, two of us were exiled. Everyone else
was executed, except my lover. He escaped."
"Another Aurenfaie came to Skala with you?"
"Zhahir i Aringil didn't make it. He threw himself overboard with a ballast
stone tied around his neck as soon as we lost sight of the coastline. I very
nearly did the same, then and many times later on. Most exiles end up suicides
sooner or later. But not me. Not yet, anyway."
The few inches between them felt like cold miles.
Clasping his flask, Alec asked, "Why are you telling me this now? Does it
have something to do with what Nysander meant?"
"In a way. It's something I don't want secret between us anymore, not after
tonight." He took another drink and rubbed his eyelids. "Nysander's been after
me since he met you to tell you that—"
Seregil turned to him and put a hand on his shoulder. "Alec, you're faie."
There was a gravid pause.
Alec heard the words, but for an instant he couldn't seem to take them in and
make sense of them. He'd rehearsed a dozen dark possibilities during their walk
from the Palace, but this had not been one of them.
He felt the flask slip from his fingers, felt it bounce on the damp, dead
grass between his feet.
"That can't be!" he gasped, his voice unsteady. "My father, he wasn't—"
But suddenly it all fell into place—Seregil's questions about his parents,
veiled remarks Nysander had made, all the rumors that he and Seregil were
somehow related. The impact of this sudden revelation made him sway where he
sat.
Seregil's grip on his shoulder tightened, but he could scarcely feel it. "My
mother."
"The Hazadrielfaie," Seregil said gently, "from beyond Ravensfell Pass near
where you were born."
"But how can you know that?" Alec whispered. It felt like the entire earth
was spinning out from beneath his feet, leaving him stranded in a place he
couldn't comprehend.
At the same time, it all made terrible sense: his father's silence regarding
his mother, his distrust of strangers, his coldness. "Could she still be there?"
"Do you recall how I told you the Hazadrielfaie left Aurenen a long, long
time ago? That their ways are different than ours? They don't tolerate any
outsiders, especially humans, and they kill any half-breeds that are born, along
with the parents. Somehow your mother must have broken away long enough to meet
your father and have you, but her own people must have hunted her down in the
end. Even if she'd gone back of her own accord, the penalty would still have
been death. It's a miracle your father and you escaped. He must have been a
remarkable man."
"I never thought so." Alec's pulse was pounding in his ears. This was too
much, too much. "I don't understand. How can you know any of this?"
"I don't, for certain, but it fits the facts we do know. Alec, there's no
getting around the fact that you are faie. I saw the signs that first morning in
the mountains, but I didn't want to believe it then."
"Why not?"
Seregil hesitated, then shook his head. "I was afraid I was wrong, just
seeing what I wanted to see—But I wasn't wrong—your features, your build, the
way you move. Micum saw it right away, and the centaurs and Nysander and the
others at the Oreska. Then, that first night we came back to the Cockerel, I
went out again, remember? I went to the Oracle of Illior about another matter
,and during the divinations, he spoke of you, called you a "child of earth and
light"—Dalna and Illior, human and faie—there was no question what he meant.
Nysander wanted me to tell you from the start but—"
At that, a wave of anger burst up through Alec's shocked numbness. Lurching
to his feet, he rounded on Seregil, crying out, "Why didn't you? All these
months and you never said anything! It's like that Wheel Street trick all over
again!"
Seregil's face was half black, half bone pale in the moonlight, but both eyes
glittered. "It's nothing like Wheel Street!"
"Oh, no?" Alec shouted. "Then what, damn it! Why? Why didn't you tell me?"
Seregil seemed to sag. Lowering his face, he rested both hands on his knees.
After a moment he let out a ragged breath. "There's no single answer. At first,
because I wasn't certain." He shook his head. "No, that's not true. In my heart
I was certain, but I didn't dare believe it."
"Why not?"
"Because if I was wrong—" Seregil spread his hands helplessly. "It doesn't
matter. I'd been alone for a long time and I thought I liked it that way. I knew
if I was right, and if I told you then, if you'd even believed me, then it might
create a bond, a tie. I wasn't willing to risk that either, not until I figured
out who you were. Illior's Hands, Alec, you don't know, you can't know, what it
was like—"
"Enlighten me!" Alec growled.
"All right." Seregil let out another unsteady sigh. "I'd been exiled from my
own kind for more years than you've been alive. Any Aurenfaie who came to Skala
knew who and what I was, and was under prohibition to shun me. Meanwhile, all my
human companions age and die before my eyes."
"Except Nysander, and Magyana."
"Oh, yes." Now it was Seregil who sounded bitter. "You know all about my
apprenticeship with him, don't you? Another failure, another place I didn't
belong. Then, from out of nowhere, comes you, and you were—are—"
Alec looked down at the bowed figure before him and felt his anger slipping
away as quickly as it had come. "I still don't understand why you didn't want to
say anything."
Seregil looked up at him again. "Cowardice, I guess. I didn't want to see the
look that's on your face right now."
Alec sat down next to him again and sank his face in his hands. "I don't know
what I am," he groaned. "It's like everything I ever knew about myself has been
taken away." He felt Seregil's arm go around his shoulders, but made no move to
push him away.
"Ah, tali, you're what you've always been," Seregil sighed, patting his arm.
"You just know it now, that's all."
"So I'll see Beka get old, and Luthas, and Illia and—"
"That's right." Seregil's arm tightened around him. "And that wouldn't be any
less true if you were Tirfaie. It's not a curse."
"You always talk like it is."
"Loneliness is a curse, Alec, and being an outsider. I don't have a clue why
the two of us ended up in the same dungeon cell that night, but I've thanked
Illior every day since that we did. The greatest fear I've had is losing you.
The second greatest is that when I finally did tell you the truth, you'd think
it was the only reason I'd taken you on in the first place. That isn't so, you
know. It never was, not even in the beginning."
The last of the shock and anger drained away, leaving Alec exhausted beyond
measure. Reaching down, he retrieved the wine flash and drained what was left in
it. "It's a lot to take in, you know? It changes so much."
For the first time in hours Seregil chuckled, a warm, healing sound in the
darkness. "You should talk to Nysander, or Thero. Wizards must go through these
same feelings when they learn they have magic in them."
"What does it mean, though, with me being only half?" asked
Alec as a hundred questions and comparisons flooded in. "How long will I
live? How old am I, really?"
One arm still around Alec, Seregil found his own flask again and took a sip.
"Well, when the faie blood comes from the mother it's generally stronger. I
don't know why that is, but it's always the case and all those I know of lived
as long as the rest of us, four centuries or so. They mature a bit faster, so
you're about as old as you thought. There's also a good chance you'd inherit any
magic she had, although it seems like that would have shown itself—"
He trailed off suddenly and Alec felt him shiver. "Damn it, I'm sorry I
didn't say anything sooner. The longer I waited, the harder it got."
Without giving himself time to evaluate the impulse, Alec turned and put both
arms around Seregil, hugging him tightly. "It's all right, tali" he whispered
hoarsely. "It's all right now."
Taken by surprise, Seregil hesitated a moment, then returned the embrace,
heart beating strong and fast against Alec's. A weary peacefulness came over
Alec at the feel of it, and with it a whisper of pleasure at their closeness.
From where they sat, Alec could see the glimmer of a few lanterns shining
through the bare trees from the Street of Lights beyond. Seregil's fingers were
twined in his hair at the nape of his neck, he realized with a guilty start, the
same way he'd touched the young man at Azarin's a few short weeks ago.
First that strange, perception-altering night, he thought wearily, and now
this. Illior's Hands, if things kept up in this manner, he'd end up not knowing
who he was at all!
Releasing him at last, Seregil looked up at the moon, half-hidden in the
tangled treetops.
"I don't know about you, but I've had about all the excitement I can deal
with for one night," he said with a hint of his crooked smile.
"What about Rythel?"
"I guess Tym can keep an eye on things one more night. We'll track him down
in the morning."
As they mounted for the ride home, it was Alec's turn to chuckle.
"What's so funny?"
"It could have been worse, I guess," Alec told him. "In the old ballads,
orphans turn out to be the long-lost heir to some kingdom, which means they end
up either cooped up in the family castle learning royal manners, or get sent off
to slay some monster for a bunch of total strangers. At least I get to keep my
old job."
"I don't think anyone will get much of a ballad out of that."
Alec swung up into the saddle and grinned over at him. "That's fine by me!"
"Where are we?" Zir shouted over the jingle of harness.
"We're in Mycena!" someone else called back. Beka grinned in spite of
herself.
They'd worn the joke threadbare weeks ago, but every once in a while someone
trotted it out again just to break the monotony.
Sergeant Mercalle's riders were in high spirits this morning. Beka had
received orders to take a decuria and ride to a nearby market town to buy
supplies for the troop. Mercalle had won the toss.
For weeks they'd ridden through rolling, snow-covered hills, oak forest, and
empty fields; past thatch-roof steadings and small country towns where soldiers
of any sort were regarded with guarded resentment. Mycena was a country of
fanners and tradesmen. Wars interrupted commerce.
It had taken the regiment nearly a month to reach the port city of Keston—a
month of cold camps and thrown-together billets in garrisons and courtyards, and
slow-march riding over frozen roads. At night, the green new officers sat around
the fire and listened to the veterans' war tales, hoping to pick up some of the
things they hadn't had time to learn during their brief six weeks of training.
The more Beka listened, the more she realized that despite all their drilling
and individual prowess with horse, sword, and bow, it would take a battle or two
to sort out how well the turma worked together and trusted one another.
And how much they trusted her.
She'd noticed that many of her riders still looked more often to her
sergeants for guidance than to her. That stung a bit, but then, they were the
turma's only seasoned veterans. To their credit, they all showed the strictest
respect for her rank, even Braknil, who was old enough to be her father.
In return, Beka was mindful of the fact that without Seregil's patronage and
the commission it had won her, sergeant would have been the highest rank she
could've hoped for in such a regiment. Some of the other squadrons' new
lieutenants—the sons and daughters of Rhiminee lords—seemed to keep this in
mind, too, and let her know with the occasional sneer or condescending remark.
Fortunately, her brother officers in Myrhini's troop were not among these.
At Keston the regimental commander, Prince Korathan, had taken Commander
Perris' Wolf Squadron and split off to follow the coastline.
Commander Klia's squadron headed inland toward the Folcwine Valley. The
Folcwine River was the southern leg of the great trade route that ran north all
the way to the Ironheart range in the distant northlands. The river was the
first prize the Plenimarans were expected to reach for.
That had been two weeks ago; it would be another two before they came to the
river.
Turning in the saddle, Beka looked back at the column snaking darkly over the
hills behind her: nearly four hundred horsemen and officers of Lion Squadron,
the sledges of the sutlers and armorers, provision wains, livestock and drivers.
It was like traveling with a small town in tow. Scouting trips, vanguard
duty, even mundane provision runs like this offered a welcome break.
Catching Mercalle's eye, Beka said, "Sergeant, I think the horses could do
with a run."
"You're right, Lieutenant," Mercalle answered with the hint of a smile; they
both knew it was the restless young riders who needed it more.
Beka scanned the rolling terrain ahead of them and spied a dark line of trees
a mile or so off. "Pass the word, Sergeant. At my signal, race for the trees.
The first one who gets there has first chance at the taverns."
Mercalle's riders fanned out smoothly, catcalling back and forth to each
other. At Beka's signal, they spurred their mounts forward, galloping for the
trees.
Beka's Wyvern could easily have outdistanced most of the other horses, but
she held back, letting Kaylah and Zir end the race in a tie.
"I hear they always finish together," Marten grumbled as the rest of the
riders reined in around the winners. A few of the others smirked at this.
Sexual relations in the ranks were frowned on, and a careless pregnancy got
both parties cashiered, but it happened, nonetheless. Still celibate herself,
Beka chose to turn a blind eye to who was sharing blankets with who. A number of
her riders had come into the regiment already paired, including Kaylah and Zir.
Others, like Mirn and Steb, had formed bonds during the march.
"Don't worry about it," Braknil had advised after she'd noticed certain
blankets moving late at night. "So long as it's honorable, it'll just make them
fight the enemy all the harder. No one wants to look a coward to their lover."
Kaylah and Zir already seemed proof of this; during training they'd competed
fiercely against each other and everyone else. Kaylah was a pretty blonde who
looked almost too fragile for a warrior's life, but she was like a centaur on
horseback, and could match anyone in the turma with a bow. Zir, a young, black-
bearded bear of a man, had
Sakor's own sword arm mounted or afoot.
The trees turned out to be a thick pine forest.
Skirting along its edge, they struck a well-packed road that led through in
the direction of the town. Just before noon they came out on the far side into a
valley overlooking the town. It was a prosperous-looking place, with a palisade
for protection and a busy market square.
Their dark green field tunics attracted less attention than their dress
tabards might have, but the townspeople still looked askance at their swords,
bows, and chain mail.
Better us than the Plenimaran marines, Beka thought, pulling her gorget from
the neck of her tunic to show her rank.
Their Skalan gold was welcome enough, however. In less than an hour's time
they'd found all the supplies they'd been sent for- parchment, flints, wax,
honey, meal and flour, dried fruit and beans, salt, smoked meats, ale, four fat
sheep and a pig, oats and winter fodder for the horses-and hired three carters
to haul the goods back to the column under escort.
Her riders had also found time to purchase items for themselves and those
left behind with the rest of the turma: tobacco, playing cards, sweetmeats,
fruit, and writing materials were always in demand. Some even had chickens and
geese slung from their saddlebows.
Mercalle shopped for the other sergeants; Portus was partial to nuts and
raisins, Braknil to Mycenian cider brandy.
Mercalle glanced up at the sun as the carters secured the last of their load
on their sledges and hitched up their oxen teams. "The column should have just
about caught up by now. It'll make a shorter return trip for the carters."
"Everyone back?" asked Beka, counting faces.
"All accounted for, Lieutenant."
"Good. You, Tobin, and Arna take the point. The rest of us will ride escort
with the sledges. We'll switch off point riders now and then, just to keep them
from getting bored."
Mercalle saluted, and galloped off with the two riders. Beka and the rest
fell in around the sledges.
No one seemed to mind the slower pace; it was pleasant to saunter along with
the sun on their backs and a cold breeze in their faces. Leaving town by the
same road they'd entered, they wended their way back up into the pines.
"Do you travel this road often?" Beka asked, striking up a conversation with
the lead driver.
The man twitched the reins across his team's broad backs and nodded. "Often
enough spring to autumn," he replied, his accent thick as oat porridge. "My
brothers and me drive goods up to Torbum-on-the-River. Boats take it on to the
coast."
"That must be a long trip at this pace."
He shrugged. "Three weeks up, three back."
"Have you heard much news here about a war coming?"
The carter spared her a sour glance. "I should think we have. Seeing as how
we're like to get trampled once again when you lot and the Plenimarans go at
each other. There's some say we ought to just trade land with one or't'other of
ye, so's ye can fight without bothering us."
Beka bristled a bit at this. "We're on our way east to keep that from
happening. Otherwise, your armies will be left on their own when Plenimar comes
after your land and the river."
"They ain't took it yet. And you lot ain't never stopped 'em from wading in
to try it."
Beka bit back a retort and eased her mount away from the sledge. There was no
sense arguing the point. "Marten and Barius, you go take point. Tell Sergeant
Mercalle I'll be up to relieve her as soon as the others get back."
"Right, Lieutenant!" Barius said, grinning through his new beard. He and
Marten set off at a gallop, cloaks streaming behind them as they raced each
other out of sight around a bend in the road.
The sound of their hoofbeats had just faded out of earshot when the scream of
a horse raised the hair on the back of Beka's neck. Wheeling Wyvern, she saw
Syrtas' mount buck him off behind the third sledge. The horse screamed again,
then bolted for the trees.
Rethus reined in beside the fallen man, then slung himself from the saddle.
"Ambush!" they shouted, dashing for cover behind the sledge.
An arrow sang past Beka's horse and struck the side of the lead sledge. A
glance told her that this was no military attack. The arrow was double fetched,
rather than the military triple vane style, and the fletching was done clumsily,
with one white vane and one a ragged brown.
"Bloody bandits!" the carter growled, pulling a short sword from under his
seat and jumping over the side.
"Take cover!" Beka yelled, although the others were already doing just that.
She slid off Wyvem with her bow in hand and whacked the horse on the haunches,
hoping he'd get clear of the archers.
Heart pounding in her ears, Beka dove for the scant cover at the front of the
sledge. Crouched there beside the carter, she tried to size up the situation.
The point riders weren't back yet; that left Zir, Kaylah, Corbin, Rethus,
Mikal, and Syrtas—assuming none of them were already killed—and the three
drivers.
Judging by the hail of arrows whining at them from the cover of the trees,
however, her group was considerably outnumbered. Worse yet, they were being
fired on from both sides of the road.
"You said nothing about bandits when we set out," she hissed to the driver.
"Ain't seen any most of the winter," he replied grudgingly.
"This crew's come north early. They must of laid for us until they saw you
send off them other two."
Beka moved to the opposite side of the sledge just in time to spot three
swordsmen running at them from the woods. Almost without thinking, she fitted an
arrow to her bowstring and shot one of them; the other two fell to someone
else's shafts.
Arrows snarled and hissed over her head as Beka dashed back to the next
sledge, where she found Mikal, Zir, and Kaylah shooting wildly into the trees to
either side.
"Stop shooting!" Beka ordered. "We can't afford to waste the arrows."
"What do we do?" Mikal demanded.
"Wait for a clear shot. And grab any spent arrow you can reach without
getting hit."
Ducking low, she made it to the last sledge.
Rethus and Corbin were unscathed. Their carter lay panting beneath the
sledge, an arrow shaft protruding from his hip.
That first enemy arrow had cut Syrtas just above the knee before striking his
horse. The wound was bleeding freely, but it didn't seem to be slowing him down
much as he and the others shot into the trees.
Beka repeated the order, and then nocked another arrow on her bowstring,
waiting for one of their attackers to show himself.
The bandits mistook their actions as a sign of surrender; in a moment the
arrow storm stopped and swordsmen burst from the trees, yelling wildly as they
charged the sledges on foot.
"Now hit them, both sides!" Beka shouted, scrambling to her feet. Heedless of
any archers who might still be lurking in the trees, she sent shaft after shaft
at the swordsmen running at her, downing three of them. For the first time since
the skirmish began, it occurred to her that she was taking human lives, but the
thought carried no emotion. The thrum of bowstrings and the cries and shouts of
battle filled her mind, leaving room for nothing else. Beside her, Rethus fired
with the same silent determination.
An arrow nicked the shoulder of her tunic and pinned her cloak to the side of
the sledge behind her. Yanking the brooch pin loose, she dropped to one knee and
continued to shoot.
A dozen or more bandits fell to their arrows, but an equal number were
closing in around them.
"Swords!" Beka shouted. Drawing her blade, she strode out to meet a bearded
man in scarred leather brigadine and ragged leggings. Ducking his wild swing
with a broadsword, she whirled and struck at the back of his neck.
She'd practiced the move a thousand times against her father and others; this
time she drew blood.
There were plenty more with him, though, and she drew a long dagger in her
left hand, using it to fend off thrusts to her open side.
Syrtas was to her right, Kaylah to the left.
Covering each other as best they could, they waded into the knot of bandits.
The attackers outnumbered her side at least three to one, but Beka quickly
realized that most of them relied more on brawn than skill. With almost
disappointing ease, she ducked another swing and ran a man through, then pulled
her blade free in time to strike another on the arm as he attacked
Kaylah. The girl flashed her a grin, then lunged at a tall, scrawny youth who
turned tail and fled.
Looking around, Beka realized that there were mounted fighters at work, too.
Mercalle and the others had come back at some point and were charging into the
fray, their helmets flashing in the sunlight as they scattered ambushers and
struck down the stragglers with their swords.
The bandits were already beginning to fall back when more riders of the Horse
Guard thundered down the road from the direction of the column. Tobin was at
their head, with Portus and Braknil beside him.
The enemy broke for cover and the horsemen followed, driving them into the
trees and dismounting to give chase.
"Come on!" cried Beka, rallying her blood-streaked comrades. "Let's not let
them steal all the fun!"
When the rout was over, more than twenty ambushers lay dead in the snow.
Beka's riders had sustained nothing worse than a few sword cuts and arrow
wounds.
"By the Flame, that was a fair-sized gang," Mercalle exclaimed.
The lead carter crawled from under his sledge. "Looks like old Garon's crew.
They been harrying the traders up and down the valley for nigh onto three years
now. The sheriffs couldn't never catch 'em."
"They chose the wrong prey this time," Sergeant Braknil remarked, grinning as
he strode over to join them. "Looks to me like you had things pretty well in
hand by the time we got here, Lieutenant."
"I wasn't so sure," Beka said, noticing for the first time how shaky her legs
felt. "What are you doing here, anyway? Not that I'm not glad to see you."
"When Barius and Marten showed up, I sent Tobin and Arna back," Mercalle
explained. "But all of a sudden they came belting back with word that you were
under attack. They didn't know how big the force was or who, so I sent Arna back
to the column for help and came on with the others. As it turns out, Braknil had
talked the captain into letting the rest of the turma come meet you. He and
Portus were less than a mile away when Arna met them."
The rest of the turma had drifted over to listen.
"Any losses?" she asked.
"Not a one, Lieutenant!" Corporal Nikides reported proudly. "Not bad for our
first battle, eh?"
"I don't know that I'd claim routing bandits as a battle, but we acquitted
ourselves well enough," Beka said, grinning around at the others. "You did well,
all of you."
Braknil exchanged a look with Mercalle and cleared his throat. "With all due
respect,
Lieutenant, there's a custom some of the riders should observe. For their first
kill, that is."
"Drinking the blood of the first man you kill to keep off the ghosts, you
mean?"
"That's the one, Lieutenant. Some call it superstition nowadays, but I say
the old ways are sound."
"I agree," said Beka. She'd heard of the custom from her father, and from
Alec, who'd done the same after his first fight. "How many of you made your
first kill today?"
Everyone in Mercalle's decuria stepped forward, and several more from the
others. "All right, then. All of you archers, find your first killing shaft.
Come back here when you find it. The rest of you bring your swords."
Beka walked to the body of the first swordsman she'd killed, a middle-aged
brigand with a braided beard.
He lay on his back, a look of mild surprise on his unremarkable face. She
stared down at him a moment, making herself remember the murder in his eyes as
he charged at her. She was glad to be alive, but not to have killed him.
It was an odd mix of feelings. Shaking her head, she pulled the arrow from
his chest and joined the others standing in a rough half circle beside the road.
When everyone else had come back, she looked around and felt the weight of the
moment settle upon her.
"Sergeants, I'm as new to this as the rest of them. Are there any special
words to be spoken?"
"Whatever you want to say," Braknil replied with a shrug.
Beka raised the arrow in front of her. "May we all fight together with honor,
mercy, and strength."
With that, she touched the arrowhead to her tongue and the coppery tang of
the blood flooded her mouth. She wanted to grimace and spit, but she kept her
face calm as she cleaned the arrowhead in the snow and dropped it back into her
quiver.
"Honor, mercy, and strength!" echoed the others, doing the same with arrows
and sword blades.
"I guess that's it. Now we've got supplies to deliver," she told them.
"Anyone seen my horse?"
That evening Captain Myrhini's troop feasted on the first fresh meat they'd
had in weeks and drank the health of Beka and her turma several times over.
When they'd finished and were settling in their tents for another cold night,
Captain Myrhini drew Beka aside.
"I've been talking with some of Mercalle's riders," she said as they walked
together past the campfires of the various turmae. "Sounds to me like you kept
your head and took care of your people."
Beka shrugged. She'd been doing some thinking of her own. "It's a good thing.
I made a mistake sending out two riders when three were already up on point. I
don't think it was any accident that those ambushers jumped us when they did."
"Oh?" Myrhini raised an eyebrow. "What could you have done differently?"
"I was going to relieve Mercalle anyway. I should've ridden up alone and sent
the other two back for their replacements."
"But that would have left your riders without an officer or sergeant."
"Well, yes—"
"And the way I hear it, it was you who kept those green fighters from wasting
all their arrows on the bushes, which the raiders were probably counting on. The
fact is, it was me who made a mistake today."
Beka looked at her in surprise, but Myrhini motioned for her not to
interrupt. "I assumed that because we were in neutral territory, it was safe to
send a decuria out on its own. If you'd had the turma with you, those brigands
would never have attacked. Of course, you were far too tactful and inexperienced
to bring this to my attention when I gave you that order, weren't you?"
Beka couldn't quite read the officer's cryptic smile. "No, Captain, it just
never occurred to me that we'd need any more people than that for a supply run."
"Then we were both in error," Myrhini said. "But learn and live, as a certain
friend of ours always says. You did well, Lieutenant. Sergeant Mercalle thinks
you've got the makings of a good fighter, by the way."
"Oh?" Beka asked, caught between pleasure at the veteran's appraisal and a
certain pique that the sergeant had evidently not had the same confidence in her
abilities before now. "What made her say that?"
"I think it was the way you were grinning as you fought," Myrhini answered.
"At least, that's what she hears from those fighting beside you. Tell me, were
you scared?"
Beka thought about that a moment. "Not really. Not during the fight, anyway."
"Sakor touched!" the captain exclaimed, shaking her head. But Beka thought
she sounded pleased.
Clutching the stolen loaf beneath his shirt, Skut sprinted through the late
afternoon crowd filling the marketplace.
Behind him he could hear the furious bread seller shouting, "Stop him, stop
thief!" A few people made halfhearted grabs at him, but the sympathy of the
waterfront crowd was obviously with him.
Reluctant to leave his wares open to further depredations, the bread seller
quickly gave up and returned to his handcart.
Hunger knotted Skut's empty belly. Tym's death had thrown him off his game
for three days now, and he'd had almost nothing to eat. Grabbing the loaf had
been a desperate move, but he couldn't stand the gnawing ache in his gut any
longer.
Keeping one eye out for trouble, he threaded his way through filthy alleys to
a ruined warehouse on the western fringes of the lower city, his current home.
One wall had burned and fallen in and the whole place reeked of old smoke,
but an attic loft was still sound. Picking his way over the rubble, he climbed
the makeshift ladder leading up to it.
Sunset light spilled across the floor below but the back of the loft was
already lost in shadow. The grey doves roosting overhead shifted suspiciously as
he peered over the edge of the platform.
"Kaber, you here?"
There was no answer.
That was a relief. He hadn't seen Kaber in a week and good riddance. The
older boy had provided a certain amount of protection, but he was lazy and had
lately taken to punching Skut when he didn't bring home enough for them to eat.
He went to the rusty brazier at the center of the loft and felt for the fire
makings. His hand had just closed around the tinder bowl when suddenly he sensed
movement behind him.
Skut was a quick lad, but not quick enough this time. Before he could stand
up someone had thrown a heavy cloak over his head and pinioned his arms.
Snuffers!
Skut thought desperately.
He squirmed wildly, struggling for his life, and felt his foot hit something
with satisfying force. There was a soft grunt of pain, but strong arms caught
his flailing legs. His captors lifted him off the floor, holding him so tightly
he could scarcely wiggle.
"We're not here to harm you," said the one holding his arms. It was a man's
voice, and soft. "I want to know about Tym."
"Don't know nothin"!" Skut whimpered, bucking helplessly.
"Oh, let's not go down that route, shall we? Word is you're the one who saw
it happen. I only want to talk to you about it. Settle down now and I'll make it
worth your while."
Skut resisted a moment longer, his thin body taut as a bowstring, then gave
in. Whoever had a hold of him clearly wasn't about to let go.
"All right then, I'll tell you. Only let me down."
"Put him down."
Skut felt his legs released, though the one behind him maintained a strong
hold around his chest and arms.
"Are you going to behave yourself?"
"Said I would, didn't I?" Skut mumbled, heart hammering in his throat.
"Sit down where you are."
Skut obeyed, then cried out in fear as something heavy settled on his thigh.
Looking out from under the edge of the cloak, he saw that it was a rough sack.
"Go on, open it," the man urged, still behind him. He could see the boots of
another just in front of him, the one who hadn't spoken yet.
With trembling hands, Skut opened the bag and was amazed to discover a small
sausage, a wedge of cheese, and half a dozen boiled eggs. The toothsome aroma
was unbearably good, but he was still suspicious. The one doing all the talking
had a highborn sound to him. What'd he want with Tym?
"It's all right," said the second one, speaking for the first time. Another
man. "Go ahead and eat. You look like you could use it."
The smoky garlic scent of the sausage was too much.
Praying it wasn't poisoned, Skut took a cautious nibble, then another.
"What happened to Tym?" asked the first one.
"Fell off a roof, that's all," Skut replied around a mouthful.
"Tym
fell?"
Skut shrugged, peeling one of the eggs with dirty fingers. "Saw him go over.
He didn't yell or nothin', just toppled down."
"No one's found his body. Are you certain he was dead?"
"Course!" Skut snorted. "Think I wouldn't make sure? The bastard hadn't paid
me yet. His head was all stove in and broken. He didn't have so much as a groat
on him, neither, not even his knife."
His unseen interrogator seemed to consider this for a moment. "What were you
doing there? What was it he was going to pay you for?"
"Well—" Skut hesitated. "I guess I could say, since he's dead and all. I was
watching a house for him, the one he fell off of."
"What house?"
"Tenement house in Sailmaker Street. Tym said I was to keep an eye out for
any shady sorts, especially breakers and gate-runners. And Scavengers, too."
"How long did you watch?"
"Most of a week." The sausage was good, best he'd ever tasted. On the
strength of this, he added helpfully, "I seen one, too. Pry the Beetle come by
day before Tym fell."
"Did Tym say why he wanted you to watch for these fellows?"
"No, and I didn't ask. When Tym wanted something done, you done it, that's
all," Skut told him, adding somewhat pointedly, "Would've paid me, too, if he
hadn't gotten his self killed."
The man chuckled in a friendly way. "A true man of honor, our Tym. Did you
see anyone on the roof, or hear anything strange before Tym fell?"
Skut absently cracked a louse on his sleeve as he thought hard. "No,
nothin'."
"What was he doing up on the roof in the first place?"
"Said he was going to have a listen on the feller he was watching, lived up
on the top floor. That's where he went over, right at that window. You ain't
going to kill me or nothing, are you?"
"No, but I'll give you a word of advice. Keep low and stop blabbing. You
don't know who else might take an interest in you. Now I want you to sit tight
awhile, until you know we're gone. I wouldn't want to have to hurt you after
you've been so helpful."
"I won't twitch!"
A strong hand clamped menacingly down on Skut's shoulder. "And not a word to
anyone about this little visit, right?"
"Right! You wasn't never here," he whispered, suddenly fearful again.
The hand withdrew. Skut heard a shuffle of boots, the creak of the ladder,
then silence. He made himself count to a hundred twice before he dared pull the
cloak off his head. When nothing stirred, he scrambled to kindle a light and
found a sturdy dagger and a small cloth purse lying on the brazier grill. The
bag held at least a sester's worth of pennies.
Highborn or not, those gents knew a thing or two, Skut thought wonderingly.
Showing gold or silver around these parts could get you killed right quick,
especially a skinny brat like himself. But a few coppers here and there were
safe enough and a stash like this could keep him going a month or more. He
turned the knife over with something like reverence, testing its wicked edge
against his thumb. Just let Kaber try knocking him around again! Gathering what
few belongings he owned, together with anything of Kaber's that struck him as
useful, he set off in search of new lodgings.
"Sounds like an accident," Alec said as soon as they were well away from the
ruined warehouse. "He must have slipped coming down those slates, just like I
did."
Seregil looked doubtful. "It's hard to believe Tym could fall. He's been over
those roofs all his life. And the missing knife, that bothers me. Tym only drew
his blade when he meant to use it. If it was in its sheath when he fell, Skut
would have taken it. He said himself it wasn't there. Besides, if Tym had gone
clattering over the slates, the boy would have heard it."
"And what happened to the body?" mused Alec.
They'd already made the rounds of the charnel houses.
"From the sound of it, he didn't just get up and walk away."
Seregil shrugged. "There are plenty strange characters in Rhiminee who'd pay
for a corpse."
Alec grimaced. "Like who?"
"Oh, the mad and the curious, mostly. There was one man, a lord, no less, who
wanted to determine which organ contained the soul. Artists have been known to
use them, too, sculptors in particular. I recall a woman was executed after it
was discovered that she'd used human skeletons as armatures for statues she was
casting for the Dalnan retreat house.
According to the story, a priest stopped by her shop to see how the work was
coming along and inadvertently knocked over one of the life-size clay models.
The head struck the floor at his feet and split open to reveal an all too
lifelike mouthful of teeth."
"You're joking!"
"It's the Maker's truth. Valerius has told that story a hundred times. "Burn
'em or leave 'em alone!" was generally the moral of the tale. As for Tym,
though, it could be necrophiles or just some poor starving sod—"
"Enough, I get the idea," Alec growled. He had no idea what a necrophile was
and didn't think he wanted to know; the thought of cannibalism was nauseating
enough all by itself.
"What? Oh, sorry. All that aside, I think it's more likely that Rythel or
some of his associates caught Tym spying and wisely disposed of the body. We'd
better have a look up there ourselves."
They waited until it was full dark, then rode down to Sailmaker Street. The
inhabitants of the house were still awake and at their suppers; their own
clatter would cover any noise Seregil might make going over the slates.
With Alec on watch below, he climbed the rickety stairs at the back of the
house and pulled himself onto the roof. Looping a rope around a chimney pot, he
crept cautiously down to the eaves just over
Rythel's window.
He spotted the knife at once, its naked blade gleaming cleanly in the gutter.
Stretched out on his belly, face just inches from the knife, Seregil regarded
it for a moment, wondering how Tym—quick, clever, deadly Tym—could have been
caught out on the edge of a bare roof and not drawn a drop of blood before he
died.
You were good, Tym, but it looks like we all meet our match sooner or later,
he mused, reaching for the dead thief's knife. The thought sent a brief chill up
his spine as he grasped the scarred hilt. Hurrying on its heels, however, came
the still more chilling memory of sending Alec to burgle the room by himself.
Was it any more than Illior's luck that whoever Tym had run afoul of had not
been on hand for Alec's visit?
Tucking the knife into his belt with a silent prayer of thanks, he worked his
way back the way he'd come and found Alec waiting across the street.
"I checked the yard," he told Seregil. "All I found was this." He held up a
small, fancy button of carved bone. "Anytime I saw him, his clothes were pretty
fancy under the dirt."
Seregil nodded. "True enough. What about bloodstains?"
"Too much rain and foot traffic. Did you have any luck?"
Alec's eyes widened a bit at the sight of the knife. "I'll be—But where does
that leave us?"
"Nose deep in the shit heap, I suspect,"
Seregil sighed. "I expect that map is long gone, and it's two more days
before we can check. Rythel will be done with his good work in the sewers by
then and we still don't have a clue who's behind him on this. Now the bastard's
cost me a good thief to boot."
Alec looked up at the place Tym had fallen.
"If Nysander hadn't called us away that night—"
Seregil shook his head. "Then we'd be wiser or dead, too. It's useless to
speculate. It's time to grab our man, but we've got to do it quick and proper.
And for that, we'll need a wizard's help."
He touched Tym's dagger again. "Maybe Nysander can get something out of this,
while we're at it. Let's see if he's home."
Galloping up the Harbor Way, they rode at full tilt through the streets
toward the Oreska House. Catching sight of its high spires looming ahead of them
at last, they were relieved to see a light burning in the east tower.
They found Nysander and Thero at work over a malodorous collection of
bubbling limbics and crucibles. At one end of the worktable a handful of
unpolished broad arrow points lay in a little heap on a leather pad.
Seregil saw Alec's eye stray toward these, but they had more pressing matters
at hand.
"Can you get any sort of a sighting off this?" he asked, showing Nysander
Tym's dagger.
Wiping his hands on a stained rag, Nysander took it and turned it over in his
hands for a moment, then grasped it and closed his eyes.
After a moment, however, he shook his head and handed it to Thero. "There is
a faint trace of magic about it, but I cannot say what sort or how long it had
been there."
"Objects seldom retain much," Thero observed. "His body would have told us
more."
"Obviously someone else knew that," Seregil muttered, dropping onto the
nearest bench with a disgusted grunt. "We're getting nowhere! Let's just reel
Rythel in. Week's end is the night after tomorrow. I say we keep a close eye on
him, and hit him then."
"That would appear to be the next logical step," Nysander agreed. "What will
you need?"
"A translocation key. Make it something small I can hand him without raising
suspicion. A rolled document should do the trick. As Lord Seregil, I can talk it
up to be a salable item. I think we can count on our man's greed."
"Excellent. And I shall make arrangements with the warder at Red Tower
Prison. We will pop him into a cell before he can wiggle loose."
Seregil turned to Alec, hovering expectantly beside him. "You'll nip in and
toss his room as soon as he leaves for his weekly whoring. Even if the map's
gone, there may be something else incriminating lying around. We don't want to
give anyone else time to clean up after him once we've got him. As soon as
you're done there, meet us at the prison."
Alec grinned, ready for the hunt. "This shouldn't take too long."
Seregil grinned back, glad to see an end to this particular job. "Hell, we'll
probably be able to catch the second performance at the Tirarie Theater!"
Vargul Ashnazai looked resignedly around his latest lodging. The deserted
house smelled of damp and mice, but the roof was sound and the hearth was
usable. He'd lost count of the inns and taverns they'd stayed at since their
arrival in Skala three months before. Winter was harsher here than in his native
Benshal, but not so harsh as those they'd endured for three years as he
helped Mardus scout the northlands for the Eyes and the Veil.
No, in Skala the necromancer's greatest hardship so far had been boredom. The
Oreska's reach was long; no matter if they were in Rhiminee tracking
Urvay's various spies and dupes, or sequestered at a deserted steading such as
the one they now occupied, he could not afford to practice his art without first
weaving a tight barrier of shielding spells. Such magicks had worked admirably
with the avaricious young sorceress Urvay had netted for them. Ylinestra was
altogether too sure of her powers; never once had she divined who, or what,
Mardus truly was.
Throwing back the warped shutters, Ashnazai blinked out at the cove below the
house. Great slabs of sea ice lay piled at the tide line, but beyond the shingle
open water rippled grey-green in the morning light.
Yet another impediment nicely cleared away, he thought, smiling to himself.
Urvay's actor dupe, Pelion, had leapt with predictable glee at the offer of a
series of special engagement performances in the southern city of Iolus. He
would have his triumphs there, no doubt, never knowing his life's thread had
been measured to its final length, to be cut two weeks hence by an assassin
already paid in full. And the beautiful Ylinestra, too, was living on ransomed
time, along with all the others.
The months of waiting were nothing now, compared to the coming triumph.
Ashnazai's revenge hung before him like a heavy, promise-filled fruit, almost
ripe and soon to be within his grasp, a fruit that would ooze with the sweet
liquor of blood when pressed.
Two short nights, and all would be in place.
She would be here.
The stars stood out like glittering eyes against the midnight vault of the
sky.
Standing beside Mardus on the beach, Ashnazai could hear Tildus' men moving
through the trees that fringed the little cove, and the nicker of the horses
that were tethered, ready for the night's ride. Other men patrolled the woods
beyond the gully where an unlucky peddler lay face down in a brackish pool of
water. There would be no witnesses.
They hadn't been waiting long when a black presence suddenly coalesced out of
the darkness in front of them.
Ashnazai bowed gravely to the dragorges.
"We will be with you presently," it announced in its hollow, wind-filled
voice.
"All is prepared," Mardus replied. "We await you here."
Soon the light splash of oars came to them from across the water. Tildus and
his men tensed, weapons drawn, as the black outline of a longboat came into
view. Two sailors pulled the oars, while their two passengers sat motionless in
the bow.
Reaching shore, one of the oarsmen jumped out and pulled the prow up onto the
beach so that his passengers could disembark dry shod. The first to climb out
was the gaunt, grey-beaded necromancer, Harid Yordun.
"Welcome, my brother," Ashnazai said, clasping hands with him, "and to Irtuk
Beshar, our most esteemed lady."
Yordun gave a terse nod, then lifted his companion out onto the shore. Silent
and invisible behind her thick veils, Irtuk Beshar extended a leathery,
blackened hand in benediction.
At week's end Seregil and Alec lurked for the last time in the evening
shadows across from the smith's tenement. "You don't think he'll, change his
pattern, now that the job's finished, do you?" Alec asked for the third time
that day. His new cronies at the Hammer and Tongs had passed on the news that
the sewer contract had been fulfilled. So far, there was no word of Master
Quarin awarding his nephew more work, or of Rythel requesting it.
Seregil stifled an impatient remark.
"Wait another few minutes and we'll know. Hold on, there he is, and dressed
fit for a ball, too!"
As Rythel paused by the lantern over his door, they saw the glint of gold
embroidery on the coat beneath his fur-trimmed mantle.
"Looks like we guessed right," Seregil whispered.
Under his black cloak he wore one of his finest claret-colored coats, white
doeskin breeches, and a weighty purse.
A boy brought Rythel his mount and the man headed off in the usual direction.
"Luck in the shadows," Seregil whispered, quickly clasping hands with Alec.
"See you at the prison."
Flashing him a happy grin, Alec ghosted off toward the tenement's back
stairs.
Seregil let Rythel round the corner down the street, then mounted Cynril and
set out to arrange a chance meeting with his quarry.
Tonight Rythel bypassed his usual haunts and made straight for the Street of
Lights.
They must have given you a nice bonus today, Seregil thought, shadowing him
to a gambling house called the Golden Bowl.
Perhaps you're even thinking of setting up in a new line of work with the
proceeds. I wouldn't make too many plans just yet, my dear fellow.
Reestablishing contact proved an easy enough matter.
Seregil had hardly stepped inside the card room where Rythel was playing
before the man was hailing him like an old comrade.
"Sir Rythel, how good to see you again!" Seregil greeted him, shaking hands
warmly as he joined him at the table.
This was clearly a triumph of sorts for Rythel; Seregil could see him
scanning the other nobles at the table, gauging their reaction to his reception
by one of their own.
"Well met, Lord Seregil," Rythel exclaimed, taking up his cards again. "We'll
be getting up a game of Coin and Sword next. Perhaps you'd partner me?"
With the subtlest of winks Seregil nodded, bidding his time.
As before, Seregil talked a great deal during the game, interspersing his
gossipy chatter with casual references to various business ventures. He could
see Rythel rising to the bait; another few rounds and he'd suggest they retire
for a quiet drink somewhere. A private room here would do nicely.
Seregil had just broached the suggestion when a ragged lad appeared with a
message for Rythel.
Laying his cards aside, Rythel scanned the scrap of parchment and then tucked
it carefully away inside his coat.
"You must excuse me," he said, sweeping his winnings into his purse. "I have
a small matter to attend to, but I shouldn't be long. Could we meet here in,
say, an hour or two?"
"I expect I'll be here most of the night," Seregil replied, nodding
cordially. Then, to set the hook, he gave him a rakish wink and added, "There's
a small matter I would appreciate your assistance with. Small but quite possibly
lucrative. We can discuss it when you return."
"I'm at your service, my lord." Giving Seregil and the others a bow, he
hurried out.
"And since my partner has deserted me, I think I'll take a moment to freshen
up." Leaving the table, Seregil retrieved his cloak and hurried outside.
To his surprise, he saw Rythel strolling away on foot. Keeping well back,
Seregil followed.
It was a warmish night. The last grimy remnants of snow steamed in the damp
night air, mingling with the light fog rolling up from the harbor. Early spring
was fast coming to Skala; the dank, rotted smell of it was on the air.
Rythel whistled softly through his teeth as he left the Street of Lights and
skirted the Astellus Circle to Torch Street. This soon led them to the narrower
streets of the nearby merchants district.
Where in Bilairy's name is he headed to? Seregil wondered.
Ahead of him, Rythel passed out of sight around a corner. Seregil was
hurrying to catch up when the quiet of the evening was shattered by the screams
of maddened horses. Running to the corner, he saw Rythel some thirty feet away,
standing frozen in the middle of the lane as a team of draft horses charged out
of the mists at him, the heavy wagon they pulled fishtailing wildly behind them.
The lane was desperately narrow; even if Rythel managed to dodge the horses, he
would almost surely be crushed by the cart.
With a nightmarish feeling of impotence, Seregil could not even shout as
Rythel just stood there, hands raised as if he meant to halt the beasts.
The lead horse struck him full on, cutting short his ragged scream and
trampling him beneath its huge hooves. Then the cart jolted sideways and a leg
spun out from beneath it, severed by one iron-rimmed wheel.
Seregil leapt back to the safety of the corner and watched the wagon thunder
by. Foam hung from the horses" mouths; their eyes rolled in panic.
There was no driver on the bench. One long rein whipped uselessly across
their backs.
As the wagon hurtled past, he saw several large hogsheads lashed in the back.
A brewer's wagon, out on the nightly rounds?
Like a nightmare vision, it vanished again into the fog with a thunder of
hooves and jangling harness.
Crouched in the shadows, sword drawn, Seregil waited until the clamor had
died away, watching to see if anyone would come. When no one did, he ran to
where Rythel lay crushed against the wet cobbles.
Bile stirred bitterly at the back of his throat.
It was as bad a mess as he'd ever seen made of a man. The torso was smashed.
Pressing the back of one hand over his mouth, he recognized a familiar sourness
amid the horrid stench that rose from the mangled flesh.
I bought you that wine, Seregil thought, averting his eyes from the contents
revealed in the ruins of the ruptured stomach.
Lips pressed in a thin line of anger and disgust, he dragged the severed leg
back and laid it over the corpse, then took out Nysander's magicked scroll, the
one he'd meant to hand Rythel only moments before. Grasping it in one hand,
Rythel's sound right arm in the other, he pried the wax seal loose with his
thumb. An instant later, the street was empty.
"NYSANDER!"
Seregil's furious shout echoed up the prison corridor, jarring Nysander,
Alec, and Thero from their patient vigil. Nysander was the first to recover.
Rushing to the cell door, he cast a light spell and peered in through the
grate. Inside, Seregil crouched over what appeared to be a tangled mass of
clothing. The stink that hit the wizard's nostrils told another story. The door
swung open at his command and he stepped in.
"By the Four! What happened?"
"He was run down in the street," Seregil hissed between clenched teeth. "I
was practically within arm's reach of him—He just stood there like a rabbit
while a runaway brewer's wagon rolled over him and I couldn't do a thing to save
him."
Nysander heard a gagging sound behind him and looked up in time to see Thero
staggering blindly out, one hand clapped across his mouth. Grim-faced and pale,
Alec remained at the open doorway, watching as Seregil stripped back the dead
man's blood-soaked garments with savage thoroughness, his fine clothing already
smeared with foul-smelling muck.
Seregil was pale as milk, too, but his eyes blazed with fury. Kneeling on the
other side of the body, Nysander held his hands a few inches above Rythel's
ruined head.
"Again, I sense nothing," he sighed. "You must tell me everything. Was it an
accident?"
"I'm getting very leery of accidents," was growled Seregil.
He turned the body over and a bloody purse fell into the straw with a sodden
chink of coins. He turned out the purse, inspected the remains of the coat, and
then flung the whole lot across the cell.
"Damn it to hell!" he raged. "Damn it to hell! There was a note. Someone
summoned him to that place, someone he knew. He sauntered off to his death
whistling like a bridegroom! Alec, get the boot off that leg and check it."
Alec dutifully tugged at the boot on the severed leg. It was snugly fit and
he had to brace his foot on the remains of the thigh to get it off.
Pulling it free, he felt inside and shook his head. "Nothing here either."
"Or here." Seregil tossed the other boot aside and yanked off the remains of
the dead man's trousers.
After another careful inspection, he leapt up with a guttural cry and slammed
one bloodstained hand against the cell wall.
Just then Thero reappeared at the doorway. "Forgive my weakness, Nysander,"
he mumbled, still looking green. "Is there anything I can do?"
"Look well," Nysander replied somberly. "Someday your vocation will take you
from the shelter of the Oreska House; you must be strong enough to face such
ugliness. This may have been an accident—"
"An accident!" Seregil burst out, glaring down at the body. "Bilairy's Balls,
Nysander, the man was murdered, and so was Tym."
"Probably so. And we still do not know who was masterminding this man's
work."
"But the map-?" Seregil turned to Alec.
"It wasn't there," Alec replied dully, staring at Rythel.
"Nothing was there. Clothes, papers, chests, everything—gone. The room had
been turned out. I don't think he was planning to go back there again. The old
woman who owns the house said everything had been taken away by cart this
afternoon."
Nysander closed his eyes a moment, then sighed. "Thero and I will retrace
your paths tonight using our own methods. Should we uncover anything, I shall
inform you at once."
Slipping a hand beneath Alec's arm, Nysander drew the boy from the cell. But
Seregil remained, crouching gloomily over the body.
"You clever son of a whore," he whispered at it, barely loud enough for
Nysander to overhear. "You were better than I thought."
"Father, where are you?"
Gripping a handful of Valerius' magical herbs, Alec ran headlong down the
bare passageway. There were no doors, no windows, just endless walls of stone as
he turned corner after corner, following the splashes of dark blood on the floor
and the wracking sound of his father's labored breathing. But no matter how fast
he ran. Alec couldn't catch up with him.
"Father, wait," he pleaded, blinded by tears of frustration. "I found a
drysian. Let me help you. Why are you running away? "
The hoarse wheezing changed as his father tried to speak, then fell deathly
silent.
In the awful stillness, Alec heard a new and ominous sound, the soft tread of
footsteps behind him, echoing his pace. When he stopped the sound disappeared;
when he went on, they dogged him.
"Father? was he whispered, hesitating again.
The sound of footsteps continued this time, and suddenly he was mortally
afraid. Over his shoulder he saw only empty passageway behind him, stretching
away until another bend cut off the line of vision. And still the footsteps came
on, closer and louder.
The flesh between Alec's shoulder blades tightened as he fled, expecting any
moment to be grabbed from behind. The sound of pursuit grew nearer, closed in
behind him.
Wresting his sword clumsily from its sheath, Alec whirled to fight. Instead
of his sword, however, he found himself grasping a blunt arrow shaft.
And facing a wall of darkness.
Alec lurched up in bed and hugged his knees to his chest, shivering. His
nightshirt was soaked with icy sweat and his cheeks were wet with tears.
Outside, a storm had blown up. The wind made a lonely moaning in the chimney and
lashed rain against the windows.
His chest hurt as if he really had been running.
Taking a few deep breaths to calm himself, he focused on the red glow of the
hearth and tried to exorcise the nightmare's bitter imagery. His heart had
almost slowed to normal when he heard a floorboard creak across the room.
"That's the third time this week, isn't it?"
Seregil asked, stepping into the glow of the hearth. His cloak looked sodden,
and water dripped from his tangled hair.
"Damn, you startled me!" Alec gasped, hastily wiping his eyes on a corner of
the blanket. "I didn't expect to see you back tonight."
It had been nearly a week since Rythel's death and none of them, not even
Nysander, had been able to find evidence tying the smith to anything other than
the sewer sabotage and a few indiscretions at various gambling houses. Everyone
had given up by now except Seregil, who'd grown increasingly short-tempered as
he pursued one false scent after another. Lately Alec had found it wiser to keep
out of his way when they weren't working. He'd taken it as a hopeful sign this
evening when Seregil slouched off to the Street of Lights in search of
consolation; his untimely reappearance now didn't bode well.
But Alec saw nothing but genuine concern in his friend's expression as
Seregil fetched cups and the decanter of Zengati brandy from the mantel shelf.
Sitting down on the foot of Alec's bed, he poured out liberal doses for them
both.
"Bad dreams again, eh?" he asked.
"You knew?"
"You've been thrashing in your sleep all week. Drink up. You're as pale as
old ashes."
The brandy warmed Alec's belly, but his nightshirt was clammy against his
back. Tugging a blanket around his shoulders, he sipped in silence and listened
to the wind sobbing under the eaves.
"Want to talk about it?"
Alec stared down into the shadows in his cup. "It's just a dream I keep
having."
"The same one?"
He nodded. "Four or five times this week."
"You should have said something."
"You haven't exactly been approachable lately," Alec replied quietly.
"Ah, well—" Seregil pushed his fingers back through his hair. "I never was
very gracious in defeat."
"I'm sorry about the map." The thought of it had plagued Alec through the
long, unhappy week. "I should have taken it when I had the chance."
"No, you did the right thing at the time," Seregil assured him. "We just
seemed to have a lot of bad timing with this business. If I'd gone after Rythel
sooner, or if he'd held off getting killed another half an hour, we'd have had
him. There's no changing what happened, though. Now tell me about this dream."
Alec took another sip of brandy, then set the half-finished cup aside and
recounted all the details he could remember.
"It doesn't sound so bad, just telling it," he said when he'd finished.
"Especially that last part. But in the dream, it always feels like the worst
part. Even worse than my father—"
He broke off, surprised at the tightness in his throat. He sat staring down
at his hands, hoping his hair veiled his face for the moment.
After a while Seregil said gently, "You've had a lot to contend with lately,
what with finding out the truth about your birth and then this. Seeing Rythel
all mangled in that cell must have dredged up some unpleasant memories. Maybe
this is your way of finally allowing yourself to mourn your father's death."
Alec looked up sharply. "I've mourned him."
"Perhaps, tali, but in all the time we've been together you scarcely ever
mention him or weep for him."
Alec rolled the edge of blanket between his fingers, surprised at the sudden
bitterness he felt. "What's the use? Crying doesn't change anything."
"Maybe not, but—"
"It wouldn't change the fact that I couldn't do anything for my own father
but sit there watching him shrink like a burnt moth, listening to him drown in
his own blood—"
He swallowed hard. "Besides, that's not even what the dream was about,
really."
"No? What, then?"
Alec shook his head miserably. "I don't know, but it wasn't that."
Seregil gave him a rough pat on the shin and stood up. "What do you say we
scrounge breakfast with Nysander tomorrow? He's good with dreams, and while
we're there, you could talk to him and Thero about this life span business. With
all the uproar over Tym and Rythel, you haven't had much time to absorb it all."
"It's been easier, not thinking about it," Alec said with a sigh. "But I
guess I would like to talk to them."
In the darkness of his own bed, Seregil lay listening to Alec's breathing
soften back into sleep in the next room.
"No more dreams, my friend," he whispered in Aurenfaie, and it was more than
a simple well-wishing. He could almost hear the Oracle's mad whispering in the
shadows, echoing over the weeks and months with increasing insistence and
clarity.
The Eater of Death gives birth to monsters.
Guard you well the Guardian! Guard well the
Vanguard and the Shaft!
The shaft. An arrow shaft, like the one Alec clutched in his dreams night
after night—useless, impotent, without its broadhead point could mean a thousand
different things, that image, he told himself, struggling angrily against his
own instant certainty that another fateful die had been irrevocably cast in a
game he could not yet comprehend.
The storm blew itself back out to sea before dawn. The soaring white walls,
domes, and towers of the Oreska House sparkled against a flawless morning sky
ahead of them as Seregil and Alec rode toward it. Inside the sheltering walls of
the grounds, the scent of new herbs and growing things enveloped them in the
promise of a spring not far behind in the outside world.
Nysander and Thero had other guests breakfasting with them. The centaurs,
Hwerlu and his mate Feeya, had somehow navigated the maze of stairways and
corridors, not to mention doorways not designed to admit creatures the size of
large draft horses. Magyana was there as well, sitting on the corner of the
table with her feet propped on a chair next to Feeya.
"What a pleasant surprise," Nysander exclaimed, pushing another bench up to
the impromptu breakfast spread out on a worktable. Most of the regular victuals
were laid out—butter and cheese, honey, oat cakes, tea-together with a huge
platter of fruit. The usual breakfast meats had evidently been banned for the
occasion, in deference to the centaurs. Giving Seregil a meaningful stare from
under his beetling brows, he added, "I do hope this is a social call."
"More or less," Seregil said, piling a plate with bannocks and fruit. "Alec's
feeling a bit lost about living for a few extra centuries. I thought you wizards
could give him some helpful guidance, since it takes your sort by surprise,
too."
"So he finally told you," said Magyana, giving Alec a hug. "And high time,
too."
Hwerlu let out a snort of surprise. "Not until now does he know?" He said
something to Feeya in their whistling language and she shook her head.
Turning to Alec, Hwerlu smiled. "We saw it that first day you came here, but
Seregil says not to tell you. Why?"
"I guess he wanted me to get used to him first," Alec said, shooting Seregil
a wry look.
"I suppose that would take a long while," Thero threw in.
"Yet, as things have turned out, I now believe Seregil may have been wise to
wait," said Nysander. "It is more than a sense of obligation or fear which keeps
you with him, is it not, Alec?"
"Of course. But the idea that I could be sitting here three or four hundred
years from now—" He stared down at his plate, shaking his head. "I can't imagine
it."
"I sometimes still feel that way," said Thero.
Seregil looked at the younger wizard in surprise. In all the time he'd known
him, he'd never heard Thero reveal a personal feeling.
"I'd guessed it when I was a boy," Thero continued. "But it was nonetheless
overwhelming to have it confirmed when the wizards examined me. Yet, think of
what we'll experience in our lifetimes—the years of learning, the discoveries."
He's almost human today, Seregil thought, studying his rival's countenance
with new interest.
"I made a poor job of telling you," he admitted to Alec. "I was feeling a bit
shaky that night myself, after seeing Adzriel and all, but what Thero says is
true. It's what has kept me sane after I left Aurenen. Long life is a gift for
those with a sense of wonder and curiosity. And I don't think you'll ever have
any shortage of those qualities."
Nysander chuckled. "Indeed not. You know, Alec, that for over two centuries I
have studied and learned and walked in the world, and yet I still have the
satisfaction of knowing that should I live another two hundred years there shall
still be new things to delight me. Magyana and I have gone out into the world
more than many wizards and so, like Seregil here, we have seen many friends age
and die. It would not be truthful to tell you that it is not painful, yet each
of those friendships, no matter how brief, was a gift none of us would
sacrifice."
"It might sound hard-hearted, but once you have survived a generation or two,
it becomes easier to detach yourself from such feelings," added Magyana.
"It isn't that you love them any less, you just learn to respect the cycles
of life. All the same, I thank Illior the two of you found each other the way
you did."
"So do I," Alec replied with surprising feeling. He colored slightly, perhaps
embarrassed by his own admission. "I just wish I could have talked to my father
about it, about my mother. Seregil's spun out a good theory about what must have
gone on between the two of them, but now I'll never know the real story."
"Perhaps not," said Nysander. "But you can honor them by respecting the life
they gave you."
"Speaking of your parents, Alec, tell Nysander about that nightmare you've
been having since Rythel got killed," Seregil interjected, sensing the opening
he'd been hoping for.
"Indeed?" Nysander cocked an inquiring eyebrow at the boy.
"Can you describe it?" asked Magyana.
"Dreams are wondrous tools sometimes, and those that come to you more than
once are almost always important."
Seregil kept a surreptitious eye on Nysander while Alec went through the
details of the nightmare; he knew the old wizard too well not to see a definite
spark of interest behind Nysander's facade of thoughtful attentiveness.
"And that's always the last of it, and the worst," Alec finished. Even with
the morning sun streaming down through the glass dome overhead, he shifted
uneasily as he described the final image.
Magyana nodded slowly. "Violent events can summon up other painful memories,
I suppose. Though your father died of the wasting sickness rather than violence,
it must have been a time of terrible fear and pain for you."
Alec merely nodded, but Seregil read the pain behind his stoic expression.
"Yes, and coupled with the shock of learning your true parentage, it could
create such images in the mind," Nysander concurred, although the look he gave
Seregil showed that he had other ideas on the matter.
"I would not worry too much about them, dear boy. I am certain they will pass
in time."
"I hope so," sighed Alec. "It's getting so I hate to go to sleep."
"Nysander, do you still have that book of meditations by Reli a Noliena?"
asked Seregil. "Her philosophy might be of some use to Alec just now. I seem to
recall seeing it on the sitting-room bookshelves somewhere."
"I believe it is," replied Nysander. "Come along and help me look, would
you?"
Nysander said nothing as they descended the tower stairs.
As soon as the sitting-room door was firmly shut behind them, however, he
fixed Seregil with an expectant look.
"I assume there is some matter you wish to discuss privately?"
"Was it that obvious?"
"Really now. Reli a Noliena?" Taking his accustomed seat by the hearth,
Nysander regarded Seregil wryly. "I seem to recall that you have on numerous
occasions referred to her writings as utter tripe."
Seregil shrugged, running a finger along the painted band of the mural that
guarded the room. "First thing that popped into my head. What do you make of
this dream of Alec's, and the headless arrow shaft? I have a feeling it's tied
in with"—Seregil paused, acknowledging Nysander's warning look—"with that
particular matter about which I am not allowed to speak."
"It does seem a rather obvious correlation. No doubt you are thinking of the
words of the Oracle?"
"The Guardian, the Vanguard, and the Shaft."
"It is certainly possible that there is a connection, although why it should
suddenly surface now, I do not know. Then again, it could conceivably be nothing
more than it appears. Alec is an archer. What stronger image of helplessness
could there be for him than a useless arrow?"
"I've tried to tell myself that, too. We both know who this Eater of Death
is; I've been touched twice by the dark power and was damn lucky both times to
get away with life and sanity intact. So I want to believe that Alec isn't
getting pulled into this web, but I think he is, that that's exactly what that
dream means. You believe that, too, don't you?"
"And what would you have me do?" Nysander asked with a trace of bitterness.
"If we are dealing with true prophecy, then whatever must happen will happen,
whether we accept it or not."
"True prophecy, eh? Fate, you mean."
Seregil scowled. "So why dream? What's the use of being warned about
something if you can't do anything to avoid it?"
"Avoiding something is seldom the best way to resolve it."
"Neither is sitting around with your head up your ass until the sky falls in
on you!"
"Hardly, but forewarned is forearmed, is it not?"
"Forearmed against what, then?" Seregil asked with rising irritation as an
all-too-familiar guarded look came over the wizard's face. "All right then,
you're still guarding some dire secret, but it seems to me that the gods
themselves are giving hints. If you're the Guardian, which you've admitted
already, and Alec, our archer, is the Shaft, then am I the Vanguard?" He paused,
mentally trying the title on for size. But the bone-deep feeling of certainty
he'd had about Alec eluded him. "Vanguard, those who go before the battle, one
who goes in front—No, that doesn't resonate somehow for me. Besides, the Oracle
wouldn't tell me to guard myself. So why would he tell me anything at all
unless—"
"Seregil, please—"
"Unless there's a fourth figure to the prophecy!"
Seregil exclaimed, striding excitedly back and forth between the hearth and
the door as the myriad possibilities took shape in his mind. "Of course. Four is
the sacred number of the Immortals who stand against the Eater of Death, so—"
The inner certainty was there now. No matter what answer Nysander gave, he
knew instinctively that he was on the right track now. "Illior's Light,
Nysander! The Oracle wouldn't have spoken to me as he did if there wasn't a
reason, some role for me to play."
Nysander stared down at his clasped hands for a moment, communing with an
inner voice. Taking a deep breath, he said quietly, "You are the Guide, the
Unseen One. I did not tell you before for two reasons."
"Those being?"
"First, because I still hoped—continue to hope, in fact—that it will not
matter. And secondly, because I know nothing more than that. None of the
Guardians ever has."
"What about the Vanguard?"
"Micum, most likely, since he has also been touched by these events. For the
love of Illior, Seregil, do stop that pacing and sit down."
Seregil came to a halt by the bookshelves.
"What do you mean, you hope it won't matter?"
Closing his eyes, Nysander massaged the bridge of his nose with thumb and
forefinger. "Just as there have been other Guardians, so have there been other
Shafts, other Guides. It is as if they always exist from generation to
generation, kept in readiness in case—"
"In case what?"
"I cannot say. I confess I still cling to the hope that this terrible evil
may yet be forestalled. For now, I must guard my secret as I have done. What I
can tell you, seeing that you have guessed so much, is that the four figures of
the prophecy have always been known to the Guardians, but what their functions
are has never been revealed. But if you are the Unseen One, Seregil, if Alec is
the Shaft and Micum the Vanguard, then there is nothing any friend or foe can do
to alter that."
Seregil let out an exasperated growl. "In other words, all we can do is wait
for this terrible Something to happen. Or not happen, in which case we spend the
rest of our lives waiting because we won't know that it isn't going to happen
after all?"
"That is, no doubt, one of the reasons that the Guardians keep such knowledge
from the others. It serves little purpose for you to know, and will only make
you uneasy. On the other hand," he paused, looking up at Seregil with a mix of
concern and pity—"I suspect that my hope to pass my burden on to a new Guardian
will prove a vain one. Mardus had the wooden disks; other Plenimarans came to
the Asheks on your very heels, seeking the crown.
There are other objects—magical ones—some in Plenimar, others thankfully
scattered to lost corners of the world. It was only by chance that my master,
Arkoniel, came into possession of the palimpsest that led you to the crown.
Clearly the Plenimarans are making a more deliberate effort to recover them. It
bodes ill, dear boy, most ill.
"As for your dilemma"—Nysander gave him a weary smile—"may I remind you that
if you were not such a intolerable meddler you would not be in this quandary."
"What about the others?"
Nysander spread his hands. "I do not forbid you to tell them what you know,
but reflect a moment on what you have just said. Even knowing, there is nothing
yet to be done; our fates rest on the knees of the immortals."
"And a damned uncomfortable seat that is," Seregil grumbled.
"I agree. And perhaps a dangerous one now. We must all live cautiously for a
time."
"I can keep an eye on Alec, if that's the way you want it, but what about
Micum?"
"I placed a number of protective spells around the three of you as soon as
you came back from the north. Since then someone has tried to break through
those surrounding you and Alec a few times, but—"
"What?" An icy stab of fear lanced through Seregil's chest. "You never—"
"I was not surprised by such attempts," Nysander told him calmly, "and they
have failed, of course. The spells surrounding all of you are intact, making it
impossible for you to be seen magically. Thus far, there have been no
disturbances in the spells surrounding Micum or his family."
"Bilairy's Balls! Do you know who was doing this?"
"Unfortunately, the seekers are equally well shielded. Their magic is very
strong and they know how to protect themselves."
"I don't like this. I don't like this at all," muttered Seregil. "There are
more ways than magic to find someone. Hell, Rhal showed up, didn't he? Who's to
say Mardus or his dogs haven't, too? Poor Alec had no idea how to cover his
tracks."
"Whatever happens, you must not blame the boy," cautioned Nysander.
"Who said anything about blame?" Seregil ran his fingers back through his
hair in frustration. "He did a damn fine job, given the circumstances. He saved
my life. Now it's up to me to protect him. And Micum; knowing what I do, I'm
honor-bound to give him any warning I can."
Seregil braced for further argument, but instead, Nysander sighed and nodded.
"Very well, but only as much as is absolutely necessary."
"Fair enough. Damn, they'll be wondering where we are by now." Seregil rose
to go back upstairs, but Nysander remained where he sat.
"Seregil?"
He turned back to find Nysander regarding him sadly.
"I hope, dear boy, that no matter what the coming days bring, you will
believe I never foresaw this time coming during my Guardianship, or that its
advent would enmesh any of you."
Seregil gave him a grudging grin. "You know, I've spent most of my life
listening to legends or telling them. It should be interesting being part of
one. I only hope the bards who tell it years from now will be able to end with
'And the Band of Four all lived with great honor for many years thereafter'."
"As do I, dear boy. As do I. Make some excuse for me, would you? I would like
to sit here for a while."
Silence closed in around Nysander after Seregil had gone. With his hands
resting on his knees before him, he allowed himself to go limp in the chair,
listening to the sound of his breathing and his heart until he was aware of
nothing else. Then, slowly, he opened himself to the invisible currents of
foreseeing, using the faces of his three chosen comrades to call in the energies
he sought. Grey images stirred sluggishly before his mind's eye, the tangled
flux of
??
How to pluck crumbs of truth from a future as yet unfixed
-
The hands of Tikdrie Megraesh,
The icon of his dreams and visions, opened before him. Voices came faintly
through the murk, shouting, raging, weeping. He could hear the clash of weapons,
men shouting.Then, harsh as a blow, came the vision of a black disk surrounded
by a thin white nimbus of fire. It seemed to glare at him—an accusing eye.
A familiar perfume wafted out to Seregil as he neared the workroom door.
Opening it, he found Ylinestra sitting next to Magyana. A quick glance revealed
an interesting tableau around the breakfast table. As usual, Ylinestra looked
intentionally stunning as she chatted with Magyana, with her shining black hair
braided loosely over one shoulder of her loose-flowing gown.
Magyana appeared to be a willing conversationalist, but Seregil thought he
detected faint lines of distaste around her eyes. Feeya was not so subtle. She'd
moved to the other end of the table and stood eyeing the sorceress with evident
dislike.
Thero seemed torn between embarrassment and lust.
Alec stood at what might be considered a safe distance from his former
seducer, carrying on some earnest conversation with Hwerlu.
All eyes turned Seregil's way as he entered.
"Ah, here they are," said Magyana. "But where is Nysander?"
"Oh, he got distracted by something down in his study," Seregil replied.
"How unfortunate," sighed Ylinestra. "I was hoping I could lure him out to
the gardens for a while."
"You know how he is. He's likely to be a while."
"I'll tell him you were looking for him," Thero offered a trifle stiffly. "In
the meantime, perhaps
I—"
"Ah well, another time," Ylinestra said breezily, gliding to the door.
When she was gone Feeya whistled something to Hwerlu, who laughed. "She says
the smell of the woman makes her belly hurt," he translated.
"Mine, as well," Magyana agreed with a mischievous smile. "Although I daresay
most men find the scent alluring enough. She must be missing Nysander. That's
the third time this week she's come looking for him. Isn't that right, Thero?"
"I don't keep track," the young wizard said with a shrug. "If you'll all
excuse me, I've got work of my own I'd better get started on."
Alec chuckled as he and Seregil set off for the Cockerel again. "I'll bet you
a sester he waits until everyone else clears out, then goes after her."
"That's a loser's bet," Seregil said with a crooked grin. "I've never seen it
fail; when a cold fish like Thero finally does fall in love, it makes a total
fool of him."
"You know, I think you're too hard on him."
"Is that so?"
Alec shrugged. "I didn't care much for him at first, either, but now he
doesn't seem so bad. He helped save our lives during that raid on Kassarie's
keep, and he was useful during that whole business with Rythel, too. Since then,
he's been almost friendly. Nysander may be right about him, after all. As
arrogant and cold as he can seem, underneath I don't think he's so bad."
Seregil gave Alec a skeptical grin.
"You've a charitable nature. We've got more important things to worry about
than Thero right now, though. I'll explain it once we get home."
They both rode with hoods pulled forward, but Alec guessed even without
seeing his friend's face that something of note had come up during Seregil's
separate conversation with Nysander.
"What is it?" he asked, unable to guess from
Seregil's guarded tone whether the matter was likely to be a job or a
problem.
Seregil shook his head. "Not here."
They spoke little the rest of the way back to the inn, but Alec noted that
the route they took to approach it was more cautiously circuitous than usual.
Thryis hailed them as they passed the kitchen door.
"I didn't hear you go out," she said, sharpening knives by the fireside.
"Rhiri brought in a message for you last night, but it wasn't sent for the
Rhiminee Cat. It's there on the mantelpiece behind the salt box."
Seregil found it, a coarse square of paper tied with greasy twine and sealed
with candle drippings.
"Anything else?" asked Seregil, bending down to tickle Luthas, who sat
playing with a wooden spoon at his great-grandmother's feet.
"No, nothing."
"How many are there in the inn today?"
"I think this wind's blown all our customers away," the old woman grumbled,
testing the edge of a cleaver against her thumbnail. "There were those six
draymen in the big room, but they left first thing this morning. All we've got
left now is a horse trader and his son in the room at the front and a cloth
merchant in for the spring trade. I've never seen it so slack this time of year.
I sent Cilia and Diomis out to see what's what down at the market."
Suddenly Luthas startled them all with an angry squall.
"By the Flame, he's been restless all morning," Thryis sighed. "Must be
another tooth coming."
"I'll get him." Alec scooped up the child, bouncing him gently in his arms,
but the child howled on. "You're wanting your mother, aren't you, dear one?"
Thryis smiled, offering him his spoon. But Luthas knocked it away and cried
louder, squirming like an eel.
"Find me that rag of his," Alec called to Seregil over the uproar.
Rummaging in the nearby cradle, Seregil found a colorful kerchief with a knot
tied in the middle and held that within reach. Luthas grabbed it and stuffed the
knot in his mouth, chewing at it with a decidedly disgruntled air. After a
moment he relaxed drowsily against Alec's shoulder.
"You're quite the nursemaid these days," whispered Seregil.
"Oh, they're great friends, these two," Thryis said fondly.
Alec was just attempting to lay the child in his cradle when Rhiri stamped
in, slamming the door behind him.
Luthas jerked awake, crying ferociously.
The mute ostler gave Alec an apologetic nod, then pulled a small scroll tube
from his jerkin and handed it to Seregil.
"Come on!" groaned Seregil, motioning for Alec to follow.
Back in their disordered sitting room again, Seregil flopped down on the
couch and opened the scroll tube, which contained a jeweled ring and the usual
request for the Cat's services. Setting these aside with an impatient sniff, he
cut the string on the folded paper and smoothed it out on his knee.
"Well now, here's a bit of good news," he exclaimed happily. "Listen to this.
"In Rhiminee Harbor, awaiting your pleasure. Ask for Welken at the Griffin."
It's signed "Master Rhal, captain of the Green Lady," and dated yesterday."
"Yesterday? We'd better get down there."
"Another hour won't matter." His smile faded as he waved Alec to a chair.
"We've got something else to deal with first."
Alec sat down, studying Seregil's face uneasily; he didn't look happy.
"First, you have to swear secrecy under your oath as a Watcher," Seregil began
with uncharacteristic gravity.
A thrill of anticipation went through Alec as he nodded. "I swear. What's
going on?"
"Those dreams of yours, with the headless arrow shaft? They meant something
to Nysander. To me, too, really, the moment you told me about it last night, but
I had to have Nysander hear it to be certain."
"Of what?" Alec asked uneasily.
"There's so much to tell you, it's hard to know where to begin." Seregil
studied his clasped hands for a moment. "That first night we came here, I went
out again."
"To the Temple of Illior."
"That's right, but I never told you why I went there, did I?"
"No, never."
"I went hoping the Oracle could tell me something about that wooden disk we
brought back from Wolde."
Seregil touched a hand to his breast where the hidden brand lay.
Alec stared at him in disbelief. "Does Nysander know?"
"He does now, but that's not the point. The Oracle didn't tell me anything
specific about the disk, but he did say something that I know now was a piece of
a prophecy. He spoke of the Eater of Death—"
"Just like in the journal we found, and at the Mourning Night ceremony."
"Yes, and then he told me I was to guard three people he called the Guardian,
the Vanguard, and the Shaft. And there's a fourth, the Unseen One or Guide.
That's me, it seems, and Nysander's the Guardian. After hearing about your
dream, we think you might be—"
"The Shaft," Alec said softly, remembering the headless arrow and the feeling
of helplessness he always felt at the sight of it.
"Apparently Nysander has had some presentiment that Micum is the Vanguard."
"But the Eater of Death is Seriamaius." He saw Seregil flinch as he said the
name aloud. "This Shaft and Guardian business, it's connected somehow. Oh, wait
a minute—"
Alec's belly twisted into a queasy knot. "That disk, that damned wooden disk
that made you so sick and crazy. That's what you went to the Oracle to ask
about, so it must have something to do with the prophecy."
"It does," said Seregil. "But what, I don't know. Nysander won't say, except
that the disk is part of something bigger, something the Plenimarans are willing
to go to any lengths to get. When I went away just before the Festival of Sakor,
it was to get another object before the Plenimarans did, a sort of crown. It had
the same sort of evil magic about it, only worse." His face darkened as some
memory surfaced. "Much worse, and much more dangerous. But I got it."
"There were other disks just like the one we stole," Alec recalled, his mind
racing. "Maybe they had to be all together to have their full effect."
"That's right. Which means if we'd been greedy and taken them all, you and I
probably wouldn't have made it as far as Boersby. I've wanted to tell you all
this before, but Nysander swore me to silence. I wouldn't be telling you now,
except that you seem to be part of it, too."
"Of what?" demanded Alec. "What does the Shaft do? If Nysander has the disk
and the crown, then the Plenimarans aren't going to get them and whatever
they're part of can't happen, right?"
"I guess that's the idea. But why would you be having these dreams now, if
that's all there is to it, eh?"
"Do you think Mardus could still be after us? Bilairy's Balls. Seregil, if
Rhal could find us, then why not him?"
Seregil shrugged. "It's not impossible. He didn't strike me as the sort who
gives up easily. But why hasn't he shown up yet? It's been months now, and if he
had any idea that we have the crown as well, then he or somebody like him will
be certain to come after it sooner or later. There's something else, too. You
remember Micum's description of the ritual sacrifice he found up in the Fens?"
"All those bodies cut open," Alec said with a small shudder.
"I found the same sort of thing with the crown. All the bodies were ancient
there, but the mutilations were the same, breastbone split, ribs pulled back
like wings. Now Nysander claims that all this may come to nothing, that there
have always been Guardians and Shafts and so forth chosen just in case. But he
didn't sound all that confident. That's why I'm telling you this, and why we've
got to warn Micum. I want you to ride out there tomorrow and tell him just what
I've told you."
"What about you?"
Seregil smiled darkly. "There are a few old mates of Tym's I'd like to have a
chat with. If Plenimarans are getting into Rhiminee, then someone has got to
know about it."
"They covered their tracks pretty well with that business in the sewers,"
Alec reminded him.
"Except for Rythel. There's almost always a Rythel in any plot. When you get
to Watermead, what I've told you is for Micum's ears alone. Do whatever you can
to get him alone but try not to raise suspicion. Kari usually knows when
something's up. And ask him about his dreams while you're at it, although I
expect he'll scoff.
"It's a lot to take in, I know. Like I said, Nysander claims this may all
come to nothing, but I don't think he really believes it. I know I don't."
Half-realized images whirled through Alec's mind, too chaotic to grasp. Yet
bits and pieces seemed to stand forth from the general maelstrom, like branches
in an eddy. "So Nysander has at least two pieces of whatever this thing is: the
disk and the crown. But there must be something else, right?"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, if he's been the Guardian all these years, then what's he guarding?"
Seregil's eyes widened in surprised realization.
"That's a good question. But somehow I doubt we'll ever know."
Resuming their roles of Lord Seregil and Sir Alec for the day, they emerged
from the Wheel Street villa at midday and rode down to the lower city to inspect
a certain privateering vessel anchored just beyond the quays. They found Rhal's
man still waiting at the Griffin. A day and night spent in a tavern
notwithstanding, he was still sober enough to row them out to the ship.
"That's 'er," he said proudly, nodding over one shoulder as he rowed them
toward a sleek, twin-masted raider. The Green Lady sported fighting platforms
fore and aft. Even to Alec's untutored eye there was no mistaking her prime
purpose.
"Bilairy's Balls, what's that supposed to be?" Seregil asked as they crossed
beneath her prow. Fitted under the bowsprit was the painted statue of a woman.
"Figurehead," Welken replied. "Lots of the new ships has 'em. Said to bring
luck. Captain Rhal got the best carver in Iolos to do our lady there; she's even
got a real golden ring on her finger with a great red stone winking in it.
Captain says her round belly'll bring us a full hold."
Dark hair streamed over the woman's shoulders and the carved skirts of her
emerald-green gown flowed back from a rounded, pregnant belly. One outstretched
hand pointed ahead; the other lay modestly over her heart.
Alec broke into a broad grin as he squinted up at the painted wooden face; it
was not fine work, but the resemblance to Seregil was obvious to anyone who'd
seen him playing a Mycenian gentlewoman aboard the Darter.
Still staring up, Seregil swore pungently under his breath.
Alec stifled a snort of laughter and asked innocently, "Does she have a
name?"
"Oh, aye. Captain calls her Lady Gwethelyn."
"It suits her," Alec observed, still fighting to keep a straight face.
"Charming," muttered Seregil.
Climbing a rope ladder, they found Rhal waiting for them on deck. After a
brief tour, he ushered them belowdecks to his aft cabin. Though by no means
luxurious, it was a far cry from the cramped quarters he'd entertained them in
aboard the Darter.
"I hope that figurehead of yours brings you luck," Seregil remarked dryly,
taking a chair.
"Aye, and I don't doubt we'll be needing it soon," Rhal said, pouring wine
for them. "The weather is settling out early this year. With the old Overlord
dead, there isn't much to hold the Plenimarans back now. Of course, his son
Estmar isn't Overlord yet. According to Plenimaran custom, there's a month of
official mourning before he can be crowned. That should give us another few
weeks."
Seregil shook his head, frowning. "I wouldn't count on it. There have been
rumors of Plenimaran scouts sighted as far west as the Folcwine River."
This had come as troubling news, Alec reflected.
The swift- moving units of the Queen's Horse Guard were scouting there, too,
but there'd been no word from Beka in weeks.
"Well, whatever happens, the Lady and her crew are ready," Rhal assured them
stoutly. "She sailed easy as a swan coming up from Macar and as you saw, we're
fitted out with grapples, catapults, and fire baskets. When we set off raiding
I'll have twenty archers among my crew and ten more hired on special."
"Impressive. When do you sail?" Rhal stroked his dark beard. "Soon as we get
the Queen's Mark."
"The only thing that separates privateers from pirates," Seregil interjected
for Alec's benefit.
"That, and the percentage of the take appropriated for the royal treasury,"
Rhal added. "I figure we'll do coasting trade until the war breaks out in
earnest; goods loads, transporting soldiers, that sort of thing. The crew needs
a proper sea run.
Word is there's already plenty of activity down around the Inner Sea and the
Strait, lots of fat Plenimaran merchant ships carrying supplies and gold up
toward Nanta. And of course, I stand ready to honor our bargain, though I don't
see how you'll find me if you need me."
"We thought of that," Alec said, flipping him a silver medallion. "It's
magicked. Just hang it up in here somewhere and a wizard friend of ours can
sight off it wherever you are."
Rhal studied the emblem of Illior stamped into the face of the disk. "This
has a lucky feel to it, too, and we can use all of that we can get."
"Then the best of it to you," said Seregil, rising to go.
"I hope your ship's belly is as full as your figurehead's before long."
Rhal scratched his head sheepishly. "Oh, you noticed that, did you? She was a
fine-looking woman, that Gwethelyn. Thinking back to that night I caught you
out, I don't know if I was more angry or disappointed. But in the end I'd say
meeting you brought me luck, so there she is. The Green Lady's a fine ship and
she'll do us all proud."
Since they were already dressed for the part, Alec and Seregil put in a
suppertime appearance at Wheel Street, then slipped back to the Cockerel after
dark. Once there, Seregil went straight to his room and rummaged out his
tattered beggar's rags.
"Are you going out tonight?" asked Alec, leaning in the doorway as Seregil
changed clothes.
"There are some thieves and nightrunners I want to speak with. I'm not likely
to find them in daylight. I probably won't be back before you go, so get some
rest and leave early. Before I go, though, let's hear what you're going to tell
Micum. Things happened pretty fast today. I want to be sure you've got
everything straight."
Alec recited as best he could what Seregil had told him about the prophecy
and dreams. Seregil made one or two corrections, then nodded approval.
"Just right. I don't know what Micum will make of all this but
least he'll know what's in the wind."
Clapping on his old felt hat, he stepped past Alec and began dusting himself
with ashes from the hearth.
"I'll come back as soon as I've talked to him," said Alec, "I could be back
by nightfall."
"There's no need. Stay the night and come back in daylight."
Alec opened his mouth to protest further, but Seregil forestalled him with an
upraised hand. "I
mean it, Alec. If we are in danger, then the more care we take the better. I
don't want you getting caught out in some lonely place after dark."
Still slouching unhappily in the doorway, Alec frowned down at his boots. The
truth was, he suddenly didn't like the thought of leaving Seregil alone here,
either, though he knew better than to say so.
Seregil seemed to guess his thoughts just the same.
Adjusting a greasy patch over one eye, he came over and grasped Alec by the
shoulders. "I'll be all right. And I'm not shutting you out of anything,
either."
Despite the patch, tangled hair, and ridiculous old hat that partially
obscured his friend's features, Alec heard the warm earnestness in his voice
clearly enough.
"I know," he sighed. "You missed a spot."
Reaching over, Alec smeared ashes over a bit of clean skin just under
Seregil's right cheekbone. His friend's one visible eye widened noticeably.
Strange feelings stirred again, and Alec felt himself blush.
Seregil held his gaze a moment, then cleared his throat gruffly. "Thanks. We
don't want any telltale signs of cleanliness giving me away, do we? I'll take a
run through the stable dung heap before I go, just to make sure I've got the
right odor about me. Take care."
"You, too." Alec felt another twinge of unease as Seregil headed out the
door. "Luck in the shadows, Seregil," he called after him.
Seregil looked back with a crooked grin. "And to you."
Left to himself, Alec set about packing the small bundle for his journey. But
he soon found himself repeatedly packing and unpacking the same few items as his
thoughts wandered over the harried events of the day, and his strange unease
over Seregil's departure.
That night Alec's nightmare returned, but this time there was more to it.
In the end, when he turned to look for his pursuer, blocks of stone slid out
of the wall beside him, tumbling to the floor with a hollow crash. Gripping the
headless arrow, he forced himself to go to the opening in the wall and look
through. He could see nothing but darkness beyond, but he could hear a new
sound, one that was at once as ordinary and as inexplicably terrifying as the
sight of the simple arrow shaft.
It was the booming grumble of the sea battering a rocky shore.
Alec opened his eyes well before dawn. Too anxious to sleep, he dressed
quickly and went down to the stable to saddle Patch.
A damp grey mist hung over the city, presaging a foul day, but in the Harvest
Market the first traders and stall keepers were already preparing for the day's
business. Alec paused to buy a bit of breakfast, then headed for the gate. To
his surprise, pikemen of the City Watch stepped out to block his way.
"State your name and business," one of them said, stifling a yawn.
"What's this?"
"Queen's orders. Anyone going in or out of the city gets recorded. State your
name and business."
Just a spy riding out to warn an old friend that the Immortals may have
designs on his future. Alec thought wryly. "Wilim i Micum of Rhiminee," he said
aloud. "I'm heading up to Tovus village to see a man about a horse."
A guard seated at a rough table by the gate busily recorded this information
in a day book.
"When do you expect to return?" asked the first guard.
"With luck, late tonight" As he said it, Alec realized that sometime between
last night and now, he'd made up his mind to return that day, no matter what
Seregil said. There was no good reason he couldn't make the trip in a day if the
weather didn't turn too bad.
Riding north along the highroad, he watched a cheerless grey dawn crawl
slowly up from the eastern horizon. The first crocus and snowdrops were
blossoming in the ditches, but the pallid light seemed to rob both them and
Alec's spirits of any color.
His dreams had left him feeling gritty-eyed and dour. The farther he rode
from Rhiminee, the more heavily the weight of a formless dread seemed to weigh
on his heart.
It was midmorning when Alec crossed the bridge and started up the hill toward
Watermead. Micum's hounds came pelting out to meet him, but there was no sign of
any other welcome.
Wondering where Illia could be, he entered the courtyard to find a farm hand
waiting for him.
"Good morning, Sir Alec. If you're looking for the master, he ain't here. He
and the family up and headed over to Lord Warnik i Thorgol's estate in the next
valley day before yesterday. Folks are gathering there from all over the
district to talk about defenses for the war."
Alec slapped his gloves against his thigh in exasperation. "When do you
expect them back?"
"Not until tomorrow, maybe longer."
"Is that Master Alec?" Kari's old woman servant, Arna, called out the front
door. "Come on in, love. This house is always open to you. You can put up here
until they return. Is Master Seregil behind you on the road?"
"No, I'm alone." Still mounted, Alec considered the offer. "How long would it
take for me to get to Warnik's?"
Ama considered this a moment. "Well, you'd have to go down to the highroad
and then north to the next valley. What would you say, Ranil, he could be there
in two hours or so, couldn't he?"
"Two hours, eh?" Two there, two back here, and another two back to the city,
plus however long it took to explain things to Micum. Alec frowned to himself.
With this weather, he would be riding home in the dark.
"Oh, aye," said Ranil. "And you'd be wanting a fresh horse to give young
Patch here a spell. Course, if you're in a particular hurry, you might want to
try the old hill track."
"He doesn't want to go riding up the hills today," scoffed Arna, pulling her
shawl closer about her skinny shoulders. "That trail will be nothing but a
ribbon of mire with all the thaw and rain."
"How long does that way take?" Alec pressed, trying hard not to let his
impatience show.
"I dunno." Ranil scratched his head as he considered the question. "Perhaps
no more than an hour, if you rode hard and didn't lose yourself. Myn's the one
who'd know best. He comes from over in that valley."
"There now, so he does," said Arna, sounding as if the next valley were some
exotic distant land.
"Myn's the one could tell you, Master Alec. Perhaps he could guide you."
"Where is he?" Alec asked.
"Myn? Now let's see, Ranil, where's Myn today?"
"Gone over to Greywall with the reeve," Ranil replied. "That's five miles or
so east of here."
Another costly detour. "Ranil, is this hill track of yours far from here?"
asked Alec.
"No, you know the one, sir. Ride back down to the stream at the bottom of the
hill and you'll strike it running to your right along the near bank."
"You mean that trail that leads up to the pool where the otters live?" Alec
exclaimed in relief.
He'd ridden there with Beka.
"Aye, that's the one," said Arna. "It's a rough track beyond, though, or so I
hear."
"I'm used to that," said Alec, dismounting. "I will borrow a horse, though,
and leave my pack here. I'll be back for Patch before dark."
He was underwater. Looking up, he could see the surface shimmering just above
him, a shifting silver mirror that reflected nothing. Just beyond the surface
something dark moved, like a man standing against the sky.
Seregil uncurled with a startled grunt as something prodded him roughly
between the shoulder blades.
"Told you he was alive!" he heard a woman say.
Two bluecoats were looking down at him from horseback, early morning light
glinting from their helmets. A third stood over him holding a truncheon in both
hands.
"Come on, you. On your feet," the one with the truncheon growled, looking
like he'd just as soon give a beggar another good jab for good measure.
"Maker's mercy and blessings on you," Seregil whined.
"Keep your blessings, you Dalnan mudlark."
Seregil pulled his dirty rags closer about him and got stiffly to his feet,
wondering how in hell he'd let himself doze off in the middle of the east end
stews.
He'd been watching a nearby slophouse, hoping to snag a certain informant who
often drank there. The dingy establishment was shuttered now, his man long gone.
Grabbing Seregil roughly by the arm, the bluecoat marched him past the horses
to a high-sided cart.
"Get up there and be quick about it."
Scrambling over the tailboard, Seregil found half a dozen sullen beggars and
whores already huddled inside.
Disgusted with himself, Seregil clung to the hard bench as the cart lurched
on. Something nagged at the back of his mind, some dream he'd been having when
the bluecoats had woken him. But it was gone. Time now to deal with the present
situation.
"I ain't done nothing," he protested querulously, tucking his chin down
against his chest.
"I've done nothing a'tal. What are they at, taking a poor cripple up like
this?"
"Haven't you heard?" a ragged girl asked tearfully. "Word come that war's
started. It's the Beggar Law for us!"
Seregil stared at her mutely as the irony of the situation struck home.
Ancient and time-honored, the Beggar Law stated that in time of war all
vagrants, beggars, and criminals were to be either pressed into military service
or cast out of the cities to fend for themselves. In the event of a siege, no
precious stores would be wasted on societal parasites.
Looking around at his fellow unfortunates—the tearful whore, a pair of
vaguely familiar thieves, a one-armed drunken giant covered in sour vomit, a
half-starved boy—Seregil had all he could do not to laugh at his own unwitting
miscalculation in choosing a disguise.
Stay with this lot and I'll find myself facing down a Plenimaran cavalry
charge with nothing but a pike in my hands, he thought grimly. still might just
as well have taken a pleasant ride out to Watermead with Alec for all the use
I've been so far.
Alec didn't see the otters as he rode past their pool, although there were
footprints and slide marks enough to show that they were still in residence
there.
Beyond the pool, the trail grew steeper, winding steadily uphill around thick
fir trunks and boulders bigger than his borrowed mare. Crusts of snow still
lingered under roots and rocky overhangs, but the air was sweet with the scents
of tender new growth and moist earth. Despite the rain already pattering down
through the boughs, it felt good to be in the woods. After a winter spent mostly
in the confines of Rhiminee's intricate streets, the simple task of following a
disused woods trail held a comfortable familiarity.
Spring runoff and fallen needles had obscured long stretches of the trail. In
other places, it crossed open expanses of bare ledge with nothing but the
tumbled remains of a few small cairns to show the way.
The forest grew thicker as he went along. Thick stands of hemlock and fir
laced their branches overhead, shutting out what little light the day had to
offer. Winter storms had felled trees across the trail, forcing him to dismount
frequently and lead his horse around or over.
After an hour of struggling along, he still hadn't seen any sign that he'd
reached the pass Ranil had spoken of. The wind picked up suddenly, lashing a
torrent of icy rain down through the trees. Cursing, Alec pulled his cloak
around him and tucked it under his thighs to keep out the wet as long as he
could.
At last he reached the crest of the pass. From here the trail seemed to open
up a bit, but before he could make up any lost time he rounded a bend and found
himself faced with the worst deadfall so far.
The ground was steep here, and the path hugged a small cliff face to the
left. A thick hemlock had fallen across against the rock face, its thick
branches forming a dark green palisade higher than Alec's head.
He could have wormed his way through, but the horse was another matter.
Cursing Ranil again, and himself for listening, he dismounted again to look for
a way around.
Trees groaned in the wind around them as Alec led his horse off the trail,
following the trunk to its base. A tangled network of roots twenty feet across
lay exposed there, torn from the thin, stony soil in some past storm.
His horse shied as they went around it, spooked perhaps by the gnarled fists
of the roots or the roar of the storm.
Gripping the reins in one hand, he pulled the animal's head down and threw
his cloak over its eyes. By the time he'd climbed the bank back up to the trail
he was soaked to the skin and covered in mud.
He had one foot in the stirrup to mount when the mare shied again. Alec
staggered awkwardly, pulling his foot free in case she bolted.
The move probably saved his life. He'd just gotten both feet on the ground
when he caught a hint of motion out of the corner of one eye and instinctively
flinched.
Something struck his left shoulder hard before he could turn, hard enough to
knock him sideways.
Scrabbling backward, he tugged his sword free and got it up in time to make
his attacker pause.
The ragged bandit held a club in both hands, grinning wolfishly as he circled
for another strike. He was gaunt but sinewy, with a long reach behind the long
club he wielded. Alec suspected he was overmatched, but that his sword had
surprised the man, judging by the wary way he watched it, still not pressing the
attack.
"What do you want?" Alec demanded as the first shock of the attack passed.
The bandit gave him a nasty, gap-toothed grin.
"What else you got?" he sneered, jerking a thumb down the trail. "We already
got yer 'orse."
Alec glanced quickly in that direction and saw a harsh-faced woman leading
his horse away.
"I have gold," Alec told him, ignoring the dull pain that ran down his left
arm as he pulled his purse from his belt and shook it so the coins inside
jingled. "You're welcome to it, but I need that horse."
"Did you hear the fine young gentleman's offer, me love?" the bandit
exclaimed gleefully. "He wants to buy back his 'orse!"
The woman gave a listless shrug and said nothing.
"Give us the bag, then, and we'll shake on the bargain," the bandit offered,
sidling closer.
Alec lowered his sword and held out the purse, as if he'd been gulled into
the bargain. As he'd-expected, the bandit immediately struck at him.
Jumping back, he blocked the blow and swung a slashing stroke that opened the
front of the man's jerkin and some of the skin below.
"Bilairy's Collops, the little bastard cut me!" the bandit snarled in
surprise. "Got teeth, have you, you whelp? I'll soon blunt 'em!" Gripping his
club in both hands, he flew at Alec and swung another blow at his head.
The bandit was strong; blocking the swing with a two-handed parry, Alec felt
a nasty jolt down both arms. Pushing him away, he fell back, letting the man
push him toward the deadfall. Rain ran down into his eyes as he blocked blow
after blow, hoping to make his attacker think he was a novice swordsman.
Still moving backward, he felt branch, tips graze his neck. It was time to
hazard his one gambit.
He lowered his sword and turned slightly, as if he meant to run for it. As
Alec had hoped, his opponent struck at him, and hit the springy branches of the
hemlock instead. Overbalanced by the force of his own swing, he stumbled.
Alec whirled and struck him a savage blow to the shoulder. The blade glanced
off bone, flaying the muscle from shoulder to elbow in a great bloody flap.
Alec had expected the blow to stop the man in his tracks, but it didn't. With
a howl of pain, the bandit dropped his club and grappled Alec, locking his good
arm around the boy's neck and dragging him to the ground as he choked him.
Raw, severed flesh slapped against Alec's face, and the hot blood pulsing
from the wound spurted into his mouth and eyes. His sword was useless at such
close quarters. Dropping it, he tore at the arm around his throat, but the man
held on, pinning him down as he locked his hand around Alec's windpipe.
Blood loss alone should be weakening him,
Alec thought grimly as his vision began to darken.
Through a red haze he saw mindless determination still burning in the
haggard, white face above his, felt it in the hard hand crushing his throat; the
man might just live long enough to kill him first.
Letting go of the man's arm, Alec felt for the slender, black-handled dagger
in his right boot. His fingers found the rounded pommel and closed over it,
pulling it free. Gripping it, he drove it with the last of his strength into the
bandit's neck. More blood spurted out, steaming hotly against his face as the
world went dim around him.
The sound of fading hoofbeats brought him around again a moment later. From
the sound of them, the woman had decided the horse was booty enough and taken
off with it as soon as her man went down. Alec pushed the dead man off and sat
up, but it was too late. She was already out of sight.
Wet, bruised, and muddier, than ever, Alec got to his feet only to find that
his legs were not ready to support him just yet. Staggering away from the body,
he braced himself against the tree trunk and waited for the world to stop
spinning around him. He tasted blood in his mouth and spat repeatedly, trying to
get rid of the revolting metallic taste.
He supposed he should be grateful for the woman's cowardice. She'd taken the
horse, but had left his purse, his weapons, and his life, for that matter. She'd
had ample opportunity to knife him.
Hoping he'd already covered at least half the distance to Warnik's valley, he
set off on foot again.
The trail was no better on this side of the pass but the downhill grade made
for easier walking. Coming to a stream, he waded in to wash off some of the
filth.
His clothes were ruined, but it was a relief to cleanse away more of the
blood. He could still taste it at the back of his mouth and retched suddenly,
remembering the feel of it spurting down on him.
A more immediate worry, however, was whether or not the bandit's woman would
decide to circle back for another try, drawn by a delayed desire for revenge or
his purse. Wading out of the stream,
Alec scanned the surrounding forest with renewed wariness. Thick underbrush
pressed close on both sides of the trail, the potential for ambush unlimited.
The storm blew on, hastening the afternoon darkness already thickening into mist
beneath the tangled forest roof.
Seregil was obliged to delay his escape. Soon after they picked him up, the
Watch patrol entered the East Ring to begin a sweep of the shanties there. Even
if he got away now, there was nowhere to run.
Other bluecoats were already at work there, pulling down the shacks and
piling the scrap wood onto carts, clearing the Ring to serve its wartime purpose
as a killing zone between the inner and outer walls of the city.
The marketplaces and circles all around the city would be cleared as well for
similar reasons.
Despite its size and grandeur, Rhiminee had been designed first and foremost
to be a defensible citadel.
Most of the shantytown denizens had cleared out already, warned by the
vagrant's sixth sense that trouble was brewing. Those that had remained were
rounded up and sorted out. Cripples and mothers with young children were allowed
to stay in the city, as well as any able-bodied person willing to work for their
keep or fight.
Unpatriotic ne'er-do-wells would have to fend for themselves in the
countryside.
The cart was full by midday and the patrol headed back through the east ward.
Seregil stood at the rear of the cart, maintaining his air of sullen
bewilderment until a familiar street corner came into view.
Taking the three bluecoats riding behind the cart by surprise, Seregil
vaulted over the side, dodged between their horses, and tore off down the
street. Behind him, his fellow prisoners cheered him on with delighted jeers and
catcalls.
Two of the guards wheeled in pursuit, but Seregil had chosen his moment
carefully. Running back to the familiar street, he bolted around the corner.
It was more of an alley than a street. There were no side ways leading off it
and the far end was blocked by a high wooden barrier. Without slowing, Seregil
launched himself at it, found purchase with hands and feet, and clambered over
the top just as the furious guards thundered up.
On the far side, another alley angled off toward a larger street. The
bluecoats knew this section of the city nearly as well as he did himself; he
could hear the approaching clatter of hooves ahead of him as he ran. Dodging
down a side lane before they caught sight of him, he slipped into the narrow
space between two sagging tenements and came out in a tiny, weed-choked
courtyard.
Here he bounded up a rickety exterior stairway to a disused attic. The cache
of spare clothing and knives he'd hidden there months ago was still under the
warped floorboards, no worse for wear except for a few beetles and some mouse
turds.
Whistling softly through his teeth as he shook them out, he changed clothes
and settled down at the garret window to outwait his pursuers' patience. It was
only a filthy beggar they'd lost. They wouldn't waste much time hunting for him.
Hungry, wet, and footsore, Alec finally reached the edge of the woods by late
afternoon. Through the trees ahead he could see a rolling valley stretching out
before him.
A small log house stood near the trail, with a low byre and a goat pen beside
it. Too tired to care what he must look like, he headed for it, hoping to beg a
little food and some directions.
As he approached the place, a huge mongrel charged out of the byre, baying as
it charged toward him.
"Soora thasdli," Alec said quickly, making the left-handed charm sign Seregil
had taught him. It worked to a degree; the dog halted a few feet away, but
remained on guard, growling every time he moved.
"Who's that?" a man called out, emerging from the byre with an ax gripped in
both hands.
"Sir Alec of Ivywell," Alec replied, holding his hands out, palm up. "I had
some bad luck up the trail. Bandits stole my horse. Could you—"
"That so?" The man stepped nearer, squinting for a better look at him.
Alec had managed to wash off most of the blood, but his bedraggled clothing
and sword appeared to inspire little confidence.
"Lots of bandits about just now," the man went on, still wary. "Stole two of
my milch goats just the other day. Could be you're one of 'em come back to rob
me again. Tugger!"
The dog crouched, baring its fangs.
"No, please! Soora thasdli." Alec fell back a pace, making the sign again.
"Listen, I'm only trying to get down to—"
"Here now, what're you up to with my dog?" the man demanded. "Tugger, on
him!"
"No-soora thasdli—if you'd just listen—"
"Damn you, Tugger, at him!"
"Shit!" Alec took to his heels with Tugger snapping at the ends of his cloak
close behind.
The dog chased him until they were well out of sight of the cottage, then
stood its ground in the center of the trail, snarling every time Alec chanced a
backward look.
Winded and irate, Alec ran on until he was certain the dog had given up, then
collapsed on a rock to get his breath. Evidently Seregil's dog magic worked best
without the cur's master on hand to countermand it.
Less than half a mile farther on he struck the main road and soon met a
string of heavy oxcarts heading for Warnik's estate. At
the sight of Alec's gold the lead carter and his wife agreed to let him ride
with them.
Climbing into the cart, Alec stretched out gratefully among the bales and
baskets.
"Maker's Mercy, lad! You've had rough traveling, ain't you?" the woman asked,
turning to look him over.
"I had a little trouble coming over the hill trail," Alec told her.
"The hill trail," snorted the carter.
"What in the world made you go that route when it's faster on the highroad?"
"Faster?" Alec groaned. "I thought the hill track was a shortcut."
"What looby told you that? It's my livelihood, driving these roads, so I
guess I know a thing or two. It don't take more than two hours by cart from this
valley around to the next one, less on a good horse. The hill track this time of
year? By Dalna, you're lucky you got over at all."
The late afternoon light was already beginning to fail when they arrived at
Lord Warnik's fortified keep. A gate in the curtain wall swung wide for the
carts and they rumbled to a halt in the bailey yard.
"We've got someone looking for one of his lordship's guests," the carter told
the reeve who came out to take charge of their stores.
"I'm looking for Micum Cavish of Watermead," Alec explained. "I need to speak
with him at once."
The reeve gave him an appraising once over, then motioned to a stable boy
loitering nearby.
"Portus, go and find Sir Micum. Tell him there's a messenger boy waiting his
pleasure in the bailey."
Alec stifled a smile, then bid the carter and his wife farewell. A large
brazier had been set up in the yard and he drifted over to join the knot of
guards and servants who'd gathered around it. Sitting in the cart in wet clothes
had chilled him through.
Leaning close to the fire, he ignored the curious glances his sword and
filthy clothes attracted.
A few minutes later he saw Micum stride into the bailey. He was dressed in a
fine coat and furs, and looked rather harried.
"Someone looking for me?" he called out.
"Me, sir," Alec said, reluctantly leaving the brazier.
"What is it then?" Micum asked impatiently.
He stopped, recognizing Alec as he came closer. "By the Flame—"
"Greetings, Sir Micum," Alec said, covering a discreet warning gesture with a
bow. "Is there someplace we could speak privately?"
Taking Alec by the arm, Micum drew him into the stable. Grabbing a horse
blanket from a nearby stall, he handed it to Alec.
"What happened to you?" he whispered. "And what are you doing here of all
places?"
Alec pulled the smelly blanket around him gratefully and sat down on an
upended bucket with his back against a post. "It's a long story," he sighed. "I
ran into a bandit on the hill track—"
"The hill track. What possessed you to come that way this time of year?"
Alec cut him short with a weary gesture. "Believe me, I won't do it again."
"And you were attacked by bandits. were you on foot?"
"As a matter of fact, no. I borrowed a fresh mount at Watermead, and they
took it. That is, she took it, his woman. I killed the man. Anyway, I'll pay you
for the horse and I'll need another to get home from here. But that's not what I
came to tell you. Seregil and Nysander think the four of us—them, you and I—may
be mixed up in some sort of prophecy having to do with the Eater of Death and
that wooden coin we found up in Wolde."
Micum looked less surprised than Alec had expected. "After what I saw up in
the Fens, that makes some sense. But what have we got to do with it?"
Alec told him what Nysander had revealed, his own dreams, and the possible
connections between the coin and the Plenimarans.
Micum listened without comment. When Alec finished, he shook his head slowly.
"These Illiorans and their dreams. You mean to tell me that he sent you clear up
here by yourself in this weather just to tell me that something bad might happen
and that he's not even certain what it is?"
"Well, yes. But Seregil says he thinks Nysander's not telling us everything
yet, and that he seems genuinely worried."
"If Nysander's worried, then we'd do well to pay heed. But first we need to
get you into some dry clothes. I'll wager you haven't eaten all day, either.
Come on in."
"I'd better not," Alec said. "Seregil didn't want Kari or anyone to see me up
here like this."
"All right, then. You wait here and I'll bring things out. Stay here."
Micum returned quickly with a bundle of clothes and a mug of steaming soup, a
hunk of fresh bread balanced on top.
"Strip off those wet things," he ordered.
Alec pulled off his coat and shirt, anxious to get into warm clothes. As he
was about to pull on the thick tunic Micum had brought him, the man let out a
low whistle and touched a finger to a long purple bruise darkening across Alec's
left shoulder.
"Fetched you a good one, didn't he?"
"I was lucky; he was aiming for my head. My arm's fine, though." Pulling on
the tunic and breeches,
he wrapped his hands around the hot mug and took a sip of the thick, steamy
broth.
"Maker's Mercy, that's good! So, about that horse? I mean to go back
tonight."
Micum's heavy red brows drew together ominously. "Now look here, Alec. You're
hurt, tired, and chilled through and it's already starting to get dark. Stay
here tonight and get an early start in the morning."
"I know I should, but I can't. Seregil's trying to track down some Plenimaran
spies, and he may need my help."
Whether he knows it or not, he added mentally. It wasn't exactly lying to
Micum. Not exactly.
Micum looked like he was about to argue the point, but then he just shook his
head and said gruffly, "All right then. I can't force you. I've got a horse you
can take if you promise to stick to the road and not go gallivanting around
through the woods with it in the dark!"
Alec grinned as he clasped his friend's hand. "You have my word on it."
Alec saddled Micum's Aurenfaie black quickly, not wanting to give him time to
reconsider.
"I should be home before midnight," he said as he mounted and settled his
sword against his thigh under his borrowed cloak.
"Maybe," said Micum, still looking dubious.
"Don't gallop yourself into a ditch for the sake of an hour, you hear?"
"I hear."
Micum reached up and clasped Alec's hand tightly again, a shadow of worry
crossing his face as he looked up. "Safe journey to you, Alec, and luck in the
shadows."
Alec returned the grip, then walked the black toward the gate. He was just
about to ride out, however, when he realized he'd for gotten something. Turning,
he rode back to where Micum stood watching by the stable door.
"By the way, Seregil wanted me to ask if you've had any strange dreams
lately."
Micum shrugged, grinning. "Not a one. Tell him I leave that sort of thing to
you. I do my best fighting when I'm awake."
Thryis and the others sat pushing their suppers around their plates in
silence that night. The announcement of war had come at midmorning and the news
of Plenimar's attack on Mycena the previous day had thrown the city into an
uproar.
Bluecoat patrols were out in force, rounding up beggars and keeping the
peace. Down in the harbor, fighting ships that had rocked at anchor like winter
ducks hoisted their colors and sailed out through the moles to join others from
ports up and down the coast.
At the Harvest Market vendors' stalls were being moved aside to make way for
ballistas and catapults.
Diomis had spent the afternoon in the streets, trying to sort some sense out
of the ebb and flow of rumors flying freely around the city: the Plenimaran
fleet had been spotted off the southern tip of Skala; the fighting was centered
around the island of Kouros; it was a land attack-the enemy had crossed the
Folcwine and was marching west toward Skala; Plenimaran marines were at the
Cirna Canal.
A Queen's herald had arrived at the market at last with solid news; the
Plenimarans had made a surprise attack against Skalan troops somewhere in
Mycena.
"It makes my old fingers itch for a bow string even now," Thryis commented
wistfully as her family and Rhiri gathered in the kitchen for the evening.
"I still remember that battle we fought above Ero. A clear summer morning,
not a breath of wind to spoil the shot, and a hundred of us lined up behind the
infantry with our longbows. When we let fly, the Plenimarans fell like a swath
of wheat before a scythe."
"They'll be fighting in mud and rain, starting in this early. I wonder how
Micum Cavish's girl is making out." Diomis broke off in surprise as a tear
trickled down his daughter's cheek.
"Why, Cilia, you're crying. What's the matter, love?"
Cilia wiped her cheek and hugged the baby to her, saying nothing.
"Luthas' dad is a soldier, isn't he, dear?" her grandmother asked gently,
patting the girl's shoulder.
Cilia nodded mutely, then hurried up the back stairs with Luthas in her arms.
Diomis rose to follow, but Thryis stopped him.
"Let her go, son. She's never talked of the man before; I don't suppose
she'll say anything now until she's a mind to."
"What do you know about that?" he said, scratching under his beard in
bemusement. "You'd think if she cared for whoever this fellow is enough to weep
for him now, she'd have said more about him to us. Why do you suppose she keeps
it such a damned secret?"
"Who knows? I always thought maybe he'd broken promises to her, but she
wouldn't cry for him if he had. Ah well, Cilia's always had her own way of doing
things."
They sat quietly a moment, listening to the crackle of the fire. Then Rhiri
tapped the table with his spoon and made a hand sign. "No, I have had no word of
them since yesterday," Thryis told him. "Alec's Patch was gone this morning, but
both of Seregil's horses are still in their stalls, aren't they?"
Rhiri nodded.
"I wouldn't worry about those two," said Diomis. "You go on up to bed now,
Mother. Me and Rhiri will see to things down here."
"Make certain the doors are barred," Thryis warned as he helped her to her
feet."Rhiri, don't you forget to put oil in the lanterns out front. With all the
excitement today some folks may get up to mischief. I want the court well lit."
"Aye, we will, Mother," sighed Diomis.
"Haven't we seen to the closing up these last twenty years? Rhiri, you go on
out and check the stable. I'll take care of the front room."
Rhiri gave a quick salute and went out through the lading-room door to the
back court.
In the front room Diomis checked the bar on the door and extinguished the
lamp. The hearth fire was out; with only two guests in the inn, he hadn't
bothered to keep it burning when they'd turned in early. He was just checking
the shutter hooks when he heard the familiar rattle of the front door latch.
Diomis peered through the crack of the shutter but saw no horses in the
courtyard.
"Who's that?" he called.
There was no answer except a crisp rap on the door.
Diomis had no patience for games tonight. "We're closed up! Try the Rowan
Tree, two streets over."
The unseen visitor knocked again, more insistently this time.
"Now look here—" Diomis began, but was cut short by the crash of the kitchen
door slamming back on its hinges.
Topping the crest of a hill just north of Watermead, Alec was surprised to
see a long line of torches in the distance. As they came closer, he saw it was a
column of cavalry under the red and gold insignia of the Red Serpent Regiment.
Reining in, he hailed the first of the outriders as he came abreast of him.
"What's going on?" Alec called out.
The soldier slowed his horse. "War, son. It's war at last. Pass it on to all
you meet."
"This early in the year?" Alec exclaimed.
"Looks like the bastards were spoiling for a fight," the man replied grimly.
"A Plenimaran raiding party ambushed some of our cavalry up in the Mycenian hill
country. We're headed north to join with the Queen's Horse Guard. Word is they
took the brunt of it, as usual."
"The Queen's Horse? I know someone in that regiment. Could you take a message
for me?"
"No time, son," the man said, spurring away as the column caught up.
The hundred or more riders wore red and gold tabards over their chain, and
their huge black horses rang with harness and breast plates. Then, like an
apparition in the deepening dusk, they disappeared over the crest of the hill.
"Maker's Mercy, here you are at last!" Arna exclaimed, coming out into the
courtyard to meet him.
"Did you have trouble on the way?"
Alec was in too much of a hurry to properly address that. "Just tell that
fellow Ranil not to send anyone else that way," he said, leading Micum's black
to the stable. "I had news on the road, though. The war's started."
Arna's hands flew to her wrinkled cheeks. "Oh, my poor Beka! She's up on the
border already. Do you think she's in it yet?"
Alec didn't have the heart to lie.
Turning, he took the old servant by the shoulders.
"The soldier who gave me the news said the Queen's Horse was in it, yes.
Micum didn't know any of this; word hadn't reached Warnik's yet. I imagine
they'll hear it there before long, but in case they haven't, you tell Micum
first, then let him break it to Kari, all right?"
"I will, love, I will," Arna sighed, dabbing her eyes with a corner of her
shawl. "Wouldn't you just know it? Nothing will do for her but to enlist, then
doesn't she land smack in the middle of things. And her not even twenty yet."
"Well, she's a good soldier," said Alec, as much for his own comfort as hers.
"With Micum and Seregil for teachers all those years, and then Myrhini—that's as
good training as anyone could have."
Arna gave his arm a squeeze. "Maker love you, sir, I hope you're right. I'll
go get you something to eat as you ride. Don't you go off without it, hear?"
By the time he'd shifted his borrowed saddle onto Patch's back, she was back
with a bundle of food tied up in a napkin and several torches. Mounting he lit
one from the courtyard lantern and set off on the final stretch to Rhiminee
under a clouded, moonless sky. He met more columns of riders and foot soldiers
along the way, but didn't stop for news.
He came in sight of the city just before midnight. The highroad followed the
top of the cliffs above the sea and from here he could see down to the harbor
where lines of watch fires outlined the moles, shining brightly across the dark
expanse of water. More signal fires burned on the islands at the mouth of the
harbor, and torches had been lit along the city walls above.
The north gate was open under heavy guard to allow for the passage of troops.
Inside, the Harvest Market looked as if a war had already been fought there.
Piles of scrap wood and tangled shreds of colored canvas were all that appeared
to be left of the booths and stalls he'd ridden past that same morning. Despite
the lateness of the hour, soldiers were at work everywhere, setting up ballistas
and hauling off refuse. From now on, it appeared, merchants would have to carry
on their business under the open sky or from the backs of carts.
Steering Patch through the chaos of the market square, Alec rode on into the
maze of side streets beyond to Blue Fish Street. Light still showed around the
front shutters, although in the excitement Rhiri had let the lanterns hanging at
the Cockerel's front gate go out.
Thryis will be after him for that.
Alec thought, riding around to the back courtyard.
He stopped at the stable long enough to unsaddle Patch and throw a rug over
her steaming back. Leaving her with water and feed, he let himself through the
lading-room door and hurried up the back stairway. With all the uproar around
town, perhaps Seregil would overlook the fact that Alec had ignored his
admonition to spend the night at Watermead.
He knew the way upstairs well enough not to bother with a light. On the
second floor he gave the corridor a cursory glance, then headed up the hidden
stairs to their rooms. The keying words for the glyphs had become habit to him
by now, and he spoke them with absent haste as he went up. In his eagerness to
find Seregil, he failed to notice that the warding symbols did not make their
usual brief appearance as he passed.
No final dream or vision prepared him.
Nysander was dozing over an astrological compendium by his bedroom fire when
the magical warning jolted him to his feet; the Oreska defenses had been
breached. The alarm was followed by a storm of message spheres, swarming like
bees through the House as every wizard in the place called out for information.
Or in fear.
Invaders in the atrium!
Golaria's voice rang out in a red flash.
A dying cry from Ermintal's young apprentice stabbed at Nysander's mind like
a shard of glass, and then that of Ermintal himself—
The vaults!—cut short by another burst of blackness.
Through the onslaught of voices Nysander called out to Thero. There was no
response.
Steeling himself for the battle he'd hoped never to fight, Nysander cast a
translocation and stepped through the aperture into the corridor of the lowest
vault just beyond the secret chamber. Shadowy figures waited for him there. He
took a step toward them and stumbled. Looking down, he saw what was left of
Ermintal and his apprentice, recognizing them by the shredded remains of their
robes. Other bodies lay heaped beyond them.
"Welcome, old man." It was the voice from Nysander's visions. Magic crackled
and he barely managed to throw up a defense before it struck him in a roar of
flame. The corpses sizzled and smoked as it passed.
Regaining his balance, Nysander retaliated with lightning, but the smaller of
the two invaders merely lifted a hand and brushed it aside to explode against
the wall. By its light, Nysander saw it was a dyrmagnos. Beside it stood a
figure so cloaked in a shifting veil of shadows that Nysander could not be
certain at first if it was human or supernatural.
"Greetings, old man," the dyrmagnos hissed.
"How weary you must be after your long vigil."
Not Tikarie Megraesh, but a woman, Nysander thought as he took a step toward
her. She was a tiny, wizened husk of a creature, blackened with years,
desiccated by the evil that animated her. This was the ultimate achievement of
the necromancer—the embodiment of life in death wearing the sumptuous robes of a
queen.
Raising gnarled hands, she held up two human hearts and squeezed them until
blood oozed out in long clots, spattering to the floor around her feet.
"The feast has begun, Guardian," the figure beside her said, and Nysander
again recognized the voice of the golden-skinned demon of his visions. But it
was an illusion. Through the veils of darkness, he saw a man—Mardus—speaking
with the voice of the Eater of Death.
Just behind them, several other robed figures came into view. Nysander could
smell the stench of necromancy coming from them and with it something
heartbreakingly familiar—the unmistakable sweetness of Ylinestra's special
perfume.
"After all these years of anticipation, you have no reply?" the dyrmagnos
sneered.
"There has never been any reply for you but this."
Raising his hands, Nysander launched the orbs of power that burned against
his palms.
The moon had passed its zenith by the time Seregil came back to Blue Fish
Street. It had been a pointless day overall. With the Beggar Law in force, most
of his more valuable contacts had fled or gone to ground. Those that he had
managed to track down had no fresh information on Plenimaran movements in the
city. If the enemy was in town, he was keeping a low profile.
Weary as Seregil was, however, the sight of the unlit lanterns in front of
the inn brought him up short. A tingle of presentiment prickled the hairs on his
neck and arms. Ducking quickly into a shadowed doorway across the street, he
scrutinized the courtyard for a moment, then drew his sword and crept cautiously
across to the front door.
It was slightly ajar.
Leaving it untouched, he crept around to discover the back door open as well.
He pushed it wide with the tip of his blade, tensed for attack, but there was no
sound from inside.
An unlucky door filled his nostrils as he entered the kitchen; the stale,
flat smells of a cold hearth and lamps left to gutter out on their own. Taking
out a lightstone, he saw nothing out of place, except for Rhiri's pallet, which
was missing from its place near the hearth.
On the second floor the signs were more ominous.
Thryis and her family were not in their rooms and only Cilia's bed appeared
to have been slept in;-the linens were thrown hastily back, and the coverlet
hung awry over the side. Next to the bed, an overturned chair lay in the
shattered remains of a washbasin.
A grim heaviness settled in the pit of Seregil's stomach as he moved on to
the guest rooms at the front of the inn. Only one had been occupied. The unlucky
carter and his son lay dead in their beds, smothered with the bolsters.
The hidden panel leading to the stairs up to his rooms appeared untampered
with from the outside but opening it, he found that the warding glyph at the
base of the stairs had been tripped. There were spots of blood on the lower
steps, and several were smeared where more than one person had stepped in them
before they'd dried. The glyphs farther up were simply gone. Still gripping his
sword in his right hand, he drew his poniard with his left hand and mounted the
stairs.
The doors at the top of the stairs stood open, showing darkness beyond. If
there was anyone lurking in the disused storage room, it was best to find out
now while there was still a chance of easy retreat. Fishing a lightstone from a
pouch at his belt, he tossed it into the room. The stone skittered noisily
across the floor, illuminating the few crates and boxes scattered there. No one
jumped out to attack, but the floor told a tale it didn't take Micum Cavish to
read; people had been in and out of his rooms, quite a number of them. Some had
been dragged and some had been bleeding.
The final warding glymph on the door to the sitting room was gone, too.
Taking a deep breath,
Seregil flattened himself against the wall next to the door frame and slowly
turned the handle.
A band of eerie, shifting light spilled across the floor at his feet, and
with it came a horrendous slaughterhouse stench. Weapons clutched at the ready,
he stepped inside. Even with all the warning he'd had, his first glimpse of what
lay beyond struck like a blow.
Several lamps had been left burning, and pale, unnatural flames danced on the
empty hearth.
Someone had turned the couch to face the door, and on it four headless bodies
sat as if waiting for him to return.
He knew who they were even before he looked past them to the heads lined up
on the cluttered mantelpiece.
The strange light cast their features into tortured relief: Thryis, Diomis,
Cilia, and Rhiri seemed to look with dull incomprehension toward their own
corpses, which some monstrous wit had arranged in attitudes of repose. Diomis
leaned against his mother, one arm draped over her bloody shoulders.
Cilia sat next to him, slumped against the remains of Rhiri.
There was blood everywhere. It hung in congealed ribbons from the mantelpiece
and pooled on the hearthstones below. It had dried in scabrous crusts on the
pitiful bodies. There were great sticky smears and handprints on walls.
There had been a struggle. The dining table had been knocked sideways,
spilling a sheaf of parchment onto an already blood- soaked carpet. The writing
desk was overturned in a litter of quills and parchment, and the shelves to the
left of it had been pulled down. As he stooped to inspect the mess more closely,
something in the shadows beneath the workbench caught his eye, stopping his
breath in his throat.
Alec's sword.
He dragged it out and examined it closely. Dark stains along its edge showed
that Alec had put up a fight before losing it. Gripping it by the hilt, Seregil
was surprised by a brief, irrational burst of anger.
I told him to stay at Watermead!
The door to his bedroom was shut, but bloody footprints led inside. Taking a
jar of lightstones from a nearby shelf, he kicked the door open and tossed them
in.
An unearthly yowl burst out from inside and Seregil raised his sword in
alarm. It came again, ending in a drawn-out snarl. Following the sound, he saw
Ruetha crouched on top of a wardrobe, eyes glowing like swamp fire. She hissed
at him, then leapt down and scuttled away toward the front door.
Nothing appeared to have been disturbed here except the green velvet curtains
of his bed. He never used them, but someone had pulled them shut all around the
bed.
Someone who'd left the bloody foot marks on the carpet.
Seregil's breath sounded loud in his ears as he forced himself across the
room, knowing already whose body he'd find when he pulled the hanging aside.
"No," he said hoarsely, unaware that he was speaking aloud. "No no no please
no—"
Gritting his teeth, he flung the curtain aside.
There was nothing on the bed but a dagger-a dagger with a hank of long yellow
hair knotted around the hilt.
Seregil picked it up with shaking hands, recognizing the black horn grip
inlaid with silver; it was the knife he'd given Alec in Wolde.
For one blinding second he seemed to feel Alec's thumb on his face again,
reaching to smudge over the clean spot on his cheek.
"Where is he?" Seregil hissed. Grabbing up his sword, he rushed out into the
sitting room again. "You bastards! What have you done with him?"
An evil chuckle erupted beside him and Seregil froze, scanning the room. The
laugh came again, lifting the hair in the back of his neck. He knew that voice.
It was the voice of the apparition that had dogged him through the Mycenian
countryside; the one he'd fought through a fever dream the night Alec had torn
the wooden disk from his neck.
But this time there was no black, misshapen specter. The voice issued from
the writhing lips of
Cilia's severed head.
"Seregil of Rhiminee and Aurenen!" Her glazed eyes rolled in their sockets,
seeking him. "We found you at last, thief."
Diomis' jaws gaped with the same terrible voice.
"Did you think we would allow you to escape? You have desecrated the
sanctuary of Seriamaius, and defiled his relics."
"The Eye and the Crown." It was Rhiri now, who'd never had a voice in life.
"Thief! Defiler!" Thryis spat out, her withered lips curling back in a leer.
"Defiler! Thief!" the other heads cried in moaning, joyless chorus.
"Aura Elustri mdlrei, his gasped Seregil, watching the grotesque performance
with a mixture of outrage and revulsion. "What have you done with Alec? Where is
he?"
They made no answer, but Rhiri's head tumbled to the floor and rolled at him,
snapping its jaws and laughing, followed by the others.
"Forgive me, all of you." Feeling as if he were trapped in the worst of
nightmares, Seregil raised his sword and hacked at the heads until only a
scattered mass of hair and brains remained. In the midst of it he found four
small charms, charred human finger bones wrapped with nightshade vine.
Choking back a wave of nausea, he cast a suspicious eye over the bodies,
still slumped together on the couch.
"You deserved better than this," he whispered thickly. "Somehow-somehow I'll
make this right."
Going back to his bedchamber, he pulled out his old leather pack and thrust
in a few essentials. Then he wrapped Alec's dagger carefully in a large scarf
and slipped it inside his tunic.
In the sitting room he took Alec's bow and quiver down from their hook over
the bed and put them by the door, not allowing himself to wonder whether they
would ever be needed again. The sword he slipped into his own sheath; he had no
plans for sheathing his own until he was well away from here.
Skirting the mess on the hearth, he pulled the box of loose jewels on the
mantelpiece free front a puddle of congealed blood and upended it into his pack.
The spoils of years of casual pilfering tumbled out, glittering in the unnatural
light of the fire. Alec had sorted them recently during a lesson on gem
appraisal. A layer of bright rubies slid into the pack to fill the spaces
between clothes and pouches, then emeralds, opals, amethyst, a handful of gold
and diamond buttons they'd used for gaming stones.
His hands were beginning to shake. A lord's ransom spilled over the lip of
the pack but he left the stones where they fell. Cinching the pack shut, he
carried it to the door, then turned for a last look at the home he'd inhabited
for nearly thirty years.
He'd been happy here, perhaps happier than anywhere else in his life. Now all
of it-the books, weapons, tapestries and statues, the shelves of accumulated
relics and curiosities-all of it was nothing more than stage dressing for the
mocking tableau centered around the mutilated corpses gathered at his hearth.
Taking a large lamp from the table, Seregil whispered a quick prayer and
emptied the oil over the bodies. Then he gathered every other lamp within reach,
flung them against the walls, and scattered a jar of firechips over the spilled
oil. Flames sprang up, quickly spreading out into sheets of hungry, purifying
fire.
Shouldering the packs and weapons, Seregil fled down the stairs, leaving the
doors open behind him.
As he hurried past Cilia's room on his way to the kitchen stairs, however, a
muffled cry brought him to a halt. Dropping everything but his sword, he dashed
into the room and flung the overturned chair aside. There, tightly wrapped in
thick blankets to keep him still, Luthas lay squalling in his small trundle bed.
Cilia had heard her attackers coming. In what little time she must have had,
she'd hidden her child, overturning the chair and pulling the blankets down over
the edge of the bed to cover him from view.
He must have been asleep when I was in here before, Seregil thought,
gathering up the furious child.
And if he hadn't cried.
As Seregil turned to go, he caught sight of himself in Cilia's mirror. The
image reflected there, white-faced, eyes black with rage, might have been his
own vengeful ghost.
Smoke poured down through the ceiling boards as he hefted the pack and
weapons again and carried Luthas downstairs. In the first, thin light of dawn,
the familiar back courtyard had an unreal look, like a familiar place seen in a
dream just before it transforms into something sinister. The weight of pack,
swords, and child pulled at him, sapping his strength.
"Thank the Lightbearer, there you are!" a familiar voice called.
Turning in confusion, Seregil saw Nysander's young servant Wethis coming
around the corner of the inn on a sorrel horse.
"I saw the smoke from up the street," Wethis told him, reining in. His
clothing was torn and he had a bandage wound around one hand, Seregil noted with
a fresh pang of dread. "When no one answered out front—"
"Everyone's dead," Seregil told him, his voice coming out thin and strained.
"What happened to you? What are you doing here?"
"The Oreska was attacked last night," Wethis answered, his voice cracking
with emotion. "It was terrible. Nysander- They found him in the lowest vault—"
"Is he dead?" barked Seregil.
Wethis flinched. "I don't know. Valerius and Hwerlu were with him when I
left. They sent me after you. You have to go at once!"
Seregil dropped his gear and thrust Luthas up at the boy. "Take him, and have
the rest of this brought to the Oreska. And see that the rest of the horses get
out of the stable before the whole damn place goes up."
Leaving the boy to fend as well as he could, Seregil dashed into the stable
and bridled Cynril.
Patch nickered at him from the next stall. Alec had taken the time last night
to feed and cover her before going up, never suspecting what lay in wait.
Mounted bareback, Seregil rode out past Wethis and away from the burning inn
without a backward glance.
The world seemed strangely muted as he galloped toward the Oreska. The
streets, the pale morning sky, the sound of Cynril's hooves-all had a vague,
muffled air, as if he were observing the scene from a distance through one of
Nysander's magnifying lenses. But somewhere behind the protective barrier of
shock, the anguish was building.
Not yet. Not yet. So much to do.
He pelted on through the streets, through the Oreska gate and the scented
gardens, not slowing his horse until he reached the House itself. Reining in, he
leapt from the saddle and took the steps two at a time.
The atrium reeked of smoke and magic. The mosaic floor was scorched and
cracked, the dragon design nearly obliterated. Where the arched doors leading to
the museum had been, there was now a gaping hole partially blocked by rubble.
Afterward, Seregil could not recall how he got upstairs, or who had let him
into the tower, but when he finally stopped running, he was at Nysander's
bedroom door and Valerius was blocking his way.
"Is he alive?" Seregil panted, heart hammering in his chest.
The drysian nodded, frowning. "Yes, for the moment at least."
"Then let me pass. I've got to talk to him!"
Seregil tried to shoulder past but Valerius grabbed his arm, holding him back
with considerable insistence.
"Gently, Seregil. Gently," he warned.
"By all the medicine I know, he shouldn't have survived such an attack. A
good many others weren't so fortunate. But all the same, he won't let any of us
ease his pain as much as we should until he's spoken with you. Be quick and
don't tax his strength. He's got none to spare."
Stepping aside, Valerius opened the door and followed Seregil in.
Nysander lay on his side beneath a clean white sheet. His eyes were shut, his
face slack.
Hwerlu knelt at the end of the bed, tears streaming from his strange horse
eyes as he played a song of healing. Two unfamiliar drysians, a woman and a boy,
stood chanting softly nearby.
Valerius exchanged a brief word with them and they withdrew.
Seregil went to the bed and knelt beside Nysander. The wizard's breathing was
so shallow Seregil could scarcely hear it.
"What happened?" he whispered, gently touching the old man's cheek. It was as
cold and moist as clay.
"There was a great noise in the night, like thunder and battle," Hwerlu told
him, still playing as he spoke. "The sound of it woke us in our grove. As I ran
to the House, I saw a dark shape rise above it, very large. It disappeared
against the darkness of the sky.
I ran on, and inside I found a scene of such carnage—"
The centaur's fingers faltered briefly on the harp strings. "The intruders
had brought swordsmen as well as wizards. So many dead!"
"But how?" Seregil asked in disbelief. "How did they get so many in? lllior's
Hands, this is the Oreska House!"
"Through the front gate, and the sewers, it appears,"
Valerius said behind him.
"The sewers? But I thought that had all been taken care of after Alec and I
found out about Rhythel."
"As it turns out, the authorities concentrated only on those routes that
might lead toward the Palace. It's also possible someone was paid to turn a
blind eye here and there. Whatever the case, just after the alarm went up,
another group, mostly swordsmen, burst through the garden. How they got in
unnoticed is another mystery, but the main attack seems to have come up through
the vaults."
Seregil sank his head into his hands. "All those dead gate- runners this
winter. By the Four, if I'd gotten to Rythel sooner, we might have been able to
stop this!"
Nysander's eyelids fluttered slightly.
"Mardus," he whispered, the word scarcely audible.
"It was Mardus, I saw him, a dyrmagnos, more—"
His voice failed, but his lips kept moving.
Seregil leaned down, placing his ear close to Nysander's lips to catch the
faint words.
"Eater of Death." It was hardly more than a breath, but unmistakable.
Nysander shuddered and closed his eyes, fighting a wave of pain. Yet he
struggled on, forcing the words out breath by breath. "Where-Alec?"
"They took him, left me this." Seregil pulled out the dagger and held it up
for Nysander to see.
The wizard gazed at the lock of hair, then squeezed his eyes shut as another
spasm wrenched through him.
"It's not your fault." The words felt like ashes in Seregil's mouth. His
emotional defenses were beginning to erode, laying bare the first jagged shards
of rage and grief lying just beneath the surface.
"It has begun," Nysander gasped out, his agitation clear. It took every ounce
of will he possessed to go on shaping the words. "One place and one time-in
Plenimar, beneath the pillar of the sky- The temple-temple—"
"A temple in Plenimar. Where, Nysander? Damnation, you have to tell me
where!"
"Synodical—"
Nysander murmured regretfully as blackness surged over him again.
"What? Nysander, what does that mean?" Seregil turned to Valerius. "Isn't
there anything you can do? Alec's life may depend on it!"
Taking Seregil by the arm, Valerius drew him away from the bed. "Give him a
little time. He must rest or he may never recover. You look like you could use
some attention yourself. I'll call for Darbia."
"I don't need anything," Seregil hissed through clenched teeth, straining to
see over the drysian's shoulder as the larger man urged him toward the door.
"I've got to know what he meant! It may be too late already."
"If he doesn't rest now he'll never be able to tell you anything again. A few
hours, perhaps less. Don't leave the tower, I'll come to you as soon as I've
finished here. Now get out!" With a final none-too-gentle shove, Valerius thrust
Seregil out into the corridor and shut the door in his face.
Seregil stood there, alone in the corridor, Alec's dagger clutched in one
fist. Smoothing the lock of hair between his fingers, he spoke half aloud the
words he'd bitten back in the sickroom.
"Tell me, Nysander, can your magic protect him now?"
Micum felt the roundness of Kari's belly between them as they embraced.
Magyana's message sphere hovered nearby, gleaming greenly in the corner of their
guest chamber at Lord Warnik's keep.
"I'm sorry, love, but something's happened and Magyana's waiting." Micum
gently stroked a tear from her cheek. How many times had there been someone
waiting, calling him away? How many times had she sent him on his way with that
small, tight-lipped smile?
"Go on then," she said brusquely, folding her arms. "Sakor guide you safely
back."
Shouldering his traveling bundle, Micum turned to the sphere. "I'm ready."
A large oval of darkness yawned where the sphere had been. With a final wave,
he stepped through. An instant later he found himself standing in Nysander's
casting room. A few feet away the wizard sat on a low stool, looking utterly
exhausted. Her brocade robe was dirty and bloodstained, her long silver hair in
disarray over her shoulders.
"What's happened?" Micum asked in alarm.
Sinking down on one knee in front of her, he took her hands in his and found
them icy cold.
"The Oreska House was attacked last night,"she told him, her voice trembling.
"Nysander was hurt terribly, and many others are dead. I'd have brought you
in sooner, but I had to rest a bit first. Oh, Micum, it was terrible, so
terrible."
"Then they were right, after all," he groaned, gathering the old woman in his
arms. "It was the Plenimarans?"
"Led by Duke Mardus himself. He had necromancers, and a dyrmagnos."
"Where's Seregil? And Alec?"
Magyana shook her head. "Wethis was sent to fetch them. They may be here
already. Come, I must be with Nysander."
Downstairs they met a drysian woman coming out of Nysander's chamber with a
basin and stained clothes.
"How is he?" asked Magyana.
"No worse," the woman replied gently.
Valerius was applying compresses to Nysander's chest and side as they
entered. He pulled the sheet back over him as Micum approached, but not before
he'd seen the terrible burns there. Nysander appeared to be asleep or
unconscious, his face white as carved marble. Magyana drew a chair to the head
of the bed and placed her hand on NySander's brow.
"He's got a dragon's own constitution," Valerius said quietly, stroking his
unruly black beard thoughtfully as he gazed down at
Nysander. "How he fights! He'll heal if I
can keep the infection from him. Have you seen Seregil yet?"
"No, I only just arrived. But they're here? They're all right?"
The drysian laid a hand on his arm and Micum's heart sank. "Seregil burst in
about half an hour ago. He hasn't spoken to anyone except Nysander, but Alec's
not with him. Wethis says he set fire to the Cockerel. As far as I know, only
the baby—"
"Damnation!" Micum spun for the door. "Where is he?"
"The sitting room. If you—"
Micum didn't wait to hear more. Dashing the short distance down the corridor,
he found the door open.
Seregil stood leaning against the mantel, dressed in what appeared to be
borrowed breeches and shirt. A great drift of maps and scrolls lay spread out
around one of the armchairs, as if he'd been sitting there going through them
earlier. There was a wine cup on the floor beside it, but as he looked up,
Micum knew his friend was far from drunk. His pale face was nearly
expressionless, except for his eyes. What Micum saw there sent a black stab of
dread through him.
"Did Alec tell you about all this?" Seregil asked, far too calm for Micum's
liking.
"The prophecy? Yes." Micum approached him slowly, the way he would a maddened
horse. "Where is he? What happened at the Cockerel?"
Seregil held up something he'd been holding all along, a dagger with a long
lock of blond hair knotted around it.
"Is he—?"
"I don't know."
Micum sank into a chair with a stricken groan.
"He was in such a lather to get back. He was worried about you, I think, but
I should've stopped him from going back."
"Perhaps I can help," Valerius said from the open doorway. Going to Seregil,
he took the dagger and held it to his brow, murmuring a prayer or a spell.
"He's alive," he said, handing it back. "That's all I can tell from this, but
he is alive."
"But for how long, eh?" Thin lines of tension around Seregil's eyes and mouth
showed darkly in the firelight as he took the dagger back, clutching it against
his heart. "We know what these bastards are capable of. It was Mardus after all,
you know. Nysander saw him during the attack. And I think it's safe to assume
that those were his men who came to the Cockerel, too."
"They found you."
Seregil's lips quirked into a parody of his old grin that sent another chill
through Micum. "In a manner of speaking," he said, his voice nearly toneless now
as he stared into the fire. "Alec walked into an ambush. I didn't show up until
it was all over." His hands were trembling visibly now as he leaned against the
mantel.
Giving Micum a compassionate nod, Valerius slipped quietly out.
"They killed—They killed everyone," Seregil whispered. "In my rooms. Except
Luthas. Wethis has him. It's burning now, the whole place. Everything."
Micum shook his head as the horror of it sank in. "But Cilia, Thryis?"
"All of them."
Seregil's face seemed to crumple in on itself like a parchment thrown on a
fire. "I did this, Micum," he gasped raggedly, clutching his head in both hands.
"I brought this down on them, led the bastards to them. They were—"
Micum said nothing, simply put his arms around his friend and held him tight
as Seregil shook helplessly with harsh, strangled sobs. In all the time Micum
had known him, he'd seldom seen Seregil weep, and never as violently as this.
Whatever he'd seen at the inn, whatever had been done there, it had wrenched
something from his very soul.
"You couldn't have known," he said at last.
"Of course I should have!" Seregil shouted. Jerking away, he stared at Micum
with wild, desolate eyes. "All the years they protected me, kept my secrets.
Slaughtered! Slaughtered, as if they were animals, Micum! Then the shit-eating
carrion scum—They cut off—"
He sank to his knees, burying his face in his hands as another fit of weeping
rocked him.
Micum knelt, one hand on Seregil's shoulder, and listened with mounting
horror and outrage as he choked out the details of what he'd found, what had
been done to the bodies of those good people.
When he'd finished, Micum gathered him in again, unresisting now, and held
him until Seregil had cried himself limp and silent. He remained there, leaning
against Micum, for a moment longer, then sat back on his heels and wiped his
face on his shirttail. His eyes were red, but he looked calmer now.
Micum's knees ached from kneeling. Sitting down among the strewn papers, he
stretched one leg, then the other. "Tell me more about Alec."
Seregil held up the black and silver dagger, which he'd been clutching
through the whole outburst. "It's his. They left it for me so I'd be sure to
know they had him. From the looks of the room, they killed the others, and then
waited for some length of time, hoping we'd show up. I found his sword under a
table. He gave them a fight before they brought him down; there was blood on the
edge of the blade." He took a deep breath, fighting for control. "I showed this
to Nysander when I got here this morning. I think he knows where they're headed.
He was trying to tell me when he fainted, but I think I may have figured it
out."
Seregil retrieved a map from the scattered pile by the chair. As he spread it
on the floor between them,
Micum recognized the outline of the Plenimaran peninsula, but the spidery
writing that covered it was unintelligible.
"What is that? I can't read any of it."
"Nysander's own writing system," Seregil explained. "I learned it back in my
apprentice days. Before he passed out, Nysander spoke of a temple in Plenimar,
saying it was under "the pillar of the sky." At first I thought it must be a
monument of some sort and didn't have much hope of finding it. But look here."
He pointed to a place on the northwestern coastline just above the isthmus. "See
that small cross there? It marks the position of Mount Kythes, only here it's
labeled "Yothgash-horagh.""
Seregil looked up at Micum, the old intensity rekindling. "In the ancient
tongue of Plenimar, that means Sky Pillar Mountain."
"Under the pillar of the sky." Micum looked at the map again. "You do
realize, of course, that this place is well behind enemy lines now?"
"Yes, but if I understood what Nysander was trying to tell me, it's
imperative that the four of us be there at some specific time. "One place, one
time," he said, and "synodical."
"What's that?"
Seregil shook his head, frowning. "I don't know yet, but it's important."
"It's all to do with that damn prophecy of yours, isn't it?" Micum scowled.
"But what in hell did the Plenimarans attack the Oreska for?"
"They were after that wooden coin I stole from Mardus back in Wolde. Nysander
had it and at least one other item of interest to them. He'd hidden them down in
the lowest of the vaults. That's where the worst of the wizard battle took
place."
Getting to his feet, Seregil straightened his ill-fitting clothes and headed
for the door. "Come on, I want to see if Nysander's conscious yet. Then I'll
need a look at the damage down below."
Micum followed, thinking of Mardus, and the fact that he'd taken Alec instead
of killing him on the spot. This was tied in with what he'd found up in the
Fens, he knew, but it was best not to think of that just now.
Valerius met them outside the bedroom door.
"Well, you're certainly looking better," he observed, looking Seregil over
with gruff approval. "Red eyes, flushed cheeks. A good cry's just what you
needed. Damn shame about the inn. That baby's fine, by the way. I've sent him to
the temple for the time being. I suppose you'll tell me about the others when
you're ready."
Seregil nodded. "Can I see Nysander now?"
"Still sleeping. Magyana and Darbia are watching him. They'll send for us as
soon as there's any change."
"How soon do you think he'll wake up?" asked Micum.
"It's difficult to say. These old wizards are strange creatures; he has his
own way of fighting for life." Valerius cocked an eyebrow in
Seregil's direction. "I gather you haven't heard about Thero?"
"What about Thero?" Seregil asked sharply.
"He's gone," snorted the drysian. "They've searched high and low. He's not
among the dead, nor anywhere in the House or the city. My guess is, he's with
whoever it was attacked here last night."
"That traitorous bastard!" Seregil snarled.
"He knew Nysander's ways, his habits, not to mention something of the Oreska
defenses. There's more than iron grates guarding the sewer channels under this
place. He let them in! Bilairy's Guts, he let them in!"
"We don't know that," Micum warned but Seregil wasn't listening.
"He knew whenever I was around, and where I lived!" White with anger, Seregil
slammed a fist against the wall. "Agrai methiri dos prakra, he betrayed all of
us. I'll feed him his own balls when I find him. Lasot arma kriunti!"
Micum took the news more calmly. "If he was in on it, then so was Ylinestra.
I suppose she's gone, too?"
Valerius shook his head. "Her body was in the vaults, among the enemy's
dead."
Seregil loosed another sizzling volley of Aurenfaie curses. "How many of the
Oreska House were killed?"
"Eight wizards, seventeen apprentices, twenty-three guards and servants, last
I heard. And there are plenty of others who may not survive their wounds."
"And the enemy?"
"Twenty-seven dead."
Seregil gave the drysian a questioning look. "And the others? Wounded,
prisoners?"
"Not a one," Valerius replied darkly. "That dyrmagnos creature saw to that
herself. According to those who witnessed the fight, as soon as Mardus and his
creature had disappeared from the vaults, and I do mean "disappeared" in a
thaumaturgic sense, every one of the surviving Plenimaran swordsmen there and up
in the atrium just fell down dead where they stood. I've seen the corpses;
there's not a mortal wound on them."
"I'll need to see them." said Seregil.
"I rather suspected you would. They've been laid out in the west garden."
"Good. But first I want to see the vault."
Tiles and rubble grated beneath their boots as Seregil and Micum crossed the
atrium to the museum chamber. Whatever magic had blasted the doors from their
hinges had carried through and smashed half the cases in the chamber. The case
holding the hands of the necromancer was among these; the hands lay palm up
among the splinters and shards like huge brown insects.
There were people everywhere in the vaults now. As they made their way down
one level after another they met servants and apprentices carrying up rescued
artifacts, and wizards weeping or wandering past in stunned silence.
A doorkeeper at the final door let them through without question. Torches and
wizard's lights lit the maze of brick-paved passageways. By their light Seregil
followed the traces of battle: a bloodied dagger abandoned at the turning of a
hallway, dark smears and spatters on the pale stone walls, shattered pieces of
an ivory rod, a corselet buckle, the charred remains of a wizard's robe.
Micum nudged a broken sword with his foot, then spread his arms to find that
he could nearly touch both walls at once. "Sakor's Flame, it must have been a
slaughter."
The sound of voices guided them the last of the way to Nysander's long-hidden
cache hole behind an unremarkable expanse of wall halfway down one of the
innermost corridors. A blacked hole a few feet above the floor led into
darkness. Beside it stood a young assistant wizard Seregil vaguely recognized,
together with several servants:
"You're Nysander's friend, aren't you?" she said. "Magyana told me you might
come."
"This is it, then?" he said, peering into the hole.
"Yes, it's a room of containment, masterfully done. I don't suppose anyone
but Nysander knew it was here all these years."
"Obviously, someone else guessed," Seregil retorted humorlessly. "Where did
the attack come from?"
The girl colored indignantly as she pointed farther down the corridor.
"There's a breach in the wall at the far end of this passage where a sewer
channel runs within a few yards of the wall. As you say, they seemed to know
just where to look."
She and the others retreated, leaving Seregil and Micum to their
investigation.
"Thero could have known," Micum admitted, watching Seregil take out his tool
roll and select a lightwand. "He might have guessed. Perhaps Nysander even told
him."
"No. He didn't." Stooping, Seregil inspected the jagged opening. "Illior's
Fingers, the stonework is three feet thick here, but there's no debris. I see
something shiny on the far edge, though."
The opening was large enough for Seregil to wiggle through.
Reaching in, he ran his fingertips cautiously over what felt like metallic
nodules beading a section of broken stonework. "It feels like—Of course, it's
silver. And something melted it; it ran like wax before it cooled. I'm going in
for a look."
Micum frowned as he peered doubtfully into the dark, cramped space. "Do you
think it's safe? Nysander must have had one hell of a lot of magic protecting
whatever he had hidden in there."
"Any safeguards that existed must surely have been destroyed," the wizard
said, placing his palms against the stone above the hole. "I sense only the
residue."
Holding the lightstone in one hand, Seregil squeezed in headfirst. It was a
tight fit. Jagged stone scraped at his hands and belly as he crawled through to
the small chamber beyond.
"I'm in," he called back to the others. "It is a room of sorts, but too small
to stand up in."
"What's in there?" asked Micum, peering in at him.
"Nothing. It's empty. But every surface from floor to ceiling is all black,
and covered with magical symbols."
Seregil touched his palm to the wall beside him and recognized the soft,
almost velvety texture of the surface at once; rubbing at a small section of it
with his sleeve, he uncovered gleaming metal.
"It's silver, the whole room is sheathed with it."
He was not surprised; taking all the details into consideration, he knew it
to be nothing more than a larger version of the silver-lined box Nysander had
given him to carry the crystal crown. "And here at the back there's a shelf
running the width of the wall."
Examining this, he found three areas of bright metal on the shelf, as if
whatever had sat there had kept it from tarnishing. The central mark was roughly
circular and about the size of his palm. To the left was a smaller, but more
perfectly round circle. To the right was a large square of silver, not so bright
as the other two. Seregil recognized the last two outlines as those of the boxes
holding the coin and crown, but what had the central object been? Judging by the
relative lack of tarnish, it had been there the longest of the three, proving
Alec's supposition that Nysander had been guarding something long before they
had brought him the disk.
Bending over the mark with his light, he touched the outline, tracing it with
his finger—his vision dissolved into a brief curtain of sizzling sparks, then
darkness.
A single clear, attenuated note broke the silence surrounding him and for as
long as it lasted he knew nothing else. It pierced him, bathed him, dancing
along on the threshold dividing pleasure from pain. Gradually other notes joined
the first and they had form, long heavy forms that gradually wrapped together
like the strands of a great rope.
And he was one of those strands, twisted tight and drawn along with the rest
toward some destination. It was not fear that shot through him now, but an
horrific elation.
Other sounds gradually filtered in from beyond the umbilicus, and these were
different.
Removed.
Not of the flow.
Countless black-feathered throats raising a deafening collective cry that
swelled to a roar of diseased laughter, then faded away as the flow passed on.
Human screams, voices crying out in every language of the world.
The clash of battle.
Impossible explosions.
He burrowed deeper into the umbilical bundle but the intrusive sounds
followed, rising to an awful crescendo before they faded as quickly as they had
come.
Silence, gravid with a sense of immediacy.
At last another sound crept in between the strands; Seregil knew this sound
and it inexplicably filled him with a greater dread than all the rest. It was
the heavy rumble of ocean surf.
"Seregil?"
The sound of Micum's worried voice broke through the vision, yanking him back
to the cramped chamber.
"You all right in there?" Micum called again.
"Yes, yes, of course," Seregil replied thickly, although suddenly he didn't
feel all right. He felt pissed as a newt.
Rising slowly, he staggered back to the opening and pulled himself through.
Micum helped him to his feet, but his legs didn't seem to want to support him
just yet. Sliding down with his back to the wall, he rested his elbows on his
knees.
"What happened in there?" Micum demanded, studying him with apparent concern.
"You don't look right."
"I don't know." There had been something, a fleeting glimpse of-what? Gone,
nothing.
Seregil scrubbed his fingers back through his hair to clear his head. "Must
have been some residual effect of Nysander's magic, or a pocket of bad air
maybe. I just went a little light-headed. I feel better now."
"You were saying something about a shelf in there," said Micum. "Did you find
something?"
"Just the marks. From the coin and the crown and the bowl."
"What bowl?"
Seregil blinked up at Micum. "I don't know. I just—know."
For the first time since he'd learned of Nysander's prophecy Seregil felt the
faint, chill brush of fear, but it was tempered with a sudden burst of grim
anticipation.
The blare of battle horns brought Beka up out of sleep just after dawn.
Grabbing her sword, she ran from the tent. "To arms! To arms!" a messenger
shouted, riding through the encampment. "An attack from the eastern hills. To
arms!"
Shading her eyes, Beka looked across the small plain that lay between the
camp and a line of hills a mile to the east. Even with the sun in her eyes she
could see dark ranks of horsemen and foot soldiers in the distance, perhaps as
much as a regiment. The Queen's Horse was still at half strength; Wolf Squadron
was patrolling the supply route that stretched back to the Mycenian coast twenty
miles to the south.
Sergeant Braknil rushed up fully armed, his blond beard bristling. "What is
it, Lieutenant?"
"Look there," said Beka, pointing.
"Damn! The scouts from Eagle troop said those hills were clear yesterday."
The edge of Plenimaran territory lay more than twenty miles to the east.
The rest of the turma scrambled from their tents in various-stages of
readiness.
"Full armor," shouted Beka, dashing back to finish dressing. Outside, she
could hear Portus, Braknil, and Mercalle barking at their riders.
"Lances and swords! Come on now, this is it!"
Minutes later all thirty riders were mounted and ready. Their chain mail, and
the white horse and sword insignia on the fronts of their green tabards, showed
bravely in the early morning light.
Beka gave them a satisfied once-over, then led the way to where Captain
Myrhini and the troop's standard-bearer were waiting. Lieutenant Koris' Second
Turma galloped up to join them.
Myrhini sat her white charger and barked out orders in a voice that carried
over the general outcry of the camp.
"Commander Klia wants our troop to hold this far right end of the battle
line. Commander Perris' squadron will be to our left. Lieutenant Beka, I want
your turma on our right. Koris, you've got the left. We'll show these sneaky
bastards that you have to get up earlier than this to catch the Queen's Horse in
bed on such a fine morning. Form up!"
Beka turned to her riders. "Sergeant Mercalle, you've got the center of our
section. Sergeant Braknil, take right; Portus, the left."
The three decuriae fell into formation, lances waving like the spines on a
sea urchin. Watching their faces, Beka saw in them a mix of fierceness and
elation.
And fear.
They were a young group, among the youngest in the regiment and, despite all
their hard training, they hadn't seen any worse action than their skirmish with
bandits weeks ago. This was just as unexpected as that had been, but a hundred
times more daunting.
Thirty-three faces turned to Beka as she buckled on her white-crested helm.
She knew as she looked at them that no matter how brave they were or how well
they fought, there were bound to be some who wouldn't live to see the sun set.
"We'll show 'em today, right, Lieutenant?" called Corporal Kallas, giving her
a nervous, cocky grin.
She grinned back. "Damn right we will! Honor, strength, and mercy, First
Turma."
Waving bows and lances, they returned the cry.
The trumpet signal "canter advance" came down the line. Unsheathing her
sword, Beka brandished it and yelled out, "Blood and Steel, First Turma!"
"Blood and Steel!" they roared back at her, shaking their lances.
The rumble of hooves and harness rang out on the morning air as the line
advanced to meet the enemy cavalry. The trumpets sounded again, and the line
sprang forward at a gallop across the plain.
Spring was creeping slowly up into Mycena and their horses kicked up clods of
half-frozen mud as they ran.
As the two forces hurtled at each other, closing the distance to seconds,
Beka felt only a deadly stillness as she marked an oncoming Plenimaran officer.
Both sides set up a blood-chilling battle cry as the two forces collided-cries
quickly swelled by the screams of horses and soldiers.
Myrhini's troop was in the thick of it from the outset. By midmorning they
had battled their way behind the enemy's flank. Regrouping, they wheeled back to
attack the rear guard, only to have the Plenimaran cavalry fade away like smoke
before wind at their advance, leaving a line of archers and pikemen in their
wake to meet the Skalan charge.
Bloodied to the elbows, Beka and her remaining riders heard the trumpets
sound the advance again and rode down on the enemy line through a hail of
arrows.
As she rode, Beka glimpsed soldiers falling and riderless horses veering
wildly across the field.
Sergeant Portus went down under his own horse, but there was no time to stop
for him.
Plowing into the ranks of infantry, Beka's turma fanned out, striking left
and right with swords as they pressed their mounted advantage.
Hewing her way through the chaos, Beka caught a welcome glimpse of regimental
standards on the far side of the melee.
"Look there," she shouted to the others. "Second Turma's with us. Close the
gap!"
She was wheeling her horse for a renewed charge when an enemy soldier struck
at her with a javelin, catching her a glancing blow across the front of her left
thigh just below the edge of her mail shirt.
He struck at her again, aiming for her throat.
Beka rocked back in the saddle and grabbed for the shaft, using the man's own
forward momentum to pull him off balance. As he staggered forward she struck him
over the head with her sword. He fell back and disappeared under the crush of
fighters surging around them.
Looking up, she saw Second Turma's standard tilt drunkenly in the distance,
then disappear.
Cursing, Beka called out new orders and spurred forward to aide Corporal
Nikides, who was about to be skewered from behind.
The battle raged on into early afternoon as the two forces battered each
other in repeated charge and melee. There was no quarter given to the dead or
dying; those who weren't carried from the field were trampled into the cold,
reeking mud. Combatants on both sides were so filthy that it was difficult to
tell friend from foe.
Though outnumbered, the Skalans refused to break and finally the Plenimarans
gave way, disappearing back into the hills as quickly and mysteriously as they'd
come.
Beka gritted her teeth and tried to concentrate on other things while the
troop surgeon tugged the last stitches tight, closing the gash in her leg.
The hospital tent was crowded, the air rank with the stench of the wounded.
Moans and cries came from all sides as the more seriously hurt begged for help,
water, or death. A few feet away, a man screamed as an arrow was pulled from his
chest.
Dark blood bubbled out ominously from the wound. When he cried out again,
more weakly this time, air from his punctured lung whistled through the hole.
The gash on Beka's thigh was a deep one and it hurt like hell now, though
she'd hardly noticed it during the battle. No one had been more surprised than
she when she'd fainted across her horse's neck when the fighting was over.
"There now, that should heal nicely if it doesn't fester," Tholes assured
her, laying his needle aside and pouring a bit of sour wine over the wound.
"Vinia will bind it up so you can ride."
There was a stir at the door of the hospital tent as Commander Klia entered,
flanked by her three remaining captains, Myrhini, Perris, and Ustes. All four
officers were covered with the filth of battle and Beka noted that Myrhini was
limping on a bandaged foot. Captain Ustes, a tall, black-bearded noble, wore his
sword arm in a sling and Perris had a stained bandage around his brow. Klia
alone appeared to have come off without a scratch, although word was she'd been
in the thick of it the whole time.
Magic, Beka wondered, or just charmed skill?
Klia was a skillful tactician, to be sure, but it was her preference for
leading from the front that made her so popular with her squadron. After
exchanging a word with one of the surgeons, she moved off among the wounded,
praising and encouraging them, and asking for details of the battle as the
fighters had seen it.
Myrhini spotted Beka and hobbled over. "First Turma distinguished itself
again today. I saw you break through the line. How's the leg?"
Beka grimaced as Tholes" assistant finished bandaging her thigh. Hauling her
torn breeches up, she flexed her leg. "Not so bad, Captain. I can ride."
"Good. Klia wants reconnaissance patrols out before dawn tomorrow. What state
is your turma in?"
"Last I knew for certain, four dead including Sergeant Portus, and thirteen
still unaccounted for.
As soon as I get out of here I'll round up the rest and let you know." The truth
was, she dreaded the final count. Lying here, she'd been unable to block the
memory of young Rethus' broken body trampled in the mud. He'd been the first to
stand with her during their first fight with the bandits.
Myrhini shook her head grimly. "Well, you may be better off than some.
Captain Ormonus was killed in the first charge, along with most of his second
turma. All told, we've lost nearly a third of the squadron."
Klia came over and squatted down beside Myrhini.
Beka made her commander an awkward salute from where she lay. Klia looked
older than her twenty-five years today. Tired lines had sunk in around her eyes
and mouth and creased the smooth brow below her dark widow's peak.
"A force that large—" Klia growled under her breath, tugging absently at the
end of her long brown braid. "A full regiment of Plenimaran cavalry and foot
soldiers boiling down out of hills we've been patrolling for a week!"
She pinned Beka with an appraising look. "How do you suppose they managed
that, Lieutenant?"
Beka looked out the tent flap to the distant hills visible beyond. "There are
hundreds of little valleys up there. Anyone who knew the area could sneak small
groups into them, keep quiet, no fires. When the time came, they'd send out
runners with orders to mass at some central point."
Klia nodded. "That seems to be the general opinion. Myrhini tells me you're a
good tracker. If you learned any of it from your father and Seregil, then I know
you're better than most. I want your turma to go up into those hills tomorrow,
see what you can find."
"Yes, Commander!" Beka sat up and saluted again.
"Good. I can give you a few more riders if you think you'll need them." Beka
considered the offer, then shook her head.
"No, we can move faster and quieter if there aren't too many of us."
Klia clapped her on the shoulder. "All right, then. This is like finding
adders in the haymow, I know. Find what you can and send back word. Don't engage
unless you're cornered. Myrhini, who else are you sending?"
"Lieutenant Koris is taking a decuria north into the steeper country. The
rest of his turma will go up the central pass with me."
"I've sent word to Phoria that we need reinforcements here," Klia told them,
rising to go. "With any luck the rest of the regiment will come up from the
coast in a day or so. Good luck to you both."
"Take care of yourself, Commander." Myrhini grinned, thumping the toe of
Klia's boot with her fist.
"Don't go getting yourself gallantly killed while I'm gone."
"I'll wait until you get back," Klia shot back wryly. "I wouldn't want you to
miss it."
"Sakor touched!" Myrhini muttered, watching her friend stride away. "Good
luck to you, Beka, and take care."
"Thanks. I will," Beka said.
When Myrhini was gone, she got up and looked around for familiar faces among
the wounded. She soon found some—too many, in fact. Ariani, a rider in Braknil's
decuria, beckoned to her from a back corner of the tent.
She was wounded but looked able to ride. Some of those with her hadn't been
so lucky. Mikal had taken a spear in the belly, and Thela had a shattered leg.
Next to her, Steb sat slumped against his friend
Mirn, one hand pressed to a bloody dressing over his left eye. That wasn't
the worst of it, though.
The little group was gathered around the body of another comrade. It was
Aulos, Kallas' twin.
A Plenimaran foot soldier had unhorsed him just before the retreat, then
hacked his lower belly open.
His brother had carried him off the field and now sat cradling Aulos' head on
his lap.
Beka felt her stomach go into a slow lurch. The surgeon had cut the remains
of Aulos' uniform and chain mail away, only to find that there was not enough of
his abdomen left to stitch back together. White and panting, the young man lay
staring mutely up at his brother, their faces mirrors of agony. They'd always
been inseparable, Beka recalled sadly, equally quick to sing or fight.
"They gave him a draught, but he still feels it," Kallas said softly as she
knelt down beside him.
Tears were coursing down his cheeks, but he remained motionless, patient as
stone. "Tholes says there's nothing to do but to let him go. But he won't! He
hangs on." Kallas paused, closing his eyes.
"As his kinsman, Lieutenant, I ask permission—to spur him on."
Beka looked down into the wounded man's face, wondering if he understood what
was going on. Aulos locked eyes with her and nodded slightly, mouthing. Please.
"Find someone, Mirn. Quickly!" Beka ordered.
Mirn hurried off, returning a moment later with an orderly who quickly opened
an artery in Aulos' leg. The wounded man's labored breathing slowed almost at
once. With a last long sigh, he turned his face to his brother's chest and died.
"Astellus carry you soft, and Sakor light your way home," Beka said, speaking
the soldier's brief prayer for the dead. The others echoed it in a ragged
chorus.
"Those of you who can ride, help Kallas bury him, then find the rest of the
turma. The rest of you stay here and wait for transport to the coast. You fought
bravely, all of you. Captain Myrhini's proud of you. So am I."
Accepting the murmured thanks of the others, she limped outside as quickly as
her leg allowed, only to be met by the sight of scores of bodies lined up on the
ground like bundles of harvested grain.
Syrtas was there, and Arna, Lineus, and Sergeant Portus. They lay looking up
at the blue sky with empty eyes, like dirty, broken dolls discarded once and for
all.
"Astellus carry you soft, and Sakor light—"
Beka's voice failed her. How many more times would she have to say that
parting blessing today? Wiping a hand roughly across her eyes, she whispered the
rest.
"Lieutenant Beka?" It was Zir, calling to her from the next hospital tent. He
appeared to be unhurt, but his face was deathly pale. "It's Sergeant
Mercalle—She's in here."
Squaring her shoulders, Beka followed him back into the stinking dimness.
The surgeons must have given Mercalle something for pain, for she smiled
sleepily up at Beka.
Both arms were splinted, and one of her legs. There were bandages wrapped
tightly around her chest and rib cage, as well, and blood had seeped through
these below her right breast and on her left side.
Beka knelt and rested a hand lightly on the sergeant's shoulder. "By the
Flame, what happened to you?"
"Damned horse—"
Mercalle rasped, shaking her head slightly. "When I heal up, I'm joining the
infantry."
"She got thrown and trampled," Zir whispered. "Corbin was carrying her off
the field when they both got hit with arrows. He was killed. I got her on my
horse and brought her in. Tholes expects she'll live."
"Thank the Maker for that. Where are Kaylah and the others?" Beka asked.
"She's out looking for the missing ones, Lieutenant. You saw—" Zir nodded in
the direction of the bodies outside, and she saw tears glistening in his eyes.
"We'd just fought our way into the open, and thought we'd have a moment to
collect ourselves. But there were Plenimaran bowmen there, too. By the Flame,
Lieutenant, they hit us hard! Arna, Syrtas, and the others-they were in the lead
and didn't have time to turn their horses."
Beka clasped his hand. "Go on. Find Kaylah and the rest. I'll be along soon."
"Lieutenant?" Mercalle's eyes were bleary, but she fixed Beka with a direct
look. "You were fine on the field, Lieutenant. Real fine. And you're fine with
them off the field, too. But you can't care too much, you know? You've got to
care for them, but not too much. It's a hard thing to learn, but you won't last
if you don't."
"I know." Beka sat a moment longer with her, realizing how much she was going
to miss the older woman's presence in the turma. "When you get back to Skala—if
you need anything—my father is Micum Cavish, of Watermead near Rhiminee."
Mercalle smiled. "I thank you for that, Lieutenant, but I've got a couple
daughters back home. I'll try and get word to your folks, though."
There didn't seem to be much left to say after that.
With a final word of thanks, Beka left the tent and limped past the corpses
in search of the living.
The Plenimarans had mown through the encampment, destroying tents, wagons,
and anything else in their path. Soldiers were at work everywhere now, trying to
salvage what they could from the tangled wreckage.
Beka was just wondering which direction to try first when she heard her name
called again and saw Corporal Rhylin waving to her from atop an overturned
sutler's wagon.
"Praise the Flame!" he exclaimed, jumping down. He was taller than she by
nearly a head and had an awkward, storklike quality when on foot that belied his
prowess as a horseman.
"We didn't know what to think when you disappeared at the end," he told her.
"There's been all sorts of rumors. Someone claimed Captain Myrhini went down."
"She's fine and so am I," Beka assured him, though the stitches felt like
burning claws in her skin, "Where is everybody?"
"Just over that way." Rhylin waved a hand back beyond the line of hospital
tents, adding glumly, "What's left of us, anyway. You'd better take my horse."
"We'll ride double. I want everyone together."
Rhylin swung up into the saddle and extended a hand.
Gritting her teeth as another hot rope of pain pulled taut across her thigh,
Beka climbed up behind him and gripped his belt.
"What can you tell me?" she asked as they set off.
"There are about a dozen of us accounted for who aren't too badly wounded.
Sergeant Braknil's in charge of them. Mercalle's hurt badly and Sergeant
Portus—"
"I saw him go down," said Beka, hearing the sudden strain in the man's voice.
Rhylin had been Portus' corporal.
"Anyway, Sergeant Braknil sent some of us out looking for you. The others are
scouting up food and gear," he told her.
Thank the Flame for that at least, Beka thought gratefully, imagining the
stocky, blunt-spoken sergeant striding through the wreckage to whip things into
order again.
"That's good. Mim, Kallas, and Ariani will be back later. Steb and Thela are
out of it for the time being—"
"Aulos?" Rhylin asked, and Beka felt him tense again. He'd come into the
regiment with the twin brothers. They were from the same town.
"Dead," she told him. There was no use glossing it over, she thought, feeling
weary for the first time that day. Like Mercalle had warned, death was something
they'd all better get used to, and quickly.
As expected, Braknil had things well in hand.
Food had been salvaged from somewhere, a few tents were up and, best of all,
a dozen or more horses were hobbled nearby, a good many of them sporting
Plenimaran tack.
A cheer went up as the others caught sight of them riding up.
"What's the word, Lieutenant?" Braknil asked as the others gathered anxiously
around.
He had a bloody rag wrapped around one forearm, but it didn't seem to be
slowing him down.
Beka counted fourteen in all, plus the sergeant.
"The word is we got caught with our britches down," she replied wryly.
"Commander Klia isn't too happy about that, but she thinks that First Turma can
help make it right. What do you say?"
Another cheer went up, mingled with angry shouts of "Let's raid the
bastards!", "Blood and
Steel!", and "Lead on like you did today, Lieutenant, we'll follow!"
Beka eased herself down on a crate and motioned for silence. "It looks like
two decuriae will have to do for now. Rhylin, I'm making you sergeant of Second
Decuria. Who do you have left?"
Rhylin looked around. "Nikides, Syra, Kursin, Tealah, Jareel, and Tare."
"Braknil, what about First Decuria?"
The sergeant waved at the two exhausted young men beside him. "Just Arbelus
and Gilly, so far."
"And us," called Steb, who'd just arrived with Kallas, Ariani, and Mirn.
"You're missing an eye!" Braknil said gruffly.
"I've still got one left," Steb replied, though it was clear he was in pain.
"Come on, Sergeant. There aren't enough of us left to spare me. I can fight."
"All right, then," the sergeant said with a shrug.
"Corporal Kallas, you're still sound?"
Still deeply shaken by the death of his brother, Kallas nodded grimly.
"So that makes seven in each decuria so far," Beka observed, counting them
up. "All of you who were with Sergeant Mercalle, step forward. Tobin, Barius,
you go into Braknil's decuria. Marten, Kaylah, and Zir, you're with Rhylin. As
soon as we've got horses and gear sorted out, we have orders to head up into
those hills as scouts."
"We couldn't make a worse job of it than Eagle troop," Kaylah muttered.
Others growled angry agreement.
"Never mind that. The Plenimarans pulled a good trick this morning, it's
true. It's up to us to make sure they don't do it again. We're going to poke our
nose down every gully and snake hole until we find out where they're hiding.
They can't conceal that many men and horses for long now that we know what
they're up to. Sergeants, see that everyone scrounges up a decent horse, patrol
gear, and a week's rations. Stow your tabards again, too. Maybe we can pull a
few surprises of our own, eh? We ride out at dusk."
Beka sat where she was for a moment, watching the remains of her command
bustle about. Most were sporting minor wounds. It was probably a mistake to take
Steb, but as he'd pointed out, they couldn't afford to spare anyone who could
still ride.
Twelve riders and two sergeants lost in a single day's fighting, she thought,
and half of those dead.
It was a lucky thing they had a mission to take up their thoughts tonight.
A white linen pavilion had been erected for the
Oreska dead. As Seregil and Micum passed by it the next morning, they heard soft
chants and the weeping of those preparing the bodies for pyre or grave.
Farther on, the enemy corpses lay under the open sky. Judged by their
clothing, they could have been laborers or thieves, but most of them had the
build and scars of soldiers. A Scavenger cart stood ready nearby. Untended and
unmourned, they would be hauled away and burnt without ceremony.
"Valerius said that after the attack was over, any of Mardus' men who weren't
already dead just dropped in their tracks," Micum mused as he and Seregil walked
around the bodies, seeking faces they'd seen with Mardus in Wolde all those
months ago. "You figure the dyrmagnos did that?"
"Probably," Seregil said. He was still wearing his baggy borrowed clothes and
looked as if he hadn't slept in a week. Micum knew for a fact that he'd sat
awake with Nysander all night. They both had.
"But I doubt they killed all of their own people," Seregil went on, taking a
closer look at a ragged, one-handed beggar. "Have you noticed that no one
remembers seeing Mardus and the necromancers leave? Except Hwerlu, maybe. He
said something about a huge dark shape rising over the House as he ran toward
it. He didn't get there until it was over, so that may have been Mardus' exit. A
dyrmagnos could have that kind of power."
Micum felt an unlucky chill go up his back.
"Let's hope we can stay clear of the thing, then. Anything that can lay
Nysander low and then fly off like a bat is nothing I want to face down."
A swarthy man with a scar through his bottom lip caught his eye. "I know him.
He's one of Captain Tildus' men," Micum said, pointing him out to Seregil. "I
drank with him a few times at the Pony in Wolde. He's one of them who gave Alec
a hard time."
"I see an old friend, too." Seregil stood looking down at a lanky, rawboned
man dressed in a soiled leather jerkin. "Farm the Fish, a gaterunner who came up
missing a month ago. Tym mentioned him to me just before he disappeared himself.
I don't recognize any of the others. Probably all Plenimaran soldiers and spies
brought in for the job." He tapped his chin with one long forefinger as he
frowned down at the dead. "You remember I ran into a Juggler up in Asengai's
dungeon, that night Alec and I first met?"
"The Plenimaran assassins guild, you mean?"
"Yes." Seregil jerked a thumb at die corpses. "What would you bet there's a
guild mark on one or two of these fellows?"
Micum grimaced in distaste. "Guess there's wily one way to find out. What's
it look like?"
"Three small blue dots tattooed to form a triangle. They're usually in the
armpit,"
Seregil told him, adding with a wry grin, "At least this is better than going
to the charnel houses."
Even in the scented coolness of the Oreska garden, however, it was not
pleasant work.
Pulling at clothing and cold, stiff limbs, Micum found no tattoos, but two
men did have suspicious scars about the size of a sester coin under their arms.
The healed tissue was still pink and new.
"I think this might be something," he said.
Seregil came over for a look and nodded. "There are three more just like it
over there. That scar isn't a burn or a puncture; the skin was sliced away on
purpose. If it wasn't a Juggler's mark they cut out, then I'll wager it was
something similar."
"That Mardus is a cagey bastard," Micum said with grudging admiration. "He
wasn't taking any chances. Not that we can prove it now, though."
Seregil examined the scar. "You know, I've heard that these skin marks go
deep. What do you think?"
Micum sighed. "It's worth a try, so long as no drysians catch us at it."
Slipping a tiny, razorlike blade from the seam of his belt, Seregil held the
skin on either side of the mark taut with two fingers and sliced away the
surface of the scar. When he'd pulled back the flap of skin, he and Micum
inspected the livid flesh beneath.
"See anything?" asked Micum.
"No, they must've cut deep on this one. Let's try another."
Their second attempt was more successful. Scraping gently this time, Seregil
uncovered the faint triangular imprint of the Juggler's guild mark still visible
in the flesh.
Seregil rocked back on his heels with grim satisfaction. "That's proof enough
for me."
"Maker's Mercy! What do you think you're doing?"
It was Darbia, the dark-haired drysian who'd been helping tend Nysander.
Bristling with indignation, she strode up and made a quick blessing sign over
the corpse.
"Enemy or not, I cannot condone such barbarous behavior," she snapped.
"It's not desecration," Micum assured her, getting to his feet. "This man and
several others wear the mark of Plenimaran spies. The
Queen should be informed before any of these bodies are taken away."
The drysian crossed her arms, still scowling. "Very well then, I'll see to
it."
"Did Valerius send you after us?" asked Seregil.
"Yes, Nysander is stirring a bit."
Without waiting to hear more, Seregil and Micum ran for the tower.
Magyana was still in the armchair by Nysander's bedside where she'd spent the
night, one hand still on his brow.
Seeing her like that, Micum could almost feel her willing her own energy into
her old love, trying to heal and sustain him with her own life force.
To Micum, Nysander looked worse than ever. His face was a dull, chalky grey,
his eyes sunken deep in their sockets beneath the unruly white brows. His
breathing scarcely lifted the sheet covering him but Micum could hear it,
rasping faintly as dry leaves across stone.
The sight of him must have struck Seregil hard as well. He read a hint of
despair in Seregil's face as he approached Nysander, and knew it was born of the
conflict between Seregil's great love for Nysander and his desperate need to
learn whatever he could to save Alec.
Seregil paused long enough to cleanse his hands at the washstand, then knelt
beside the bed and took Nysander's hand between his own. Micum moved around
behind Magyana's chair in time to see Nysander's eyes slowly open.
"I found your map," Seregil told him, not wasting any precious time.
"Yes," Nysander mouthed, nodding slightly against the pillow. "Good."
"The Pillar of the Sky, Yothgash-horagh. It's Mount Kythes, isn't it?"
Again, a slight nod.
"This temple you spoke of, it's on the mountain?"
"No," Nysander told them.
"Beneath it, underground?"
No response.
Seregil watched the wounded man's face for any movement, then asked as calmly
as he could manage, "At the foot of it?"
Nysander's throat worked painfully as he struggled to speak. Seregil bent
close, but after a few desperate efforts, the wizard's eyes closed.
Seregil rested his forehead against his clenched fists for a moment. Micum
couldn't see Magyana's face from where he stood, but her hand was trembling as
she reached to clasp Seregil's shoulder. "He's gone deep within himself again. I
know how desperately you need to speak with him, but he's just too weak."
"Could you make anything out of that last bit?" Micum asked, refusing to give
up hope.
Still kneeling by the bed, Seregil shook his head doubtfully. "He was trying
to tell me something. It sounded like "late us" or "lead us," but it was so
faint I can't be certain."
Magyana leaned forward, gripping his shoulder more forcefully this time as
she turned him to face her.
"Leiteus? Could it have been the name Leiteus?"
Seregil looked up at her in surprise.
"Yes! Yes, it could have been. And I've heard that name somewhere—"
Magyana clasped her hands together over her heart.
"Leiteus i Marineus is an astrologer, and a friend of Nysander's! They've
been consulting with each other about some comet for over a year now."
Seregil jumped to his feet and began searching the floor around Nysander's
hearth. At last he bent and pulled a book from beneath an armchair.
"I noticed this lying open by his. chair yesterday," he said, handing it to
her.
She opened it and Micum saw that it was full of tables and strange symbols.
"Yes," she said, "this is one of Leiteus' books."
"Have you ever heard the word "synodical'?" Seregil asked her with growing
excitement.
"I believe it refers to the movements of the stars and planets."
Micum looked to Magyana in surprise. "You mean Nysander really was trying to
send us to this astrologer fellow?"
"So it would seem."
"One place and one time." That's what he said yesterday," Seregil reminded
them. "A synodical event, like the advent of this comet. It must have some
bearing on whatever Mardus is up to."
He bent to lay a hand against Nysander's pale cheek. "I don't know if you can
hear any of this," he said softly, "but if you can, I'm going to Leiteus. Do you
understand, Nysander? I'm going to speak with Leiteus."
Nysander gave no sign of consciousness. Seregil sadly stroked a lock of
grizzled grey hair back from the old man's brow. "That's all right. I'm the
Guide. You just leave it to me for now."
Outside the Oreska walls an early spring wind had blown up, clearing the sky
and whipping corner whirlwinds out of the dead year's dust and leaves.
Galloping north out of the Harvest Gate, they left the highroad for a smaller
one that wound along the sea cliffs.
The astrologer's modest walled villa sat perched on a headland overlooking
the sea. Above it, gulls wheeled gracefully against the morning sky.
The courtyard gate was shut tight, but a servant soon answered Micum's
relentless knock.
"My master is not accustomed to receiving visitors at this early hour," the
man informed them stiffly, eyeing Seregil's unkempt appearance and ill-fitting
coat with undisguised skepticism.
"We're here on a matter of the utmost interest to your master," Seregil
replied, affecting his most arrogant tone. "Tell him that Lord Seregil i Korit
Solun Meringil Bokthersa and Sir Micum of Cavish, Knight of Watermead, require
his attendance at once in a matter pertaining to his friend Nysander, High
Thaumaturgist of the Oreska House."
Duly intimidated by the onslaught of titles, the man relented enough to
escort them to a small sitting room overlooking the sea, while he went to speak
with his master.
"Prophecies and astrologers," Micum grumbled, pacing around the tiny room.
"Alec's carried off by crazy butchering bastards and we're weaving sails out of
smoke!"
"It's more solid than that. I can feel it." Seregil sat down on a bench under
the window and rested one elbow on the sill as he gazed out.
Having a thread to follow, even as tenuous a one as this, appeared to have
restored the inner calm Seregil needed to function. After all the horror of the
previous day, however, Micum wondered if he wasn't just a bit too calm.
And what if this astrologer doesn't have all the answers?
"How did Kari take you going off like this?"
Micum shrugged. "She's nearly four months gone with child, Beka's off in the
middle of a war, and I charge off again with you. I swore to her I'd be there
when her time comes."
Still looking out the window, Seregil said quietly, "You don't have to come,
you know. Prophecy or not, the decision is yours."
"Don't talk like an idiot. Of course I'm coming," Micum retorted gruffly.
"I've made my choice and I'll stick by it," he went on, sitting down next to
Seregil.
"Though I'll admit I don't like it. Nysander talks of a band of four and here
we sit, knocked down to two before we even begin."
"We're still four, Micum."
Micum stared down at the mosaic under his feet for a moment, then laid a hand
on Seregil's thin shoulder. "I know what Valerius said yesterday. I want to
believe it as much as you, but—"
"No!" Seregil glared at Micum. "Until I hold his body in my hands, Alec is
alive, do you hear?"
Micum understood the anguish behind Seregil's anger all too well. If Alec was
alive, Seregil would fight through fire and death to save him. If Alec was dead,
then he'd do the same to track down his killers. Either road, he blamed himself.
"You know I love the boy as much as you do," he said gently, "but it won't do
him a damn bit of good for us to let that cloud our thinking. If we're going to
come up with any sort of plan we have to at least take into consideration that
he might be dead. If this "Shaft" person of yours is really meant to be an
archer, then we'd better—"
Seregil stared out the window, his mouth set in a stubborn line. "No."
They were interrupted by the arrival of a short, well-fed man in an enormous
dressing gown.
"I beg pardon, gentlemen," he apologized, yawning as he ushered them into a
spacious consultation room. "As you've no doubt surmised, the nature of my
studies requires that I work at night. I'm seldom awake at this hour. I've sent
for strong tea, so perhaps you would—"
"Forgive me, but I assume you're unaware of the attack on the Oreska House
last night," Seregil broke in, "or that Nysander i Azusthra has been seriously
wounded."
"Nysander!" Leiteus gasped, his robe billowing around him as he sank into a
chair. "By the Light, why would anyone want to harm that decent old fellow?"
"I can't say," answered Seregil, his manner now betraying none of the emotion
of a moment before. "He sent us to you, though he was too weak to tell us why.
Magyana says he'd consulted you on some astrological matter recently. It could
have some bearing."
"Do you think so?" Leiteus fetched a pile of charts from a nearby shelf and
shuffled quickly through them.
"If only he'd allowed me to do that divination for him. He was gracious about
it, of course, but so- Ah, here it is!"
He spread a large chart out on a polished table and peered down at it. "He
was interested in the movements of Rendel's Spear, you see."
"A comet?" asked Seregil.
"Yes." The astrologer pointed to a series of tiny symbols arcing across the
chart. "It has a synodical cycle of fifty-seven years. This is the year of its
return. He helped me calculate the date of its appearance."
Seregil leaned forward eagerly. "And you have it?"
The astrologer referred to his parchments again. "Let me see, going by the
observations recorded in Yourindai's Ephemeris, as well as our own calculations,
I believe Rendel's Spear should be visible on the fifteenth night of Lithion."
"That gives us just over two weeks, then," Micum murmured.
"Of course, it will remain in the sky for nearly a week," Leiteus added.
"It's one of the largest comets, a most impressive display. Of particular
interest both to Nysander and myself, however, is the fact that this cycle of
the comet coincides with a solar eclipse."
Seregil shot Micum a meaningful glance, then asked, "Would that also be
considered a synodical event?"
"Certainly, and one of the rarer variety," replied the astrologer. "I assumed
that's why Nysander was so curious about it."
"Eclipses are unlucky things," Micum noted. "I once knew a man who went blind
afterward."
"It'll be a doubly unlucky day with the comet in the sky," Seregil added,
though to Micum's ear he sounded more pleased than alarmed. was "Plague stars,"
I've heard these comets of yours called, bringers of ill fortune, war, disease."
"That's true, Lord Seregil," Leiteus concurred. "The College of Divination
has already sent word to the Queen, advising the suspension of all trade on that
day. People should keep to their homes until the evil influence passes. Such a
conjunction has not occurred in centuries."
"And do you have a date for that?" asked Seregil.
"On the twentieth."
"Was there any other sort of information Nysander seemed interested in?"
The astrologer stroked his chin. "Well, he did ask me to calculate if such a
conjunction had occurred before."
"And did you?"
Leiteus smiled. "I didn't have to, actually.
As every Skalan astrologer knows, it was that very same conjunction that
heralded the beginning of the Great
War six hundred eighty-four years ago. So you see, Lord Seregil, your talk of
unlucky "plague stars" does have some basis."
Leaving the astrologer with assurances to send word of Nysander, Micum and
Seregil headed back to the city.
"I admit, it makes some sense if you accept that Nysander's right about
Mardus aiming for that conjunction," Micum said as they rode.
"He is right, I'm sure of it. Think about it, Micum. There haven't been any
major incidents between Skala and Plenimar for twenty years, yet all of a sudden
Plenimar decides to launch another war of aggression, just as they did in the
Great War.
And the old Overlord, who opposed such a war, conveniently dies just in time for
his hawkish son to take the throne? And there's the same conjunction?
And the attack on the Oreska? And if that whole business does all revolve around
some rite or ceremony having to do with their Eater of Death, then what more
propitious time could there be than during the conjunction?"
"But what is it all for?" Micum growled. "Those odds and ends that Nysander
was guarding, what does
Mardus want with them? If the Plenimarans need them that badly, and now, just as
war is breaking out again—"
"That's just it, though. Nysander said he wasn't the first
Guardian. His mentor, Arkoniel, was before him, and the wizard before him. Who
knows how long Oreska wizards have been watching that same hidey-hole in the
vaults? Those things could date all the way back to the Great War. You've heard
the legends of necromancers and walking dead from that time, and everyone knows
it was the wizards who finally turned the tide."
"You mean to say that the Plenimarans are going to use those things to summon
the power of this god?"
"Something like that."
They both rode in silence for a long moment.
"Well, we'd better get moving," Micum said at last. "If you and Nysander are
right, then we've only got two weeks to find this mysterious temple, if it
exists, and a long way to go to get there. We'll have to hire a ship."
"I had Magyana send out word to Rhal this morning.
We should be able to set sail by tomorrow or the next day."
He kicked his mount into a gallop toward the city gate. Micum spurred grimly
on behind him.
Returning to the Oreska, they found Magyana and
Valerius in Nysander's workroom. Seregil quickly outlined what they'd learned
from Leiteus.
"So you see," he added, "it's imperative that we all be at this place
together, at the given time."
"Haul Nysander off in a ship over spring seas? Are you both mad?" Valerius
burst out, glaring at him and Micum. "It's absolutely out of the question. I
forbid it!"
Clenching his fists behind his back, Seregil fought to remain calm as he
looked to Magyana for support. "There must be some way we could make him
comfortable."
But Magyana shook her head firmly. "I'm sorry, Seregil, but Valerius is quite
right. Nysander must have solitude and peace to heal. Such a voyage in his
present state would certainly kill him."
"Not to mention the fact that you're sailing off into the very teeth of a
war," the drysian sputtered. "Even if he could stand being moved—which he
can't-what if you're boarded or sunk? Bilairy's Balls, man, he's scarcely
conscious more than a few minutes at a time!"
Seregil ran a hand back though his hair in exasperation. "Micum, you talk to
them."
"Calm down," said Micum. "If Valerius says Nysander can't survive the voyage,
then that's the end of that. But what about a translocation?"
Magyana shook her head again. "He's too weak to survive it, and even if he
could, it would not be possible. Since the attack there are only three wizards
left, including myself, who possess the skill to perform that spell. And it will
be some time before any of us are strong enough to attempt it."
Seregil let out a frustrated growl, but Micum was still thinking. "Well,
assuming that these Illiorans are on the right track with their prophecies and
comets and all, then we wouldn't necessarily have to move him for almost—"
"Two weeks," cried Seregil. "Praise the Flame for hardheaded Sakoran common
sense! You may have just saved us all, Micum. What do you say to that, Valerius?
Would he be strong enough in two weeks?"
"With his will, it's possible," the drysian admitted grudgingly. As for the
state of his powers, though, only he could say."
Seregil gave the wizard a hopeful look. "Magyana?"
She contemplated her folded hands for a long moment, then said softly, "By
then, yes, I should be able to assist him with a translocation of that distance.
But the decision must be his."
Micum slapped a hand on the table and stood up. "Then it's settled. We'll
sail without him and he can catch us up when the time is right."
Reaching into his purse, Seregil took out a small silver amulet, the twin of
the one he'd given to Rhal.
"This will guide you to our ship, the 'Green Lady,"" he told Magyana, giving
it to her. "There's no guarantee we'll still be with her then, but Rhal may be
able to tell you where we've gone. Wait, there's another way, too."
He took a clean rag from a pile near the worktable. Pricking his thumb with
his dagger, he dabbed a few spots of blood onto the cloth and knotted it
tightly.
"You won't miss me with that," he said. "Micum should do one, too, just to be
safe. If you'll excuse me now, I want a moment with Nysander."
Magyana looked down at the stained cloth in distaste when Seregil had
disappeared downstairs.
"I abhor blood magic," she said. "So does Nysander. Oh, Micum, do you really
believe all this is what Nysander intended? Seregil has had so many terrible
shocks."
"I don't know," Micum said quietly, pricking his own finger and staining
another bit of cloth for her.
"But I do know that nothing short of death is going to stop him from going on
with it. If he's right, then maybe there's a chance of getting Alec back, and
perhaps even stop whatever it is that the Plenimarans are up to. If he's wrong—"
Micum gave a resigned shrug. "I can't just let him dash off by himself, can
I?"
"And what of your own family?" asked Valerius as Micum stood to go.
For the first time that day Micum managed a wry smile. "Kari won't budge from
Watermead unless the enemy's in sight. Wamik's given me his word to watch over
her until I return."
The drysian smiled through his unruly beard. "A
strong-minded woman, your wife. The eldest, Beka, is no different."
"By the Flame, Beka!" groaned Micum. "I promised Kari I'd ask Nysander to
look for her."
"Rest yourself, Magyana," Valerius said as the wizard moved to rise. "Give me
your hand, Micum, and think of your eldest daughter."
Clasping his staff in one hand, Valerius took Micum's in his other and closed
his eyes. After several minutes he announced, "She is well. I see her riding
with good companions."
"And Alec?" Micum asked, still gripping the drysian's hand. "Can you see
anything of him?"
Valerius concentrated, frowning. "Only that he is not among the dead, nothing
more. I'm sorry."
Alec's teeth rotted and fell loose in his mouth.
Hot bile rose in the back of his throat, made doubly foul by the feel of the
snakes squirming in his belly. He wanted desperately to curl up, writhe away
from the interminable agony, but the iron spikes driven through his hands and
feet held him spread-eagled. Blind and helpless, he lay waiting for release back
into the dark dreams where there was only the sighing of wind and water—
Occasionally faces would intrude on his darkness, swimming out of the murk
only long enough to leer, fading back out of sight before he could put names to
them.
Fevers rose, flaming across his skin to burn out every memory until nothing
remained but the rush of the sea—
Alec felt the chill of a salt-laden breeze against his bare skin, but no
pain. His limbs felt heavy, too heavy to move just yet, but he ran his tongue
over his teeth and found them sound. How could a nightmare feel so real, he
wondered, or leave him so drained and confused?
The cold breeze helped clear his mind, but the world was still rolling under
him in a vaguely familiar fashion. Opening his eyes, he blinked up at broad,
square-rigged sails bellied out against a noonday sky.
And two Plenimaran marines.
Scrambling up to his knees, Alec reached instinctively for his dagger, but
someone had stripped him to his breechclout, leaving him helpless. The marines
laughed, and he recognized them as two of the men who'd pushed him around in
Wolde.
"Don't be frightened, Alec."
Alec rose slowly to his feet, too stunned to speak. Less than ten feet away,
Duke Mardus leaned at his ease against the ship's rail.
He'd been seated the one time Alec had seen him.
He hadn't guessed how tall Mardus was. But the man's handsome, aesthetic
face, closely trimmed black beard, and scarred left cheek-Alec remembered those
well enough. And the smile that never quite reached his eyes.
"I trust you slept well." Impeccably dressed in leather and velvet, Mardus
regarded him with all the solicitude of an attentive host.
How did I get here? Alec wondered, still at a loss for words. A few details
trickled back to him: the frantic ride to Watermead, a snarling dog, unlit
lanterns, hoping to find Seregil home. Beyond that, however, there was only a
blank greyness tinged with dread.
"But you're cold," Mardus observed, unpinning the gold broach that secured
the neck of his cloak.
He motioned to the guards, who pulled Alec roughly forward and held him while
Mardus swung the heavy folds around his bare shoulders.
Holding the brooch in place with one gloved hand,
Mardus slid the long pin through one of the holes until its blunt point
pressed against Alec's windpipe.
Terrified, Alec fixed his gaze in the buttons of Mardus' velvet surcoat and
waited. The pin pressed harder against his throat, but not quite hard enough to
break the skin.
"Look at me, Alec of Kerry. Come now, you mustn't be shy."
Mardus' voice was disarmingly gentle. Without wanting to, Alec found himself
looking up into the man's black eyes.
"That's better." Still smiling, Mardus fixed the brooch in place. You must
not fear me. You're quite safe under my care. In fact, I shall guard you like a
lion."
Alec felt someone come up behind him.
"Perhaps he does not understand his situation well enough to be properly
grateful," a heavily accented voice hissed near his ear.
The speaker moved to stand by Mardus, and Alec recognized him as the silent
"diplomat" who'd been with Mardus at Wolde.
"Perhaps not," Mardus said agreeably. "You must understand, Alec, that Vargul
Ashnazai was all for gutting you like a fish the moment he laid hands on you.
Not an unjustified reaction, considering the trouble you and your friend have
put us to over the past few months. It was I who prevented him from doing so.
"Why, he's nothing but an impressionable boy," I said many times as we stalked
the two of you through the streets of Rhiminee."
"Many times," the necromancer said with a poisonous smile. "Sometimes I fear
that the softness of my Lord Mardus' heart will lead him into harm."
"And yet how else am I to feel when I see such an intelligent and
enterprising young man fallen in with such company." Mardus shook his head
sadly. "A renegade Aurenfaie spy, outcast from his own people to whore for the
queen of a decadent land, and a wizard admitted even by his own kind to be a mad
fool?
"No, Vargul Ashnazai," I said, "we must first see if this poor lad can be
saved.""
Mardus grasped Alec by the shoulders, slowly pulling him close enough for
Alec to feel the man's breath on his face. His eyes seemed to go an impossible
shade darker as he asked, "What do you think, Alec? Can you be saved?"
Trapped in the intensity of Mardus' gaze, Alec kept silent. Despite'the
implicit threat behind those honeyed words, there was something dangerously
compelling in the man's manner, a force of personality that left Alec feeling
powerless.
"This one has a stubborn nature," the one called Vargul Ashnazai muttered. "I
fear he will disappoint you."
"Let's not be hasty in our opinion," said Mardus. "This Seregil of Rhiminee
may have some claim upon his loyalty. You did say, after all, that you believe
young Alec here has Aurenfaie blood in his veins."
"I am certain of it, my lord."
"Perhaps that's the impediment. There were so many conflicting rumors around
the city. Tell me, Alec, is he by chance your father? Or a half brother? Age is
so difficult to gauge with these Aurenfaie and they are by nature deceitful."
"No," Alec managed at last, his voice sounding faint and childish in his
ears.
Mardus raised an eyebrow. "No? But friend, certainly. He may have called you
his apprentice during that unfortunate masquerade in Wolde, but your
circumstances in Rhiminee belie it. So then, friend. Perhaps even lover?"
Alec felt his face go hot as the soldiers snickered.
"I recognize loyalty when I see it," Mardus said. "I admit I am impressed to
find it in one so young, even if it is blind loyalty to a man who abandoned
you."
"He didn't!" Alec snarled.
Mardus gestured around them at the ship, the empty sea stretching away on all
sides. "Didn't he? Ah, well. I suppose it's of little consequence to me what you
choose to believe. Still, you might wonder why this trusted friend of yours
chose to leave you to your fate when he might have saved you."
"You lie!" Alec was trembling now. He still couldn't remember anything that
had happened after his arrival at the Cockerel.
"Are you so certain?" Mardus' smile was tinged with pity. "Well, we'll speak
again when you're less overwrought. Vargul Ashnazai, would you be so kind as to
assist Alec with some calming meditations?"
"Of course, my lord."
Alec tried to flinch away, but the guards held him still as the other man
pressed cold, dry fingers against his cheekbone and jaw. For an instant Alec was
overwhelmed by a thick, rotten odor, then a terrible blackness engulfed him,
plunging him back into a morass of illness and pain where he couldn't escape the
mocking echo of Seregil's long-forgotten warning, Fall behind and I'll leave
you, leave you, leave you—
Alec awoke in the dim confines of a tiny cabin.
Still panting from the residual terror of the necromancer's trance, he sat up
in the narrow bunk and tried to make out his surroundings. There was no lantern,
but the weak light filtering in through a grate in the cabin door was enough to
illuminate the foot of another bunk against the opposite wall.
Above the rush of water against the hull, he heard the distant, muffled sound
of someone weeping loudly. The smell of rich broth wafted in from somewhere
nearby, and he realized that he was hungry in spite of the lingering effects of
the necromancer's magic.
Throwing off the thin blanket, he climbed out of the bunk, then froze. Now
that his eyes had adjusted to the dim light, he could see that the other bunk
was occupied. A figure lay stretched there under a blanket, face hidden in the
shadows. Clearing his throat nervously, Alec reached out to touch the person's
shoulder.
"Hello. Are you—"
A hand shot from beneath the blanket, grasping his wrist in a ferocious,
ice-cold grip. Alec lunged back, but the other man hung on, lurching up as Alec
tried to pull free.
"By the Light," Alec gasped. "Thero!"
The young wizard was as naked as Alec, and a set of branks had been fastened
around his head. Iron bands encircling the lower part of his face held an iron
gag piece in his mouth, while another passed tightly over the top of his head
between his eyes to join the first in the back. An opening for his nose had been
left in the vertical band and the whole thing was secured under his chin by a
chain. When Thero tried to speak around the gag his voice was hardly
intelligible. Saliva dripped from the corners of his mouth to collect in his
sparse beard and Alec guessed from the look in his eyes that he was either
insane or terrified.
"Ah'ek?" Thero managed, still gripping his wrist with one hand as he brought
the other up to touch Alec's face. Wide iron bands inscribed with symbols
encircled his wrists.
"What are you doing here?" Alec whispered in disbelief.
Thero gabbled thickly for a moment, his desperation clear. Then, releasing
Alec, he beat his fists against his head until Alec had to restrain him.
"No, Thero. Stop it. Stop!" Alec shook him roughly by the shoulders. Thero's
pale, bony chest heaved with emotion as he shook his head violently and tried to
pull away.
"You've got to calm down and talk to me," Alec hissed, caught somewhere
between anger and terror himself. "We're in one hell of a mess and we're going
to need each other to get out of it. Now let me try and get this contraption
off."
But the branks were locked securely in back and he had no tools to open it.
He searched the cabin with the scant hope of finding something-a nail, perhaps,
or a splinter of wood-to use as a makeshift pick.
He found nothing except a bowl of broth by the door. Hungry as he was, he
left it untouched in case it was drugged or poisoned.
Perhaps that's what's wrong with Thero, he told himself as his stomach
rumbled. The drooling creature cowering on the bunk bore little resemblance to
Nysander's reserved assistant.
Giving up at last, he sat down beside Thero on the bunk. "There's nothing
here. You've got to tell me what you know. Go slow so I can understand you."
Still wild-eyed, Thero nodded and said slowly around the gag, was
"Eye'ander's 'ead."
"What?" Alec gasped, praying he'd misunderstood.
" 'ysander dead. Dead!" Thero wailed, rocking violently back and forth in
misery. "My fault!"
"Stop that," Alec ordered, shaking him by the shoulders. "Thero, you talk to
me. What happened to Nysander? Did you see him killed or did Mardus just tell
you it happened?"
"Carried me 'own, "lack creatures-through walls, floors-to— " Thero hugged
himself, shuddering. "'tacked 'reska—'sander on the floor, they made me look. My
fault, mine!"
"Why is it your fault?" Alec demanded, shaking him again. "Thero, what did
you do?"
With a low moan, Thero wrenched away and curled deeper into the corner. There
were long, curved scratches on his back and sides, and little crescent-shaped
bruises along the tops of his shoulders.
"It was Ylinestra, wasn't it?" Alec asked, a vague, half-formed memory
shifting uneasily at the back of his mind. "She did something, or you told her
something?"
Thero nodded mutely, refusing to look at him.
Alec stared at him a moment longer, then rage exploded like a blazing sun in
his chest. Grasping the iron band at the back of Thero's head, he yanked the
young wizard out of his corner and shook him like a rat.
"You listen to me, Thero, and you listen well. If it does turn out that you
betrayed us and got Nysander killed, then by all the Four I'll kill you myself
and that's a promise! But I'm not sure about anything yet and I don't think you
are, either. They've done something to your mind and you've got to fight it.
Fight their magic and tell me what it was you said or did. What she did!"
"'on't know," Thero whispered hopelessly, spittle running from the corners of
his mouth. "She kep' me with her 'at night. When black 'uns came, she 'eld me
with 'agic. "en she thanked me and she laughed—She laughed!"
Releasing Thero in disgust, Alec pressed his fists against his eyes until
fiery stars danced behind his closed lids.
"Thero, what did they do to you? Why can't you use your magic?"
Thero held out one arm, showing him the strange iron band.
"These keep you from using your magic?" Alec reached out and felt the
unnatural coldness of the burnished metal. Running his hands over them, he could
find no sign of any seam, joint, or hinge.
"Think so—" Thero shifted uneasily, wiping at his damp beard. "Not 'ertain.
So much confused, nightmares, voices! "don't dare, A'ek, I don't dare!"
"You mean you haven't even tried?" Alec grasped
Thero's arms, bringing the bands in front of his face.
"You've got to try something, anything. For all we know these may just be a
trick, something to cloud your mind."
Thero shrank back, shaking his head desperately.
"You have to," Alec insisted, feeling his own desperation creeping back.
"We've got to get away from Mardus. There's a lot you don't know, but believe
me, Nysander would want you to help me. If you want to make things right, then
you've got to at least try!"
"'ander?" Thero's chest heaved as he looked distractedly around the cabin, as
if he expected to find Nysander there. " 'ander?"
Sensing a chink in whatever madness held Thero, Alec nodded encouragingly.
"Yes, Thero, Nysander. Concentrate on him, his kindness, Thero, all the years
you spent with him in the east tower. For the sake of the faith he placed in
you, you've got to at least try. Please."
Thero twisted the edge of the blanket in his fists as tears rolled from his
mad eyes. "P'rhaps," he whispered faintly, "p'rhaps—"
"Just something very small," Alec urged. "One of those little spells. What
are they called?"
Thero nodded slowly, still twisting the blanket. " 'an'rips."
"That's right. Cantrips! Just a simple one, a tiny little cantrip."
Trembling visibly, Thero half closed his eyes in preparation for the spell
but suddenly looked up again. "You 'aid there's some'ing I 'on't know," he asked
with a sudden flash of his customary sharpness. "What? I's his 'sistant; why
didn't he tell me?"
"I don't know," Alec confessed, getting the gist of Thero's question. "He
told us—told me so little I'm not even sure what it's all about. But he swore me
to secrecy. I shouldn't have said anything at all, I guess. Maybe later, when
we're out of this—"
Alec trailed off, suddenly wary. Thero was watching him intently, hanging on
every word. "We'll talk about it later, all right? Please, try the spell now."
"'ell me first! Could 'elp!" Thero insisted, and this time there was no
mistaking the feral intelligence in his eyes.
"No," Alec said, slowly moving away, though there was nowhere to go. "I can't
tell you."
He tensed for some attack, but instead Thero slumped over sideways on the
bunk like a discarded puppet.
The cabin door opened behind him and Alec felt a wave of terrible coldness
roll into the room.
Whirling in alarm, he confronted a walking horror.
It took a moment to see that the wizened husk had once been a woman. Lively
blue eyes regarded him slyly from the masklike ruin of her face.
"That is most ungrateful of you, boy," she rasped, the cracked remnants of
her lips curling back to reveal uneven yellow teeth, "but I think that you will
tell me."
Stretched prone on the crest of the hill, Beka and Sergeant Braknil shielded
their eyes from the drizzle and surveyed the little village below. There were
large granaries and warehouses there, the walls of which still had the pale
gleam of new wood.
Empty wagons of all descriptions stood near a sizable corral. All this,
coupled with the cavalry troop billeted just outside the wooden palisade, added
up to one thing: a supply depot.
"Looks like you were right, Lieutenant!" Braknil whispered, grinning
wolfishly through his beard.
Satisfied with their reconnaissance, they made their way cautiously back to
the oak grove where the rest of the turma was waiting.
"What's the word?" asked Rhylin.
"We found Commander Klia's adders," Braknil told him.
"A good nest of them, too," said Beka. "But only one nest, and it took us
four days to do it. From the looks of it, I'd say it's just one link in a supply
chain."
"You think we should look farther before we go back?" asked Corporal Kallas.
He was still mourning his brother and had the look of a man who'd welcome a
fight.
Beka looked around at their dirty, hopeful faces. The depot was an important
emplacement, enough of a find to go back with now that their food was running
low and the weather had turned foul.
Her leg ached dully as she shifted her weight.
The gash in her thigh had festered just enough to kindle a fever. Though it
broke her sleep at night with confused dreams, it seemed to sharpen her wits
during the day, as fevers sometimes did.
"We'll circle wide and see if we can learn where the wagons are coming from,"
she said at last.
For two days they followed the supply route as it wound south into the
steeper country above the head of the Plenimaran isthmus. Beka kept her riders
well up in the wooded hills, sending scouts ahead and behind as they went. They
spotted two separate wagon trains heading west, but both were too heavily
guarded to attack.
Their seventh day out dawned cold and foggy. Reining her horse to the side of
the steep track, Beka watched as the remains of her turma rode past; the fog
made it difficult to see more than thirty feet in any direction and she couldn't
afford to lose any stragglers. The uncertain light and muffling effect of the
mist lent the riders a ghostly, insubstantial look.
They all rode with growling bellies. Their food was nearly gone and game was
scarce. With the rain and the plentiful mountain springs they had water enough,
but hunger soon took the edge off a soldier's strength. It would probably be
wisest to turn back today.
Just as she was about to call a halt, however, Braknil materialized out of
the fog and cantered over to her.
"The scouts found a way station ahead, Lieutenant. They report four big
wagons unhitched there and only a handful of guards," he informed Beka quietly,
then added with a knowing wink, "Quite a manageable gathering, I'd say.
Especially in this weather, if you take my meaning."
"I believe I do, Sergeant."
Leaving Rhylin in command, she followed Braknil to a stone outcropping where
Mirn was waiting with several horses.
"You can see it from just around the next bend in the trail," he told them,
his face flushed and eager beneath his shock of pale hair. Mirn had always
reminded Beka a bit of Alec, though a taller, more muscular version.
Proceeding on foot, they found Steb keeping watch.
"You can see better now," he told them, pointing down a gap. "This breeze
that's coming up should clear it off before long."
From where they stood, Beka could see a road winding through the narrow cleft
of a pass. There was a way station there, an old tumble-down log building, but
the stable and large corral next to it were sturdy and new.
Rocky slopes rose steeply on both sides of the road, making it the only
passable route of attack or escape.
"I've been watching the place," Steb told them. "I'd say there's no more than
two dozen soldiers and a few wagoneers down there. Nobody's ridden in or out
since we found the place an hour ago."
Judging by the activity in the yard, Beka guessed the wagoneers were getting
ready to move out, though neither they nor their military escort seemed in any
particular hurry. Many still lounged around the station door with trenchers and
mugs. The breeze coming up the pass carried the tantalizing aroma of breakfast
fires.
She studied the fog still shrouding the road leading up to the station. "If
we move fast, we might get within two hundred yards of the enemy before they
catch a good look at us."
"And if we circle by this trail and come in on the road from the east,
chances are they'll think we're friendly forces anyway," whispered Braknil.
"Good idea. The Plenimaran cavalry columns travel at a canter in ranks of
four. We'll line up in the same formation. Put anyone who's riding with
Plenimaran tack in front in case they recognize the jingle of the harness."
Sergeant Braknil raised an eyebrow, looking impressed. "Who taught you to be
such a sly thinker, Lieutenant?"
Beka gave him a wink. "A friend of the family."
Their ruse paid off. The Plenimarans scarcely looked up from their breakfasts
as the turma came cantering toward them out of the mist. By the time they drew
swords and broke into a gallop, it was already too late.
They thundered up to the station, whooping and screaming at the top of their
lungs. A few of the Plenimaran soldiers stood their ground. Most broke and ran
for cover in the station and outbuildings.
Galloping at full speed, the Skalans rode down the men who stood against
them. The Plenimarans put up a brief, determined fight but were no match for the
flashing swords and iron-shod hooves that mowed them down.
With the station's one line of defense destroyed, Beka shouted an order and
the riders split into decuriae.
Braknil spotted men running for the cover of the stable and chose that as his
target. Wheeling toward the low-roofed building, he and his riders drove the
would-be escapees into the stable, then tossed the Plenimarans' own night
lanterns into the straw piled outside the back door. Within seconds, screams
rang out from the panicked horses stabled inside. Choking and cursing, those
who'd taken refuge there came stumbling out again and were herded at sword point
into the corral.
Rhylin and his decuria attacked the station building.
Dashing up to the door, the ungainly sergeant leapt from his horse and threw
himself against the door, knocking it open just as the men inside were trying to
thrust the bar into place. His assault was successful, but he was nearly
trampled for his efforts as the rest of his decuria, led by Kallas and Ariani,
stormed in to his aid. The soldiers and wagoneers inside surrendered
immediately.
Beka and a handful of riders rode off in pursuit of the Plenimarans who had
fled at the first sign of attack. Most of those on foot were easily overtaken,
but several who'd gotten onto horses broke away down the east road. Beka and her
group took off in pursuit, but their quarry had the advantage of fresh horses
and a knowledge of the country. Cursing under her breath, she turned back.
The remaining Plenimarans had been gathered in the station building.
"I took count, Lieutenant," Braknil informed her as she dismounted. "Nineteen
enemy dead and fifteen taken, counting the wagoneers and stationmaster. Sergeant
Rhylin's got the prisoners under guard."
Beka surveyed the bodies scattered between the buildings and the road. "Any
losses for us?"
"Not a scratch," the sergeant replied happily. "Those little tricks of yours
worked!"
"Good." Beka hoped her relief wasn't too obvious. "We don't want to make the
same mistake as our friends in there, so post lookouts on the road. Corporal
Nikides!"
"Here, Lieutenant." The young man rode over to where she stood.
"Get someone to help you check the wagons. Let's hope we haven't gone to all
this trouble for a load of horseshoes and slop pails."
"Yes, Lieutenant!" Grinning, he snapped a salute and rode off again.
Inside the station, the Plenimarans sat packed together at the far end of the
building's single narrow room under the watchful eyes of Rhylin's guards. Six of
the captives were wagoneers; the rest wore black military tunics displaying a
white castle emblem.
Rhylin snapped Beka a smart salute as she entered. "We've searched the
prisoners and the buildings, Lieutenant. Nothing of note found. It looks like a
routine supply train."
"Very good, Sergeant."
Beka's long red braid fell free over her shoulder as she removed her helmet.
The prisoners exchanged glances and low murmurs among themselves at the sight of
it. Several stared at her boldly and one spat sideways onto the floor.
Gilly moved to avenge the insult, but Beka stayed him with a glance.
"Who's the ranking officer here?" she demanded, not bothering to sheath her
sword. The prisoners simply stared back at her, silent and insolent.
"Do any of you speak Skalan?"
Again the blank silence. The Plenimarans" disdain for female soldiers was
legend, but this was her first exposure to it. A trickle of sweat inched down
her back as all eyes turned to her.
Rider Tare, a young, red-haired squire's son with the solid build of a
wrestler, stepped forward with a respectful salute. "By your leave, Lieutenant,
I speak a little Plenimaran."
"Go on, then."
Tare turned and addressed the prisoners haltingly.
A few snickered. None replied.
Well, I've got the badger by the hind leg, as the saying goes. Now what the
hell do I do with it?
Beka thought, racking her brain. The thought of Seregil's sly, lopsided grin
brought her inspiration.
With a careless shrug, she said aloud, "Well, they had their chance. Sergeant
Rhylin, see that they're securely bound. Sergeant Braknil, your decuria is in
charge of burning the place."
A few of her own people exchanged worried looks, but the sergeants obeyed
without question.
One of the wagoneers whispered excitedly to a grizzled soldier next to him.
The man went an angry red, then hissed something back. Rising on one knee, the
wagoneer bowed awkwardly to Beka.
"A moment, Lieutenant, I speak your language," he said in passable Skalan.
"Captain Teratos says he will parley with your commanding officer as soon as
he arrives."
Beka favored the Plenimaran captain with an icy look. "Wagoneer, first tell
this man that I am the commanding officer here until the rest of our troop
arrives. When my captain arrives, she will have less patience with him than I
do. Then inform him that Skalan officers do not parley with those they have
defeated. I will ask questions. He will answer them."
The wagoneer quickly interpreted Beka's words for the captain. The man stared
at her for a moment, then spat wetly between his feet. This time Beka made no
move to stop Gilly as he brought the flat of his sword down on the man's head.
"My men don't approve of his discourtesy, wagoneer," Beka went on calmly.
"Tell him that we're hungry, and that the roasted flesh of our enemy is more
succulent than pork. Sergeant Braknil, fetch the torches." Turning on her heel,
she strode outside.
Braknil followed her out. "You don't really mean to burn those men?"
"Of course not, but we don't want them to know that, do we? Let's give them a
few minutes to consider their situation."
Syra ran over to her just then, clutching a strip of salted fish and a cup of
beer. "Lieutenant, Corporal Nikides sends you breakfast with his compliments,"
she said, handing them to Beka. "There's barley meal, too, but he said to tell
you 'no slop jars.""
Beka took a swallow of warm beer. "That's a relief. Spread the word; each
rider is to take as much fish and meal as they can carry. We'll have to leave
the beer. As soon as everyone has what they need, burn the rest. Sergeant
Braknil, see that Rhylin's riders are relieved as soon as yours are supplied—"
She was interrupted by the sound of a horse coming in from the west. It was
Mirn, who'd been sent out as a lookout.
"Enemy riders headed this way!" he shouted to her.
"Cavalry column, two score riders at least."
"Damn!" Motioning the others to silence, she listened intently for a few
seconds; no sound of the approaching riders yet. The mist was still with them,
but the smell of the burning stable would carry for a mile. "Spread the word,
Mirn. Everyone grabs an extra horse and food and heads east. If anyone gets
separated, they're to circle back and head for the regiment with word of what we
found. Go!"
Rhylin came running out of the station with his people. "What about the
prisoners?"
"Leave them. Get out of here!" The staccato rumble of the approaching column
was audible now.
Leaping onto her horse, Beka galloped to the wagon and yanked out the first
sack her hand fell on.
An arrow sang over her head as she slung the bag over her saddlebow. Another
shaft thudded into the side of the wagon as she wheeled her mount, galloping
down the eastern road just as the first of the Plenimaran outriders burst out of
the thinning mist.
Hoping the fire at the station would halt at least some of the enemy, Beka
led her riders deeper into Plenimaran territory.
It was silent and dark under the water. Seregil could see the bright silver
surface wavering above him as he struggled, but something in the depths below
gripped his ankle, holding him just out of reach.
A tall, dark figure loomed over him, distorted by the surface refraction. It
saw Seregil floating helplessly below and beckoned to him.
With a final, frantic kick, he managed to get his face above water just long
enough to fill his bursting lungs. As he did so, he looked up into the face of
the man standing over him. The lips moved as he told Seregil what he must do.
He couldn "t understand the words, but they filled him with such horror all
the same that he cried out and water poured into his mouth as the unseen force
below pulled him under again-
"Seregil! Seregil, wake up, damn it."
Gasping for air, Seregil focused on Micum's worn, freckled face, the ship,
the open sea around them.
The ship. The open sea.
"Oh, shit, not again," Seregil groaned, pressing his fingers against his
throbbing temples. Over his friend's broad shoulder, he saw a few sailors
gathered nervously nearby, craning their necks for a glimpse of him.
"Did I-?"
Micum nodded. "They heard you clear back to the stern this time. This is the
third time."
"Fourth." In the week since they'd set sail, the dream—whatever it was, since
he couldn't recall it when he woke—had come more often. Worse yet, he was
beginning to nod off at odd times during the day to have it, this time in broad
daylight right here at the foot of the bow platform.
"Any man with time on his hands can report to me for extra duty," barked
Captain Rhal, scattering the knot of gawkers as he stumped up the deck.
Reaching Micum and Seregil, he lowered his voice to a growl. "You said you'd
keep to your cabin after the last time. The men are beginning to talk. What am I
supposed to tell them?"
"Whatever you can," Micum replied, helping Seregil to his feet.
"Those two who were with you on the Darter, can they still be trusted?"
Seregil asked.
"I've told them to keep their mouths shut about that and they will." Rhal
paused, still frowning. "But Skywake's muttering about you being a jinx, a
stormcrow. He knows better than to say it outright but the others are starting
to sense it."
Seregil nodded resignedly. "I'll keep out of sight."
Micum followed as he headed for the companionway. "By the Flame, you'll get
us pitched over the side for certain if you don't mind yourself," he muttered.
"These sailors are worse than soldiers when it comes to anything that looks
like an omen." Seregil ran a hand back through his lank hair.
"What did I say this time?"
"Same as before, just 'no, I can't' over and over until I got to you. I
suppose I shouldn't have left you when I saw that you'd dozed off." Entering
their cabin, Micum dropped onto his bunk.
"Did you remember any of it this time?"
"No more than before," Seregil sighed, stretching out on his own bunk with a
flask of ale. "I'm drowning, and I see someone looking down at me through the
water. That's all I can ever recall, but it scares the hell out of me. The
closer we get to Plenimar, the worse it feels."
"I'm not so happy about it myself," Micum said with a wry grin.
Since rounding the southern tip of Skala two days before, they'd spotted half
a dozen enemy vessels in the distance, and outrun two of these. This was another
point of contention with the crew; there would be no bounty to divide up if they
didn't engage.
"You don't suppose Nysander could be trying to reach you this way?" Micum
asked without much hope.
"I wish it was, but I think I'd feel it if it was that." He took a sip of ale
and stared disconsolately up at the cabin ceiling.
"Illior's Light, Micum, what I do feel is a wrongness in him not being here.
And Alec."
Seregil reached inside his coat, felt the dagger hilt there, and the soft
lock of hair. If they were too late, if Alec died, was dead already—
"You never said anything to him, did you?" asked Micum. "About your feelings
for him, that is?"
"No, I never did."
His friend shook his head slowly. "That's a pity."
Aura Elustri malreis, Seregil prayed silently, clenching the hilt until his
knuckles ached. Aura Elustri watch over him and keep him until I can plunge this
same knife into the hearts of his enemies.
The pounding of feet on deck overhead woke them just after dawn the next
morning.
"Enemy sail off the port bow!" a lookout shouted.
Snatching up their swords, Seregil and Micum ran above.
Standing at the helm, Rhal pointed toward the northeastern horizon, where a
black and white striped sail was just visible. "The bastards must've sighted us
last night and trailed us."
"Can we outrun them?" asked Micum, shading his eyes. At this distance he
could already make out the vessel itself, running low and fast over the waves.
"From the cut of their sails, I'd say not. Looks like we'll have to fight
this time," Rhal replied with a certain grim satisfaction. "I know your feelings
on this, Seregil, but it'd be best if we take the offensive."
Seregil said nothing for a moment, but appeared to be studying the oncoming
vessel. "The sails on that vessel aren't so different from ours, are they?" he
asked.
"No, we're rigged out about the same."
"So you could sail this ship with those sails?"
Rhal grinned, catching his drift. "In the proper navy they'd call that a
dishonorable trick."
"Which is why I stick with privateers," Seregil replied, grinning back. "The
closer we get to Plenimar, the less attention we'd attract, at least from a
distance."
"By the Old Sailor, Lord Seregil, you've the makings of a great pirate in
you. Trouble is, if you want the sails off her, we can't use our fire baskets."
"Keep it as a last resort and throw everything else you've got at her."
"All hands, prepare for battle," Rhal sang out, and the call was passed down
the deck.
The crew of the Lady sprang to action with a will. The pilot have the ship
around to meet the Plenimaran challenger. Hatches were dragged back, the
catapults fitted into their bracing sockets along the deck and on the battle
platforms fore and aft, and baskets of stones, chain, and lead balls hauled up
from the hold. Rhal's archers took their places and the edge of every sword and
cutlass was given a final touch of the thumb.
"She's showing the battle flag, Captain," the lookout shouted as they bore
down on the enemy ship.
"Run up the same!" answered Rhal.
Micum lost sight of Seregil in the general confusion, but his friend
reappeared moments later with Alec's bow.
"Here," he said, handing it to Micum without meeting his eye. "You're better
with this than I am."
Before Micum could think of a reply, Seregil hurried off to join one of the
catapult crews.
The Plenimaran ship swooped toward them across the waves like an osprey,
closing the distance rapidly.
"A warship, Captain, and they got fire baskets lit!" the sharp- eyed lookout
called down.
"How are they set?" Rhal bellowed back.
"Two catapults to a side, fore and aft! Fire baskets to the fore."
"Keep at her bow, helmsman!"
As the ships closed within a few hundred yards of each other, archers on both
sides took aim.
Standing with Rhal's bowmen along the port rail, Micum listened to the
bowstring song of Alec's Black Radly as he loosed shaft after shaft at the
enemy. The song was quickly answered. Plenimaran arrows whined and buzzed across
the water at him like angry dragonflies.
Welken, the faithful lookout, crashed to the deck with a shaft through his
chest. Nettles was hit in the leg but kept on shooting. Others fell and the
shouting and screams on both sides echoed over the water between the vessels.
No shortage of arrows,
Micum thought, pulling enemy shafts from the deck and rail and sending them back
the way they'd come.
The heavy thud of the catapults sounded fore and aft as catapults on both
sides let fly. Flaming balls of a pitchy concoction known as Sakor's Fire sailed
across the
Lady's bow, narrowly missing her forward sail. The Lady responded with double
loads of chain that clawed through the enemy's rigging, collapsing one of her
mainsails like a broken wing. Panicked shouts rang out on the enemy ship as she
slowed.
"Hard about and give her another!" Rhal ordered.
Skywake fought the rudder to port and the Lady leaned dangerously into the
waves as they wheeled to press their advantage. A groaning volley from the port
catapults smashed the Plenimarans' forward mast and the enemy ship yawed,
wallowing in the swells.
Like a wounded dragon, the Plenimarans released a second volley of Sakor's
Fire as the Lady passed. This one found its mark, striking the forward platform.
An oily sheet of flame engulfed a catapult and its crew. Burning men fell
writhing to the deck or leapt overboard. Sailors tore the covers from sand
barrels lashed against the rails, smothering the flames before they could
spread.
Choking on the smell of burning flesh, Seregil dropped his load of chain and
ran up the platform ladder to help drag the wounded away from the flames.
"What now?" he called, spotting Rhal on the deck below.
"Hard around, strike sails and board 'em,"
Rhal yelled. "Makewell, Coryis, tell your group to stand ready with the
grapples."
A final volley of stones from a Plenimaran catapult shattered the Lady's main
mast as she bore down on them. Dodging the fallen spars, the grappling crew
tossed their hooks across and hauled the two ships together before the
Plenimarans could cut the ropes. As soon as the bulwarks were close enough to
leap, Rhal's
fighters boarded the other ship and waded into the black-uniformed marines
massed to repel them.
From his vantage point on the platform, Seregil scanned the fray for Micum's
red mane. As expected, his companion was already across in the thickest of the
fight.
The gods chose you well for the Vanguard, Seregil thought, shinnying down the
ladder and elbowing his way to the rail. Reaching it, he did his best to ignore
the foaming chasm that opened and closed beneath him as the two disabled vessels
wallowed in the swells. He-made his jump, drew his sword, and was immediately
confronted by a Plenimaran sailor armed with a cutlass.
The battle soon spread to both ships. Somehow in the confusion, Micum and
Seregil found each other and fought shoulder to shoulder, back to back, as the
precariously balanced fight raged on.
For a time it seemed that it would go on indefinitely, but in the midst of
the melee one of Rhal's seamen killed the captain of the Plenimaran ship. At
almost the same moment, Micum struck down the commander of the marines.
Confusion spread among the remaining enemy and they finally surrendered.
A cheer went up from the Lady as the surviving enemy sailors and soldiers
threw down their weapons in surly submission. Whooping and howling their
triumph, Rhal's men surged forward to loot the vanquished ship.
Exhausted, Seregil and Micum left them to it and jumped back aboard the Lady.
"By the Flame, that was a proper fight," Micum gasped, nudging a severed hand
out of the way with his foot before collapsing on a bulkhead.
Looking his friend over, Seregil saw that Micum had come out with no more
than a cut over one eye. He'd taken a shallow cut across the shoulder himself.
Stripping off his tunic and shirt, he glanced at it, then held a wad of cloth
against it to stanch the bleeding.
"Too close quarters for my taste," he said, collapsing on the deck with his
back to the bulkhead.
Rhal appeared from out of the surrounding confusion and strode over to where
they sat. "Well, we caught your ship for you but there's still better than
twenty of her crew left standing," he informed Seregil. "I know we don't want to
be weighed down with prisoners, but I'll tell you straight that I won't be a
party to the execution of beaten men."
"Neither will I," Seregil told him wearily.
"I say strip whatever we need off her, take the sails, and set the crew
adrift on her with food and water. How long will repairs to the Lady take?"
Rhal rubbed his jaw, looking around at the damage. "We'll have to step a new
mast and rig the new sails. No sooner than sunup tomorrow."
"How many days to Plenimar?"
Rhal eyed the sky. "Barring foul weather, I'd say three days, maybe four.
Running with Plenimaran sails could save us a fight or two."
Seregil looked to Micum, but the big man merely shrugged.
"Do it, then," Seregil told the captain. "And put the Plenimarans to work,
too."
Hands. Hands on him, touching, seeking, tormenting.
Alec wrapped his arms around his knees, curling tightly in the darkness of
the tiny cabin as he fought to block out the memory of being touched and wishing
he still had Thero for company. He'd seen no sign of the young wizard since that
first night on board the Kormados.
Mardus and his people were subtle in their methods; in all the terrible time
since his capture they hadn't once broken the skin, or drawn so much as a drop
of blood. But inside he hurt.
Oh, yes. He hurt very much.
The dyrmagnos Irtuk Beshar, a walking nightmare, had straddled him with her
withered hams, flaking fingers scrabbling over him in a grotesque parody of lust
as she ripped her way into his mind, raping the memories from him. She'd kissed
him afterward, thrusting a tongue like a ragged strip of moldy leather against
his clenched teeth.
The necromancer, Vargul Ashnazai, assisted her in these interrogations and
Alec soon came to fear him on a deeper level than he did the dyrmagnos or
Mardus.
The former carried out her hallucinatory tortures with zest, but as soon as
she'd finished,
Alec seemed to cease to exist in her mind. Mardus was more difficult to read.
It was he who directed the tortures and put the questions to Alec, his eyes flat
and soulless, his voice as gentle as a father's as he named the next obscenity
to be carried out.
Otherwise, however, he treated Alec with a peculiar mix of distance and
solicitude that bordered on courtliness. In the worst moments of torment,
Alec sometimes caught himself inexplicably looking to Mardus for rescue.
Ashnazai was different. In the presence of others, the necromancer maintained
an impassive demeanor.
Left alone with Alec, the searing hatred spilled out like acid.
"You and your vile companion cost me great status that night in Wolde," he'd
hissed in Alec's ear as the boy lay trembling in the darkness after one of the
dyrmagnos' assaults. "At first I thought only of killing you, but now, you see,
I am given by the Beautiful One to relish my revenge."
And relish it he did, until Alec came to dread the sight of him more than any
of the others.
Ashnazai's attacks left no marks, drew no blood. Instead, he salted his
spells with lurid descriptions of the murders he'd helped carry out at the
Cockerel.
"It's a pity you didn't arrive earlier that night," he told Alec. "The old
woman never said a word, but how that foolish son begged. And the girl! She
stayed proud right up until they hacked off the old bitch's head, then she
screamed, those great breasts of hers heaving. The men wanted to take her right
there on the bloody floor—"
Held silent and immobile by the magic, Alec could only shudder as Ashnazai
passed a clammy hand over his chest, then traced a hard line down his
breastbone. "Did you ever take her on that floor, boy? No? Ah, well, I suppose
other things happened there, eh? But then, snik, snik, snik, like so we had the
heads off for the mantel decoration.
I must say, your reaction was all that I'd have hoped for. I nearly added
your head to the collection, but then I thought of a more—how would you say?"
The necromancer traced the line down Alec's chest a second time with a look
of almost dreamy pleasure.
"A more satisfying revenge. You shall pay for the difficulties you made, and
be of great use."
The implication was clear enough. Thinking of the bodies Micum and Seregil
had seen, with their chests split open, ribs pulled back on either side like
wings, Alec wished they had killed him that first night.
The rounds of torture continued for several days and when they'd finished
with him, Alec finally understood why Nysander had told Seregil and him so
little. They wrung everything from him, though it was nothing more than the
fragment of the prophecy.
"There now. Well done, Alec," Mardus said, smiling down at him when the
dyrmagnos had finished. "But your Guardian is dead, this mysterious band of four
he spoke of sundered, broken. Poor Seregil. Even if he did desert you in the
end, he must be feeling a bit guilty at having brought such destruction down on
so many of his friends."
Torn loose from any shred of hope or pride, Alec could only turn his face
away and weep.
After the torture ceased, the soldiers became Alec's chief source of daily
misery. Among them were Mardus' captain, Tildus, and the men-at-arms who'd
bullied him in Wolde. With Seregil's training to guide him, he looked for a weak
link among them, a man with some fatal streak of sympathy, but Mardus had chosen
his personal guard with care.
A harsh, brutal lot, they'd crowded to the grate to listen when he was
tortured. Now they were the ones who dragged him above for the daily airings on
deck that Mardus insisted upon. They stood over him at meals, sniggered when he
begged for a pail to relieve himself. Few of them spoke any Skalan, but they
managed to get their crude jests and insults across.
A few of them made free with their hands, too, and laughed when he lashed out
at them.
The worst among them was a hairy, muscular brute called Gossol. During the
brief struggle at the Cockerel the night of his capture, Alec had smashed him in
the mouth with the hilt of his sword and broken off the man's front teeth.
Gossol held a grudge over it and made a special effort to torment him at every
opportunity.
On the morning of Alec's sixth day aboard, Gossol showed up alone to escort
him above. One look was enough to make Alec brace for trouble.
"Come you, man child," Gossol ordered in broken Skalan. The stumps of his
broken front teeth showed as he leered slyly and held up a cloak, the only
garment Alec was allowed except for his clout.
Alec understood. He'd have to go get it.
"Come quick, not seshka Mardus keep wait," Gossol chided.
"Toss it here," Alec said, holding out his hand.
Gossol's grin widened dangerously. Leaning against the door frame, he gave
the cloak a taunting shake. "No. You come, man child. Now."
Getting to his feet, Alec cautiously reached for the cloak. Gossol snatched
it away and laughed as Alec jumped back.
"What? You afraid of Gossol, little man child?"
He offered the cloak, pulled it back again with a sneer, then advanced on
Alec, backing him into the narrow space between the bunk and the wall. "You be
afraid, good. You break mouth of Gossol. Think whores like this mouth now? Eh?
You know whore, I think." Gossol made a lewd gesture.
"Whores don't like this broken mouth. Maybe you like, eh?"
Shoving Alec back against the wall hard enough to knock the breath out of
him, he pinned him there with the weight of his body and kissed him savagely on
the mouth.
Alec struggled furiously, but Gossol held him fast with one hand and ran the
other up Alec's belly to his nipple and gave it a vicious twist.
With a snarl, Alec gave up trying to push the heavy man off and instead bit
him on the lip.
Gossol pulled away and drew back his fist, but Alec beat him to the punch.
The moment his arms were free, he drove his fist into the startled guard's face
and felt the satisfying crunch of bone as Gossol's nose splintered.
Maddened, he grappled with Alec again, throwing him back onto the hard bunk
and locking a hand around his windpipe. As Alec fought for breath he heard
someone else storm in, cursing in Plenimaran.
Tildus dragged the enraged soldier off and struck him hard across the jaw
before pushing him into the arms of the other soldiers waiting at the door.
"Hell damn little bastard fool!" Tildus shouted, seeing blood on Alec's face
and chest.
He barked an order to another soldier in the companionway, then rounded on
Alec again. "If any of this is, yours, you dead as Gossol. No good if damaged.
Mardus slice you up like an eel, eat your rezhari for dinner!"
Someone fetched a bucket of water and a rag and Tildus set about sponging the
blood off Alec and looking for wounds.
As the guards pulled him this way and that, Alec considered what the captain
had just let slip; Mardus wanted him with a whole skin, no blood spilled. That
explained why they'd tortured him in the manner they had, but not why it was
necessary.
When Tildus had finished, he pushed Alec back onto the bunk and threw him the
cloak, really lucky bastard today. No cuts."
"Very lucky indeed."
Looking past Tildus and the guards, Alec saw Mardus standing in the doorway
with Vargul
Ashnazai.
"There has been some unpleasantness, I understand," Mardus continued, giving
Tildus an ominous look.
The captain rattled off a terse reckoning in his own tongue. Mardus answered
curtly in the same, and motioned to the necromancer.
Smiling thinly, Vargul Ashnazai made his own inspection of Alec. "The boy
remains unblemished, my lord."
"I'm glad to hear it. It would have been a great pity to have him come so
close to our destination and then go to waste. Come, Alec, walk with me. There's
something I think you'll enjoy."
Alec doubted it, but there was no choice but to obey.
Under close guard, he followed Mardus above.
It was an achingly beautiful day. The sky arched over the rolling sea like a
deep blue bowl. The ship cut through the white-capped waves, her striped sails
filled by a sweet following wind that sang through the yards and seemed to
cleanse some of the stench of captivity from his skin.
A large square of white canvas had been nailed to the deck just below the
forward battle platform.
Irtuk Beshar knelt at the center of it in an attitude of meditation, her
hideous hands curled on her knees.
For the first time, Alec saw how most of the sailors and marines gave her a
wide berth. Those who had to pass her kept their distance and averted their
eyes.
This was also the first time he'd been able to observe her with any
detachment. As usual, she wore rich, elaborate robes that contrasted hideously
with her scabrous head and hands. A few wisps of long dark hair still clung to
her scalp, and over it she wore a sort of veil fashioned from tiny gold chains
and beads.
Kneeling there in the bright sunshine, she looked as fragile as the dried
carapace of a locust, but Alec knew better all too well. In the Oreska museum
he'd seen the hands of another dyrmagnos, who'd been hacked to pieces and
scattered. Even after a century, those hands still moved. Looking down at the
small figure still meditating in front of him, Alec shuddered, wondering what
the true extent of her power was.
Captain Tildus shouted something in Plenimaran and a contingent of marines
lined up in two ranks flanking the square of canvas. A few sailors drifted over,
but not many. Mardus nodded to Alec's guards and they moved him in front of the
soldiers to the left.
Vargul Ashnazai went below through a different hatchway. While he was gone,
guards brought up another prisoner and stood with him opposite
Alec.
It was Thero.
Alec's relief at seeing him was short-lived, however. The young wizard's face
was as vacant as before beneath the iron bands of the branks, and there was the
gleam of madness in his wide, staring eyes. A grizzled man in nondescript robes
stood just behind him; another necromancer, he guessed.
Ashnazai returned, followed by two marines carrying a large chest on carrying
poles. The box and poles were both covered with gold and unfamiliar symbols.
This was set down in front of the dyrmagnos. As the others began chanting,
Ashnazai opened the chest and lifted out a crystal diadem that glittered in the
sunlight.
"Behold the Crown," he intoned reverently, placing it on the canvas before
Irtuk Beshar.
The sight of it wrenched at Alec's heart. This was the mysterious object
Seregil had risked his life to find for Nysander.
Ashnazai next lifted out a bowl made of crudely fired clay and placed it
inside the circlet. "Behold the Cup!"
Last came a loop of golden wire on which had been strung a number of wooden
disks. "Behold the Eyes of Seriamaius!"
Alec let out an involuntary gasp as the dyrmagnos began placing them, one by
one, inside the cup.
Mardus turned to Alec. "You recognize those, I'm sure. Just think, if the two
of you hadn't stolen one, you and poor Thero would not be standing here now. All
those lives lost, all that destruction, Alec, because of that one impetuous act.
Ah, but
I'm forgetting that it was Seregil who committed the actual theft. That's what
you told Irtuk Beshar, that you simply helped. But it all comes out the same in
the end, doesn't it. Here you are with me, and there he is, safely back in
Rhiminee, no doubt thinking himself very lucky. Can you still be loyal to this
faithless friend of yours?"
"Yes." Alec met Mardus' gaze levelly in a show of bravado he didn't feel.
Past Mardus, past the ship's rail and out over the wide sea he could see the
tiny dot of an island on the horizon, too far away to be of any use.
Just like Seregil.
A wave of longing rolled over Alec, bringing the sting of tears to his eyes.
All those days with Seregil taken for granted the memory of them made him ache
as he stood stranded among these enemies.
The dyrmagnos placed her withered hands over the crown for a moment, then
called out harshly in her own tongue.
There was a scuffling sound from belowdecks, followed by a terrified cry. A
moment later Gossol was hauled on deck by several soldiers. Bootless and
stripped to the waist, he looked around wildly at the gathering before him. When
he saw the dyrmagnos, however, he went ashen, his great barrel chest heaving in
voiceless terror.
"We were debating the choice of victim, but you have spared us the tiresome
inconvenience of a lottery," Mardus informed Alec pleasantly.
"This is only a preliminary sacrifice, of course. The blood of this ignorant
lump has neither the power nor purity of, say, a half Aurenfaie boy or an Oreska
wizard, but it's sufficient for our purposes today."
"That's why I'm still alive?" Alec managed, his voice scarcely more than a
dry croak.
"Certainly," Mardus assured him, as if promising him some gift. "You and
Thero are being reserved for the supreme moment. The power of your blood, Alec!
The long years sacrificed. Yours will be deaths of highest honor. You should pay
careful attention to this ceremony. Yours will be very much the same."
Gossol was thrown down on his back and held by four marines marked apart from
their fellows by white headbands.
A fifth man knelt holding a gag across the condemned man's mouth.
In the midst of his fear, Gossol suddenly locked eyes with Alec and shot him
a look of pure hatred. The power of it tightened Alec's throat and he quickly
averted his eyes, hating the guilt washing through him.
As the incomprehensible chanting went on, he looked instead at Thero, trying
to guess what was going on in the wizard's addled mind. Thero stood motionless,
locked mute by whatever magicks the necromancers had placed over him. Only the
spasmodic twitching of his fingers clutching the front of his cloak suggested
that he comprehended anything around him.
Irtuk spoke again and the second necromancer lifted something from where she
sat. As he passed it to Ashnazai, Alec saw it was a strange axlike weapon. The
heavy, curving head had been chipped out of black obsidian and bound onto an
iron haft. Despite its obvious weight, Vargul Ashnazai raised it above his head
with practiced ease. With no other paean than Gossol's strangled scream, he
struck and the black blade cleaved open the doomed man's breastbone as neatly as
a wood cutter would split an oak stave.
Alec turned his head quickly, squeezing his eyes shut until his head
throbbed. But he could not escape the sounds that followed. Gossol's screams
rose to a squeal before they choked off to a gurgle. There was the dry-stick
sounds of bones breaking, and the wet suck of a carcass being opened. Eyes still
closed, Alec remembered the feel of Vargul
Ashnazai's cold finger tracing a line down his bare chest.
He suddenly felt very light. Opening his eyes, he saw the sanded planks of
the deck rushing up to meet him.
Beka's scouts spotted the convoy of horse-drawn wagons that morning and
trailed it as it wended south through the coastal foothills. There were only ten
of them, Gilly reported, and only one decuria of cavalry to guard them, a fact
that confirmed Beka's assumption that they were deep in the Plenimarans'
northern territory now.
The country they'd come into was steep and well wooded. Beka let the scouts
keep the wagons in sight, biding her time until they stopped for the night.
The wagoneers made camp in a little forest hollow by a stream just before
sundown. Leaving her main group of riders a quarter of a mile down the road,
Beka chose her fastest runners, Zir, Tobin, and Jareel, to accompany her, and
left Rhylin with orders to disrupt the camp as soon as she had accomplished her
mission.
Darkness fell, and the wagoneers lit cook fires for the evening meal. Their
escort posted a few guards up and down the road.
Beka and her raiders stole through the darkness toward the supply wagons,
each of them armed with jars of firestones they'd captured in a similar raid two
days before. Reaching the wagons, Beka looked underneath the nearest and saw
unsuspecting wagoneers cooking their evening meal less than twenty feet away.
With Zir keeping watch, Beka and the others split up and scattered firestones
over the crates and bales in the wagon beds. Ribbons of smoke curled up quickly,
but the wind was in their favor, blowing it away from the camp.
Rhylin had been watching for it as his signal, however. Beka's group had
hardly finished their work before a frantic whinnying came from the Plenimaran
horses picketed nearby.
Whooping and waving torches, Rhylin and his decuria drove the draft animals
into the camp, scattering startled soldiers and drivers. Flames shot up in the
wagons, adding to the confusion.
Before the Plenimaran guards had time to act, Braknil's decuria charged in
with bows and loosed a hail of arrows to cover me retreat of the others.
Beka and her group skirted the camp to meet Tealah, who was holding horses
for them down the road.
An enemy shaft nicked Zir in the shoulder as he swung up into the saddle.
Tobin took an arrow through the heart before he'd reached his horse.
Beka saw him fall but there was nothing she could do but look after the
living.
"Retreat! Come on, before they get their horses back," she yelled. A
Plenimaran swordsman charged at her, only to fall with a Skalan arrow in his
back.
Leaving the camp in flames behind them, her riders thundered back down the
dark road with victorious whoops and catcalls. Among the last to leave, Beka
listened to the Plenimaran's angry outcry with satisfaction.
"Do you know what they called us?" Tare called out with a wild laugh as they
rode away.
"Urgazhi! Wolf demons."
An eerie chorus of yells and wolfish howls erupted from the others.
"Well done, Urgazhi Turma!" Beka laughed, as elated as the others.
"I say we've earned the honor," Sergeant Braknil added.
They were like wolves now-traveling by night, employing stealth and speed to
attack any target weak enough to be taken, then fading back into the darkness
before the enemy could get a clear look at how few of them there actually were.
Over the past two weeks they'd made nine raids, harrying small convoys,
burning barns and way stations, and fouling wells as they worked their way south
through the hills toward the sea.
Their plan was to strike the coast and follow it north again in the hope of
meeting a friendly force.
What Beka wasn't certain of was just how far south their raiding had driven
them, or where the Skalan line currently was. Whatever the case, they'd have to
fight like true urgazhi to get back.
"It's only me, Lieutenant!"
Beka opened her eyes to find Rhylin's long, homely face just inches above
hers.
"It's almost sundown. You said to wake you," he said, hunkering down beside
her.
Beka sat up and rubbed a hand over her face. "Thanks. I wasn't sleeping so
well anyway."
Rhylin handed her his drinking skin, then ran a hand over the brown scruff of
beard covering his jaw.
"The fever hasn't come back on you, has it?"
"No, the leg's fine." Beka took a drink and handed it back.
They'd made camp in a beech grove. Buds were just breaking out on the
branches overhead and through them she could see the first golden streaks of
sunset.
"But you've still got the dreams, eh?" he asked, then shrugged when Beka
glanced up sharply. "You've been thrashing and muttering some in your sleep."
"Well, I wish you'd tell me what I'm saying," Beka replied, hoping it was
dark enough not to betray the color that rose in her cheeks. "I don't remember a
damn thing when I wake up. Any word from Mirn or Gilly yet?"
"That's what I came to report. Kallas and Ariani just got back from tracking
them. It looks like they've been captured."
"Damn." From what they'd seen so far, the Plenimarans weren't keeping
prisoners alive, and her urgazhi had suffered losses enough already.
Getting to her feet, she glanced around the clearing. In Braknil's decuria
only Kallas, Ariani, Arbelus, and one-eyed Steb were left. Rhylin had Nikides,
Syra, Tealah, Jareel, Tare, Marten, Kaylah, and Zir. Of those, Tealah had
suffered a sword cut during the third raid and couldn't use her left arm. Zir
and
Jareel had festering wounds, and Steb, still recovering from the loss of an
eye, had a bad case of the scours.
Now Mirn and Gilly were gone.
"Who's out now?" she asked.
"Syra has the watch. Arbelus and Steb went scouting about an hour ago."
"Go wake the others and tell them to eat quickly. We ride as soon as it's
full dark."
Rhylin gave a quick salute and started around the camp. Beka let out a slow,
exasperated breath.
She'd hoped the others hadn't noticed her nightly struggles. At least it had
been Rhylin who'd brought it to her attention. Despite his ungainly appearance,
he'd proven a good choice for sergeant.
He had a calm steadiness about him that only seemed to increase under
adversity.
Still, the last thing any of them needed right now was an officer who had bad
dreams behind lines; yelling in your sleep was a good way to bring the enemy
down on your neck. Rubbing her eyes again, she tried to remember what the dream
had been, but nothing would come except a vague feeling of anxiety.
Giving up, she turned her thoughts to more practical matters. Reaching for
her tucker sack, she dipped out a cupful of soaked meal and hastily downed it.
Coarse and full of grit, the barley meal they'd captured in the last raid was
hard on both teeth and stomach. Most of the time they couldn't chance a fire to
boil it into porridge. Instead, they threw it into a leather bag with some water
and fragments of dried fish for a few hours until it swelled into a gluey mass
Nikides had dubbed "broken tooth pudding."
They were just saddling up for the night's ride when Steb came riding back.
"We found Mim and Gilly, Lieutenant!" he informed Beka.
"Praise Sakor! Where?" Beka demanded as the others crowded around in uneasy
silence.
"There's a Plenimaran column ahead about two miles. They've just stopped to
make camp for the night. It's big, Lieutenant, fifty soldiers at least. And
maybe twice that in prisoners marching afoot in chains."
"Prisoners?" Rhylin raised an eyebrow.
"That's the first we've heard of that. And you're sure you saw Gilly and
Mirn?"
Steb nodded, his good eye blazing with grief and anger. "The whoreson
bastards planked them."
Braknil cursed, then spat angrily over his left shoulder.
"What do you mean, planked?" Beka demanded.
"It's an old Plenimaran soldier's trick,
Lieutenant," the sergeant scowled. "You take a man, tie a plank across his
shoulders, and then nail his hands to it."
Beka stood silent for a moment, feeling a black void opening in her heart.
They'd been lucky so far, facing no more than a decuria or two of fighters and
panicked wagoneers. And so far, they'd left no one behind but the dead. This was
different.
She gripped her sword hilt and growled, "Let's go have a look."
Taking Braknil and Kallas, Beka followed Steb.
What must this be like for him? she wondered, stealing a look at Steb's drawn
face; the bond between him and Mirn was strong. The two were always together,
whether it was around the fire at night, or fighting side by side like twin
avenging furies. They usually took scout duty together, too. What had happened
today?
The young rider remained grim and silent as he led them to the little
hillside gully where Arbelus was keeping watch. Less than a mile below, the
scattered campfires of the Plenimaran column winked in the darkness. Beyond the
camp, the black expanse of the Inner Sea glimmered with the light of the first
stars. The wind was coming off the water tonight and Beka caught a faint,
unsettling sound on the air. After a moment she realized it was only the distant
crash of surf growling like a hound in its sleep against the rocky cliffs.
"There's an old road that runs along above the shore," Arbelus told her.
"They set up camp on the landward side of it."
"You're certain our men are still alive?" Beka asked, squinting down at the
pattern of campfires.
"They were at sundown. I saw the guards prodding them in with the other
prisoners for the night."
Beka chewed at her lip, still glowering at the enemy encampment. At last she
turned to Braknil.
"It's the first real force we've encountered so far. What do you think? Any
chance of grabbing them out tonight?"
Braknil scratched under his bearded chin a moment, looking down at the fires.
"I'd say not much, Lieutenant. They'll have the perimeter sewed tighter than a
virgin's bodice. Even if we did manage to slip in, we'd never fight our way out
if they tumbled to us."
Beka let out an exasperated sigh. "Sakor's Fist, first they aren't taking
prisoners, then they've got a couple hundred. And where in hell did they get
that many this far inside their own borders?" " Braknil shrugged. "That's a good
question."
Arbelus looked up in surprise. "I never thought of that. But I'll tell you
something even stranger."
"What's that?"
"Before they settled down for the night, they were marching north."
"North!" Beka exclaimed softly. "The Mycenian border can't be more than fifty
miles from here, and not a single Plenimaran city in between. If they're going
to all the trouble to take that many prisoners, why on earth aren't they taking
them south where they could use them?"
She rested a hand on Steb's rigid shoulder.
"Still, it makes our task easier. We planned to turn north along the coast
anyway. We'll trail them, haunt them, by the gods, and watch for a chance to
grab Mirn and Gilly!"
The guards handled Alec with superstitious care after Gossol's sacrifice, but
they clearly blamed him for the death of their "soldier brother."
Ashnazai came less often, too, although he still paid occasional visits in
the middle of the night. Starting up out of some nightmare, Alec would smell the
man's unclean odor in the darkness, feel the touch of cold fingers on his skin
as Ashnazai plunged him into another punishing miasma of torment.
Locked alone in his tiny dark cabin, Alec grew increasingly despondent. He'd
searched in vain for some means of escape, even if it meant throwing himself
overboard, but there was none. Left with nothing to do, he slept a great deal,
but his dreams were full of violence and omens. The dream of the headless arrow
came far more often now, sometimes twice in one day.
Under such desperate conditions, he grew to look forward to his daily walk on
deck with Mardus.
Despite his chilling revelation at the ceremony, Mardus continued to treat
him with a strange sort of solicitude, as if he enjoyed Alec's company.
At midmorning each day Alec was given a cloak and escorted above under guard.
Fair weather or foul, Mardus would be waiting for him, ready to hold forth on
whatever subject had taken his fancy that day. To Alec's considerable surprise,
Mardus was a remarkably intelligent, well-spoken man, with interests as broad
and varied as Seregil's. He was as likely to launch into a discussion of
Plenimaran war tactics or a detailed comparison of Plenimaran and Skalan musical
conventions, although his discourses often took a darker turn.
"Torture is an undervalued art form," he remarked as they strolled up and
down with Vargul Ashnazai one brisk morning. "Most people assume that if you
cause enough pain you will achieve your end. While this may be true in some
cases, I've always found that outright brutality is often counterproductive.
Consider your own recent experience, Alec. Without drawing so much as a drop of
blood, we were able to extract every scrap of information from you."
"Necromancy is a subtle art," Ashnazai interjected smugly.
"It can be," Mardus amended dryly, "although "subtle" is hardly how I'd
describe many of the necromantic procedures I have witnessed. But to return to
the subject at hand, I assure you that had it not been for the prohibition
against shedding blood, I could have accomplished the same result without such
an extraordinary expenditure of magic."
Giving Alec a poisonous smile, Ashnazai asked, "I am curious, my lord, as to
what your method would have been?"
Mardus clasped his hands behind him, considering the question as coolly as if
Ashnazai had asked what he thought the price of grain would be this year. "I
often begin with the genitals. While the blood loss is negligible, the pain and
emotional anguish are exquisite. Once that level of pain is established, the
prisoner is usually quite easy to manipulate. In Alec's case, I could leave him
still fit for the slave markets. Only a fool would destroy such a pretty
creature unnecessarily."
Trapped at sea in such company, Alec nearly succumbed to despair. By day he
was the toy of his executioners. By night the muffled cries that sometimes came
up from the hold below increased his sense of helplessness. The few times he
dreamed of better days with Seregil or his father only made things worse when he
woke up. Lying in the darkness, he would try to recall the smell of their rooms
at the Cockerel or the color of Beka's eyes.
Mostly, however, he thought of Seregil and cursed Mardus for the seeds of
doubt he'd planted.
"He didn't abandon me. He didn't!" he whispered into the darkness one night
when his spirits were at their lowest. He forced himself to recall his friend's
grin when Alec had mastered a new skill, the delight Seregil took in tormenting
Thero, the grip of Seregil's hand when he'd pulled him back from the edge of the
cliff after the ambush below Cirna.
And the way he'd looked that night at the Street of Lights. Alec suddenly
remembered the guilty pleasure he'd felt that evening, and later at the casual
touch of Seregil's hand resting on his shoulder or the back of his neck.
His cheeks went warm now at the memory of that touch.
It was too painful to think of, now that he'd never feel it again.
"Stop it!" he hissed aloud. "He could come. He could be following right now!"
But not even Micum could track a ship across water.
Foundering in his own misery, Alec pulled the thin blanket around himself and
tried to recall fragments of conversation he and Seregil had shared, just to
imagine a friendly voice. He dreamed of him that night, although he couldn't
recall any particulars when he awoke. But something had come back to him,
nonetheless. Seated on the bunk that morning, he chewed his breakfast
thoughtfully, summoning various lessons Seregil had instilled in him over the
long months of their acquaintance.
Everyone on board considered him powerless, a prisoner of little consequence
beyond whatever fate Mardus had in store for him. It was time to put aside fear
and begin to pay attention, real attention, to what was going on around him, and
then to ask questions—small, inconsequential ones at first—as he tested the
water. After all, he wouldn't die any faster for at least trying.
Learn and live, Seregil's voice whispered approvingly at the back of his
mind.
The soldiers' newfound wariness of him made it slightly easier to talk to
them, though Alec quickly discovered that all that mattered to them was their
unswerving loyalty to Mardus, a fact which made any overtures to them pointless.
But he did learn that they were making for some point on the northwestern coast
of Plenimar.
Later that same morning he made more of an effort at conversation with Mardus
during their daily walk, allowing himself to be drawn into a discussion of
archery.
The next day they spoke of wines and poisons.
Mardus seemed pleasantly surprised and began sending for him more frequently.
On the fifth day following Gossol's sacrifice, Tildus came for him at sunset.
The bearded captain said nothing, but Alec didn't like the smug, secret smile
Tildus gave him as they went above.
On deck Alec saw with alarm that the ritual space had been prepared again. A
line of soldiers held torches to illuminate the freshly laid square of canvas
where Irtuk Beshar was already bent over the bowl and crown. Beside her, Vargul
Ashnazai stood ready with the stone ax.
Thero was there, too, standing next to Mardus as slack-jawed as ever. All
eyes seemed to turn to Alec as he approached.
"O Illior," he whispered hoarsely, feeling his knees go weak. Mardus had had
some change of heart, his god had sent different instructions, Alec's
questioning had led him into some fatal misstep.
Tildus gripped his arm more tightly and muttered, "Easy, man child. Not your
time yet!"
"Good evening, Alec!" Mardus said, smiling as he swept a hand toward the
eastern horizon. "Look there, can you make out the coastline in the distance?"
"Yes," Alec replied, a fresh coil of apprehension running up his back at the
sight.
"That is Plenimar, our destination. Seriamaius has been kind, guiding us so
smoothly along our course. And now it is time for the second act of
preparation."
As Alec watched with mounting dread, ten men and women were dragged up on
deck by the black-clad marines.
This was the source of the weeping he heard in the night.
This had all been planned in advance, the sacrificial victims packed away in
the hold as carefully as the wine and oil and flour.
They were not soldiers, but thin, pale, ordinary-looking souls who blinked
and wept as they were herded together near the rail. Most were ragged or dressed
as laborers, just innocent victims, he guessed, plucked from the darkened
streets of whatever ports the ship had put into before Rhiminee.
"O Illior," Alec whispered as Mardus came to stand beside him, hardly knowing
that he spoke aloud. "No, please. Not this."
Mardus slipped an arm around his shoulders and closed his hand over the back
of Alec's neck. Giving him a playful shake, he purred, "Ah, but you should savor
it. Don't you understand yet how great a part you played in bringing this
about?"
Faint with revulsion, Alec made the mistake of looking up at Mardus. For the
first time he saw the depths of naked cruelty in his eyes, and in that awful
moment he knew as certainly as he'd ever known anything that Mardus had
purposefully allowed him to see behind the mask, was delighting in his fear and
confusion, savoring it the way another man might savor the first caress of a
long-desired lover. And perhaps worse even than this was the conviction that
Mardus was nonetheless sane.
Some of the prisoners were staring at Alec, mistaking him for one of their
murderers.
He couldn't watch this again. Tildus had moved away when his master had come
over, and the rest of the soldiers were watching the ceremony. Jerking out of
Mardus' grip, Alec dashed to the rail behind him with some instinctive,
half-formed notion of throwing himself overboard, swimming as far as he could
toward the shore, giving up if he had to.
He'd gone no more than two paces when a deadly coldness engulfed him, locking
his joints, forcing him painfully to his knees. Some unseen power forced his
head around to see Vargul Ashnazai holding up a small vial of some sort that
hung around his scrawny neck on a chain.
"Nicely done, Vargul Ashnazai," said Mardus. "Move him a bit closer so that
he can see."
Unable to turn his head or blink, Alec had no choice but to watch as the ten
victims were dragged down onto the deck at Ashnazai's feet. Ten times the blade
rose and fell with deadly efficiency and each heart was taken by the dyrmagnos
and drained into the reeking cup.
Thero stood just beyond her and through his own helpless tears of rage and
impotence, Alec saw tears coursing slowly down Thero's cheeks. It was an eerie
sight, like watching a statue weep, but it gave him a sudden thrill of hope in
the midst of the nightmare being acted out before him.
The white canvas was scarlet by the time the necromancer had finished. He and
the dyrmagnos were smeared to the elbows, their robes sodden, hair matted with
it. Blood had soaked across the deck to where Alec knelt, staining his bare
knees.
Leaving the soldiers to pitch the bodies overboard, Mardus took Thero below
again.
Vargul Ashnazai walked over to Alec and laid one bloody hand on his head,
breaking the spell.
Alec doubled over retching. Ashnazai snatched the hem of his blood-soaked
gown out of the way with a grunt of disgust, then gave Alec a shove with one
foot that sent him sprawling in sticky blood and vomit.
"I look forward to cutting you open," he sneered.
Scrambling back to his hands and knees, Alec glared defiantly back at him.
The necromancer took an involuntary step back, raising his hand.
Alec braced for some new agony, but Ashnazai merely turned on his heel and
stalked away, snarling something to Captain Tildus as he passed.
Dread returned as a pair of soldiers stripped Alec and washed him down with
buckets of cold seawater. When he was clean, they thrust him into a soft robe
and turned him back to Tildus, who led him below to a spacious cabin in the
stern.
To his amazement, he found Mardus, Ashnazai, Thero, Irtuk Beshar, and the
silent, grey-bearded necromancer, Hand, reclining on cushions around a low
table. A young serving boy placed another cup on the table, motioning for Alec
to be seated.
"Come, Alec, join us," Mardus said, patting an empty cushion between himself
and the dyrmagnos. He and the others had also changed clothes and cleansed away
all traces of the murders he'd just witnessed.
It's as if none of that happened, he thought numbly, too shocked to protest
as Tildus steered him to his place and pushed him down.
Thero sat on Irtuk Beshar's left. At her nod, he raised his cup mechanically
to his lips.
Wine dribbled down through his beard as he drank, his eyes locked on some
distant point.
The sight filled Alec with a strange guilt, as if he'd spied on something
unseemly.
Looking away, he fixed his attention on his cup as the servant filled it with
pale yellow wine.
"Come now, dear boy, why so shy?" Mardus coaxed, the mask of gentlemanly
solicitude in place once more. "It's an excellent wine. Perhaps it will put some
color back in those wan cheeks of yours."
"Strong emotion does so spoil a young man's beauty," Irtuk Beshar added, her
coquettish tone as incongruous with her cracked, blackened face as her robes and
veil.
The entire situation had such a surreal quality that Alec found himself
replying, "I don't care for any, thank you," as if he were Sir Alec of Ivywell
dissembling at some noble's banquet with Seregil.
"Such pretty manners, too," Ashnazai noted.
"I am beginning to see your point, my lord. It will be a pity to kill him. He
would ornament any gentleman's household."
Alec's sense of dreamlike detachment increased as the grisly conversation
flowed around him in polite salon tones. If this was the onset of madness, then
he welcomed it as a gift of Illior.
Whatever the case, he suddenly felt a giddy lightness coming over him. He'd
experienced this before, though never so intensely. When death was your only
option, it made you feel very free indeed.
"My lord," he began. "What is this all about? The wooden disk, the crown? I
know you're going to kill me as part of it, so I'd just like to understand."
Mardus smiled expansively. "I would expect no less of a person of your
intelligence. As I have said, you and all your misguided friends have been
instrumental in a grand and sacred quest. At first even I didn't perceive the
significance of it, but Seriamaius has revealed how you were all simply
instruments of his divine will."
Mardus raised his cup to Alec in a mocking salute. "You can't imagine the
trouble you saved us, bringing so many parts of the Helm together for us to
reclaim with a single brief stroke. Not to mention the damage we were able to
inflict upon the Oreska in the process. Why, in one night we managed to
accomplish what might otherwise have taken months, even years. And we do not
have years, or even weeks, now."
"A helm?" Alec asked, seizing on this new reference.
Mardus turned to his companions, shaking his head.
"Imagine! This Nysander, great and compassionate wizard that he is, had his
closest friends carry out his thievery without the least hint of what they were
being embroiled in. Why, he regarded Seregil and poor young Alec and Thero here
almost as sons.
"Yes, Alec, the Helm. The Great Helm of Seriamaius. The coin, as you so
amusingly refer to it, the cup, and the crown are all elements of a greater
design. When brought together with the other fragments at the proper time, they
will rejoin to form the Helm revealed to our ancestors by Seriamaius more than
six centuries ago."
"It is the ultimate artifact of necromantic power," Irtuk Beshar told him.
"He who wears it becomes the Vatharna, the living embodiment of Seriamaius."
"The legends from the Great War. Armies of walking dead," Alec said softly,
thinking of the ancient journal he and Seregil had discovered in the Oreska
library.
"Perhaps we have underestimated this child," the dyrmagnos observed, cocking
her head to regard Alec more closely. "There may be depths within him still to
be sounded."
Alec shuddered inwardly under the greediness of her scrutiny.
"Yet these tales of yours said nothing of the Helm?" Mardus continued. "I am
not surprised. At the end of that war we were betrayed. Aided by traitors,
fawning Aurenfaie wizards, and a pack of ragged drysians, the wizards of the
Second Oreska managed to capture and dismantle the Helm before its full power
could be invoked. Fortunately, they could not destroy the individual pieces. Our
necromancers managed to recapture a few of them; the rest were carried off and
hidden. For six centuries my predecessors have hunted for them, and one by one,
they have been recovered."
"That's what you were doing in Wolde," Alec said slowly. "You'd been to the
Fens, that village Mi—"
"Micum Cavish?" Ashnazai smiled as he broke off suddenly. "Don't trouble
yourself. You screamed that name out to us already, just as you did all the rest
of it."
Mardus paused as the serving boy brought in platters of roasted doves and
vegetables.
"Do try to eat something," he said, serving Alec himself.
Surprised at his own hunger, Alec obliged.
"Now, where was I?" Mardus asked, spearing a dove for himself. "Ah yes. The
three fragments guarded by Nysander were the last, and of those, the bowl was
the most gratifying discovery. We knew of the others, you see, both stolen from
under our very noses by your friend Seregil, as it turns out. But all trace of
the bowl had been lost until the two of you led us to it with the theft of the
Eye. And only just in time, too. As it is, we've only just enough time to
complete the ritual preparations."
"The sacrifices, you mean?" asked Alec.
"Yes." Mardus sat forward as the servant brought in a course of roasted pork.
"Each soul taken, each libation of heart's blood, brings us closer to
Seriamaius, to his great power. No man could be a vessel for such power, but
through the Helm we may partake of some small portion of it. By "small portion"
you must understand I am speaking in relative terms. Once restored, the Helm
will increase in power as more lives are fed to it until a single thought by the
wearer can level whole cities, control thousands. And you, Alec, you and Thero,
I am holding in reserve for the final sacrifice of the reconstruction ceremony.
A hundred people will have perished before you, allowing you the privilege of
watching every death until your own turns come, two last, perfect sacrifices.
The blood is to a great extent merely symbolic of the life force given up to the
god. The younger the victim, the more years taken, the richer the sacrifice."
Irtuk Beshar patted Alec and Thero on the shoulders. "A young Oreska wizard
and a half faie boy—the youth of our greatest enemies! What could be more
pleasing to our god than that?"
Alec regarded them a moment in stunned silence, trying to take it all in.
No, he thought numbly. No, I will not be apart of that. "Thank you," he said
finally. "I think I'm beginning to understand."
There were no guards in the room now. No spells or chains held him. Forcing
himself to give no leading hint of his intentions, Alec suddenly lashed out
across the table and snatched up a carving knife lying next to the platter of
fowl. Clutching it in both hands, he drove the blade at his own ribs, praying
for a quick kill.
To his horror and astonishment, however, he twisted around instead and
plunged the blade into the chest of the young servant. The boy let out a single
startled cry and collapsed.
"Really, Alec, where are your manners tonight?"
Mardus exclaimed regretfully. "I've owned him since he was a child."
Alec stared down at the body, horror-struck at what he had done.
"Did you think us so lacking in imagination that we would not anticipate such
a noble action on your part?"
Irtuk chided. "You forget how intimately I know you, Alec. One of the first
wards I placed upon you was one to guard against such ridiculous heroics.
Anytime you try to hurt yourself, you shall only end up hurting another, like
this poor innocent."
"O Illior!" Alec groaned, covering his face with his hands.
"Perhaps I am somewhat to blame," Mardus sighed. "My explanation may have
given the boy the impression that he and Thero are necessary for the final
realization of our plans."
Mardus' hands closed over Alec's, squeezing painfully as he pulled them aside
to fix Alec with a look of sardonic pleasure.
"Understand this. The presence or absence of either one of you will not make
the slightest difference to the god. It merely pleases me, and Vargul Ashnazai
as well, I am certain, that the two of you should be the final victims. Just
imagine, dear Alec—watching all those others die, and you quite helpless to save
them. And then, as your chest is split and your heart pulled free, your final
thought will be that after all your meddling, all that extraordinary effort, it
is your life bringing the Helm back into being! I'm only sorry that your friends
will not be there to share in your reward. Now do try to eat something more.
You're looking quite pale again."
Seregil woke drenched in sweat, still caught in the nightmare's grip.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he tried to hang on to the images of the dream, but as
usual could recall nothing but the vague memory of a tall figure towering over
him and the terrible sensation of drowning.
Micum had already gone above. Seregil lay a moment longer, half dozing as the
first faint light of dawn brightened the cabin's single window. Was Alec awake,
seeing that same light? he wondered, as he'd wondered every morning of the
voyage. Was Alec alive at all? Would he be when the sun set?
He rubbed at his eyelids and felt the wetness seeping through his lashes.
Early morning was the worst.
During the day he could keep busy, bury his fear in the semblance of doing
something useful. At night he simply closed his eyes and escaped into dreams and
nightmares.
But here, in the half world of dawn, he had no defenses, no diversion. The
longing for Alec's presence, the guilt and remorse at having brought him to
this, the shame at never having told the boy how much he cared for him—it was
all as raw as a wound that refused to heal.
And there was nothing to do but go on to the end. Rolling out of the bunk, he
threw on a surcoat over his shirt and went above without bothering to fasten it
up.
On deck he turned his face to the wind and spread his arms. The cold salt
breeze lifted his hair from his neck and blew his coat open, whipping his shirt
against his ribs. Tilting his head back, he inhaled deeply, trying to cleanse
away the sense of oppression. As he did so, he noticed a new scent on the wind,
the smell of land.
Going to the starboard rail, he saw a dark, uneven line of mountains looming
through the morning mist like a promise just out of reach. His sail-changing
ploy had worked. They'd sailed within sight of Plenimar's northwestern coastline
without challenge.
Rhal called put sharply somewhere to stern and Skywake barked an order.
Looking around the deck for Micum, Seregil spotted him sitting on the forward
bulkhead. He had a small mirror propped on one knee and was shaving his chin
with the aid of a knife and a cup of water.
Micum looked up as he approached, then frowned.
"Another bad night, eh?"
"Worst yet." Seregil combed his fingers back through his windblown hair. "It
feels like someone's trying to tell me the most important thing in the world in
a language I can't understand."
"Maybe Nysander can make something of it when he gets here."
"If he gets here," Seregil replied listlessly. He felt as if they'd been on
this ship for years instead of weeks; Rhiminee, Nysander, Alec, the deaths
they'd left behind, perhaps it was just all part of the same bad dream.
Micum gestured with his knife at a lonely peak to the north. "Rhal says
that's Mount Kythes there. He thinks we can put ashore tonight. There's
a—Bilairy's Balls, you're bleeding!"
Setting his knife and cup aside, he stood and tugged at the loose ties of
Seregil''s shirt.
"Damnation, it's that scar. It's opened up again," he whispered, touching a
finger to Seregil's chest and showing him the blood.
Using Micum's shaving mirror, Seregil inspected the small trickle of blood
oozing from the raised outline of the scar. He could even make out the faint
whorls left by the disk, and the small square mark of the hole at its center. He
also caught a glimpse of his own face, looking sallow and hollow-eyed in the
early light. Pulling his coat shut, he fastened the top buttons.
"What does it mean?" Micum asked.
"Don't you remember what the date is today?"
Seregil replied grimly.
Micum's jaw dropped. "By the Flame, I'd lost track being on a ship so long."
"The fifteenth of Lithion," Seregil said, nodding. "If Leiteus and Nysander
were right in their calculations, Rendel's Spear should be in the sky tonight."
Seregil saw awe and concern mingle in his friend's eyes as Micum took a last
look at the bleed on his fingers before wiping them on his coat.
"You know I came along on this trip mostly to look out for you, don't you?"
Micum said quietly.
"Yes."
"Well, I just want you to know that as of now, I'm beginning to be a
believer. Whatever it was that left its mark on you there, it's working on us
now. I just hope Nysander is right about Illior being the immortal who's leading
us around."
Seregil grasped his friend's shoulder. "After all these years, maybe I'll
finally make an Illioran out of you."
"Not if it means waking up looking like you do this morning," Micum
countered.
"Still no dreams?" Seregil asked, still puzzled by the fact that of the four
of them, Micum was the only one who hadn't had a premonition of some sort.
Micum shrugged. "Not one. Like I've always told you, I do my fighting when
I'm awake."
The mountain loomed steadily larger ahead of them as they followed the coast
north through the day. From a distance it seemed to rise directly up from the
sea itself, its summit lost in a mantle of cloud.
"Pillar of the Sky, eh?" Rhal remarked, standing with Seregil and Micum at
the rail that afternoon.
"Well, they sure named it rightly. How in hell are you going to find this
temple of yours on something that big?"
"It's somewhere along the water," Seregil replied softly, rubbing
unconsciously at the front of his coat; Micum had tied a wadded bit of linen
over the raw circle of skin. Oddly enough, the wound hardly hurt at all.
"Well, it'll take some doing to put you ashore."
Rhal shaded his eyes, peering landward. The weather had remained clear
through the day but-a wind was blowing up out of the west, piling up the waves
and lashing the foam from their white crests. "I see breakers against the rocks
all up and down there. Most of it's cliff and ledge. You'll just have to coast
along until you see a likely landing place."
"Is the boat ready?" asked Seregil.
Rhal nodded, his gaze still on the distant coastline.
"Water, food, all that you asked for. I saw to it myself. We can cast you off
as soon as you've packed in your gear."
"We'd best get at it then," Micum said.
"It's been a while since either of us has sailed. I don't want to try this
sea without some daylight ahead of us."
When the final pack and cask had been lashed into the Lady's starboard
longboat, Seregil and Micum took leave of Rhal.
"Good luck to you," the captain said solemnly, clasping hands with them.
"Whatever it is the two of you are up to over there, give those Plenimaran
bastards merry hell for me."
"Nothing will make me any happier," Micum assured him.
"Lay off the coast as long as you can," said Seregil. "If we're not back in
four or five days, or if you get run off yourself, head north and put in at the
first friendly port you find."
Rhal gripped Seregil's hand a moment longer.
"By the Old Sailor, when this whole thing is over, I'd like to hear the tale
of it. You look out for yourselves, and find that boy of yours."
"We will," Seregil promised, climbing into the boat. Crouching down beside
Micum, he wrapped his hands around one of the ropes securing the boat's small
mast.
"Hold tight!" Rhal called as his men set to work lowering it over the side.
"Wait until we're well away before you put up your sail. Good luck, friends!"
The little boat swung precariously from the halyards as it was lowered down
the side of the pitching ship.
Waves slapped at it as they neared the water, then rolled in over the side.
Clinging on as best they could Seregil and Micum waited until they'd cleared the
Lady, then unfurled the triangular sail.
The little boat yawed sharply, catching another wave over the side. Micum
took the tiller and turned her into the wind while
Seregil hauled on the spar rope. As soon as they got her headed properly into
the waves, he looped the spar rope over a cleat and set about bailing the craft
out.
"You're the Guide," Micum said, shrugging out of his sodden cloak and
settling himself more comfortably at the tiller. "What do we do now?"
Seregil gazed toward the distant shore. "Like Rhal said, get in close and
coast along until we spot a landing place."
"There's a lot of coast there, Seregil. We could end up miles from wherever
this temple of yours is."
Seregil went back to his bailing. "If I am the Guide of Nysander's prophecy,
maybe I'll know the right place when I see it."
The words sounded weak and half-convinced even to him, but he didn't know
what else to say. This certainly didn't seem like the proper moment to confess
that except for a few fragmentary dreams and the bleeding scar on his chest, he
was painfully unaware of any feelings of divine guidance.
As Rhal had observed, much of the coastline was ledge or cliff. The boom of
the surf echoed back at them across the water and they could see the spume
thrown up by the breakers. Great blocks of reddish granite shot through with
bands of black basalt lay in tumbled disorder between the water and the trees
above.
As far as the eye could see the land looked desolate and uninhabited. Dark
forest blanketed the hills.
Higher up, the stark, stony peak of the mountain rose forbiddingly against
the evening sky. The setting sun behind them cast a thick golden light over the
scene, enhancing briefly the color of water, sky, and stone. Great flocks of sea
ducks and geese floated on the swells just beyond the pull of the breakers.
Overhead, gulls uttered their whistling calls as they circled and dove.
"I never thought I'd be setting foot on
Plenimaran soil," Micum remarked, steering them closer in. "I've got to admit,
it's nice-looking country."
The sun sank lower. Kneeling in the bow, Seregil squinted intently at the
harsh shoreline.
"I think we may be spending the night out here," Micum said, steering them
past a rocky point.
"You may be—Wait!"
The forest was thick here, but he caught the distinct yellow flicker of
firelight in the shadow of a cove. "Do you see that?"
"Could be a campfire. What do you say?"
"Let's have a look."
Steering into the cove, they discovered a tiny, sheltered beach at its head.
Above the tide line, a large fire crackled invitingly, illuminating the thick
tangle of evergreens that edged the shingle.
"It looks more like a signal fire," whispered Micum, tacking just off shore.
"Could be fishermen or pirates."
"Only one way to find out. You stay with the boat."
Slipping over the side into the hip-deep water, Seregil drew his sword and
waded ashore.
The beach lay at the head of a deep cleft in the surrounding ledge, making an
oblique approach impossible, and the slanting evening light lit it like a stage.
The shingle was made up of small, wave-polished stones that crunched and rattled
under his boots as he continued up toward the fire.
Might just as well tie a bell around my neck, he thought uneasily, picturing
archers tracking him from the ledges and swordsmen in the thickets.
But the cove was peaceful. Standing still, he listened carefully. Over the
sigh of the wind, he heard the mournful music of doves and white throats in the
woods, the clacking croak of a heron stalking the shallows somewhere nearby. No
one was disturbing them.
Encouraged but wary, he crunched up the shingle to the fire. There was no
sign of habitation, no packs or refuse. As he came nearer, he realized with a
nasty start that the flames were giving off no heat. It was an illusion.
A branch snapped in the forest and he crouched, bracing for ambush. A tall,
spare figure stepped from the trees.
"Here you are at last, dear boy," a familiar voice greeted him in Skalan.
"Nysander?" Still wary, Seregil remained where he was as the wizard pushed
back his hood. Dressed for traveling, Nysander wore an old surcoat and loose
breeches, and his faded cloak was held at the throat with the worn bronze brooch
he always used.
As he came forward into the light, Seregil let out a startled gasp. Even in
the ruddy light of sunset, Nysander looked ghostly. His face was the color of
bone and more deeply lined than ever. Worse yet, he looked shrunken in on
himself, diminished, like the gnarled caricature of an old man carved in fresh
ivory. Only his bright eyes and the familiar warmth in his voice seemed to have
come back to him intact.
The surprise of their unexpected meeting left Seregil wary of illusion,
however. Quelling the impulse to embrace his old friend, Seregil kept his
distance and asked, "How did you find us?"
Nysander made a sour face. "That blood charm you left with Magyana, of
course. It took some managing and magic, but here I am."
Sheathing his sword, Seregil gave the old man a joyous hug. "I knew you'd do
it, but by the Light, you look awful!"
"As do you, dear boy," Nysander chuckled.
Micum hauled the boat in and ran up the shingle to join them.
"You mean to say you were here waiting for us?" he cried, looking Nysander
over in wonder. "How did you know? And why didn't you send us a message by
magic?"
"All in good time," the old wizard sighed, sinking down on a driftwood log
and waving the illusory fire out of existence. "I must admit, I am equally
relieved to see you. I feared I might have missed you after all."
"Do you know anything about Alec?" Seregil asked hopefully, sitting down
beside him.
"No, but you must not despair," Nysander told him, patting his shoulder
kindly. "If he were dead, I would know it. The force of the prophecy is binding
us closer with every passing day."
Micum kicked together a pile of driftwood sticks and fished a firechip from a
pouch at his belt. "Well, I haven't had any great visions or dreams, but the
more I see of this business, the more
I believe it. By the Flame, Nysander, look at you. How can you have gotten here
at all?"
"Look at me, indeed," Nysander replied rather ruefully. "One does not return
from such a journey as the dyrmagnos sent me on without showing a bit of wear.
But there was some value to it. While my body healed, my mind floated free among
dreams and visions. I believe I know how to find the temple we seek. It is
marked by a large white stone surrounded by black ones. And it is near the sea."
Disappointment settled in Seregil's belly like a bad dinner. "That's it?
You're telling me in all the hundreds of square miles around that mountain we
have to find one rock?"
"That's not much to go on," Micum noted, echoing his skepticism.
Yet Nysander appeared perfectly complaisant. "We will find it," he assured
them. "It does not guarantee our success, but we will find it."
"I've been having dreams of my own," Seregil told him.
"You've done more than that," Micum snorted. "Show him your chest."
Seregil peeled off the bandage and showed Nysander the crusted yellow scab
that had formed around the scar. "It must be some kind of sign. Leiteus claimed
this was the night the comet would appear."
"Undoubtedly," Nysander agreed. "Whether it is an omen of good or ill remains
to be seen. What was your dream?"
Seregil picked up a knife-shaped stone and rubbed it between his hands. "I
can never remember much of it, just the image of a figure with a misshapen head
looking down at me through water while I drown. Isn't there something you could
do to sort of pull more of it out of me?"
Nysander shook his head. "I must conserve both my strength and my magic. What
little I have was hard-won and will be needed for what lies before us now. Even
the fire I used to signal you was from a spell
Magyana made for me. As for the dream, it must be some sort of preparation for
the task ahead."
Micum ran his hands back through his thick red hair and sighed. "Do you think
you could be a bit more specific?"
Nysander nodded. "Before the attack on the Oreska I hoped I would never have
to tell you. Afterward, I was unable to."
"As Seregil has told you, there is a prophecy which names four persons, the
Guardian, the Shaft, the Vanguard, and the Guide. I am the Guardian, and have
been since the days of my apprenticeship with Arkoniel. What we have guarded,
there below the Oreska House, was a fragment of a necromantic object called the
Helm of Seriamaius."
"The bowl," Seregil interjected.
Nysander glanced at him in surprise. "How on earth did you learn that?"
"More visions," said Micum, tossing wood on the fire. The sun was
disappearing into the western sea, leaving the stars spread like a diamond veil
above them.
"Yes, it was a bowl," Nysander went on. "And then Seregil and Alec brought me
the wooden disk. Just before the Festival of Sakor, I sent Seregil after a third
object, a crown which had been hidden deep in the Ashek mountains. He knew at
once, both by the condition of the bodies of sacrificial victims he found there
and the evil magic that surrounded it, that it was related to the disk.
However, I told him nothing and swore him to secrecy. Not even Alec knew."
"I still don't see how you'd get any sort of helmet out of those odds and
ends," said Micum.
"Their appearance hides their true form. A powerful protective glamour was
placed on them by the necromancers who created them. Who would guess, even
having all the pieces in hand, that a lopsided clay bowl, a crystal crown, and a
handful of wooden disks could be parts of a common whole?"
"What does it do, when it's all put together?"
"It was created to channel the power of the dark god. No one knows how long
it took to forge the different elements, or what magicks were used. It first
appeared near the end of the Great War, when it was assembled and placed on a
man they called the Vatharna, or chosen one. Fortunately, the wizards of Skala
and Aurenen overcame the first Vatharna before he had the opportunity to fully
manifest the magic of the Helm."
"You mean to say that this Vatharna of theirs would eventually have all the
powers of their death god?" asked Micum.
"No one knows what the extent of its abilities might have been, but there is
evidence that even in the short time it existed, the Helm granted its wearer
terrible necromantic power. If it had not been dismantled when it was, I doubt
anyone could have overcome it."
Seregil shook his head slowly. "Then those old tales of walking dead, armies
of them, were true?"
"It is likely there is at least a kernel of truth in them."
"You said dismantled, not destroyed," Micum noted.
"So it was, to the great sorrow of subsequent generations. The wizards
managed to reduce it to its component parts, but before they could learn how to
destroy them, Plenimaran forces attacked to reclaim them.
When it was clear that the Skalan position would be overrun, six wizards were
chosen to flee with the pieces and hide them. Only one was ever seen alive
again."
"The one who took the bowl," said Seregil. "Reynes i Maril Syrmanis Dormon
Alen Wyvernus. It was he who eventually created that chamber in the lowest vault
of the Oreska, and he who passed the onus of Guardianship down to his successor,
Hyradin, who passed it to Aikoniel, who passed it to me. Neither the Queen nor
the Oreskan Council ever knew of its existence there. Any who tried to learn
their secret were killed."
"These Guardians didn't even trust the other wizards?" said Micum.
"Who could be trusted with such knowledge? The Empty God understands nothing
better than the dark corners of a mortal heart. Fear, pity, remorse, greed, the
lust for power-these are the Eater of Death's most potent weapons."
"Did Thero know?" asked Seregil.
"No, he was not ready for such knowledge." Nysander rested a hand on
Seregil's shoulder. "Part of my grief in losing you as an apprentice was the
knowledge that you would have been such a worthy successor. From the day took
you on, I knew in my heart that you were capable of assuming the burden. When
you could not learn the magic, I was devastated. But now I see that I was not
mistaken about your worthiness, only about the role which you were destined to
play. What you learned after leaving me, the life you went on to, it all
prepared you to be the Unseen One."
Seregil scowled. "You think the gods made me a thief and a spy, just so I
could steal the disk from Mardus? You think my whole life means nothing more
than this one task? I refuse to believe that!"
"No, not entirely," Nysander said. "You recall me telling you that there is
always a Guide somewhere, and all the others of the prophecy? Perhaps your life
would have been no different if the Helm never existed, but being what you are,
you are the Guide. I have speculated on it many times over the years, but it was
only after you brought me the disk that I truly began to believe. When you were
also able to snatch the crown away from the Plenimarans, I prayed that it was
simply good fortune, that by being vigilant I could keep all the fragments out
of Mardus" hands and prevent the restoration."
"Then you knew about Mardus already?"
"Only that he was a bastard relation of the old Overlord, a noble of
tremendous ability and ambition, and one of Plenimar's most formidable spies.
Now I suspect he means to make himself Vatharna."
"He sounds like the right man for the job," Micum said, scowling. "But you
still haven't told us where this prophecy of yours came from, or what it says."
"No one but the Guardians have ever heard it, or were ever meant to,"
Nysander replied solemnly.
"While still a young man, the second Guardian had a dream vision which has
been passed down from one Guardian to another ever since as our greatest source
of hope. "The Dream of Hyradin" is this:
"And so came the Beautiful One, the
Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the world.
First clothed in Man's flesh it came, crowned with a dread helm of great
darkness.
And none could stand against this One but a company of sacred number.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness.
Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the
Guide, the Unseen One, goes forth."
"This same prophecy names the Pillar of the Sky, and speaks of a temple
there."
"That gives us about as much to go on as your rock dream," Micum grumbled.
But Seregil felt a sickening chill pass through him, recalling the visions he
had experienced when in contact with those pieces—the scenes of death and
choruses of agony. "Then everything Mardus has done since Alec and I ran into
him up in Wolde—the disk, Rythel and the sewer plot, the attack on you—it's all
leading to him bringing all the pieces together again?"
"Of course, and bringing them together at the correct time and place. The
time is during a solar eclipse five days from now."
"We'd guessed that already, after talking to your astrologer friend," said
Seregil.
"Well done. Now that the three of us are together again, we must find the
temple and see where the gods lead us from there. This time the Helm must be
destroyed completely, and to accomplish that we must allow it to be
reassembled—"
"What?"
Seregil sputtered.
"It is the only way we can be certain that every fragment is accounted for,"
Nysander went on.
"Arkoniel himself believed it was the only possible course of action and I
believe he was right. If the knowledge passed down from Reynes i Maril is
correct, then it takes a certain amount of time for the power of the Helm to
gather itself, and more time for it to increase to its full potential.
Therefore, once it has been reassembled we will have some brief moment of
opportunity to strike. As the Guardian, I charge you both by your life and honor
to strike whatever blow necessary to destroy the power of the Helm. Will you
swear to that?"
"You have my oath on it." Micum extended his hand.
Nysander took it and they looked to Seregil.
He hesitated, still toying with the beach stone, as an inexplicable ripple of
misgiving went through him.
"Seregil?" Nysander raised an eyebrow at him.
Shrugging off his apprehension, Seregil tossed the stone aside and covered
their hands with his own. "You have my word—"
As soon as his hands touched theirs, a sharp stab of pain lanced through his
chest like an arrow shaft. Gasping, he pressed a hand over the scar.
Pushing Seregil's hand aside, Micum opened his coat and gently pulled the
bandage off. "You're bleeding again," he said, showing Seregil and Nysander
fresh blood on the linen dressing.
"It's nothing," Seregil rasped. "It must have broken open when I moved."
"Look there!" Nysander exclaimed, pointing up at the night sky.
A distant streak of red fire had appeared against the white band of stars to
the east.
"Rendel's Spear!" Micum exclaimed.
They gazed up at the comet for a moment in silence, then Nysander said
softly, "The necromancers call it by a different name."
"Oh? What?"
"Met 'ar Seriami," the wizard replied. "The Arm of Seriamaius."
"Met 'ar Seriami!"
Framed against the last light of sunset as he stood on the forward battle
platform, Mardus swept a hand toward the fiery scintilla just visible above the
eastern horizon. A victorious cheer went up from his men.
The throng assembled on the nearby shore echoed the cry, waving torches and
shooting flaming arrows into the air over the cove. Drums throbbed out in the
darkness.
Even before being brought on deck, Alec was uneasily aware of changes in the
ship's routine.
First, Mardus had foregone their walk that morning.
Then the guards had brought Alec a long tunic, the first clothing he'd had
since his capture. As the interminable day wore on, he felt the motion of the
ship change and guessed that they were nearing the
Plenimaran coast. He was proven correct that evening. When he and There were
finally brought on deck, the Kormados was riding at anchor off a desolate shore.
Desolate, but not uninhabited. There was an encampment of some sort, and he
could see black uniformed men hailing the ship excitedly.
On board, Alec sensed an air of expectation.
Everyone seemed to be watching the eastern horizon as the sun set. Finally,
the comet appeared with the stars, a red point of light clearly visible below
the waxing moon, and the great shout went up.
Standing under guard on deck, Alec leaned closer to Thero and whispered,
"Look there. A plague star! Do you see it?"
"Plague star for you, maybe!" Captain Tildus scoffed disdainfully. "For us
great sign. Lord Mardus and voron had say there should be such sign tonight."
"What did Mardus say just now—'Mederseri'?" Alec asked.
"Met "ar Seriami. " Tildus searched for the words in Skalan to explain. "It
is 'The Arm of Seriami." A very great sign, I tell you before."
"Seriami? What I call Seriamaius?" A vague sense of dread gripped Alec as
Tildus nodded. "Aura Elustri mal—"
"Shut that," Tildus growled, seizing Alec roughly by the arm. "Your madness
gods don't be here. Seriami eat hearts of the false ones."
No other prisoners remained. Alec and Thero had been given proper clothing
before being brought on deck, and their hands were bound securely behind their
backs.
Thero moved like a sleepwalker, obeying simple commands, moving when ordered.
Otherwise he remained motionless, his expression betraying nothing of what
thoughts, if any, were going on within. The seamless iron bands on his wrists
glinted softly in the torchlight as he moved, the unreadable characters incised
into their burnished surfaces lined black with shadow.
That's the secret, Alec thought, convinced that these, rather than the
branks, were the source of their enemies' control over Thero. If he could get
those off somehow—
There was considerable activity on deck. Irtuk Beshar and the other
necromancers stood together at the base of the platform, talking quietly among
themselves as their traveling trunks were brought up from below and stacked by
the rail.
Captain Tildus and a few of his men went ashore in a longboat, returning
quickly with some news. Although Alec couldn't understand what they were saying,
it was clear that Mardus was pleased with Tildus' report. When they'd finished,
the captain shouted out a command and the sailors hurried to ready the rest of
the ship's longboats for departure.
Mardus crossed the deck to where Alec and Thero still stood with their
guards. "We'll be continuing our journey by land from here," he told Alec.
"Thero is suitably restrained and I expect no difficulty from him. You, however,
are another matter." He paused, and the scar beneath his left eye deepened as he
smiled.
"You've already proved yourself a slippery customer and once ashore you will
no doubt be tempted to escape. I promise you, it would be a futile effort, and
the consequences would be extremely unpleasant, but not fatal."
"More unpleasant than having my chest hacked open with an ax?" Alec muttered,
glaring up at him.
"Immeasurably so." Mardus' eyes were depthless as the night sky, and as
enigmatic.
Turning on his heel, he strode away to oversee his men.
Shivering in spite of his warm clothing, Alec looked back at the comet
glimmering on the lip of the world. This might not be the night for the final
ceremony, but it couldn't be far off now. Whatever schedule
Mardus was following, this comet was clearly a significant indicator.
Somewhere on that dark shore lay their destination, and his death. It was only a
short dash to the rail, he thought. If he moved quickly he could dodge the
guards, take them by surprise. leap over.
And then what?
Alec could almost see Seregil frowning impatiently at him from the shadows.
Assuming that you could swim with your hands tied, there are probably only
about two hundred soldiers over there, not to mention at least one necromancer.
Or were you just planning to take a nice deep breath down there in the
blackness?
And where, by the way, would any of that leave Thero?
Alec clenched his fists as desperation threatened to overwhelm him again. He
wasn't ready to die, and he knew he couldn't abandon Thero. He had no idea how
much of this whole business, if any, was actually the young wizard's fault;
There's garbled confession had been too enmeshed in Irtuk's manipulations for
Alec to give it full credence, though the doubt in his own mind was real enough.
But guilty or not, he wouldn't leave him behind.
"You go now," one of his guards ordered, prodding him toward the last
longboat.
It was too late to do anything but obey.
Illior and Dalna, gods of my parents, I beg your aid, he prayed silently,
moving forward.
As he neared the rail, he caught sight of something lying half hidden in the
shadow of a bulkhead in his path, something he'd long since given up all hope of
finding.
A nail.
Two inches long, square forged and slightly bent with use, it lay in plain
view less than five feet from where he stood.
For one awful moment Alec was certain the guards had seen it, too, that
someone was sure to snatch it away if he so much as glanced back at it. Perhaps
Mardus himself had dropped it there, as a last cruel test.
There was only one way to find out.
The guard pushed him again, less gently this time.
Alec pretended to stumble, then fell flat on his face.
He landed hard, but when he opened his eyes the nail was within an inch of
his nose. Shifting as if he were struggling to get up, he quickly rolled over
the nail, caught it with his lips and teeth, and had it safely stowed in his
cheek by the time the guards pulled him to his feet.
It was as simple as that.
"What's all the fuss about down there?" Beka asked, joining the scouts on the
crest of the hill overlooking the Plenimaran camp.
The Plenimaran column had headed steadily north since Beka and her riders
began shadowing them. After three days they'd stopped on this lonely stretch of
plain overlooking the Inner Sea. Beka and her people kept their distance, using
their Plenimaran shod horses for closer scouting so as to leave no enemy
hoofprints to betray their presence.
For the past two days the Plenimarans had remained there with no apparent
purpose. Just before sundown, however, a Plenimaran warship had sailed in from
the west and dropped anchor.
"Looks like someone from the ship is putting ashore,"
Rhylin said, squinting into the last glare of sunset.
"I don't know what all the hoorah is, though.
They're all yelling and waving torches back and forth."
"Maybe that's it," Kallas whispered suddenly, pointing to the sky.
Looking up, the others saw a fiery streak of light moving slowly up the sky
from the eastern horizon.
"Maker's Mercy, a plague star!" Jareel muttered, making a warding sign. "I'd
take that for an omen if ever there was one,"
Rhylin said, making a sign of his own. "If that's what they're cheering about
down there, then I don't like it."
Beka had never seen a comet, yet the sight of this one brought with it a
strange feeling of recognition similar to the one she'd experienced when she'd
first heard the sound of the surf a few nights before. This time it was
stronger, more unsettling. There was also a vague impression of-tightness.
"Lieutenant?"
Beka turned to find the others regarding her solemnly in the failing light.
"Could you make out any insignia on the ship?" she asked.
"She was running without colors," Rhylin replied. "We didn't see any cargo
come off her, either, just people. What do we do now?"
"We could go down for a closer look once it gets dark," Steb suggested
hopefully.
"Urgazhi style, quick in, quick out," urged Rhylin, taking his part.
Beka considered their limited options carefully before answering. She shared
their frustration, knew how badly they wanted to make a move. More than once in
the days since they'd been dogging the column they'd caught glimpses of Gilly
and Mirn among the crowd of prisoners, staggering along under the weight of the
planks nailed across their shoulders, in the end, however, it still boiled down
to the fact that they were just fourteen against a hundred or more.
She shook her head slowly. "Not yet. If they don't move out tomorrow I'll
reconsider, but I can't afford to lose any more of you. For now we wait and if
they move north again tomorrow, we'll follow."
Steb turned away angrily, and several others groaned.
"I guess nobody'll be going by ship!" exclaimed Rhylin, gesturing toward the
sea again.
The anchored vessel was on fire. As they watched in amazement, the rigging
caught fire and sheets of flame spread to the sails.
"Bilairy's Balls, they scuttled her!"
Jareel gasped. "A fire couldn't spread that quickly unless someone meant for
it to. What the hell are they up to?"
Beka settled cross-legged on the grass, watching the reflection of the flames
dancing across the water. "I guess we'll just have to stick with them until we
find out."
The following morning Alec's guards woke him at dawn and led him to an iron
cage mounted in the back of a small cart, the sort strolling players used to
transport their trained animals. A thick mattress covered the floor of it, and
there was a canvas awning over the top, but it still stank faintly of its former
occupants.
Thero was already inside, seated cross-legged in the far corner. Like Alec,
his hands were no longer tied, and he'd been allowed to keep his tunic and
cloak.
"What a mangy pair of bear cubs," Ashnazai sneered, coming up to the bars
behind Alec.
Alec moved away from him, although there wasn't really anywhere to go; the
cage was only ten feet on a side.
"Lord Mardus is very busy now that we have landed, so I will be looking after
you now," the necromancer went on.
He wrapped his hands around two of the bars, and Alec saw blue sparks dance
over the iron, as if the cage had been struck by lightning. He jumped in alarm,
and Ashnazai smiled his thin, unpleasant smile. In the clear light of the
morning sun, his skin had a damp, unhealthy look, like the flesh of a toadstool.
"Don't you fear, dear Alec. My magic won't hurt you. Not unless you try to
get out. And of course, you are far too intelligent to do anything so foolish."
Still smiling, he walked away. He looked like a winter scarecrow as the wind
off the sea tugged at his dusty brown robe.
Hatred boiled in Alec's veins. Never in his life had he wanted so badly to
kill a man.
When Ashnazai disappeared beyond a row of tents,
Alec turned his attention to the camp around him.
The back of the cart afforded a good view. From up here he could see the
ranks of small white tents belonging to the soldiers and the herd of horses
staked out beyond. The column that had met them on shore had at least fifty
riders, as well as a crowd of people who were not in uniform and had the look of
prisoners, although he was too far away to be certain. They had slept in we open
under the watchful eye of swordsmen and archers. Mardus had brought at least a
score of men of his own, making it a
formidable force, all in the black uniforms of the marines. Going to the other
side of the cage, he could see the smoking remains of the
Kormados lying in the shallows like the skeleton of some wretched leviathan.
What happened to her crew? he wondered. They'd even burned the longboats.
He didn't recognize the pair of soldiers who brought him breakfast a short
time later. He spoke to them in the hope that they spoke some Skalan. If they
did, they didn't let on.
Giving him a scornfully direct look, they passed some remark between them,
spat on the ground, and walked off a few paces to join the other guards assigned
to watch him.
Alec hadn't really expected better from them.
Sitting down beside Thero, he put a bit of bread in the young wizard's hand.
When Thero did nothing, Alec said, "Eat."
Thero raised the bread to his mouth and took a bite. Crumbs fell into his
beard as he slowly chewed and swallowed. Alec brushed them off and gave him a
cup of water.
"Drink," he ordered wearily.
The column formed up at midday and set off north along the coast. The
northwest coast of Plenimar was wild, rugged country. The track they followed
wound in and out of swamps, meadows, and forests of pine and oak, always with
the shadow of mountains on their right and the sea in sight on their left. The
farther north they moved, the more forbidding the coastline became. Rocky
shingle gave way to red granite ledges and cliffs.
A cold, constant wind sighed through the trees, stirring the twisted branches
of the jack pines and bringing Alec the sweet scents of the forest. It was
colder here than in Skala, but he guessed that it must be sometime in
mid-Lithion by now.
The nail was his talisman, his one remaining secret and symbol of hope. It
was too large to keep in his mouth without attracting notice, but he didn't dare
let it out of his possession, even to hide it in the mattress tick. Instead, he
pierced it securely into the folds of his clothing. Recalling the incident on
the ship, he was careful to keep it hidden from Thero, in case the necromancers
or dyrmagnos decided to use the wizard to spy on him again.
So, keeping it hidden as best he could, Alec bided his time, waiting for some
opportunity to present itself.
Guards surrounded the cart day and night, but even without their presence
he'd have hesitated to attempt picking the lock;
Ashnazai's little warning demonstration with the bars suggested that such an
effort would be futile and probably dangerous. It was a frustrating situation.
He recognized the type of lock securing the door and knew the nail would have
been more than adequate for the job.
It was clear from the first that Vargul Ashnazai was relishing his new
commission. He had none of Mardus' deceptive smoothness, but contented himself
with riding along beside the cart like a dour specter.
Alec did his best to ignore him as the bear cart rolled and jounced northward
along the rutted coastal trail. Nonetheless, he was often aware of the
necromancer's gloating gaze.
Their first night on the road the column camped in the shelter of an ancient
pine grove. The sound of surf was loud. Looking west past the huge, straight
trunks, Alec could see the white spume of the waves as they thundered against
the ledges. It reminded him of the sea sounds of his dreams, but it was not
quite the same.
As darkness fell, another cheer went up and he guessed that the comet must be
visible again, although he couldn't see up through the branches. Much later, he
heard agonized screams in the darkness and knew that the sacrificial ritual was
being carried out again somewhere nearby. Even the guards around the cart
shifted uneasily and several made warding signs.
The cries went on longer this time. Feeling cold and sick, Alec moved closer
to Thero's sleeping form and covered his head with his cloak.
Less than a year before, a younger, more innocent Alec had lain awake all
night in Asengai's dungeon, trembling and weeping at every fresh cry that echoed
from the torturer's room.
Weeks of death and torture in Mardus' company had almost emptied him of such
emotion. Pressing his hands over his ears, he drifted into a restless doze with
the survivor's uneasy prayer of relief: This time, at least, it wasn't me.
In his nightmare there was no invisible pursuer this time, only the hoarse
screams leading him on, faster and faster. With tears of frustration coursing
down his cheeks, he gripped the useless arrow shaft and ran until his chest
ached. Rounding a corner, he staggered to a halt, his way blocked by a section
of collapsed wall.
A thrill of hope shot through him at the sight of the ray of sunlight
streaming in through a jagged break high in the stonework. From outside came the
familiar rush and rumble of surf.
Clambering up the pile of broken stone, he squeezed out through the hole—and
found himself standing alone on a granite ledge surrounded by thick fog that
shrouded the view on all sides. Overhead, the faint disk of the noonday sun
burned through the mist.
The crash of the surf was loud now, so loud that he couldn't tell which
direction it was coming from. If he moved too far, went the wrong direction in
the mist, he'd surely fall off the ledge. Crouching low, he moved slowly along
on all fours until his hands touched water. The waves surged around him
suddenly, flipping him on his back and tumbling him across the rocks. When the
foaming waters receded again, the ledges were covered for as far as he could see
with corpses of drowned men and women, their blue-white skin gleaming in the
shadowless light.
The sea sound was fainter now, and over it Alec could hear harsh grunts and
heavy, wet tearing sounds coming toward him in the fog. Terrified, naked,
unarmed, he crouched among the corpses. Even the headless arrow was gone,
carried off by the sea.
Soon he caught sight of weird, humped forms moving among the dead. The
grunting and snuffling grew louder, closer.
Suddenly something grabbed him from behind in an icy grip, pulling him to his
feet. Alec couldn't turn his head far enough to see what it was, but the putrid
stench that rolled off it made him gag.
"Join the feast, boy, was a gloating, clotted voice whispered close to his
ear. Struggling out of that loathsome grasp, Alec whirled to see what the
creature was, but there was nothing there.
"Join the feast!" the same voice said again, still behind him no matter how
fast he turned.
Stumbling backward, he fell into a heap of bloated corpses. No matter how he
struggled he couldn't get up; every move enmeshed him more in a tangle of
flaccid limbs.
"Aura Elustri malrei!" he screamed, flailing wildly.
"Join the feast! was the voice howled triumphantly.
Then the sun went black.
Alec jerked awake, still smelling the terrible death stench of the dream. A
plump slice of moon visible through the branches told him it was still far from
morning.
Hugging his knees miserably, Alec took a deep breath, but the air smelled
fouler every moment.
"Oh, Alec, I'm so frightened!"
Looking up in amazement, Alec saw Cilia crouched a few feet away. Illuminated
by some ghostly inner light, she looked imploringly at him. Ghost or not, he was
too relieved to see her whole again to be frightened.
"What are you doing here?" he asked softly, praying she wouldn't disappear as
suddenly as she'd come.
"I don't know." A tear slid slowly down her cheek. "I've been lost for so
long! I can't find Father or Grandmother anywhere. What's happened, Alec? Where
are we?"
She looked so real that he took off his cloak and placed it around her
shoulders. She pulled it around herself gratefully and leaned against him,
feeling very solid and real. For a moment he simply knelt next to her, trying
hard not to question her presence. At last, however, he pulled back a little and
looked down at the top of her head resting against his chest.
"Why did you come?" he asked again.
"I had to," she whispered sadly. "I had to tell you—"
"Tell me what?"
"How much I hate you."
Her voice was so soft, so gentle, that it took a moment for the import of her
words to sink in.
As his heart turned to lead in his chest, she said, "I hate you, Alec. It was
your fault, even more than Seregil's. They saw you, followed you. You led them
to us. I'm glad you're going to die."
"No! Oh, no, no, no, no"
Scrambling away, Alec flung himself into the farthest corner. "That's not
true!" he cried. "It can't be true."
Cilia raised her head slowly, her eyes black hollows in the dim light of the
moon. She smiled, and the fetid stench rolled through the cage again. Her smile
widened to a grimace, a snarl, a silent scream, then a black arm shot from her
mouth, lengthening impossibly as it reached for Alec.
Locking black talons around his arm, it dragged him over Thero's limp body
and back to her. For a moment his face was inches from hers, her wild eyes
boring into his, mouth stretched obscenely around the arm protruding from it.
Then her whole body swelled into a black, man-shaped form.
"Are you so certain?" the thing asked in the voice from
Alec's nightmare. "Are you so very certain?"
Releasing him, it wavered, then flowed out through the bars like smoke.
"Damn you!" Alec screamed, knowing Vargul Ashnazai was close by, watching.
"Damn you, you blood-swilling son of a whore! You lie! You lie!"
A single harsh, mocking laugh answered him from the darkness beneath the
trees.
The wind whipped Seregil's cloak around his knees and pulled at the bow case
and quiver strapped to his old pack as he stopped to wait for Micum and
Nysander. Looking back along the ledges to the north, he could just make them
out, Nysander leaning on Micum and a stout staff as they picked their way over
an expanse of tumbled stone. Over them loomed
Mount Kythes, its jagged peak thrusting above the tree line like an elbow from a
worn green sleeve.
Seregil shook his head in wonder. Despite Nysander's fragile appearance, the
wizard had managed to keep up a steady pace over the past two days. Seregil and
Micum took turns supporting him while the other scouted ahead. They were at the
foot of the great mountain now, toiling south along the edge of the forest that
flanked the coastline for as far as they could see. The area was rough and
uninhabited, but there was the faint line of an overgrown road through the woods
that followed the ledges.
Looking ahead, he shaded his eyes against the afternoon sun and scanned the
forest and ledges.
How in the name of Illior were they supposed to find one stone, white or
otherwise, in this wilderness? For all they knew they'd passed it somewhere
yesterday. Yet Nysander insisted on pressing forward, the light of hope growing
brighter daily in his eyes as they moved southward. Micum said little, but
Seregil suspected he was as daunted by the unlikely nature of their quest as he
was.
What if Nysander is wrong?
Seregil fought a daily battle against that question, and others. What if by
losing the battle at the Oreska, Nysander had failed in his Guardianship? What
if the wounds he'd received in that fight had addled his brain and he was
leading them a fool's errand while Alec was carried off to some other part of
Plenimar?
Yet each night the comet blazed ever closer in the night sky and the mark on
Seregil's breast grew clearer as the skin healed, so he could not voice his
doubts. Rational or not, in his heart he believed that Nysander was right.
Clinging to this, he pressed on each day, scanning the coastline along the
forest's edge until his eyes burned and his head ached, feeling his heart leap
into his throat every time a patch of sunlight or the reflection of a tide pool
tricked his eye.
Nysander and Micum had almost caught up. Sitting down on a slab of red
granite, Seregil watched a flock of sea ducks bobbing on the waves beyond the
breakers. Gradually his gaze wandered to the greenish-brown beards of bladder
wrack clinging to the damp rocks below. Scattered patches of it marked the high
tide line. Farther down, where the tide was nearly out, it blanketed the wet
rocks in thick, slippery beds. He'd noted the difference the day before and the
fact had been nagging at the back of his mind ever since, though he wasn't quite
certain why.
Micum and Nysander climbed slowly up to where he stood. The wizard sank down
on an outcropping, wiping his brow on his sleeve.
"My goodness," he panted, "I believe I must sit for a moment."
Seregil uncorked his water skin and handed it to him.
"We only have a few hours of daylight left," he said, suddenly restless.
"I'll go on ahead. If I'm not back by dusk, light a fire and I'll backtrack to
it."
Micum frowned and held up a hand. "Hold on, now. I don't like the idea of us
getting split up again."
"Not to worry," Nysander assured him. "I shall only need a short rest, and
then we can follow. I agree with Seregil; there is no time to lose."
"It's settled," Seregil said, setting off again before Micum could protest.
A quarter of a mile farther on a broad cove cut into the shoreline like a
bite from a slice of bread. An expanse of smooth ledge several hundred feet wide
sloped gently up to the base of steeper layers of sea-weathered granite that
embraced the cove like ruined battlements. Gulls picked their way through the
rock pools and seaweed near the water's edge, spying out a meal left behind by
the tide. It was a rather pretty place, Seregil thought, climbing up the rocks
to stay near the edge of the forest.
Looking through the trees, he saw that the disused road curved to follow the
upper ledges. He was just wondering if he should follow it for a while when
something white caught his eye in the edge of the undergrowth across the cove.
Clambering over rocks and fallen trees, he braced for another disappointment;
an equally promising flash earlier that morning had turned out to be the
shoulder blade of an elk. Another had been nothing more than sunlight striking a
spring-fed pool. As he came closer, however, he saw that it was a boulder of
milky white stone nearly four feet high.
Dropping his pack, he pushed his way through the thicket of leafless bushes
and dead fern that partially obscured it.
It was real-a great chunk of white quartz that had no business being in this
type of country. He circled it, looking for carvings or marks, then reached down
through the dry bracken until his fingers found a small, smooth stone. Pulling
it out, he saw that it was a piece of polished black basalt the size and shape
of a goose egg. Digging in farther, he found more of the black stones, as well
as a tiny clay figure of a woman and an ornament of carved shell.
Clutching his finds, Seregil bounded back the way he'd come until he saw
Micum and Nysander heading his way.
"I found it!" he shouted. "I found your white rock, Nysander. It's real!"
Micum let out a happy whoop and Seregil answered with one of his own.
"What do you say for Illioran mysticism now, Micum?" Seregil demanded
breathlessly as he reached them.
Micum shook his head, grinning. "I'll never understand it, but it's surely
led us well so far."
"There were black stones around the base of it, and I found these, too,"
Seregil told Nysander excitedly, showing him the clay figure and the carved bit
of shell.
"Illior's Light!" the wizard murmured, examining them. "Come along," he
urged, grasping them both by the arm. "Carry me if you have to, but get me to
that stone before the sun goes down."
But they didn't have to carry him. Swinging his staff ahead of him, Nysander
strode over the ledges with much of his old energy. It was as if his news had
revitalized the wizard, Seregil thought. Perhaps Nysander had needed this solid
affirmation of his visions as much as the rest of them.
"Oh, yes, this is the one," Nysander said as they reached the stone. Placing
both hands on it, he closed his eyes.
"It is old, so old," he said almost reverently.
"It was placed here long before the first Hierophant landed on Plenimaran
soil, but the echo of ancient worship is still so strong in it."
"You mean this is some ancient shrine?" asked Micum, examining it more
closely.
"Something of the sort. Those objects Seregil found have been here for over a
thousand years. They should be put back."
Seregil replaced the figure and shell ornament as he'd found them. "I looked
the big stone over, but I didn't see any markings. Still, if this was a shrine,
maybe it's the temple the prophecy meant."
Nysander shook his head. "No, this is only a marker. Of that I am certain.
Before the forest grew up it would have been visible from the sea. From the
trail, too, if it existed whenever this was placed here."
"Then the temple must be back up in these woods somewhere," said Micum. "You
rest here, Nysander.Seregil and I'll take a look."
The forest here was old virgin growth, Micum saw with a certain degree of
relief. The huge, wind-twisted pines were widely spaced, with little undergrowth
beneath them. Despite the good visibility, however, after an hour's searching
neither he nor Seregil had found anything remotely resembling a temple or any
other structure.
Returning to the shore, they found Nysander down on the ledges. It was late
afternoon by now, and the tide was nearing its lowest ebb.
"Nothing, eh? That is very puzzling." Leaning on his staff, Nysander frowned
out at the sea. "Then again, if we are not finding what we seek, then perhaps we
are not looking for the right thing."
Micum sank down on a rock with a discouraged groan. "Then what should we be
looking for? We've only got three more days before this eclipse of yours."
Seregil scanned the cove pensively, then set off toward the waterline. "All
it means is that it isn't a building."
"I know that look," Micum said, watching him cast back and forth along the
ledges like a hound seeking a scent.
The wizard nodded in bemusement. "So do I."
"What are you looking for?" called Micum.
"Don't know yet," Seregil replied absently, poking through the seaweed
floating in one of the larger tide pools.
"See how the formation of the stone forms a natural amphitheater?" Nysander
pointed out. "You try those higher ledges. I shall take the right."
Micum scrambled diligently up and down the rocks, but found nothing but
bleached shells and bird droppings. He was just wondering if Nysander ought to
spare a bit of magic after all when Seregil let out a triumphant cackle below.
"What is it?" Micum demanded.
Seregil lay sprawled on his belly, his arms plunged nearly to the shoulder
into one of the long, narrow fissures that ran down the lower ledges to the sea.
"Come see for yourself."
Climbing down, Micum and Nysander knelt and peered into the cleft in the
stone.
"Look here," said Seregil, pushing aside a clump of rock weed. Beneath it,
they saw rows of crudely carved symbols cut into the rock six inches below the
top of the crack. Moving along on hands and knees, they found that the symbols
formed a continuous band spanning both sides of the fissure all the way down to
the sea. A second crevice near the other side of the cove was filled with the
same sort of carvings.
"What are they?" asked Micum.
Nysander's pale face lit up with excitement as he studied the whorls,
circles, and cross-hatching that formed the patterns. "Such carvings have been
found all round the inner seas, but no one has ever deciphered them. Like that
stone up there, they were placed here before our kind arrived."
"Another sacred spot," Seregil said, sitting up. "I found the crown in a cave
the Dravnians called a spirit chamber. I felt their spirit after I'd gotten the
crown. Micum, you remember that underground chamber you found in the Fens?"
"Of course." Micum grimaced, recalling the scene of slaughter.
"You said there was an altar stone of some sort there," Nysander said,
exchanging an excited glance with Seregil. "That chamber could have been some
sort of holy place, too, before the wooden disks were hidden there." He waved a
hand at the carvings they'd found.
"And now this place, this ancient temple site. All this suggests that the
necromancers use the power of such places to enhance their own magic. Assuming
that this is the case, then there must be some significance in Mardus' choice of
this rather obscure location."
"I was just thinking the same thing," Seregil said, sighting down the
right-hand fissure. Waves surged up the cleft with the gentle heave of the tide,
churning up white foam as they lifted the seaweed. After a moment he began
pulling off his boots.
"Fetch a rope, would you, Micum?" he asked, stripping off his tunic and shirt
as well.
"What are you up to?"
"I just want a look at where these cracks in the rock lead."
Seregil tied one end of the rope around his waist and handed the rest to
Micum, then waded into the icy water.
He was thigh deep when the undertow knocked him off his feet. Micum tightened
his grip on the rope, but Seregil surfaced and motioned for nim to slack up
again. Struggling against the waves, he swam farther out and dove beneath the
surface.
"What is it he's after?" Micum muttered nervously, paying out more line.
"I cannot imagine," Nysander replied, shaking his head.
Seregil dove twice more before shouting for Micum to haul him in.
Pale and blue-lipped with cold, Seregil staggered up the rock and flattened
himself against its sun-warmed surface. Nysander unfastened his cloak and laid
it over him.
Micum squatted down beside him. "Find anything?"
"Nothing. I had thought maybe, with the gift tide coming—"
Seregil broke off. Sitting up, he smacked a hand across his forehead.
"Illior's Fingers, I've had it all backward!"
"Ah, I think I see!" For the first time in days a little color stole into
Nysander's bleached cheeks.
"How could I have overlooked such an obvious factor?"
"A gift tide?" Micum asked, wondering if he'd heard right.
Seregil's teeth clattered like bakshi stones in a leather cup as he
exclaimed, "It's the last piece of the puzzle. Now the rest falls into place."
"What in the hell are you—"
"Twice each month, the moon causes the tide to rise and fall to unusual
extremes," Nysander explained. "The fishermen call it a gift tide. On the day of
the eclipse there will be such a tide."
"It was the seaweed," Seregil went on, as if that explained everything. "It
grows thickest around the low tide line. Last night I noticed that an unusually
thick band of it was laid bare at low tide."
"But you just said there was nothing out there," said Micum.
"That's right." Seregil jumped to his feet and headed up the ledges. "And I
might have saved myself a swim just now. Leiteus said the eclipse would occur at
midday, which is when the tide will be unusually high. That's the other half of
the cycle!" Water dripped from the tip of his nose as he scrutinized the fissure
again, following it up toward the high ground.
Suddenly he stooped over a collection of stones jumbled together near one of
the parallel fissures, then began tossing them aside.
"Look, a hole," he said, showing them a round hole a hand's span wide bored
deep into the stone.
Scrabbling along on his knees he soon found another, and then a third.
With the help of the others, he uncovered a total of fourteen of the holes,
spaced evenly to form a half circle around a broad, shallow depression in the
stone just above the high tide mark.
It was an unremarkable looking spot, littered with driftwood, shells, dried
seaweed, and other debris, but both of the mysterious crevices in the rock ran
through it.
"Here's your temple," Seregil announced.
"I think you may be correct," Nysander said, looking around in amazement.
"It's above the normal tide line now, but from the looks of the debris, the
highest tides reach it. It's a sort of natural basin."
"It must have been used by the people who left the writing we found carved
there," Nysander speculated. "I wonder what the holes represent?"
"So the eclipse and the high tide that fills this thing will happen at the
same time," observed Micum, helping Seregil cover the holes as they had found
them.
"The highest point of the tide will lag some minutes behind the completion of
the eclipse," the wizard replied.
"Which means Mardus will have only a few moments in which to complete
whatever ritual he plans before the sun returns. It is generally believed that
the more rare the conjunction, the more powerful its effect. With the added
factor of the comet, I should say this conjunction will be an extraordinarily
potent and dangerous one. That it is so focused on a specific locale makes it
all the more so."
"By the Flame!" Micum muttered. "And the three of us are supposed to take on
that, with however many Plenimarans thrown in?"
"Four," Seregil amended darkly, shooting Nysander a pointed look. "When the
time comes, there are supposed to be four of us."
Time passed like a slow nightmare for Alec.
By day the cart bumped and jolted over the rough coastal track the column
followed. His mounted escort ignored him for the most part, talking among
themselves in their own language. With only Thero for company, Alec spent the
daylight hours dozing and watching the mountainous countryside go by.
And dreading nightfall. At night the bear cart was stationed somewhat apart
from the camp. Alec quickly learned to fear the moment when his guards faded
away into the shadows; this was the signal for Vargul
Ashnazai's festival of nightmares to begin.
Later, when the final horror was over and Alec had been reduced to terrified
fury, the guards would reappear and whatever was left of the night would pass in
relative peace.
The second night Diomis and his mother materialized in the cage, heads
clutched beneath their arms as they cursed and accused him. Alec knew they were
only illusions, but their accusations stabbed at enough of his own doubts to
bring real pain. Turning his back on them, he stuffed his fingers in his ears
and tried to ignore the prodding and buffeting of their cold, ghostly hands. It
was pointless to fight back—they had no more substance than air.
Curling tighter in his misery, he waited for Ashnazai to tire of the game.
When it was over, Alec lay listening to the small sounds of the night-an
owl's hunting call, the distant nickering of horses, the low murmur of the
guards, who'd come back as soon as Ashnazai had gone.
Where did they go? he wondered, letting his mind wander where it would.
A better question: why do they go?
His eyes widened as he stared up into the night sky.
Every time Ashnazai had tormented him, on the ship and now, he did it without
witnesses. This seemed to verify something Alec already suspected. Vargul
Ashnazai did not want anyone, especially Mardus, to know what he was up to.
The following night there was no sign of Ashnazai.
Huddled close to Thero's sleeping form, Alec stared out into the shadows,
bracing for whatever new horror was to come.
The moon rose. The stars wheeled slowly past the branches, but nothing
disturbed the surrounding stillness.
A sweet spring breeze swept through the boughs, carrying to him the scents of
resin, damp mosses, and tender green herbs sprouting from the forest loam.
Closing his eyes, he imagined himself walking through those wooded hills with
his bow as he had with his father. In spite of his fear, he drifted off and
dreamed of hunting and forest trails and freedom.
He was awakened by someone whispering his name. A dark figure stood next to
the cart, beckoning him to the bars.
Alec crouched warily. "What do you want?"
"Alec, it's me," the man replied softly. He pushed his hood back and the
moonlight struck his face.
"Seregil!" Alec managed a choked whisper. Scrambling over, he thrust his hand
out to his friend.
Seregil clasped it and pressed it to his lips.
He was real, solid, warm. Alec clung to him, heedless of the tears of relief
rolling down his own cheeks. "I never thought—How did you find us?"
Reaching through the bars, Seregil cupped Alec's face in his hands. "No time
to explain, tali. I've got to get you out of there." Releasing Alec reluctantly,
he went to the back of the cart to examine the lock.
"Be careful. Vargul Ashnazai put some kind of magic on it."
Seregil glanced up. "Who?"
"The necromancer who was with Mardus in Wolde. And he's not the only one
around, either. They've got a dyrmagnos with them."
"Bilairy's Balls! But there's got to be some way. I'm not leaving you here!"
Alec's heart hammered in his chest as he watched Seregil inspect the lock. It
was torture, being this close but still separated.
"Ah, here's something—" Seregil began, but just then torchlight flared behind
him.
"Seregil, look out!"
Turning, they found Vargul Ashnazai leering up at them, flanked by a
half-dozen armed soldiers.
"How clever of you to have found us," the necromancer gloated. "I much
appreciate your effort. And your boy played his part very convincingly, no?"
Seregil shot Alec a startled look.
It was the cruelest blow yet, that accusing look. It froze Alec's throat, so
that he could only shake his head imploringly.
Seregil drew his sword and sprang from the wagon, away from Ashnazai's men.
But others were waiting for him in the shadows.
Flinging himself against the bars, Alec watched with horror as Seregil fought
for his life. He ran a guard through and slashed another across the neck before
the others leapt at him from behind, knocking him to the ground and pinning him.
The necromancer barked an order and they yanked Seregil to his feet. His face
was bloody, but he held his head high and spat at the necromancer, eyes blazing
with hate.
Ashnazai gave another order. This time Seregil was dragged up into the bear
cart and lashed hand and foot to the bars facing Alec.
"I didn't help him, I swear," Alec whispered hoarsely. "Oh, Seregil, I—"
"It doesn't matter much now," Seregil growled, turning his face away.
"Not in the least," Ashnazai agreed, climbing into the cart behind him with
Seregil's sword in his hand.
"It's a pity you were cut, but then I'd hardly dare chance putting the two of
you together again." He grabbed Seregil by the hair, pulling his head back. "Who
knows what mischief you'd make, eh?"
Stepping back, he placed the point of the sword against the small of
Seregil's back and pushed slowly, twisting the blade.
Seregil let out a strangled cry and grasped the bars. Alec reached through,
grappling for the sword, but one of Ashnazai's men pulled him away, holding him
back as the necromancer drove the blade out through Seregil's belly and then
yanked it free.
Seregil let out a harsh scream and sank to his knees. Struggling free, Alec
caught at him, trying to hold him through the bars. He felt hot blood under his
hands. More ran from the corner of Seregil's mouth.
Alec wanted to speak, but no words would come.
Seregil looked at him, his wide grey eyes full of sorrow and recrimination.
Pulling the dying man's head back again, Ashnazai drew the blade across
Seregil's throat. More blood pumped from the severed arteries, spattering Alec's
face and chest.
Seregil struggled weakly for a moment, his last breath gurgling horribly
through the gaping wound. With a final spasm, he went limp, eyes open and
vacant.
Sobbing, Alec clung to his friend's body until the soldiers cut it loose from
the bars and dragged it from his grasp.
Ashnazai looked down at him with disdain. "That was most enjoyable. Your turn
comes soon, but not so mercifully. But then, you know that, I think."
It had been an illusion, just another of
Ashnazai's tricks.
Alec repeated this over and over to himself as the cart rumbled north the
next day.
But the dried blood on his hands and clothing was real enough. So were the
stains on the canvas ticking of the mattress and the wood at the back of the
cart where Seregil had fallen.
Seregil is dead.
It was an illusion.
Seregil is dead.
It was—
His grief was too deep for tears. It was so vast that it blotted out
everything else. He couldn't eat or sleep or take in his surroundings. Hunched
in a corner of the cage, he clasped his hands around his knees and rested his
head on them, shutting out the world.
Seregil is dead.
As the flat, empty day wore on, Alec often felt Ashnazai's gloating gaze on
him, sipping at his anguish like wine. He kept his eyes averted, unable to bear
the sight of that smug, satisfied smile. The necromancer bided his time, keeping
his distance until the afternoon.
"The guards tell me you eat and drink nothing all day," he said, riding
beside him.
Alec ignored him.
"Too bad not to keep up your strength," Ashnazai went on airily. "Perhaps a
diversion will cheer you. The scouts found a cave where we will make camp.
After so many days of this cage—so drafty, so many eyes looking—a snug cave
will be nice for you, eh?
It will be most, how do you say—?"
He paused. "Most cozy."
His parting laugh left no doubt that something particularly unpleasant was in
the offing. Alec shivered, partly out of dread, partly from a sudden burst of
excitement. This could be his final chance for escape.
He gazed out over the ocean, trying to imagine how many miles lay between him
and Rhiminee.
Nysander was dead.
Seregil was dead.
Cilia. Diomis. Thryis. Rhiri.
The names fell like stones against his heart. If he couldn't get away
tonight, then he'd just as soon die trying.
Sometimes total despair was the best substitute for hope.
The column halted for the night at the base of a small cliff surrounded by
forest. Below the road, the ground fell way sharply to sea ledges.
By this point, Alec had taken stock of his limited options. Somewhere to the
north lay the Mycenian border. If he did manage to get free tonight, it was the
only direction worth going. If he followed the coast, it improved his chances of
meeting friendly forces. It meant fleeing with Thero in tow and Mardus close
behind, but if he could elude him, stay concealed and some distance ahead, then
maybe they had a chance.
If not, he'd put up a fight.
When the column showed signs of stopping for the night he quickly transferred
the precious nail from the seam of his tunic into his mouth and stood at the
bars, watching. The wagoneer drove the bear cart some way apart from the main
camp as usual, trundling to a halt at the ledges on the seaward side of the
trail. Their position, Alec noted with growing hope, had the added advantage of
being to the north of the main camp, which meant fewer pickets between him and
freedom.
Ashnazai was taking no chances. Half a dozen armed guards came to escort the
prisoners to their new quarters. The cave was a rough, deep fisslire beneath a
shelf of ledge overlooking the sea. It was damp, but large enough for a man to
stand up in. A stout iron staple had been driven into a crack in the back wall
and two lengths of heavy chain hung from it.
One of the guards asked something in Plenimaran. The necromancer answered at
some length and his men laughed, then looped the end of a chain around Alec's
neck and secured it with a padlock.
"He asked if I wished you shackled by the leg," Ashnazai told Alec. "I told
him, "An animal will chew off a limb to escape a trap but I think even this
clever young thief cannot chew off his own head."
Still chuckling darkly at the varan's little joke, the guards chained Thero
in the same fashion while Vargul Ashnazai looked on with obvious satisfaction.
"That should hold you nicely," he said, giving the staple a final tug. "I
suggest you waste no effort in trying to free yourself from these bonds. Even if
you did somehow manage to do so, you would find your way blocked by things more
dangerous than chains or guards. Rest now, while you can."
Favoring Alec with another sly, repulsive smile, he added, "Our time together
grows short. I look forward to making this a memorable evening for us all."
Hatred welled up in Alec's throat like bile.
Ashnazai was only a few feet away, well within the reach of the chain. Alec
clenched his fists at his sides and mumbled, "I won't forget you anytime soon."
Ashnazai followed the guards out through the low opening, then turned and
wove a series of symbols in the air in front of it. He walked away out of sight,
but Alec could see at least two guards stationed outside. They spoke among
themselves in low, bantering voices, their shadows passing across the entrance
as they kindled a watch fire and settled down to the night's vigil.
With one eye on the entrance, Alec spat the nail out into his hand and set to
work. First he examined the lock they'd used on Thero's chain. It was large and
sturdy, but he recognized the design as one of only moderate complexity.
With the proper tool, he amended mentally. The nail was not a particularly
delicate instrument for such work, but it did fit inside the keyhole. Closing
his eyes, he gently worked it in against the wards until he felt them give way.
There were four in all; it took several tense minutes to jigger them, but at
last the lock fell open in his hand. He left the curved link holding Thero's
chain in place. Anyone coming in for a quick look would be none the wiser so
long as it was turned around to the back of his neck. He did the same with his
own, then turned his attention to Thero's other restraints.
The lock at the back of the branks was too small for his crude pick. Shifting
Thero into the faint light from the watch fire, he inspected the iron
wristbands.
They were seamless, presumably put on by magic.
Though too snug to slip off over Thero's hands, they turned easily on his
bony wrists. Alec could easily slip a finger into the space between arm and
band.
Perhaps, he smiled darkly to himself, the bands had been tighter before two
weeks of abuse and scant rations had taken their toll. Apparently no one, not
even Mardus, had taken that into account.
Looking up, he found Thero staring at him. It sent a chill over his heart.
Irtuk Beshar had made a speaking puppet of the wizard before; who was it now,
looking at him out of those foggy eyes?
"Thero," he whispered, taking one of the man's cold hands in his own. "Do you
know me? Can you understand what I say?"
Thero gave no sign of understanding, but his gaze did not waver.
Alec shook his head, hardening his resolve. They had nothing to lose and
everything to gain. If the dyrmagnos was spying on him through Thero's eyes and
alerted Mardus, then he'd just shed a little of his own blood and force their
hand tonight.
"I've had enough, Thero. I'm done going along like a sheep to slaughter," he
went on softly, tearing a strip from his tunic and tucking it around the mouth
plate of the branks. Thero offered no resistance as Alec moved the crude gag
into place.
"You need to keep quiet no matter what happens next, all right? You hear? No
matter what, don't make a sound."
Alec stood up and grasped Thero's thumbs firmly. Placing his foot against the
young wizard's chest, he took a deep breath and yanked the thumbs with all his
strength, twisting sharply as he pulled.
He'd seen Seregil do this trick, but had never had the nerve or opportunity
to try it himself.
To his mingled relief and amazement, both joints dislocated cleanly on the
first attempt. Thero's thin hands folded in on themselves with sickening ease,
allowing Alec to work the bands off. There was no time for gentleness;
fortunately whatever magicks kept Thero dazed held until the second band was
off.
As it slipped free, he gave a soft, strangled groan and curled forward
against Alec's knees, holding his limp hands to his chest.
Resetting the joints proved less easy. Alec could feel the bones skating
around under the skin as he pulled and strained, trying to seat the bones back
in their sockets. He could hear Thero's breath whistling harshly around the gag
as he fought not to cry out. Both of them were drenched with sweat by the time
the job was done.
"Damnation!" Thero whimpered, still biting down on the mouth plate.
"Not so loud," Alec pleaded, holding
Thero's head against his chest to muffle any cries.
His own stomach was doing a slow lurch of its own.
"I'm sorry, it was the only way. Are you free of it?"
Thero nodded. "Saw, "eard everythin". Couldn't move—Saw every—"
"So did I," Alec told him, patting his shoulder. "We've got to forget that
for now, while we figure out how to get away from here. What about these,
though?" He pointed to the wristbands, unwilling to touch them again. "Can the
necromancers tell you're not wearing them?"
Thero sat up. "Don' know, "magos work."
"What about your magic?"
Before Thero could answer, they heard the warning sounds of the guards moving
around outside. Alec's heart sank as he listened to their footsteps fading away.
Thero hid the wristbands in the shadows behind him.
Alec moved a few feet away, out of the light.
This is it, he thought coldly, rising to his feet.
Whatever happens, this is it.
A moment later Ashnazai entered carrying a small lantern. The sudden light
stung Alec's eyes and he looked away, noting as he did that
Thero sat half-turned to the wall, wrists out of sight in his lap.
Ignoring the young wizard, Vargul Ashnazai closed in on Alec. "I trust you're
prepared for the evening's entertainment?"
There was a mad possessiveness in his manner; not even the fear of Mardus was
going to get in the way of whatever obscene pleasures he intended to grant
himself tonight. The man's raw hatred was a palpable force in the confines of
the cave. Trapped in the gaze of those hungry black eyes, Alec suddenly felt his
plans of escape turning to dust in his hands.
"What about the guards?" Alec managed, his voice a hollow whisper. He was
grasping at straws and they both knew it.
Ashnazai set the lantern on the floor beside him and pulled off his gloves.
"They're of no concern. No sound will be heard beyond these walls until I choose
to allow it. And even if it did, who would rush to your aid? Duke Mardus,
perhaps? How fond he is of you! Almost as fond as I, but distracted just now by
practical concerns. Fortunately, I have no task at the moment except you."
"Ah, I have been patient," he crooned, raising one pale hand to stitch a
spell pattern on the air. "How I have waited for such a moment as this."
"So have I, necromancer!"
Alec scarcely had time to realize that the harsh, ragged voice was Thero's
before he was blinded by a brilliant explosion of light. A screech of rage or
pain rang out, but Alec couldn't tell which of them it came from.
Blinking away the black spots dancing across his eyes, Alec saw the twisted
remains of the branks lying on the ground at Thero's feet. He also saw with
alarm that whatever spell Thero had cast, it had only wounded Ashnazai, and not
nearly enough.
Bloodied but still standing, the necromancer rounded on Thero, hands raised
for another attack.
Tearing the open lock off, Alec pulled chain from around his neck. Grasping a
length of it in both hands, he sprang at Ashnazai, got the chain around the
necromancer's throat, and yanked it tight.
Vargul Ashnazai writhed like a huge serpent, tearing at the chain. Alec
pulled it tighter and dragged him to the ground. He'd never strangled anything
before, but rage proved a willing teacher. Nothing existed except the feeling of
power coursing through his body as he braced a knee against the necromancer's
back and hauled the chain tighter until it cut into the flesh of his hands and
the necromancer's throat.
"This is for Seregil, you son of a bitch!" he snarled. "For what you did to
Cilia and Thryis and Rhiri and Diomis and Luthas and Thero. And me!" He yanked
the chain back and heard bones snap.
Ashnazai went limp under him, head lolling.
Alec pushed him onto his back and stared into the hated face. Ashnazai's
tongue protruded from his foam-flecked lips. His bulging eyes were wide with
agony and surprise.
Satisfied, Alec pulled the ivory vial from the necromancer's neck and hung it
around his own.
Whatever this was, no one was going to use it against him again.
"We've got to get out of here now," Thero warned, still weak and breathless.
"That spell, the attack—We've got to go before the guards come back!"
"What about the warding spells he cast on the entrance?" Alec asked, helping
the wizard to his feet.
Thero was shaky, but determined. "They were dispelled when you killed him."
"Good." Vargul Ashnazai was nothing more to him than forgotten carrion now.
Turning his back on the body, he extinguished the lantern, then crept to the
mouth of the cave.
The guards were still off minding their own business somewhere, leaving their
master to his pastimes, but the fire they'd built was still bright. The minute
he and Thero stepped out, they'd be visible to anyone lingering nearby.
"Can't you translocate us or something?" Alec whispered, surveying the scene.
"I'd have done that already if I could!" Thero replied with a welcome hint of
his customary brusqueness.
"Get me away from here and I may be able to do something else, though."
"You'd better be praying for Illior's luck, then." Alec pointed north into
the darkness. "We're going that way, understand? We'll have to keep low and
follow the ledge below the road until we get away from the main camp."
Alec left unsaid the fact that any number of guards could be within fifty
feet of them and they wouldn't know it until it was too late; he was trying hard
not to think of that himself. With Thero at his side he sent up one last silent
prayer and hurried past the fire into the darkness beyond.
There didn't seem to be anyone around, but peering up over the ledges they
could see men hunkered around a campfire less than a hundred feet way.
Their bare feet made no sound as they stole along the rocky shore to the edge
of the forest just north of the camp. The open ground between the stunted trees
was treacherously laced with exposed roots jutting out of the thin soil. Alec
clutched Thero by the arm, pulling him along as he stumbled.
They soon spotted several men on picket duty ahead of them. The guards were
watching for trouble coming from outside the camp, however, and Alec skirted
around their position with no trouble. Gauging their direction by the moon, he
led the way north.
They'd been going for less than half an hour when Thero suddenly pulled Alec
to a halt in a small gully.
"Look, I'm tired, too, but we can't afford to rest," Alec urged.
"It's not that," Thero whispered. "They know we're gone. I just felt
something, a searching, I think. It won't take Irtuk Beshar any time to find
us."
"Oh, gods!" Alec gasped, looking back the way they'd come. "We can't get
taken, Thero. They'll sacrifice you and now that I've been bloodied there's
nothing to stop Mardus from—"
"Shut up," Thero interrupted, giving him an abrupt shake. "Kneel down."
"You've got your magic back!" Alec breathed, relief washing over him. "Can
you translocate us now?"
"No, I don't have the power." Thero's lean, bearded face was lost in shadow
as he laid cold hands on Alec's shoulders. "Clear your mind and relax. This
spell will only last until sunrise; remember that if you can. Sunrise. You'll
have to run hard, go as far as you can before—"
They both froze as a weird, preternatural howl burst out from the direction
of the camp. It rose to a mad, sobbing cackle, fell away, only to erupt again,
closer this time.
"Too late!" hissed Alec, then winced as Thero grabbed him by both arms and
forced him back to his knees.
"No it's not!" Thero held him down, speaking urgently. "Clear your mind,
Alec, relax. This takes only a moment."
Another gibbering howl floated to them through the night.
Alec bowed his head, wondering what it was that There intended, and why it
suddenly seemed so familiar.
"That's good, very good," whispered There. "Alec i Amasa Kerry, untir
maligista."
It was the unaccustomed sound of his full name that triggered Alec's memory.
He opened his mouth to protest, but the magic had already taken hold.
"Untir maligista kewat, Alec i Amasa Kerry." There continued, pouring out all
his disremaining power as he pressed down hard on Alec's shoulders. Whatever
horror Irtuk Beshar had unleashed was crashing through the trees toward them,
bellowing its lunatic hunting call.
Throwing back his head, Thero cried out, "Let thy inner symbol be revealed!"
The change was nearly instantaneous. One moment Alec was kneeling before him,
the next a young stag was shaking the remains of the tattered tunic from its
antlers. Nostrils flaring, it leapt away from Thero, then looked back in
confusion. A ghostly residue of magic still glimmered faintly around it, but
that would soon fade.
Thero took a tentative step toward it, though he knew Alec was probably past
understanding human speech.
"I didn't intentionally betray the Oreska," he told him. "Let this be the
atonement for my blindness. Go on. Run!"
The stag lowered its head, lashing its antlers from side to side as if
refusing to leave him.
"No, Alec, go."
A greedy snarl from the shadows settled the issue; the stag turned and
bolted.
The last thing Thero saw was the white flash of its tail.
They'd had time now to learn the pattern of the Plenimaran camp. Pickets were
stationed along the landward perimeter a quarter mile out, with a second line
closer in. It made a tight net but, like any net, it was also a pattern of
holes.
Silent and deadly as true urgazhi, Beka and her raiders quietly killed four
pickets, stripped them of their tunics and weapons, then worked their way toward
the mass of sleeping prisoners.
The clearness of the night was against them. The moon was nearing full and by
its light they could make out the details of each other's faces as they gathered
for the raid. By that same betraying light, they also saw that Gilly and Mirn
had again managed to keep themselves as close as possible to the outside edge of
the group.
Stripped to the waist, they lay on their backs, heads resting on the plank.
Just then, angry shouts burst out somewhere on the far side of the camp.
Whatever was going on, it was attracting the attention of the whole camp.
Several of the sentries stationed among the prisoners moved off in the direction
of the noise. From somewhere nearby came the snort and bellow of a bull.
"By Sakor, we'll never have a better chance than this!" Beka whispered.
Her plan was simple, direct, and fraught with the possibility for complete
disaster. The others understood this, but had been unanimously in favor of the
rescue.
Bows at the ready, Beka and the others watched from the cover of the trees
while Steb, Rhylin,
Nikides, and Kallas pulled on the stolen enemy tunics and strode casually out
in the direction of the prisoners.
Still focused on the outcry, none of the sentries challenged the four raiders
as they quickly lifted the planked prisoners and rushed them into the shelter of
the trees. The whole act was accomplished in a moment's time.
The raiding party ghosted back the way they'd come until they reached Jareel
and Ariani, who'd been left behind to guard the horses well outside the
Plenimaran perimeter.
"Knew you'd come," Gilly said faintly as Kallas and Nikides lowered him
gently to the ground on his back beside Mini.
Their hands were swollen and purple where the long spikes pierced their
palms. Their shoulders had rubbed raw against the rough planks. Looking more
closely at them now, Beka saw from the numerous other bruises and abrasions that
covered both men that they must have often stumbled and fallen beneath their
awkward burdens.
"Rest easy, riders," she said, kneeling next to them. At her nod, several of
the others held their legs and shoulders. Nikides bent to cut the ropes lashing
their arms to the wood, but Sergeant Braknil stopped him.
"Best leave those on 'til we're done," he cautioned. "Give them both a belt
to bite down on and let's get this over with."
Using a pair of farrier's pliers, he set his foot against the plank and
wrenched the first spike from
Gilly's hand.
It was an excruciating process. The flesh had swollen and festered badly
around the spikes and
Braknil had to dig into the skin to get a proper grip.
Gilly fainted as the first spike pulled free.
Mirn gnawed doggedly at the belt between his teeth while tears of pain
streamed down into his ears.
"Easy now," Beka murmured, trying not to let the rage and revulsion she felt
show in her voice as she pressed her hands down on his shoulders. "It'll be over
soon."
When it was over, Braknil bathed their wounds with seawater and bandaged them
with strips of sweat-stained linen and wool each rider had cut from their
clothing.
"Neither of them is in any condition to ride," said Beka. "Rhylin, you and
Kallas are the strongest riders so you'll take them. Nikides, see that those
planks come with us, and the spikes. Don't leave the bastards any more sign than
we can help."
As the rest of the turma mounted for the retreat, a new cry came from the
direction of the camp, one that brought gooseflesh up on every arm.
The mad, unnatural howl rose and fell, then burst out again, quavering as if
some monstrous throat was about to burst with the effort. The horses tossed
their heads, nervously scenting the wind.
"Bilairy's Balls! What was that, Lieutenant?" gasped Tealah.
"Let's hope we don't find out," Beka muttered. The awful cry came again. "No,
it's headed away from us. Let's move on before it changes its mind."
"Which way?" Rhylin asked, shifting his hold around Mirn, who'd finally
fainted.
"Inland, out of their path," Beka replied as another faint howl floated back
to them through the trees.
"And away from whatever that is!" someone muttered as they spurred away.
Alec?
Nysander's brow creased as he stared unseeingly into the darkness. It had
been Thero's essence he felt first; now there was only Alec's, glimmering in his
mind like a distant beacon.
It took no expenditure of power to sense it—the energy was clear, perhaps due
to the strong magic fused with it. Nysander recognized the familiar imprint of
the spell.
Well done, Thero!
But why had the young wizard's own essence disappeared so suddenly?
Feeling Alec's fleeting tremor again, he focused the slightest burst of magic
on it, silently mouthing, Come to us, Alec. We need you.
They'd taken shelter beneath an old salt pine in the forest above the temple
site. The tips of the tree's lower limbs swept nearly to the ground, forming a
low, tentlike space inside.
Stretched out on the thick fragrant bed of fallen needles, Micum snored
softly. Beside him, Seregil tossed restlessly, muttering in Aurenfaie.
The wizard had felt little need for sleep since his arrival in Plenimar. The
quiet hours of the night were too precious to waste. Instead, he kept watch and
wove his meditations, nurturing his returning strength. He only hoped it would
be enough when the time came.
Seregil shifted again, uttering a low moan.
Nysander considered waking him, sharing this first sign of hope, but it was
too soon; if Seregil believed Alec, was nearby, then he would strike off on his
own after him. Alec was still too far away.
Leaning back against the pine's knobby trunk, he resumed his lonely vigil.
The Four was whole again; they would find each other.
Beka's raiders pushed due east until the moon set. At dawn they found
themselves on a rocky highland overlooking the misty blue sea in the distance.
Mim's and Gilly's hands looked like bloated gloves, mottled with angry shades
of purple, red, and yellow. When Braknil had finished with the new dressings,
Beka drew him a little apart from the others.
"You've seen this before. What do you think?" she asked, keeping her voice
low.
"I'd give a year's bounty for a drysian." The sergeant was careful to keep
his back to the others.
"Even then I don't know if the hands could be saved. As it is here, field
dressing's the best I can do and I've got no simples to work with but brine.
That might be enough to draw the pus off, but if they take the blood poisoning—"
He gave a small, expressive shrug. "Well, it'd be kinder to speed them on."
Looking back to the others, Beka watched Tare coaxing the wounded men to
drink.
"Thirty-four of us rode out of Rhiminee together, a green lieutenant and
green troops, except for you," Beka said grimly. "Now look at us."
"It was that attack on the regiment that cleaned us out,"
Braknil reminded her. "You led us well there. What happened wasn't your
fault. Every one of us that fell went down with honor. We've fared damn well
with all the raiding we've done since and that is your doing. All that counts
now is getting back to our own lines with what we've learned."
Beka gave her sergeant a weary half smile. "So you keep telling me. Let's see
if Mirn and Gilly have anything to add."
"Some of the other prisoners spoke some Skalan," Mim told them weakly, his
head resting on Steb's leg. "One of them said the general's name is Mardus, a
lord of some degree. He's got necromancers with him, too."
"Necromancers," snorted Gilly, staring down at his useless hands. "One of
them looked more demon than wizard. Black as something raked out of the fire,
but alive as you or me! No one knew where we were headed, but everyone knew what
was going on at night and it was her doing it!"
"It was some kind of sacrifice," explained Mirn. "The guards came every night
at sundown and you could see everyone trying to shrink down out of sight any way
they could, hoping they wouldn't be the ones chosen. We were on the other side
of camp from the ceremony most nights, but we could hear well enough to know
that they were cutting up the poor buggers alive—"
He broke off, shuddering. "Afterward the other wizard, the man, would conjure
up a black fetch to take away the bodies. The next day we'd march right over the
spot where it happened and I swear to you, there wouldn't be so much as a drop
of blood anywhere."
"A black fetch?" several riders murmured uneasily.
"By the Flame! You suppose that's what we heard howling in the woods last
night?" Tare asked.
"Go on," Beka urged, ignoring the others.
"What I'll never figure is why they didn't do us," Gilly groaned, his voice
suddenly unsteady. "By the Flame, Lieutenant, we were enemy captives. They
planked us, all right, but nothing more. All the rest of the lot were plain
folk: sailors taken by press gangs, Skalans, Mycenians. Women and children, too.
But most of them were Plenimarans. Their own people!"
Both men fell silent, then Mirn sighed. "Sorry, Lieutenant, that's about all
there is to tell."
Beka shook her head. "Don't apologize. You rest easy now." Getting to her
feet, she looked around at the others.
"I figure we can't be more than four or five days ride from Mycena. If we're
lucky, our side's made some headway south by now. Ariani, I'm sending you back
to the regiment with a verbal dispatch. Take the two best horses, ride as hard
as you can, and get word back to Commander Klia about what we've seen."
Ariani snapped a proud salute. "I will, Lieutenant."
"Corporal Nikides, you're in charge of taking back the wounded. We'll rig up
drag litters for Mirn and Gilly here. Steb, you'll go with them. The rest of us
will dog the column for a few more days."
Steb looked down at Mirn, clearly torn in his loyalties. "With all due
respect, Lieutenant, that only leaves twelve of you. I can shoot and fight as
well with one eye as ever I did with two."
"That's why I need you to protect the wounded," she told him, and saw his
look of relief. "That goes for you, too, Nikides," she added, seeing that the
corporal was about to object. "Head north as fast as you can. You're my
secondary couriers in case Ariani doesn't make it. The rest of us are staying to
spy, not fight."
Leaving Braknil in charge, Beka made a wide circuit of the camp, coming to a
halt at last on a west-facing outcrop downhill from the others. She could hear
them grumbling among themselves.
Those being sent away were none too happy about leaving the others behind;
those staying wondered what more there was to be learned.
Beka sighed heavily. She'd already wrestled with the decision to further
fragment what was left of the turma. None of her superiors would fault her for
turning back now.
But what would they say about her reasons for staying? As her eye wandered
north up the coastline she again felt the strange impression of familiarity and
lightness that had come over her the night they'd first seen the comet.
Whoever this Lord Mardus was, whatever he was up to with his necromancers and
pointless marches to nowhere, newly honed instincts told Beka that she was too
close to learning his secrets to leave off now.
Cries rang out behind him as Alec fled the little clearing. The voices of the
Man and the Other mingled for a moment, then were silent. An inchoate sense of
confusion stirred again, but his animal consciousness drove him on, deeper into
the forest and away from the carrion reek. He scented other Men in the forest
around him but they were easy enough to evade.
The first time Nysander had cast the spell of intrinsic nature on him, all
those months ago in the safety of the Oreska garden, Alec's conscious identity
had been so totally overwhelmed by that of his beast form that Nysander had
hastily changed him back before he could harm himself or anyone else in the
resulting confusion.
It was the same this time, and it had been his overpowering animal flight
instinct that had undoubtedly saved his life.
The wind was alive with scent as he dashed headlong through the darkness.
Heeding the warnings that came to his nose, he avoided the Plenimaran pickets,
bounding through thickets and over gullies and deadfalls with unthinking ease.
As he fled, his mind slowly recovered from the shock of the change, blending
with that of the stag into a state of heightened awareness that was neither
animal nor human.
Emerging from the trees onto a rocky sea cliff, he stopped for a moment,
muzzle dark with foam. Below him the tide crashed against the rocks, sending up
great fans of spray.
The comet was burning across the sky and sight of it sent a fresh wave of
panic through him. Every muscle trembled and twitched, every instinct screamed
flight.
But he remained still, long sensitive ears sharply forward, nostrils wide. As
his strange blood slowly cooled, something new caught at his senses.
Pawing the rock with one cloven hoof, he uttered a plaintive bellow, then
stood motionless, listening.
The answering call was nothing more than the faintest of whispers in the
silence of his mind. There was no voice or scent or image, only the summoning of
instinct.
North, still north. Follow and trust.
Like a bird that suddenly recalls the route south after the first frost, Alec
gave himself up to the pull of that faint glimmer, his mind still too clouded by
the stag's to question or doubt.
With another deep-throated cry he set his face to the wind and bounded
onward.
Moon shadow patterns slid across his broad back as he ran and his human mind
gradually began to marvel at the sensation of this startling new body.
He could feel the strain and bunch of the stag's muscles as he sprang, the
pumping of its great heart, the weight of the heavy rack that it bore with no
more thought than he'd ever given to a hat.
The familiar scents of sea and forest took on a new richness beyond human
perception. Pausing to drink at a flowing spring, he couldn't resist the aroma
of young mallow shoots growing around it. The wet green taste of them filled his
mouth like honeycomb. A little grey owl winged across his path with a soft rush
of feathers as he set off again.
The coastline grew more desolate as he moved north, and in the distance he
could see a solitary peak jutting up against the stars. The ledges were broader
here, extending out into the sea and cleft with crevasses and bands of darker
stone. Farther up, where rock met grassland, mats of crowberry and lichen sent
up a sweet aroma as he trampled across.
The sea slowly retreated down the rocks toward the low mark, leaving behind
glistening tide pools that shone like black mirrors in the darkness. The moon
sank into the sea and the stars danced toward home. As the wind shifted and
night scents began to fade he smelled horses and men.
Picking his way down into a gully, he stood motionless, sniffing the breeze,
until they'd passed him and disappeared to the north.
Alec sensed the coming dawn long before the first tinge of it appeared in the
sky. The pellucid light of the false dawn welled up behind the mountains, waking
flotillas of gulls and ducks that had ridden the waves out beyond the pull of
the breakers. Something in the change of light tugged at his memory, but
consumed by the irresistible pull of instinct and the summons, he could not
recall what it was.
The first ray of true dawn touched him as he sprang across a foaming cleft in
the rocks. The stag form blurred in midair, leaving in its place a thin, naked
youth.
Sheer momentum carried Alec across. He landed awkwardly, skinning his knees
and elbows. Still reeling from the transformation, he sprawled on his back and
blinked up at the marbled gold sky, wondering dully where he was and how he'd
come to be there.
Waves surged up the cleft he'd just jumped, flinging glittering white spray
across his bare skin.
As Alec struggled to his knees, he realized he was still wearing the ivory
vial he'd taken from Vargul Ashnazai. Prying it open, he emptied the contents
into his palm, a few dark slivers of wood.
A blinding flash of memory rocked him—Ashnazai toying with the vial as he
wove his tortures aboard the Kormados, the look of satisfaction on his face when
he cut Seregil's throat, There's last despairing cry as it mingled with the howl
of whatever had been unleashed against them after their escape. With a choked
sob, he flung the pieces into the sea and screamed his sorrow after them.
But even as he mourned, the summons was still there, fainter somehow but
still clear enough.
North.
The first Plenimaran scouts reached the temple site just after dawn. Micum
was on watch and heard their horses in time to hide in the underbrush next to
the track. He waited until they passed him, heading toward the white stone, then
hurried back to the pine shelter to warn the others.
"They're on their way," he whispered, crawling under the screen of branches.
"Two Plenimaran scouts just went by on the road, headed north."
"It is fortunate that they keep to the road," Nysander murmured, stroking his
chin absently.
"Why is that?" asked Seregil.
Nysander sighed heavily, then looked up at his two companions. "Alec is on
his way to us. He is keeping to the shoreline, so it is fortunate that the
Plenimarans take the road."
"He's on his way?" Micum gasped, incredulous. "How do you know? When did you
know?"
Seregil said nothing, but Micum saw the sudden tension in him, and the hectic
spots of color that leapt into his sunken cheeks.
"I sensed him just after midnight last night," replied Nysander.
"You knew he was out there and you didn't tell us?" Seregil hissed. "Illior's
Light, Nysander, why not?"
"You would only have charged off in the darkness with very little hope of
accomplishing anything but damage to yourselves. He was too far away for you to
reach on foot. Thero seems to have had a hand in his escape—"
"That traitorous bastard?" Seregil's eyes narrowed dangerously.
"Stop it, Seregil!" Nysander ordered, finally giving rein to his own anger.
It flashed across his face, startling as lightning from a clear sky.
"Whatever Thero's past actions may have been, it would appear that he used
his own magic to aid Alec's escape, quite possibly at the expense of his own
life. Alec is alone. This has brought him closer to us than losing either of you
would have. If Mardus' scouts have reached us already, then the man himself
cannot be far behind."
Seregil opened his mouth to protest but Micum spoke first. "I don't like it
either, but he's right and we both know it," he said grudgingly.
"Well, what about now, then?" demanded Seregil, still boiling. "We can't just
sit here hoping he finds us by sheer luck! Bilairy's Balls, Nysander, if you're
so certain of where he is, magick him in!"
"You know I cannot expend that kind of power now. However, I was able to send
a summoning and place some protections around him, as well. Mardus will not find
him by magic."
Seregil reached for his boots and sword belt.
"But you knew about him last night," Micum said, frowning. "How did you do
that, if not with magic?"
"I did nothing. The knowledge simply came to me."
"Then why don't Micum and I sense him?"
Seregil demanded.
"Who knows? Go to him now; help him. He is coming from the south."
"Ah, that's one of my titles, isn't it? The Guide?" Seregil growled, grabbing
up a water skin and pushing out through the branches.
Micum moved to follow, but Nysander laid a hand on his arm. "Let him go."
Seregil's anger quickly gave way to cautious joy as he loped along over the
rocks. During the long days on the Lady, hope had dwindled to a stubborn refusal
to imagine the worst. Now it seemed Nysander's faith in the prophecy had been
proven. Against all odds, the four of them were being brought together again on
this hostile shore.
The tide had just turned past low, leaving tide pools and treacherous masses
of bladder wrack gleaming in the morning sun. Great green swells rolled in from
the open sea, wave upon wave smashing to geysers of glistening spume against the
rocks. A freshening wind off the water carried the spray up the shore; Seregil
turned his face to it as he stalked along, tasted salt on his lips.
Nothing else mattered. Alec was alive.
He kept one eye on the trees as he went. One patrol had shown up already;
there would be others. Within the hour he spied the glint of sunlight off metal.
Taking cover in a rocky cleft, he listened as a group of riders passed at a
gallop. From the sound of it, there were at least a dozen of them. Waiting until
the last sound of their horses had faded away to the north, he continued on his
way.
Another hour passed and he began to worry that they'd somehow missed each
other. Alec could have taken refuge, as he had, under an outcropping or in the
forest. Or had an accident or been recaptured. Reining in these dark thoughts,
Seregil sat down on a damp block of stone to catch his breath.
His arrival dislodged a small nation of striped periwinkles, which clattered
and rolled away like a cascade of marbles into the tide pool at his feet. A gull
circled down to drink on the opposite side.
"I'll find him," Seregil sighed aloud, resting his head in his hands. "He's
here and I'll find him."
The gull regarded him with one skeptical yellow eye, then flapped off with a
derisive jeer.
Turning his head to watch it, Seregil froze in disbelief. A wan, battered
spector stood looking down at him from a shelf of rock not twenty feet away.
"Alec!"
Thin, bruised, and naked, Alec swayed visibly as the wind buffeted him.
Despite his obvious exhaustion, however, he was poised for flight.
"Alec, it's me," Seregil said more gently, watching hope and fear warring in
those dark, narrowed eyes. What had put such deep distrust there?
"What's wrong?"
"What are you doing here?" Alec croaked, and the wariness in his voice went
through Seregil like a knife.
"Looking for you. Nysander's here, too, and Micum. They're back that way."
"Nysander's dead," Alec said, taking a step backward.
"No, he almost died, but he's alive, I promise you. We know what Mardus is up
to now/ We were right, Alec. We are the Four-you, me, Nysander, and Micum. We're
all here to stop him."
Alec shivered miserably as the wind whipped his hair across his pale face.
"How do I know it's you?" he mumbled faintly.
"What are you talking about?" Seregil asked in growing confusion. "What did
they do to you? It's me! I'm coming up to you now, all right? Don't be afraid."
To his amazement, Alec turned and fled.
Scrambling up the rocks, Seregil dashed after him and caught him in his arms,
holding Alec tightly as he struggled.
"Easy, now! What's wrong?" He could feel
Alec's heart hammering beneath his ribs. Panting, Alec twisted around and
gripped the side of Seregil's face in one hand. Fighting back his own sudden
fear, Seregil loosened his hold.
Alec gingerly touched his hair, shoulders, and arms, his expression almost
feral in its intensity and distrust. After a moment, however, the look
disappeared, replaced by the most wondrous look of relief Seregil had ever seen.
"O Illior, it is you. You're alive," Alec gasped, tears welling in his eyes.
"That bastard! I should have guessed, but the blood, your voice, everything. But
you're alive!"
Shuddering, he grabbed Seregil in a fierce embrace.
"Last time I looked," Seregil rasped, his throat tight with emotion as he
hugged Alec to him.
The boy was trembling badly now. Releasing him just long enough to get his
cloak off and swing it around Alec's bare shoulders, Seregil helped him down in
the lee of a large rock and held him close as the boy trembled and wept.
"I thought you were dead," Alec exclaimed hoarsely, still clinging to Seregil
as if terrified that he'd disappear. "It was Vargul Ashnazai. He made me think
you'd come to rescue me, and he killed—" Alec let out a harsh sound between a
sob and a laugh. "But I killed the son of a whore!"
The story that spilled from him was broken and confused, but Seregil was able
to piece enough together to begin to guess what kind of torture Alec had been
subjected to. Tears of helpless rage stung behind his own eyes as he stroked
Alec's hair, murmuring softly to him in Aurenfaie.
Coming to the end of his tale, Alec rested his head wearily on Seregil's
shoulder and drew another shuddering breath. "The worst of it—When Ashnazai
killed you, tricked me into thinking he had—he said things—" Alec squeezed his
eyes shut. "I thought you died believing I'd betrayed you."
Seregil stroked a strand of hair back from Alec's forehead and kissed him
there. "It's all right, tali. If it had really been me, I wouldn't have believed
him. I know you too well for that."
"And I never told you—" Alec's pale face flushed crimson. "I don't understand
it, but I—"
He faltered and Seregil pulled him closer. "I know, tali. I know."
It was Alec who brought their lips together.
Seregil's first reaction was disbelief. But Alec was insistent, clumsy but
determined. It lasted an instant, an eternity, that one awkward kiss, and it
spoke silent volumes of bewildered honesty.
The moment that followed was too fragile for words.
He's exhausted, confused. He's been tortured past the point of endurance,
Seregil warned himself, but for once, the doubts refused to take root.
Father, brother, friend.
Lover.
He closed his eyes, knowing that whatever grew up between them, it would be
enough.
Alec was the first to break the silence. Wiping his face on the corner of the
cloak, he said, "We'd better keep going. If I fall asleep now I don't think
you'd be able to wake me again. Mardus is on his way."
"You'd better get some clothes on." Seregil stood to pull off his tunic and
felt the weight of the black dagger he'd carried inside it.
"I almost forgot, I've been saving this for you."
Taking the knife out, Seregil unwrapped the scarf he'd wound around it. He
held it a moment, his symbol of both defeat and hope through the long days of
their separation. At last he tugged the knotted hank of hair loose from the hilt
and let the wind snatch the golden strands from his fingers, scattering them
over the rocks and into the sea.
Irtuk Beshar rode to the front of the column and fell in beside Mardus.
Captain Denaril, leader of the land force that had met them upon landing, gave
place with a barely concealed shudder.
Mardus greeted her with a gracious nod. "Good morning, Honored One."
"And to you, Lord Mardus. Have your scouts returned?"
"Yes. They report no interference. We'll make camp by late afternoon today
and be well in place for the final ceremony tomorrow."
"The will of Seriamaius is with you, as always, my lord." Irtuk studied the
dark man's comely profile. "I must say, you seem remarkably sanguine, given the
death of Vargul Ashnazai and the escapes last night."
Mardus shrugged eloquently. "Ashnazai brought his death on himself, despite
all my warnings. Losing Alec was regrettable, though. What a remarkable young
man."
"But the prisoners?"
"My trackers say the Skalan raiding party numbered less than a dozen riders
and that they fled east. No, the Helm will be restored and I shall serve
Seriamaius as the Vatharna."
Mardus' cold smile broadened perceptibly.
"Not a shabby attainment for an Overlord's unacknowledged bastard, eh?"
"I have foreseen this day since you were a child at my knee," the dyrmagnos
said fondly. "Even now the young Overlord suspects nothing. When the time comes
he will be forced to give place to you, his trusted half brother. With the Helm
on your brow and the hand of Seriamaius over you, no one can contest your claim
to the throne."
"And how is young Thero this morning?"
Irtuk Beshar gave a dry, whispery laugh.
"Subdued. Most subdued."
The second scouting patrol was larger. Watching from the shelter of several
large boulders, Micum counted a dozen Plenimaran riders moving up the track
toward the temple site.
Stealing back to the salt pine, he found Nysander listening calmly to the
scouts calling back and forth to one another as they spread out through the
trees behind the site.
"What are they saying?" whispered Micum.
"From the sound of it, they are looking for a place for an encampment."
Before long the Plenimarans backtracked to a sloping meadow a quarter of a
mile back the way they'd come.
Micum and the wizard followed cautiously.
"Looks like they're settling in," Micum said, watching as several soldiers
set to work felling trees at the edge of the clearing. "And right in Seregil's
path, too. You can see the ledges from there."
"He must have seen them earlier," Nysander replied, heading back to the pine
shelter.
"Let's hope so," Micum muttered. "I didn't like the way he stormed out of
here. You know, there's nothing to do here just now. Maybe I should head out
looking for him. Will you be safe?"
Nysander smiled. "From that lot? Oh, yes. You go on."
Keeping behind the underbrush along the road, Micum passed the Plenimaran
camp without being seen. From the cover of a fallen tree, he counted ten
soldiers in the clearing. That left two unaccounted for.
When he was well away from the camp he moved out onto the ledges and looked
south for some sign of movement. Nysander had not been specific on how far away
Alec was. Checking the sun, he guessed Seregil had been gone a little better
than an hour.
The incoming tide boomed against the rocks as he continued south. Another
hour passed before he finally caught sight of two figures moving toward him in
the distance. Though too far away still to make out details, he could see that
Seregil was supporting Alec as they made their way unsteadily over a rocky
stretch of shore.
Seregil drew his sword at the sight of him, then sheathed it again as he
recognized Micum.
"By the Flame, we found you after all!" Micum exclaimed joyously as he
reached them. Throwing an arm around Alec, Micum gave him a welcoming hug and
helped him to a seat on a driftwood log. The boy was hollow-eyed with
exhaustion, and dressed in Seregil' boots, tunic, and cloak.
"Are you all right? Where's Thero?"
"Dead or captured," Alec told him, and Micum heard the strain in his voice.
Seregil gave Micum a quick warning look. "Thero helped him escape. He's had a
rough time of it these last few weeks. We've still got a ways to go, Alec. Do
you want to rest before we go on?"
"No, let's just keep going," Alec replied.
"Where's Nysander?"
"Don't you worry about him. He's safe. And by the Flame, so are you!" Micum
said warmly, clasping Alec's shoulder. "Bilairy's Balls, Alec, I was afraid we'd
lost you."
"Have the second group of scouts reached the place yet?" asked Seregil.
"Two hours ago, I'd say. They staked out a camp just below the temple. I
didn't want the two of you running into them by accident, so I came out to meet
you."
"Thanks. I'll need you to get him the rest of the way." Seregil glanced down
at Alec with concern.
"He doesn't have much left in him. I'm surprised we made it as far as we
did."
"I'll be all right," Alec insisted, swaying as he got to his feet again.
"We'd better stick to the woods," Micum said, slipping an arm under Alec's.
"It's too exposed out here and I don't know where they've posted guards. How far
behind would you say Mardus is?"
"I lost all track of distance last night," Alec confessed. "If the scouts
have reached you, he can't be much more than half a day behind."
"What kind of force does he have with him?"
"I'm not certain, but I think he has at least forty soldiers, plus a gang of
prisoners—maybe a hundred. And there's the necromancer and a dyrmagnos."
Micum's eyes widened in alarm. "Damnation! He's got one of those things with
him? And prisoners?"
"I imagine it takes a lot of blood to make this Helm of theirs," Seregil said
bitterly. "Alec claims there were sacrificial murders on the ship as they came
over, and more since they landed and met up with another force. That's where
this bunch of prisoners came from."
"And the four of us are here to stop them?" Micum shook his head as they
climbed up to the forest and started back.
With the help of Micum and Seregil, Alec managed to make it to the salt pine.
"Here you are at last, dear boy!" Nysander whispered, embracing Alec as he
collapsed onto the carpet of dried needles. "I knew you would come back to us.
And only just in time."
"Seregil told me about the eclipse tomorrow," said Alec, yawning as he
settled with his back to the trunk.
"I know how weary you must be, but you must tell me all that you've learned.
Then I promise, you shall rest. And you must eat!"
Seregil passed him some biscuit, cheese, and a skin of fresh water. Alec took
a long gulp before he began.
"You were right, both of you," he said, looking ruefully at Micum and
Seregil. "I should've stayed at Watermead that night, but I was worried about
Seregil. When I got back to the Cockerel—"
He paused, blinking back fresh tears.
"They know," Seregil told him, moving closer beside him. "I got there at dawn
and saw everything. What happened after that?"
"They jumped me as soon as I came in, Ashnazai and his men. I managed to
wound a couple of them before they took me down."
"Vargul Ashnazai?" asked Nysander. "Ah, yes, I have heard of him."
Alec smiled bitterly. "You won't anymore. I killed the bastard last night.
That's how Thero and I got away. At least I did."
He looked around at the others earnestly. "He saved my life. Whatever else he
did, he saved my life and he's probably dead now because of it. He used his
magic to help us escape, then he changed me into a stag the way you did,
Nysander." Alec's chin trembled but he didn't stop. "I-I ran away. He chased me
off and I ran. I can still hear—"
The wizard clasped Alec's hands between his. "I won't tell you not to grieve,
dear boy, but you mustn't blame yourself. Please, continue with your story. You
were speaking of the inn."
Alec wiped at his nose with a dirt-streaked forearm. "I don't remember much
after that, until I woke up aboard the ship. Mardus was there, and Ashnazai,
another necromancer I didn't see much of, and a dyrmagnos woman called Irtuk
Beshar."
Steeling himself, he related his treatment aboard the Kormados.
Nysander listened in silence until he reached the nightmarish dinner with
Mardus. "Mardus himself told you that the Helm must be given lives to build its
power? You are certain of this?"
Alec nodded grimly. "He said the younger the victim, the more power the death
gives. It was Mardus' idea of revenge to have Thero and me be the last
sacrifices at the final ceremony."
Seregil looked up sharply at this. "That's the key! If we strike quickly,
before they complete the sacrifices, maybe we have a chance against this thing."
"Perhaps, but we must not underestimate its initial capabilities," warned
Nysander. "It may well have some degree of power from the moment of completion.
Very well. Go on, Alec."
Too tired to be anything but matter-of-fact about the nightly horrors Vargul
Ashnazai had visited on them, Alec quickly outlined the details of the overland
journey.
Seregil went pale as he described the visitation by Cilia and the invectives
she'd hurled at him.
"Phantasms, nothing but illusions conjured up by this terrible man," Nysander
assured him. "Such spells turn your own fears and imaginings against you."
"But what about when I saw Seregil?" Alec asked. "That was real. I touched
him, felt him bleeding. There was blood on my hands the next day."
"More illusion," said Nysander. "He created Seregil's image using some poor
victim so that the death would be convincing. Someone certainly died in front of
you that night. I imagine Ashnazai meant to break your spirit once and for all."
Alec glanced guiltily in Micum's direction. "I enjoyed killing him. I know
that's wrong, but I did."
"Don't fret over it," Micum said with a grim smile. "I'd have felt the same
in your place. There's no dishonor in killing a mad creature like that."
Seregil chuckled blackly. "I plan to enjoy killing Mardus just as much."
"Vengeance is not our purpose," Nysander reminded them firmly. "Never allow
yourselves to forget that their god can use our own emotions and weakness
against us. Now allow Alec to finish his account so he can rest."
"There's not much to tell. After we got away from the camp Thero used the
same spell you showed me the day you turned us into animals. I didn't know what
he was doing until it was too late to stop him. Once he'd turned me into a stag,
I ran. If he'd just given me a chance maybe I could have helped him, but
something happened to my mind, just like the last time."
"There was nothing you could have done against anything conjured up by the
likes of Irtuk Beshar," Nysander said. "Thero's decision was wise and
honorable."
"As I see it, the real question is how to get at the Helm in the first
place," Micum interjected.
"Alec says Mardus has at least two score soldiers with him. They're not just
going to stand flatfooted while we waltz in."
"We'll have to see how they distribute themselves at the temple tomorrow,"
Seregil said, going to his pack.
"Assuming Mardus wasn't lying to Alec, then the prisoners will have to be
close at hand during the ceremony. If we could get them loose, they could
provide a diversion." Turning, he handed Alec his bow case and sword.
"You brought them!" Alec exclaimed, pulling the limbs of the Radly from the
case and fitting it together.
"And your quiver," Seregil told him. "If Nysander's right about this prophecy
of his, then you'll be needing these."
"There's plenty of high ground overlooking the temple site," Micum noted.
"Alec could pick off some of the guards around the prisoners, start a panic. If
the prisoners have any spirit left in them at all, they'll fight or run. Either
way, it would give the rest of us a chance to make a dash for it in the
confusion."
"There are only a score of arrows here," Alec said, opening the quiver to
check his fletching. "Even if I made every shot, that still leaves a lot of
armed men to deal with. These are Plenimaran marines we're talking about."
"We'll have our hands full, all right, but I doubt we'll have to take them
all on at once," said Micum. "My guess is Mardus will post sentries and leave
some others on guard at their encampment. It's the dyrmagnos I'm most worried
about. Tell me more about her."
"She's pure evil," Alec answered bitterly.
"What she did to me, and to Thero—I don't even know how to tell you. By the
time she was finished with me, I'd told her every damn thing she wanted to know.
Nysander was right not to tell us very much. Once she started in on me, there
was nothing I could do to stop her."
"I feared as much," murmured the wizard.
"When we finally did escape, she sent something after us. I didn't see it,
but just the sound of it was enough to freeze your blood!"
"This is all excellent news," Nysander exclaimed, rubbing his white hands
together in satisfaction. "The sacrifices, the spells she used on Alec and
Thero, the creature. From the sound of things, she has allowed herself little
respite since her attack against me at the Oreska House. No one, not even a
dyrmagnos, can expend so much power over such a short period of time without it
exacting a toll. Once she has finished with the Helm, she should be at least
somewhat weakened. If we attack her then, perhaps we can disable her long enough
to carry out our mission. And now, Alec, you should get what sleep you can. The
greatest trial of all still lies before us."
"That's for certain," Micum muttered. "Four against forty. I'm going back
down the road to keep an eye out for Mardus."
But Alec felt no dread as he stretched out under Seregil's cloak. No matter
what happened, it couldn't be worse than what he'd already been through.
Micum found an outcropping that overlooked the coastal track and settled down
to wait.
The weather had held fair; the sun felt warm against his back as he lay in
his hiding place, listening to the sound of the birds in the woods around him.
Looking out through the trees on the west side of the road, he could see the
green waves rolling across the Inner Sea and the flocks of sea ducks that rode
them.
What little he'd seen of Plenimar didn't look all that different from Skala.
In fact, it appeared to be a pretty fine place overall- except for the
Plenimarans.
It was midafternoon before he heard the first horses approaching. A vanguard
of riders passed at a gallop. Soon after he saw more riders coming on at a walk
at the head of a column of marines.
Micum had seen enough of Mardus up in Wolde the previous autumn to recognize
him now, riding at the head of it. He wore military dress and the way he sat his
mount told Micum this man was accustomed to command.
A woman in rich riding apparel rode at his side, her presence puzzling until
Micum caught sight of her face and realized what she was. Flattening lower, he
lay scarcely breathing, until the dyrmagnos had ridden past.
Behind them came more riders and marines. Micum spotted a few familiar faces
among them, Captain Tildus and several of the soldiers who'd been with him in
Wolde. The dispassionate calm that had kept him alive through so many battles
settled over Micum as he silently marked men for death.
A line of wagons followed, including the bear cart
Alec had described. As it came abreast of Micum's hiding spot, he saw a thin,
half-naked man sprawled face down in the bottom of it. He couldn't make out the
face, but from the build he guessed it was Thero. Another wagon was loaded with
small wooden cages, and a black bull was tethered to this one.
Next came a long procession of prisoners stumbling along in chains. Women,
men, and children, some hardly older than Illia, marched in dispirited silence
beneath the watchful eye of their mounted guards.
Behind them came wagons, servants, and livestock.
Micum's heart sank as he watched the last of the column pass. Alec had missed
his guess; there were closer to a hundred soldiers.
By the Flame, he thought. We've got our work cut out for us this time.
While Micum was gone, Seregil spent some time spying on the Plenimaran camp,
then went back to check on Alec.
He was still asleep, curled on his side beneath the cloak. A pained frown
furrowed his brow, and his fingers twitched restlessly as he fought his way
through whatever dreams still haunted him. Sitting down next to him, Seregil
gently stroked Alec's tangled hair until the shadow left his face.
Nysander sat with several arrows across his lap. He'd produced a small dish
of paint from somewhere and was painting symbols on one of the shafts with a
fine brush.
Watching Alec sleep, Seregil shook his head with concern. "Do you really
think he'll be up to fighting tomorrow?"
"He is young, and not badly hurt," the wizard assured him, not looking up
from his work. "All he needs is rest."
Seregil rubbed absently at his chest. The last of the scab was peeling away
and it itched. As his fingers brushed across the scar, he felt the tiny raised
whorls of the disk's imprint.
It felt different.
Reaching for Micum's pack, he dug out the shaving mirror and held it out to
see the scar. The round shape of the disk and the small square mark left by the
hole at its center were still outlined in shiny new skin, but the imprint of the
design had changed. What had originally been a cryptic pattern of lines and
whorls had somehow transformed into a circular device of stylized knives, eyes,
and necromantic runes.
"Nysander, look at this!" He pulled the neck of his tunic wider.
Nysander's bushy white brows shot up in surprise. "Do you recall me telling
you that the design on the wooden disk concealed another? This is one of the
siglas of the Empty God."
Seregil inspected it again. "I can read them. The runes, I mean. They're
right way around in the mirror. I hadn't thought of it before, but since this is
a brand, the whole design is backward."
Nysander tugged thoughtfully at his beard. "If this sigla is intrinsically
magical rather than merely symbolic, such a reversal would have a significant
effect on its power. It may even have helped protect you from the effects of the
crown."
He smiled ruefully. "I should have guessed it sooner, I suppose, but I had
been putting your survival down to your magical dysfunction. This may well have
been an ameliorating factor."
Seregil, hoping to get a little sleep stretched out beside Alec. "I'd call
that left-handed luck, but I guess I'll take it—I just hope it works for us
tomorrow."
Nysander took up his brush again. "As do I, dear boy." I take any kind I can.
Alec slept on through the night while Nysander and the others listened to the
Plenimarans at work preparing the temple site. They also heard the chanting, and
later the screams and moans that drifted to them on the wind from the
encampment. Micum wanted to investigate, but the wizard forbade it.
"We know well enough what they are doing. The dyrmagnos is more dangerous
than ever during such ceremonies. If not for the protective magic I have placed
around us, she would have sensed us already. We are safe enough for now, but we
must wait for morning before we move. You should rest while you can. I fear
there will be little opportunity to do so tomorrow."
Scratching a circle around the base of the pine, he seated himself against
the opposite side of the trunk and closed his eyes.
Alec woke just before sunrise the next morning and was surprised at how
rested he felt. He had a few scrapes and aches from the previous day's journey,
but he scarcely noticed them.
Seregil was asleep close beside him, one arm under his head, the other
stretched out toward Alec.
His face was wind-burned and there were pine needles tangled in his long dark
hair, but that only seemed to enhance his strange beauty.
I kissed him! Alec thought in a sudden agony of embarrassment. In the midst
of all the horror they had faced, and all they'd face today, he had kissed
Seregil.
His teacher. His friend. His—what? Worse yet, if Nysander hadn't been sitting
a few feet away, he might have been tempted to do it again.
I can't think about that now, he groaned inwardly, cheeks flaming. It wasn't
that he regretted it. He just didn't know yet what it meant, or what he wanted
it to mean.
Sitting up, he saw that Micum had gone out already.
Nysander was sitting on the other side of the tree and didn't stir or look
around when Alec went over to the pile of packs. He found a spare set of
breeches and some low boots in Seregil's, then turned his attention to his bow.
Stringing it, he ran careful fingers up and down the braided string, looking
for any frays or weak spots. After so many weeks of disuse, it needed waxing.
There was a tack pouch in his quiver, but he didn't see it with the rest of
the gear. Looking around, he spied it lying on the ground next to Nysander. In
with his red-fletched arrows were four newly fletched with white swan feathers.
Taking up the quiver, he touched one of the crisp white vanes and felt a sharp
tingle of magic against his finger. He jerked his hand away, then gingerly
pulled the arrow from the quiver for a closer look. The shaft was covered from
point to nock with tiny, intricate symbols painted in blue ink.
"No spell can improve on the skill of your hand and eye," Nysander murmured,
eyes still closed, "but those four arrows carry magic that will pierce the skin
of the dyrmagnos. She must be your first target once the Helm is complete. See
no one else, aim for nothing else until one of these has struck her. Even my
magic cannot kill her, but it will weaken her while we attack. Strike her in the
heart if you can manage it."
"You can depend on it," Alec replied stonily.
The boy who'd wavered taking first aim at a man was long gone. He touched the
nock, imagining the feel of it on the string just before he let it fly.
I still hope I see her face when it hits her.
Seregil sat up and brushed pine needles from his hair. "Any sound from our
neighbors?"
"Not for some time now," Nysander told him, opening his eyes and stretching.
"Micum went out a short while ago to check their camp."
Seregil peered out through the pine boughs. "I think I'd like a look at the
temple again before too many people are stirring. What do you say, Alec. Fancy a
walk before breakfast?"
They kept a sharp eye out for sentries as they made their way down to the
north side of the cove.
"So that's what those holes were for," Seregil muttered, looking across to
the temple site through the underbrush.
Sturdy wooden posts had been set upright in the mysterious holes surrounding
the dry basin at the head of the ledges. A few men were still at work clearing
debris from the area.
"There are plenty of good vantage points up on those rocks, but I bet they'll
have men up there," Alec whispered.
"We'll manage something. Beshar will most likely be up there, behind those
posts. Look for a place that will give you the best shot at her."
"Don't worry, I'll hit the bitch." Seregil glanced at Alec in surprise and
saw a hardness in his expression that had never been there before.
Soon more men began to wander up from the camp.
Hurrying back to the pine, they found Micum there ahead of them. He held a
finger to his lips as they entered, then pointed to Nysander kneeling in the
center of a dancing circle of white sparks. Inside the circle he'd scraped back
the pine needles and scratched a complex pattern of symbols into the packed
earth beneath.
Eyes half-lidded, Nysander was calmly weaving shining figures in the air. He
had stripped to his breeches and covered his arms, chest, and face with designs
drawn in blue ink. A horizontal band of black paint across his eyes gave him an
uncharacteristically barbaric appearance. In front of him, Alec's bow and quiver
lay amid a clutter of bowls, wands, and parchments.
Alec and Seregil hesitated at the edge of the light circle, but Nysander
motioned for them all to enter. Once inside, they smelled the scent of magic
mingling with the aroma of the pine like the faint, rich odor left behind in a
cupboard where spices had once been stored.
"The eclipse will begin soon," said Nysander, taking up a brush and a bowl of
black paint. "This band across your eyes will ward off the blinding effects of
it, even at the full. Unless the Plenimarans take similar precautions, it may
work to our advantage."
Nysander painted a heavy band across each of their faces, then set the bowl
aside. "Now, if you would hand me your weapons."
Using several colors of pigment, Nysander painted a few small sigils on each
blade. He took the longest over Seregil's sword, covering it from hilt to tip
with a line of tiny figures that flickered and disappeared as soon as they were
completed.
"What's all this?" Micum asked.
"Just some necessary magicking. The dyrmagnos is not the only one with
protective magic. Kneel with me here, close together, and hold out your hands."
Gathering them in a small circle, Nysander painted their palms with
concentric circles of black, red, brown, and blue, then instructed them to press
their raised palms to those of the person on either side of them. Seregil was on
the wizard's right, Alec to his left, with Micum closing the chain.
The moment the circle of hands was complete they were enveloped in a sudden
sensation of tingling warmth that raised the hairs on their arms and made their
eyes water. A collective shudder ran through them as the feeling swelled and
faded away.
Nysander was the first to lower his hands. "It is done."
The paint was gone. In its place each of them bore a complex pattern of red
and gold on each palm.
"The great sigla of Aura," Seregil murmured, touching his left palm.
"What is it, some kind of protection?" asked Alec.
"It will not keep you from being wounded. It is to protect your soul,"
Nysander explained. "If any of us are killed today, the Eater of Death will not
have us. The design will fade from sight in time, but the protection is
permanent."
Seregil regarded his hands with a humorless, lopsided grin. "Well, that's one
less thing for us to worry about."
At that moment, less than two miles to the north, Beka Cavish shivered
suddenly when a sharp tingle passed through her as she tethered her horse with
the others.
"You all right, Lieutenant?" asked Rhylin, who'd been out scouting the
Plenimaran camp with her.
"Guess a snake must've crawled across my shadow." The strange sensation
passed as quickly as it had come, except for a slight tingling in her gloved
hands. Flexing them, she walked over to where Braknil and the others sat waiting
in the shadow of a gully.
They had preparations to make.
An hour before noon a tiny, curved paring disappeared from the lower edge of
the sun.
"There it goes," Seregil whispered as he and Micum lay in a brush thicket
overlooking the temple.
The dry pool near the head of the cove had been cleared of all debris and
painted with white symbols neither he nor Micum had ever seen before.
More symbols had been outlined between each of the fourteen posts set into
the rock and a large square had been painted to contain the entire site.
The sacrificial victims huddled under close guard on the rocks above the
pool. Slightly apart from these, Thero stood between two of Tildus' men.
He was dressed in wizard's robes, but below its full sleeves Seregil caught a
glimpse of metal on Thero's wrists.
"Well, he's alive but they've got him under control again."
"Too bad," muttered Micum. "My guess is we could use his help before this is
over."
Twenty soldiers stood formed up in ranks before the captives, unlit torches
piled at their feet.
A brazier stood nearby, filling the air with fragrant smoke.
Mardus sat on the white marker stone, studying a parchment. He was dressed in
ceremonial splendor for the occasion; beneath his sweeping black cloak, his
burnished cuirass and gorget glinted with gold chasing.
As Seregil and Micum watched, the dyrmagnos stepped from the trees and the
failing sunlight glinted from the jewel work on her veil and gown.
"Don't they just make a handsome pair." Micum glanced up at the sun again.
"Nysander said the eclipse would take about an hour. Looks like you were right
about it matching the tide. It's already as high as it was yesterday and still
coming in."
"Come on then, time to get started."
Irtuk Beshar laid a wizened hand on Mardus' sleeve. "The conjunction has
begun, my lord."
Mardus glanced up from the document he'd been studying. "Ah, yes. Tildus!"
"Yes, my lord?" Never far from his master, the bearded captain stepped
forward.
"Pass the word, Tildus; the eclipse has begun. Remind the men to avoid
looking at it, particularly once it's complete."
Tildus snapped a quick salute and strode off.
The tide was climbing steadily toward the pool and with it came a warm breeze
smelling of rock weed and salt.
Soon enough it would smell of blood, Mardus thought with satisfaction.
When all his men were in position, he strode down into the temple, his black
war cloak sweeping out behind him. The waves were surging close to the dry basin
now, and lines of foam ran ahead up the two narrow fissures that contained the
carvings. He paced a slow circuit around the declivity, then moved to stand on
the landward side of it and raised a hand. Trumpeters at the head of the ledges
blew a blaring fanfare.
Irtuk Beshar stepped from the trees above at the head of a small procession.
First came silent Harid Yordun bearing the carved chest containing the elements
of the Helm. Behind him, soldiers led four unblemished white heifers with the
symbol of Dalna painted on their brows and four young black bulls bearing the
sign of Sakor. These were followed by large wicker cages containing four gulls
and four large brown owls, symbolic of Astellus and Illior.
Harid placed the chest reverently at the landward edge of the dry pool and
the animals were divided, one of each sort at the four corners of the great
square.
Irtuk Beshar moved slowly from one group to another, laying hands on the
beasts. They sank dead beneath her touch and were immediately gutted and piled
in reeking heaps.
Lifting her arms to the sky, she threw back her head and shouted in the
ancient necromantic tongue,
"Agrosh marg venv Kui gri bara kon Seriami. Y'ka Vatharnaprak'ot!"
Tongues of shimmering, unnatural fire flared up from the piles of carrion.
The assembled soldiers cheered at the sight of it.
The sun was a thin, inverted crescent now against the leaden purple sky.
Beneath it, the long tail of the comet hung like an evil, slitted eye. Shadows
blurred and faded in the uncertain light, lending a strange flatness to the
landscape. Birds that had been singing noisily since dawn gradually faltered to
silence except for the occasional puzzled hooting of doves and the rasping croak
of a lone raven.
Water surged up the fissures and spilled into the rock basin. Mardus signaled
to the guards standing over the prisoners. Ten frightened men were dragged
forward, stripped, and tied to the posts. With Irtuk Beshar chanting tonelessly
behind him, Mardus drew his dagger and slit their throats in quick succession.
They died quickly, these first ones, their blood flowing down to stain the
swirling waters of the salt pool.
As the last sliver of sun narrowed to an edge, a raucous clatter suddenly
came from all sides.
An immense flock of ravens appeared out of the surrounding gloom, croaking
and sawing in a cloud of black wings as they settled on tree and ledge and post
top. At the same moment, crabs of every size and color came boiling up out of
the water. Sidling up the rocks, they swarmed over the piles of dead animals and
the corpses, feeding greedily.
Cries of terror burst out among the remaining prisoners. Tildus barked orders
and the torchbearers lit their brands at the brazier. The whole ghastly scene
leapt into sharper relief.
No one, not even the dyrmagnos, noticed when the three guards stationed on
the northern promontory were jerked back out of sight. Any sound they may have
made was lost in the general outcry below.
Carrion eaters. Eaters of the dead, thought Seregil as he, Alec, and Micum
shoved the men they'd just killed into the undergrowth behind them. The black
stripes across their faces gave them all a deadly, feral look as they
belly-crawled back to the edge of the overlook where Nysander was keeping watch.
The moon overtook the last curve of the sun and a hazy corona burst out
around it. The black disk hung framed in light, like a baleful, glaring eye.
The burning arc of the plague star, visible now in the darkened sky, glowed
just below it.
With every surge of the surf, water foamed into the stone hollow at Irtuk
Beshar's feet.
The dead men were cut from the posts and thrown onto the offal pile. Ten
women took their places and Mardus' knife flashed again, severing their cries.
Seregil winced. It was agonizing to watch and not act. Beside him, Alec
clenched his hands around his bow, eyes wide with horror.
"How can we just lay here and watch them die?" he hissed.
Nysander was on Alec's other side and Seregil saw him close a hand over
Alec's. "Think of how many will die if we fail," the wizard reminded him. "Be
strong, my boy. Let nothing distract you."
Raising her hands toward the sky, Irtuk Beshur began to chant again, her
cracked, dry voice loud above the rush of the sea. More victims were dragged
forward to the edge of the pool and beheaded by swordsmen, who then held the
bodies so that the blood still pumping from the severed necks fell into the
water.
Mardus opened the chest and lifted out the crystal crown. Taking it from him,
Beshar held it up to the sky a moment, then cast it into the surging waters of
the pool. Next came a plain iron hoop, then the crude clay bowl.
"It is almost time," whispered Nysander.
Seregil gripped Alec's arm. "Shoot true, tali."
Alec pressed a white-fletched arrow to his lips. "I will, tali," he whispered
back, blue eyes glinting fiercely under the black paint.
Holding that image in his heart, Seregil hurried away after the others.
Alec gripped the arrow in his fist, feeling the power in it. The sound of the
sea now was the sound from his nightmares, but this time the arrow had a head.
Looking down, he saw the dyrmagnos scatter the handful of wooden disks into
the water. As the last one sank from sight the face of the pool went still and
glassy. The tide still surged and thundered to its edge, but the power of the
dyrmagnos kept any more water from flowing into the pool, which was now full.
Like a dark mirror, it reflected the black eye of the sun.
The dyrmagnos raised her hands above it and began a new chant. A man was
brought forward and thrown down on his back at her feet. Soldiers held him by
the hands and feet and Harid Yordun came forward with the black ax.
Alec wanted desperately not to watch as he hacked the man's chest open, but
he knew he must not look away for an instant.
Harid cut out the heart and threw it into the water.
Quick, skirling ripples appeared and faded on its glassy surface as if a
flock of swallows had darted past. Another heart was thrown in, and the ripples
reappeared, more numerous this time.
Alec felt a silent tremor roll through the stone he was lying on. It came
again as the ax rose and fell, growing to a steady rhythm like the pounding of a
labored heart.
The pool went black; and dull as tar. Tendrils of mist rose from it, and with
them came disembodied moans that echoed softly on all sides.
Seregil recognized those ghostly voices, remembered standing over the crown
as his blood fell into ice and crystal while they whispered around him.
Crouched with the others now behind a fallen tree near the waterline, he saw
shifting, half-formed shapes gathering out of the gloom beyond the torches,
mingling restlessly with the vaporous exhalations of the pool. The black water
began to swirl as if stirred with a dyer's paddle. The spirit voices grew
louder, sighing and shrieking. Wraiths buffeted them, plucking at their clothing
and weapons, twitching strands of hair. The air thickened perceptibly, muting
what little light remained. Nysander sketched a quick sigil on the air and the
wraiths retreated.
Working their way into the woods without being seen by the sentries, they
followed the road to the head of the cove.
"Be ready," the wizard whispered. "It is nearly time."
Something slipped coldly across Alec's back beneath his tunic. The weird
disturbances in the air were worse now, tenuous but too insistent to be denied.
Spectral forms, half-seen from the corner of the eye, brushed light as cobweb
against his face, only to flit out of sight when he tried to look at them
directly.
The soldiers' torches flared green and spit off fragments of flame that
skittered like rats around the edge of the pool before being sucked up into the
column of ghostly mist that was forming over the roiling pool. Up and up it
rose, thrusting a twisting grey pillar flecked with tongues of fire into the
burnt sky. It stood over the pool for a long moment, spirit forms darting around
and through it, then a single blue-white bolt of lightning forked down through
its center with an apocalyptic roar, blasting the pool into an explosion, of
steam and rock fragments.
Soldiers fell to their knees, covering their faces in terror. The ravens rose
in a screaming cloud, adding their raw voices to the din. From the direction of
the road came the frenzied screams of the horses tethered there, and the clatter
of carts being dragged off as the panicked beasts bolted. The mist slowly rolled
back, revealing a shattered, steaming hole where the pool had been.
With a shout of triumph, Irtuk Beshar climbed down into it and retrieved
something from the water and rubble.
Straightening again, she raised a helmet in both hands with a screech of
sheer triumph.
The bulging, peaked top and nasal of the helm were fashioned of dull iron but
it was circled at the brow with a wide circlet of ruddy gold. This band was set
around with eight dull blue stones and surmounted by a bristling crown formed
from eight twisted black horns. A curtain of black mail hung down from the back
of the Helm and skeletal, long-taloned hands served as the cheek guards.
Climbing out, she held it up before Mardus and launched into an invocation of
some kind. Although Alec did not understand her language, he recognized two
words: "Seriamaius" and "Vatharna."
Alec drew the bowstring to his ear.
Before he could loose the shaft, however, shouting broke out in the forest to
the south. All eyes turned to see the bright glow of fire above the tops of the
trees in the direction of the camp.
Mardus drew his sword and shouted an order, sending half the guards off in
the direction of the disturbance.
Still clutching the helm, Irtuk Beshar gabbled urgently at him.
Time slowed to dreamlike unreality as Alec rose to his feet and took aim
again at the dyrmagnos.
Ghostly forms imposed themselves between him and his target, swirling around
him to buffet and natter but he ignored them, concentrating on his shot.
Shoot true, tali.
"Aura Elustri malreil, his he whispered.
The black bow quivered like a live thing under his hand as he drew it,
calling on every ounce of power the Radly possessed. When the nock was level
with his ear he released it. The fletching nicked his cheek as it flew, carrying
a drop of his blood away with it.
The arrow sped straight and true as any shaft he'd ever loosed, and made a
sound like a sudden crack of summer thunder when it struck Irtuk Beshar in the
chest just below her throat. The impact spun her like a broken doll. The Helm
fell from her hands, tumbling back into the blasted pool.
"And now you, you bastard!" Alec yelled, taking aim at the startled Mardus.
But an arrow buzzed by his head, spoiling the shot.
Another whined past and he dropped for cover as pandemonium broke out below.
Still clutching his bow, he scrambled to the edge of the outcropping to see what
was going on.
Arrows flew from all directions, but most found targets among the
Plenimarans. By the wavering light of the fallen torches Alec could just make
out a small group of archers on the high ground opposite where he lay. They were
shooting down at the exposed men below. In the melee, he saw Seregil and Micum
dashing down over the rocks with their swords drawn, closing in on the wounded
dyrmagnos.
Mardus was nowhere to be seen, so Alec turned his attention to the soldiers,
shooting two in rapid succession before he was momentarily blinded by a
brilliant flash of light that flared among the prisoners.
As his vision cleared, he saw Thero standing over the smoking bodies of
several dead soldiers, but apparently unaware of the armed man coming at his
back.
The wounding of the dyrmagnos must have weakened her hold on the wizard, Alec
thought. "Look out," he whispered, sending a red-fletched shaft at the guard.
The man fell and Thero was lost from sight as the other prisoners surged forward
in rebellion or panic.
"Got her on the first try!" Seregil exclaimed under his breath, watching from
the ledges above as Irtuk Beshar whirled suddenly, clutching at the shaft
protruding from her chest. The Helm fell from her hands, tumbling back into the
hole it came from.
Mardus dove after it.
Ignoring the sudden arrow storm that erupted around them, he and Micum left
Nysander in the shelter of the rocks and charged down. Irtuk Beshar's spells on
the pool were already unraveling. Water surged back into the basin, washing
corpses and entrails down into the hole, and sweeping the Helm out of reach as
Mardus bent to grab it.
Praying to Sakor that Nysander was right about her powers being exhausted,
Micum charged the wounded dyrmagnos. She saw him and raised one gnarled hand. He
swung, severing the arm, then struck again, taking her between the neck and
shoulder. Her body split under his blade like a dry gourd. She screamed curses
at him as her head and remaining arm tumbled away from her torso.
Despite the warnings of Seregil and Nysander,
Micum hesitated for an instant, transfixed with horror as the severed parts
writhed on the ground at his feet. Then a hint of motion caught his eye and he
turned in time to deflect Tildus' sword.
Sakor's smiling today, he told himself as he sidestepped another blow and
caught the Plenimaran captain a solid blow to the neck.
Other marines leapt forward to avenge their captain's death. Micum crippled
two and killed a third.
A fourth pressed in on his left side but fell before Micum could strike at
him, an arrow through his back. Micum scarcely had time to register that the
fletching color was not Alec's before more Plenimarans rushed at him. He
doggedly stood his ground, aware of the clash of swords behind him but too
closely pressed to look.
As hoped, the revolt of the prisoners, together with the mysterious fire at
the encampment, had drawn off many of the soldiers. Micum made short work of the
few who remained.
He was just looking around for Seregil when a searing bolt of pain shot
through the back of his right thigh.
Staggering, he twisted around to find Irtuk Beshar clinging to him, eyes
shining like a wildcat's as she tore at his leg with nails and teeth. Too late
he realized his mistake; she was whole again.
The lower portion of her gown had fallen away and Micum could see both the
livid, uneven line of the joining and the splintered end of the arrow shaft
still protruding between her shriveled husk. Her legs, black and withered as
those of a burned corpse, kicked spasmodically as she tightened her grip and
sank her teeth into his flesh. A deadly coldness spread slowly out from the
wounds.
Micum hacked awkwardly at her. One withered leg flew off, then he managed the
cleave her in half at the waist. Determined not to make the same error twice, he
grabbed the lower torso by its remaining leg and flung it with all his strength
into the sea, then kicked the other limb into the shadows beyond the torches.
But Irtuk Beshar was still horribly alive and clung on to him like a curse.
The coldness of her bite spread up through Micum's vitals, stopping his ears,
darkening his vision, numbing his fingers. His sword fell from his hand and he
tore clumsily at her. Dried bone collapsed beneath his fists, strips of dusty
scalp pulled away like rotten cloth, but still Irtuk Beshar hung on, plunging
her poison into his veins with the last of her strength.
Micum's deadened leg folded under him and he felt her grip change as she
slowly pulled herself up his body. He could hear Seregil shouting nearby.
Micum's throat worked soundlessly, choked with the vengeful hate of the
dyrmagnos.
Alec was down to the three white arrows when he saw Micum thrashing on the
ground just above the pool. His belly went cold as he realized what the
monstrous thing clinging to him must be. It was pointless to shoot from here;
there was no way to hit the dyrmagnos without killing Micum at the same time.
Gripping the arrow like a dagger, Alec bounded down over the rocks, praying he
wasn't already too late.
Looking back over her shoulder, Beka saw that Braknil's decuria had succeeded
in setting fire to the Plenimaran camp. At this signal, she and Rhylin's decuria
opened fire on the Plenimaran soldiers massed in the natural amphitheater below.
From where they stood on the ledges, it was like shooting pigs in a sty.
They were not the first to fire, however. Even as she loosed arrow after
arrow, Beka wondered how
Braknil had gotten back here so quickly and what his group was doing on the
opposite side of the cove.
One of them had managed to hit the sorceress before Beka could give the order
for her group to fire.
Whatever the case, the prisoners were breaking free below, just as she'd
hoped.
"That's got them moving," she growled, turning to the others. "Come on,
urgazhi, let's leave them to it."
"Hold on, Lieutenant," whispered Rhylin.
"It looks to me like we're not the only ones who were after them!"
The frantic prisoners were pushing their captors back toward the cliffs, but
a smaller knot of fighting was concentrated near the water's edge.
Torchlight glanced off steel in the shadows of the natural basin that lay in
the embrace of the two ridges of high ground. General Mardus was nowhere in
sight, but the Plenimaran's sorceress was still alive and wrestling with a large
swordsman.
Beka's heart skipped a beat.
"It can't be!" she gasped. Then Alec bolted into view from behind a jumble of
rocks, splashing wildly through the shallow water toward the struggling pair
with nothing but an arrow in his hand.
Dropping her bow, Beka began scrambling down the steep rock face.
"What are you doing?" Rhylin cried, catching her by the wrist.
Beka pulled free so violently that she nearly dragged the startled man over
the edge.
"My father's down there!" she snapped over her shoulder as she plunged on.
"Riders," barked Rhylin behind her, "follow the lieutenant's lead! Attack!"
Micum was still struggling weakly beneath the dyrmagnos when Alec reached
him. Grasping Beshar by what was left of her hair, Alec plunged the arrow into
her neck. The resulting blast knocked him over onto his back, ears ringing.
Releasing Micum with a wild screech, Irtuk Beshar dragged what remained of
herself at Alec and locked a hand around his ankle.
"I'll have you after all," she rasped, pulling herself along his leg with
both hands like some nightmare lizard.
Alec saw his own death in her eyes. In his haste to aid Micum, he'd left the
last two white arrows behind with his bow.
"Aura Elustri!" he panted, struggling to wrest his sword from the scabbard
pinned beneath his leg. Before he could shift it, another blade flashed down,
sending the dyrmagnos' head spinning into the surf.
Shaking off the clinging hands, Alec lurched to his feet and stared in
disbelief as Beka Cavish hacked furiously at the flailing arms and trunk.
"Get away from it," he warned. "You can't kill it."
"What are you doing here?" she demanded, backing away from the twitching
remains.
"No time for that. Where's Micum? Go see to him."
Beka found her father lying motionless where he'd fallen, eyes shut as he
fought for breath. Sweat ran down his face in rivulets, carving trails in the
black strip painted across his eyes.
"Father, it is you!" Beka exclaimed, kneeling to inspect the terrible wound
in his leg. The dyrmagnos had torn away skin and muscle in her frenzy, and the
raw flesh was already going dangerously dark.
"Beka?" he gasped, opening his eyes. "Scatter the parts, scatter—it won't
die."
"Alec's doing that," she assured him. She pulled off her gloves to take his
hand and saw for the first time the strange designs that had somehow appeared on
her palms. Her father's hands bore the same device.
"First I find you here and now this," she said, bewildered. "What in Sakor's
name is going on?"
Micum held his hand next to hers. "So you're a Vanguard, too. Things have
come together in a strange way, Beka. You don't know the half of it." He closed
his eyes and drew a wheezing breath.
She pulled open his tunic and laid an ear to his chest. His heart was
pounding too hard and his skin was too cold. Looking around for help, she saw
Alec and Rhylin hurrying toward her, supporting another man between them. This
thin one with his matted black hair and young beard looked vaguely familiar.
He'd been wounded, too; the side of his face was bloody and he had a sword cut
across his ribs. Nonetheless, his pale green eyes were sharp and alert as he
sank down beside Micum.
"Help him, Thero. There must be something you can do,"
Alec pleaded. "I've got to find Seregil! Has anyone seen him? Or Nysander?"
"I am here, dear boy," a hollow voice replied from the shadowed rocks above
them.
Mardus crouched opposite Seregil in the uneven basin, the surge of the tide
rushing around their ankles. They sloshed through icy water as they circled,
vying for possession of the Helm that lay partially submerged between them, the
newly awakened glow of the blue eye stones casting a pale phosphorescence up
through the water. The blast that had formed it had deepened the shallow basin
into a broad pit deeper in places than the height of the two men who fought
there. Strewn with bodies, lit only by the dead glow of the eclipse that still
stood overhead, it was like a place from a fever dream.
"I should have killed that whelp of yours when I had the chance," snarled
Mardus.
"Yes, you should have," Seregil retorted through gritted teeth, sizing up his
opponent.
Mardus was not a brawny opponent, but he did have the protection of his
cuirass. "You missed Nysander, too, you know. He's alive and the Four remains
unbroken."
"Yet you failed all the same," Mardus gloated, pointing to the Helm with the
dagger clutched in his left hand. "I am the Vatharna, the Chosen of Seriamaius.
Do you think you can stand against me now?"
"I was chosen, too, you fatherless son of a whore." Seregil tugged open the
neck of his tunic with one hand to show him the reversed symbol pulsing there.
"But it's my people at the Cockerel that I'll kill you for, and for what you
did to Alec. For the runners and keeks you used and betrayed, the innocents
who've died at your order. Hell, I'll kill you for the sheer fun of it. Come on,
Lord Eater of Shit. Let's get this over with."
He lunged at Mardus and their swords locked in a resounding parry that sent a
shock up both their arms. Seregil ducked Mardus' guard and tried for a stab
below his cuirass. He missed his footing and the tip of his blade glanced off
metal, but the point cut the man's left arm and fresh blood spotted the already
stained waters of the pool; neither of the combatants had time to notice how the
bleary light of the Helm brightened as it rolled in the wash of the tide.
Fighting for purchase on the broken stone underfoot, Seregil quickly realized
that he was overmatched. On better ground his speed would have evened the odds,
but trapped here in this watery pit he could only stand firm and fend off the
taller man's bone- jarring swings. Mardus slapped his blade back and nicked
Seregil's left shoulder. Seregil got his guard back up, made a lucky sidestep,
and repaid him with a slash across the right forearm.
For the first time it occurred to Seregil that his role in the prophecy had
been fulfilled, that he was expendable now. That he might lose.
Sensing his doubt, Mardus pressed the advantage and scored a shallow cut
across Seregil's thigh.
More blood spotted the water and the Helm, brighter now with this and every
death that occurred in the fight that was still raging above them, shone more
brightly still.
It was Mardus who finally noticed the light, understood its significance.
Redoubling his attack, he beat Seregil back against the rocks.
Pinned off balance in an indefensible position, Seregil decided to take a
desperate chance.
Springing past Mardus, he dove for the Helm. He hadn't gotten two steps when
his foot lodged in a hidden crevice and he stumbled painfully.
Mardus struck at his back, slashing him across the ribs. Just as he drew back
for the killing stab, however, a wave surged in over the shelf of rock, knocking
them both off their feet with a blinding wall of spray that slammed them against
the rocks.
Mardus was the first to recover when it subsided. Still gripping his sword,
he looked around to find
Seregil sprawled stunned and unarmed against the seaward rocks. Blood
trickled down over one closed eye from a cut on his forehead.
A look of dark triumph spread across Mardus' face as he stalked toward him
through the knee-deep water. Long experience had taught him where to strike to
cripple and give a lingering death.
It was the glow of the Eyes that distracted him. As the foaming surge of
waves cleared for an instant, Mardus found the Helm shining up through the water
at his feet.
"It seems I'll have the pleasure of offering you to the Beautiful One after
all," he gloated. "Wounded or not, you're still an admirable sacrifice."
Gripping the Helm by one of the twisted black horns, he raised it over his
head.
"Adrat Vatharna, thromuth—"
Seregil chose his moment. Opening his eyes, he reached underwater, yanked the
poniard from his boot, and threw it.
Mardus froze, the Helm still poised over his head as he stared down in
amazement at the knife buried between his ribs where the edge of the cuirass
left his side exposed.
"You should've killed me when you had the chance," Seregil snarled, trailing
blood as he waded unarmed toward his adversary.
"You played a brilliant game until now, but you should always finish your
enemy off before you reach for the spoils. Arrogance, my lord. It's a deadly
vice. It makes you predictable."
Mardus' lips stretched in the parody of a smile.
"Tricks. Always your tricks," he whispered.
Clutching the Helm in one hand, his sword in the other, he turned woodenly
and began to stumble toward the edge of the pool.
Seregil followed and blocked his way. Mardus was dying, but still he looked
down at Seregil with searing disdain.
"The Eater of Death—" he began thickly, gouts of blood spilling down over his
chin from his mouth. "will eat your heart today, not mine," Seregil finished,
glaring up into his enemy's dark eyes.
He grasped the hilt of the poniard and twisted it, tearing through muscle and
sinew until the long blade lodged fast in bone. A hot, bright fresh spurt of
blood poured out over his clenched fist.
Mardus dropped the Helm and toppled backward into the water. A ribbon of red
bubbles streamed up from his nose and mouth, then ceased. His eyes, already
vague with death, mirrored tiny dual reflections of the sun's first, bright edge
as it emerged from the moon's dominance.
Seregil spat into the water. A smaller wave surged over the edge of the pool,
hiding Mardus for a moment beneath a rushing sheet of foam.
When it cleared again, the long reflection of another man had interposed
itself across the surface of the water in front of him. Seregil looked up to
find Nysander standing above him at the edge of the pool, the sound of scattered
fighting still audible from beyond.
"Well done," the wizard said gravely. "Now the Helm must be destroyed once
and for all. Give it to me, then find your sword."
Reaching down, Seregil grasped the glowing Helm by two of its black horns,
just as he had grasped the crystal points of the crown months before. And as
before, invisible voices and insubstantial spirits coalesced around him as he
touched it, trying to stay his hand.
The blue eye stones set in the band had taken on the appearance of flesh now
and swiveled accusingly in their lidless sockets as he passed the Helm up to
Nysander.
The wizard drew a fold of his cloak around the Helm, screening it from view.
"Your sword," he said again, his voice gentle but firm. "I must have your help
in this, Seregil. You are the only one who can aid me."
Seregil scarcely felt his wounds as he splashed back across the pool to find
his weapon.
"Here it is," he called. "But what about—?"
The words died in his throat. With the foam of a fresh wave boiling in around
his legs, he looked up at the tall figure from his nightmares towering over him.
But this time he knew the face beneath the spiked brim of the misshapen Helm.
It was Nysander's.
The skeletal hands that formed the cheek guards clenched inward against
Nysander's face, sinking their talons into his cheeks until the flesh dimpled.
The unnatural blue eyes blazed, sending out rays of light. Nysander stood
unmoved, waiting.
"Nysander, why?" Seregil rasped the skin around the brand on his chest
crawled and tingled, the sensation growing as it crept down his right arm.
Sparks flickered over the quilions of his sword and along the shining blade.
But Seregil was aware of nothing except the sorrowful determination he read
in Nysander's eyes.
Nysander—oldest friend, wisest teacher, second father.
Some sane part of Seregil's mind screamed for him to throw the sword away
into the sea, but he couldn't move or look away.
"Nysander, I can't!" he pleaded, echoing the forgotten words of his dreams.
"You must." Nysander's voice was already thin and strained. "I have accepted
this burden freely.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness. Then the
Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the Guide, the Unseen
One, goes forth. And at the last shall be again the Guardian, whose portion is
bitter, as bitter as gall."
"You must strike now, dear boy. Too much blood has been spilled and I cannot
hold back its power for long. If you fail, I shall become their Vatharna, the
anathema of my life's work. Strike now, I beg you. There is no other way, and
never has been."
Seregil's body felt weightless as he climbed up the broken rock, sword naked
in his hand.
Lock away grief, a voice whispered deep in his heart.
Lock away horror and fear and outrage and pity—
I understand. Oh, yes!
The Eyes of the Helm rolled to focus on him as he took his place in front of
Nysander; this was a blow that could not be struck from behind. Hideous moans
split the air around them, blending with the cries from mortal throats nearby as
he raised his arm to strike. Some part of him recognized Alec's voice among the
others but he did not turn.
Nysander staggered, sank to his knees, arms extended on either side. Orbs of
light burned in the hollow of each palm, illuminating the symbols that still
showed on his skin.
"To protect your soul—"
The orbs flared and began to fade as the Helm blazed brighter. Even then
Seregil might have hesitated if Nysander hadn't raised his head and looked up at
him with eyes that glowed already with the same horrible light as the Helm.
Something broke inside Seregil at the sight of those alien eyes staring up at
him from that familiar, beloved face.
Raising his sword in both hands, he brought it down with all his strength.
The symbols Nysander had painted on the blade flashed out like lightning as
it cleaved through iron, horn, and gold, shattering the great Helm of Seriamaius
into a thousand ragged fragments that dissolved into shreds of shadow in the
milky light of the returning sun.
A sudden wind filled with a thousand tortured voices roared down out of
nowhere, smashing the waves against the rocks. Flinging the twisted, blackened
sword away, Seregil fell to his knees and lifted Nysander's ruined head onto his
lap, cradling the dead man in his arms. Another wave crashed in against the
ledges, foaming around his knees, tugging at the dead man's legs.
You knew, Seregil thought as he gazed down into Nysander's face, plain and
kind again in death.
You knew.
All along you knew.
youknewyouknewyouknewyouknew—
"You knew!" he screamed against the raging wind, blind to the friends
gathered in horrified realization around him.
Bowed over Nysander's limp body, Seregil waited for the next wave to drag
them both from the rocks and down into the trackless depths beyond.
Seregil watched the smoke from Nysander's pyre rise against the brilliant red
and gold of the sunset and wondered why he couldn't weep.
Alec was crying softly beside him and Micum, too, as he lay supported by
Beka, one broad hand over his eyes. Thero stood a little apart, tears streaming
down his pale cheeks as the flames crackled up through the carefully stacked
tinder and driftwood.
Seregil longed to join them. His grief was a dry, sharp-edged stone lodged in
his chest; he could scarcely draw breath around it.
Rhal's sailors and Beka's soldiers stood in respectful silence on the
opposite side of the pyre. Patrolling loyally off the coast, Rhal had seen the
fire at the camp and taken it as a signal. Braving the crashing surf, he'd come
ashore with twenty of his men in time to help Beka's raiders clear out the last
of the Plenimarans. As word spread of Mardus' death, however, most of the
remaining soldiers simply scattered into the hills to fend for themselves.
Afterwards, Beka and Rhal had marshaled their people together, clearing away
the dead and all trace of the ceremony.
When the site was cleansed, they stacked a funeral pyre on the ledges below
the basin, then stood aside as Seregil and Thero placed Nysander on the bed of
oil-soaked kindling and sweet herbs.
Standing here now, watching unflinchingly as the flames blackened Nysander's
skin and clothing, Seregil forced himself to recall the old wizard kneeling
calmly among his paints and symbols, speaking words of encouragement.
But still the tears would not come.
Stars appeared overhead in the darkening sky and with them the comet, robbed
now of its dread significance. The pyre began to settle in on itself and
Nysander's corpse sank out of sight in a whirling cloud of sparks. Several of
Rhal's men came forward and added more wood and oil, stoking the blaze until the
heat of it pressed the onlookers back into the surrounding shadows.
With the solemnity of the funeral circle broken, people began to drift away.
The fire would burn long into the night, reducing skin, bone, and wood alike to
a fine ash for the tide and winds to scatter.
Turning, Seregil limped slowly up to the white stone and sat there waiting
for some release.
None came; the emptiness he'd been plunged into from the moment he'd accepted
Nysander's final charge still enveloped him, leaving him isolated, deadened
inside. He could see Alec and the others gathered around Micum, a knot of shared
comfort against the oncoming night.
He should be with them, he knew, but somehow he couldn't move. Sinking his
head into his hands, he remained where he was, alone in the shadows where
Nysander had stood awaiting his moment just hours before.
Some time later, he heard the sound of someone climbing up the rocks toward
him. Looking up, he was surprised to see that it was Thero.
Worn and battered, dressed in borrowed clothes, he bore little resemblance to
the prim young wizard Seregil had sparred with for so many years. Thero stared
down at the pyre below for a moment before speaking.
"I wasted too many years being jealous of you," he said at last, still not
looking at Seregil. "It hurt him, and I'd take it back if I could."
Seregil nodded slowly, sensing that there was more to be said between them
but not knowing how to begin. Instead, he asked, "Will Micum be all right?"
"I think I've stopped most of the poison," Thero replied, sounding relieved
to speak of practical things. "Still, even if he doesn't lose the leg, I doubt
it will ever be much use to him."
"He's lucky to be alive at all. And the dyrmagnos?"
"She's finished. Alec saw to that."
"Good."
Another uncomfortable pause raveled out and Thero turned to leave.
"Thank you," Seregil managed, his voice thin and strained. "For helping Alec
and all."
With a curt nod, Thero moved off through the shadows along the road.
Micum saw Thero leave.
"You go up to him," he croaked, looking up at Alec with fever bright eyes.
"He's right," Beka said, raising a cup of drugged wine to her father's lips.
"It's not proper, him being alone now."
"I know. I've been thinking that all afternoon," Alec whispered miserably.
"But I don't know what to do for him, what to say. We all loved Nysander, but
not like he did. And then he had to be the one to—"
Reaching out, Micum closed a hot, dry hand over Alec's. "His heart is broken,
Alec. Follow your own."
Alec let out a heavy sigh and nodded. Climbing the rocks, he walked over to
where Seregil still sat on the rock, face lost in shadow.
"It's turning cold. I thought you might need this," Alec said, taking off his
cloak and draping it over his friend's shoulders. Seregil mumbled a thank you,
but didn't move.
Feeling desperately awkward, Alec rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder, then
slid an arm around him. He'd half expected Seregil to shrug it off, or finally
weep, but not the black waves of emptiness he felt, leaning there beside him.
Something intrinsic in Seregil had fled or died; it was like touching a statue,
a scarecrow.
A fresh trickle of tears inched down Alec's cheeks, but he didn't move, just
stayed there, hoping
Seregil would draw some comfort from his nearness. His tongue felt like a
dead thing in his mouth. Words were dead leaves lodged in his throat. What was
there to say?
A breeze stirred, sighing through the forest at their backs, mingling its
sound with the rhythmic surge of the waves. An owl sailed by close enough for
Alec to hear its wings cutting the air. Its hooting call drifted back to them
through the darkness.
They remained like this for some time before Seregil finally spoke, his voice
barely audible. "I'm sorry, Alec. Sorry for everything."
"Nobody blames you. You did what you had to, just like the rest of us."
Seregil's short, angry laugh was startling after such silence. "What choice
did I have?"
They sailed the following morning, heading north along the coast. Still
running with stolen canvas, the Green Lady again raced unchallenged through
enemy waters, though she caused something of a stir at Nanta until Rhal showed
his commissioning papers.
They lay in port for two days while Rhal refitted the sails and took on fresh
stores.
Beka found a drysian to tend Micum's wounds and Seregil's, then set about
making her own preparations for departure. She and her riders were duty-bound to
find their regiment. By the second day Braknil and Rhylin had rounded up
sufficient horses and supplies, as well as word that their regiment was
stationed a few days ride to the north.
Rhal had given over his cabin to the survivors of Nysander's Four and Micum
lay on the narrow bunk, his leg swathed in linen bandages. Sitting down beside
him, Beka pushed her long braid back over her shoulder.
"Word around the city is that the Plenimarans have been pushed behind their
own borders for the moment," she told him. "We'll ride northeast until we find
Skalan troops, then start asking directions from there."
Micum clasped her hand. "You take care of yourself, my girl. This war is far
from over."
Beka nodded, her throat tight. "By the Flame, Father. I don't like to leave
you, but I have to get back. I sent some of my people on ahead before we met up
with you and I've got to see if they made it."
Micum waved aside her concern with a smile.
"I've been talking with your Sergeant Braknil and some of the others. From
what they say, you're a good officer and a brave fighter. I'm proud of you."
Beka hugged him tight, feeling the familiar roughness of her father's cheek
against her own. "I had the best teachers, didn't I? I just wish—"
"What?"
Beka sat back and wiped a hand across her eyes.
"I always thought, once I had some experience on my own, that maybe Nysander
would, you know, find use for me the way he did with you and Seregil."
"Don't you worry about that. There'll always be enough trouble in the world
to keep our kind busy. None of that dies with Nysander. I'll tell you, though,
it's Seregil I'm worried about."
Beka nodded. "And Alec, too. You can see what it's doing to him, having
Seregil so silent and sad. What's happened with them?"
Micum lay back against the bolsters with a sigh. "Poor Alec. He cares so much
for Seregil he doesn't know what to do about it, and now this. And Seregil's
hurting so deep I don't know if any of us can help him."
"Perhaps he has to help himself." Beka rose reluctantly. "You get Valerius to
see to that leg when you get back. I still don't like the look of it. And take
my love to Mother and the girls. Send word of my new brother when he's born."
"You keep yourself in one piece, you hear?"
Beka kissed him a last time, then hurried above.
Seregil was standing alone by the rail.
As they clasped hands, he turned her palms up to look at the faded traces of
the symbols there.
"You've got your father's heart as well as his hair," he said with a ghost of
the old smile. "Trust either one of you to show up when you're least expected
and most needed. Luck in the shadows, Beka Cavish, and in the light."
"Luck to you, too, Seregil, and the Maker's healing," Beka returned warmly,
relieved to see even this small break in his sorrow. He'd scarcely spoken since
they'd set sail. "Bring Father safe home again."
Alec was waiting for her by the longboat. Putting her arms around him, Beka
squeezed him tight and felt the embrace returned.
"Take them to Watermead, both of them," she whispered against his cheek.
"Stay there as long as you need to. Poor Nysander, I can't believe he'd ever
have wanted things to turn out like this."
"Me neither," Alec said, still holding her by the arms as he stepped back.
He looks so much older, Beka thought, seeing the depths of sadness in his
eyes.
When Nanta had slipped away to the horizon Alec went below. Seregil was
sitting on the end of Micum's bunk.
"I found something for you in Nanta before we sailed," Alec said, handing
Seregil a cloth-wrapped parcel. Inside was a small harp, like the one he'd
carried in Wolde.
"It's nowhere near as good as yours, I know," Alec went on quickly as Seregil
folded the wrappings back and touched the strings. "But I thought it might—Well,
Micum is still in pain and I thought maybe if you played for him it might give
him some ease."
A white lie, perhaps, but it did the trick.
Micum gave Alec a knowing wink as Seregil propped the instrument on his knee
and plucked out a few tentative notes.
"It's a fine instrument. Thank you," Seregil said, not looking up. He plucked
out a few searching chords, then swept the strings, releasing a glissando of
plaintive notes.
Thero came in to tend Micum's leg and stayed awhile to listen. Seregil didn't
sing, but plucked out tune after tune, the music mournful and soothing.
Micum slipped into a peaceful doze and Alec sat quietly in the corner,
watching Seregil's face as he played on through the afternoon. His expression
betrayed little. The mantle of silence remained in place.
Seregil's spirits seemed to rally somewhat during the voyage back to
Rhiminee. He spoke more freely, though not of Nysander or the Helm.
Never of those. He walked the deck with Alec and Thero, ate sparingly with
neither relish nor complaint, and played the harp by the hour, covering his own
pain a little by easing Micum's.
Micum and Thero took heart at these small changes but Alec, who shared a
pallet withSeregil on the floor of Rhal's cabin, knew how he trembled and
groaned in his sleep each night. An intuition uncomfortably like the one that
had dragged him back to the Cockerel that fateful night kept him by Seregil's
side as much as possible. The man he'd known for so long was gone, leaving in
his stead a quiet stranger with distance behind his eyes.
Alec sat alone with Micum the afternoon of their fifth day out from Nanta.
Micum was dozing, his face pale and haggard against the bolsters. The harp lay
at his feet where Seregil had left it after soothing him to sleep. There's
continued ministrations had kept rot from setting into Micum's leg, but the
little cabin was stifling with the flat, heavy odor of unhealthy flesh.
Moving quietly so as not to disturb Micum, Alec opened the cabin window and
propped the door open with a pack. Just as he was about to steal out again,
however, Micum opened his eyes.
"That's a long face you've got on," he rasped, motioning for Alec to sit by
him. "Out with it. What's wrong?"
Alec shrugged unhappily. "It's Seregil. He's like a shadow. He doesn't talk,
he doesn't smile. It's like he's not really here at all. I don't know what to do
for him."
"I think you're doing right by just standing by him for now, just as you did
when he ran afoul with that wooden coin. It made all the difference to him then.
He's told me so himself."
"That was magic and he was fighting it, too. But killing Nysander—" Alec
fiddled with the edge of the blanket, searching for words. "It's like he killed
part of himself."
"He did. We have to give him time to sort out what's left."
"Maybe." But in his heart Alec feared that the longer they waited for Seregil
to come around, the farther away he drifted.
Magyana was waiting for them on the quay the day they sailed into Rhiminee
harbor. Alone and unattended, she wore a dark mourning veil over her silvery
hair.
Seregil placed a little bundle containing Nysander's few belongings in her
arms, his voice failing him when he tried to speak.
"I know, my dear," she murmured, embracing him.
"Nysander and I said our farewells the day I sent him across to find you. He
suspected that he would not return, and asked me to tell all of you not to
grieve for him, but to forgive him if you can."
"Forgive him?" gasped Thero, standing rigidly beside Micum's litter. "What
could there be to forgive?"
Magyana did not answer, but her gaze stole briefly back to Seregil, who'd
turned away.
Alec's eyes locked briefly with hers and in that instant the mutual
understanding ran deep.
"It was also Nysander's wish, Thero, that you should complete your training
with me," she continued.
The color fled from the young wizard's thin cheeks as he sank to his knees
before her. "I can't go back to the Oreska, not after what happened that night.
The attack, the Plenimarans getting in, it was my fault. If I hadn't told
Ylinestra about Nysander's walks, his studies—Looking back now, I see what all
her questions were leading to, but at the time—I just didn't know! But the
Council would never allow me back."
Magyana laid a hand on his bowed head. "You forget that I, too, am a member
of the High Council, as was Nysander. He spoke with them one last time before he
left. There is no impediment to your return. His last words to me on the matter
were that he hoped I would see to it that you completed what you have begun so
well."
Cupping his chin, she gently raised his anguished face. "I would be honored
if you would accept me as your teacher, Thero. In truth, it would be a great
comfort to have you with me, and to see the education of my friend's last pupil
completed. It would be the greatest honor to his memory."
Thero rose and bowed. "I'm yours to command."
Magyana smiled gently. "You will learn that, like
Nysander, I seldom command anything. I hope the rest of you will accept my
hospitality tonight?"
"I thank you, Magyana, but I don't think—"
Seregil broke off, unable to meet her gaze.
"I understand." She touched his cheek. "Later then. Tell me where you plan to
stay and I'll send word for Valerius to see Micum."
"Wheel Street tonight, then out to Watermead."
"I will see that he comes to you at once. Aura Elustri mdlreis, Seregil
tali."
Clasping hands with Alec, she bid him farewell, then bent over Micum. "Shall
I send word to Kari?"
Micum took her hand with a meaningful look and said softly, "Maybe we'd
better wait until Valerius has had a look at me, eh?"
Magyana pressed his hand. "Very well. May Dalna speed health to you, Micum,
and peaceful hearts to you all." With Thero at her side, she walked away through
the dockside throng to a waiting carriage.
"If you've no further need of the ship, the men are anxious to put out
again," said Rhal, coming over to take his leave of them. "We've made two
crossings with an empty hold and there are enemy ships to be plucked."
"The ship is yours to command, Captain," Seregil told him. "And the luck of
Astellus go with you. I expect the Green Lady will be the scourge of both seas."
Moving Micum into a hired cart, Alec and Seregil set off for Wheel Street.
The house was just as they'd left it. Evidently Mardus had been well apprised
enough of their movements not to waste time on unnecessary destruction.
Old Runcer greeted them with his usual lack of surprise, as if they'd been
gone for a day or two instead of months. Seregil's white hounds, Zir and Marag,
showed equal equanimity toward their master, padding softly on ahead as Seregil
and Alec helped Micum up the stairs to Seregil's chamber.
Valerius arrived soon after, dour as ever, but subdued. His scowl deepened as
he inspected Micum's wound.
"You're lucky to be here," he exclaimed, wrinkling his nose. "Who's been
looking after you?"
"Thero, mostly," Alec told him. "He was there when the dyrmagnos attacked
him, and he tended him all the way home."
"He may have saved your leg, Micum. He certainly saved your life. There's
still a great deal of healing to be done, though." He turned to Seregil and
Alec. "Runcer can help me. I suggest you both go out for a while."
"I'm not leaving," Seregil protested with a flash of his old fire.
"You heard him, Seregil. You'd just be in the way. Get out," Micum said from
the bed, making a passable job of sounding cheerful. "Come see me in the
morning."
"Come on," said Alec, taking him by the arm. "I could do with a walk after
all that time at sea."
Valerius closed the door firmly behind them.
Seregil glared at it for a moment, tight-lipped and grim, then followed Alec
downstairs without another word.
Seregil hadn't worn a sword since the day of Nysander's death, but Alec
hastily buckled on his own as they headed out into the cool spring evening.
Lithion had passed into Nythin since he'd been gone and flowering trees
scented the air.
They both still wore their rough traveling clothes and, with his sword
swinging against his leg with no cloak to cover it, Alec worried fleetingly that
the Watch might stop them to ask why two such ill-dressed strangers were
hurrying through the streets of the Noble Quarter.
But Seregil soon took the lead, heading into poorer courtyards and alleyways.
He was still limping slightly, but seemed not to feel it as he strode silently
along. Along the way they passed Lazarda's Black Feather brothel. The door stood
open and, glancing at Alec saw that the carved ship on the mantelpiece was
facing west, signaling that a message had been left there for the Rhiminee Cat.
If Seregil saw this, he ignored it and they wandered on like ghosts through the
familiar shadows of their city.
A slender moon stood high over the rooftops before Seregil finally broke his
silence. Stopping suddenly in a weed-choked courtyard, he turned to Alec as if
they were in mid conversation.
"He thinks he might die, you know?" he said, his face half-lost in shadow.
The part Alec could see was a mask of misery.
"Micum? I don't think he will," Alec replied, adding without much conviction,
"Valerius wouldn't have made us leave if he thought he would."
"I don't think I could stand to lose him, too,"
Seregil said, betraying more emotion than he'd shown in days. But before Alec
could respond he was off again, heading west.
They'd gone several blocks in silence before Alec realized where it was that
they'd been headed all along.
One scorched brass cockerel remained to guard the courtyard gate, its
upraised claw empty. Beyond the low wall lay nothing but a gaping foundation
hole choked with charred timbers. Everything had burned-the inn, the stables,
the wooden gate of the back court.
The stink of rain-soaked ashes hung rank on the air.
"O Illior!" Alec whispered in stunned dismay. "I knew it was gone, but
still—"
Seregil looked equally bereft. "It was just starting to burn when I left.
Cilia was only two years old when I bought it."
Alec shuddered, hating Vargul Ashnazai all the more for giving him such
memories of her and the others.
"Do you think their ghosts are here?"
Seregil kicked at a bit of cracked stone. "If they did linger, you gave them
peace the moment you strangled that bastard."
"What about Luthas?"
"I suppose the drysians at the temple will foster him out or make a priest of
him—"
Seregil broke off as a small form bounded up out of the cellar hole with a
loud, familiar trill.
Purring frantically, Ruetha went back and forth between them, twining herself
around their ankles and arching to have her ears scratched.
They stared down at the cat for a moment in mutual amazement, then Seregil
scooped her up with shaking hands. She butted him under the chin with her head.
"By all the gods! Thryis used to complain about the way she'd disappear until
I came back."
Burying his fingers in the sooty fur of her ruff, he muttered huskily, "Well,
old girl, you'd better come with us this time. We're not coming back."
"Not ever." Alec rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder as he reached to stroke
Ruetha. "Not ever."
When they returned to Wheel Street a few hours later, Seregil and Alec found
Valerius just finishing a hearty late supper in the dining room.
"Cheer up, you two. Micum will be fine," the drysian told them, brushing
crumbs from his beard.
"What about his leg?" asked Seregil.
"Go see for yourself."
Elsbet was at her father's side, holding his hand as he slept. Weariness made
her look older than her fifteen years; with her smooth dark hair bound back in a
thick braid over the shoulder of her simple blue gown, she was the image of Kari
as Seregil had first known her.
"He's going to be all right," she whispered.
The room smelled of healing herbs and fresh air.
Bending over Micum, Seregil saw with relief the faint flush of healthy color
that tinged the sleeping man's cheeks. Fresh blood had soaked through the lines
wrapped around his thigh, but the leg was still intact.
"Valerius says he'll be able to ride again in time," she told them. "I've
already arranged for a carriage to take him home tomorrow. Mother's been so
worried!"
"We'll come out with you," Seregil replied, wondering what sort of reception
he'd have from her mother.
"Mother! A carriage is coming, and riders," cried Illia from the front gate.
"It must be Father coming home!"
Shading her eyes against the slanting afternoon sun, Kari joined her at the
gate and watched the covered carriage make its way slowly up the hill toward
them. She recognized the riders as Seregil and Alec. Micum wasn't with them.
She unconsciously pressed a hand across her belly as she set off down the
road to meet them. Catching her mother's mood, Illia hurried solemnly along
behind her.
Seregil cantered on ahead to meet her and Kari's sense of dread deepened as
he came near. She had never seen him so pale and worn. There was something in
his face, a shadow.
"Where's Father, Uncle Seregil?" demanded Illia.
"In the carriage," he told her, reining in beside them and dismounting. "He's
wounded but he'll be fine. Elsbet's with him, too, and Alec."
"Thank the Maker!" Kari exclaimed, embracing him. "Oh, Seregil, I know about
the Cockerel. I'm so sorry. Those poor good people."
He returned the embrace stiffly and she stepped back to look into his face
again. "What is it? There's something else, isn't there?"
"You've had no news, then?"
"Magyana sent word at dawn that you'd returned, that's all."
Seregil turned away, his face disturbingly expressionless as he looked out
over the new green of the meadow. "Nysander's dead."
Kari raised a hand to her mouth, too stunned to speak.
"That nice old man who did magic tricks for me on Sakor's Day?" asked Illia.
She danced around them impatiently, her face puckering to cry. "Why is he dead?
Did a bad man kill him?"
Seregil swallowed hard, his face still grim. "He did something very brave.
Very difficult and very brave. And he died."
The others drew up and Seregil straightened, his face betraying nothing but a
strained composure.
Too composed, it seemed to Kari as she hurried to the carriage door. But then
all her thoughts turned to Micum.
Haggard as he was, he greeted her with a rakish grin as she flew into his
outstretched arms.
"I may be home for good this time, love," he said ruefully, patting his
bandaged leg propped before him on the carriage seat.
"Make me no idle promises, you wandering scoundrel!" Kari gasped, wiping away
tears of relief. "Where's Alec?"
She leaned out the window and took his hand as he sat his horse. "Are you
well, love?"
"Me? Hardly a scratch," Alec assured her, though he looked as drawn and
careworn as the others.
Kari held his hand a moment longer, seeing what Beka had seen; he was no
longer the boy he'd been when he first came to Watermead. Whatever had happened
to him through these past weeks, it had stripped the innocence from him, and who
knew what else besides?
The household hounds leapt around the carriage and horses as they entered the
courtyard. A loud answering hiss issued from somewhere near Kari's feet. She
looked down to find a pair of green eyes shining out at her from a crack in a
wicker hamper.
"What in the world—?"
"Seregil's cat," Micum told her. "I bet there'll be some slashed snouts among
the dogs before she's through. Poor creature, she's the last survivor of the
inn."
Kari smiled to herself, but held her peace until Alec and Seregil had helped
Micum into the main hall. When he was settled comfortably in front of the fire,
she drew Elsbet aside, then whispered to Illia. The little girl disappeared into
the kitchen, returning a moment later with a plump, curly-headed baby in her
arms.
"Father, look what Valerius brought us. Isn't he pretty?"
Alec was the first to react. Jumping to his feet again, he lifted the child
from Illia's uncertain grip and held him up, looking him over with a mix of
wonder and joy.
"Cilia's baby?" Micum asked.
Kari took his hand. "Valerius brought him to me a few days after you left and
asked if I'd foster the child. I knew Cilia would want him here, rather than
raised by strangers who knew nothing of his people. I didn't think you'd mind."
"Of course not," replied Micum, watching in bemusement as Luthas tugged at
Alec's hair, crowing with delighted recognition. "But with the new one coming,
do you think you're up to it?"
"Up to raising the orphaned child of a friend? I should think so!" Kari
scoffed. "With the older girls gone, I've got far too much time on my hands. And
Illia adores him."
She looked up at Seregil, standing alone by the hearth. "When he's old
enough, I'll tell him how you saved his life," she added.
"It might be better if he didn't know," Seregil replied, watching Alec and
Illia fussing over the child.
"I'll leave it to you, then," Kari said, catching another glimpse of the
desperate unhappiness she'd sensed in him on the road.
Lying close to Micum that night, she listened in silence as he slowly
explained the manner of Nysander's sacrifice and death.
"No wonder Seregil's so lost," she whispered, stroking her husband's strong,
freckled arm. "How could Nysander have demanded such a thing of him?"
"I don't completely understand it all myself," Micum admitted sadly. "But I
do believe Nysander was right in thinking that no one but Seregil would have the
heart to strike him down when the time came. I couldn't have done it, and I
don't think Alec could have, either."
"We forget sometimes how cruel the gods can be!" Kari said bitterly. "To turn
love to murder like that."
"You'd have to have been there," Micum said, staring up into the shadows cast
by the fire on the hearth. "If you could have seen Nysander's face—It wasn't
murder. It was an act of mercy, and love."
During the weeks that followed mixed reports came of the war; for the time
being the Plenimaran army was held back in eastern Mycena, but their black ships
ruled the seas, raiding the eastern coast of Skala as far north as Cirna, though
they hadn't yet won control of the Canal.
Except for the absence of the young men who'd gone off to war, life at
Watermead continued on largely unchanged. Gorathin followed Nythin, and then
Shemin, bringing with it the lushness of high summer.
Gentle morning rains nourished the fields and strong spring lambs and colts
bounded after their dams in the meadows.
Kari flourished with the land and her great belly swayed proudly before her
as she went briskly about her daily work and the welcome tasks of summer. But
she continued to worry about Seregil, though the only outward sign of trouble
was his unusual quietness.
She knew Micum and Alec felt the same concern, yet none of them could see a
way to help him.
He sought no solace from any of them, to be sure, but kept himself busy
around the estate. Micum had made it clear that he and Alec were welcome to live
at Watermead for as long as they wished, and Seregil seemed content to do so.
From Alec, Kari learned that he'd sworn never to set foot in Rhiminee again.
If he'd been morose or self-pitying, she might have tried to cajole him out
of it, but he wasn't. When asked, he would tell tales and play the harp. He
worked with the horses, helped build a new stable, and spent his evenings
devising clever devices to help Micum cope with his crippled leg, including a
specially designed stirrup that let him ride again. Of late he'd even been able
to bring himself to hold Luthas again, but left to himself he sank again into
that inner stillness.
Alec, who'd endured the most abuse of any of them, was the quickest to
recover. Farm labor agreed with him and he quickly grew brown and cheerful
again. Kari saw him watching Seregil, however, trying to gauge the inner turmoil
that underlay his friend's long silences and distant eyes.
At night they shared the bed in the guest chamber, but Kari could tell that
no comfort was being found there either.
One morning in mid-Shemin Kari awoke just before dawn, too uncomfortable to
sleep. No matter how she turned, her back ached. Not wanting to wake Micum, she
threw a shawl on over her shift, checked Luthas, who lay asleep in the cradle by
their bed, then went off to the kitchen to make tea.
To her surprise, the kettle was on the hook over the fire already. A moment
later Alec came in carrying a basket of pears from the tree in the backyard.
"You're up early," he said, offering her the fruit.
"It's this wretched child." She frowned comically, kneading her lower back.
"He kicks his mother and puts his knees and elbows in all the wrong places. What
woke you so early?"
"Seregil was tossing around in his sleep again. I thought maybe I'd go
hunting."
"Sit with me a moment, won't you? It's so peaceful this time of the day."
Kari sat on the hearth bench to warm her back while Alec made the tea.
"Seregil isn't getting any better, is he?"
"You and Micum both see it, too, don't you?" he said wearily, pulling up a
stool beside her. He held out one tanned, callused hand. "He hasn't once told me
to wear gloves. He was always after me about it. Before."
He looked up at her and Kari saw the depth of unhappiness in his young face.
"Now he goes out at night or sits up writing. He hardly sleeps at all."
"Writing what?"
Alec shrugged. "He won't talk about it. I even thought of stealing a look at
his papers, but he's got them hidden somewhere. It's like he's fading inside,
Kari, leaving us behind without going away. And I keep thinking about something
he told me once, about when he was exiled from Aurenen."
He spoke of that to you? thought Kari. Even Micum knew almost nothing of that
part of Seregil's life.
"Another boy was sent away with him then, but he threw himself off the ship
and drowned," Alec went on. "Seregil says most Aurenfaie exiles end up suicides
because sooner or later they fall into despair living among the Tirfaie. He said
it hadn't happened to him. But the way things are now, I think maybe it has."
Kari watched his hands tighten around the mug he was holding. There was
something else going on behind those blue eyes, something too painful to share.
She reached to stroke his cheek.
"Then keep good watch over him, Alec. You two share the same blood. Perhaps
in his sadness he's forgotten that."
Alec sighed heavily. "He's forgotten more than that. The day he found me
again in Plenimar, something happened, but now he won't—" Kari flinched suddenly
as a sharp stab of pain lanced down one leg.
"What it is?" he asked, concerned.
Kari gasped through her teeth again, then grasped his arm to raise herself.
"It's only the eight-month pains. A walk in the meadow will ease them and we can
keep talking." The pain passed and she gave him a reassuring smile. "Don't look
so worried. It's just the Maker's way of preparing me for the birth. You know,
I've got a craving for some of that new cheese. Run and fetch us a bit from the
dairy, would you?"
"Are you sure? I don't like to leave you."
"Maker's Mercy, Alec, I was bearing children before you were even thought of.
Go on, now." Pressing her fists into the small of her back, she went outside by
the kitchen door so as not to waken the servants still sleeping in the hall.
Alec was halfway to the dairy before he realized he'd forgotten to bring a
dish for the fresh curds.
By the time he found one, Kari was already out of sight around the corner of
the house. Going around to the courtyard, however, he saw that the postern was
still barred.
A deep groan came from behind him, and he turned to find Kari sagging against
the stone watering trough near the stable. Her face was white, and the front of
her shift was wet to the hem.
"Oh, Dalna!" he gasped, dropping the cheese as he hurried to her. "Is it the
baby? Is it coming now?"
"Too early and too fast! I should have realized—"
Kari grabbed his arm, digging her fingers painfully into his wrist as another
spasm took her.
She was a tall woman and too heavy with child for him to carry. Getting an
arm around her waist, he supported her as best he could to the front door.
It was still barred and he kicked at it, shouting for help.
The door disopened at last. Elsbet and several servants helped bring her
inside.
Beyond them, Micum limped from his bedchamber. "What is it?" he demanded
anxiously, catching sight of Kari in the midst of the commotion.
"It's the baby," Alec told him.
"I'll go for a midwife!" Seregil offered, halfway to the door already.
"No time," Kari gasped. "My women can help me. We've delivered a whole house
full of babies between us. Stay with Micum, you and Alec both. I want you with
him! Elsbet, Illia, come to me!"
Arna and the other woman helped their mistress into her chamber and closed
the door firmly, leaving the men stranded in the hall.
"She's not so young as she was," Micum said, lowering himself shakily down
into a chair by the fire. Kari let out a cry of pain in the next room and he
went pale.
"She'll be all right," Seregil told him, although he was looking a bit green
himself. "And it's not so early for the child. She was due in the next few weeks
anyway."
They sat exchanging uneasy glances as her cries echoed through the house.
Servants drifted in and out, listening nervously. Even the hounds refused to be
put out and lay whining at their feet. At last Seregil fetched his harp and
played to soothe them all.
A final straining groan rang out just before noon, followed by a thin wail
and exclamations of delight from the women. Micum pushed himself up as old Arna
emerged beaming from the birthing room.
"Oh, Master Micum!" she cried, wiping her hands on a towel. "He's the
sweetest little redheaded mite you ever saw. And strong, too, for an early babe.
He's sucking already, nice as you please. It was Dalna's own mercy she brought
him out early or she'd have had a worse time of it than she did, poor lamb. Give
us a moment to clear up the bed and then come in, all of you. She wants you
all!"
"A son!" shouted Micum, wrapping his arms around his friends" shoulders. "A
son, by the Four!"
"He's all wrinkled up and red and covered in muck!" squealed Illia, bounding
out to hug him.
"And he has red hair like you and Beka. Come and see. Mother's so happy!"
Kari lay tucked up in the wide bed with a tiny bundle laid to her breast. To
Alec, the least experienced in such matters, she looked dreadful, as if she'd
been ill, but the serene smile she greeted him with belied it.
Micum kissed her, then took the child in his arms.
"He's as lovely and strong as all the others," he whispered huskily, gazing
down into the wizened little face beneath the damp shock of coppery hair. "Come
on, you two, and greet my son."
"I'm so glad you were there this morning, Alec." Kari reached for his hand
and laughed. "You should have seen your face, though."
Seregil peered over Micum's shoulder for a better look at the child, and Alec
saw a smile of genuine pleasure soften his friend's drawn features for the first
time in months.
"What will you call him?" Seregil asked. "We'd thought to call him Bornil,
after my father,"
Kari replied, "but looking at him now, it doesn't seem to fit. What do you
think, Micum?"
He laughed and shook his head. "I'm too fuddled to think."
Kari looked up at Seregil, who was still smiling down at the child. "Then
perhaps you can help us again, as you did with Illia. As the oldest and dearest
friend of this family, help us name our son."
Micum handed the baby to Seregil. Gazing at him thoughtfully, he said,
"Gherin, I think, if you'd have another Aurenfaie name in the family."
"Gherin?" Kari tried the sound of it. "I like that. What does it mean?"
"Early blessing," was Seregil replied quietly.
Thank the Maker, Alec thought gratefully, watching Seregil with the child.
That's the most peaceful I've seen him since we got back. Maybe his spirit is
finally healing after all.
A warm night breeze sighed in through the open window.
The sound of it seemed to echo Seregil's inner loneliness.
It was ironic, really. The first time he and Alec had stayed in this room,
Alec had kept stiffly to his side of the bed; these past weeks Seregil often
woke to find him lying close beside him, as he was now. Alec had thrown one arm
across Seregil's chest, his breath soft at his bare shoulder.
Why can't I feel anything?
Lying there in the moonlight, Seregil stroked Alec's fair hair and summoned
the memory of the kiss they'd shared that day in Plenimar.
Even that had been sucked pale and flat.
Since Nysander's death all his emotions seemed to have fled to a distance,
felt dimly, as if through a pane of thick glass.
It was too late now, too late for anything. He was too empty. Covering Alec's
hand with his own, he watched the stars wheel toward morning, thinking of
Gherin.
His mind had ranged far these last weeks, turning round and round on itself
as he struggled to reach some decision that would bring him peace. Looking down
into the face of Micum's tiny new son today, he'd suddenly felt that the sign
he'd been waiting for had been given at last. With this last thread of the past
tied off, he could go.
An hour before dawn, he slipped out of bed and pulled on his clothes.
Throwing his old pack over one shoulder, he took a small bundle from its hiding
place behind the wardrobe, then closed the shutters to keep out the morning
light. Alec mustn't waken until he was well away from here.
Moving with his natural silence past the sleeping servants in the hall, he
went to Micum's chamber. A night lamp still burned there, and by its light he
watched his old companion sleeping so peacefully in his wife's arms. Micum was
home.
Seregil laid a rolled parchment at the foot of the bed, along with small
packets of jewels for each of the children. On his way out, he paused beside
Gherin's cradle.
The infant lay on his back, arms flung over his head. Seregil ran a fingertip
lightly over one tiny fist, marveling at the fragility of the silken skin.
Gherin stirred, sucking contentedly in his sleep.
In twenty years you'll be the young man your father was when I met him,
Seregil told him silently, touching the infant's fuzzy red hair.
What would it be like to see you then?
Seregil pushed the thought away and stole hurriedly away. He wouldn't be
back, not in twenty years, not ever. He owed them all that much.
Leaving Alec was even harder than he'd feared.
Against all better judgment, he went back to the open doorway of the room
they'd shared so chastely, knowing full well that if Alec so much as opened an
eye, he was lost.
Alec lay curled on his side now, blond hair tumbled over the pillow. A dull
ache gripped Sergil's heart; all the nights he'd been lulled by that soft
breathing, all the things that might have been, seemed to come together at once
in a tight knot at the base of his throat.
If only Nysander hadn't—
Seregil placed a thick roll of parchments on the doorsill: the letter, too
painful to be anything but brief; documents making Alec of Ivywell heir to all
Lord Seregil's holdings in the city; the lists of names and secrets and money
holders. It was all there, carefully set down. When Alec sorted them out he'd
discover that even minus what Seregil had deeded to Micum and a few others, he
would be one of the wealthiest young men in Skala.
Good-bye, tali.
The stars were dying as he led Cynril down the road below Watermead. When he
judged he was far enough away to ride without waking the house, he swung up into
the saddle and nudged the horse into a brisk trot. It was a little easier now,
riding along at first light, the air already warm and redolent with the scent of
the wild roses blooming in the meadow.
A flight of wild geese rose from the river. He could almost see Alec on the
bank below, trying to coax Patch out of the stream with a scrap of leather.
The boy had been all innocence and good intentions then; why had he worked so
hard to sully that?
He rode up onto the bridge and reined Cynril to a halt. Mist was rising from
the stream's surface, coiling up to turn gold with the first touch of dawn. It
looked, Seregil thought, like some magical pathway leading up to unexplored
realms. Pulling the poniard from his boot, he tested the well-honed edge, then
looked up the shining stream again.
It was as good a direction as any.
Something brushed Alec's hand and he opened one eye, expecting to see Illia
or one of the dogs.
Nysander was standing beside the bed.
"Go after him," Nysander whispered, his voice faint as if it came from a
great distance.
Alec lurched up, his heart pounding. Nysander had disappeared, if he'd-ever
been there at all.
Worse yet, Seregil was gone. Alec slid his hand over the sheets where Seregil
had slept. They were cold.
Whether dream or vision, the urgency of Nysander's warning grew stronger by
the second.
Just like that other night, riding back to the inn.
Scrambling out of bed, Alec hauled on breeches and a shirt and headed for the
door. His bare foot struck something as he crossed the threshold. It was a thick
roll of parchments bound with plain string.
Untying it, he quickly scanned the familiar flowing script covering the first
page.
"Alec tali,
Remember me kindly and try—"
"Damn!" Pages scattered in all directions as Alec ran for the stables.
Too much to hope that Seregil had gone on foot; Cynril was missing from her
stall. Mounted bareback on Patch, Alec searched for and quickly found Cynril's
tracks, the distinctive print of the slightly splayed right hind hoof plain in
the dust of the road outside the courtyard gate.
Kicking Patch into a gallop, he rode down the hill and across the bridge,
reining in where the two roads met to see which way Seregil had gone.
But there was no sign of Cynril here. Cursing softly to himself, Alec
dismounted for a closer search, then walked back onto the bridge and scanned the
hillside, looking for telltale lines across the dewy meadow. Nothing there
either, or on the hill trail. He was about to ride back for Micum when a patch
of freshly turned gravel on the stream bank above the bridge caught his eye.
You went up the streambed, you sneaky bastard!
Alec thought with grudging admiration. The bridge was too low to ride under
and there were no other signs downstream. Upstream lay Beka's otter pond, and
the ill-fated pass that Alec had crossed to Warnik's valley.
And beyond that, the whole damn world.
Mounting again, Alec rode up the trail. The streambed grew steeper and he
soon found where Seregil had been forced to come up onto the trail.
Judging by the tracks, he'd traveled quickly from here.
Heedless of the branches that whipped at his face and shoulders, Alec kicked
Patch into a gallop again.
When the clearing around the pond came into view ahead, he was both relieved
and surprised to see Seregil there, sitting motionless in the saddle as if
admiring the morning.
Alec's first reaction to Seregil's letter had been only the desperate desire
to find him. He realized now that there had also been a generous leaven of anger
mixed in.
When Seregil raised his head now, looking back at him with an expression of
startled wariness, the anger took over. It was the look you'd give an enemy.
Or a stranger.
"Wait—" Seregil called, but Alec ignored him. Digging his heels into Patch's
sides, he charged Seregil, bearing down on him before he could turn his own
horse out of the way. The animals collided and Cynril reared, throwing Seregil
off into the water. Alec leapt down and waded in after him.
Grabbing Seregil by the front of his tunic, he hauled him to his knees and
shook the crumpled note in his face.
"What's this supposed to be?" he yelled. "'All I have in Rhiminee is yours
now"? What is this?""
Seregil struggled to his feet and pulled free, not meeting Alec's eye. "After
everything that's happened—" He paused, took a deep breath. "After all that, I
decided it would be better for everyone if I just went away."
"You decided. You decided?" Furious, Alec grabbed Seregil with both hands and
shook him. The wrinkled parchment drifted across the pool, hung a moment against
a stone, and spun away unnoticed down the stream. "I followed you over half the
earth to Rhiminee for no other reason than you asked me to! I saved your damn
life twice before we even got there and how many times since? I stood with you
against Mardus and all the rest. But now, after moping around all summer, you
decide you're better off without me?"
Color flared in Seregil's gaunt face. "I never meant for you to take it that
way. Bilairy's Balls, Alec, you saw what happened at the Cockerel. That was my
fault. Mine! And it was only thanks to Ashnazai's twisted vanity that you didn't
end up dead with them. Micum's crippled for life, in case you didn't notice,
lucky to be alive. Do you have any idea how many times I've almost gotten him
killed before? And Nysander—Let's not forget what I did for him!"
"Nysander sent me!"
Seregil went ashen. "What did you say?"
"Nysander sent me after you," Alec told him. "I don't know if it was a dream
or. a ghost or what, but he woke me and told me to go after you. Illior's Hands,
Seregil, when are you going to forgive yourself for just doing what he asked you
to?"
He paused as another thought dawned on him. "When are you going to forgive
Nysander?"
Seregil glared at him wordlessly, then pushedAlec's hands away. Sloshing up
to the bank, he sank down on a log overlooking the pond. Alec followed, settling
on a rock beside him.
Seregil hung his head and let out an unsteady breath. After a moment he said,
"He knew. He should have told me."
"You would have tried to stop him."
"Damn right I would have!" Seregil flared, clenching his fists on his knees.
Angry tears spilled down his cheeks, the first Alec had ever seen him shed.
"If you'd done that, we'd have failed," Alec said, moving to sit beside him
on the log. "Everything Nysander worked for would've been lost. The Helm would
have taken him over and he'd have ended up as their Vatharna"
For an instant Alec thought he felt the wizard's touch against his hand
again. "I think he must be grateful to you."
Seregil covered his face, giving way at last to silent sobs. Alec wrapped an
arm around him, holding him tightly. "You were the only one who loved him enough
not to hesitate when the time came. He knew that. In the end you saved him the
only way you could. Why can't you let yourself see that?"
"All these weeks—" Seregil shrugged helplessly.
"You're right, right about everything. But why can't I feel it? I can't feel
anything anymore! I'm floundering around in a black fog. I look at the rest of
you, see you healing, going on. I want to, but I can't!"
"Just like I couldn't make myself jump that time at Kassarie's keep?"
Seregil let out a small, choked laugh. "I guess so."
"So let me help you, the way you helped me then," Alec persisted.
Seregil wiped his nose on his sodden sleeve. "As I recall, I threw you off
the roof into a gorge."
"Fine, if that's what it takes to show you that I'm not about to let you
slink away like some old dog going off to die."
The guilty look that crossed his friend's face told Alec his worst fears had
been correct. "I'm not letting you go," he said again, gripping Seregil's sleeve
for emphasis.
Seregil shook his head miserably. "I can't stay here."
"All right, but you're not leaving me."
"I thought you'd be happy at Watermead."
"I love everyone there like my own family, but not—" Alec broke off, feeling
his face go warm.
"But not what?" Seregil turned and brushed a clump of damp hair back from
Alec's face, studying his expression.
Alec forced himself to meet Seregil's questioning gaze squarely. "Not as much
as I love you."
Seregil looked at him for a moment, grey eyes still sad. "I love you, too.
More than I've loved anyone for a long time. But you're so young and—" He spread
his hands and sighed. "It just didn't seem right."
"I'm not that young," Alec countered wryly, thinking of all they'd been
through together. "But I am half faie, so I've got a lot of years ahead of me.
Besides, I've only just begun to understand Aurenfaie, I still don't know one
style of snail fork from another, and I can't jigger a Triple Crow lock. Who
else is going to teach me all that?"
Seregil looked out over the pond again. "'Father, brother, friend, and
lover.""
"What?" A coldness passed over Alec's heart; Mardus had spoken almost those
same words when asking about his relationship to Seregil.
"Something else the Oracle of Illior said that night I asked about you,"
Seregil answered, watching an otter slip into the water. "I kept thinking I had
it all sorted out and settled, but I don't. I've been the first three to you and
swore that was enough, but if you stay on with me—"
"I know." Catching Seregil off guard, Alec leaned forward and pressed his
lips to Seregil's with the same mix of awkwardness and determination he'd felt
the first time.
But when he felt Seregil's arms slip around him in a welcoming embrace, the
confusion that had haunted him through the winter cleared like fog before a
changing wind.
Take what the gods send, Seregil had told him more than once.
He would, and thankfully.
Seregil drew back a little, and there was something like wonder in his grey
eyes as he touched Alec's cheek. "Anything we do, tali, we do with honor. Before
all else, I'm your friend and always will be, even if you take a hundred wives
or lovers later on."
Alec started to protest but Seregil smiled and pressed a finger across his
lips. "As long as I have a place in your heart, I'm satisfied."
"You always have to have the last word, don't you?" Alec growled, then kissed
him again. The feel of Seregil's lean body pressing against his own suddenly
felt as natural and easy as one stream flowing into another. His last remaining
worry was that he had very little idea about how to proceed from here.
The sound of a horse coming up the trail at a gallop forestalled the issue
for the moment.
"I can guess who that is," Seregil groaned, standing up.
Micum burst into the clearing. "So here you are!" he exclaimed, glowering
down at Seregil. "By the Flame, the whole house is in an uproar because of you!"
He pulled a rolled letter from his coat and held it up angrily. "You gave us
a scare with this, you idiot. I don't know whether to kiss you or kick your ass
from here to Cirna!"
For the first time in months, Seregil summoned a cocky, crooked grin. "Don't
strain your leg on my account. Alec already done both."
Micum took a second look at the two of them and returned this'. grin
knowingly. "Well, it's about time!"
Two days later Micum and his family gathered in the courtyard to wish Alec
and Seregil a proper farewell.
"Will you be heading to Mycena from here?" asked Micum as they made a final
check of their horses and gear.
"I imagine the queen will have some use for a couple of trustworthy spies."
Seregil shrugged noncommittally. "Winter's not that far off. Idrilain is
supposed to be somewhere above Keston now. There won't be much to do once the
snow flies. Maybe in the spring."
Kari shifted Gherin in her arms and embraced him tightly, then Alec. Blinking
back tears, she whispered, "Take care, both of you."
Micum rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder, looking at him as if he didn't
expect to see him again. "By the Flame, it's hard not riding out with you. I
wish you'd take my sword."
Seregil shook his head. "That blade belongs with you. I'll find another if I
ever feel the need of one again. In the meantime, Alec'll keep an eye on me."
"You see that you do, Alec, or you'll answer to us," Micum said with gruff
affection, exchanging a quick look with Kari. They'd both noted the new light in
Seregil's eyes whenever he looked at Alec, and how that same warmth was
returned.
After all their farewells had been said, Seregil and Alec swung up on their
Aurenfaie mounts and rode out the gate.
"What if the Queen doesn't want us for spies in the spring?" Alec asked as
they cantered down toward the bridge.
Seregil shrugged again. "Well then, we're still some of the best damned
thieves I know of. Never any shortage of work there."
Kicking their mounts into a gallop, they raced down the hill side by side,
and swung north to the open road beyond.
About the Author
Lynn Flewelling grew up in Presque Isle, Maine. Since receiving a
degree in English from the University of Maine in 1981, she has studied
veterinary medicine at Oregon State, classical Greek at Georgetown University,
and worked as a personnel generalist, landlord, teacher, necropsy technician,
advertising copywriter, and freelance journalist, more or less in that order,
She currently lives in western New York with her husband, two sons, and other
assorted mammals.
Stalking Darkness
(V0.5—Formatted and cleaned up. NOT checked against the book. Some parts
remain garbled.)
"What is it? You look like you've just seen your own ghost."
A desperate ache lanced through Seregil as he looked down into Alec's dark
blue eyes.
Damn you, Nysander!
"I can't tell you, tali, because I'd only have to lie," he said, suddenly
dejected. "I'm going to do something now, and you're going to watch and say
nothing."
Taking the final page of the manuscript, he twisted it into a tight squib and
tossed it into the fire.
"But what about Nysander?" Alec asked. "What will you tell him?"
"Nothing, and neither will you."
"But—"
"We're not betraying him. You have my oath. I believe he already knows what
we just learned, but he can't know that you know. Not until I tell you it's
safe. Understand?"
"More secrets," Alec said, looking solemn and unhappy.
"Yes, more secrets. I need your trust in this, Alec. Can you give it?"

STALKING DARKNESS
LYNN FLEWELLING
A Bantam Spectra Book/March 1997
All rights reserved.
SPECTRA and the portrayal of a boxed's' are trademarks of
Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
Copyright ) 1997 by Lynn Flewelling
Cover art copyright ) 1997 by Gary Ruddell
Maps by Virginia Norey
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: Bantam Books.
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware
that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to
the publisher and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment
for this "stripped book."
ISBN 0-553-57543-0
Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada
Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of
Random House, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam Books" and the
portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in
other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540 Broadway, New York, New
York 10036.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
For my sons Matthew and Timothy, who laugh at the same goofy things I do.
You're the best, guys.
Special thanks to Doug Flewelling, Darby Crouss,
Laurie Mailman, Julie Friez,
Scott Burgess, Anne Groell and the Bantam folks,
and my agent Lucienne Diver for all their support, input, and wonderfully
ruthless editing.
The lean ship smashed through foaming crests, pounding southwest out of
Keston toward Skala. By night she ran without lanterns; her crew, accomplished
smugglers all, sailed with eyes lifted skyward to the stars. By day they kept
constant watch, though there was little chance of meeting another ship. Only a
Plenimaran captain would chance deep water sailing so late in the year and this
winter there would be none so far north. Not with a war brewing.
Ice sheathed the rigging. The sailors pulled the halyards with bleeding
hands, chipped frozen water from the drinking casks, and huddled together off
watch, muttering among themselves about the two gentlemen passengers and the
grim pack of cutthroats who'd come aboard.
The second day out, the captain came above slobbering drunk. Gold was no use
to dead men, he howled over the wind; foul weather was coming, they were turning
back. Smiling, the dark nobleman led him below and that was the last anyone
heard of the matter. The captain fell overboard sometime that same night. That
was the story, at least; the fact was that he was nowhere to be found the next
morning and their course remained unchanged.
The mate took over, tying himself to the wheel as they wallowed along. Blown
off course, they missed Gull Island and sailed on without respite through
lashing sleet and exhaustion. On the fourth day two more men were swept away as
waves nearly swamped the ship. A mast snapped, dragging its sail like a broken
wing. Miraculously, the ship held true while the remaining crew fought to cut
away the tangled ropes.
Clinging among the frozen shrouds that night, the men muttered again, but
cautiously. Their finely dressed passengers had brought ill fortune with them;
no one wanted to chance attracting their eye. The ship plunged on as if helpful
demons guided her keel.
Two days out from Cirna the gale lifted. A pale sun burst through the
shredding clouds to guide the battered vessel westward, but foul luck still
dogged her. A sudden fever struck among the crew. One by one, they sickened,
throats swelling shut as black sores blossomed in the warmth of groins and
armpits. Those untouched by the illness watched in horror as the gentlemen's
men-at-arms laughingly tossed the bloated corpses overboard.
None of the passengers sickened, but by the time they sighted the towering
cliffs of the Skalan Isthmus the last of the crew could feel the weakness
overtaking them.
They reached the mouth of Cirna harbor in darkness, guided by the leaping
signal fires that flanked the mouth of the Canal. Still sagging at the wheel,
the dying mate watched the passengers" men strike the sails, lower anchor, and
heave the longboat over the side.
One of the gentlemen, the dark-haired one with a long scar under his eye,
suddenly appeared at the mate's elbow. He was smiling, always smiling, though it
never seemed to reach his eyes. Half-delirious, the mate staggered back, fearful
of being devoured by those soulless eyes.
"You did well," the dark man said, reaching to tuck a heavy purse into the
mate's pocket. "We'll see ourselves ashore."
"There's some of us still alive, sir!" croaked the mate, looking anxiously
toward the signal fires, the warm lights of the town glimmering so close across
the water. "We've got to get ashore for a healer!"
"A healer, you say?" The dark gentleman raised an eyebrow in concern. "Why,
my companion here is a healer of sorts. You had only to ask."
Looking past him, the mate saw the other man, the weedy one with the face
like a rat's, at work chalking something on the deck. As he straightened from
his task the mate recognized the warning symbol for plague.
"Come, Vargul Ashnazai, isn't there something you can do for this poor
fellow?" the dark man called.
The mate shuddered as the other man glided toward him.
Not once during the voyage had he heard this man speak. When he did now the
words were unintelligible and seemed to collect in the mate's throat like
stones. Gagging, he slumped to the deck. The one called Ashnazai laid a cold
hand against his cheek and the world collapsed in a blaze of black light.
Mardus stepped clear of the bile spreading out from the dead sailor's mouth.
"What about the others?"
The necromancer smiled, his fingers still tingling pleasantly from the mate's
death. "Dying as we speak, my lord."
"Very good. Are the men ready?"
"Yes, my lord."
Mardus took a last satisfied look around the deck of the ravaged vessel, then
climbed down to the waiting boat.
Cloaked in Ashnazai's magic, they passed the quay and custom house without
challenge. Climbing a steep, icy street, they found rooms ready for them at the
Half Moon tavern.
Mardus and Ashnazai were just settling down over a hot supper in Mardus'
chamber when someone scratched softly at the door.
Captain Tildus entered with a grizzled man named Urvay, Mardus' chief spy in
Rhiminee for the past three years. The man was invaluable, both for his skill
and his discretion. Tonight he was dressed as a gentleman merchant and looked
distinguished in velvet and silver.
Urvay saluted him gravely. "I'm glad to see you safe, my lord. It's nasty
sailing this time of year."
Mardus dismissed Tildus, then waved the spy to a nearby chair. "What have you
to report, my friend?"
"Bad news and good, my lord. Lady Kassarie is dead."
"That Leran woman?" asked Ashnazai.
"Yes. The Queen's spies attacked her keep about a week ago. She died in the
battle. Vicegerent Barien committed suicide over the matter and there are rumors
that the Princess Royal was implicated somehow, though the Queen's taken no
action against her. The rest of the faction has gone to ground or fled."
"A pity. They might have proved useful. But what about our business?"
"That's the good news, my lord. I have new people in place with several
influential nobles."
"Which ones?"
"Lord General Zymanis, for one-word is he's about to be commissioned with
overseeing the lower city fortifications. And one of my men just got himself
betrothed to Lady Kora's second daughter and has the run of the villa. But of
particular interest, my lord—" Urvay paused, leaning forward a little.
"I'm in the process of establishing a contact inside the Oreska House."
Mardus raised an eyebrow. "Excellent! But how? We haven't been able to get a
spy in there for years."
"Not a spy, my lord, but a turncoat. His name is Pelion i Eirsin. He's an
actor, and highly thought of at the moment."
"What's he got to do with the Oreska?" demanded Vargul Ashnazai.
"He's got a lover there," Urvay explained quickly, "a young sorceress said to
be the mistress of one or two of the older wizards as well. Her name's Ylinestra,
and she's got a bit of a reputation around the city; a fiery little catamount
with an eye for handsome young men and powerful old ones. This man Pelion is
evidently part of her collection. Through him we may be able to get to her and
perhaps others. She's not a member of the Oreska herself, but she lives there
and has rooms of her own."
"I hardly think we need the services of some slut to get into the place," the
necromancer scoffed.
"Maybe not," Urvay interrupted, "but this slut numbers the wizard Nysander
among her lovers."
"Nysander i Azusthra?" Mardus nodded approvingly. "Urvay, you've outdone
yourself! But what have you told this actor of yours?"
"To him, I am Master Gorodin, a great admirer of his work. I also understand
how important patronage is to a young actor on the rise, and to a certain
playwright who's willing to create roles especially for him. In return, my new
friend Pelion passes on whatever bit of gossip he picks up around town. He likes
the deal, and knows better than to ask too many questions. As long as the gold
flows, he's ours."
"Well done, Urvay. Spare no expense with him. We must infiltrate the Oreska
before spring. You understand? It is imperative."
"I do, my lord. Shall I make arrangements for you in Rhiminee?"
"No. Nothing's to be arranged in advance. I'll contact you when I need you.
For now, keep an eye on Pelion and his sorceress."
Urvay rose and bowed. "I will, my lord. Farewell."
When he was gone Mardus returned to his interrupted meal, but Vargul Ashnazai
found his appetite had fled.
The Oreska, he thought bitterly, fingering the ivory vial that hung from a
chain around his thin neck. That's where they'd gone, the thieves who'd stolen
the Eye from under his very nose.
Mardus had nearly killed him that night in Wolde. Worse yet, he'd threatened
to banish him from their quest. If Mardus had entrusted him with the disks in
the first place, of course, it would never have happened, but that was a point
not worth arguing. Not if he cared to live longer than his next word.
His standing with Mardus had eroded steadily ever since.
Even with the power of the Eye itself to aid him, he'd been unable to
exercise sufficient power over the fugitives to stop them. The Aurenfaie had
proven infuriatingly resistant to his magicks and when he'd finally succumbed to
the dragorgos attack at the inn, the boy, that wretched boy, had outmaneuvered
them, spiriting his partner away before Mardus and his men could reach the
place.
Still holding the vial between his fingers, Vargul Ashnazai pictured the
precious blood-soaked slivers of wood inside, slivers he'd gouged from the floor
of the Mycenian inn where his dragorgos had overtaken them.
The talisman he'd made with their blood was a powerful guide, so powerful
that he'd almost caught them at Keston. But then they'd slipped on ahead by sea
and another's power was growing around them, occluding his own. He'd recognized
the resonance of the magic at once. Oreska magic.
And so Mardus and his men had tracked them by methods thoroughly mundane,
while he, a necromancer of the Sanctum, rode along like so much useless baggage.
Mardus had been sanguine. They already knew where the thieves were headed,
result once again of Mardus' cold-blooded methods rather than his own. One of
the river sailors captured after the destruction of the Darter—this, at least,
was Vargul's work—had screamed out with his last breath what they'd needed to
know.
To be sitting here now, no more than two days ride from the stronghold of his
enemies, was maddening.
So close! he thought, closing his fist around the vial.
Mardus saw, and guessed his thoughts. "Why not scry for them again?"
Vargul Ashnazai shifted uncomfortably. "It's been the same for weeks now."
Mardus glanced over at him, much the way any man might look at another who's
said something mildly surprising. But Mardus was not just any man.
As his gaze met Ashnazai's, the necromancer felt a stab of fear. It was not
madness he saw in his companion's eyes—never that—but something worse, an
obdurate purposefulness steeped with the shadow of their god. Mardus might not
have magic, but he had power.
He was touched, chosen.
Held in that remorseless gaze, Ashnazai felt the blood slow in his veins.
Clasping the vial more tightly, he placed his other hand over his eyes and
summoned the image of the thieves.
For a moment he felt the reassuring pulse of his own considerable power. The
inner blackness flowed through him to the vial and beyond, using the essence of
the blood to seek its source. Ever since the thieves had reached Rhiminee,
however, a veil had dropped over them.
Someone had placed a protective spell over them, and the resistance to his
magic was fierce and decisive.
This time was no different. The moment he focused his concentration on their
location, he was blinded by a searing vision of fire and huge, leathery wings.
The message was clear enough: These people are under the protection of the
Oreska. You cannot touch them.
Gasping, Ashnazai let go of the vial and pressed both hands to his face.
"No change?"
Ashnazai could tell without looking up that the bastard was smiling.
"Then Urvay's actor is truly a blessing placed in our path. If these two are
still under the protection of the Oreska wizards, where better to seek them?"
"I hope you're right, my lord. When I find them, I'll crush their beating
hearts in my hands!"
"Vengeance is a dangerous emotion."
Looking up, Vargul Ashnazai saw a familiar blankness pass across his
companion's face, the touch of the god.
"You should be grateful to them for leading us to the completion of our
quest," Mardus continued softly, staring into the depths of his cup. "This actor
and his sorceress are the seal on that. Patience is the key now. Be patient. Our
moment will come."
Sleet-laden winds lashed in off the winter sea, racketing through the dark
streets of Rhiminee like a huge, angry child. Loose shingles and roof tiles tore
free and clattered down into streets and gardens. Bare trees swayed and clashed
their branches like dead bones in the night. In the harbor below the citadel,
vessels were tossed from their moorings to founder against the mores. In upper
and lower city alike, even the brothel keepers put up their shutters early.
Two cloak-wrapped figures slipped from a shadowed courtyard in Blue Fish
Street and hurried east to Sheaf Street.
"I can't believe we're out in this to deliver a damn love token," Alec
groused, shaking his wet, fair hair from his eyes.
"We've got the Rhiminee Cat's reputation to maintain," Seregil said,
shivering beside the boy. The slender Aurenfaie envied Alec his northern-bred
tolerance for the cold. "Lord Phyrien paid for the thing to be on the girl's
pillow tonight. I've been wanting a peek into her father's dispatch box anyway.
Word is he's maneuvering for the Vicegerent's post."
Seregil grinned to himself. For years, the mysterious thief known only as the
Rhiminee Cat had assisted the city's upper class in their endless intrigues; all
it took to summon him was gold and a discreet note left in the right hands. None
had ever guessed that this faceless spy was virtually one of their own, or that
the arrangement was as much to his benefit as theirs.
The wind buffeted at them from all sides as they pressed on toward the Noble
Quarter. Reaching the fountain colonnade at the head of Golden Helm Street,
Seregil ducked inside for a moment's shelter.
"Are you sure you're up to this? How's your back?" he asked as he stooped to
drink from the spring at the center of the colonnade.
Less than two weeks had passed since Alec had pulled Princess Klia from the
fiery room below the traitor Kassarie's keep. Valerius' malodorous drysian
salves had worked their healing magic, but as they'd dressed tonight he'd
noticed that the skin across the boy's shoulders was still tender-looking in
places. Not that Alec would admit it and risk being sent back, of course.
"I'm fine," Alec insisted as expected. "It's your teeth I hear chattering,
not mine." Shaking out his sodden cloak, he tossed one long end over his
shoulder. "Come on. We'll be warmer if we keep moving."
Seregil looked with sudden longing toward the entrance to the Street of
Lights across the way. "We'd be a hell of a lot warmer in there!"
It had been months since he'd visited any of the elegant pleasure houses. The
thought of so many warm, perfumed beds and warm, perfumed bodies made him feel
even colder.
Invisible in the shadows, Alec made no reply, but Seregil heard him shifting
uncomfortably. The boy's solitary upbringing had left him uncommonly backward in
certain matters, even for a Dalnan. Such reticence was unfathomable to Seregil,
though out of respect for their friendship he did his best not to tease the boy.
The fashionable avenues of the Noble Quarter were deserted, the great houses
and villas dark behind their high garden walls. Ornate street lanterns creaked
unlit on their hooks, extinguished by the storm.
The house in Three Maidens Street was a large, sprawling villa surrounded by
a high courtyard wall. Alec kept an eye out for bluecoat patrols while Seregil
tossed the grapple up and secured the rope. The roar of the storm covered any
noise as they scrambled up and over. Leaving the rope in a clump of bushes,
Seregil led the way through the gardens.
After a brief search, Alec found a small shuttered window set high in a wall
at the back of the house. Climbing onto a water butt, he pried back the shutter
with a knife and peered inside.
"Smells like a storeroom," he whispered.
"Go on then. I'm right behind you." Alec went in feet first and disappeared
soundlessly inside.
Climbing up, Seregil sniffed the earthy scents of potatoes and apples.
Squeezing through, he lowered himself in onto what felt like sacks of onions.
He reached out, finding Alec's shoulder in the darkness, and together they
felt their way to a door.
Seregil eased the latch up and peeked out into the cavernous kitchen beyond.
The coals in the hearth gave off enough of a glow to make out two servants
asleep on pallets there.
Deep snores sounded from the shadows of a nearby corner. To the right was an
open archway. Tapping Alec on the arm, Seregil headed for it on tiptoe.
The arch let onto a servant's passage.
Climbing a narrow staircase, they crept down a succession of hallways in
search of Lord Decian's private study. Not finding it, they moved up to the next
floor and chanced shielded lightstones.
By this dim light they saw that these nobles left their shoes outside their
bedroom door for a servant to collect and clean. Seregil nudged Alec and flipped
him the sign for "lucky." The lord of the house had only one daughter; it was a
simple matter to find the footgear appropriate for a maiden of fifteen.
A pair of dainty boots stood before a door at the far end of the corridor. A
stout pair of shoes next to them warned that the young woman did not sleep
alone.
Seregil stifled a grin. Alec was in for more than he'd bargained for, in more
ways than one.
Alec lightly fingered the latch, found the door unbarred. The delivery was
his task tonight, more training in the ways of the Cat. This sort of job, though
hardly as significant as their recent work for Nysander, required a high level
of finesse and he was anxious to prove himself.
Sliding his lightstone back into his tool roll, Alec took a deep breath and
lifted the latch.
A night lamp burned on a stand beside the bed. The hangings were open and
inside he could see a young girl with heavy braids asleep on the side nearest
the door, her face turned to the light. Beside her, a larger form, her mother or
nurse perhaps, stirred restlessly beneath the thick comforter.
Creeping to the side of the bed, he took out the token, a tiny scroll pushed
through a man's golden ring.
Left to his own devices, he'd simply have put it on the lamp stand and been
done with it, but Lord Phyrien had been very exact in his instructions. The ring
must be left on his sweetheart's pillow.
Bending over the girl, Alec placed the ring as specified. Too late he heard
Seregil's sharp intake of breath. The heavy ring immediately rolled down the
curve of the pillow and struck the girl on the cheek just beside her mouth.
Startled brown eyes flashed wide. Fortunately for Alec, she saw the ring
before she could cry out. Her look of fear changed instantly to one of mute joy
as she mistook his muffled form for that of her lover.
"Oh, Phyrien, you are bold!" she breathed, stealing a quick look at the
sleeping woman beside her. Grasping Alec's hand, she drew it gently but
insistently under the bedclothes.
Alec blushed furiously in the depths of his hood.
Like most Skalans, she slept nude. He didn't dare resist, however. Any kind
of struggle would not only seem suspicious, but probably shake the bed enough to
awaken its other occupant.
"You're so cold!" she said with a hushed giggle, pulling his hand still
lower. "Kiss me, my brave lover. I'll warm you."
Holding his hood in place with his free hand, Alec pressed his lips hastily
to hers, then motioned warningly at the other woman. Pouting prettily, the girl
released him and tucked the token away beneath her pillow.
With his heart hammering in his ears, Alec extinguished the lamp and hurried
back out into the corridor.
"Seregil, I—" he began in a whisper, but his companion cut the apology short,
grabbing him by the arm and hustling him off the way they'd come.
Damn, damn, damn!
Alec berated himself. A simple little delivery job and I cock it up.
Braced every moment for an outcry, they hurried down to the kitchen and
weaseled back out the storeroom window. Outside, Seregil was still implacably
silent. Climbing over the wall, he set off at a run. Alec followed, grimly
convinced he was in disgrace.
Three streets from the villa, Seregil suddenly stopped and hauled him into an
alleyway, then bent over, hands on knees, as if to catch his breath.
Braced for a scathing lecture, it took Alec a moment to realize that Seregil
was laughing.
"Bilairy's Balls, Alec!" he burst out. "I'd give a hundred sesters to have
seen the look on your face when that ring rolled away. And when she tried to
pull you into bed—" He sagged against the alley wall, shaking with laughter.
"But it was so stupid," Alec groaned. "I should have seen it would slide
off."
Seregil wiped his eyes, grinning. "Maybe so, but these things happen. I don't
know how many times I've pulled a blunder like that. It's the recovery that
counts and you did just fine. "Learn and live," I always say."
Relieved, Alec fell into step beside him as they headed for home. Before
they'd gone another block, however, Seregil let out another snort of laughter.
Leaning heavily on Alec's shoulder, he moaned in a lilting falsetto, "Kiss me,
my brave lover. I'll warm you up!" then staggered away, cackling into the wind.
Perhaps, Alec thought in exasperation, he hadn't heard the last of the matter
after all.
Back at Cockerel Inn, they nicked a late snack from Thryis' pantry and crept
up the hidden staircase on the second floor. Warding glyphs glowed briefly as
Seregil whispered the passwords.
At the top of the stairs, they crossed the chilly attic storeroom to their
own door.
The cluttered sitting room was still warm from the evening fire. Tossing his
wet cloak over the mermaid statue by the door, Alec shucked off soaked clothing
as he crossed to his bed in the corner by the hearth.
Seregil watched with a faint smile. The boy's considerable and, to his way of
thinking, unnatural degree of modesty had lessened somewhat over the months of
their acquaintance, but Alec still turned away as he stripped off his leather
breeches and pulled on a long shirt. At sixteen he was very like Seregil in
build: slim, lean, and fair-skinned. Seregil quickly busied himself sorting a
pile of correspondence on the table as the boy turned around again.
"We don't have anything in particular planned for tomorrow, do we?" Alec
asked, taking a bite from one of the meat pies they'd purloined.
"Nothing pressing," said Seregil, yawning hugely as he went to his chamber
door. "And I don't intend to be up before noon. Good night."
With the aid of a lightstone, he navigated past the stacks of books and boxes
and other oddments to the broad, velvet-hung bed that dominated the back of the
tiny room. Peeling off his wet garments, he slipped between the immaculate
sheets with a groan of contentment. Ruetha appeared from some cluttered corner
and leapt up with a throaty trill, demanding to be let under the covers.
It had been a busy year overall, he thought, stroking the cat absently.
Especially the past few months. Just realizing how long it had been since he'd
visited the Street of Lights underscored the general disruption of his life.
Oh well. Winter's here. There'll always be work enough to keep us occupied,
but plenty of leisure too for the pleasures of the town. All in all, I'd say we
earned a bit of a respite.
Imagining quiet, snowy months stretching out before them, Seregil drifted
contentedly off to sleep—only to lurch up sometime soon after from a nightmare
of plummeting into darkness, Alec's terrified cry ringing in his ears as they
fell down, down, past the walls of Kassarie's keep into the gorge below.
Opening his eyes with a gasp, Seregil was at once relieved and annoyed to
find himself slumped naked in one of Nysander's sitting-room armchairs.
There was no need to ask how he'd gotten there; the green nausea of a
translocation spell cramped his belly. Pushing his long, dark hair back from his
face, he scowled wretchedly up at the wizard.
"Forgive me for bringing you here so abruptly, dear boy," said Nysander,
handing him a robe and a steaming mug of tea.
"I assume there's a good reason for this," Seregil muttered, knowing very
well that there must be for Nysander to subject him to magic so soon after the
shape-changing incident.
"But of course. I tried to bring you earlier, but you two were busy burgling
someone." Pouring himself a mug of tea, Nysander settled into his usual chair on
the other side of the hearth. "I just looked in for a moment. were you
successful?"
"More or less."
Nysander appeared in no hurry to elucidate, but it was obvious he'd been
working on something. His short grey beard was smudged with ink near his mouth,
and he wore one of the threadbare old robes he favored for his frequent
all-night work sessions. Surrounded by the room's magnificent collection of
books and oddities, he looked like some down-at-the-heels scholar who'd wandered
in by mistake.
"Alec is looking better, I noticed," Nysander remarked.
"He's healing. It's his hair I'm concerned about. I've got to get him
presentable in time for the Festival of Sakor."
"Be thankful he came away no worse off then he did. From what Klia and Micum
told me, he's lucky to be alive at all. Ah, and before I forget, I have
something for the two of you from Klia and the Queen." He handed Seregil two
velvet pouches. "A public acknowledgment is impossible, of course, but they
wished to express their gratitude nonetheless. That green one there is yours."
Seregil had received such rewards before. Expecting another trinket or bit of
jewelry, he opened the little bag. What he found inside reduced him to stunned
silence.
It was a ring, a very familiar ring. The great, smooth ruby glowed like wine
in its heavy setting of Aurenfaie silver when he held it closer to the fire.
"Illior's Light, Nysander, this is one of the rings I took from Corruth i
Glamien's corpse," he gasped, finding his voice at last.
Nysander leaned forward and clasped his hand. "He was your kinsman and
Idrilain's, Seregil. She thought it a fitting reward for solving the mystery of
his disappearance. She hopes you shall wear it with honor among your own people
one day."
"Give her my thanks." Seregil tucked it reverently away in its bag. "But you
didn't magick me out of bed just for this?"
Nysander sat back with a chuckle. "No. I have a task which may be of interest
to you. However, there are conditions to be set forth before I explain. Agree to
abide by them or I shall send you back now with all memory of this meeting
expunged."
Seregil blinked in surprise. "It must be some job. Why didn't you bring
Alec?"
"I shall come to that presently. I can say nothing until you agree to the
conditions."
"Fine. I agree. What are they?"
"First, you may ask no question unbidden."
"Why not?"
"Starting now."
"Oh, all right. What else?"
"Second, you must work in absolute secrecy. No one is to know of this,
particularly not Alec or Micum. Will you give me your oath on it?"
Seregil regarded him in silence for a moment; keeping secrets from Alec was
no easy business these days. Still, how could something so shrouded in mystery
fail to be interesting? "All right. You have my word."
"Your oath," Nysander insisted somberly.
Shaking his head, Seregil held out his left hand, palm up, before him. "Asurit
betweenuth dos Aura Elustri kamar sosui Seregil i Korit Solun Meringil Bokthersa.
And by my honor as a Watcher, I swear also. Is that sufficient?"
"You know I would never impose such conditions on you without good reason,"
the wizard chided.
"Still, it seems to be happening quite a lot these days," Seregil retorted
sourly. "Now can I ask questions?"
"I will answer what I can."
"Why is it so crucial for Alec and Micum not to know?"
"Because if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell you,
I shall have to kill all of you."
Though spoken calmly, Nysander's words jolted him like a kick in the throat;
he'd known the wizard too long to mistake his absolute sincerity. For an
instant, Seregil felt as if he were looking into the face of a stranger. Then
suddenly, everything fell into place as neatly as a three-tumbler lock. He sat
forward, slopping hot tea over his knees in his excitement.
"It's to do with this, isn't it?" he exclaimed, tapping his chest. There,
beneath Nysander's obscuring magic, lay the branded imprint of the wooden disk
he'd stolen from Duke Mardus at Wolde—the same strange, deceptively crude disk
that had nearly taken his life. "You went white the night I told you about
showing a drawing of it to the Illioran Oracle. I thought you were going to fall
over."
"Perhaps now you understand my distress," Nysander replied grimly.
They'd never spoken of that conversation, but the dread Seregil had felt then
returned now in full force. "Bilairy's Balls! You'd have done it, too."
Nysander sighed heavily. "I would never have forgiven myself, I assure you,
but I would also have been furious with you for forcing me into such an act. Do
you recall what I said to you then?"
"To pray I never found out what that disk really is?"
"Precisely. And to undertake this task, you must continue to accept that as
my answer on the subject."
Seregil slouched glumly in his chair. "Same old answer, eh? And what if I say
no to all this? That if you don't tell me the whole story I want no part of it?"
Nysander shrugged. "Then as I said before, I shall remove all memory of this
conversation from your mind and send you home. There are certainly others who
could aid me."
"Like Thero, I suppose?" Seregil snapped before he could stop himself.
"Oh, for—"
"Does he know the Great Secret?" The old jealousy gripped Seregil's heart.
The last thing he wanted to hear was that the young assistant wizard knew more
of this than he did.
"He knows less than you," Nysander replied, exasperated. "Now do you want the
task or not?"
Seregil let out a frustrated growl. "All right, then. What's this all about?"
Nysander pulled a sheet of vellum from his sleeve and handed it to him. "To
begin with, tell me what you make of this."
"Looks like a page from a book." The vellum was darkened with age or weather.
Seregil rubbed a corner of it between his fingers and sniffed it, then examined
the writing itself. "It's old, four or five centuries at least. Poorly kept at
first, though later carefully preserved. And the vellum is human or Aurenfaie
skin, rather than kid." He paused again, examining the stitching holes on the
left edge. "These are still intact, showing that it was carefully removed from a
book, rather than torn. It was already damaged by dampness, though. Judging by
the color I'd say the page was steeped in poison after that, but that's
obviously been neutralized or we wouldn't be handling it."
"Quite so."
Oblivious now to everything but the task at hand, Seregil tugged absently at
a strand of hair.
"Let's see. The writing is Asuit Old Style and it's written in that language,
which originated with the hill people north of Plenimar. From that we can infer
that our author was either from that region or a scholar of languages."
"As you are, dear boy. I assume you can read it?"
"Hmm—yes. Looks like the ravings of a mad prophet. Very poetic, though.
"Watch with me, beloved, as demons strip the fruit from the vine." Then
something about horses—and "The golden flame is married with darkness. The
Beautiful One steps forth to caress the bones of the house " No, that's not
right. It's "the bones of the world.""
Moving to the table, he pulled a lamp closer.
"Yes. I thought it was just a few errors with the accent marks, but it isn't.
There's a cipher here."
Nysander passed him a wax writing tablet and a stylus. "Care to try it?"
Scanning back through the document, Seregil found sixteen words with
misplaced accents. Listing only the wrongly accented letters, he came up with
twenty-nine.
Frowning, he tapped the stylus against his chin, "This is a bitch of a
thing."
"More difficult than you know," said Nysander. "It took my master Arkoniel
and myself over a year to discover the key. Mind you, we were working on other
things at the time."
Seregil tossed aside the stylus with a groan.
"You mean to tell me you've broken this already?"
"Oh, yes. That is not the task, you see. But I knew that you would prefer to
work with the original and draw your own conclusions."
"So how does it work?"
Joining him at the table, Nysander turned the wax tablet over and began to
write rapidly. "To begin with, the accented letters come out to nonsense, a fact
it took a discouragingly long time to discover. The key is a combination of
syllabification and case. As you know, Old Asuit is an inflected language with
five cases. However, only three-the nominative, dative, and genitive—are used
for the cipher. For instance, look at the words making up the phrase 'of the
world." "
Seregil nodded thoughtfully, muttering to himself, "Yes, it was that
misplaced accent that threw me. It should be over the second vowel of the last
syllable, not the first."
"Correct. As 'world' is in the genitive case and the misplaced accent appears
in the antepenultimate syllable, you use the last letter of that word. If it
occurs in the same case but on the second, or penultimate, syllable, then you
use the first."
Seregil looked up and grinned. "I didn't know you were such an accomplished
grammarian."
Nysander allowed himself a pleased wink. "One learns a thing or two over the
centuries. It is truly an exquisite system, and one fairly secure from
inadvertent detection. In the nominative case, an erroneous accent over the
antepenult indicates that you take the last letter of the word immediately
following the one wrongly accented, and so forth. In the dative case only the
accents over the penult have any significance. The upshot of it all is that you
come out with just fifteen letters. Properly arranged—keep your eyes on the
writing now—properly arranged they spell out 'argucth chthon hrig.""
"Sounds like you're getting ready to spit—" Seregil began, but the words died
in his throat as the writing on the page swirled into motion. After a few
seconds it disappeared entirely, leaving in its place a circular design
resembling an eight-pointed star that covered most of the page.
"A magical palimpsest!" he gasped.
"Precisely. But look more closely."
Tilting the vellum closer to the lamp, Seregil let out a low whistle; the
entire design was made up of the finest calligraphic writing. "Our mad prophet
must have written this with a hummingbird's quill."
"Can you read it?"
"I don't know. It's so cramped. The script is Konic, used by the court
scribes in the time of the early Hierophants, but the language is different, as
if the writer wanted to approximate the sounds of one language with the alphabet
of another. Yes, that's exactly what he was doing, the clever old bastard. So,
attacking it phonetically—"
Muttering under his breath, Seregil slowly worked his way through the tangled
writing. Half an hour later he looked up with a triumphant grin. "Pure Dravnian!
Nysander, it's got to be Dravnian."
"Dravnian?"
"The Dravnians are a tribal people scattered through the glacial valleys of
the Ashek Range, north of Aurenen. I haven't been up there since I was a boy,
but I've studied the language. Great ones for sagas and legends, those Dravnians.
They have no writing themselves, but this captures the sound of it. This fellow
was certainly a student of obscure tongues. Once you untangle all this mess,
it's just the same few words written over and over again to form the design.
Written in blood, too, by the way and probably his own if he was loony enough to
create something like this."
"Perhaps," Nysander broke in. "But can you make out what it says?"
Seregil glanced up at him, then let out a crow of triumph. "Ah ha! So that's
what this is all about. You can't read it!"
Nysander affected a pained look. "I would remind you of the oaths you have
given—"
Seregil held up a hand, grinning smugly. "I know, I know. But after all your
restrictions and secrecy, I think I've earned the right to gloat a little. All
it says is, "Stone within ice within stone within ice. Horns of crystal beneath
horns of stone." Or vice versa. There's no way of telling which is meant to be
the first line. Why he would go to such extremes to hide anything as obscure as
this is beyond me, though."
"Not at all, not at all!" Nysander clapped Seregil on the shoulder, then
began pacing excitedly. "The palimpsest begins in Asuit Old Style, an archaic
language of Plenimar, which predates the Hierophantic settlements. The seemingly
meaningless hidden phrase "argucth chthon hrig" operates as the key word to the
hidden writing. This, in turn, is composed in the alphabet of the Hierophantic
court, based at that period on the island of Kouros, yet in the language of an
obscure tribe of the southern mountains across the Osiat Sea near Aurenen. I had
reason to suspect as much but you, dear boy, have provided the final clues. What
an amazing document!"
Seregil, meanwhile, had been doing some further pondering of his own. "The
Dravnian tribes keep to the highest valleys of the Ashek Range, building their
villages along the edges of the ice fields. "Stone within ice within stone
within ice." And the horns of stone part reminds me of a story the mountain
traders used to tell, something about a place up there where demons dance across
the snow to drink the blood of the living. It was called the Horned Valley."
Nysander halted in front of Seregil, grinning broadly. "You have a mind like
a magpie's nest, dear boy! I never know what odd bit of treasure will tumble
from it next."
"If the Homed Valley really exists, then all this"—Seregil tapped the stained
vellum—"it's not just some convoluted riddle. It's a map."
"And perhaps not the only one," said Nysander. "According to recent
intelligence from Plenimar, several expeditionary forces have been dispatched
west toward the Strait of Bal. We could not imagine what they were up to, but
the Ashek peninsula lies in that direction."
"At this time of year?" Seregil shook his head.
Crossing the Bal meant making for the southern rim of the Osiat Sea, a place
of dangerous shoals and forbidding coastlines in the best of weather. In the
winter it would be worse than treacherous. "So whatever this "stone within ice"
thing is, the Plenimarans want it pretty badly. And I take it you don't mean for
them to get it?"
"I hope that you will assist me in forestalling that event."
"Well, it would certainly help to know what I'm looking for. If it wouldn't
mean revealing too many sacred mysteries, that is."
"It is rumored to be a crown or circlet of some sort," Nysander told him.
"More importantly, it possesses powers similar to those of the coin, which you
have already experienced."
Seregil grimaced at the memory. "Then I'll be certain not to wear it this
time. But if your information is correct, haven't the Plenimarans stolen a march
on us?"
"Perhaps not. The fact that they sent several expeditions suggests that they
do not know the object's precise location. We, on the other hand, may have just
determined that. And I am able to transport you there in a much swifter
fashion."
Seregil blanched. "Oh, no! You can't—translocation from here to the Asheks?
Nysander, I'll be puking for hours."
"I am sorry, but this matter is too important to chance anything else. Which
brings us to the matter of Alec. Will he be difficult about being left behind?"
Seregil raked a hand through his hair. "I'll manage something. When do I
leave?"
"By midday if you can manage it."
"I think so. What will I need, besides the obvious?"
"How would you fancy playing an Aurenfaie wizard?"
Seregil gave him a wry look. "Sounds fun, so long as we aren't relying on my
magical abilities."
"Oh my, no," Nysander said with a laugh. "I shall provide you with items
necessary to give credence to the role, and those for the task itself." He
paused and clasped the younger man by the shoulders. "I knew you would not fail
me, Seregil."
Seregil raised an eyebrow wryly at the wizard. "Bet now you're glad you
didn't kill me, eh? What's the hour?"
"Nearly sunup, I should think. Regrettably, I must send you back the same way
you came."
"Twice in one night? Just be sure you drop me handy to a basin!"
Alec woke to the sound of sleet lashing across the roof. Ruetha had burrowed
under the covers sometime in the night. He stroked the thick white ruff under
her chin and the cat broke into a loud purr.
"What are you doing here?" he asked sleepily.
Sitting up, he saw Seregil's battered old pack sitting ready outside the
bedroom door.
Seregil's sword belt was draped over it, the newly mended quillon shining in
the milky morning light.
Alec eyed the tidy pile with rising suspicion; Seregil had obviously been up
for some time, making preparations for a journey. And he hadn't bothered to wake
him.
"Seregil?" Poking his head around his friend's door,
Alec found the normally cluttered little room utterly impassable.
"Morning!" Seregil called cheerily from somewhere beyond an overturned chest.
"What's going on? Have you been up all night?"
"Not all night." Seregil waded free of the mess with an armload of heavy
sheepskin clothing and dumped it by the pack. "I found this," he said, handing
Alec a dusty sack containing half a dozen complex locks. Some were still
attached to splintered fragments of wood.
"Thought you might like to have a go at these, since you've mastered most of
the others on the workbench. Be careful, though. Some of them bite."
Alec set the bag aside without comment and leaned against the door frame.
Seregil was dressed for traveling and still hadn't told him to start packing.
"What's going on?" he asked, watching as Seregil wrestled a pair of long
snowshoes out of a wardrobe. "Where are you going to find snow in this weather?"
"Give me a minute, will you?" said Seregil, checking the rawhide webbing.
"I've got a few more things to find, then I'll explain what I can."
Alec let out a sigh and went to the window over the workbench. The panes
rattled as a fresh gust of wind buffeted the inn. Outside he could see Thryis'
son Diomis hurrying across the back court. Curtains of icy rain rippled past,
obscuring all but the closest buildings. Behind him, he could hear Seregil still
rummaging about.
Fighting down his rising impatience, he pulled on a pair of breeches and set
about lighting the fire.
The coals had died in the night. He heaped tinder and kindling on the ashes
and shook out a firechip from the jar by the hearth. Flames leapt up and he
stared into them, trying to marshal his racing thoughts.
"You know, from the back your head looks like a disheveled hedgehog," Seregil
remarked, emerging at last. Ruffling Alec's ragged hair, he dropped into his
favorite chair by the fire.
Alec was not amused. "You're going off alone, aren't you?"
"Just for a few days."
There was a guardedness in Seregil's tone that Alec didn't like. "On a job,
you mean?"
"I can't say, actually."
Alec studied his friend's face. On closer inspection, he noticed that Seregil
looked rather pale. "Is this because of last night? You said—"
"No, of course not. This is something I can't speak of to anyone."
"Why not?" the boy demanded, stubborn curiosity mingling with disappointment.
Seregil spread his hands apologetically. "It's nothing to do with you,
believe me. And don't bother pressing."
"This is something for Nysander, isn't it?"
Seregil regarded him impassively. "I need your word you won't track me when I
go."
Alec considered further objections, then nodded glumly. "When will you be
back?"
"In a few days, I hope. You'll have to do that papers job for Baron Orante,
and anything else coming in that looks like a one man job. There's Mourning
Night to think about, too, if I'm not back in time."
"Not back in time?" Alec sputtered. "That's only a week away, and you're
holding a party at Wheel Street that night!"
"We are holding a party," Seregil corrected.
"Don't worry. Runcer sees to all the arrangements, and Micum and his family
will be here by then, too. You'll just have to play host. Remember Lady Kylith,
the woman you danced with our first night there?"
"We're sitting with her at the Mourning Night ceremony."
"Right. She'll see to your etiquette."
"People are bound to ask about you, though."
"As far as anyone knows, Lord Seregil is still away recovering from the shock
of his arrest. Tell anyone who asks that I was delayed. Cheer up, Alec. Chances
are I'll be back in plenty of time."
"This secret job of yours—is it dangerous?"
Seregil shrugged. "What do we do that isn't? The truth is, I won't know much
myself until I'm in the middle of it."
"When are you leaving?"
"As soon as I've had something to eat. Get dressed now and we'll have our
breakfast downstairs."
Alec smelled freshly baked bread as they crossed the lading room to the
kitchen.
The breakfast uproar was over. A scullery boy was scrubbing down the scarred
worktables while Cilia bathed Luthas in a pan. Old Thryis sat peeling turnips by
the hearth, a shawl draped over her shoulders against the damp.
"Well, there you are at last," the old woman greeted them, though she seldom
saw Seregil before noon. "There's tea on the hob and new current buns under that
cloth there. Cilia made them fresh this morning."
"And how's this lad today?" Seregil smiled, holding a forefinger out to the
baby. Luthas immediately grabbed it and pulled it into his mouth.
"Oh, he's feisty," replied Cilia, looking rather dark under the eyes. "He's
got a tooth coming and it wakes us all night."
Alec shook his head. One minute Seregil was speaking of mysterious journeys,
the next here he was playing uncle to the baby like he hadn't a care in the
world.
Not that his affection for Luthas wasn't genuine.
He'd told Alec how Cilia had offered him the honor of fathering her child
when she'd made up her mind to avoid conscription. Seregil had politely
declined. While his interest in women seemed marginal at best, Alec suspected
the real reason for Seregil's reticence was that it would have cost him his
friendship with her grandmother. Thryis had been a sergeant in the Queen's
Archers in her youth and despaired that neither her son nor granddaughter had
followed a military career before settling down.
Cilia had never revealed who the child's father was, but the man must have
been dark. She was fair, while her son's eyes and hair were as brown as a
mink's.
Going to the hearth, Alec leaned down next to Thryis and reached for the
teapot warming by the fire.
"You're looking down in the mouth today," Thryis observed shrewdly. "Going
off without you, is he?"
"He told you?"
The old woman gave a derisive snort "He didn't have to," she scoffed, deftly
quartering a turnip and pitching it into a kettle beside her. "There he is in
his old rambling boots, chipper as a sparrow. And you here with the long face
and still in your shirtsleeves? Don't take no wizard to figure that one."
Alec shrugged. Thryis had run the Cockerel since Seregil secretly bought it
twenty years before. She—together with her family and Rhiri, the mute ostler—were
among the select few who knew anything of Seregil's double life.
"Now, don't go fretting yourself over it," she whispered. "Master Seregil
thinks the world of you, and no mistake. There's none he speaks so well of 'cept
Micum Cavish, and those two have been friends for years and years. Besides,
it'll give you and me a chance to talk shooting again, eh? There's still a trick
or two I haven't shared and that fine black bow of yours shouldn't be gathering
dust."
"I guess not." Alec gave her a quick peck on the cheek and went to sit across
from Seregil at the breakfast table.
Studying his friend's face as Seregil joked with Cilia over breakfast, Alec
felt certain he saw small lines of tension around his eyes. Whatever this secret
job was, there was more to it than he was letting on.
There was no use asking further about it, though.
Upstairs in their room again, Seregil finished with his scant collection of
gear and clapped a battered hat on his head.
"Well, take care of yourself," he said, "especially on that job for the
baron. I don't want to find you in the Red Tower when I return."
"You won't. Want help getting all that down?"
"No need." Shouldering his pack, Seregil clasped hands with him. "Luck in the
shadows, Alec."
And with the flash of a crooked grin, he was gone.
Alec listened to his footsteps fading rapidly away. "And to you."
Seregil paused in the kitchen on his way out.
Pulling up a stool beside Thryis, he slipped her a flat, sealed packet.
"I'm leaving this with you. I've got to go off for a few days. If I don't
come back, this should take care of Alec and the rest of you."
Frowning, Thryis fingered the wax seals. "A will, is it? No wonder young Alec
was looking so dark."
"He doesn't know, and I'd like to keep it that way."
"You've never left a will before."
"It's just in case I meet with an accident or something." Shouldering his
pack, he headed for the door.
"Or something!" The old woman's mouth pursed into a skeptical line. "Mind
that a 'something' don't jump up and bite you on the arse when you're not
looking."
"I'll do my best to avoid it."
Outside, the sleet had turned to rain. Pulling the hood of his patched cloak
up over his hat, he dashed across the slick cobbles to the stable where Rhiri
had his new mare saddled and ready. Tossing the fellow a gold half sester,
Seregil swung up into the saddle and set off at a gallop for the Oreska House.
It was midafternoon before Nysander completed his preparations for the
translocation. "Are you ready, Seregil?" he asked at last, looking up from the
elaborate pattern chalked on the casting-room floor.
"As ready as I'm likely to be," Seregil said, sweating in his heavy
sheepskins. He carried his pack, snowshoes, and pole to the center of the design
and piled them on the floor.
"These should establish your reputation as a wizard."
Nysander held up a half-dozen short willow rods covered with painted symbols.
"When broken, each will produce a different gift for your hosts. But you must be
certain to keep this long one with the red band separate from the rest. It
contains the translocation spell that will carry you back."
Seregil tucked the red wand carefully away in a belt pouch, then slipped the
others inside the white Aurenfaie tunic he wore beneath his heavy coat.
"These are the most crucial items, however," the wizard continued, stepping
to a nearby table. On it sat a wooden box two feet square and fitted with a
leather shoulder strap and a strong catch. It was lined with sheets of silver
engraved with magical symbols and contained two flasks wrapped in fleece.
Seregil frowned. "What if this crown or whatever it is that I'm after is too
big to fit inside?"
"Do the best you can and return to me at once."
Seregil lifted the flasks. They were heavy, and the wax seals covering the
corks were also inscribed with more symbols. "And these?"
"Pour the contents around the crown and inscribe the signs of the Four within
the circle. It should weaken any wards protecting it."
A nasty twinge of uncertainty shot through Seregil's innards. "Should?"
Nysander wrapped the flasks carefully in the fleece and shut them in the box.
"You survived the magic of the disk with no assistance. This should be
sufficient."
"Ah, I see." Seregil glanced doubtfully at his old friend. "You believe the
same inner flaw that kept me from becoming a wizard protects me from magic as
well."
"It seems to be the case. I only wish it did not cause you such distress with
translocations. Considering the distance involved in—"
"Let's just get it over with." Seregil gathered his gear in his arms as best
he could. "The Asheks are far enough west that I should have a few hours of
light left, but I'd rather not press my luck."
"Very well. I have done a sighting and should be able to send you to within a
few miles of a village. It will be safest to drop you on the glacier itself,
rather than risk hitting the rocky outcroppings along the edge."
"That's very comforting. Thanks so much!"
Ignoring the sarcasm, Nysander placed his fingertips together in front of his
face and began the incantation.
After a moment a particle of darkness winked into being within the cage of
his fingers. Spreading his hands slowly, he coaxed it larger until it spun like
a dark mirror in front of them.
Seregil stared into it for a moment, already queasy.
Tightening his grip on his snowshoes, he took a resolute breath, closed his
eyes, and stepped forward.
The whirling blast of vertigo was worse than he'd feared. For most people, a
translocation was as simple as stepping from one room to another. To Seregil,
however, it was like being sucked down in some vile black whirlpool.
It seemed to go on endlessly this time, buffeting him with darkness. Then,
just as suddenly, he tumbled out into frigid brightness and sank up to his hips
in drifted snow.
Stuck fast, he bent forward and spewed out his scant breakfast. When the
spasms were over, he struggled free and crawled away from the steaming mess.
Collapsing on his back, one arm over his eyes, he lay very still as the world
spun sickeningly. The wind sighed over him, blowing fine ice crystals across his
lips. Rolling onto his belly, he retched again, then cleaned his mouth with a
handful of snow.
At least Nysander can aim, he thought, looking around.
The glacier hung in a steep valley. At its head a few miles away a pair of
high peaks towered above the rest, marking a narrow pass and giving the valley
the name Seregil had remembered.
Slanting sunlight reflected back from the white expanse before him, bright
enough to make his eyes water.
Frozen waves, wind scoured out of the hardpack, thrust glistening up through
the fresh powder to cast shadows as blue as the sky overhead.
Seregil's heavy outer garments kept the worst of the biting cold at bay, but
his nose and cheekbones were already numb. His breath condensed with every
exhalation, freezing in a glistening rime on the fur edging of his cap.
Untangling the snowshoes, he checked them for damage and quickly strapped them
to his boots.
His thick gloves were cumbersome, but it would be courting frostbite to
remove them even briefly.
With firmer footing on the snow now, he set out for a nearby rise to get his
bearings. Anyone backtracking his trail would discover that he had more or less
fallen from the sky, but that couldn't be helped; he was, after all, supposed to
be a wizard.
From the top of the rise he spotted thin columns of smoke marking a village a
few miles away on the western slope. Farther down the valley he could just make
out a second village. The first was closer to the "horns of stone," so he headed
west.
He was still nauseated and the thin, frigid air cut at his lungs, making dark
spots dance in front of his eyes. Setting himself a steady pace, he marched
along until he struck a trail leading toward the village. He was within half a
mile of it when a pack of children and dogs appeared, running out to meet him.
Seregil paused, leaning on his snow pole with a grin of relief. Dravnian
hospitality was legendary among those few who knew of it. Members of a
neighboring village were greeted as family, which they often were. Anyone from
beyond the limiting peaks was regarded as a veritable marvel. Goats were
probably already being slaughtered in his honor.
"May I visit your village?" he asked in Dravnian as the children crowded
excitedly around him.
Laughing, they shouldered his baggage and led him in.
Dogs barked, goats and sheep bleated from their stone enclosures. Villagers
hailed him like some returning hero.
The little settlement was made up of a collection of squat towers, round
two-story affairs of piled stone topped with conical felt roofs. The main doors
were set high in the upper level and reached by a ramp when the snow was not
piled up to the doorsill.
At the center of the village stood a tower broader than the rest. A sizable
crowd had already collected outside, hoping for a look at the newcomer.
The Dravnians were a short, broad-set people with black, almond-shaped eyes
and coarse, dark hair that they wore slicked back with liberal applications of
oil. A few among them, however, had lighter hair or finer features that spoke of
mixed blood—probably Aurenfaie, since few others found their way to these remote
valleys.
The headman of the village was one of these half castes. As he stepped
forward, smiling broadly, Seregil saw that the man's eyes were the same clear
grey as his own.
"Welcome in this place, Fair One," the fellow greeted him in a patois of
broken Aurenfaie and Dravnian. "I am Retak, son of Wigris and Akra, leader of
this village."
"I am Meringil, son of Solun and Nycanthi," Seregil answered in Dravnian.
Grinning, Retak lapsed back into his native tongue. "We've not seen one of
your tribe since my grandfather's time. You honor our village with your
presence. Will you feast with us in the council house?"
"You honor me," Seregil replied, bowing as gracefully as his thick clothing
allowed.
The upper level of the council house, used as a communal storehouse, was
floored over except for the large central smoke hole. Rough stone steps led down
to the lower chamber, where a huge fire of dried dung chips had already been
kindled in a fire pit surrounded by thick carpets and bolsters. Women bustled
excitedly around a cooking fire across the room, preparing the ritual meal.
Seated at the central fire with Retak and the other principal men of the
village, Seregil closed his eyes for a moment as his belly did a slow, uneasy
roll. The smell of slaughtered animals, mingled with the more immediate aromas
of unwashed bodies and greased hair, was overpowering after the clear mountain
wind.
Every available inch seemed to have been filled by curious villagers. People
talked excitedly on all sides, leaning across their neighbors to shout to
someone else or calling down from above for details. Children ringed the smoke
hole overhead, chattering like swallows. The women labored with noisy cheer,
wielding cleavers and clattering skewers and bowls.
Seregil felt all eyes on him as he stripped off his heavy outer garments.
Posing as a traveler from his native Aurenen, Seregil had worn traditional garb.
His long white tunic and close-fitting trousers were comfortable and unadorned
except for thin bands of patterned weaving at the hem and neck. To complete the
effect, he pulled a loosely woven head cloth from inside his tunic and wrapped
its many folds about his head with practiced skill, leaving long ends hanging
down his back. A small, ornate dagger hung at his belt, but he laid it and his
sword aside as a gesture of good faith.
An excited hum went around the room as he reclined at last and accepted a
bowl of llaki from Seune, the headman's wife. He sipped the fermented milk as
sparingly as good manners allowed.
His duty as guest was to repay hospitality with news and he slowly related
such events from the south as might be of interest to them. Most of it was
thirty years out-of-date, mixed in with snippets he'd picked up since his
banishment, but it was all fresh to the Dravnians and very well received.
When he'd finished, the traditional storytelling commenced. Great lovers of
tales that they were, the Dravnians had no system of writing. Each family had
its own special stock of stories that only members of that clan could relate.
Other tales were general property and were demanded of those who told them best.
The children frequently chimed in with familiar lines and the women were called
upon for the proper songs.
Seregil joined in with tales of his own and was quickly hailed as a biruk,
"one who remembers many stories"—highest praise in such company. By the time a
gigantic platter of roasted goat was set before them, he'd begun to enjoy
himself.
Roasted shanks, haunches, and ribs lay arranged on the communal platter in a
great ring surrounding cooked entrails, sweetbreads, and boiled goat's heads.
When the guest and council had eaten their fill, the platter would pass on to
the secondary guests, and after them the children and dogs. Seregil was served
by Seune and her eldest daughters.
The two girls knelt on his right, holding out slabs of dark bread that their
mother loaded with choice bits-of meat. Nodding polite acceptance, Seregil
picked up a chunk of meat and bit into it, signaling his hosts to begin.
The tough, savory meat settled the last of his queasiness and when the meal
was over he made a great show of presenting gifts to Retak and his village.
Motioning for the others to clear a space in front of him, Seregil secretly
palmed one of Nysander's painted wands from his sleeve and snapped it between
his fingers while making elaborate motions with his other hand. Several bushels
of fruit appeared instantly out of thin air before his delighted audience.
The baskets passed from hand to hand and up to the crowd overhead as the
people exclaimed over their good fortune.
Smiling, Seregil drew another wand, which produced a casket of silver coins.
The Dravnians had no use for currency, but were pleased by the glint of the
metal and the fineness of the designs. Subsequent conjurings brought bolts of
bright silk and linen, bronze needles, coils of rope, and bundles of healing
herbs.
"You are a Fair One of great magic and generosity, Meringil, son of Solun and
Nycanthi, and a true biruk," Retak proclaimed, clapping Seregil on the shoulder.
"You shall be known as a member of my clan from this day. What can we offer you
in return?"
"It is I who am honored by your excellent hospitality. My gifts are given in
thanks for that alone," Seregil replied graciously. "Though there is a matter in
which you may be able to assist me."
Retak motioned for the others to pay attention. "What has brought you so far
to our valley?"
"I've come seeking a place of magic spoken of in certain legends. Do you know
of such a place?"
The reaction was instantaneous. The elders exchanged hesitant looks. A woman
dropped a spit with a clatter. Overhead the children left off exclaiming over
their new treasures and leaned farther over the hole to listen.
Retak motioned with his staff and an ancient little man wearing a coat
decorated with sheep's teeth shuffled forward. In the firelight he looked like
an ancient tortoise, with a tortoise's leathery, slow-blinking gaze. Kneeling
slowly before Seregil, he held up a bone rattle in one tremulous hand and shook
it in a wide circle before speaking.
"I am Timan, son of Rogher and Borune," he said at last. "And I tell you that
there is such a place in this valley. It has been the duty of my clan to watch
over it since the time of the spirit's anger. It is a spirit home, deep in the
rock beneath the ice. How it came there no man knows. Sometimes the door is
there and sometimes it is not there, according to the will of the spirit."
"And this spirit has grown angry?" asked Seregil.
Timan nodded, shaking the rattle softly in time to his words. It was more of
a chant than a story, as if he'd told it many times before, and in exactly the
same words.
"The spirit made a chamber for men to dream in. Some had visions. Some did
not. Some heard the voice of the spirit. Some did not. All was with the will of
the spirit. When the spirit chose to speak, those who heard were called blessed,
bringers of great luck to their clan. But many generations ago the spirit grew
angry. Men came out maddened. They did deeds of terrible evil. Others never
returned and no trace of them could be found. A man of my clan was the first to
go mad, and so it has been the burden of my clan to guard the spirit home since
that time."
He stopped, wrinkled mouth moving in silence, as if he'd run out of sound.
"Why do you seek this place?" Retak asked.
Seregil stared into the fire for a moment, quickly weaving this new
information into a usable form. "I'd heard legends of this place and was curious
to see if they were true. You know that the Aurenfaie are people of great magic.
I have shown you my powers already. If you will show me this sacred place, I
will speak with your spirit and find out why it's so angry. Perhaps I can even
make peace between you again."
A murmur of approbation went around the cramped room.
Old Timan laid his rattle at Seregil's feet. "This would be a great feat
indeed. Many times I have tried to placate the spirit, but it has been silent to
me, or driven me out with terrible noises in my head. Truly, can you do such a
thing?"
"I'll try," Seregil replied. "Bring me to the spirit chamber at first light
tomorrow and I'll speak to your spirit."
The murmur changed to a roar of acclaim.
"The guest sleeps in my house this night," Retak announced proudly, ending
the feast. "The mountain nights are harsh for your kind, Meringil, but I have
many healthy daughters to keep you warm,"
Overhead the children shouted with delight as the older girls craned for a
better look at Seregil.
Seregil blinked, "What?"
"To get a round belly from a guest gives a young woman highest status," Retak
explained happily. "New blood brings new strength to the whole village. My own
grandfather was a light-eyed Aurenfaie, as you can see. But not a great magician
like you! Tomorrow Ekrid's clan will offer you hospitality, and then Ilgrid's
and—"
"Ah, of course." Seregil looked around to find mothers reckoning on their
fingers their place in the hierarchy. Clearly, there were a few Dravnian
guesting customs he'd forgotten about.
Ah, Nysander, he groaned inwardly, scanning the gaggle of moonfaced maidens,
reading clearly enough the greedy gleam behind their modest smiles.
This had damn well better be the right valley!
Alec lowered himself from the villa window, then whirled in alarm as a
menacing snarl erupted on his right.
There'd been no sign of a dog when he'd first climbed into the baron's
courtyard, but there was sure as hell one here now.
What he could see of it in the darkness was big, and the rising timbre of the
growl was enough for him to imagine the beast closing in on him, ears laid back,
teeth bared.
It was too far to the courtyard wall for a dash.
Racking his memory for the thief's charm Seregil had shown him, he raised his
left fist with index and little fingers extended. Snapping his hand to point the
little finger down, he whispered hoarsely, "Peace, friend hound."
The growling ceased at once. A cold nose thrust briefly against his palm,
then he heard the dog padding away.
It had never occurred to Alec to ask how long the charm lasted. Taking no
chances, he ran for the wall.
The top was studded with shards of glass and crockery set in mortar; in his
haste he reached carelessly and caught his left hand on one of the jagged
points, gashing the palm just above the wrist. Pain bloomed through his hand as
a warm trickle oozed down into his sleeve. Hissing softly through his teeth, he
slid down the far side and headed for home.
His route took him by Wheel Street and he halted a moment at the corner,
holding his torn hand to his chest. It would only take a moment to duck in
there, and he knew where Seregil kept bandages and salve.
The growing throb in his hand decided him.
Letting himself in the front door, he took out a lightstone and whistled
softly to the dogs, making himself known. A huge white shape materialized at
once. Marag padded out of the dining room, wagging a greeting as he sniffed
Alec's hand. His mate would be on patrol in the back court. Accompanied by the
hound, Alec walked through the main hall to the kitchen.
The supplies he wanted were on the shelf by the door. Carrying the rags and
salve pot to the table, he set his lightstone by them and examined the gash. It
was jagged and sore, but no major veins or tendons seemed to be damaged.
"This must be my unlucky hand," he muttered, rubbing his thumb over the shiny
circular scar left by the cursed disk they'd stolen from Mardus. They'd both
been branded by it—Seregil on his chest where it had hung, Alec on the palm of
the hand as he'd grasped it during their strange struggle at the inn.
He bandaged the cut as best he could one-handed, then sat back and stroked
Marag's silky head. The thought of his own bedchamber upstairs was tempting. He
was cold and tired and suddenly Blue Fish Street felt very far away. But there
was always the complication of appearances; Sir Alec and Lord Seregil were not
expected to arrive for several more days and it wouldn't do to have untoward
signs of occupation just yet. With a resigned shrug, he cleared away the
evidence of his visit and set out through the dark, cold streets.
Within a block of Wheel Street he suddenly sensed pursuit. Stealth was
difficult on the icy streets and whoever it was shadowing him was making a poor
job of concealing their movements. When Alec slowed, they came on. When he
increased his pace, so did they. It was too dark to see, but he could hear more
than one set of feet. One of them had metal nails on the soles of his boots; in
the silence of the street,
Alec could hear them scraping against the cobbles.
There was no question of returning to the house. Even if he could get back
past his pursuers, he couldn't risk leading them there.
Ahead of him, a street lantern burned at the intersection of Wheel and Golden
Helm. A right turn would bring him to the Astellus Circle and the Street of the
Sheaf. There was a chance of meeting with a Watch patrol there, but he couldn't
be sure of it.
A left turn would take him toward Silvermoon Street and the Palace.
At the corner he deliberately walked through the pool of light and swung
sharply to the right. Once beyond it, he doubled quickly back toward Silvermoon.
His pursuers caught the trick, however, and charged after him, their boots
clattering on the paving stones.
There was nothing left to do but run. Abandoning any attempt at stealth, Alec
pelted down the center of the broad boulevard, cloak flapping behind him.
High garden walls presented an unbroken barrier on either side, blocking any
hope of a quick sidestep. The pounding of his feet and those closing in on him
echoed like the clatter of dice in a cup.
Tearing his cloak strings loose, Alec let it fall away behind him. A muffled
curse rang out an instant later, and the sound of a man falling heavily.
Dashing past another lantern, he glanced back to see two swordsmen no more
than twenty yards behind.
He veered into Silvermoon Street and saw the wall surrounding the palace
grounds looming on his right. As he'd hoped, a watch fire burned in front of one
of the postern gates. He dashed toward it, lungs bursting.
A cluster of soldiers of the Queen's household guard were huddled around the
brazier. At the sound of Alec's approach, four came forward with swords drawn.
"Help!" gasped Alec, praying they didn't attack as he barreled into their
midst.
"Footpads—chasing me—back there!"
Two men grasped him by the arms, half restraining, half supporting him as he
skidded to a halt. "Steady, lad, steady there," said one.
"I don't see anyone," growled another, squinting in the direction Alec had
come from.
Looking back, Alec saw no sign of his mysterious pursuers.
The first guard ran a skeptical eye over his fine coat and sword. "Footpads,
eh? More likely an angry father or husband at this hour. Been up to mischief,
have you?"
"No, I swear," Alec panted. "I was coming home late from—from the Street of
Lights." The others grinned knowingly at this.
"Just the place to get your purse lightened, one way or another, eh?" the
sergeant said with a chuckle.
"Well, it's late for the nighthawks to be out, but they might just lurk
around for you. Do you live close by?"
"No, across the city."
"Then you're welcome to tuck up here with us round the fire 'til first
light."
Alec gratefully accepted a spare cloak and a pull from a water skin, then
settled down with his back to the wall, the warmth of the brazier warming his
face and chest. All in all, he thought as he drifted off to sleep, it wasn't the
worst end to an evening's work.
Retak's daughters bid Seregil a fond farewell as he and their father left to
meet Timan at the council house early the next day. To Seregil's dismay, a crowd
had already assembled and many had snowshoes and poles ready.
Timan presented a young man to him. "I am too old now to make the journey,
but my grandson, Turik, knows the place. He can guide you. These others will
carry your belongings and gift offerings for the spirit."
Seregil groaned inwardly. The last thing he wanted was an audience, but he
was too close to his objective to risk offending the village. Amid much cheering
and singing, they set off for the head of the valley.
The Dravnian youths marched along easily, talking and joking as they broke
trail. Seregil toiled doggedly in their wake, struggling with the thin air and a
poor night's rest. One of Retak's sons fell in beside him, grinning.
"You had good hospitality last night, eh? My sisters were happy this
morning."
"Oh, yes," wheezed Seregil. "I was kept very warm, thank you."
They reached the base of the pass just after midday.
Turik called a halt while an older man named Shradin went ahead to scout the
snow.
Turik pointed up the pass. "The spirit home is there, but it's difficult
going from here—fissures beneath the snow and avalanches. Shradin can read the
snow better than anyone in the village."
Squatting on their snowshoes, the others watched as the guide explored the
pass.
"Well, what do you think?" asked Seregil when Shradin returned.
The Dravnian shrugged. "It's only a little dangerous today. Still, it would
be better if just a few go on from here. Turik knows the way and I know the
snow. The rest of them better go home."
After some disgruntled grumbling, the others headed back to the village.
Shradin took the lead as they began their cautious ascent. Seregil and Turik
following in single file. Seregil watched in silent admiration as the man probed
ahead with his pole, leading them safely around deep fissures concealed just
beneath the deceptively unbroken snow. Glad as he was of this, however, Seregil
couldn't help glancing nervously up at the tons of snow and ice clinging
precariously to the mountainsides above.
As they neared the top of the pass, Turik took the lead. "We are almost
there," he said at last, pausing for Seregil to catch his breath.
Struggling up a last, steep face, Turik halted again and began casting around
where the lip of the glacier met the rock face. After frequent sightings up at
the peaks and much prodding with his pole, the young Dravnian raised his hand
and waved for the others
Hung with icicles and half drifted over with snow, the opening of the passage
resembled a fanged and sullen mouth. Digging with hands and snowshoes, they soon
cleared the opening and peered down the steep black tunnel that descended into
the ice.
Seregil felt a strange tingling in his hands and up his back as leaned over
it; strong magic lay below.
"The first part of the way is slick," Turik warned, pulling a sack of ashes
from his bag. "We'll need to scatter these as we go, or it's nearly impossible
to climb back out again."
"I have to go alone from here," Seregil told him. "My magic is strong, but I
can't be distracted worrying about the two of you. Wait for me here. If I'm not
back by the time the sun touches that peak, come down for me, but not before. If
your spirit kills me, give all my things to Retak and say he is to divide them
as he sees fit."
Turik's eyes widened a bit at this, but neither he nor Shradin argued.
Seregil took off his bulky hat and tied his long hair back with a thong.
Taking the small lightwand from his tool roll, he grasped the handle in his
teeth and shouldered an ash bag and the cumbersome box.
"Aura's luck be with you," Shradin said solemnly, using the Aurenfaie name
for Illior.
Let's hope it is, Seregil thought nervously as he began his descent.
The steep tunnel was narrow and slick as glass in places. Scattering ash in
front of him, he crawled down, dragging the box behind. By the time the ice gave
way to a more level stone passage, he was smeared black from head to foot.
The magic permeating the place grew stronger as he went down. The uncanny
tingle he'd first noticed increased swiftly. There was a low buzzing in his ears
and he could feel an ache growing behind his eyes.
"Aura Elustri malrei," he whispered, speaking the invocation to Illior aloud
to test the effect. The silence absorbed his words without an echo and the
tingling in his limbs continued unabated.
The tunnel ended at a tiny natural chamber scarcely larger than the passage
itself. The shards of a broken bowl lay against the far wall.
The ceaseless noise in his ears made concentration difficult as Seregil began
a careful search of the place. It wasn't a steady tone, but rose and fell
erratically. At times he seemed to catch a faint hint of voices beneath the
rest, but put it down to imagination.
Satisfied at last that no other passages were concealed by any method he
could detect, he tucked his chilled hands into his coat and hunkered down to
review the few facts he possessed.
"Horns of crystal beneath horns of stone. Stone within ice within stone
within ice," the palimpsest had said.
Seregil looked around, frowning.
Well, I'm certainly beneath horns of stone. And to get here I've gone through
the ice first, and then stone.
That left stone within ice still to go, but where? Though obscure in method,
the palimpsest had been quite specific in giving the necessary directions. If
there was some secret way beyond this point, then logic suggested that the final
clues leading to it were also concealed in that same document.
Massaging his throbbing temples, he closed his eyes and recalled the details
of the palimpsest's various inscriptions. Could he and Nysander have missed
something in the rambling prophecies? Or perhaps Nysander had been wrong in his
assertion that only one side of the document concealed a palimpsest.
Now there was an uncomfortable thought.
He was startled from his reverie by a blast of cold air. Opening his eyes, he
found himself lying in the snow outside the tunnel entrance with Turik and
Shradin kneeling over him with obvious concern. Over Shradin's shoulder he saw
that the sun was already low behind the designated peak.
"What happened?" Seregil gasped, sitting up.
"We waited as long as we could," Turik apologized. "The time came and went
for you to return. When we went down, we found you in a spirit dream."
"There's a storm coming," added Shradin, frowning up at the clouds. "They
come on fast this time of year. We need to get back to the village while there's
still light enough to go down safely. There's no shelter here, and nothing for a
fire."
Seregil looked around in sudden alarm. "My sword! And the box—Where are
they?"
"Here, beside you. We brought them out, too," Turik assured him. "But tell
us, did you speak to the spirit? Do you know the reason for its anger?"
Still chagrined at having fallen so easily under the spell of the place,
Seregil nodded slowly, buying time as he collected his thoughts.
"It's not your spirit who is angry, but another, an evil one," he told them.
"This evil one keeps the other prisoner. It's a very strong spirit. I must rest
and prepare myself to banish it."
Shradin looked up at the sky again. "You'll have time, I think."
Taking up their packs and poles, the Dravnian guides led Seregil back to the
village for another night of exhausting hospitality.
As Shradin had predicted, a savage blizzard roared in through the teeth of
the mountains during the night.
People fought their way through the howling wind to drive their livestock up
the ramps into their towers, then sealed their doors and settled down to wait
out the storm.
It raged steadily for two days. One house lost its felt roof, forcing the
inhabitants to flee to a neighboring tower.
At another, a woman gave birth to twins.
Otherwise, the time was given over to eating, storytelling, and general
husbandry. The Dravnians were philosophical about such conditions; what was the
use of complaining about something that happened every winter? The blizzards
were even beneficial. They piled snow around the house and helped keep the
drafts out.
One family in particular regarded this storm as a stroke of luck, for it kept
the Aurenfaie guest in their house for two nights.
Seregil was less complaisant about the-situation.
Ekrid had nine children, six of them daughters. One girl was too young,
another in the midst of her menses, but that still left four to contend with and
he didn't much like the competitive gleam in their eyes as they welcomed him.
To further complicate matters, the lower level had been given over to Ekrid's
herd of goats and sheep, and their bleating and odor lent little to the general
atmosphere. For two days, Seregil had to choose between evading the amorous
advances of the girls or trying to walk three feet without treading in shit. His
success was limited on both counts and his concentration on the problem at hand
suffered.
Stretched out with two of Ekrid's daughters still twined around him the
second night, Seregil stared up at the rafters and decided he'd had enough of
women to last him for some time. Shifting restlessly in their musky embrace, he
caught a hint of answering movement across the way where Ekrid's sons slept.
One of them had made long eyes at him the evening before—He gave the
possibility a moment's consideration, but resolved dourly that there was little
to be gained in that direction. The young man smelled as strongly of goat tallow
and old hides as his sisters, and lacked a front tooth besides.
Lying back, he allowed himself a moment's longing for his own clean bed and a
freshly bathed companion to share it. To his surprise, the anonymous figure
swiftly transformed into Alec.
Father, brother, friend, and lover, the Oracle of Illior had told him that
night in Rhiminee.
He supposed that, after a fashion, he had been father and brother to Alec,
having more or less adopted him after their escape from Asengai's dungeon.
Seregil smiled wryly to himself in the darkness; it'd been the least he could
do, considering that Alec was one of dozens of innocents captured and tortured
by Asengai's men during their hunt for Seregil himself.
In the months since then they'd certainly become friends, and perhaps
something more than friends.
But lovers?
Seregil had kept this possibility resolutely at bay, telling himself the boy
was too young, too Dalnan, and, above all, too valued a companion to risk losing
over something as inconsequential as sex.
And yet, lying exhausted among Ekrid's daughters, he suffered a guilty pang
of arousal as he thought of Alec's slender body, his dark blue eyes and ready
smile, the rough silken texture of his hair.
Haven't you had enough hopeless infatuations in your life? he scowled to
himself. Rolling onto his belly, he turned his thoughts to the palimpsest,
running through its cryptic phrases once again.
Horns of crystal beneath horns of stone. Stone within ice within stone within
ice.
Damn, but there seemed little enough to be wrung out of it at this point.
Slowly he repeated the phrase in its original Dravnian, then translated it into
Konic, Skalan, and Aurenfaie, just for good measure.
Nothing.
Start again, he thought.
You're overlooking something. Think!
After this came the directions to the chamber. Before it were the prophetic
ramblings: first the dancing animals, then the bones, and the strange words of
the unscrambled cipher that unlocked the secret—
"Illior's Eyes!"
One of the girls stirred in her sleep, running a hand down his back. He
forced himself to lie still, heart pounding excitedly.
The phrase! The phrase itself.
Those alien, throat-scraping words. If they were the key to the palimpsest,
then why not to the magic of the chamber itself?
Assuming he was correct, however, this raised other considerations. If the
words were simply a password spell, then he could probably use them without
danger to himself or anyone else. But if they worked a deeper magic, what then?
He could go back to Nysander now with what he already knew. Still, the
Plenimarans might be beating a trail up the valley at this very moment and
Nysander would be too drained from the first translocation spell to send him or
anyone else back immediately. Unless, of course, he enlisted the aid of someone
more magically reliable rather than risk mishap—Magyana perhaps, or Thero.
To hell with that! I haven't come this far for someone else to see the
mystery's end. First light tomorrow I'm going up that pass again, avalanches be
damned.
As he drifted happily off to sleep, he realized that the wind had dropped at
last.
Someone pounded on Ekrid's door just before dawn, waking the household.
"Come to the council house!" a voice shouted from outside. "Something
terrible has happened. Come now!"
Extricating himself from a soft tangle of arms and thighs, Seregil threw on
his clothes and ran for the council house with the others.
Faint, predawn light painted the snow blue, the towers black against it.
Snowshoeing through the icy powder, Seregil found the village almost
unrecognizable. The storm had buried the towers up to their doorsills, leaving
the exposed upper story looking like an ordinary cottage drifted up with snow.
Shouldering his way through the crowd at the council house, he hurried
downstairs to the meeting chamber.
The central fire had been lit and beside it crouched a woman he hadn't seen
before. Surrounded by a silent, wide-eyed crowd, she clutched a small bundle
against her breast, wailing hoarsely.
Retak's wife knelt beside her and gently folded back the blanket. Inside lay
a dead infant. The stranger clutched the baby fiercely, her hands mottled with
frostbite.
"What happened?" Seregil asked, slipping in beside Retak.
He shook his head sadly. "I don't know. She staggered into the village a
little while ago and no one has been able to get any sense out of her."
"That is Vara, my husband's cousin from Torgud's village," a woman cried,
pushing her way through the crowd. "Vara, Vara! What's happened to you?"
The woman looked up, then threw herself into her kinswoman's arms.
"Strangers!" she cried.
"They came out of the storm. They refused the feast, killed the headman and
his family. Others, many others, my husband, my children—My children!"
Throwing back her head, she let out a scream of anguish. People gasped and
muttered, looking to Retak.
"But why?" Retak asked gently, bending over her.
"Who were they? What did they want?"
Vara covered her eyes and cowered lower. Seregil knelt and placed a hand on
her trembling shoulder.
"Were they looking for the spirit home?"
The woman nodded mutely.
"But they refused the feast," he went on softly, feeling a coldness growing
in the pit of his stomach.
"They affronted the village, and you would not deal with them."
"Yes," Vara whispered.
"And when the killing started, then did you tell them?"
Tears welled in Vara's eyes, rolling swiftly down her cheeks. "Partis told
them, after they killed his wife," she sobbed weakly. "He told them of Timan and
his clan. He thought the killing would stop. But it didn't. They laughed, some
of them, as they killed us. I could see their teeth through their beards. They
laughed, they laughed—"
Still clutching her dead child, she slumped over in a faint and several women
carried her to a pallet by the wall.
"Who could do such things?" Retak asked in bewilderment.
"Plenimaran marines," Seregil growled, and every eye turned to him. "These
men are enemies, both to me and to you. They seek the evil that lurks in your
spirit home. When they find it, they'll worship it and sacrifice living people
to it."
"What can we do?" a woman cried out.
"They'll come here," a man yelled angrily.
"Partis as good as set them upon us!"
"Do you have any weapons?" Seregil asked over the rising din.
"Nothing but wolf spears and skinning knives. How can we fight such men with
those?"
"You're a magician!" shouted Ekrid. "Can't you kill them with your magic?"
Caught in a circle of expectant faces, Seregil drew a deep breath. "You've
all seen the nature of my magic. I have no spells for killing men."
He let disappointment ripple through the crowd for an instant, then added,
"But I may have something just as effective."
"What is that?" the man demanded skeptically.
Seregil smiled slightly. "A plan."
Retak called a halt at the base of the pass as the first lip of sun showed
over the eastern peaks.
Shradin went ahead to assess the danger. The others—every man, woman, and
child of Retak's village comwaited quietly for word to move on.
Mothers whispered again to their younger children why they must keep silent
in the pass. The infants had been given llaki to make them sleep.
Seregil climbed an outcropping and shaded his eyes as he looked back across
the snowfield. Blue shadow still lay-deep in the valley, but he could make out a
dark column of men closing in on the village. It wouldn't take long for them to
see that their prey had fled, or what direction they'd gone.
"There they are," he whispered to Retak. "We have to move on quickly!"
Hardly daring to breathe, they continued up the pass.
It was a fearsome journey. The villagers moved as swiftly as they could, some
bowed under loads of fuel and food, others carrying children on their backs or
aged relatives on litters. Only the muffled creak of snowshoes and pack straps
broke the silence.
Old Timan trudged painfully along near the rear, supported by Turik and his
brothers.
Mercifully, Vara had died and she and her child were hidden now in the drifts
beyond the goat enclosures.
But her death was not in vain; she'd given Retak's village time to prepare.
Shimmering veils of snow blew across the pass, dislodging small falls down
the slopes.
These gave out harmlessly in fine bits of crust, rolling down to leave mouse
trails across their path.
Ominous cracks and groans echoed between the cliffs overhead, but Shradin
gave no warning sign and Retak silently motioned his people on.
Trudging along in their midst, Seregil was deeply moved by the mix of fear,
trust, and determination that drove these people forward. They'd welcomed him—a
stranger-given him the best of all they had. When Retak claimed him as a member
of his clan, it was meant literally, hi the eyes of the Dravnians he was now a
blood member of the community for as long as he wished to claim kinship.
The Plenimaran marines pursuing them had been offered the same welcome.
Looking back as they neared the cave, he saw that the enemy had reached the
village and was now turning toward the pass.
You bastards! he thought bitterly.
You'd carve these people like sheep for whatever lies hidden at the end of
that tunnel. You slaughtered Vara's village. But you were sloppy my friends, and
that makes all the difference!
Up ahead Retak conferred briefly with Shradin, then motioned for a halt.
Seregil climbed up to join them.
"Do those men know how to read the snow?" he whispered..
"Let's hope not. Retak, tell the others to move a bit andl watch for your
signal. Are the young men in place?"
"They're ready. But what if this plan of yours doesn't work?"
"Then we'll need another plan." Feeling much less confident than he sounded,
Seregil went to take his own position.
The villagers nervously watched the Plenimarans. The sun was higher now, and
glinted back from spears and helmets below. What first appeared only as a long,
dark movement against the snow soon resolved into individual men toiling toward
them.
Whatever the Plenimarans think they're after here, they not taking any
chances, Seregil thought, counting over ?? men. He glanced briefly up the slope,
trying to make mouth of the spirit chamber tunnel and wondering again what could
be worth all this..
The Plenimarans were close enough for Seregil to make out the insignia on
their breastplates before Shradin and Retak. The headman raised his staff
overhead with both arms and let out a bloodcurdling yell. Every villager joined
in
screaming at the top of their lungs. At the same time Seregil, Shradin, and the
young men of the village shoved piles of loosened rock and ice chunks, sending
them ca down the steep slope.
For an instant nothing happened.
Then the first rumblings sounded along the western cimaran of snow and ice
sloughed off, plunging down on the
column.
Seregil could see the pale ovals of upturned faces. The soldiers realized too
late the trap they'd been drawn into. ?? column wavered and broke. Men foundered
in the snow, throwing aside their arms as they sought some direction of escape
it implacable wave bearing down on them.
The avalanche overtook them in seconds, carrying in dead leaves in a flood,
blotting them from sight.
A great cheer went up from the Dravnians and the sound brought down a second
deafening avalanche from the east wall. It crashed down the valley to lap over
the first with a roar of finality that echoed for minutes between the stark,
sun-gilded peaks.
Shradin pounded Seregil joyfully on the back. "Didn't I say it would fall
just so?" he shouted.
"No one could have survived that!"
Seregil took a last wondering look down at the massive slide, then waved for
Turik. "It's time I completed my work. This evil must be removed from your
valley so no others will come seeking it."
Amazingly, the tunnel opening was still clear, though drifts were piled
thickly around the spot. With the women singing victory songs behind him,
Seregil once again made his way down the slick, cramped passage. The noises in
his head and the tingling in his skin were as bad as before, but this time he
ignored them, knowing what he had to do.
"Here we are again," he whispered, reaching the chamber.
Refusing to consider the various ramifications of being wrong about the
nature of the magic, he hugged the box against his side and said loudly, "Argucth
chthon hrig. "
An eerie silence fell over the chamber. Then he heard a soft tinkling sound
that reminded him of embers cooling on a hearth. Tiny flashes like miniature
lightning flickered across the rock face at the far end of the chamber.
Seregil took a step back, then dove for the mouth of the tunnel as the stone
exploded.
Jagged shards flew up the tunnel, hissing like arrows as they scored the back
of his thick coat and trousers. Others ricocheted and spattered in a brief,
deadly storm around the tiny chamber.
It was over in an instant. Seregil lay with his arms over his head a moment
longer, then cautiously held up the lightstone and looked back.
An opening had been blasted in the far wall, revealing a dark space beyond.
Drawing his sword, Seregil approached and looked into the second chamber. It
was roughly the size of his sitting room at the Cockerel, and at the back of it
a glistening slab of ice caught the glow of his lightstone, reflecting it across
a tangle of withered corpses that covered the floor.
The constant cold beneath the glacial ice had drawn the moisture from the
bodies over uncounted years, leaving them dark and shrunken, lips withered into
grimaces, eyes dried away like raisins, hands gnarled to talons.
Seregil sank to his knees, cold sweat running down his chest beneath his
coat. Even in their mummified state, he could see that their chests had been
split open, the ribs pulled wide. Only a few months earlier his friend and
partner, Micum Cavish, had come upon a similar scene nearly a thousand miles
away, in the Fens below Blackwater Lake. But there some of the bodies had been
newly killed. These had been here for decades, perhaps centuries. Putting this
together with Nysander's veiled threats and secrecy, Seregil felt a twinge of
genuine fear.
The singing whine in his ears was much worse here.
Kneeling there at the mouth of the chamber, Seregil suddenly envisioned what
the victims' last moments must have been.
Waiting to be dragged into the killing chamber.
Listening to the screams.
The steam rising from torn bodies—
He could almost catch the sound of those tortured voices echoing back faintly
over the years.
Shaking such fancies off uneasily, he climbed in to examine the mysterious
slab.
The rough-hewn block of ice was half as long as he was tall, and nearly four
feet thick. The aura of the place was worse here; a nasty prickling sensation
played over his skin, like ants beneath his clothes. His head pounded. The
ringing in his ears swelled like a chorus of voices wailing an octave beyond the
scope of pain.
More disturbing still was the sudden flair of pain around the scar on his
chest. It burned like a fresh wound, driving a deep spike of pain at his heart.
Working swiftly, Seregil took the two flasks from the box, unwrapped them,
and poured out the dark contents of the first in a circle on top of the ice.
With his dagger, he scratched the symbols of the Four inside the circle: a
lemniscate for Dalna; Illior's simple crescent; the stylized ripple of a wave
for Astellus; the flame triangle of Sakor. They formed the four points of a
square when he had finished.
Unnatural flames licked up as the liquid ate into the ice and a soft,
answering glow sprang up in the center of the slab, revealing the outline of a
circular object embedded there.
A fresh blast of pain tightened Seregil's breath in his throat. He reached
into his coat and felt wetness there. Tearing open the neck of his coat and
shirt with bloodied fingers, he found that his skin had opened around the edges
of the scar.
There were voices all around him now, whispering, sighing, keening. His hands
shook as he quickly emptied the second vial onto the ice. More flames licked up,
guttering in the faint, unnatural breeze rising around him. Invisible fingers
brushed his face, plucked at his clothing, stroked his hair.
A first translucent point of crystal protruded from the shrinking ice,
quickly followed by seven more in a slanting ring.
The singing, at once tortured and exultant, rose to fill the cramped chamber.
Seregil pressed his hands to his ears as he crouched, waiting.
The magical liquid burned and boiled away until eight blade-like crystal
spikes were revealed, set in a circlet of some sort.
Seregil bent to pull it free and a drop of blood fell from his chest onto the
ice within the circlet.
He paused, strangely fascinated, as another followed, and another. A stone
shard had grazed the back of his hand and this, too, was oozing blood. A rivulet
of it ran down between his fingers onto the point he was grasping, streaking it
like ruby as it trickled to the little pool gathering in the center of the
crown.
The singing was clearer now, suddenly sweet and soothing and somehow
familiar. Seregil's throat strained to capture the impossible notes as the blood
dripped down from his chest.
Not yet, the voices crooned. Unseen hands stroked him, supporting him as he
stooped over the crown.
Watch! See the loveliness being wrought.
The gathering blood sank into the ice as an answering rubescent blush spread
slowly up through each crystal point.
Oh, yes! he thought.
How beautiful!
Their sides were sharp. They cut into his palms as he gripped them. More
blood trickled down and the crystal blushed a darker red.
But a new voice was intruding from a distance, rough and discordant.
Nothing, sang the voices.
It is nothing. There is only our music here.
Join us, lovely one, join our song, the only song. For the Beautiful One, the
Eater of Death.
It was distracting, this ugly new tone. But as he bowed his head, straining
against this raw new voice he found that it, too, was familiar.
He'd almost succeeded in blocking it out when all at once he recognized
it-the sound of his own hoarse screams.
The beautiful illusions shattered as searing bolts of pain slammed up his
arms, seeking his heart.
"Aura!" he cried out, wrenching the crown free with the last of his strength.
"Aura Elustri mdlrei!"
Staggering through a haze of agony, he thrust the crown into the silver-lined
box and drove the latch into place.
Silence fell like a blow. Collapsing among the corpses, he pressed his bloody
hands to the front of his coat.
"Mards Aura Elustri chyptir," he murmured thankfully as he slipped into a
half faint. "Chyptir maros!"
The Beautiful One, the voices had said. The Eater of Death.
Gradually he became aware of another presence in the chamber, and with it a
pervasive sense of peace mingled with sadness.
This, he realized, must be the true spirit, the one that had created this
place and inhabited it until the crown was hidden here. With an ironic grin, he
recalled the tale of warring spirits he'd concocted for Turik and Shradin the
first time he'd come out of the cave. It seemed he'd spoken the truth in spite
of himself.
"Peace to you, spirit of this place," he rasped in Dravnian. "Your sanctuary
will be properly cleansed."
The presence gathered around him for a moment, soothing away his pain and
weariness. Then it was gone.
Shouldering the box, Seregil crawled slowly back up the tunnel. Turik and
Timan were keeping watch at the opening when he stumbled out into the sunlight.
The old man clutched Seregil's arm wordlessly, tears of gratitude glittering
in his rheumy eyes.
"He lives! The Aurenfaie's alive! Bring bandages," Turik called to the
others, examining Seregil's hands with concern.
The cry passed from mouth to mouth and soon the whole village had gathered
solemnly around them.
"Terrible sounds came out of the ground, then all was still," Retak told
Seregil. "Timan said you had driven out the bad spirit, but he didn't know if
you'd survived the ordeal. Tell us of your battle with the evil spirit!"
Seregil groaned inwardly.
Bilairy's Balls, they want another story!
Climbing to his feet, he held up the box.
"I've captured the evil spirit that troubled you. It's imprisoned here."
Round-eyed, the Dravnians regarded the battered wooden chest. Even the
children did not venture to approach it. Filthy and exhausted, Seregil did his
best to look like a victorious wizard as he mixed fact and fiction to best
effect.
"In the time of Timan's ancestor, this evil thing came to your valley and
invaded the spirit home, holding the true spirit prisoner and troubling those
who entered the chamber. I found its secret lair and battled it there. It was a
strong spirit and it fought mightily, as you can see."
The villagers' eyes grew rounder as they pressed around him to see what sort
of marks a spirit left on a man.
"By my magic, and by the powers of sacred Aura and the true spirit of this
place, I vanquished and captured it. Your spirit came to me, easing my wounds
and asking that the sanctuary be cleansed so that your people may once again
come to it in peace. There are bodies there now, victims of the evil one. You
must not fear them. Take them away and burn them as is proper, so that their
spirits can rest. This is no longer a place of evil."
The Dravnians cheered wildly as he paused to catch up with his own invention.
By the time they'd settled down again, he was ready.
"If any man comes seeking the evil one, bring them to this place and tell
them how Meringil, son of Solun and Nycanthi, mage of Aurenen, captured the evil
spirit and took it away forever. Remember this day and tell the story to your
children so that they will remember. Let no person among your clans forget that
evil was cast out from here. And now I must go."
The villagers surged forward, imploring him to stay.
Unvisited maidens wept with disappointment and one of Ekrid's daughters threw
herself into his arms sobbing. Putting her gently aside, he gathered his gear
and palmed the last of Nysander's painted wands from the pouch at his belt. He
snapped it behind his back and the Dravnians shrank back in fear as the
translocation vortex opened behind him. Waving a last farewell, he forced a
smile as he stepped backward into emptiness.
Thero was on his way upstairs when a muffled crash halted him in his tracks.
There was no doubt where the sound had come from; every door along the curved
corridor—the bedchambers, the guest room—stood open except one.
The sitting-room door, with its magical wards and protections, was always
kept shut unless Nysander was inside. Nonetheless, putting his ear to the door,
Thero heard a low groan inside.
"Nysander!" he called, but his master was already hurrying down the tower
stairs, robes flapping beneath his leather apron.
"There's someone in there," Thero exclaimed, gaunt face flushed with
excitement.
Nysander opened the door and snapped his fingers at the nearest lamp. The
wick flared up and by its light they saw Seregil sprawled in the middle of the
room, his back arched awkwardly over the pack he wore, the strap of the battered
wooden chest tangled around one leg. His eyes were closed, his face colorless
beneath streaks of grime and blood.
"Get water, a basin, and linen. Hurry!" said
Nysander, going to Seregil and pulling at the front of his coat.
Thero hurried off to fetch the required articles.
When he returned a few moments later,
Nysander was examining a raw wound on Seregil's chest. "How bad is it?" he
asked.
"Not so bad as it looks," said Nysander, covering the wound with a cloth.
"Give me a hand with these filthy clothes."
"What happened to him this time?" Thero asked, gingerly pulling off the
unconscious man's boots.
"He's got the same sort of preternatural stench he had when he came back—"
"Very similar. Fetch the things for a minor purification. And, Thero?"
Halfway out the door already, Thero paused, expecting some explanation.
"We shall not speak of this again."
"As you wish," Thero replied quietly.
Focused on Seregil, Nysander did not see the hot color that leapt into
Thero's sallow cheeks beneath his thin beard, or the sudden angry set of his
jaw.
Later, with Seregil asleep under Thero's watchful eye, Nysander paid his
nightly visit to the lowest vault beneath the Oreska House. He was not the only
one who wandered here late at night. Many of the older wizards preferred to
pursue their research when the scholars and apprentices were out of the way.
Proceeding on through the long passages and down stairways, he nodded to those
he met, stopping now and then to chat. He'd never made any secret of his evening
constitutionals. Had anyone over the years ever noticed that he seldom followed
the same route twice? That there was always one point, one stretch of blank,
innocent wall, which he never failed to pass?
And how many of these others, Nysander wondered as he went on, kept watch as
he did over some secret charge?
Reaching the lowest level, he wended his way with more than even his usual
caution through the maze of corridors to the place, though his carefully woven
magicks kept all from perceiving the box he carried.
Satisfied that he was unobserved, he lowered his head, summoned a surge of
power, and silently invoked the Spell of Passage. A sensation like a mountain
wind passed through him, chilling him to the bone.
Hugging the grimy box to his chest, he walked through the thick stonework of
the wall and into the tiny chamber beyond.
Alec squinted as sunlight flashed off the polished festival gong under his
arm. Shifting his grip, he struggled the rest of the way up the ladder braced
against the front of the villa.
"Really, Sir Alec, this is not necessary. The servants always take care of
these details!"
Runcer dithered from the curb, clearly embarrassed by this display of labor
but powerless to countermand it.
"I like to keep busy," Alec replied, undeterred.
He'd reluctantly resumed his public role at Wheel Street the day before. The
Festival of Sakor began tonight and—Seregil or no Seregil—Sir Alec had to make
an appearance.
Runcer was stubbornly determined to defer to him as master of the house in
Seregil's absence, a role he was acutely uncomfortable with. He detested being
waited on, but every servant in the house seemed to take it as a personal
affront every time he so much as fetched his own wash water or saddled a horse.
Grasping the wooden brace set into the wall, Alec slid the gong's leather
hanging straps over it. They held and it swung gently in the morning breeze, a
rectangular battle shield displaying the elaborate sunburst design of Sakor.
Runcer handed up a swath of black cloth and Alec draped it carefully over the
shield face.
Similar gongs were being hung all across the city. Mourning Night, the
longest of the year, began with solemn ceremonies at the Temple of Sakor. The
symbolic passing of the old god would be enacted, and every fire in the city
extinguished except for a single firepot guarded by the Queen and her family at
the temple. At the first hint of dawn the following morning, the gongs would be
uncovered and sounded to welcome the resurrected god as runners carried the new
year's fire to every hearth.
Similar versions of the ceremony would be carried out all over Skala.
He was halfway down the ladder when a rider clattered around a corner down
the street.
Recognizing Seregil's glossy Aurenfaie mare, Alec jumped down and ran to meet
them.
Seregil reined Cynril to a walk and looked Alec over with a disapproving
frown as he continued up the street. "Out in your shirtsleeves like a common
laborer? What will the neighbors say?"
"I did remark upon it, my lord," Runcer commented blandly as they came up.
"I guess they'll say I'm more likely to do a lick of honest work than my fop
of a guardian," Alec said with a laugh, too relieved to see Seregil safely home
to care what anyone thought.
Wherever Seregil had been, he'd costumed himself carefully for the role of
returning lord. His mud-spattered boots and gauntlets were of the finest
chestnut-brown leather, his riding mantle lined with dark fur. Beneath it he
wore a velvet surcoat, and tall pheasant feathers bobbed at a jaunty angle from
the jeweled cockade of his cap.
"Ah well, we must forgive him his rough ways," Seregil said, throwing an arm
around Alec's shoulders as they went inside. "These northern squire's sons are
badly raised—too much honest labor in their youth. How's everything here?"
"Come see for yourself."
Inside, the main hall was still swarming with servants.
The carpets were being rolled back in preparation for the night's dancing and
fragrant garlands of plaited wheat and winter greenery festooned the walls. Rich
aromas had been floating out from the kitchen since dawn. The feast after the
ceremony would be cold, but well laid on.
"What about the lightwands?" asked Seregil as he sat to tug off his boots.
"They arrived from the Oreska House yesterday, my lord," Runcer informed him,
hovering close at hand. "Nysander i Azusthra and Lady Magyana a Rhioni have
confirmed that they will contribute to the evening's entertainment again this
year."
"Good. Any word from the Cavishes?"
"They are expected this afternoon, my lord. I prepared the upstairs guest
chambers myself."
"We'll leave you to it, then. Come on, Alec, you can give me the news while I
freshen up."
"Nysander's invited the Cavishes to sit with him," Alec told him as they went
up the stairs to Seregil's room, adding wistfully, "I wish we could."
"I know, but Kylith's group is likely to be more informative. Besides, you
need practice playing nobility."
Seregil's bedchamber overlooked the garden at the back of the villa. Unlike
the other rooms, it was furnished in Aurenfaie style, with walls whitewashed
rather than frescoed, and the furnishings were done in pale woods and simple
lines. In contrast, the cushions, carpets, and hangings around the bed were
vibrant with pattern and color.
The shutters had been opened and a fire crackled invitingly in the marble
fireplace.
"Runcer's right, you know," he went on, tossing his cloak over a clothes
chest and going to the fire.
"It's not good for you to be seen out there in your shirtsleeves. When you're
playing a role—"
Alec sighed. "You play it to the bone, I know, but—"
"No excuses. It's part of the game." Seregil leveled a gloved forefinger at
him. "You know as well as I do that it doesn't matter at the Cockerel or half
the time around here, but on a real job something like that could get you
killed! When you play Sir Alec, you must be Sir Alec. Either live it from the
heart, or stand outside yourself like a puppet master and direct every movement.
You've seen me do it often enough."
Alec stared glumly out over the snow-dusted garden.
"Yes, but I doubt I'll ever be as good at it as you."
Seregil let out an impatient snort.
"Horseshit. That's what you said about swordplay, and look how you've come
along. Besides, you're a natural actor when the role doesn't go against your
stiff-necked, Dalnan yeoman's pride. Relax! Flow with the moment."
Seregil suddenly grabbed him by the arm and whirled him into an eccentric jig
around the room. Alec hadn't even heard him approach. But he recovered swiftly
and took the lead.
"But Sir Alec is a stiff-necked Dalnan yeoman," he said, laughing as he
clomped through the steps of a country dance Beka and Elsbet had taught him.
"Wrong!" Grinning wickedly, Seregil yanked him into a formal pavan. "Sir Alec
is stiff-necked Dalnan gentry. Besides, he should be picking up a few of Lord
Seregil's airs along the way."
Alec leaned back in mock horror. "Maker's Mercy, anything but that!" Still
gripping Seregil's gloved hand his thumb found a ridge beneath the thin leather.
Frowning, he felt at it. "What's this? A bandage?"
"It's nothing, just a few scrapes." Seregil stripped off the gloves and
showed him thin strips of linen across each palm. "And what about you?" He
turned Alec's left palm up and examined the scab there.
"I cut myself going over a wall the other night," Alec told him, letting
Seregil's obvious evasion go without argument, knowing it would be futile to
press him. "I got chased on the way home afterward, too, but I got away all
right."
"Any idea who it was?"
"Footpads, probably. I didn't get much of a look at them."
"How many 'thems' were there?"
"Three, I think. I was too busy rabbiting to take count."
"Let's hear it."
Dropping into a chair by the fire, Alec launched into a well-rehearsed and
somewhat embellished account of his escape down Silvermoon Street.
"That was quick thinking, using the palace guard for protection," said
Seregil when he'd finished. "And speaking of the Palace, I've got something for
you—a little thank you from the Queen and Klia, I think."
He took a small pouch from his coat and tossed it to Alec. Opening it, the
boy found a heavy silver cloak brooch fashioned to look like a wreath of leafy
branches surrounding a deep blue stone.
"Silver leaves." Alec smiled slightly as he admired it. "The first time I met
Klia up in Cirna I was calling myself Aren Silverleaf."
"That's a good stone," Seregil remarked, looking at it over his shoulder.
"You could get a fine horse for that, if you ever need to. Just be sure not to
let on where it came from, or why. We've got reputations to hide."
Ilia Cavish burst into the hall like a small, happy hurricane just after
midday. "Uncle Seregil! Alec! We're here!"
From the musicians' gallery, Seregil watched as she tackled Alec, who'd just
come out of the dining room.
"I can stay up for the party this year because I'm six now," she announced,
hugging Alec excitedly.
"And I got new shoes and a real gown with a long skirt and two petticoats
and—Where's Uncle Seregil?"
"I'm on my way," Seregil called. Going down the steep narrow stairs from the
gallery, he strode across the hall and claimed a hug of his own.
"Did you ride in from Watermead all by yourself, madame?"
Illia pulled a long face. "Mother's still being sick from the baby, so she
had to ride in a cart with Arna and Eulis. Father and Elsbet and me all had to
ride slow. But he let me come ahead when we got to your street. I'm the van
soldier!"
"I think you mean vanguard," Alec corrected with a smile.
"That's what I said, silly. Do Elsbet and I get to sleep in the room next to
yours, Uncle? The one with the dragon-shaped bed and the ladies painted on the
walls?"
"Of course you do, so long as you don't pop out at the guests once you've
been put to bed the way you did last year."
"Oh, I'm much too old for that now," she assured him, taking him and Alec by
the hand and drawing them toward the door. "Come on, now. Father and Mother must
be here by now."
Wheel Street was thick with traffic, but Seregil quickly spotted Micum's
coppery head bobbing toward him through the press, followed by his second
daughter and a covered cart driven by a pair of servant women. Old Arna spied
him and waved.
"I see Illia found you," Micum said with a grin as they dismounted in front
of the house.
Seregil embraced his old friend, and then Elsbet, dark and shy in her blue
riding gown. "You're just in time. Alec's done all the work."
"We'd have been here sooner if I could have ridden," Kari complained,
struggling from a nest of cushions and robes in the cart. Weeks of morning
sickness had thinned her face, but the journey had put the challenging glint
back in her dark eyes. Micum helped her down and she embraced Alec and Seregil
happily.
Seregil eyed her rounding belly. "Breeding agrees with you, as usual."
"Don't tell her that before breakfast just yet," Micum warned.
Old Arna made a blessing sign in her mistress' direction. was "The sicker the
mother, the stronger the son."
Kari rolled her eyes behind the old woman's back. "We've heard that at least
three times a day for the past month. Even if it's another girl, I expect the
child will be born with a sword in her hand."
"Another Beka," Alec said, grinning.
"And what about you?" Seregil asked Elsbet.
"Last I heard, you were going to stay on at the temple school."
"That's right. Thank you for recommending me. It's what I've always wanted to
do."
"First Beka's commission with the Queen's Horse Guard, and now Elsbet a
scholar." Kari slipped an arm about Elsbet's waist and gave Seregil a dark look.
"Thanks to you, I'll be lucky to get any of my girls married off before they're
old and grey."
"Scholars marry, Mama," Elsbet chided.
"I'll get married!" Illia chimed in, still clinging to Alec's hand. "I'm
going to marry you, Alec, aren't I?"
The boy gave her a gallant bow. "If you still want me when you're grown up a
beauty like your mother and sister."
Elsbet blushed noticeably at this. "How are you, Alec? Father told us you
were hurt saving Klia."
"I'm pretty well healed, except for this," he replied, running a hand
ruefully over his ragged hair. "Klia came out of it looking worse than I did."
"It was very brave of you. To run into the fire like that, I mean," she
stammered. Blushing more hotly than ever, she hurried after Arna into the house.
Alec turned to Kari with a perplexed look. "Is she all right?"
Kari slipped her arm through his with an enigmatic smile. "Oh, she's just
turned fifteen, and you're a hero, that's all. Come along now, brave Sir Alec,
and let's see what can be done about your hair. We don't want you looking like
the tinker's boy in front of Lord Seregil's fine lady friends tonight."
Lady Kylith's tapestry-draped box commanded an excellent view into the Sakor
Temple portico. Seregil and Alec reached the Temple Precinct an hour before
sunset and found their hostess and six other guests already chatting over
dainties and wine.
It was a frosty evening and everyone's breath puffed out in little clouds as
they talked. All were warmly swathed in black cloaks or robes out of respect for
the occasion, but gold and jewels caught the light on wrists and circlets.
"Ah, now our little party is complete!" Kylith rose smiling to kiss Seregil.
He returned the kiss with genuine affection. They'd been lovers for a time
years ago, and friends ever since.
Kylith must be nearing fifty now, he realized, but time had refined both her
famous beauty and wit.
All of these were in full force as she turned to Alec, still hanging shyly
back. "And you and I meet again under far more pleasant circumstances, Sir Alec.
I trust no one will be arresting Lord Seregil tonight?"
Alec executed a perfect bow. "I believe he's rescheduled all arrests until
tomorrow, my lady."
Well done, Sir Alec, Seregil thought to himself with a smile.
From the corner of his eye, he saw several of the others exchange discreet
glances. Most of Rhiminee knew he'd been taken from his villa in chains only a
few weeks before. Kylith had deftly removed any tension surrounding the incident
by making light of it.
"Seregil, you'll sit there by Lord Admiral Nyreidian," she said, waving him
to a seat beside a portly, black-bearded noble. "He's overseeing the outfitting
of the Queen's privateer fleet and I know you'll want to hear all about it. Sir
Alec, you sit here between us so that we may renew our acquaintance. But first
you must be properly introduced—Lord Admiral Nyreidian i Gorthos, Lady Tytiana e
Reva and Lady Breena e Ursil of the Queen's court, Sir Arius i Rafael, and my
very dear friend Lady Youriel e Nikiria."
Pausing, she placed her hand over that of a uniformed woman on her right.
"And this is Captain Julena e Isai of the White Hawk Infantry, the newest
addition to our little salon."
Seregil eyed the captain with discreet interest; she was rumored to be
Kylith's latest paramour.
"My friends, you all know Lord Seregil i Korit," she continued. "And this
charming young man is Lord Seregil's protege, Sir Alec i Gareth of Ivywell. His
late father was a knight of Mycena, I believe."
Alec's spurious pedigree elicited the hoped-for lack of interest. Leaving him
to stumble charmingly along through Kylith's courtly flirtations, Seregil turned
his attention to the other guests, where more interesting game was afoot.
"I expect war will be a relief for Phoria," Lady Tytiana was saying. As
Mistress of the Queen's Wardrobe, she was a valuable and generally reliable
gossip. "She's still under a bit of a cloud, you know, after that horrible
business with the Vicegerent's suicide—Oh, Lord Seregil, forgive me. I didn't
mean to be indelicate."
"Not at all, dear lady." Seregil flicked a crease from his black mantle. "My
name was cleared, so my honor is no more blemished than usual."
A ripple of laughter went round the little circle.
He'd cultivated his reputation as a charmingly dissipated exile carefully
over the years. While his distant relation to the royal family granted him
access to most of the more fashionable salons, it was generally supposed that
his foreign birth and dilettante ways kept him safely outside the complex
intrigues of the city. As a result, he was taken lightly but told a great deal.
"As I was saying," Tytiana went on, "I shouldn't wonder that she'd be
relieved to go off to war. Nothing like a few victories to improve one's
popularity. And just between ourselves, Phoria could use some goodwill among the
people, even without that other unpleasantness. An heir apparent with no
offspring is always awkward."
"She's a fine cavalry commander, though," said Captain Julena.
Admiral Nyreidian leaned back and laced his fingers over his considerable
paunch, "True, but she'll be at a disadvantage unless the Plenimarans are
foolish enough to attempt overrunning Mycena. Plenimar is a naval power, always
has been. I've advised the Queen so and she agrees. The lower city defenses are
being built up as we speak."
"Only yesterday I overheard Queen Idrilain ordering two hundred wagonloads of
fine red clay from Piorus to slake the slopes below the citadel," Lady Breena
chimed in. "That's not been done since her great-grandmother's day."
"Surely they wouldn't be so bold as to attack Rhiminee directly?" Seregil
ventured over his wine.
Nyreidian cast a rather patronizing look his way. "They've done it before."
"So you are preparing to meet them on their own terms. It must be an enormous
undertaking."
"I believe I've seen every sailor, fisherman, and pirate that ever sailed
between here and the Strait of Bal!" the admiral replied. "The harbor's alive
with them. And investors, too. Privateering is a lucrative venture. Have you
considered backing a vessel, Lord Seregil?"
"Sounds like an interesting mix of patriotism and profit. Perhaps I should
look into it."
"Vessels are getting scarce already, I must warn you. Every shipbuilder in
Skala has all the work he can handle, refitting old ships and building new. But
the real trick is to find a decent captain."
"And yet war has not been officially declared. How can the Queen send out
privateers without giving provocation? Surely she doesn't mean to precipitate a
conflict?"
Nyreidian stiffened perceptibly. "I'm sure our Queen does nothing without the
best interests of Skala in mind."
"But of course," murmured Seregil. "The fact that the Queen has entrusted you
with this undertaking is ample proof of the gravity of such measures."
Alec breathed a sigh of relief when Kylith turned her attention to her other
guests. His repertoire of invented history was slim and he was out of his depth
for small talk. Luckily, no one else seemed particularly interested in him.
Seregil was still busy with the fat admiral, so he leaned his elbows on the
rail to watch the spectacle unfolding before him.
The tiers of viewing boxes where he sat stood at an angle on the south side
of the square, just in front of the Dalnan temple grove. Across the square
another set of tiers partially obscured the fountain courts and delicate,
brightly colored archways of the Temple of Astellus. The Temple of Illior was
hidden by the back wall of the box to the east.
Cordoned-off pathways between the four temples quartered the broad square.
Black-robed festival goers were already packing the open areas and crowding into
the courtyards and porticoes of the other temples. Gulls wheeled overhead,
mingling with flights of brown doves from the Dalnan grove.
Before him, the black Temple of Sakor stood massive and stark against a
riotous sunset. Broad bars of light spilled out between the square pillars of
the portico, silhouetting the gongs that hung between them.
Inside stood an altar of polished black stone.
A great fire burned on it, illuminating the huge golden shield that hung
suspended just behind. This,
Seregil had explained earlier, was called the Aegis of Sakor. It was twenty
feet high and its sunburst device was set with hundreds of smooth-polished
rubies that seemed to pulse with life in the flickering firelight.
An honor guard was massed in formation on the broad stairs in front of the
temple; somewhere in those faceless ranks Beka Cavish was standing watch with
her regiment. He envied her just a little. The soldier's life seemed an
uncomplicated one to him; no pretending, no disguise—just honor, duty, and the
bravery to stand by your comrades in battle.
"I suppose they do not celebrate the Sakor Festival with such display in
Mycena?" Lady Kylith remarked, breaking in on his thoughts.
"No, my lady," Alec replied, raising his voice for Seregil's benefit. "Even
the Harvest Home at the end of Rhythin isn't a patch on this."
"Lord Seregil will have explained to you, I am sure, about the extinguishing
of the flames?"
"Yes. I imagine this will be an uncomfortable night."
"The soldier's vigil is very weary." Kylith cast a regretful glance in
Julena's direction and Alec guessed the captain would be going back on duty
soon. "But for the rest of us, it's a merry time. Moonlit parties, blind games,
and chases. It's a fine night for lovers, as well. They say half the people born
in Rhiminee can count back from their birth to this night."
Her perfume drifted over him as she leaned closer. "And who will be keeping
you warm in the darkness, hm?"
A sudden fanfare from the temple spared him the necessity of a reply.
A hush fell over the crowd as a long procession of priests filed out from the
interior of the temple.
Chanting and playing reed flutes, sistrums, deep-throated horns, and timbrels,
they formed themselves into two ranks flanking the Aegis. The skirling music had
an ancient, mournful sound.
"The Song of Passing, sung in the original Konic tongue," Seregil whispered.
"Most of this ceremony dates back at least a thousand years."
At the end of the chant, an ornately robed figure was carried forward on a
litter, face covered by a golden sun mask, an unsheathed broadsword lying across
his knees.
"That's the oldest of the Sakor priests, dressed to represent the dying god,"
Seregil went on.
"He brings the great Sword of Gerilain."
"Was it really hers?" Alec whispered. Gerilain was the first of Skala's
hereditary queens instituted by the prophecy of Illior six centuries before.
"Yes. The Queen's reinvested with it each year."
When Old Sakor had been positioned in front of the altar, a priest stepped
forward and addressed him in the same ancient tongue.
"She's imploring Sakor not to abandon the people,"
Seregil interpreted. "This next part goes on and on, but the gist of it is
that Sakor appoints the Queen as their guardian and gives her the sacred firepot
and sword."
As predicted, Sakor's reply took some time. The lower portion of the sun mask
was constructed to amplify his voice, which was rather thin and creaky. When
this dialogue was completed, horns sounded and the grand procession began.
Contingents of priests emerged from the other temples, each bearing a figure
representing their patron deity on a litter.
The Dalnans came first, with Valerius playing Dalna. Seated beneath an arch
of laurel and ivy, the irascible drysian was uncharacteristically resplendent in
a green robe heavily embroidered with gold and carried a ceremonial staff
wrought in ivory and gold. Someone had managed to tame his wild hair into some
semblance of order beneath his circlet, but his beard bristled as aggressively
as ever as he glared out over the crowd.
"I'm no Dalnan, of course, but I don't think Valerius presents a particularly
comforting figure as the Maker," Seregil murmured, eliciting chuckles of assent
from several of the other guests, including Alec.
Astellus would serve as Sakor's guide on his journey to the Isle of the Dawn.
A plump blond priestess dressed in a simple blue and white tunic and
broad-brimmed hat played this role, complete with wayfarer's staff and wallet.
Grey-backed gulls, living emblems of the Traveler, rose up from the fountain
courts of the temple and circled overhead as she was carried forth.
Illior was also being played by a woman. She sat stiffly in her flowing white
gown and serene golden mask, right palm raised to display the elaborate circular
emblem that covered her palm.
The three groups met at the center of the square to await the final
contingent. Horns sounded again. A squadron of cavalry in ceremonial scarlet and
black advanced from the entrance of the Temple Precinct, followed by the royal
family.
"Is that her? Is that the Queen?" Alec whispered, craning for a better look.
"That's her."
Grey-haired and solemn, Idrilain sat her charger like the warrior she was.
Her golden breastplate was emblazoned with an upraised sword and the crescent of
Illior; an empty scabbard hung at her side.
With her rode the Consort Evenir, her second and much younger husband. Behind
the royal couple came her sons and daughters. Among these rode Klia, resplendent
in the dress uniform of the Queen's Horse.
Alec's hand rose to the silver brooch holding the ornamental cloak at his
shoulder as he watched her in the distance. Until now he'd seen her only as
another cheerful, mud-spattered soldier, someone who'd treated him like a
comrade, never standing on ceremony. Watching her now—among her true kind and
against the pageantry of the ceremony—like seeing a stranger.
The procession advanced at a stately pace to the steps of the temple, where
Idrilain dismounted and strode up to stand opposite Old Sakor and the other
priests, her consort and children behind her. From this point, the ritual
proceeded in the modern tongue.
Idrilain's voice was clear and steady as she spread her arms and performed a
chant hailing Sakor as Protector of the Hearth and the Sword of Peace.
"Let not the darkness come upon us!" she cried at its conclusion.
The massed crowd took up the cry, repeating it in a great voice until
Valerius stepped forward and raised his staff in both hands. When the crowd
quieted again, he sang the Song of Dalna, his deep, resonant voice carrying well
in the open air.
Alec knew this song well. When the crowd repeated the closing line, "The
Maker has made all, and nothing can be lost in the hand of the Maker," he joined
in gladly, ignoring the glances he attracted from Kylith's other guests.
Astellus and Illior helped Old Sakor to his feet and the assembled priests
commenced a low keen.
"Who shall keep watch?" the priests of Sakor sang. "Who shall guard the
Flame?"
Masked Illior answered, reciting the revelation of the Afran Oracle. "So long
as a daughter of Thelatimos' line defends and rules, Skala shall never be
subjugated."
The Queen stepped forward and was exhorted by Old Sakor to keep watch over
her people through the long night and the new year to follow. Bowing solemnly,
she pledged herself and her generations to the guardianship of Skala and was
given the Sword of Gerilain and a large firepot. When she turned, holding both
aloft, the crowd erupted into cheers of assent.
The last of the day's light was fading from the western sky as two priests
led out a black bull. Handing the firepot to Phoria, Idrilain raised the sword
in her right hand and placed her left on the animal's brow, pressing gently as
she spoke the ritual greeting.
The bull snorted and twisted its neck, nicking the edge of her mantle with
the tip of one horn.
A restless murmur rippled through the crowd like wind across a barley field;
an unwilling victim was a poor omen.
The animal showed no further sign of resistance, however, as the priests
pulled its head back and Idrilain slashed its throat. Dark blood spurted out,
steaming in the cold air, and the animal collapsed without a struggle. Idrilain
extended the blade to Old Sakor, who dipped a finger in the blood and anointed
his forehead and hers.
"Speak to your people, O Sakor!" she intoned. "You who pass away from all
living things and return renewed. What is your prophecy?"
"Let's see what they've come up with this year," someone murmured.
"You mean it's not real?" Alec whispered to Seregil, rather shocked.
Seregil gave him a hint of the crooked smile.
"Yes and no. Divinations are gathered for months from all the major temples
around Skala. They vary in form from year to year, but they're generally quite
supportive of current policy."
Standing before the Aegis, Sakor faced the people and raised his hands.
But before he could speak, a sudden wind gusted through the square, billowing
robes and snatching at cloaks and scouring dust and dead leaves up in little
whirlwinds.
Banners whipped loose from the fronts of boxes.
Shield gongs swung on their long chains, clashing ominously against the
pillars of the temple.
Startled from their evening roosts, gulls and doves burst into the air again
in a flurry of wings, only to be met by scores of ravens. Swooping out of the
surrounding gloom as mysteriously as the wind that bore them, the black birds
attacked in a frenzy, stabbing with thick beaks, tearing with taloned feet.
The spectators below watched helplessly as black wings beat against white or
brown; upturned faces were spattered with blood and sticky scraps of feathers.
Then startled cries rang out as broken bodies plummeted down around them.
In the temple, Idrilain stood with sword drawn, fending off scores of ravens
that dove at the sacrificial bull. Phoria and her brothers and sisters leapt to
her aid, driving the carrion birds off.
Beside them, Valerius laid about with his staff. Even at this distance
Seregil and Alec could see the crackling white nimbus that glowed dangerously
around its ivory head. The Illioran priestess, still inscrutable behind her
mask, raised her hand again and a brilliant, multihued flash blazed out, leaving
inert mounds of black feathers scattered in its wake. Soldiers closest to the
temple ran back up the steps to assist the Queen, while others tried to maintain
order as thousands wailed and screamed and sought to flee.
A thick cloud of ravens circled the square now, diving and slashing like
hawks. Others flocked boldly on railings and temple pediments. One large bird
flapped down to perch on the edge of Kylith's box and seemed to regard Alec
thoughtfully with one black, unblinking eye.
Seregil raised his hand in a warding sign and Alec saw his lips move,
although it was impossible to make out the words over the chaos around them. The
raven uttered a mocking croak and flapped away.
Then, as quickly as they'd come, the baneful black horde retreated, pursued
by the surviving gulls. The doves had been no match for their attackers; soft
brown bodies lay scattered around the precinct by the dozens.
As the noise of the birds subsided, a new and ominous sound boomed forth from
the temple.
The Aegis of Sakor, untouched by any hand, rang with a low, shivering roar.
In front of it, the flames of the alter fire flared from yellow to deep
bloodred.
Four times the Aegis sounded, and then four times again.
"Hear me, my people!" cried Idrilain. "Sakor speaks, sounding a call on the
Aegis itself. Attend to the prophecy!"
The multitude stood motionless as Old Sakor was helped forward again, swaying
visibly as he raised a trembling hand.
"Hear, O people of Skala, the word of Sakor," he called in his reedy old
man's voice. "Make strong your walls, and let every sword be whetted. Guard well
the harvest and build strong ships. Look to the east, O people of Skala. From
thence comes thine enemy—" He paused, and the trembling seemed to worsen. "From
thence—"
He sagged heavily against Valerius for a moment, then straightened and took a
step forward unaided. In a voice of star fling clarity, he cried out, "Prepare
you in the light, and in the shadow. From thence comes the Eater of Death!"
"The what—?" Alec looked to Seregil again, but found him white-faced and
grim, one gloved hand clenching the side of the rail where the raven had
perched.
"Seregil, what's wrong?"
His friend sat up abruptly, as if waking from an evil dream, and warned him
off with a discreet but emphatic hand signal.
"We have heard your word, O Sakor!" said the Queen, speaking into the silence
that still gripped the crowd. "We shall be prepared!"
Another roar of acclaim went up as Old Sakor was carried down the stairs of
the temple to begin the long march to the waterfront in the lower city. There,
accompanied by Astellus, he would set sail ostensibly for the Isle of the Dawn
to be reborn and return on the morrow in the guise of a much younger priest.
The altar fire dwindled and went out and a hundred deep-throated horns
sounded from the roof of the temple, signaling for every fire in the city to be
extinguished.
The remaining priests joined the procession while the Queen took her place
before the altar to begin the sacred vigil.
"What a remarkable performance!" said Lady Youriel with an uneasy laugh. "I
think they rather overdid it this year, don't you?"
"Most impressive," Kylith agreed lightly as servants appeared at the door of
the box with lightstones on long wands to assist their departure.
"But I suspect Lord Seregil has something equally impressive planned for us
at his gathering. Will you two share my coach?"
Seregil rose and bent over her hand. "Thank you, but I think we'll wait here
until the crowd thins a bit, then ride back."
"Games in the dark, eh?" She brushed his cheek with her lips, then Alec's.
"I'll meet you at Wheel Street."
Seregil sat motionless for some moments after the others had departed,
resting his elbows on the rail.
"What's the "Eater of Death"?" asked Alec uneasily. "It sounded like a
threat, or a warning."
"I'm sure it was," Seregil muttered, gazing down into the square. It was full
dark now, and the moon and stars shed pale brilliance over the city, casting the
world into sharp contrasts of silvery light and inky shadow. Lightwands bobbed
here and there in the hands of those wealthy enough to afford them, and faint
laughter and cries of "Praise the Flame!" echoed up to them as people jostled
each other in the darkness.
Something in his friend's face made Alec still more uneasy. "Any idea what
the priest meant by it?" he asked.
Seregil pulled his hood up against the night's chill as he rose to go. Alec
couldn't see his face as he replied, "I can't say that I do."
The Wheel Street house was already full of music by the time they returned.
Alec handed his dark cloak to a servant at the entrance and followed Seregil
into the hall. A number of guests were already enjoying the wine and food. Each
had been presented with a brightly ribboned lightwand upon arrival and these
provided a cool, shifting light as people danced or strolled about the room.
A flurry of applause greeted them as Runcer gravely announced their arrival
from his station by the door.
"Welcome to my home on this dark, cold night!" Seregil called out. "For those
of you who've not yet met my companion, allow me to present Sir Alec i Gareth of
Ivywell."
Alec made a graceful bow and quickly scanned the room for familiar faces.
Kylith's party was there, but there was no sign yet of Nysander or the Cavishes.
In a far corner, however, he spotted a knot of officers in the green and white
of the Queen's Horse Guard. Klia's friend and fellow officer, Captain Myrhini,
saluted him with her lightwand from their midst and Alec waved back, wondering
if Beka was with her.
He was just heading over to find out when Seregil slipped a hand under his
arm and steered him off toward a group of nobles.
"Time to play the gracious hosts."
Together, they made a circuit of the room, moving smoothly from one
conversation to another, most of which centered around the omens at the
ceremony.
"I thought they rather overdid the thing this year," sniffed a young nobleman
introduced as Lord Melwhit. "What doubt is there that war is coming?
Preparations have been going on since summer."
A grave, blond woman turned from a conversation with Admiral Nyreidian and
greeted Seregil in Aurenfaie.
"Ysanti maril Elustri, Melessandra a Marana," Seregil returned warmly. "Allow
me to present Sir Alec. Lady Melessandra and her uncle, Lord Torsin, are the
Skalan envoys to Aurenen."
"Ysanti bek far, my lady," Alec said with a bow.
"Ysanti maril Elustri, Sir Alec," she returned. "Lord Seregil is instructing
you in his native language, I see. There are so few nowadays who speak it well."
"And fewer still who speak it so well as you, dear lady," added Seregil.
"It's a pretty language, if one can manage it," Nyreidian rumbled. "I
wouldn't dare attempt it in front of you, Lord Seregil. I'm told my
pronunciation is grotesque."
"It is!" Melessandra agreed, laughing. "Forgive our interruption, Lord
Seregil, but we were just debating whether the portents at the temple tonight
were genuine. Would you care to venture the Aurenfaie view?"
Alec watched with interest as Seregil struck a thoughtful pose. "Well, to
question the omens' veracity would be tantamount to casting doubt on the Oracle
itself, wouldn't you say?"
She gave the admiral a pointed look. "Many would not hesitate to do so."
Seregil tactfully changed the subject. "I understand your uncle accompanied
the remains of Corruth i Glamien back to Viresse?"
"Yes, and allow me to offer my sympathies for the loss of your kinsman," said
Melessandra. "It must have been a terrible shock in the midst of your own
difficulties."
"Thank you. The reports given by the Queen's agents who found him were
chilling, to say the least. Yet some good may come of it. Have you heard what
the council's reaction was in Aurenen?"
Melessandra rolled her eyes. "Complete uproar. You know the old guard still
contends that Skala is accountable for the actions of the Lerans. Yet there are
those among the younger members who argue more and more for an end to
isolationism. Adzriel a Illia is one of the chief proponents for
reconciliation."
"Illia?" asked Alec, pricking up his ears at the familiar name.
"Certainly," Seregil said, giving him a level look that warned discreetly
against questions. "What else would it be? Unless you're confusing her with
Adzriel a Olien again?"
"Oh-yes. I suppose I must be," Alec managed, wondering what blunder he'd
committed this time. "Family names are so much simpler in Mycena,"
Seregil went on lightly. "Poor Alec is still struggling with all our lengthy
patronymics and matronymics and lineages."
Melessandra appeared sympathetic. "It must be overwhelming if you're not born
to it. But there's Lord Geron and I must speak with him at once. Erismai."
She gave Alec a last, rather puzzled look, then strolled away accompanied by
Nyreidian and the others.
"I said something wrong, didn't I?" Alec whispered hurriedly, before some
other guest descended on them.
"My fault," Seregil replied with a slight smile. "If I'd been here this last
week I'd have thought to prepare you better. Illia was my mother's name. My
eldest sister, Adzriel a Illia, was recently made a member of the lia'sidra."
"Sister?" Never, in all the time Alec had known him, had Seregil mentioned
his family, or almost anything else about his past in Aurenen. Alec had come to
assume that his friend was as much an orphan as himself.
"And eldest? How many do you have?"
"Four, actually. I was the only boy, and the youngest," Seregil replied
somewhat tersely.
"Little brother Seregil?" Alec smothered a grin as his entire perception of
his friend subtly shifted. He could sense the old barriers going up again,
however, and prudently changed the subject. "It sounds like the Skalans want
Aurenen as allies again, like they were in the Great War."
"They do, but bad blood over Corruth will get in the way. Our recent
discovery may make things worse rather than better, at least for now."
"But it's been almost three hundred years since Corruth disappeared."
"Remember who we're talking about, Alec. Many of the most powerful people on
the lia'sidra were his friends and contemporaries. They haven't forgotten the
reception he received from the Skalans when he married their queen, or his
suspicious disappearance after her death. If Lera hadn't had the poor sense to
leave her half sister Corruthesthera alive, there might have been war between
the two nations then. As for a new alliance, I'm afraid that may depend more on
the Plenimarans in the end. If they join with Zengat—"
"Oh, Lord Seregil! There you are!"
A gaggle of young nobles crowded noisily around them, wreathed in expectant
grins.
"We thought you'd never come home," chided a young woman, wrapping her arm
through Seregil's. "You missed my autumn revel this year, you know."
Seregil pressed a hand dramatically to his heart. "As I stood on a rolling
deck under a full red moon that night, my thoughts were all of you. Can you
forgive me?"
"It was a crescent moon; I recall it perfectly. But I'll grant you a
conditional pardon if you'll introduce me to your new friend," she fluttered,
looking boldly across at Alec, who'd been crowded to the edge of the circle.
Alec smiled his way through an onslaught of complex introductions, noting as
he did so that his polite greetings were not always returned with the same
grace.
A number of them, in fact, were decidedly cool.
Seregil hesitated as he came to a handsome, auburn-haired dandy surrounded by
an entourage of admirers. "Forgive me, sir, I don't believe I've had the
pleasure?"
The man gave an elaborate bow. "Pelion i Eirsin Heileus Quirion of Rhiminee,
dear sir."
"Not the acclaimed actor, who just played "Ertis" at the Tirarie?" gasped
Seregil.
The man puffed visibly. "The same, my lord. I pray you'll forgive my
intrusion, but my companions insisted."
"On the contrary, I'm delighted! I hope you'll let me know when you next
perform. By all reports, you're the next Kroseus."
"I've been fortunate, was Pelion demurred modestly.
"And well patronized," a man beside him announced. "Do you know that his
current role was written specifically for him?"
"We knew you wouldn't mind," a sallow youth confided smugly to Seregil. "Poor
Pelion is in love, you see, and his lady friend may turn up here tonight. It's
all very tragic and impossible. But we've got another treat for you. Donaeus has
composed the most cunningly subtle epos in twenty-three parts. It's a marvelous
piece of art!"
Seregil turned to the poet in question, a petulant-looking giant in worn
velvets.
"Twenty-three parts? What a monumental undertaking."
"It's glorious," a girl effused. "It's all about the death of Arshelol and
Boresthia, but done in the most original fashion. And of course, he'll need a
patron. You really must hear it."
"Donaeus, read it for him at once!" cried the sallow one. "No one appreciates
the new verse styles so well as Lord Seregil. I'm sure Sir Alec could spare him
for a bit."
The slight was not lost on Alec. There were a few suppressed titters, but he
maintained his composure.
"Go on, by all means." He smiled, locking gazes with his ostensible rival.
"The significance of poetry has always eluded me. Honest ballads and sword
fights are more to my taste."
"Well then, let's go up to the library," said Seregil, giving Alec an amused
wink as he ushered them upstairs.
Turning, Alec nearly collided with Myrhini and Beka Cavish, who'd drifted
over with their uniformed comrades.
"Arrogant little turds, aren't they?" Beka muttered, glowering after the
poet's entourage. "I run into a bit of that myself now and then."
"What could they have against me?" Alec burst out, not knowing whether to be
more amused or insulted.
"Nothing, except that you had the poor taste to be born north of the Cirna
Canal."
"There are always a few like that." Myrhini shrugged, then skillfully snagged
a tray of wine cups from a passing server. "Scattering a few teeth usually
quiets 'em down. In your case though, it's more likely just whey-blooded
jealousy. There's more than a few among that set who'd like to be in your
boots."
She paused to run an eye over him. "You're looking fitter than last time I
saw you. Klia's at the Vigil, and sends her regards. I go on duty in a few
hours, but felt honor-bound to assess the new recruit here, seeing as how she's
under my command. Rider Beka tells me you've crossed blades a time or two- But
here's someone else we know!"
"Valerius of Colath, Drysian of the First Order and High Priest of the Temple
of Dalna at Rhiminee," Runcer announced.
Valerius strode into the room still clad in his ceremonial robe and circlet,
though he'd exchanged the ivory staff for his old wooden one.
"The blessing of Dalna be on this house and those within it," he intoned,
thumping the floor.
Alec hurried forward to greet him. "Welcome. Seregil just went upstairs to
hear a poet, but he should be back soon."
The drysian let out an inelegant snort. "That fool Donaeus, no doubt,
spouting his doggerel in twenty-three fatuous farts? He must still be scratching
around for a patron. He read bits of the mess at Lady Arbella's banquet last
week. Fairly took away my appetite. If he corners Seregil with the whole of it,
we're not likely to get him back before dawn."
"Maybe Alec should go rescue him," suggested Beka.
"No, leave him. Serves him right for encouraging that pack of pedantic
buffoons. What knavery have you two been up to these days? Learning swordplay, I
hear, Alec?" The drysian lowered his voice to a confidential rumble. "You'll
need it, considering the company you've fallen into."
"And look at you!" he exclaimed, glowering at Beka. "Running off to join
regiments instead of getting married like a good Dalnan girl? This young fellow
here is about your age, isn't he?"
"Leave off, you," Myrhini cried, laughing as Beka shifted uncomfortably.
"She's the best rider I've had this year and I don't want to lose her to the
hearth."
"Valerius!" Seregil called as he came down the stairs, apparently having
escaped from the poets on his own. "Did you get Old Sakor safely launched?"
Valerius chuckled. "There's considerable chop on the harbor tonight. Poor old
Morantiel was as green as a squash before they left the mooring, but I suspect
he'll survive."
"I thought he sounded rather unsteady during the prophecy," Seregil remarked
casually, signaling for a wine server.
"After all these years of shamming, I imagine it was a bit of a shock when
something mystical actually occurred."
"Then you believe it was genuine?"
Valerius raised a bristling eyebrow. "You know as well as I do it was. I
don't know what that "Eater of Death" business was all about, but I didn't like
the feel of those ravens." At the door, Runcer stepped forward again and
announced, "Nysander i Azusthra Hypirius Meksandor Illandi, High Thaumaturgist
of the Third Oreska, with the Lady Magyana a Rhioni Methistabel Tinuva Ylani,
High Thaumaturgist of the Third Oreska. And Sir Micum Cavish of Watermead, with
Dame Kari and daughters Elsbet and Illia."
Nysander and Magyana, normally the least ostentatious wizards of the Oreska,
had put on the rich ceremonial robes befitting their status in honor of the
occasion. Behind them, the Cavishes were as splendidly rigged out as any lord in
the room.
Illia clung to her mother's hand, squirming with excitement in her new dress.
Elsbet looked poised and solemn in burgundy velvet.
"Didn't you invite Thero?" Alec whispered teasingly to Seregil.
"I always invite Thero! But watch. We're in for a treat."
At his signal, the musicians stilled their instruments. The other guests
stepped back as Nysander escorted Magyana to the center of the room.
With a slight nod to their host, he waved a hand about in a swift, careless
gesture and the painted walls sprang to life.
The high chamber was frescoed from floor to ceiling to imitate a forest
glade. The branches of life-size oaks hung with flowering vines extended across
the vaulted ceiling overhead. Between their grey trunks distant vistas of
mountain and sea were visible. Even the stone gallery at the back of the room,
where the musicians softly played, was carved and latticed to resemble a leafy
bower.
At Nysander's command, golden light from some unseen sun glowed across the
scene. A soft breeze stirred around the room, carrying with it the scent of
flowers and warm earth overlaid with a hint of the distant painted sea. The
painted trees stirred in the breeze, dappling shadows across the floor. Painted
birds left their places and fluttered through the branches, filling the air with
song.
A murmur of delight greeted the display, but the wizards were not finished.
Magyana drew a crystal wand from her sleeve and wove the tip of it in the air,
conjuring a perfect sphere of iridescent light the size of a pomegranate.
"Come, my lord." She smiled, motioning to Seregil.
"As host, the honor belongs to you."
"An honor which I in turn bestow on Sir Alec on this, his first Mourning
Night with us."
Amid a flurry of applause, Alec followed Magyana's whispered instructions and
reached out a finger as if to burst a child's soap bubble.
At his touch the sphere burst in a brilliant scintilla of light. Seconds
later the thud of hooves against turf sounded near the gallery as a herd of
white deer materialized in the painted forest and galloped once around the room
before settling to graze near the dining-room archway.
Rainbow-winged serpents swooped up from a painted cavern, singing with
beautiful voices. Winged sprites and willow branch maidens peeped shyly from
tree trunks.
Laughing and clapping delightedly, the guests spun around to take in the
spectacle. Illia pulled loose from Kari and ran to Beka, leaping into her
sister's arms.
"It's magic, Beka! Real wizard magic! And you've got your uniform. You're a
horse guard!"
Beka hugged her back, grinning. "That's just what I am."
"We must have proper music!" cried Seregil.
"Fiddlers, give us "The Shepherd's Idyll'!"
The musicians set to with a will and couples paired for the sprightly dance.
"Here you are!" Kari exclaimed, coming to embrace her eldest daughter.
"She was afraid we wouldn't see you before tomorrow," Micum explained. "She's
been fretting about it all afternoon."
"Oh, I was not," snapped his wife. "Turn around, girl. Let me see all of
you!"
"Thero was otherwise engaged, I see," Seregil remarked with a sly glance at
Nysander.
"Ah, hello, Valerius," said Nysander, escorting Magyana over to them again.
"You acquitted yourself bravely in the sanctuary this evening. were the ravens
saying anything intelligible?"
"We were just discussing that," the drysian replied.
"Heavy-handed as the Sakorans are with their "oracles," they weren't
responsible for the birds, or that business with the Aegis, if I'm any judge."
"It was unquestionably magic of some sort," mused Magyana. "It may be a
portent from Sakor, but it bodes ill nonetheless."
"It certainly bears looking into," agreed Nysander, "but just now I cannot
seem to resist the music. Do you think we have a dance or two left in us, my
dear?"
"I think they'll have to chain your feet together to keep them still when
they bury you," Magyana replied with a twinkle.
Valerius watched with gruff fondness as the pair danced away. "Ridiculous,
that Oreskan celibacy of hers. Those two should have married centuries ago."
Then something else appeared to catch his eye and a wry grin spread in the
depths of his black beard. "Now there's someone I didn't expect to see here
tonight. And just look who he's with!"
"Ylinestra a Maranial Wisthra Ylinena Erind, Sorceress of Erind," announced
Runcer.
"And Thero i Procepios Bynardin Chylnir Rhiminee, Wizard of the Second Order,
of the Third Oreska."
"Well, well!" murmured Seregil.
Thero did look uncharacteristically sanguine, standing at the head of the
chamber with Ylinestra on his arm. The sorceress' silk gown glittered with
jeweled beading and the bodice, fashionable in the extreme, showed pink
half-crescent hints of nipple beneath the heavy necklace of pearl and jet she
wore over her bared breasts. Her ebony hair was caught back in a similar jeweled
web, exposing a graceful white neck.
Seregil propelled Alec forward with a gentle nudge. "Come on, Sir Alec. Let's
greet our illustrious guests."
"Welcome to my home, lady," he said, stepping up to kiss her hand.
"Thank you, Lord Seregil," she replied with a cool nod. "And this must be
your new companion I've been hearing so much about?"
"Alec of Ivywell," Alec told her, wondering with sudden discomfort whether
she recalled their first brief, tempestuous meeting soon after his arrival at
the Oreska House. If she did, however, she gave no sign of it. Extending her
hand, she enveloped him with a heart-stopping smile.
"Ah, a Mycenian. How delightful."
She clearly meant for him to kiss her hand and he bent dutifully over it. A
faint perfume rose in his nostrils, subtle yet strangely compelling.
Her hand, so warm and soft, lingered in his, and as he raised his head, his
eyes swept across her breasts to her lovely violet eyes with a studied enjoyment
he wouldn't have imagined himself capable of. Still she held him, and her
low-pitched voice sent an unfamiliar tingle through his body when she spoke.
"Nysander speaks so warmly of you. I hope that we may know one another
better."
"I'm honored, lady," Alec replied, his voice sounding distant in his ears.
She withdrew her hand at last and the world returned to normal.
"Good evening," Thero said stiffly, looking somewhat less than pleased to be
there.
"Forgive Thero's bad grace," Ylinestra murmured, once more wrapping Alec in
the warm embrace of her eyes. "He is here only as a favor to me, I fear, and is
being quite sulky. Come, Thero, perhaps wine will improve your disposition."
As he escorted her into the throng, the actor Pelion stepped into their path
with an elaborate bow, which Thero evaded with a curt and proprietary nod.
Pelion fell back a pace, then followed Ylinestra with lovesick eyes.
"Ah, so that's the actor's hopeless love," Seregil noted with a smirk. "He's
certainly got some competition tonight. And if Thero gets any stiffer, he's
likely to fall over and break."
"She was kind of abrupt with you, I thought," observed Alec.
"Well, I'm not exactly her type. Evidently you are."
Alec colored warmly. Her perfume still clung to his fingers. "I only greeted
her."
The musicians struck up a reel and he turned to watch the dancers. Micum
swirled by with Kari, laughing and smiling; Nysander and Magyana followed close
behind. One of the poets had somehow captured Elsbet and she blushed happily as
he swept her along. Across the room, Ylinestra was chatting with the actor while
Thero hovered close at hand with badly concealed impatience.
"What's she doing with Thero?" Alec wondered aloud.
"Judging by the look of him, nothing he'd want Nysander to know about,"
Valerius remarked.
"Nysander knows," said Seregil. "I think he was getting bored with her,
anyway, but I still say it was bad manners for her to grab Thero next."
"I doubt if she was the only one doing the grabbing," scoffed Valerius. "If
he wants to stick his head in the dragon's mouth, let him. Just see that young
Alec here keeps a safe distance."
"I just greeted her, for—" Alec sputtered, but was interrupted by Myrhini and
Beka.
"I'm off for the Vigil," said Myrhini. "Hope to see you all at the
investiture tomorrow."
As soon as the captain was gone, Beka turned to Alec with a knowing grin.
"Ylinestra's very beautiful, wouldn't you say?"
Alec groaned. "What was I supposed to do, knock her down?"
"For a minute there I thought you were going to."
"Well, I'm sure I'm no danger to her, when she can obviously have her pick of
any man in Rhiminee," he countered. "What about you, though? Can you dance in
uniform?"
Beka looked down at her tabard and boots. "I think we can manage."
They made a passable business of the reel and went on dancing when the next
song began, in truth, Beka was in such high spirits over her commission that
Alec thought she could probably fly if the notion struck her. They soon caught
each other's rhythm and went on dancing with scarcely a break until Micum cut in
to say that Kari and the younger girls were retiring for the night.
"I didn't realize how late it had gotten," Beka said, letting go of Alec's
hand with evident regret. "I'll go up and visit with Mother a while before I
head back to the barracks. I've got to be up early for the ceremony."
Giving Alec a quick peck on the cheek, she added, "You and Seregil are
coming, aren't you? There'll be hundreds of us, of course, so you probably won't
even see me."
"With that hair?" Alec teased, tugging at the end of her coppery braid.
"You'll stick out like a drunkard's nose!"
"I'll remember that remark the next time we work on your swordplay," Beka
warned with a dire grin. "Until tomorrow, then."
Left to his own devices again, he looked for Seregil and spotted him on the
far side of the crowded floor. No sooner had he worked his way through the
crowd, however, when Seregil was waylaid by a noble complaining at length about
some shipping venture he and Seregil were involved with. Alec listened politely
for a time, but his attention soon wandered.
Looking around, he realized that the number of guests was dwindling. Off for
more "games in the dark," as Kylith had teased. Nysander and Magyana were still
there, moving with stately grace through the circle of a galliard. Thero was
dancing as well, but not with Ylinestra.
"Where's she gotten to?" Alec wondered, looking around again.
In the garden.
The soft, caressing whisper came at his very ear, for him alone to hear.
Come into the garden.
There was no question this time; it was Ylinestra's voice.
The mysterious summons came again, and with it a delicious languor. A couple
walked past, lightwands in hand, and he marveled at the rainbow corona
surrounding each glowing stone. The whole room, in fact, had taken on a warmer
tone.
Perhaps Nysander and Magyana were tinkering with their creation? Skirting the
dancers, he slipped unnoticed into the dining room and on out into the darkened
garden.
Here. Come to me.
The voice guided him to a far corner of the garden screened by a small arbor.
He heard a faint sigh of silk and Ylinestra's pale face resolved from the
darkness. Her hands found his and lifted them to rest just above her hips.
She was slender and supple between his hands and he spread his fingers to
better appreciate the sensation of her warmth beneath the cold fabric.
"My lady, I don't understand," he whispered, some small, distant part of him
distinctly alarmed at his own actions. He'd never felt like this in his life.
"What is there to understand, lovely boy?"
How small she seemed, here in the darkness. Her lips brushed his chin as she
spoke, her violet eyes pools of night just below his own.
"But Nysander—Thero? I thought—"
She laughed softly, and the sound drowned his own trepidation in another rush
of voluptuous sensation.
"I do as I please, Alec, and I take what I want. And just now, I want you."
Her hands found his again, holding his palms flat against her as she slid
them upward. The roughness of embroidery met his touch, then the netted web of
the necklace over her breasts.
"You're trembling. Does my little magic frighten you? Do still frighten you?"
Alec drew a ragged breath. "I-I don't know."
Part of him sensed a snare, a trap, yet his whole body was gripped by a
yearning unlike anything he'd ever known. Her scent
filled his nostrils again as she slipped his fingertips beneath the edge of her
necklace to press the bare, yielding swell of a breast.
"You have only to ask, Alec. I'll release you if you ask. Shall I free you?"
She slipped a hand to the back of his neck to rest where Seregil's so often
did. Then she kissed him again, her lips parting, tongue gently seeking entrance
and gaining it as her other hand stroked his side. Pulling him closer, she
kissed her way to his neck.
"So young, so smooth," she murmured, the touch of her breath sending a
profound warmth to his loins. "So beautiful. Have you known a woman? No? So much
the better." She shifted slightly, bringing a half-exposed nipple against his
fingers. "Tell me, shall I release you now?"
"Yes! No- I don't know—"
Alec groaned softly, then embraced her. Magic or not, newly awakened passions
suffused him and he found her lips again, returning kiss for kiss.
"Close your eyes, my darling," she whispered.
"Shut them tight and I'll show you another trick."
Alec obeyed, and was startled to feel himself falling, tumbling onto
something soft. When he opened his eyes again, the two of them were lying in the
heavily draped enclosure of a huge bed. The forbidden glow of candlelight
filtered through layers of colored silk, just bright enough for him to see that
somewhere in the transition, their clothing had been left behind.
"Something wrong, my dear?" asked Nysander, seeing Magyana frowning over his
shoulder as they danced.
"I was just watching Thero. He's looking dour again, and he seemed to be
having such a pleasant time.
Has Seregil been teasing him again?"
"Not that I observed."
Thero hovered grimly in a far corner, oblivious to the band of nymphs dancing
on the wall just behind him as he scanned the room.
"I suspect Ylinestra has found more spirited companionship for the evening,"
he guessed.
"Mmm. Well, that is a great deal less surprising than seeing them together in
the first place. What in the world does she want with him?"
"He is not such a bad-looking lad," Nysander said. "And he is young."
"Yes, but he's also your assistant," sniffed Magyana. "I realize you don't
mind, but it still seems rather tactless of them."
Nysander chuckled knowingly. "Passion is seldom governed by such niceties."
Just then, however, he caught sight of Seregil standing by the cider barrel.
He was fiddling absently with a mug and looking rather perplexed.
"Come, my dear, you must be thirsty," said the wizard, steering her in
Seregil's direction.
"You haven't seen Alec in the last few minutes?" Seregil asked as they joined
him.
The gloves were gone, Nysander noted, but a spotless strip of linen still
bound each hand. He wondered what sort of explanation he'd concocted for his
guests.
"Why, no. Is he missing?" replied the wizard.
"I don't know. It's been almost an hour since I last saw him. I've just been
all over the house and he's not here. It's not like him to wander off. Could you
take a look?"
Nysander closed his eyes and sent a seeking through the house and surrounding
neighborhood, then shook his head.
"You don't suppose-?" Magyana gestured discreetly in Thero's direction.
Reluctantly, Nyander sent another of the spells to Ylinestra's chamber,
intending nothing more than a brief glimpse to ascertain the boy's presence.
As he'd feared, Alec was there, but the energies surrounding him were not
sexual.
"What is it? Is something wrong?" Seregil asked beside him.
Nysander held up a warning hand without opening his eyes. "He is well. But I
shall need a few moments—"
Intensifying the spell, he found Ylinestra crouched over Alec, who appeared
to be asleep, sprawled on his back among the disheveled blankets with a blissful
smile on his face. In contrast, Ylinestra's face was a hard mask of
concentration as she wove an unfamiliar sigil in the air above him. As it took
form, the peaceful expression drained from Alec's face. At first he simply
looked blank, then his brow furrowed as he unconsciously turned his face away, a
low sound of protest rattling in his throat. The sorceress leaned closer,
enlarging the glowing symbol, then struck him sharply on the cheek in
frustration.
"That will be quite enough, Ylinestra!"
She whirled in surprise. The sigil snapped out of existence.
"Nysander? How dare you spy into my chamber!" she hissed, eyes wide with
outrage at his disembodied intrusion. "You have no right!"
"More right than you, to work magic on an unwilling subject," Nysander
retorted sternly. "Send him back at once or I shall fetch him myself."
"Such a fuss," she purred, stroking a hand down Alec's belly, knowing he
would see. "I assure you, I did him no harm."
"That remains to be seen."
A moment later Nysander felt a ripple of magic from upstairs. When had she
mastered the translocation spell?
With Seregil and Magyana close behind, he went up and found Alec deeply
asleep in his own chamber. Satisfied that the boy was unharmed, he placed a
protective ward over the bed to curtail any further mischief and quietly closed
the door.
"Well, I suspect I won't be teasing him about his virginity anymore," Seregil
said, sounding a bit wistful. "He certainly fell in to the spirit of the evening
in a hurry."
"I doubt it was entirely his own doing," Magyana said, wrinkling her nose in
prim distaste. "If it turns out he was coerced, I want to know about it. There's
no place for that sort of behavior in the Oreska."
"Certainly not," Nysander said, thinking more of the mysterious sigil she'd
been using. "Still, if it was his choice to go off with her, we must not make a
fuss. He is old enough to decide that sort of thing for himself."
Seregil let out an abrupt laugh. "I suppose he is, really. But it may cause a
bit of a chill between him and Thero."
Just gold.
The roar of festival gongs woke Alec at dawn. Blinking, he gazed up in groggy
confusion at the bed hangings, a pomegranate pattern worked with scarlet.
He'd gone to sleep beneath layers of colored silk lit by candle glow.
Ylinestra had been looking down at him, her eyes vague with pleasure.
A delicious ache ran through him at the memory, but with it came a twinge of
anxiety that he couldn't immediately explain.
Stretching himself fully awake, he sat up to find Seregil dozing in an
armchair beside the bed. He was still wearing last night's breeches and shirt.
Slouched to one side, arms crossed tightly across his chest, he looked
profoundly uncomfortable.
Alec shook him gently by the elbow and he jerked awake, rubbing painfully at
his neck.
"How'd I get here?" Alec asked.
"She sent you back, I guess." The beginnings of a dangerous grin played at
the corners of his mouth.
"Ylinestra, eh? And after all Valerius' warnings. Enjoy yourself?"
"Oh-yes. I mean, I did, I guess—"
"You guess?"
Alec fell back against the pillows with a groan. "It's just that, well—I
think she used some magic. At first, anyway."
"So that's what it takes." Chuckling, Seregil leaned forward and touched a
finger to Alec's cheek.
"And the kind that leaves marks, too. You all right?"
Alec brushed his hand away, feeling more awkward than ever. "Yes, of course
I'm all right. It was great. Just sort of—strange." He hesitated. "Do you dream?
Afterward, I mean?"
"I usually talk. Why, did you?"
"Yes. I remember thinking that I was falling asleep but not wanting to. And
then I saw the spinning dagger."
Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow. "The what?"
"The spinning dagger that Nysander used when I swore the Watcher's oath. It
was right in front of my face, just like before, and I was afraid to say
anything for fear it would cut me. I could hear Nysander's voice, too, but like
it was coming from far away. I couldn't understand what he was saying. There was
something else, too." He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to seize the elusive
fragment. "Something about an arrow."
Seregil shook his head. "You're whisked away and made love to by the most
exotic woman in Rhiminee and it gives you nightmares? You're a strange creature,
Alec, a very strange creature." He grinned. "I just hope you're not too worn
out. This is the biggest celebration of the year. And we'd better get ready. The
Cavishes are probably already at breakfast downstairs."
Alec lay in bed a moment longer after he left, trying to sort out his
feelings about the previous night's unexpected climax. He knew better than to
imagine that Ylinestra considered him anything more than a virginal conquest; he
doubted she'd give him a second glance the next time they met.
At least he hoped not. Pleasurable as the physical act—or rather, acts—had
been, the whole affair had left him feeling low and begrimed.
Seregil's well-intentioned ribbing had only underscored his own confusion.
The sorceress' scent rose from his skin as Alec threw back the covers and got
up. Wrapping himself in a robe, he called for the chambermaid, asking her to
prepare a bath and see to it that his bedding was changed.
The bath helped considerably and he headed downstairs in somewhat better
spirits. His one remaining qualm was that Seregil had already blabbed his
exploits to Micum or Kari. But no one gave signs of being any the wiser when he
joined the cheerful group around the dining table, although Seregil did raise a
questioning eyebrow at his damp hair.
Illia was too excited by the prospect of a day in the city to let anyone
linger over their morning tea. As soon as the meal was finished the whole party
set off for the Temple Precinct.
Kari and the girls rode in a comfortable open carriage, with the men riding
attendance on horseback.
In contrast to the austerity of Mourning Night, Sakor's Day was celebrated
with wild abandon.
Horns blared, ale flowed, bonfires blazed at all hours.
Looking around as they rode, it appeared to Alec that there was a performance
of some kind-animal trainers, jugglers, troops of actors performing out of skene
wagons, fire dancers, and the like—on virtually every street corner. Food
sellers, gamblers, whores, and pickpockets mingled with the revelers, plying
their trades.
"It's all so loud and exciting!" exclaimed Elsbet, riding along beside him.
"You'll get used to it," Alec replied.
The girl grinned. "Oh, I look forward to that."
The main event of the day was the annual investing of new troops at midday.
Sakor was the patron god of soldiers and the recognition of new troops was at
once a martial and religious occasion.
In the Temple Precinct, the tiers of seating had been cleared away to make
room for the ranks of new soldiers formed up in front of the Sakor Temple.
The day was a cloudless, bitter one and even Alec was glad of the heavy,
fur-lined cloak he wore over his velvet surcoat. Seregil chatted idly with other
nobles, introducing Alec to this one or that as the fancy took him.
"I've never seen so many new recruits, have you?" Kari asked Seregil, shading
her eyes with one hand as they stood together on the steps of the Temple of
Illior.
He shook his head. "No, never."
"Where's Beka?" Illia demanded, bouncing excitedly on her father's shoulder.
"Over with those in green there." Micum pointed out the Queen's Horse,
raising his voice to make himself heard.
Glancing at Kari, Alec thought she looked rather sad and thoughtful. As if
sensing his gaze, she looked over at him and held a hand out for his.
By the time the last ranks had marched in, the close-packed regimental
groupings looked like colored tiles in a huge mosaic. The Queen's Horse was a
block of green and white directly in front of the Temple of Sakor.
"Look, there's the Queen," said Micum.
"They'll start now."
Looking solemn and proud despite her long vigil, Idrilain took her place
between the pillars of the Sakor Temple. She wore flowing robes of state and an
emerald diadem and carried the Sword of Gerilain upright on her shoulder like a
scepter. The golden Aegis gleamed behind her as she stood motionless before the
troops, the faint vapor of her breath visible on the cold air. The tableau was
intentional; there was no doubt to whom the oath was to be given. The priests
might be allowed their mysteries in the darkness, but here, in the light of day,
stood the embodiment of Skalan power.
Placing the sword point downward in front of her,
Idrilain grasped the hilt in both hands and began the ritual.
"Come you here to swear the Oath?" she cried, her voice carrying clear and
harsh as if across a field of battle.
"Aye!" came the response from a thousand throats, thundering in the stone
confines of the precinct.
From the corner of his eye, Alec saw Micum and Seregil drop their hands to
their sword hilts, as did many around them. Without a word, he did the same.
"To whom do you swear?"
"To the throne of Skala and the Queen who rules!" returned the initiate
soldiers.
"By what do you swear?"
"By the Four, by the Flame, by our honor, and our arms!"
"Swear then to uphold the honor of your land and Queen!"
"Aye!"
"Swear then to give no quarter to the adversary."
"Aye!"
"Swear then to spare the supplicant."
"Aye!"
"Foreswear all that brings dishonor upon your comrades."
"Aye!"
Idrilain paused, letting a moment pass in stillness. Then, in a voice that
would have done credit to any sergeant, she barked out, "Display arms!"
With a ringing of steel, the various regiments brandished their weapons:
swords and sabers glinted in the sunlight; small forests of lances sprang to
attention; archers beat arrow shafts against longbows, producing a strange
clacking sound; artillery soldiers held catapult stones aloft. Standards
unfurled on cue to snap brightly over the throng.
"Then so are you all sworn together!" cried Idrilain, raising her sword
overhead. "By the Four and the Flame, by land and Queen, by honor and arms.
Warriors of Skala, sound your cries!"
A deafening roar filled the square as each regiment shouted its own battle
cry, vying with the others to make their voices heard.
"The Queen's honor!"
"Sakor's Fire!"
"Honor and steel!"
"The Flame on the Seal"
"True aim and well sped!"
"The White Hawk!"
Drummers and pipers stepped from behind the temple pillars, setting up a
martial tattoo. Great horns as long as the men that sounded them blared and
bellowed on the rooftops as the ranks turned and began to march out of the
square.
"It all makes you want to join in with it, doesn't it?" Alec grinned, pulse
quickening with the beat of the drums.
Laughing, Seregil threw an arm around Alec's shoulders and drew him away,
shouting over the din, "That's the whole idea."
The clamor at dawn went unheard by Nysander.
Seated cross-legged on the floor of the casting room, a long dead candle
guttered out before him, he floated in the dim oblivion of meditation.
Images came and went, yet nothing substantial came into his grasp.
After seeing Magyana to her tower door the previous night, he'd made his
usual tour of the vaults beneath the Oreska, then found himself leaving first
the House, then the sheltered gardens, to stalk alone through the windy streets.
Hands clasped behind his back, he walked aimlessly, as if trying to escape
the anger that had been building slowly inside him from the moment he'd found
Ylinestra hovering over Alec in her chamber.
Much of this anger was directed at himself. Ylinestra had meant no more to
him than a voluptuous diversion possessed of a mind of uncommon ability. Yet he
had allowed his carnal desires to blind him to the true depths of her cupidity.
Her sudden dalliance with Thero had reawakened his lulled sense of prudence.
What he'd witnessed this night strengthened his suspicions.
He let out an exasperated growl. The Black Time was coming, he knew, coming
in the course of his own Guardianship. Was he prepared?
Hardly.
He had an assistant he could not completely trust and yet hardly dared
release. A sorceress twenty decades his junior had him passion-blind.
And Seregil!
Nysander clenched his hands, digging the nails into his palms. Seregil, whom
he loved as a son and a friend, had very nearly condemned himself to death
through his own obstinate inquisitiveness. Alec would prove no different in
time—that much was already clear.
For the first time in years, he found himself wondering what his own master
would have to say about all this. Arkoniel's craggy face came to him as readily
as if he'd seen him only the day before.
He'd been old when Nysander had first met him and never seemed to change. How
fervently the young Nysander—that desperate, quick-tempered urchin of the
streets, plucked starving from the squalor of the lower city-had tried to
emulate the old man's patience and wisdom.
But from Arkoniel he'd also inherited the burden of the Guardianship, that
dark thread of knowledge that must be kept at once intact and concealed. A
thread that the events of the past few months, beginning with Seregil's finding
the cursed disk and culminating tonight with the omens at the ceremony, showed
to be nearing its end.
Finding no answers in the night, he'd returned to his tower and prepared for
a formal meditation. Dawn found him motionless and seemingly serene. He'd been
dimly aware of Thero's arrival and respectful withdrawal.
As the last light of Sakor's Day faded above the tower dome, Nysander opened
his eyes, no wiser than when he'd begun. Denied inspiration, he was left with
facts. Seregil had stumbled across the disk, ostensibly by accident, then found
his way to the Oracle of Illior, who'd recited a fragment of a prophecy no one
but Nysander himself had any business knowing about. Last night the same
words—"Eater of Death"—had been spoken by the priest of Sakor following the
strange omen of carrion birds.
Rising, he worked the stiffness from his joints and set off for the Temple
Precinct again.
A cold sliver of moon was just sliding up from behind the white dome of the
Temple of Illior when he arrived. Taking this as a favorable sign, he entered
the temple and donned the ritual mask.
He'd sought the counsel of the Oracle only a few times before, and then more
often in the spirit of curiosity. His devotion to Illior took a different form
than that of the priests.
But now he hurried onward with a growing sense of anticipation. Snapping a
light of his own into existence, he made his way down the twisting, treacherous
stairway to the subterranean chamber of the Oracle. At the bottom he
extinguished the light and strode on through the utter blackness of the
corridor, more convinced with every step that the poor, mad creature at its end
had answers to offer.
A lumpish, disheveled young man squatting on a pallet bed looked up as he
entered. This was not the same Oracle Nysander recalled, of course, yet all the
rest was as before: the profound silence, the dim, cold light, the attendants
seated motionless on either side of the idiot vessel of the Immortal,
featureless silver masks gleaming from the depths of their cowls.
"Greetings to you, Guardian!" he cried, vague eyes locking with Nysander's.
"You know me?"
"Who you are is nothing," the Oracle replied, rocking slowly from side to
side. "What you are is everything. Everything. Prepare, O Guardian. The ordeal
is close at hand. Have you preserved what was entrusted?"
"I have." Nysander suddenly felt weary beyond words.
How many times had he walked through the dusty labyrinth beneath the Oreska
House, feigning absent curiosity? How many years had it taken to cultivate his
reputation as an eccentric, albeit powerful, dabbler? How much had he sacrificed
to uphold the trust of generations?
"Stand ready, O Guardian, and be vigilant," the Oracle continued. "Your time
approaches out of darkness and hidden places. The minions of the Adversary ride
forth in secret glory. Your portion shall be bitter as gall."
The silence closed over them again like the surface of a pool. Into that
silence Nysander slowly recited words that, to his knowledge, had not been said
aloud in nearly five centuries. It was a fragment of the "Dream of Hyradin," the
one faint ray of hope he and all his predecessors had clung to down the long
years of their vigil.
"And so came the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the
world.
First clothed in Man's flesh, it came crowned with a helm of darkness and
none could stand against this
One but Four.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness.
Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the
Guide, the Unseen
One, goes forth. And at last shall be again the
Guardian, whose portion is bitter, as bitter as gall."
The Oracle said nothing to this, but gazed up at him with eyes that held no
alternative.
After a moment, Nysander bowed slightly and went back the way he'd come, in
darkness and alone.
Alec had hoped that their stay at Wheel Street would be brief—a week perhaps,
to satisfy appearances. But the week stretched into two, and then lengthened to
a month. Seregil had "daylight business" to attend to, as he called his numerous
legitimate interests around the city. They spent a great deal of time in the
lower city, where he met with ship captains in warehouses smelling of tar and
low tide, or haggled with traders at the customs houses. This meant that for the
time being their comfortable rooms over the Cockerel were generally off-limits;
they couldn't chance a connection being made between Lord Seregil and the inn.
The business transactions bored Alec, but he contented himself with observing
how Seregil played the role. Despite his affectations, he had the common touch
that invited confidence and respect. He also had a reputation for openhandedness
in certain matters; tradesmen were happy enough to pass on whatever rumors were
current and there was little going on, legal or otherwise, which Seregil didn't
soon hear of.
Equally important were the evening salons. Once it was known that the elusive
Lord Seregil was home at last, a veritable deluge of scented, wax-sealed
invitations poured in.
Thrown together night after night with nobles of all degrees, Alec gradually
learned the gentle art of conversational thrust and parry so necessary to
navigate the intricate waters of Skalan politics.
"Intrigue!" Seregil laughed when Alec groaned over manner once too often.
"That's our bread and butter, and the only intrigue that pay are those of the
wealthy. Smile nicely, nod often, an less-than keep your ears open."
Alec's presence excited a certain amount of comment at first and rumors
regarding his relationship with Seregil circulate
hotly. The higher-minded accepted that he really was—Seregil's ward, or perhaps
his illegitimate son, though the majority of opinion tended toward less
altruistic possibilities. Alec was mortified, but Seregil shrugged it off.
"Don't let it bother you," he counseled. "In these circles the only thing
worse than being slandered is not being talked about at all. In a month or two
they'll forget all about it and think you've been around for years."
To this end, they made a point of frequenting the better theater and gambling
houses. The Tirade Theater in the Street of Light was a favorite haunt of
Seregil's, particularly when Pelion i Eirsil was on stage.
Alec was an instant aficionado of drama.
Brought up on ballad and tavern tales, he was amazed to see stories played
out by a fill cast in costume. Whether he understood the story line or not—he
frequently didn't—the pageantry of it was enough to keep him enthralled through
the entire performance.
And through it all, Alec's education continued—lock work and swordsmanship,
etiquette and lineage, history and disguise, the picking of surcoats and the
picking of pockets—together with a hundred other skills Seregil deemed
indispensable for an aspiring spy.
One grey morning several weeks after the Festival Seregi handed Alec a sealed
note from the pile of new correspondence a his elbow as they sat over a late
breakfast.
Breaking the seal, he read a hastily scrawled note from Beka Cavish.
Can get free a few hours this afternoon. Fancy a ride? If so, meet me at the
Cima Road gate at noon.
-B.c.
"You don't need me this afternoon, do you?" he asked hopefully, passing the
note to Seregil. "I haven't seen her since the investiture."
Seregil nodded. "Go on. I think I can manage without you."
Arriving at the Harvest Market well before the appointed time, Alec found
Beka already waiting for him by the city gate. The way she sat her horse, reins
held casually in one hand, her other elbow cocked out at a jaunty angle beneath
her green cloak, spoke volumes; she looked born to soldiering.
"Aren't you still the fine young dandy?" she called as he maneuvered
Windrunner through the market crowd.
"Seregil's making a gentleman of me, after all." He struck a haughty pose.
"Soon I'll be too good to hang about with the likes of you."
"Then we'd better get on with it while we still can. I need a good run," she
said, grinning at him.
Nudging Wyvern into a trot, she led the way through the gate.
As soon as they were past the curtain wall beyond, they kicked their mounts
into a gallop and rode north along the cliffs. The frozen roadway rang like
metal under their horses' hooves; the sea gave back a metallic sheen beneath the
pale winter sky. To the east, the mountain peaks gleamed white against the
lowering sky.
Side by side, cloaks streaming out behind them, Alec and Beka raced along the
highroad for a mile or more, then veered off into a meadow overlooking the sea.
"That's quite a harness you've got on Wyvem,"
Alec remarked, noting the leather breastplate and frontlet.
"That's to accustom him to the feel of it," she explained. "For battle, the
leather's replaced with felt pads and bronze plates."
"How do you like military life? And what do I call you now?"
"We all start as riders, although those of us with commissions are actually
officers from the start. I'll be a lieutenant when we ride off to the war. Right
now all the new riders are divided up into training decuria. I'm in the first
turma under Captain Myrhini. Lieutenants lead three decuriae, but it's the
captain more often than not who leads the drills—"
"Hold on!" Alec interjected, reining in. "You soldiers speak a different
language. What's a turma?"
"I'm still getting it all straight myself," she admitted. "Let's see, now—ten
riders make a decuria, which is led by a sergeant. Three decuriae to a turma,
commanded by a lieutenant; three turmae to a troop and four troops to a
squadron; two squadrons to the regiment. What with officers, sutlers and the
like, there's about eight hundred of us altogether. Captain Myrhini has command
of First Troop of the Lion Squadron under Commander Klia. Commander Perns
commands the Wolf Squadron. And the Queen's oldest son, Prince Korathan, is the
regimental commander."
"Sounds like a pretty exclusive bunch."
"The Horse Guard is an elite regiment; the officers are all nobles. The
riders all have to provide their own mounts and prove themselves at riding and
shooting, so most of them are from well- to-do families as well. I'd never have
gotten a commission without Seregil's help. Still, elite or not, you should see
some of the young blue bloods tumbling off their horses as they try to draw! I
tell you, I've never appreciated Father's training so much as now. Sergeant
Braknil thinks Captain Myrhini will want to keep me in her troop when I've
finished training. I'll have thirty riders under me. But how about you? I
suppose Seregil's keeping you pretty busy?"
"Oh, yes." Alec rolled his eyes. "I think I've gotten all of ten hours sleep
this week. When we're not arguing with traders or going off to some fancy
gathering, he's got me sitting up half the night memorizing royal lineages. I
think he secretly means to make me into a scribe."
A little pause spread out and in it he felt the distance opening between them
as they headed down their divergent paths. What he really wanted to tell her
about were their nocturnal adventures, but Seregil was adamant about secrecy
outside Watcher circles. At some point, he thought, Nysander ought to recruit
Beka.
Looking up, he found her studying his face with a faint smile. It occurred to
him that having grown up around Micum and Seregil, she probably had a fair idea
of his unspoken life.
"Did I tell you Seregil's teaching me Aurenfaie?" he said, anxious to
reestablish common ground.
"Nos eyir?"
He laughed. "You, too?"
"Oh, yes. Elsbet and I were always pestering him to teach us when he came to
visit. She had a better head for it, naturally, but I know a little. I suppose
you'll need it, too. It's all the fashion among the nobles."
"Seregil says most of them sound like they're talking through a mouthful of
wet leather when they try. He's making certain I get it right.
"Makiry 'torus eyair. How's that?"
"Korveu tak melilira. Afarya tos hara'beniel?" she replied, wheeling her
horse and kicking it into a gallop.
Assuming it had either been an insult or an invitation to another race, Alec
galloped after her.
Dusk was settling outside the windows of Seregil's bedchamber when Alec
strode in with flushed cheeks and new snow melting in his hair. The sweet tang
of a cold ocean wind still clung to him.
"Tell me we don't have to dress up tonight!" he pleaded, dropping down on the
hearth rug by Seregil's feet.
Seregil laid his book aside and stretched lazily. "You look like you've had
quite an afternoon."
"We rode for miles! I should have taken my bow—we ended up in the hills and
there were rabbits everywhere."
"I may have some other hunting for you." Seregil pulled a small scroll from
his belt and brandished it between two long fingers. "This was left at the Black
Feather for the Rhiminee Cat. It seems Lady Isara has lost some compromising
letters and she wants them back. She thinks Baron Makrin's study is a good place
to start looking."
"Tonight?" Alec asked, all weariness instantly forgotten.
"I think that's best. It's a pretty straightforward burglary, nothing fancy.
Midnight's soon enough. We'll have to wait until the household's settled down,
but I don't want to be out in the cold any longer than we have to."
The wind tugged at their cloaks as Seregil and Alec set off for the baron's
villa on the west side of the Noble Quarter. They wore coarse workman's tunics,
and old traveling cloaks covered the swords slung out of sight over their backs.
They'd gone only a few blocks when Seregil suddenly sensed someone on the
street behind them. Touching
Alec lightly on the arm, he turned a corner at random and caught a hint of
motion in the shadows behind them.
"Just like that time I was chased into Silvermoon Street," Alec whispered,
glancing back nervously.
"I had the same thought, though it's probably just someone out for a midnight
stroll. Let's find out."
Leaving the baron for later, he turned right at the next corner, heading east
into the heart of the city.
A slice of moon broke free from the clouds, giving just enough light for
Seregil to make out a large, dark form trailing them from a discreet distance.
Not so innocent after all, he frowned to himself. Keeping up a steady pace,
he strode on into the increasingly poorer streets of the southeast quarter.
Their man still kept his distance, but matched them turn for turn.
"Do you hear that?" Alec asked softly.
"Hear what?"
"That little scraping sound, when he walks over a patch of bare cobbles. I
heard it that other time, too."
"Well then, we'd better let him introduce himself."
Wending his way into a disreputable warren of darkened tenements and
warehouses, Seregil spotted a familiar alleyway. Pretending to stumble, he
reached out and grasped Alec's elbow and signed for him to follow.
Ducking into the alley, he quickly tore off his cloak and tossed it behind a
pile of refuse, then pulled himself through a crumbling window frame overhead.
Alec was up beside him in an instant. From this vantage point, they watched as
their man hesitated, then drew a falchion and went slowly on into the shadows of
the alley. From this angle, Seregil couldn't make out his face.
An amateur, but persistent,
Seregil thought, watching as he went half the length of the alley before
realizing that it was a dead end, and that his quarry was nowhere in sight.
As he turned, Seregil and Alec dropped lightly to the pavement and drew their
swords.
"What do you want?" Seregil demanded.
Undaunted, their pursuer took a step forward, weapon at the ready. "If ever
you called yourself Gwethelyn, Lady of Cador Ford, and Ciris, squire of the
same, then we've a matter of restitution to discuss."
"Captain Rhal!" Alec examined.
"The same, boy."
"You're a long way from the Darter," said Seregil, hoping he didn't sound as
shaken as he felt.
"And a good thing, too," Rhal retorted stiffly, "seeing that she lies rotting
at the bottom of the Folcwine River."
"What's that to do with us?"
Rhal advanced another step, flinging his hat aside. "I've traveled a long way
to ask you that. Two days below Torburn we put in for water at a little place
called Gresher's Ferry. A pack of swordsmen were waiting for us there, and who
do you suppose they wanted?"
Alec shifted uncomfortably beside him.
"I'm sure I have no idea," Seregil replied. "Who were they looking for?"
"Two men and a boy, they claimed, but it was you they meant, sure enough. If
I hadn't caught you out of your woman's riggings I might not have tumbled, but
it was you."
"You're mistaken, though I suppose you set them after us anyway?"
"By the Old Sailor, I did not!" Rhal retorted angrily. "I might have saved
myself the loss of a fine ship if I had."
Certain disturbing questions had occurred to Seregil during this exchange,
but before he could ask any the three of them were startled by a sudden
commotion behind them at the mouth of the alley.
A gang of back alley toughs materialized out of the shadows armed with
swords, cudgels, and daggers. Seregil saw in an instant that there were enough
of them to be trouble.
To his surprise, he found Rhal at his side, sword leveled at the newcomers.
Alec cast him one questioning look, then fell in beside the captain as the
ambushers charged in at them.
Rhal took the center, striking right and left with workmanlike efficiency.
Seregil had just time enough to pull the poniard free of his boot before he
found himself fighting two-handed against a ruffian wielding a quarterstaff.
The alley made for close quarters fighting and the three of them were soon
being forced back inch by inch toward the dead end at their backs.
"Trouble above!" Rhal bellowed as a hail of stones and roof tiles clattered
down from overhead.
"Press the bastards!"
A heavy tile struck his arm, jarring his sword from his hand. A tall footpad
closed in, but Seregil whirled and buried his poniard between the man's ribs.
Beside him, Alec struck another across the face. Rhal rolled hastily out from
under their feet, scrambling through the dirty snow for his weapon.
More stones rained down but thanks to the darkness or someone's poor aim,
most of this load landed among the attackers. In the resulting confusion,
Seregil and the others broke free to the street, the gang hot on their heels.
Freed from the confines of the alley, he rounded on the man nearest him and
ran him through, then blocked a swing from a quarterstaff. He'd lost sight of
Alec, but a fierce yell just behind told him the boy was holding his own.
Seregil was just facing off with two of the footpads when the shrill alarm of
a Watch trumpet rang out nearby. A moment later a Watch patrol galloped into
sight down the street, weapons drawn. The footpads left off at once and melted
away into the shadows like sea smoke before a freshening breeze.
"Come on!" Seregil hissed at Alec and Rhal, and bolted off in the opposite
direction.
"What are we running for?" Rhal panted.
"So we don't spend the night inventing lies for some thickheaded bluecoat,"
Seregil snapped.
Dodging into the next side street, he spotted a sagging bulkhead at the base
of a tenement just ahead.
Hoping for the best, he yanked up one of the flat doors and tossed in a
lightstone. Worn steps led down to a disused cellar.
"Down here!"
Alec and Rhal dove for cover and he followed, pulling the door shut overhead
again.
Crouched tensely in the musty darkness, they listened as the Watch made a
cursory search of the area and then moved on.
Seregil looked over at Rhal. "Now, you were saying?"
For the space of a few heartbeats Rhal stared blankly back at him, then burst
out laughing.
"By the Mariner, I came here to stick a knife in you and now I'm indebted to
you for my life. You two had no call to cover me as you did just then."
"You had no call to let us go that night on the Darter"
Seregil replied, picking up the light and heading for the stairs. "But you
did, and here we are. The boy and I have some business to attend to just now,
but I'd like to continue our earlier discussion. Meet us at the inner room of
the Bower in Silk Street, say in an hour's time?"
Rhal considered the invitation, then nodded. "All right then. An hour."
Seregil lifted the bulkhead door cautiously, then climbed out with Alec close
behind.
"Are we really going to meet him?" Alec asked as they hurried away.
"He tracked us to Wheel Street. I think we'd better find out how he managed
that, don't you?"
Seregil scowled, making no effort to mask his concern. "And who it was that
came to him looking for us, although I think I can guess."
The answering look of fear on Alec's face told Seregil that he could, too.
Their unanticipated run-in with Rhal had sapped every ounce of enjoyment from
the night for Alec. He floundered through the job in a daze of apprehension.
Seregil had said nothing more on the matter so far, but he couldn't shake the
conviction that his own callow ignorance aboard the Darter had somehow led Rhal
to them after all these months. And if he'd tracked them, then why not Mardus?
Luckily for him, the burglary was not a particularly challenging one.
Evidently a smug, unimaginative fellow, Makrin had hidden the letters in a
locked box behind a bit of loose woodwork in his study. Seregil spotted it while
Alec was still sorting through the contents of the writing table. With Lady
Isara's letters in hand, along with a few other items of interest, they stopped
briefly at Wheel Street to deposit the goods, then set off on horseback for the
Bower.
This was a discreetly respectable establishment Seregil often used for
assignations. A yawning pot boy led them to a room at the back. Rhal was already
there, but not alone; Alec immediately recognized the two men with him as the
helmsman and first mate from the ill-fated Darter.
They recognized him as well, and returned his greeting with guarded nods,
weapons close at hand.
Rhal pushed a wine jug over to them as he and Seregil joined him at the
table.
Seregil poured himself a cup, then said without preamble, "Tell me more about
Gresher's Ferry."
Rhal eyed him knowingly. "As I said, a pack of armed men was laying for us
there."
"A rough-lookin" crew," the helmsman, Skywake, added darkly, "They didn't
have no uniforms, but they sat their horses like soldiers."
Alec's heart sank still lower, though Seregil's face remained a carefully
neutral mask.
"They came asking after two men and a boy, said they'd stolen the mayor's
gold up in Wolde," Rhal continued. "When I told 'em I hadn't carried any three
such as they described, they pulled swords and swarmed all over my vessel, bold
as you please. Then their leader—a big, black-bearded son of a whore with an
accent thick as lentil porridge—he laid into me, calling me a liar and worse in
front of my own crew. The more he went on, the less I liked it. By the time he
stopped for breath, I'd sooner been drowned than give him satisfaction. So I
kept mum and finally they rode off.
"We went on downriver and I thought that was the end of it, but that same
night a fire started in the hold and burned so fierce we couldn't even get down
to douse it. Everyone got off, but my ship lies burnt and broken against the mud
bank below Hullout Bend. That's just a bit too much of a coincidence for my
taste, especially since we were carrying silver and bales of vellum that
voyage."
"Not the most flammable of cargoes." Seregil regarded Rhal impassively over
the rim of his cup. "And so you came looking for us."
"You're not going to tell me you were traveling in disguise just to make a
fool of me?" Rhal snorted.
"No."
Nettles slammed his fist down on the table. "Then it was you they was looking
for!"
"I don't know anything about that," Seregil maintained. "What I'm interested
in is how you found me."
"Not much trick to that," Skywake told him, jerking a thumb at Alec. "This
boy of yours asked around amongst the crew how to get to Rhiminee just before
you got off."
Idiot! Alec silently berated himself, his worst fears confirmed.
"Who did he talk to?" asked Seregil, not looking at him.
"There were a bunch of us on deck that day, as I recall," Nettles replied.
"Skywake, you was there, and the cook's boy."
"That's right. And Applescaith. He was the one wanted him to go overland the
whole way, remember?"
"Aye. Him, too. And Bosfast."
Alec sat staring down at his wine cup, mouth set in a grim line. How could he
have been so green?
He might just as well have drawn their pursuers a map.
Seregil took another sip of wine, considering all this. "And so, with nothing
more than a few tenuous suspicions, you chuck everything and head off for Skala
to stick a knife in me?" He shook his head in evident bemusement. "Rhiminee's a
big place. How in the world did you expect to find us?"
Rhal scrubbed a hand over his thinning hair and gave a short chuckle. "If you
aren't the damnedest creature for brass. All right then, I'll tell you straight.
You're looking at a ruined man. All I came away with was my instruments and
this."
Rhal held up his left hand, displaying a large garnet ring on his little
finger. Alec recognized it as the one Seregil had worn while playing Lady
Gwethelyn, but what was Rhal doing with it? Looking at Seregil for a reaction,
he saw the hint of a smile tugging at the corner of his friend's mouth.
"With the Darter beyond fixing and winter coming on, I didn't see too many
prospects for me in the north," Rhal went on. "I was a deepwater sailor in my
youth. I took up the Folcwine passage when my uncle willed me his ship and the
chance to be my own master. Now with the war brewing up for spring, I figured I
maybe could sign on with the navy.
"To tell you the honest truth, I didn't really expect to find you. Then I
caught sight of your boy back around the time you had all that trouble with the
law. Since then, we've kept watch on that fancy house of yours, hoping to have a
quiet chat, as it were. You're a hard pair to track down, though."
"It was you that chased me that night," said Alec.
"That was us." Rhal rubbed a knee with a rueful grin. "You're a tricky little
bugger, and fast. I'd figured you two for soft gents and didn't think you'd give
us much trouble. After seeing the way you handled yourselves in that alley,
though, I believe I'm glad those footpads showed up when they did."
Seregil gave him the crooked grin. "It may be good fortune for all of us,
meeting up again."
"How do you figure that?"
"You two"—Seregil turned to Skywake and Nettles—"do you fancy signing on as
common sailors with a war coming?"
"We go where our captain goes," Skywake replied stoutly, though it was clear
neither he nor the former helmsman were enthusiastic about the prospect.
Seregil looked back to Rhal. "And you, Captain—I'd think it would be
difficult to serve after having a vessel of your own."
Alec began to suspect where this conversation was headed.
"Of course, I'd be the last person to discourage anyone from fighting the
Plenimarans," Seregil drawled, "but it seems to me there are more rewarding ways
of going about it. Have you considered privateering?"
"I've considered it." Rhal shrugged, studying the other man's face with a
sharp trader's crafty interest, "but that takes a strong, swift ship and more
gold than I'm ever likely to see."
"What it takes," Seregil said, reaching into his belt pouch, "is the proper
investors. Would this get you started?"
Opening his hand, Seregil showed them an emerald the size of a walnut glowing
in the hollow of his palm.
It was one of many such stones Seregil kept handy as a conveniently portable
form of wealth.
"By the Sailor, Captain, did you ever see the like of that!" Nettles gasped.
Rhal glanced down at the stone, then back at Seregil. "Why?"
Seregil placed the stone in the center of the table. "Perhaps I appreciate a
man with a sense of humor."
"Skywake, Nettles, wait outside," Rhal said quietly. As they left, Rhal made
a questioning gesture in Alec's direction.
Seregil shook his head. "He stays. So, what do you think of my offer. It
won't be repeated once we leave this room."
"Tell me why," Rhal repeated, picking up the gem. "You've heard my story and
told me nothing, yet you offer me this. What's it really paying for?"
Seregil chuckled softly. "You're a clever man, away from the ladies. Let's
understand one another. I've got secrets I prefer to keep, but there are surer
ways than this to protect them, if you take my meaning. What I'm offering you,
all I'm offering you, is a mutually beneficial business proposition. You find a
ship, see to the crew, the provisioning, everything. I provide capital, in
return for which I receive twenty percent of the take and passage wherever I
say, whenever I require it, which will most likely be never. The rest of the
profits are yours to be divided in whatever fashion you see fit."
"And?" Still skeptical, Rhal put the stone back on the table.
"Information. Any document confiscated, any rumors from prisoners, any
encounter that seems out of the ordinary—it all comes to me directly and not a
word to anyone else."
Rhal nodded, satisfied. "So you're nosers, after all. Who for?"
"Let's just say we consider Skalan interests to be our own."
"I don't suppose you have any proof of that?"
"None whatsoever."
Rhal drummed his fingers lightly on the tabletop for a minute, calculating.
"Ship's papers in my name alone, and I run my vessel as I see fit?"
"All right."
Rhal tapped the emerald. "This is a good start, but it won't pay for a ship,
nor get one built before midsummer."
"As it happens, I know of a vessel being refitted at a boatyard in Macar. The
principal backer's been having second thoughts." Seregil produced a stone
identical to the first. "These should be ample evidence of good faith. I'll make
arrangements to have all further funds paid out to you in gold."
"And what if I just slip the cable tonight with these?"
Seregil shrugged. "Then you'll be a relatively wealthy man. Are we to say
done to it or not?"
Rhal shook his head, looking less than satisfied. "You're an odd one, and no
mistake. I've one last condition of my own, or it's no deal."
"And that is?"
"If I'm to keep faith with you, then I want your names, your true names."
"If you've tracked me to Wheel Street, then you've already heard it; Seregil
i Korit Solun Meringil Bokthersa."
"That's a mouthful by half. And you, boy. You got a fancy long hook, too?"
Alec hesitated, and felt Seregil's foot nudge his own beneath the table.
"You'll have heard mine, too. Alec, Alec of Ivywell."
"All right, then, I'm satisfied." Pocketing the gems, Rhal spit in his palm
and extended his hand to Seregil. "I say done to it, Seregil whoever-you-are."
Seregil clasped hands. "Done it is, Captain."
Alec was very silent as they rode back to Wheel Street. Passing through the
glow of a lone street lantern, Seregil saw that he was looking thoroughly
miserable.
"It's not as bad as all that," he assured him.
"Anyone looking for Lord Seregil knows where to find him."
"Sure, but what if it hadn't been Wheel Street he followed us to?" Alec shot
back bitterly.
"We're much more careful about that. No one's ever tracked me there."
"Probably because you were never stupid enough to give them the damn
directions!"
"Still, considering the circumstances—me too sick to think straight, you not
knowing the country—I don't know what else you could have done, except maybe
have waited until we were off the ship to ask the way. You didn't know any
better then. You do now."
"A fat lot of comfort that'll be when some other old mistake of mine catches
up with us," Alec persisted, looking only slightly less miserable.
"What if the next one who shows up is Mardus?"
"Even if those were his men that boarded Rhal's ship—and I admit, it sure
sounded like them—he didn't tell them anything."
"Then you think we're safe?"
Seregil grinned darkly. "We're never safe. But I do think if Mardus had
tracked us down, we'd have heard from him by now. I mean, he'd have to be insane
to hang about in Rhiminee for any length of time the way things are now."
Sarisin wore into Dostin, tightening winter's embrace on the city. Snow
gusted down out of the mountains, only to be followed by icy rain off the sea
that reduced it all to thick, dirty slush and churned ice, treacherous
underfoot. Smoke from thousands of chimneys mingled with the fog and hung in a
grey haze over the rooftops for days at a stretch.
Preparations for war continued amid a constant stream of rumor and minor
alarms. Skalan merchants were harassed in Mycenian towns, warehouses were rifled
or burned. Plenimaran press gangs were reported on the prowl in ports as far
west as Isil. Word circulated that more than a hundred keels had been laid down
in Plenimaran shipyards.
No major host could be raised before spring, but the forces already billeted
in Rhiminee were more visible than usual as they worked on the city's defenses
and drilled outside the walls. Seregil and Alec often rode over to view the
Queen's Horse at their maneuvers, but their friends there seldom had time for
more than a brief hello.
At Macar, Rhal's ship was progressing rapidly under the captain's sharp eye.
As Seregil had anticipated, once assured of the good faith between them, Rhal
looked out for his silent backer's interests as if they were his own.
It would be another two months before the vessel could be launched, but he
already had Skywake and Nettles combing seaports up and down the coast for
sailors.
The one subject he kept silent on was the vessel's name. When Alec asked,
Rhal only winked, telling him it was bad luck to say before she was launched.
Though by no means oblivious to the import of the events unfolding around
him, Alec moved through the grey midwinter days in a state of increasing
contentment. He'd gradually settled into the role of Sir Alec and had lost most
of his awkwardness around the nobles. He was happiest, though, honing his more
illicit skills as he worked side by side with Seregil as the Rhiminee Cat or on
Watcher business for Nysander.
He also came to appreciate the amenities of life at Wheel Street. In his
former life, wandering the northlands with his father, winter had always meant
hardship—slogging up and down trap lines, sheltering in brushwood huts, and the
snowy solitude of the forest.
Here, fires burned at all hours against the ever-present damp and cold. Thick
carpets covered the floors, food and wine were there for the asking, and warm
baths—for which he had finally acquired a taste—could be had at any hour in a
special room just down the hall. Some of his fondest memories of those days
would be sitting by a snug fire on a stormy day, enjoying the sound of the rain
lashing against the shutters.
As always, life with Seregil had a charmed quality; his enthusiasm and
irreverent good humor buoyed Alec along as a seemingly endless progression of
lessons were placed before him. The more Alec learned, the more he found he felt
like a man who'd thirsted for years unknowing, only discovering his need when it
finally began to be slaked. In return, Alec tried to teach Seregil archery and,
despite all evidence to the contrary, stubbornly refused to give him up as a
hopeless cause.
One stormy afternoon Seregil discovered Alec in the library, frowning
pensively as he scanned the shelves.
"Looking for something in particular?"
"Histories," Alec replied, fingering the spine of a thick volume. "Last night
at Lord Kallien's salon, someone was saying how this war may be as bad as the
Great War. I got to wondering what that one was like. You've told me a bit about
it, but I thought it would be interesting to do some reading on it. Do you have
anything?"
"Nothing much, but the Oreska library does," Seregil replied, inwardly
delighted at this show of scholarly initiative. Alec generally preferred more
active pursuits. "We could ride over if you'd like, and see Nysander, too. It's
been days since we've heard from him."
Sleet pelted wetly down on them as they galloped through the streets of the
Noble Quarter to the Oreska House. As soon as they entered the enchanted gardens
surrounding it the sleet turned to warm, gentle rain.
Turning his face up to it, Seregil wondered if any of the wizards ever got
bored with the perpetual summer that surrounded the place.
Crossing the second-floor mezzanine on their way to Nysander's tower, Alec
nudged Seregil and pointed to the walkway across the atrium.
"Look there," he murmured with a slight grin.
Following his nod, Seregil saw Thero and Ylinesrra walking along arm and arm.
As they watched, Thero threw his head back and let out a genuine laugh.
"Thero laughing?" Seregil whispered in amazement.
Alec watched as the pair disappeared down a corridor. "Do you think he's in
love with her?"
"He probably is, the poor idiot. Or maybe she's magicked him."
He'd meant it as a joke on Thero, but Alec's sudden blush made him wish he'd
kept it to himself.
The boy never spoke of his own apparently cataclysmic tryst with the
sorceress, or betrayed any sign of jealousy when speculating on her other
attachments, but he was rather brittle about the circumstances.
Magyana answered their knock at the tower door.
She had a few willow leaves caught in her silvery braid and a smudge of damp
earth on her chin.
"Hello, you two!" She exclaimed, letting them in. "I just dug some lovely
orris root in the garden and brought some up to Nysander, but he's not here.
Wethis says he's off visiting Leiteus i Marineus again."
Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow. "The astrologer?"
"Yes, he's been spending quite a lot of time with him these last few weeks.
Evidently there's some sort of conjunction they're both interested in. I've got
a potion on the boil back at my workshop so I can't linger, but you can come in
and wait for him."
"No, we've got other business while we're here. Maybe we'll catch up with him
later."
"I see." She paused, studying his face for a moment in the most unsettling
way. "You haven't seen him lately, have you?"
"Not for a week or more," Alec told her.
"We've been pretty busy."
There was something hovering behind the old wizard's eyes that looked very
much like concern, though she seemed to be masking it. "Is something wrong?"
asked Seregil.
Magyana sighed. "I don't know. He just looks so worn-out all of a sudden. I
haven't seen him look this tired in decades. He won't talk of it, of course. I
wondered if he'd said anything to you?"
"No. As Alec said, we've hardly seen him since the Festival except over a few
quick jobs. Maybe it's this business with Leiteus. You know how he drives
himself when he's working on something."
"No doubt," she said, though without much conviction.
"Do look in on him when you can, though." She hesitated again. "You two
aren't angry with one another, are you?"
A sudden image leapt in Seregil's mind; the night they'd unraveled the
palimpsest together, and Nysander suddenly looking at him with a stranger's eyes
as he warned—if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell
you, I shall have to kill all of you.
He pushed the memory away before it could show in his face. "No, of course
not. What would I be angry about?"
Leaving Nysander's chambers, Alec followed Seregil back down through the
warren of stairways and corridors to the ground floor.
"The Oreska library is actually scattered all over the building," Seregil
explained as they went. "Chambers, vaults, closets, for gotten cupboards, too,
probably. Thalonia has been the librarian for a century and I doubt even she
knows where everything is. Some books are available to anyone, others are locked
away."
"Why, are they valuable?" asked Alec, thinking of the beautifully decorated
scrolls Nysander had lent him.
"All books are valuable. Some are dangerous."
"Books of spells, you mean?"
Seregil grinned. "Those, too, but I was thinking more of ideas. Those can be
far more dangerous than any magic."
Crossing the atrium court, Seregil swung open the heavy door to the museum.
They hadn't been in here since Alec's first visit during Seregil's illness. As
they passed the case containing the hands of the dyrmagnos, Tikarie Megraesh,
Alec paused, unable to resist peering in at them in spite of his revulsion.
Recalling the trick Seregil had played on him last time, he kept his friend
carefully in sight.
The wizened fingers were motionless, but he could see freshly scored marks in
the oak boards lining the bottom of the case beneath the cruel nails.
"They look quiet enough—" he began, but just then one of the hands clenched
spasmodically.
"Bilairy's Balls, I hate those things!" He shuddered, backing hurriedly away.
"Why do they move like that? Aren't they and all the other pieces of him
supposed to be dying?"
"Yes." Seregil looked down at the hands with a puzzled frown. "Yes, they
are."
Alec followed Seregil through a stout door at the back of the museum and down
two sets of stairs to a series of corridors below the building.
"It's this one here," said Seregil, stopping before an unremarkable door
halfway down the passage. "Stay here, I'll go find a custodian to let us in."
Alec leaned against the door and looked about. The walls and floors were made
of stone slabs, laid smooth and tight together. Ornate lamps were fastened in
brackets at intervals, giving enough light to see clearly from one end of the
corridor to the other. He was just wondering whose job it was to keep all those
lamps full when Seregil came back with a stooped old man in tow.
The custodian rattled the door open with a huge iron key and then handed Alec
a leather sack. Inside were half a dozen large lightstones.
"No flames," the old man warned before creaking off again about his business.
"Just leave them outside the door when you've finished."
The chamber was a large one, and filled with closely spaced shelves of books
and scrolls.
Holding one of the stones aloft, Alec looked around and groaned. "It'll take
us hours to find anything here!"
"It's all very logically arranged and docketed," Seregil assured him,
pointing out little cards tacked to the shelves here and there. On each, a few
words in faded script indicated general subject areas. "Histories of the Great
War" took up several bookcases at the back of the room. Judging by the
undisturbed layers of dust on most of them, there had been little interest of
late in the subject.
Seregil clucked his tongue disapprovingly. "People ought to make more use of
these. The past always sets the stage for the future; any Aurenfaie knows that."
Alec looked at the closely packed tiers in dismay. "Maker's Mercy, Seregil. I
can't read all these!"
"Of course not," said Seregil, climbing a small ladder to inspect the
contents of an upper shelf. "Half of them aren't even in your language and most
of the others are ponderously boring. But there are one or two that are fairly
readable, if I can just remember where to look. You browse around down there;
stick to things less than two inches thick to begin with—and see if you can read
them."
If there was a system to the arrangement of the books, it eluded Alec. Books
in Skalan stood check by jowl with those in Aurenfaie and half a dozen other
languages he couldn't begin to guess at.
Seregil appeared to be right at home, though.
Alec watched as his companion went busily to and fro with his ladder,
muttering under his breath as he went, or exclaiming happily over old favorites.
Alec had already extracted half a dozen suitably slim volumes when the ornate
binding of a thicker one caught his eye. Wondering if it had illustrations, he
pulled it out. Unfortunately, this one served as a sort of keystone, for the
ones on either side of it let go and most of the shelf cascaded to the floor at
Alec's feet.
"Oh, well done!" Seregil snickered from somewhere beyond the next shelves.
Alec set his books aside with an exasperated sigh and began replacing the
others. He hadn't been all that interested in the war in the first place; his
simple query was turning out to be considerably more trouble than it was worth.
As he slid a handful of books back into place, however, he noticed something
sticking out from behind some others.
Curious, he carefully pulled it free and found that it was a slim, plainly
bound book held shut with a latched strap. Encouraged by its size more than
anything else, he tried to open it, but the catch wouldn't give.
"How are you making out?" asked Seregil, wandering back with a book under his
arm.
"I found this in back of some others. It must have fallen in behind." On
closer inspection, he saw that it was actually a case of some sort. There was no
writing anywhere on it to suggest what its contents might be. "I can't get it
open."
Alec jiggled the catch a last time, then handed it to him.
Seregil glanced it over and passed it back. "There's no lock; the catch is
just corroded good and tight. It can't have been opened for years. Oh, well, it
probably wasn't anything very interesting anyway."
He gave Alec a challenging grin, one Alec had seen often enough before.
"What, here?" he whispered in surprise.
Seregil leaned against a bookcase and gave a careless shrug. "It's not much
good to anyone that way, is it?"
After a quick, rather guilty look around to make sure the custodian hadn't
returned, Alec drew the black-handled poniard from his boot and worked it under
the strap. The deadly sharp blade cut easily through the leather. Sheathing it
again, he gently opened the cover and found a loose sheaf of parchment leaves
inside. They were badly stained and scorched along the bottom edge, some burned
half away.
Small, close-packed script covered each on both sides.
"Aura Elustri!"
Grinning excitedly, Seregil lifted out the first sheet. "It's in Aurenfaie.
It looks to be a journal of some sort—" He read a few lines. "And it's
definitely about the war."
"It's so weathered I can hardly make it out," said Alec, taking up another
page. "Not that my Aurenfaie's all that good to begin with."
"Anyone would have a hard time making this out." Seregil squinted down at the
cramped text a moment longer, then closed it and tucked it under his arm with
the other book he'd chosen. Sorting through the ones Alec had selected, he
discarded all but two and hurried Alec upstairs again, obviously eager to tackle
the journal.
Back at Wheel Street again, they retreated to Seregil's chamber with a supply
of wine and fruit. When the fire had been replenished and the lamps lit against
the early evening gloom, they began sorting through the sheets on the hearth
rug.
Taking up a page, Seregil studied it closely. "Do you know what this is?" he
exclaimed with a smile of pure delight. "These are fragments of a field journal
kept by an Aurenfaie soldier during the war. Alec, it's an eyewitness account of
events six centuries old! Just wait until we show Nysander. I'll bet no one even
knew this was there, or it would have been in a different vault."
The pages were badly shuffled in places and it took some doing to sort them
out. The translation from Aurenfaie to Skalan was easy enough; deciphering the
crabbed and often smeared writing while searching through mismatched pages was
another matter. Seregil finally found what appeared to be the earliest entry and
settled back in a nest of cushions on the floor to read it aloud.
They soon pieced together that the author had been a young archer, part of a
regiment of well-to-do volunteers raised by a local noble. He'd been a faithful
diarist, but the entries dealt mostly with skirmishes and fallen comrades. It
was clear that the Aurenfaie had hated their Plenimaran adversaries, who were
consistently depicted as harsh and brutal. There were several mercifully terse
descriptions of their barbaric treatment of captured soldiers and camp
followers.
The first series of entries ended with a detailed description of his first
sight of Queen Gerilain of Skala. Referring to her as "a plain girl in armor,"
he nonetheless praised her leadership. He spoke only Aurenfaie, it seemed, but
quoted several lines of a powerful rallying speech she'd given before the Third
Battle of Wyvern Dug, which someone had translated for him. He described the
Skalan soldiers admiringly as "fierce and full of fire."
Stretched out on the carpet, watching the shadows playing across the ceiling,
Alec let the words paint scenes in his imagination. As Seregil read about
Gerilain, the first warrior queen, he found himself picturing Klia, although she
was anything but plain.
The second fragment had been written in Mycena during the battles of high
summer, when the regiment had been joined by a contingent of Aurenfaie wizards.
This was followed by an intriguing line about "the necromancers of the enemy,"
but the rest of the page had been destroyed.
Muttering again, Seregil sorted through the few remaining pages. "Ah, here we
are. Part of it's missing, but it begins, "and our wizards have moved to the
front, ahead of the cavalry. The Skalan captain met these forces only two days
ago and cannot speak of them without paleness and trembling. Britiel i Kor
translated for us, saying he tells of dead men rising from the field to fight
the living."
"Just like in the legends," Alec murmured, forgetting for a moment that this
was a factual account and not some bardic tale.
"We've heard this account too often now to call him mad," Seregil read on.
"The Skalan captain claims Plenimar has a terrible war god. We have heard
wounded enemies calling upon Vatharna. Now learn this is their word for god even
they will not name. Nor will Skalans speak it, saying instead with great hatred,
Eater of—"
He faltered to a halt.
"Eater of Death!" Alec finished for him, scrambling up to his knees. "That's
it, isn't it? Just like in the prophecy at the Sakor Temple. We've got to find
Nysander. The Eater of Death must be that death god you told me about, the bad
luck one, Seri—"
Seregil lunged forward, pages scattering as he clamped a hand over Alec's
mouth.
"Don't!" he hissed, face white as chalk.
Alec froze, staring up at him in alarm.
Seregil let out a shaky breath and dropped his hand to Alec's shoulder,
gripping it lightly. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to scare you."
"What's the matter?"
"Be still a minute; I have to think." Seregil felt as if a black chasm had
suddenly opened beneath them.
Seregil if you let slip the slightest detail of what I am about to tell you,
I shall have to kill all of you
— join our song, the only song. For the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death—
For an instant the only thing that made any sense was the solid feel of
Alec's shoulder, the warm brush of the boy's hair as it fell across the back of
his hand.
Memories crowded in on each other, treading dangerously on each other's heels
as they threatened to coalesce into a pattern he didn't wish to see.
The palimpsest, telling of a "Beautiful One" and leading to a crown
surrounded by the dead. Micum's grim discovery in the Fens. The ragged leather
pouch that Nysander had burned. And the coin, that deceptively prosaic wooden
disk that had nearly killed him with madness and dreams-dreams of a barren plain
and a golden-skinned creature that embraced him, demanding a single blue eye
that winked from a wound over his heart. Voices singing-over a barren plain, and
deep in the depths of a mountain cavern as blood dripped down to pool on the
ice. Nysander's threat-a warning?
"Seregil, that hurts."
Alec's soft, tense voice brought him back and he found himself clutching the
boy's shoulder. He hurriedly released him and sat back.
Alec closed cold fingers over his own. "What is it? You look like you've just
seen your own ghost."
A desperate ache lanced through Seregil as he looked down into those dark
blue eyes.
if you let slip the slightest detail Damn you, Nysander!
"I can't tell you, tali, because I'd only have to lie," he said, suddenly
dejected. "I'm going to do something now, and you're going to watch and say
nothing."
Taking the final page of the manuscript, he twisted it into a tight squib and
tossed it into the fire.
Alec rocked back on his heels, watching in silent consternation as the
parchment blossomed into flame.
When it was consumed, Seregil knocked the ash to bits with the poker.
"But what about Nysander?" Alec asked. "What will you tell him?"
"Nothing, and neither will you."
"But—"
"We're not betraying him." Seregil took Alec by the shoulders, more gently
this time, drawing their faces close together. "You have my oath on that. I
believe he already knows what we just learned, but he can't know that you know.
Not until I tell you it's safe. Understand?"
"More secrets," Alec said, looking solemn and unhappy.
"Yes, more secrets. I need your trust in this, Alec. Can you give it?"
Alec looked sidelong at the fire for a long moment, then locked eyes with him
again and replied in halting Aurenfaie, "Rei phoril tos tokun meh brithir, vri
sh 'ruit 'ya. "
Though you thrust your dagger at my eyes, I will not flinch. A solemn oath,
and one Seregil had pledged him not so long ago. Seregil let out a small,
relieved laugh. "Thank you. If you don't mind, I think I'll take a rest. Why
don't you go have a look through those books we found?"
Alec got up to go without a word. But he paused in the doorway, looking back
at Seregil still sitting by the fire.
"What does tali mean? Is it Aurenfaie?"
"Tali?"
A ghost of the old grin tugged at one corner of Seregil's mouth. "Yes, it's
an Aurenfaie term of endearment, rather old-fashioned, like beloved. Where'd you
pick that up?"
"I thought—"
Alec regarded him quizzically, then shook his head. "I don't know, at one of
the salons, probably. Sleep well, Seregil."
"You, too."
When Alec was gone, Seregil walked to the window and rested his forehead
against one cold pane, staring out over the dark garden.
Stone within ice. Secrets within secrets.
Silences inside of greater silences.
In all the time he'd known Nysander, he had never felt such distance between
them. Or so alone.
Several days passed before Alec realized that they were not going to talk of
the matter again. Despite his oath, it troubled him greatly. This silence toward
the wizard seemed to create a small cold gap in a relationship that had been so
seamlessly warm and safe.
For the first time in months he found himself wondering about Seregil's
loyalties.
Try as he might to banish such thoughts, they nagged at him until at last he
came out with it as they were out walking in the Noble Quarter one evening.
He'd feared that Seregil would evade the question or be annoyed. Instead, he
looked as if he'd been expecting this discussion.
"Loyalty, eh? That's a large question for a thinking person. If you're asking
if I'm still loyal to Nysander, then the answer is yes, for as long as I have
faith in his honor. The same goes for any of my friends."
"But do you still have faith in him?" Alec pressed.
"I do, though he hasn't made it easy lately. You're too smart not to have
noticed that there are unspoken things between him and me. I'm trying hard to be
patient about all that, and so must you.
"But maybe that's not the real issue here. Are you losing faith in me?"
"No!" Alec exclaimed hastily, knowing the words were true as he spoke them.
"I'm just trying to understand."
"Well, like I said, loyalty is no simple thing. For instance, would you say
that you, Nysander, and I are loyal to Queen Idrilain and want to act in the
best interests of Skala?"
"I've always thought so."
"But what if the Queen ordered us, for the good of Skala, to do harm to
Micum? Should I keep faith with her or with him?"
"With Micum," Alec replied without hesitation.
"But what if Micum, without our knowledge, had committed treason against
Skala? What then?"
"That's ridiculous!" Alec snorted. "He'd never do anything like that."
"People can surprise you, Alec. And perhaps he did it out of loyalty to
something else, say his family. He's kept faith with his family but broken faith
with the Queen. Which outweighs the other?"
"His family," Alec maintained, although he was beginning to feel a bit
confused.
"Certainly. Any man ought to hold his family above all else. But what if his
justified act of treason cost hundreds of other families their lives? And what
if some of those killed were also friends of ours—Myrhini, Cilia, There. Well,
maybe not Thero—"
"I don't know!" Alec shrugged uncomfortably.
"I can't say one way or the other without knowing the details. I guess I'd
just have to have faith in him until I knew more. Maybe he didn't have any
choice."
Seregil leveled a stern finger at him. "You always have a choice. Don't ever
imagine you don't. Whatever you do, it's a decision and you have to accept
responsibility for it. That's when honor becomes more than empty words."
"Well, I still say I'd have to know why he did it," Alec retorted stubbornly.
"That's good. But suppose, despite all his kindness to you, you discovered he
really had betrayed your trust. Would you hunt him down and kill him as the law
required?"
"How could I?"
"It would be difficult. Past kindness counts for something. But say you knew
for certain that someone else would catch him—the Queen's officers, for
instance—and that they'd kill him slowly and horribly. Then wouldn't it be your
duty, as a friend and a man of honor, to see to it that he was granted a quick,
merciful death? Looked at from that angle, I suppose killing Micum Cavish might
be the greatest expression of friendship."
Alec stared at Seregil, mouth slightly ajar. "How the hell did we come to me
killing Micum?"
Seregil shrugged. "You asked about loyalty. I told you it wasn't easy."
The hands moved more often now. As Nysander gazed down at them through the
thick sheet of crystal that covered the case, a trick of the light superimposed
his reflection over the splayed hands below, creating the illusion that his head
lay within the case, gripped in the withered talons of the dead necromancer. The
face he saw there was a very old one, etched with weariness.
While he watched, the hands slowly curled into fists, clenching so tightly
that the skin over one knuckle split, showing brown bone beneath.
Continuing grimly on through the deserted museum, Nysander half expected to
hear the Voice from his nightmares, roaring its taunting challenge up through
the floor from the depths below. Those dreams came more often now, since
Seregil's return from the Asheks.
Summoning an orb of light, Nysander opened the door at the back of the museum
chamber and began the long descent through the vaults.
He'd wooed Magyana here in the days of their youth.
When she'd remained obdurate in her celibacy, they had continued to share
long discussions as they wandered along these narrow stone corridors. Seregil
had often come with them during his ill-starred apprenticeship, asking a
thousand questions and poking into everything.
Thero came with him occasionally, though less often than he once had. Did
Ylinestra bring him down here to make love, Mysander wondered, as she had him?
By the Four, she'd warmed the very stones with her relentless passion!
He shook his head in bemusement as he imagined her with Thero; a sunbird
embracing a crow.
He'd never completely trusted the sorceress.
Talented as Ylinestra was at both magic and love, greed lurked just behind
her smile. In that way she was not unlike Thero, but Thero was bound by Oreska
law; she was not.
The fact that she had gone from his bed to Thero's troubled Nysander in a way
that had nothing to do with former passions, though he had been unable to
convince Thero of that. After two tense, unpleasant attempts, Nysander had
dropped the subject.
Other wizards might have dismissed an assistant over such a matter, he knew,
yet in spite of their growing differences, Nysander still felt a strong regard
for Thero and refused to give up on him.
And mixed with that regard, he admitted once again in the silence of the
vaults, was the fear that many of his fellows in the Oreska would be glad to
take on Thero if he let him go. Many were critical of Nysander's handling of the
talented young wizard, and thought Thero was wasted on the eccentric old man in
the east tower. After all, he'd ruined one apprentice already, hadn't he? Small
wonder Thero seemed discontent.
But Nysander knew the boy better than any of them and believed with every
fiber of his being that given his head at this stage of training, the young
wizard would ultimately ruin himself. Oh, he would earn his robes, of course,
probably in half the time it would take most. That was part of the problem.
Thero was so apt a pupil that most masters would joyously fill his head with all
they knew, guiding him quickly through the levels to true power.
But more than a keen mind and flawless ability were needed to make so
powerful a wizard as Thero would undoubtedly become. Ungovemed by wisdom,
patience, and a compassionate heart, that same keen mind would be capable of
unspeakable havoc.
So he kept Thero with him, hopeful to change him, fearful to let him go.
There were moments, such as the night he found him tending to Seregil's
injuries after the misadventure in the sewers, when Nysander caught a gleam of
hope—signs that Thero might be coming to understand what it was that Nysander
was asking of him beyond the mere learning of magic.
Reaching the door to the lowest vault, he shook off his reverie and hastened
on.
Few had reason to go to this lowest vault, which for time out of mind had
been the Oreska's repository for the forgotten, the useless, and the dangerous.
Many of the storerooms were empty now, or cluttered with mouldering crates.
Other doors had been walled up, their frames outlined with runic spells and
warnings. But as he walked along, the sound of his footsteps muffled on the dank
brick underfoot, he could hear the bowl and its high, faint resonance, audible
only to those trained to listen for it. The sound was much stronger than it once
had been.
The wooden disk had had little effect on it; its power was incomplete
separated from the seven others Nysander knew existed somewhere in the world.
The crystal crown was a different matter. As soon as he'd placed it here, the
resonance of the bowl had grown increasingly stronger, and with it his
nightmares.
And the movements of the necromancer's hands in the museum.
How Seregil had survived his exposure to the disk unprotected by anything but
his own magical block was still a mystery. Equally mystifying was how little
protection all Nysander's carefully prepared spells and charms had been for
Seregil from the effects of the crown. In the first case he should have died, in
the second he should have had absolute protection, yet in both cases he had
sustained wounds but survived.
All this, taken together with the words the Oracle of Illior had spoken to
Seregil, left Nysander with the uneasy conviction that much more than mere
coincidence was at work.
Stopping, he faced the familiar stretch of wall yet again. With a final check
to be certain no eyes, natural or otherwise, were upon him, he spoke a powerful
key spell and cast a sighting through stone and magic to the small hidden room
beyond.
Immured in the darkness of centuries, the bowl sat on the tiny chamber's
single shelf. To the uninitiated, it was nothing more than a crude vessel of
burnt clay, unremarkable in any way. Yet this homely object had dominated his
entire adult life, and the lives of three wizards before him.
The Guardians.
To one side of the bowl lay the crystal box containing the disk; on the
other, still smeared with the ash of Dravnian cook fires, was the flat wooden
case holding the crown.
For no better reason than curiosity, he spoke the Spell of Passage and
entered the chamber.
Magic crackled ominously around him in spite of the wards and containment
spells. Taking a lightstone from his pocket, he held it up and regarded the bowl
solemnly for a moment, thinking again of his predecessors. None of them, not
even Arkoniel, had anticipated ever adding to the contents of this hidden and
most guarded chamber. Now he had, not once but twice, and their combined song
was a pulse of living energy.
His hands stole to the containers on either side of the bowl.
What would that song be if I opened these, brought even these three fragments
together without the rest? What could be learned from such an experiment?
His right thumb found the catch on the wooden box, rubbed tentatively at it.
Nysander jerked back, made a warding sign, and retreated the way he'd come.
Alone in the corridor, he broke the Spell of Passage and slumped against the
opposite wall, his heart pounding ominously in his chest.
If just three fragments of the whole could force such thoughts into his mind,
then he must be all the more vigilant.
Forced those thoughts into your mind, old man, a niggling inner voice chided,
or revealed them there? How many times did Arkoniel warn you that temptation is
nothing more than the dark mirror of the soul?
Inevitably, regret followed hard on the heels of memory. Arkoniel had taught
him well and early the responsibility of the Guardians, allowing him to share
the weight of the secret they preserved.
Whom did he share it with?
No one.
Seregil could have been trusted, but the magic had failed him. Thero had the
magic, but lacked—what?
Humility, Nysander decided sadly. The humility to properly fear the power
contained in this tiny, silver-lined chamber. The more apparent Thero's
abilities became over the years of his apprenticeship, the more certain Nysander
was that temptation would be his undoing. Temptation and pride.
Feeling suddenly far older than his two hundred and ninety- eight years,
Nysander pressed a hand to the wall, bolstering the warding spells, changing and
strengthening them to conceal what must remain concealed. It was a task he'd
once thought he would pass along as his master had passed it to him. Now he felt
no such certainty.
Seregil and Alec were lingering over a late lunch one bright afternoon toward
the middle of Dostin, when
Runcer entered the room with a ragged young girl in tow.
Seregil looked up expectantly, recognizing her as the sort who made her
living as a message carrier.
"Beka Cavish sends word that the Queen's Horse is riding out at dawn
tomorrow," the girl recited stiffly.
"Thanks." Seregil handed her a sester and pushed a plate of sweets her way.
Grinning, the child snatched a handful and hid them away in the folds of her
ragged skirt.
"Take this message to Captain Myrhini, of the Queen's Horse," he told her.
"As Beka Cavish's patron, I'm honor-bound to give her and her turma a proper
send-off. The captain is asked to attend and keep order. She may bring anyone
else she likes, so long as she gives Beka and her riders a night out. Got that?"
She proudly repeated it back word for word.
"Good girl. Off you go." Turning back to Alec, Seregil found his young friend
frowning worriedly.
"I thought you said nothing would happen before spring?" Alec asked.
"The war? It won't," Seregil replied, somewhat surprised by the news himself.
"The Queen must have some reason to think the Plenimarans mean to move in early
spring, though, and wants troops near the border in case of trouble."
"This doesn't give us time enough to send for Micum and Kari."
"Damn! I didn't even think of that." Seregil drummed his fingers on the
polished tabletop a moment.
"Oh, well. We'll ride out tomorrow with the details. In the meantime, we've
got a party to prepare for."
Word soon came back by the same messenger that Captain Myrhini would release
Lieutenant Cavish and her riders for the evening, with the expectation that
sufficient food and drink were included in the offer.
Seregil had already turned his attention to the preparations with an
efficiency that astonished Alec.
Within a few hours, extra servants had been engaged, a raucous group of
musicians was installed in the gallery with their fiddles, pipes, and drums, and
a steady stream of deliveries from the market had been whipped into a proper
feast by the cook and her crew.
In the meantime, the salon was cleared of all breakables and three long
trestle tables set up, together with hogsheads of ale and wine set on pitched
braces at the head of the room.
Beka and her turma rode into Wheel Street at sunset. They were an impressive
sight in their spotless white breeches and green tabards sewn with the
regimental crest.
A little daunting even, thought Alec, standing next to Seregil at the front
door to welcome them.
He'd always envied Beka just a little, being part of such an elite group. The
idea of riding into a pitched battle surrounded by comrades had a certain
romantic appeal.
"Welcome!" Seregil called.
Beka dismounted and strode up the front steps, her eyes shining almost as
brightly as the burnished lieutenant's gorget hanging at her throat.
"You do us a great honor, my lords," she said loudly, giving them a wink.
Seregil bowed slightly, then looked over the crowd of riders milling behind
her. "That's a rough-looking bunch you brought. Think they can behave
themselves?"
"Not a chance, my lord," Beka replied smartly.
Seregil grinned. "Well then, come on in, all of you!"
Alec's awe diminished somewhat as the men and women of Beka's command filed
past into the painted salon.
He'd only seen them at a distance on the practice field before-dashing
figures clashing in mock battle. Now he saw that most of them were scarcely
older than he. Some had the bearing of landless second sons and daughters or
merchant's scions; others—those who stood gaping at the opulent room—came from
humbler backgrounds and had earned their place by sheer prowess and the price of
a horse and arms.
"I'd like to introduce my sergeants," Beka said.
"Mercalle, Braknil, and Portus."
Shaking hands with the trio, Alec guessed that most of them had come up
through the ranks. Sergeant Mercalle was tall and dark-complected. She was also
missing the last two fingers of her right hand, a common wound among warriors.
Next to her stood Braknil, a big, solemn-looking man with a bushy blond beard
and weather-roughened skin. The third, Portus, was younger than his companions
and carried himself like a noble.
Alec wondered what his story was; according to Beka, it seemed unlikely that
he would not be an officer of some rank.
Seregil shook hands with them. "I won't embarrass your lieutenant by telling
you how long I've known her, but I will say that she's been trained by some of
the best swordsmen I know."
"I can believe that, your lordship," Braknil replied. "That's why I asked to
serve with her."
Beka grinned. "Sergeant Braknil's too tactful to say so, but he was one of
the sergeants assigned to train the new commissions when I came in. I started
out taking orders from him."
"A title may guarantee an officer's commission, but it doesn't guarantee the
officer's quality," Mercalle put in rather sourly.
"Especially if there hasn't been a real war to winnow out the chaff in a
while. I've seen a good many sporting the steel gorget who won't see high
summer."
"Mercalle's our optimist," Portus chuckled, and Alec heard the remnants of a
lower city accent behind the man's smooth words.
"It's early for you to be sent north, isn't it?" he asked ingenuously.
"There are rumblings from Plenimar already," Beka told him. "Queen Idrilain
and the Archons of
Mycena all want troops in place near the west border of Plenimar before the
roads thaw into mud holes next month. They're not making any secret of it,
either. The Sakor Horse Regiment and a squadron of the Yourkani Horse have
already headed up to Nanta. We'll be going farther east."
"First in, last out," was Portus said proudly. "That's been our motto since
Gerilain's day."
"The Queen's Horse Guard started as the token group of soldiers King
Thelatimos gave his daughter after the Oracle said a woman was to lead the
country," Seregil explained. "She surprised everyone when she led them
successfully in battle."
Braknil nodded. "One of my ancestors was with Gerilain and there's been at
least one of my family with the Guard ever since."
Stationed by the front door, Runcer announced gravely, "Captain Myrhini and
Commander Perris, of the Queen's Horse, my lords."
Myrhini strode in, accompanied by a handsome uniformed man Alec had seen
around the drilling field. Beka and her riders instantly snapped to attention.
Myrhini introduced her companion as Commander Perris, who led one of the
other squadrons of the regiment, then looked around, scowling. "What, no one
drunk yet? Lieutenant Beka, explain yourself."
"I'll see to it at once, Captain!" Beka replied, coloring a bit.
Seregil laid a hand on her arm. "I thought perhaps some of your soldiers
might be a bit self-conscious dancing with each other, so I took the liberty of
inviting a few other guests to liven things up."
At his gesture, the musicians struck up a sprightly tune and a score of
richly dressed men and women entered from the dining room, streaming out to
partner the soldiers.
"Who are they?" asked Beka, her eyes widening in surprise.
Seregil exchanged an amused look with Alec.
"Oh, just a few friends of mine from the Street of Lights who think the
Queen's best regiment deserves nothing less than the best."
Myrhini covered a smile as Beka's eyes went wider still as she recognized the
significance of the colored tokens each elegant "guest" wore discreetly on their
clothing or in their hair-white, green, rose, or amber.
Alec leaned closer to Beka. "From what I
understand, you'll want to stick with amber."
"From what I understand, Sir Alec, I think I'll stick with you," Beka
retorted, slipping her arm through his. "Come on and show a soldier a good time,
eh?"
"You are a generous patron," Commander Perris noted with amusement. "Mind if
I join in? I see a familiar face or two."
"By all means," Seregil said, smiling.
Myrhini followed Seregil to the table and accepted a cup of wine. "They can
do with a bit of spoiling," she said, watching the milling throng with obvious
affection. "It'll be cold camps and long riding for us between now and spring."
"And then?" asked Seregil.
Myrhini glanced at him over the rim of her cup, then sighed. "And then it
will get worse. Most likely a lot worse."
"Will this lot be ready?"
"As ready as green soldiers can be. These ones here are some of the best, and
so is Beka. I just hope they can stay alive long enough to get seasoned. Nothing
but battle experience can do that for them."
By midnight Alec was drunker than he'd ever been in his life and not only
knew all the riders and courtesans by name, but had danced with most of them.
He'd just staggered through a reel with a blue-eyed, tipsily amorous rider
named Ariani when Corporal Kallas and his twin brother Aulos grabbed him and
hoisted him onto one of the tables.
"Lieutenant says you're lucky,"
Kallas bawled, pulling off his tabard and handing it up to Alec. "So we're
making you our mascot, young Alec my lad."
Alec pulled on the uniform and made the company an exaggerated bow. "I am
honored!"
"You are drunk!" someone shouted back.
Alec considered this, then nodded solemnly. "I am that, but as the Maker
teaches us, in the depths of the cup lies the back door to enlightenment—or
something like that, anyway." Snatching up a half-full bottle of wine, he waved
it in their general direction. "And the drunker I get, the braver and worthier
you all look to me!"
"A visionary of the vine," Kallas exclaimed, spreading his arms in mock
reverence. "Give me your blessing, O beardless sage!"
Alec obligingly slopped some wine on the man's face. "Long life and a hollow
leg, my S on "*" S "Ponied
Laughing and cheering, the rest of them asked for his benediction. Quite a
number were mi8ment f??? as were most of the courtesans.
?????
His he not and so
He sprinkled the supplicants liberally until he came to the last, Beka. Her
freckled face was ??
and dancing; her wild red hair had escaped S fl his shed, with wisps around it,
toward your sister, was going off
"Come on, mascot, don't you have any better luck left for me?" she demanded.
Grabbing up a fresh bottle, Alec said.
"Long life, luck in the shadows," her head
Beka sputtered and laughed and those ??
"Well done, mascot," Kallas said . "A blessing that wet's likely to make her
immortal!"
"I hope so," Alec whispered, looking down at her. "I do hope so."
"Master Micum, there's riders coming up the hill," a servant shouted to him
across the snowy pasture.
Standing atop the hayrack, Micum shaded his eyes against the late afternoon
sun and quickly scanned the frozen river boundary. Two horsemen were riding up
from the bridge a mile below.
He'd been leery of unannounced visitors since returning from the northlands
that past autumn.
Despite all Nysander's assurances to the contrary, he still didn't feel easy
in his mind about Mardus and his gang.
So he studied the riders with a chary eye. Seeing that they kept to the main
track, and rode at an unhurried canter with weapons sheathed, he ruled out enemy
or messenger. They were still too far away to make out faces, but he soon
recognized the horses.
Frowning, he pushed his way through the colts milling around the hayrack and
set off for the house. More often than not, unexpected visits from Seregil meant
a summons to Watcher business. Kari was three moons gone now and the sickness
had passed, leaving in its wake the glowing bloom of mid term pregnancy.
Nonetheless, she was older this time and he disliked the thought of leaving her.
A farm hand met him apologetically in the courtyard. "Illia run ahead with
the dogs to meet 'em soon as she made out who it was, Master Micum. I didn't
think it no harm."
"Not this time maybe, Ranil, but I don't like her getting in the habit of
it," Micum retorted gruffly.
Seregil and Alec clattered into the court a few moments later, with Illia
perched proudly on Alec's saddlebow. They were both looking a little pale, Micum
noted, but they seemed in good spirits otherwise.
"So I might have to marry Alec when I'm grown," Illia was prattling across to
Seregil. "I hope that won't hurt your feelings too much."
Seregil slapped a hand over his heart like a troubadour in a mural. "Ah, fair
maiden, I shall slay a thousand evil dragons for you, and lay their steaming
black livers at your dainty feet, if only you will restore me to your favor."
"Livers!" Illia buried her face against Alec's shoulder with an outraged
giggle. "You wouldn't bring me livers, would you, Alec?"
"Of course not," Alec scoffed. "What a disgusting present. I'd bring you the
eyeballs for a necklace, and all their scaly pointed tongues to tie your braids
with."
Shrieking with delight, Illia slid off into her father's arms.
"Hey, little bird, what are you doing running off by yourself?" he asked
sternly.
"It's just Uncle Seregil and Alec. And I wasn't alone," she added coyly,
shawl askew as she spread her arms grandly over the pack of great shaggy hounds
jostled around them, like a general over her troops. "Dash and all the others
came with me."
"You know the rules, young miss," Micum remonstrated. "Run in now and tell
your mother who's here."
"What brings you two up?" he asked, turning back to the others with a twinge
of relief; they were dressed for visiting rather than traveling.
Seregil waded through the dogs to hand him a stitched packet of letters.
"Beka asked us to bring this out to you. Her regiment left at dawn."
"What, today? We should have been there to see her off!"
"There wasn't time," Alec explained quickly, coming up beside Seregil. "The
orders came yesterday. We gave her and her riders a proper send-off last night,
though." He rubbed his head with a rueful grin. "I think I'm still a little
drunk."
Seregil ruffled Alec's hair with playful impunity. "Runcer will be a couple
of days clearing up the wreckage. Between that, and the complaints from the
neighbors, we figured it might be a good time for Lord Seregil and Sir Alec to
lay low for a few days. We thought we'd put up here, if that's agreeable."
"Yes, of course," Micum replied distractedly, fingering the packet of
letters. "Where were they headed?"
"The western border of Mycena," Seregil told him. "Word is Idrilain wanted
them in place before the Klesin thaws muck up the roads next month. The Queen's
Horse was the first to go, but the city was swarming with soldiers by the time
we rode out. Idrilain isn't taking any chances."
Micum shook his head, wondering how Kari was going to take this news. "Ranil,
see to their horses. If you two will excuse me a minute, I want a look at
these."
Seregil laid a hand on his arm as he turned to go.
Casting a quick glance toward the door, he said in a low voice, "There's
something else. Rhal tracked us down in Rhiminee about a month ago."
Micum tensed. "That river trader?"
Seregil nodded. "Some foreign-sounding swordsmen showed up looking for the
three of us after Alec and I had gotten off. Rhal covered our tracks, and soon
after the Darter went down under questionable circumstances. We've been careful
since, and there's been no sign of trouble so far, but with spring coming on—you
never know. That's another reason we want to move back to the inn."
"What's Nysander say to all this?"
Seregil shrugged. "He's keeping a wizard eye out for trouble. So far he
hasn't spotted anything."
"They must have lost us in Mycena," Alec put in, sounding as if he and
Seregil had had this discussion before. "Otherwise, we'd have been approached or
attacked."
"So you'd think," Micum allowed. "Still, you're smart to be careful. Go see
to your gear. I'll break the news to Kari."
"We won't hurry, then, eh?" Seregil said, giving him an understanding look.
Kari took the news of Beka's departure more calmly than Micum had feared.
Reading over Beka's letter, and those from Elsbet, she merely nodded and then
folded them carefully back into the wrapper.
Old Arna and the other household servants joined them by the central fire in
the hall as Seregil described Beka's departure in glowing detail.
"They looked grand, riding out of the city by torchlight," he said. "Klia and
the high officers rode at the fore in full uniform, helmets and all. And there
was our Beka at the head of her turma with a steel lieutenant's gorget at her
throat. The horses had bronze chest plates and cheek pieces that jingled like
bells as they rode."
"She wrote that she's in Captain Myrhini's troop," noted Kari, stroking
Illia's dark head as the little girl leaned against her knee.
"Myrhini's as good a captain as there is," Micum said, pulling her close.
"The frontier will be quiet for a while yet, too. The Plenimarans couldn't get
that far west much before mid-Lithion at the earliest and probably not until
early summer. She'll have time to find her feet before any trouble starts."
"I hope so," murmured Kari. "Will there be more letters?"
"Dispatch riders go back and forth as often as possible," Seregil assured
her.
"That's good, then."
Micum exchanged uneasy glances with the others, but after a moment she simply
tucked the letters away and rose with her usual briskness.
"Well, Arna, you and I had better go see to the supper. Micum, tell the men
to set up the tables. You two chose a good night to come, Seregil; we've got
venison pie and apples baked in cream."
The meal was the usual noisy communal affair and the guests were summoned to
give news of the absent daughters between mouthfuls. Watermead was a country
household, close-knit and loyal. The servants wouldn't be satisfied until they'd
had descriptions of Beka's regiment twice over and a detailed account of
Elsbet's studies at the temple school.
Later, when a loudly protesting Illia had been put to bed and the servants
had spread their pallets in the warmth of the hall, Micum and Kari joined
Seregil and Alec in the guest chamber.
"Tell me about your reunion with this fellow Rhal," Micum said when he'd
poured hot spiced cider for everyone.
Sprawled crossways on the bed, Seregil launched into what sounded like a
highly colored tale of their ambush of Rhal and the subsequent battle with a mob
of alley toughs. Alec's prowess was featured in such flattering detail that the
boy, who was sitting close beside Kari, flushed with surprise.
"Well done, Alec," Kari laughed, hugging him.
"This Captain Rhal of yours sounds like a man worth knowing," Micum said.
"I've thought so ever since you told how he let you go that night."
"Micum told me something of your trip, but I'd like to hear your version of
it," said Kari. "Did he really fancy Seregil, Alec?"
Alec grinned. "I half fancied him myself, when he was all prettied up. As it
was, I had all I could do to keep the two of them at arm's length."
With frequent interruptions from Seregil, he went on to describe Rhal's
attempts at seduction, and Micum noticed that both of them skillfully omitted
any mention of the wooden disk, or the influence it had exerted over Seregil. In
this account, Rhal had simply walked in on Seregil in an unfortunate state of
undress. It all came out sounding a great deal more humorous than the original
version Micum had heard in Nysander's tower.
"Ah, Seregil," Kari exclaimed, wiping her eyes with the corner of her apron.
"I've never known anyone who could get himself into such messes, and then right
back out again!"
"It would have been considerably more difficult if Alec hadn't been such a
faithful defender of my virtue." Seregil gave Alec a courtly nod.
"My lady," Alec murmured, rising to give him a bow of such elaborate
solemnity that they all burst out laughing again.
"I was watching Seregil's face tonight," Kari said as they lay together in
the darkness that night. "He's in love with Alec, you know. He wasn't last time
they were here, or even at the Festival, but he is now."
"Are you surprised?" Micum yawned, resting a hand lazily on the roundness of
her belly, hoping to feel the new life fluttering there.
"Only that it took so long. I doubt he knows it yet himself. But what about
Alec?"
"I don't think such a thing would occur to him, with his upbringing and all."
Kari let out a long sigh. "Poor Seregil. He has such rotten luck when it
comes to love. Just once, I'd like to see him happy."
"Seems to me you had your chance about twenty years back," Micum teased,
nuzzling her bare shoulder.
"When it was you he fancied, you mean?" She rolled quickly on top of him,
pinning him playfully as she straddled his thighs. "And if I had relinquished my
claim to you, sir?" she challenged. "What would you have done then, eh?"
"I can't say," he replied, pulling her mouth to his with one hand, finding
the generous curve of her hip with the other. "Perhaps it would've been handy,
having a bed mate who's good with a sword."
"It's true I don't bring anything sharp into bed with me."
"Mmmmm-I can feel that," Micum rumbled contentedly. "Perhaps it's just as
well things worked out the way they did."
Kari moved over him like a blessing, her lips hot against his brow. "I like
to think so."
Seregil hadn't shared a bed with Alec since their last visit to Watermead.
He'd thought nothing of it then; such arrangements were common, especially in
old country houses.
But this time was different.
He wasn't certain just when his feelings had gotten away from him, or why.
Months of close living and shared dangers, perhaps, together with the genuine
affection
Seregil knew had existed between them almost from the start.
It figures, he thought dourly as they undressed for bed. He never could seem
to love anyone who could return the favor.
Not that Alec didn't care for him in his own honest, Dalnan way. Seregil had
no doubt of that. But he did doubt that Alec's heart skipped a dizzy beat at the
mere thought of sliding in between shared sheets.
Out of deference to Alec's modesty—or so he told himself—he kept his long
shirt on and pulled up the coverlet.
The old bedstead, built for company, was a wide one and Alec kept to his side
of it as he climbed in.
"You're quiet all of a sudden," he remarked, oblivious to Seregil's inner
turmoil.
"All that wine last night left me tired."
Seregil mustered a yawn. He could go sleep in the hall, he supposed, but that
would take some explaining later on. Better to stay here and hope he didn't talk
in his sleep.
Alec settled against the bolsters with a sigh of contentment. "Me, too. At
least we can get some rest while we're out here. So quiet. No jobs or midnight
summons. No worries—"
His eyes drifted shut and his voice trailed off into deep, even breathing.
No worries.
Seregil sat up to extinguish the lamp, but paused, caught by the sight of
Alec's thick, honey-gold hair fanned out across the pillow. His expression was
peaceful, guileless. His lips curved in a faint smile as if good dreams had
already come to him.
For an instant Seregil wondered what it would feel like to have that golden
head against his shoulder, the warmth of Alec's body against his own.
If it had been simple lust Seregil felt, he could easily have driven it off.
But what he felt for Alec at that moment went far beyond that.
Seregil loved him.
Little more than the length of a tailor's yard separated them, but it might
just as well have been the breadth of the Osiat Sea. Allowing himself nothing
more than a deep, silent sigh, he blew out the lamp and lay back, praying for
sleep.
Rising early the next morning, Micum found Alec stacking wood in the kitchen.
The boy had changed his city clothes for plain garb and was sharing some joke
with Arna and young Jalis. Watching a moment from the doorway, Micum was struck
again by how easily Alec seemed to fit into the rhythm of the household.
Or anywhere else, come to that, he amended, thinking of all the roles and
identities Alec had played in the time he'd been with Seregil. They were like
water, those two, always shifting shape.
"It's a fine day for hunting," he announced. "The deer have been thick up on
the ridge this year. His lordship up yet?"
Alec brushed dirt and bark fragments from his tunic. "He was still buried
somewhere under the covers last time I looked. I don't think he slept well last
night."
"Is that so?" Micum went to the kitchen door and reached outside for a
handful of loose snow. "Well then, he wants waking up, doesn't he? I'm sure he'd
hate to miss such a beautiful morning."
Mirroring his grin, Alec got himself a handful and followed Micum to the
bedroom.
The shutters were still closed, but there was enough light for them to make
out the long form beneath the quilts on
Seregil's side of the bed.
Together, Micum signed to Alec.
Stalking in silently, they threw back the quilts and launched their assault,
only to find they'd ambushed a bolster.
The shutters banged open behind them and two familiar voices shouted, "Good
morning!"
Startled, Micum and Alec looked up just in time to catch a faceful of snow
from Seregil and Illia, laughing victoriously outside.
"Sneak up on me, will you?" Seregil jeered as he and the girl fled.
"After them!" cried Micum, scrambling out through the window.
An ungainly chase ensued. Illia wisely dodged into the kitchen and was
granted asylum by Arna, who brandished a copper ladle at all would-be abductors.
Seregil wasn't so lucky. Never at his best in a daylight fight, he stumbled
over one of the excited dogs who'd joined in the hunt and was tackled by Alec.
Micum caught up and together they heaved Seregil into a drift and sat on him.
"Traitor!" he sputtered as Alec thrust a handful of snow down the back of his
shirt.
Micum cut him short with another handful in the face. "I believe I owed you
that," he chortled, "and here's another with interest."
By the time they let him up, Seregil looked like a poorly carved sculpture
done in white sugar.
"What do you say to a hunt?" Micum asked, attempting to brush him off a bit.
"Actually, I had more of a quiet day by the fire in mind," Seregil gasped,
shaking snow from his hair.
Grabbing him, Micum tossed him easily over one broad shoulder. "Find me a
fresh drift, Alec."
"There's a good one right there."
"I'll go, I'll go, damn you!" howled Seregil, struggling.
"What did I tell you?" laughed Micum, setting him on his feet.
"I knew he'd want to."
With dry clothes and a quick breakfast, the three of them set off into the
hills above Watermead with bows and hounds.
The dogs struck the trail of a boar first, but Micum called them off that,
since they hadn't brought spears.
For the rest of the morning they found nothing but birds and rabbits. At
Alec's insistence, Seregil had brought a bow and no one was more surprised than
he when he managed to hit a roosting grouse.
They were just thinking of stopping for a midday meal when the dogs flushed a
bull elk from a stand of fir. They chased it for nearly half an hour before Alec
put a broadhead shaft into the great beast's heart, dropping it in midleap.
"One shot, by the Maker!" Micum exclaimed, swinging out of the saddle to
inspect the kill.
"Quick and clean," said Alec, kneeling to inspect the shot. "That way they
don't suffer."
Alec had dropped armed men with the same merciful economy, thought Micum,
inspecting the red-fletched shaft protruding from the animal's side.
They built a fire and began dressing out the carcass. It was messy work; the
snow around them was soon stained a steaming scarlet. Opening the belly, Micum
tossed the entrails to the dogs and presented the heart and liver to Alec, his
due for the killing shot.
"We'll need more water before we're done," Micum remarked as they set about
the skinning.
Alec wiped his bloodied hands in the snow. "We passed a stream a ways back.
I'll go refill the water skins."
Seregil paused in his work, following Alec with his eyes until the boy had
ridden out of sight between the trees. Beside him, Micum smiled to himself,
thinking of what Kari had said.
"He's grown up a lot, hasn't he?" he ventured presently.
Seregil shrugged, going back to his skinning.
"He's had to, running around with the likes of us."
"You've come to think quite a lot of him, I'd say."
Seregil saw through his flimsy words in an instant and his smile faded to
hard, flat denial. "If you think I—"
"I'd never think ill of you for the world. I just think that heart of yours
leads you down some hard trails, that's all. You haven't said anything to him,
have you?"
Seregil's face was a careful mask of indifference, but his shoulders sagged
visibly. "No, and I'm not going to. It wouldn't be— honorable. I have too much
influence over him."
"Well, he loves you well in his own fashion," Micum said, unable to think of
anything more optimistic.
The silence spun out between them again, less comfortable this time.
Loosening the last bit of hide, Micum set his knife aside. "Do you have any idea
what Nysander is up to? I haven't heard a thing from him since the Festival."
This time there was no mistaking the troubled look in his friend's eyes.
"Secrets, Micum. Still secrets. He's driven me half-mad with them," Seregil
admitted, warming himself at the fire.
"Have you found anything out on your own?"
Seregil stirred the embers with a branch, sending up a little flock of
sparks. "Not much. And I'm oath-bound not to talk about it. I'm sorry."
"Don't apologize. We both know how the game works. How's Alec handling it,
though? He's smart enough to put things together and I'd say he's about as easy
to put off a scent as you are."
"True." Seregil gave a humorless laugh. "I'm worried, Micum. Something really
bad is coming down the road and I can't tell who's in the way."
Micum hunkered down beside him. "If anyone can look out for him, it's you.
But there are some other things you could be telling him. He has a right to
know."
Seregil shot to his feet and waved at Alec as he rode out of the trees toward
them.
"Not yet," he said, his voice too soft for Micum to tell if the words were a
command or a plea.
After three days at Watermead, Alec and Seregil returned to the city under
cover of night and made their way quietly back to the Cockerel.
Runcer would keep up appearances at Wheel Street; Lord Seregil was in town,
but not always available.
Thryis and the others had gone to bed when they arrived, but the aromas still
lingering in the darkened kitchen—new bread, dried fruit, garlic, wine, and ashy
coals banked on the hearth—were enough welcome for Alec.
Ruetha appeared from somewhere and followed them up to the second floor. Alec
scooped her up and held her until Seregil had disarmed the succession of warding
glyphs that protected the hidden stairway leading to their rooms. Alec grinned
to himself as Seregil whispered the passwords that had once sounded so
exotically magical.
The command for the glyph at the base of the stairs was
Etuis midra koriat|an cyris.
"Your grandmother insults the chickens."
Halfway up:
Clarin magril.
"Raspberries, saddle."
For the hidden door at the top of the stairs the word was
Nodense:
"Almost."
The nonsense was intentional, making it virtually impossible for anyone to
guess the secret words. Only the final command, the one for the door into the
sitting room, had any meaning.
Bokthersa was the name of Seregil's birthplace.
Seregil crossed the room with the aid of a lightstone and lit the fire. As
the flames leapt up, he surveyed the room in surprise. "Illior's Hands, don't
tell me you cleaned the place up before you left for Wheel Street?"
"Just enough so I could walk across the room safely," Alec replied, going to
his neat, narrow bed in the corner near the hearth. He didn't particularly mind
Seregil's chaotic living habits, but he did dislike stepping on sharp objects
barefoot, or having heavy things fall on him from shelves. Hanging his sword and
bow case on their nails above the bed, he stretched out with a contented sigh.
Seregil collapsed on the sofa in front of the fire. "You know, it strikes me
that this is all a bit of a comedown for you. After having your own chamber, I
mean. Perhaps we should think about expanding our accommodations here. There are
empty rooms on either side of us."
"Don't bother on my account." Yawning, Alec crossed his arms behind his head.
"I like things just as they are."
Seregil smiled up at the shadow of a dusty cobweb wavering overhead. "So do
I, now that you mention it."
Their pleasure at returning to the inn was marred by a sudden scarcity of
jobs. The few that had come in during their absence were petty matters, and over
the next week new ones were slow to follow. For the first time in their
acquaintance, Alec saw Seregil grow bored.
To make matters worse, late winter was the dreariest season in Rhiminee
despite the lengthening days. The icy rains brought thicker fog in off the sea,
and a grey dampness seemed to get into everything. Alec found himself sleeping
well past dawn, and then nodding off over whatever he was doing in the evening
with the sound of the rain lulling him like a heartbeat. Seregil, on the other
hand, became increasingly restless.
Returning from a visit with Nysander one dank afternoon near the end of
Dostin, Alec found Seregil working at the writing desk. The parchment in front
of him was half-covered with musical notations, but he appeared to have lost
interest in the project. Chin on hand, he was staring glumly out at the fog
slinking by like a jilted lover.
"Did you check with Rhiri on your way up?" he asked without turning his head.
"Nothing new," Alec replied, unwrapping the books the wizard had lent him.
"Damn. And I've already checked everywhere else. If people keep behaving
themselves like this we'll be out of a job."
"How about a game of bakshi?" Alec offered. "I could use some practice on
those cheats you showed me yesterday."
"Maybe later. I don't seem to be in the mood." With an apologetic shrug,
Seregil returned to his composition.
Suit yourself, thought Alec. Clearing a space on the room's central table, he
settled down to study the compendium of rare beasts Nysander had given him. The
text was somewhat beyond his ability, but he stubbornly puzzled it out, relying
on the illustrations for clues when the gist of a passage eluded him. With cold
mists swirling against the windowpanes, a fire crackling on the hearth, and a
cup of tea at his elbow, it was not an unpleasant way to occupy an afternoon.
It did require considerable concentration, however, which quickly proved
difficult as Seregil abandoned the desk and began wandering around the room.
First he toyed with an unusual lock he'd picked up somewhere, grinding noisily
away at the wards with a succession of picks. A few moments later he tossed it
onto a shelf with the others and disappeared into his chamber, where Alec could
hear him rummaging through the chests and trunks piled there and muttering
aloud, either to himself or the ever faithful Ruetha.
Presently he reappeared with an armload of scrolls. Kicking the scattered
cushions into a pile in front of the fire, he settled himself to read. But this
pursuit was equally short-lived.
After a brief perusal involving considerable rustling of parchments and
muttered asides, each document was relegated in rapid succession into the fire
or onto a dusty pile beneath the couch. With this task completed, he lay back
among the cushions and began to whistle softly between his teeth, keeping time
to his tune by tapping the toe of one boot against the ash shovel.
Not even Nysander's excellent bestiary could withstand such distraction.
Realizing he'd just read the same sentence for the third time, Alec carefully
closed the book.
"We could do some shooting in the back court," he suggested, trying not to
let his exasperation show.
Seregil looked up in surprise. "Oh, sorry. Am I disturbing you?"
"Well—"
He stood up again with a sigh. "I'm not fit to be around today, I'm afraid.
I'll get out of your way." With this he returned to his room, emerging a few
moments later wearing his best cloak.
He'd changed his rumpled tunic for a proper surcoat and breeches, too, Alec
saw.
"Where are you off to?"
"I think I'll just walk awhile, get some air," Seregil said, avoiding eye
contact as he hurried to the door.
"Wait a minute, and I'll go with you."
"No, no, you go on with your reading," Seregil insisted hurriedly. "And tell
Thryis not to wait supper for me. I could be late."
The door closed after him and Alec found himself in sole possession of their
rooms.
"Well, at least he didn't take his pack this time," he grumbled to Ruetha,
who'd stationed herself on a stack of books beside him. Tucking herself into a
neat loaf, the cat merely blinked at him.
Alec opened his book again, but found he couldn't concentrate at all now.
Giving up, he made another pot of tea and looked into Seregil's bedroom while
it steeped; no clue was immediately apparent in that chaotic jumble.
What's he up to, dashing off like that?
Except for that one mysterious journey, Seregil had included him in every job
since the Festival. But he hadn't acted like he was going out on a job just now.
The parchment was still on the desk. Bending over it, Alec saw that it was
the beginnings of a song. The words were badly smudged in places, and whole
lines had been struck through or scribbled over. What remained read:
Shelter awhile this poor tattered heart.
Cool my brow with your kiss.
Tell me, my love, you will lie with me only.
Lie to me all night like this.
Sweet is the night, but bitter the waking
When the sun harries me home.
Others there'll be, who drink at your fountain
While I toss cold and alone.
Yellow as gold, the hair on your pillow,
Green as cold emeralds, your eyes.
Dear as the moon, the cost of your favors,
Below this half a dozen lines had been struck out with what appeared to be
increasing frustration.
The margins of the sheet were filled with half-completed sketches and
designs-Illior's crescent, a perfectly drawn eye, circles, spirals, arrows, the
profile of a handsome young man. In the lower left coiner was a quick but
unmistakable sketch of Alec scowling comically over his books, which Seregil
must have drawn from his reflection in the windowpane.
As he set the sheet aside, a familiar binding caught his eye among the books
stacked on the workbench next to the desk. It was the Aurenfaie journal case
they'd discovered in the Oreska library. He'd assumed Seregil had returned it
with the others; he certainly hadn't said anything more about it, or about their
discovery of the reference to the mysterious "Eater of Death."
Opening it, Alec gently turned the fragile pages over. Though he couldn't
read them, they all looked just as he remembered them.
He replaced the case as he'd found it, and for the first time wondered if
Seregil's restlessness lately was due to something more than just bad weather
and boredom.
Come to think of it, he'd been restless at Watermead, as well. Those nights
they'd shared the guest chamber bed, his friend had often tossed and muttered in
his sleep. He hadn't done that before.
What secrets was he wrestling with?
"Or maybe he's just pining for his green-eyed mistress?" Alec speculated
aloud, scanning the parchment again with an amused chuckle.
Ruetha appeared to have no opinion on the matter, however, and he found
himself pacing as he rehearsed various nonchalant comments he could use to
broach the subject when Seregil returned.
Whenever that turned out to be.
Lost in the quiet of the murky afternoon, he went back to his book and read
until the light failed. When he got up for a fresh candle, he saw that the rain
had stopped. Beyond the courtyard wall, the street lanterns glowed enticingly
through the mist.
Suddenly the room seemed close and stale. There was really no reason he
shouldn't go out. Why hadn't he thought of it sooner? Throwing on a surcoat and
cloak, he headed downstairs.
The door between the kitchen and lading room was open.
Through it he could see Cilia serenely nursing Luthas in the middle of the
dinnertime bustle, sorting through a basket of apples with her free hand as she
did so. The baby sucked greedily, tugging at the lacings of her open bodice. Her
exposed breast throbbed gently with the rhythm of his demand.
Alec's experience with Ylinestra had considerably altered his reaction to
such sights. He colored guiltily when she looked up and caught him hovering in
the doorway.
"I thought you'd gone out already," she said.
"Ah-no. I was just, that is—It's stopped raining, you see, and I'm just going
out for a walk." He gestured vaguely toward the door behind him.
"Could you hold the baby a minute before you go?" she asked, pulling Luthas
off the nipple and holding him up. "My arm'll break if I don't shift over."
Taking the child, Alec held him while Cilia moved her baskets and uncovered
her other breast.
It was swollen with milk; a thin stream jetted from the nipple as she moved.
Alec was close enough to see the pearly drops that fell across the deep red
skins of the apples. He looked away, feeling a little dizzy. Luthas let out a
sleepy burp and nuzzled at the front of Alec's cloak.
"The way he eats, you'd think I'd not have a drop to spare, but just look at
me!" Cilia exclaimed merrily, taking the child back and putting him to breast on
the other side. "Maker's Mercy, I've got more milk than Grandmother's goat."
Unable to think of a suitable reply to this, Alec nodded a hasty farewell and
turned to go.
"Hey, Alec. Take this for your troubles," she said, tossing him an apple.
Feeling wetness beneath his fingers, he tucked it into a pocket and retreated
to the back courtyard.
There, with the fog cool on his face, he allowed himself a moment's guilty
pleasure replaying the scene in his mind. Cilia had never treated him as
anything but a friend and until just now it had never occurred to him to think
otherwise of her. Of course, the fact that she was at least six years older than
he made it unlikely that her opinion would change.
Settling his sword belt against his hip, he pulled his hood well up and set
off through the back gate with no particular destination in mind. The fog
carried the smell of smoke and the sea. He tossed a corner of his cloak over one
shoulder, enjoying the feel of the cold night air.
Skirting the Harvest Market, he strolled through Knife Maker's Lane to Golden
Helm and followed it, watching the evening traffic bustle past.
As he reached the Astellus Circle, he was suddenly struck by a new and
unexpected inspiration.
Across the busy circle, beyond the pale, templelike fountain colonnade, stood
the gracious arch that marked the entrance to the Street of Lights. He'd been
down this street many times on the way to the theater and gambling houses there,
and Seregil had often jested about stopping in at a brothel afterward, but
somehow it had never happened.
He'd never imagined it would.
Until now.
The colored lanterns-rose, amber, green, and white- glowed softly through the
mist, each color signifying what sort of companionship was available within.
Rose meant women for men, he knew, and white was women for women; amber meant a
house for women, too, but the prostitutes there were male.
Most enigmatic of all, however, was the green lantern, signifying male
companions for male patrons. Worse yet, some houses showed several colors at
once.
There's no reason to be nervous, he thought as he crossed to the arch. After
all, his clothes were presentable, his purse was heavy, and thanks to Ylinestra,
he wasn't completely inexperienced. As his friends never seemed to tire of
pointing out, he was of age for such diversions. There was no harm in just
having a look around, anyway. Nothing wrong with being curious.
As usual, the street was busy. Riders on glossy horses and carriages
displaying the blazons of noble houses and wealthy merchants clattered past as
he strolled along, looking with new eyes at the establishments showing the pink
lantern. Groups of rich young revelers seemed to be everywhere, their boisterous
laughter echoing in the darkness.
A woman wearing the uniform of the Queen's Household Guard was bidding a
lingering good-bye to a half-dressed man in a doorway beneath an amber lamp as
he passed. Next door, a well-heeled sea captain and several of his men burst
from one house showing the rose light and, after a moment's consultation,
stormed off across the street to one with a green. Lights glowed in nearly every
window; muffled laughter and strains of music drifted everywhere, adding to the
festive feel of the place.
It occurred to him as he walked along that the color of a lantern was not a
lot to go on for such a decision.
No doubt Seregil could have suggested a few likely places, but that wasn't
much good to him now. At last, he settled on a house near the middle of the
street for no better reason than that he liked the carvings on the door. Just as
he was about to go in, however, a door swung open across the street and a group
of young men spilled out in a flood of light and music. A man was singing
inside, and the voice stopped Alec in his tracks. The clear, lilting tenor was
unmistakably Seregil's.
"Yellow as gold, the hair on your pillow,
Green as cold emeralds, your eyes.
Dear as the moon, the cost of your favors,
But priceless, the sound of your sighs.
Well, well! So here you are, thought Alec.
And you figured out that last line, too.
Wondering what role his friend was playing tonight, he crossed the street and
hurried up the stairs and into the spacious vestibule beyond. In his haste, he
collided with a tall, handsomely dressed man just inside the door.
"Good evening," he exclaimed, catching Alec lightly by the shoulders to
steady himself. His hair was streaked with silver, but his long, handsome face
was youthful as he smiled down on Alec.
"Excuse me, I wasn't looking where I was going," Alec apologized.
"No harm done. I'm always glad to meet anyone so anxious to enter my house.
You've not been my guest before, I think. I'm Azarin."
The man's blue eyes swept over him in what Alec sensed was well-practiced
appraisal.
He'd given no patronymics and Alec's name was not asked for.
Evidently he'd passed muster, for Azarin slipped his arm through Alec's and
drew him with gentle insistence toward a curtained archway nearby.
"Come, my young friend," he said warmly, drawing aside the curtain. "I
believe you'll find the company most congenial."
"Actually, I was just—"
Taking the room in at a glance, Alec froze, all thought of Seregil
momentarily forgotten.
Beyond the curtain, a broad staircase led down into an opulent salon. The air
in the softly lit room was heavy with incense. The walls were painted in Skalan
fashion with superb murals and, while erotic themes were not uncommon, these
were unlike any Alec had encountered before.
Green, he thought numbly, heart tripping a beat as he gazed around.
The murals were divided into panels, and each presented handsome male nudes
intertwined in passionately carnal acts. The sheer variety was astonishing. Many
of the feats depicted appeared to require considerable athletic ability and
several, thought Alec, must have been pure fantasy on the part of the artist.
Dragging his gaze from the paintings, he swiftly took in the occupants of the
astonishing chamber. Men of all ages reclined on couches arranged around the
room, some embracing casually as they gave their attention to a young lute
player by the hearth, others laughing and talking over gaming tables scattered
here and there. Couples and small groups came and went up a sweeping staircase
at the back of the room. There was no unseemly behavior, but many of them wore
little more than long dressing gowns.
The patrons seemed to be mostly noblemen of various degrees, but Alec also
recognized uniforms of the
Queen's Archers, the City Watch, several naval tunics, and a red tabard of the
Oreska Guard.
He even recognized a few faces, including the poet Rhytien, who was currently
holding forth to a rapt audience from the embrasure of a window.
The courtesans, if that was what one would call them, were not at all what
he'd expected; some were slight and pretty, but most of them looked more like
athletes or soldiers, and not all of them were young.
He hadn't heard Seregil's voice again since he'd entered, but he saw him now
lounging on a couch near the hearth. He had one arm around a handsome,
golden-haired young man and they were laughing together over something. As the
courtesan turned his head, Alec recognized him—it was the same face Seregil had
sketched on the margin of the song. Even from this distance, Alec could see the
fellow had green eyes.
His heart did another slow, painful roll as he finally allowed himself to
focus on Seregil.
His friend wore only breeches beneath his open robe and his dark hair hung
disheveled over his shoulders.
Slender, lithe, and completely at ease, he could easily have been mistaken
for one of the men of the house.
In fact, Alec silently admitted, he outshone them all.
He was beautiful.
Still rooted where he stood, Alec suddenly felt a strange division within
himself. The old Alec, northern red and callow, wanted to bolt from this
strange, exotic place and the sight of his friend stroking that golden head as
absently as he'd petted the cat a few hours earlier.
But the new Alec, Alec of Rhiminee, stood fast, caught by the elegant
decadence of the place as his ever-present curiosity slowly rekindled.
Seregil hadn't noticed him yet; to see him like this in such a place made
Alec feel as if he were spying on a stranger.
Seregil's strange, virile beauty, at first unappreciated, then taken for
granted as their familiarity grew through months of close living, seemed to leap
out at him now against the muted backdrop of the crowd: the large grey eyes
beneath the expressive brows, the fine bones of his face, the mouth, so often
tilted in a caustic grin, was relaxed now in sensuous repose. As Alec watched,
Seregil leaned his head back and his robe fell open to expose the smooth column
of his throat and the lean planes of his chest and belly.
Fascinated and confused, Alec felt the first hesitant stirring of feelings he
was not prepared to associate with his friend and teacher.
Still hovering at his elbow, Azarin somewhat misinterpreted his bedazzled
expression. "If I may be so bold, perhaps you lack experience in such matters?"
he asked. "Don't let that trouble you. There are many hours in the night, take
your time."
He swept a graceful hand at the murals.
"Perhaps you'll find inspiration there. Or have you a particular sort of
companion in mind?"
"No!" Startled out of his daze, Alec took a step backward. "No, I didn't
really- I mean, I thought I saw a friend come in here. I was just looking for
him."
Azarin nodded and said, ever gracious, "I understand. But now that you are
here, why not join us for a while? The musician is new, just in from Cirna. I'll
send for wine."
At Azarin's discreet summons, a young man detached himself from a knot of
conversation nearby and came up to join them.
"Tirien will attend you in my absence," said Azarin.
Giving the two of them a final, approving look, he disappeared back into the
vestibule.
"Well met, young sir," Tirien greeted him.
Thick black hair, glossy as a crow's wing, framed his face and a soft growth
of new beard edged the hollows of his cheeks. His smile seemed genuinely
friendly. He was dressed in breeches, boots, and a loose shirt of fine linen;
for a moment Alec mistook him for a noble. The illusion was shattered, however,
when Tirien stepped closer and said, "There's a couch free near the fire, if you
like. Or would you prefer to go up at once?"
For one awful moment Alec was speechless; what in Illior's name was he to do?
Glancing past Tirien's shoulder, his eyes happened to fall on one of the panels.
The young prostitute turned to follow his gaze, then smiled.
"Oh, yes, I'm quite good at that. As you can see, though, we'll need a third
man."
Seregil's eyes widened in genuine amazement at he caught sight of Alec framed
in the salon entrance, amazement followed at once by a bittersweet pang of
something deeper than mere surprise.
The boy had obviously stumbled into Azarin's house by mistake. The tense
lines around his mouth and faint, betraying color in his cheeks attested as
much.
I'd better go rescue him, he thought, yet he remained where he was, letting
the scene play on a bit longer.
A quick glance around the room confirmed that Alec was attracting the notice
of other patrons, as well.
And no wonder, Seregil thought with a stab of something dangerously close to
possessiveness. For a moment he allowed himself to see Alec through the eyes of
the others: a slim, somberly dressed youth whose heavy, honey-dark hair framed a
finely featured face and the bluest eyes this side of a summer evening sky. He
stood like a half-wild thing, poised for flight, yet his manner toward the young
prostitute was almost courtly.
Tirien leaned closer to Alec and the boy's mask of composure slipped a bit,
betraying-what? Alarm, certainly, but hadn't there been just a hint of
indecision?
This time Seregil couldn't deny the hot flash of jealousy that shot through
him. Thoroughly annoyed with himself, he began disentangling himself from
Wythrin.
"Do you want to go back up now?" the young man asked hopefully, sliding a
warm hand up his thigh.
This gave him pause. Seregil touched the back of one hand to Wythrin's cheek,
savoring the faint roughness of it. This one, a favorite for some time now, had
charms of his own, and talents that spared Seregil's heart even as they
satisfied his need.
Wythrin, and others like him, offered safe, guiltless passion, free of
obligation.
"In a moment. There's someone I need to talk to first."
He'd get Alec out of whatever jam he'd stumbled into, whether that sent him
upstairs with Tirien or not, Seregil told himself sternly, then lose himself
once more in Wythrin's deep bed. It was as simple as that.
Alec quickly realized that Tirien had no intention of being put off. His own
increasingly embarrassed protestations that he had no experience in such matters
only seemed to whet the courtesan's interest. It wasn't the first time Alec had
run into this attitude; country virgins seemed to be a rare and much
sought-after novelty in Rhiminee.
For a fleeting instant it occurred to him that Tirien was attractive, but he
dismissed the treacherous thought at once; that sort of thinking was not going
to get him out of this mess.
To his relief, he saw Seregil coming his way.
Clearly amused, he gave Alec a discreet need help? sign. Alec answered with a
quick nod.
At that, Seregil strode up to them and slipped an arm around Alec's waist.
"There you are at last! Forgive me for intruding, Tirien. My friend and I have
some business. Will you excuse us for a moment?"
"Of course." The young courtesan withdrew with a graceful bow, betraying only
the faintest hint of disappointment.
Alec braced for the inevitable ragging as they withdrew to the vestibule, but
Seregil simply said, "I didn't expect to see you here."
"I heard you singing. I mean, I thought it sounded like you and—well, I just
came in." Aside from the fact that he was stammering like an idiot, Alec was
suddenly all too aware of the fact that Seregil's arm was still around him.
Strange, enticing scents clung to his friend's skin and hair, unlike his usual
clean smell. The troublesome new feelings stirred again, closer to the surface
this time, but just as confusing. "I didn't think to check the lantern. I just
came in."
Seregil chuckled softly. "Curious as usual, eh? Well, now that you're in, are
you going to stay? Tirien's an excellent choice. Azarin knows his business."
"No." Alec glanced at the young prostitute, still waiting hopefully nearby,
then hastily back to Seregil. There was no hint of challenge in his friend's
face, just bemusement. Why then, held in the calm gaze of those grey eyes, did
his own agitation increase? The situation was well past his ability to explain.
"No, I was just looking for you. I'd better go. This place makes me feel
strange."
"There's more than incense burning in those bowls. But I assume if you were
just passing by, then you're here on business of your own? Let's see now, how
long has it been?"
"I was thinking of it," Alec admitted. He could feel the warmth of Seregil's
skin through the thick silk of the robe now. "I don't know—I might just go on
home."
"Don't be silly," Seregil said, releasing him at last. "I was planning to go
back upstairs, but that can wait." The grin flashed again, and Alec abandoned
all hope of escape. "There's a place just down the street that's probably more
to your liking. And long overdue, too. I'll be right back."
Returning to the main room, he said something to Tirien. The man gave Alec a
last wistful look, then drifted away.
Leaning in the shadow of the arch, Alec watched Seregil take leave of his
companion, who was clearly dismayed by his departure. After a brief, animated
exchange, Seregil pressed him back on the couch with a deep, lingering kiss,
then disappeared up the stairs.
He came down again a few moments later fully dressed, sword belt slung over
one shoulder.
"Come along," he said jauntily, leading the way to a villa down the block.
Well, at least there's a pink lantern here, Alec thought, nervous again as
Seregil urged him up the stairs.
Seregil appeared to be well known here. A number of women greeted him
enthusiastically as he led Alec into the salon. This establishment was quite
similar to Azarin's. Erotic tapestries and statuary adorned this room and lovely
women in various states of dishabille entertained their patrons, brilliant and
lovely as rare birds.
As they handed their cloaks and swords to a page, a richly dressed woman left
a knot of conversation and rushed to embrace Seregil. Her skin, generously
exposed by the blue silk gown she wore, had a golden olive tone Alec had never
seen before. Thick black ringlets hung in a shining cascade to her waist.
"Where have you been keeping yourself, you rogue," she cried with obvious
delight.
"A million places, Eirual, my love, but none so pleasant as here," Seregil
replied, kissing her throat lasciviously.
She laughed, then pushed him away, dark eyes widening in mock reproach. "I
know that scent. You've been to Azarin's already. How cruel you are, coming to
me with your fires already spent."
"Spent? My fires?" Seregil caught her close again. "And when, my lovely one,
have you ever known that to be the case?"
"I'd like to put you to the test—upstairs."
"I accept your challenge gladly, madame, but first we have to find
companionship for my young friend."
Alec had been gazing around the room during this exchange, his heart pounding
in a manner even his old, Dalnan-bred self could find no argument with.
"I think he's found someone already," Eirual said with an amused smile.
Alec nodded shyly at a slender, blue-eyed brunette in burgundy silk. "She's
very pretty."
"Myrhichia?" Eirual shot Seregil an arch look as she summoned the woman. "He
has excellent taste, this friend of yours."
"He hasn't disappointed me yet," Seregil replied, giving Alec a wink.
Myrhichia glided over, wrapped in perfume and mystery. She was older than
Alec had supposed, older than he, but that didn't matter—there was something
familiar about her, something that made him wave aside the offer of wine and let
her lead him up the stairs to her room.
It wasn't until she turned to speak to him over her shoulder that he realized
how much she resembled Seregil, or rather Seregil as he'd looked playing Lady
Gwethelyn aboard the Darter.
It was an unsettling revelation and he did his best to put it out of his mind
as they entered her chamber.
Looking around, Alec felt the last of his trepidation giving way to sensuous
anticipation.
A fire cracked invitingly on the hearth, its flames softly illuminating the
small, elegant room. The bed was high and draped with patterned hangings. Huge
cushions were piled near the hearth, together with a few oddly shaped stools. An
elaborate washstand was half-visible behind a painted screen in a shadowy
corner.
Myrhichia stood demurely at the center of the room, offering him the choice
of where to begin. "Does it please you?" she asked, cocking her head prettily.
"Yes," he whispered. Closing the door, he went to her and loosened the
jeweled pin holding her hair.
It tumbled free over her shoulders in dark, sandalwood-scented waves.
Where his experience with Ylinestra had been out of his control from the
first, this woman seemed content to let him direct things. He touched her face,
her hair, then hesitantly brought his lips to hers.
Her hands found his face, his shoulders, then slid slowly lower.
The fastenings of her gown were no challenge for Alec's expertly trained
fingers; her clothes and his were soon in a pile at their feet.
"Shall I light a lamp?" she whispered as he took her hungrily in his arms.
He shook his head, pressing his body against the yielding roundness of
breasts, belly, and thighs, letting the feel of her envelop him. "The fire's
enough."
Still holding her, he sank down onto the cushions by the hearth. The warring
sensations of the long, confusing evening seemed to coalesce and clarify as he
at last abandoned himself to the powerful simplicity of desire.
Eirual was half Zengati, Aurenen's traditional enemy. It was that, together
with the dark beauty of her race, that had first attracted Seregil.
Though hardly more than a girl at the time of their first meeting, she'd been
a fiery lover and he'd entertained notions of taking her away for himself.
She'd been the one who'd dashed that plan; she liked her work, she'd told him
firmly.
What's more, she planned to own a brothel of her own one day, just as her
mother and grandmother had before her. Although his pride had been somewhat
jarred, Seregil had respected her wishes and over the years they'd become
friends.
She'd achieved her dreams. She was now the owner of one of the city's finest
and most nobly patronized pleasure houses. This often brought interesting bits
of information her way and, though she was no gossiping whore, she was aware of
Seregil's supposed connections to Rhiminee's mysterious "Cat" and had often
found it lucrative to pass on certain facts and rumors.
Their reunion this night had been spirited in spite of Seregil's earlier
activities. Afterward, they lay tangled together in the damp, disheveled sheets
and laughed together over little things.
Presently she sighed, then said, "You know, I saw something rather odd a few
weeks ago."
"And what was that?" he murmured, contentedly admiring the contrast of his
skin against hers as he stroked her thigh.
"I entertained a new visitor last week, a stranger. He was well turned out
and behaved himself, but I could tell from his way of speaking and the state of
his hands he wasn't upper class, just a common fellow who'd come into gold and
meant to treat himself. You know the sort."
"But he was handsome and broad-shouldered and smelled of honest labor,"
Seregil teased. "Sounds delightful. Let's have him in."
"As if I'd share you! But I admit I was intrigued at first, though he turned
out very ordinary in the end. No, I think you'd be more interested in what fell
out of his coat than what fell out of his breeches."
"Oh?" Seregil raised a questioning eyebrow, knowing better than to hurry her.
She always enjoyed spinning out a tale.
"He'd thrown his clothes every which way, so when he was snoring
afterward—which was all too soon, I might add—I decided to tidy up a bit. A
letter fell from his coat when I picked it up. The ribbon had come loose and I
took a quick peek. He stirred a moment later and I had to put it away, but I had
time to recognize the handwriting, and the seal at the bottom."
"Did you, you clever girl? Whose was it?"
"Lord General Zymanis."
"Really?" Zymanis had recently been appointed to oversee the defenses of the
lower city. "How do you know it wasn't a forgery?"
Eirual traced a playful finger around his navel.
"Zymanis is a very dear friend of mine, as you well know. Two months ago he
knocked his ring against that bedpost there behind you and chipped the stone
seal. It was a tiny piece, really, but he made such a fuss over it! Quite
spoiled the mood. This chip makes a tiny flaw in the impression, so tiny that
most people wouldn't even notice it. But I knew what to look for and it was his,
all right. What do you think of that?"
Seregil cupped her full breast in his hand like a goblet and kissed it
reverently. "I think, in your place, I'd have found some way of inquiring where
this lover of yours could be found again."
Eirual pressed closer with a luxuriant sigh.
"Sailmaker Street in the lower city. A tenement with a red and white lintel.
His name is Rythel, a big, blond fellow with a lovely soft beard, very
handsome."
"And you don't think this visitor of yours ought to have such a letter?"
Eirual shook her head. "For starters, it was addressed to Lord Admiral
Nyreidian. I've never met the admiral, but I'd bet a month's gold he doesn't
have fresh calluses on his hands and stained fingernails."
"Or a yellow beard," mused Seregil, thinking of the man he'd met at the
Mourning Night ceremony. Nyreidian had spoken of his own commission from the
Queen, too, overseeing privateering ships.
"Zymanis wouldn't let a fellow like this step on his shadow, much less write
letters to him." She gave him a sly sidelong glance. "I thought maybe your
friend the Cat might be interested?"
"He just might."
"I could tell him myself," she wheedled, not for the first time. Over the
years the unseen Rhiminee Cat had taken on a glow of romance for many, who
envied Seregil his apparently favored status.
Seregil kissed his way slowly across her chest.
"I've told you before, love, he's not what you think. He's a nasty, weedy
little man who spends half his time wading through the sewers."
"Last time you said he was a hunchback," she corrected, stroking his head.
"That, too. That's why he keeps out of sight, you see, because he's so
hideous. Why, his boils alone are enough—"
"No more!" Eirual laughed, admitting defeat.
"Sometimes I think you're the Cat, and you just make all the rest up to hide
it."
"Me? Wading through sewers and running errands for bored nobles?" He pinned
her down, feigning outrage. "Fancy me mincing across the roof slates!"
"Oh, yes," Eirual gasped, giggling helplessly at the thought. "You're the
terror of the town."
"You've pegged me wrong, my girl. There's only one thing I put that kind of
effort into."
"And what's that, may I ask?"
Seregil leered down at her. "I'll show you."
The candle had burned to a stub when he slipped from her bed.
Eirual stirred drowsily. "Stay, love. I'll be cold without you."
He drew the comforter up under her chin and kissed her.
"I can't tonight. I'll send a nice present tomorrow."
"All right, then." She smiled, already half asleep again. "Something with
rubies and I might forgive you."
"Rubies it is."
He dressed quickly and blew out the candle. Closing her door quietly behind
him, he headed for Myrhichia's room down the corridor.
He had to knock several times to get a response.
She opened the door a few inches at last, peering out with a resentful pout.
"He's sleeping," she informed him, pulling her dressing gown closed.
"How inconsiderate." Pushing past her, Seregil strode into the bedchamber.
Alec lay sprawled on his back in the bed, his sleeping face the picture of weary
bliss.
Looks like he managed to enjoy himself after all, he thought with a mix of
pride and wistfulness, glancing around at the disordered room.
Ignoring the courtesan's simmering displeasure, Seregil leaned down and shook
him by the shoulder.
Alec stirred drowsily, murmuring something amorous as he reached to pull
Seregil into bed.
When his fingers encountered wool rather than whatever he'd been dreaming of,
however, he snapped fully awake.
"What are you doing here?" he gasped, sitting up.
"Sorry." Seregil crossed his arms, grinning.
"Terrible timing, I know, but something's come up and I may need your help."
Alec glanced quickly from him to the girl. "A job? Now?"
"I'll wait for you downstairs. Don't be long."
Alec let out an exasperated sigh. Before he could get up, however, Myrhichia
dropped her robe and slipped back into bed beside him. "Does he always barge in
like that?"
"I hope not," muttered Alec.
"Are you going to leave me now?" She nibbled teasingly down the side of his
neck as her hand slipped up his thigh to more sensitive regions.
He could picture Seregil pacing impatiently downstairs, waiting for him, but
Myrhichia was putting up a persuasive argument under the covers.
"Well," he sighed, letting her push him back against the bolsters, "maybe not
right this second."
Seregil had the bones of a workable plan in mind by the time he got
downstairs. Strolling into the cloak room, he found it conveniently unattended.
He soon had what he wanted; he returned to the salon with an officer's mantle
and a wineskin concealed beneath his own cloak, Alec's sword belt and cloak over
his arm.
To his surprise, Alec had still not come down. Rather annoyed, he settled in
a chair near the door to wait.
It was late now. A few girls remained in the salon, playing bakshi to pass
the time while they waited for whatever late-coming patrons might show up.
Having seen Seregil come down, they paid little attention to him.
Minutes passed and still no Alec.
Seregil was just about to leave without him when the boy came down the
staircase. His loose shirt flapped around his legs as he struggled with his
coat, one sleeve of which appeared to be inside out. Getting himself more or
less sorted out at last, he hurried to join Seregil.
"Delayed, were you?" Seregil inquired with a smirk, tossing him his cloak and
sword.
"Myrhichia isn't very happy with you," Alec grumbled, flushed and out of
breath. He wrapped his sword belt around his hips and fastened the buckle. "I'm
not so sure I am, either. If this is just another silly lover's token—"
Seregil tugged Alec's collar straight, still grinning. "You think I'd ruin
your fun for that? Come on, I'll tell you about it on the way."
Outside, he glanced around quickly, then whispered, "I think Eirual may have
put us onto a spy."
Alec brightened up at once. "That's worth getting out of bed for."
"Did you ride?"
"No."
"Good, we'll hire horses and abandon them if we have to. I'll explain as we
go."
Leaving the warm glow of the lanterns behind, they hurried into the embracing
darkness.
"Where are we going?" Alec asked as Seregil headed west through the dark
streets.
The quickest way to the lower city was down the Harbor Way.
"I need a very special horse for this one," Seregil explained. "There's an
ostler over by the Harvest Gate who's likely to have what I want, and still be
hiring out at this hour."
Pausing, he opened the wineskin and took a sip, then sprinkled a more liberal
libation down the front of his surcoat. Evidently satisfied with the effect, he
passed it to Alec.
Grinning, he did the same. "Drunk, are we?"
"Oh, yes, and I'll be worse off than you. You'll be playing the sensible
friend."
"Don't I always?" Alec took another fortifying sip and capped the skin.
A lantern was still burning in front of the ostler's stable. Seregil fell
into a loose, unsteady walk as they stepped into the circle of light.
"Ostler!" he called, striking an arrogant pose, fists on his hips. "Two
gentlemen need mounts. Show yourself, man."
"Here, sirs," a man replied, opening a side door a crack for a wary look at
the late customers.
Seregil shook his purse at him. The ring of coins had the desired effect; the
ostler swung the stable doors wide and held the lantern while they inspected the
half-dozen horses inside.
Alec quickly found a decent mare and the man saddled her for him.
Seregil was longer at it. After much pacing and muttering, he finally settled
on a rawboned grey.
"I'm not one to tell a lord his business, but he's made a poor choice with
that one," the worried ostler whispered to Alec. "Old Cloudy there has been off
his feed for days and Jias a cough. If you'd speak to your friend for me, I'll
see to it he has the best of my stable."
Alec gave him a reassuring wink and counted out a generous stack of silver.
"Don't concern yourself. We're going to play a joke on a friend and your grey is
just what we need. We'll take good care of him, and have them both back before
dawn."
They set off at a trot, but before they'd gone a quarter of a mile Seregil's
cob stumbled to a halt, nearly throwing him over its head. Jerking its head
down, it let out a hollow, braying cough.
"Poor old fellow." Seregil patted the animal's neck. "You're better than I
could have hoped for. We'll have to send a drysian to look at him."
"What do you think this spy of yours is up to?"
Alec asked as they continued at a walk.
Seregil shrugged. "Hard to say yet. Eirual thinks this fellow Rythel has some
documents that he shouldn't. I want to see if she's right."
"Do you think he's a Plenimaran?"
"Too soon to say. At times like this it's best to keep an open mind until you
have hard facts. Otherwise, you just run around trying to prove your own theory
and overlooking important details that may turn up in the process. It could be
there's nothing to it at all, but it's more interesting than anything else we've
seen in the last few weeks."
Well-dressed, slightly intoxicated lords heading down to the lower city for a
roister were of little concern to the guards at the Sea Gate. The
sergeant-at-arms waved them through with a bored look and returned to the watch
fire.
At the bottom of the Harbor Way they rode east along the waterfront past the
custom houses and quays into a moderately respectable street lined with
tenements.
A few lights showed behind shuttered windows, but most of the neighborhood
was asleep. A dog howled mournfully somewhere nearby, the sound carrying eerily
through the streets. Seregil's horse twitched its ears nervously, then let out
another rattling cough in a jingle of harness.
"Here's Sailmaker Street," said Seregil, reining in at the mouth of an
unmarked lane.
Unclasping his mantle, he threw it to Alec and shook out the mantle he'd
brought from Eirual's.
It belonged to a captain of the White Hawk Infantry and bore a large,
distinctive device.
"Who'd you steal that from?" Alec asked, watching him put it on.
"Borrowed, dear boy, borrowed," Seregil corrected primly.
Alec peered up and down the poorly lit street.
"That must be the house there," he said, pointing to one at the end of the
lane. "It's the only one with a striped lintel."
"Yes. You hang back and be ready for trouble. If it comes to any sort of a
chase, I'd better ride with you. I don't think poor old Cloudy has much run left
in him."
Seregil emptied the last of the wine over his mount's withers, bunched the
mantle awkwardly over one shoulder, and pulled one foot loose from the stirrup.
Settling into a loose, drunken slouch, he nudged the horse into a walk. Riding
up to the door, he kicked loudly at it.
"You! In the house!" he bawled, swaying precariously in the saddle. "I want
the leech, damn him. By Sakor, send out the bastard son of a pig!"
A shutter slammed back just above his head and an old woman popped her head
out, glaring down indignantly.
"Leave off with that or I'll have the Watch down on you," she screeched,
swinging a stick at his head. "This is an honest house."
"I'll leave off when I've got his throat in my hand," Seregil yelled, kicking
the door again.
"You're drunk. I can smell you from here!" the old woman said scornfully.
"Who is it you're after?"
Just then, the grey jerked its head down in another racking cough.
"There, you hear that?" Seregil roared. "How in the name of Bilairy am I
supposed to explain this to my commander, eh? Your leech has ruined the beast.
Gave him a dose of salts and half killed him. I'll run my sword up his arse,
that pus-faced clod of shit! You send out the leech Rythel or I'll come in after
him."
"You whoreson drunken mullet!" The old woman took another swing at him with
her cudgel. "It's Rythel the smith that rooms here, not Rythel the leech."
"Smith?" Seregil goggled up at her. "What in the name of Sakor's Fire is he
doing dosing my horse if he's a smith?"
Lurking in the shadows at the mouth of the street, Alec shook with silent
laughter. It was as good a performance as any he'd seen at the theater.
"Half the men on the coast are called Rythel, you fool. You've got the wrong
man," the old landlady sputtered. "Smith Rythel is an honest man, which is more
than can be said for you, I'm sure."
"Honest man, my ass!"
"He is. He works for Master Quarin in the upper city."
She disappeared and Seregil, no doubt with knowledge born of long experience,
reined his horse out of the way just as she emptied a chamber pot over the sill
at him.
Seregil made her an ungainly bow from the saddle. "My humblest apologies for
disturbing your rest, old mother."
"You'd best sleep on your belly tonight," the old woman cackled after him as
he rode unsteadily away.
"That wasn't exactly subtle," Alec observed, still laughing as they headed
back to the Harbor Way.
"A drunken soldier making a ruckus at the wrong house in the middle of the
night on Sailmaker Street?" Seregil asked, looking pleased with himself. "What
could be subtler than that? And successful, too. Now we know that this Rythel is
a journeyman smith of some sort. Which leaves us still asking what he's doing
with gold enough for the Street of Lights and a lord's papers in his pocket."
"And why he had that much gold on him with the papers still in his pocket."
"Exactly. And what does that suggest?"
"That he's been up to whatever he's doing for a while already," replied Alec,
looking back toward the waterfront. "We'll have to get into his rooms, and we'd
better find out who Master Quarin is."
"We'll start tomorrow. Hold up a minute."
Seregil's grey was wheezing dejectedly now.
Reining in by a lantern at the foot of the Harbor Way, he dismounted and took
the animal's head between his hands. "I'd better ride double with you, Alec.
This poor old fellow's at the end of his strength. I'd better change cloaks,
too."
Alec kicked a foot out of the stirrup and held his hand down. Grasping it,
Seregil climbed up behind him and wrapped an arm around his waist.
Alec felt another unexpected twinge of sensuality at his touch, faint as a
bat's whisper, but unmistakable. There was certainly nothing seductive in the
way Seregil gripped a handful of his tunic to keep his balance, yet suddenly he
had an image of that same hand stroking the head of the young man at Azarin's
brothel, and later embracing dark-eyed Eirual.
Seregil had touched him before, but never with anything more than brotherly
affection. Alec had seen tonight what sort of companions his friend
chose-Wythrin and Eirual, both of them exotic, beautiful, and undoubtedly
skilled beyond anything Alec could conceive of.
What's happening to me? he wondered dejectedly. Maker's Mercy, he could still
smell Myrhichia's lush scent rising from his skin. From some neglected corner of
his heart, a small voice seemed to answer silently, You're waking up at last.
"Anything wrong?" asked Seregil.
"Thought I heard something." Alec nudged the horse into a walk.
Seregil bunched the stolen cloak out of sight beneath his own. "I suppose we
really should return this. I don't want any of Eirual's women getting into
trouble on my account. I don't suppose you'd mind going back there twice in one
night?"
Alec couldn't see his friend's face, but he could tell by his voice that he
was grinning.
"Me? Where will you be?" asked Alec.
"Oh, not too far away."
Alec shifted uncomfortably in the saddle. "You're going back to Azarin's."
He heard a throaty chuckle behind him. "Fowl never tastes as savory when
you're hungry for venison."
At least you know what you want, Alec thought grudgingly.
Cilia was just stirring up the fire when Seregil returned to the Cockerel the
next morning. "Is Alec back?" she asked.
"I haven't seen him since yesterday afternoon. You haven't gone and lost him,
have you?"
"Let's hope not." Grabbing a few apples from a basket, he headed for the back
stairway.
"Hang on, I've got something for you," Cilia called after him. She pulled a
small, sealed packet from behind the salt box on the mantel and gave it to him.
"Runcer sent this over from Wheel Street. A regimental courier from the Queen's
Horse delivered it there."
Pocketing the apples, he examined the packet as he continued upstairs. The
folded parchment was sealed with candle drippings and covered in smudged finger
marks. Directions to Lord Seregil's house were written across the front in Beka
Cavish's impatient, upright hand.
Opening it, he read the brief letter inside.
Dear S. and A.
Dostin-Have reached Isil. Tomorrow we move into Mycenian territory. One of
the other turmae lost a rider at bridge over the Canal at Cirna when his horse
bolted and threw him over the edge. Horrible.
The weather is foul. It's still very much winter up here.
The worst enemy we've faced so far is boredom.
Capt. Myrhini and some of the other officers break the monotony with their
war stories. Some of the best come from the sergeants, however.
Billeted tonight in stables of Baron of Isil's estate. The glory of a
soldier's life, eh, Seregil?
-B. Cavish
Reaching their rooms, he found Alec asleep on his narrow cot, clothes dropped
in a careless heap on the floor. Seregil sat down on the clothes chest at the
end of the bed and tapped him on the foot.
"Good morning. We've got news from Beka."
Alec growled something into the pillow, then rolled over. He blinked sleepily
at the morning light streaming in at the windows, then at Seregil. "You just
getting in?"
Seregil tossed him an apple. "Yes. Tirien asked after you, by the way, and
sends his regards."
Alec shrugged noncommittally and bit into his apple. "What's Beka say?"
Seregil read him the letter.
"Maker's Mercy!" Alec muttered, hearing of the man lost off the Canal bridge.
He disliked heights and Seregil had to coax him across the bridge the first time
he'd traveled over it.
"Let's see," said Seregil when he'd finished, "if they were in Wyvern Dug two
weeks ago and headed southeast from there, they could be across the Folcwine
River by now."
"Sounds like she's doing well with it all."
"I wouldn't expect anything else of her. Beka's as good with people as she is
with horses and swordplay. I'll bet you a sester she's wearing a captain's
gorget the next time we see her."
If we see her again, skittered at the back of his mind as he said this, but
he pushed the doubt away. He thought he saw a shadow of the same thought cross
Alec's face, and the same quick denial.
"Where do we start today?" Alec asked, pushing a handful of tousled hair back
from his eyes.
Seregil went to the hearth and stirred up the remains of last night's fire.
"I'd like to find this Master Smith Quarin first. Unfortunately we don't know
what kind of a smith he is, do we? Goldsmith, silversmith, swordsmith,
blacksmith—"
Alec chewed thoughtfully, watching him. After a moment he said, "How about an
ironsmith?"
Seregil glanced down at the poker in his hand, then saw that Alec was looking
at it, too.
"You said Lord Zymanis is in charge of the lower city defenses, so he's more
likely to need an ironsmith than a goldsmith, right? And Eirual said he had
rough hands."
"You've got a clearer head than I do this morning," Seregil said, chagrined
not to have thought of it himself.
"I imagine I got more sleep."
Seregil glanced over at him in surprise, fancying he heard an edge of
disapproval in Alec's tone. After last night's evident success with Myrhichia,
he'd assumed the boy was cured of any undue scruples.
Evidently he still retained his Dalnan attitude toward establishments like
Azarin's.
Well, that's just too damned bad for him.
"There are ironsmiths scattered all around the city but they all belong to
the same guild," he said aloud, letting the moment pass. "I'll have Thryis send
one of the scullions over to ask after Quarin. In the meantime, I think I'll
have a bit of a rest."
By midday they'd learned that Master Quarin's shop lay in Ironmonger Row near
the Sea Market Gate. They set off soon after, dressed as ragged cripples.
Alec's face was half-obscured by a dirty bandage. Seregil wore an old wreck
of a hat tied on with a scarf so that the brim curved down to his chin on either
side. Their disguises had the desired effect. As they crossed the back court
Rhiri saw them and shook a rake threateningly in their direction.
"Ah, the ubiquitous beggar," Seregil chuckled when they'd scuttled out the
gate. "No one is ever surprised or glad to see you anywhere in the city."
Begging bowls in hand, they set off for Sheaf Street, the broad avenue that
ran through the city between the Harvest and Sea Market gates.
As expected, they attracted little attention as they made their way through
the crowded streets. Carts and wagons rumbled past endlessly. Tinkers and knife
grinders chanted their availability in singsong voices. Dirty children dodged
through the crowds, chasing dogs or pigs or each other.
Soldiers were everywhere, along with malodorously genuine beggars and a few
early whores importuning passersby.
Watching for their chance, they stole a ride on the back of a hay wagon and
clung to the tail posts as it jolted over the cobbles.
"Look there," said Seregil, pointing behind them.
Alec looked and winced inwardly. Half a block back, five heads swayed on
pikes set upright in the back of a rough wooden cart surrounded by a grim
formation of the City Watch. He'd seen such displays before; this was the fate
of traitors and spies in Rhiminee. Their decapitated bodies would be lying in
the cart below, on their way to the city pit.
"Maker's Mercy, that's getting to be a common sight," he muttered. "If we're
right about our man—"
"Then he'll come to the same end." Seregil eyed the heads impassively. "I
wouldn't dwell on that, if I were you. I don't."
Especially since you came within spitting distance of ending up that way
yourself. Alec thought grimly. He still had nightmares about that sometimes, and
what would have happened if he and Micum had failed to clear Seregil's name from
the Leran's carefully contrived treason charges. He wondered if Seregil did,
too.
As soon as the brightly colored awnings of the Sea Market came into sight,
Seregil jumped down from the cart and led the way into Ironmonger Row, a
twisting side street of open-sided workshops and smoke-stained buildings.
Playing his role, he doubled over into a crabbed, sidelong limp and grasped
Alec's arm.
In spite of the name, metal workers of all sorts plied their trade here,
taking advantage of the proximity to both the port and the marketplace.
Acrid fumes stung Alec's eyes as they made their way through the din. Inside
the workshops he could see half-naked men silhouetted against the red glare of
the forges, looking like vengeful demons as their hammers struck sparks from
glowing metal.
Apprentices ran here and there with tools and hods of coal; others sweated
over the bellows, pumping until the forges glowed yellow-white. Pots, swords,
tools, and bits of armor hung over doorways advertising the wares being crafted
within.
Pausing at the first they came to, Seregil limped up to an apprentice and
asked after Quarin.
"Master Quarin?" The boy pointed farther down the narrow lane. "His place is
way down near the wall, biggest on the block. You can't miss it."
"Many thanks, friend," croaked Seregil, taking Alec's arm again. "Come along,
son, we're nearly there."
For a single, disorienting instant Alec stared down at him. They hadn't
discussed their roles in detail—hearing himself unexpectedly called "son" so
many months after his father's death sent a sickening chill through him. Guilt
followed hard on the heels of it; he hadn't thought of his father in weeks,
perhaps longer.
Seregil peered up at him from under his hat, one sharp grey eye visible. "You
all right?"
Alec stared straight ahead, surprised at the stinging behind his eyelids.
"I'm fine. It's just the smoke."
Dodging heavy wagons and wrathful shouts, they finally located Quarin's shop.
It was a huge establishment, much larger than the rest, and housed in a
converted warehouse.
Seregil hung back a moment, sizing the place up through the open door. "Two
forges that I can see from here," he whispered. "See those fellows with the
metal studs across the top of their aprons? They're all master craftsmen. Master
Quarin must be well established to have a crew like that under him. Let's go see
what he knows of our friend Rythel."
Just inside the door, they found a woman in a studded apron putting the final
touches on an elaborately decorated gate. Catching sight of them, she paused,
resting her hammer on one knee.
"You want something here?" she called.
Seregil lowered his voice to a windy growl. "Is this Master Quarin's shop?"
"That's the master, there at the back." Hefting her hammer again, she pointed
out a bluff, white-haired old man standing behind a worktable with several other
smiths, metal stylus in hand.
"It's a Master Rythel we was sent to find," Alec told her. "We've a message
to deliver and we was told he works here."
The woman sniffed scornfully. "Oh, him! He and his crew are down at the
western sewer tunnel in the lower city."
"Friend of yours, dearie?" Seregil wheedled, giving her a wink beneath the
cracked brim of his hat.
"He's nobody's friend here. Upstart nephew of the master, is all. That sort
always nabs the plums, and damn all to the rest of us. Be off with you, and I
hope you charge him double for the message. The bastard can well enough afford
it."
Alec gave her a respectful bob of the head. "Thanks and Maker's Mercy to you.
Come on, Grandfather, we've got a long walk ahead of us."
"Grandfather, eh?" Seregil eyed him wryly as they continued on toward the Sea
Market.
"You could be anything under there. That smith didn't seem to care much for
Rythel, did she?"
"I noticed that," said Seregil, straightening up and stretching his back.
"The guild smiths are a proud, stiff-necked lot and seniority is everything to
them. Sounds like Quarin put some noses out of joint giving the job to a
relative."
"Why would anyone begrudge him working in the sewers?"
"If they're in the sewers, then they must be replacing the iron grates that
guard the channels coming down from the citadel. Who do you suppose ordered that
job?"
"Lord General Zymanis."
"By way of whatever underlings handle the details, anyway, which would make
it a particularly lucrative contract, with extra pay for the smith in charge of
the repairs and his crew. She said he'd "nabbed the plums," remember?"
"That still doesn't explain why Rythel would have papers with Lord Zymanis'
seal."
"No, but it does establish the beginnings of a plausible connection. The
letter he had was addressed to Admiral Nyreidian. We met him at Kylith's
gathering at the Mourning Night ceremony, if you recall."
"The lord who'd just been commissioned to oversee the privateers!" Alec
exclaimed. "That has to do with the war, too."
"Which means we're probably right about Rythel being a noser of some sort."
They walked on in silence to the Harbor Way.
Presently Seregil looked up again and said, "If we're right, then I may need
to play with this Rythel a bit, see what I can get out of him. When we get down
there, I'd better stay out of sight and let you play messenger. If he is a
fellow professional, then I don't want to chance him recognizing my voice later
on."
At the harbor they made their way west beyond the last quays and warehouses
to a stretch of rocky land that hugged the base of the cliffs. A freshly rutted
wagon track led on out of sight among the twisted jack pines and hummocks.
Following it for a quarter of a mile or so, Alec and Seregil found Rythel's crew
at the head of a steep, malodorous gully.
From where Alec and Seregil stood, the entrance to the sewer channel was
about five hundred feet up the cut. The opening was the same size and shape as
an arched doorway, tall enough for a man to walk through without ducking his
head. A noisome grey torrent flowed out over its threshold and on down through a
stone sluiceway to the sea beyond. A foul odor hung over the rocky cleft and
Alec noted that the workmen wore wet rags over their noses and mouths.
Vinegar cloths, he guessed, to protect them from the evil humours of the
place.
A forge had been set up near the opening and the black smoke from it
collected sullenly on the damp air. A small wagon stood nearby and half a dozen
armed bluecoats were lounging against it.
"What are they doing there?" Alec asked as they looked out from behind the
cover of a boulder.
"Watching for gaterunners and spies. The sewers go everywhere under the
city."
"What are gaterunners?"
"Thieves, mostly, who know how to get past all the gates and grates and
travel the tunnels. They know more about where those channels lead than anyone,
even the Scavenger Guild. You'd better go have a look."
Leaving Seregil behind the-rock, Alec hugged his rags about himself and
followed the stony track up toward the forge.
"What do you want here?" a soldier demanded, looking more bored than
suspicious.
"I've got a message for one of the smiths," Alec replied. "Man named Rythel."
"Go on then, but be quick about it," the guard said, waving him on.
At the forge two apprentices were doggedly pumping the bellows, while another
held an iron rod in the coals with heavy tongs. Behind them, a smith was shaping
a glowing spike of iron on the anvil. Short and dark-haired, he didn't match the
description Eirual had given Seregil.
Alec waited until the man paused in his hammering, then stepped up and
touched his brow respectfully.
The smith eyed his rags suspiciously. "What do you want?"
"Begging your pardon, master, but I've got a message sent for Master Rythel,"
Alec replied with a beggar's unctuous civility.
"Tell it quick and be off with you. The guards don't like anyone hanging
about."
"That I can't, sir," Alec told him plaintively, twisting the hem of his tunic
in his hands. "Begging your pardon, but I was given good silver to deliver it to
nobody but Rythel his self. It'd be worth me livelihood if word got around I
passed on private messages to anyone as demands to know 'em."
The smith was less than sympathetic. "Bugger your livelihood. Rythel would
have my hammer if I let you go wandering around in there."
This exchange appeared to be a welcome diversion for the sentries. "Aw, he
looks harmless enough," one called over, taking Alec's side. "Let him wait out
here, why don't you? The message is for Rythel, after all."
"Aye, and one he'd be none too happy to miss, if you take my meaning."
Grinning, Alec made a lewd two-fingered sign.
"All right, then, but it's on your heads," the smith growled, finding opinion
against him. "Sit on the end of that cart, you, and don't stir."
Alec's champions lost interest in him as soon as they'd had their victory.
Perched on the back of the open cart, he swung his feet idly and hunted
imaginary lice among his rags.
The cart was loaded with iron grates. These were simple, sturdy affairs of
upright bars and crosspieces. Apparently they were made at the shop in the upper
city, then carried down for final fittings here. At the forge, the smith and his
helpers were putting the last touches on one, trimming the crosspieces to fit
caliper measurements and fashioning hot iron from the forge into the final bars.
When they'd finished with that, heavy metal flanges were fastened to the
outermost uprights, top and bottom. The lower flanges had heavy pins protruding
down from them; the upper did not.
Presently several workmen came out of the tunnel.
Their faces were covered with the vinegar cloths, but one was noticeably
taller than the rest, and bushy blond hair showed beneath the rim of his leather
cap.
"Ordo, we'll want those rivets when we go back in," he called to the smith at
the forge.
"Are they hot yet?"
"Whenever you're ready for 'em, Master Rythel. And this young fellow's been
waiting for you." The smith hooked a thumb in Alec's direction, adding
pointedly, "Sergeant Durnin said it was all right."
Rythel pulled off his face cloth and scrubbed a hand over the thick,
well-trimmed beard beneath it. "What do you want?"
Alec jumped down and bobbed an anxious bow.
"I've a message for you, master, from a woman."
The man's scowl lessened appreciatively.
Waving for Alec to follow him, he moved away from the others.
"What woman and what message?" he asked.
"A dark-haired bawd in the Street of Lights, master. She says she prays you
remember her fondly, and that you'll come back to her soon as ever you're able."
"Did she give her name?" Rythel asked, looking pleased.
"No," Alec told him with a worried frown, then, as if suddenly remembering,
added, "but she's in the House of the Swans."
"I know the one," Rythel said, recognizing the name of Eirual's
establishment. "Anything else?"
"That's the whole of it, just as she sent. And if may say, master, I was
lucky to find you—"
"Yes, yes!" Reaching into a wallet at his belt, Rythel dropped a few coins
into Alec's outstretched palm. "Tell your lady I'll see to her when I can. Now
off with you."
"Maker's Mercy to you," said Alec, hurrying away. As he passed the soldiers
he looked at the coins Rythel had paid. They were all coppers.
Showing them to the grinning soldiers, he spat sideways and muttered, "Stingy
son of a bitch. Let him carry his own messages."
Their laughter followed him up the gully.
At the boulder Seregil fell into step beside him and Alec told him all he'd
seen as they walked back along the track.
Seregil rubbed his hands together with satisfaction.
"Well, now we know what our noser looks like."
"We still don't know much about him, though."
"But if that woman at the shop is anyone to go by, I think we can find those
willing to gossip. You carried that off well, as usual. I think maybe we'll use
you for the jilt again tonight."
Alec grinned happily at the praise. "What will I be this time?"
"A doughty, fresh-faced country lad, looking for an apprenticeship and a few
friends."
Alec's grin widened. "That has a familiar ring to it."
Standing at the end of Ironmonger Row, the Hammer and Tongs was a traditional
gathering place for the smiths in that part of town. Most outsiders were
actively discouraged by that close-knit fraternity, who considered the alehouse
their personal sanctuary and unofficial guildhall, but no one objected to the
little wayfaring minstrel who came in out of the storm that evening. Such
musicians, hardly more than beggars, were common enough in the city, playing for
pennies in taverns and market squares. His cloak, stitched all over with scraps
of colored cloths and cheap beads, and the flutes protruding from various
pockets granted him entrance and a place near the fire.
Selecting a long wooden flute, Seregil piped out a simple tune and then sang
the verse in a voice that would have made Rolan Silverleaf cringe.
Fortunately, his present audience was less discriminating and a small crowd
had soon gathered at his end of the room. Rythel was not among the company, but
he soon found Alec, looking the perfect bumpkin with his homespun tunic and
scrubbed, beardless face. The boy gave a slight nod, signaling that all was
well.
From his seat by the fireside, Seregil could see that Alec had been adopted
by a group of drinkers, and that the woman they'd spoken with at Quarin's shop
was among them. Judging by how they included him in their jests, he had
obviously made a favorable impression.
Seregil piped on, keeping an ear open for useful tidbits of conversation
around him until Alec left. He played a few short ditties, collected his
coppers, and followed.
Alec was waiting for him at the public stable where they'd left horses.
Stripping off their disguises in the shadow of an alley, they put on plain
clothes and rode to a dram house near the north wall of the Ring.
"I didn't have much luck, unless you want to know the current price of pig
iron," Seregil said as they sat down at a corner table. "How did you make out?"
"You were right about noses being out of joint among Quarin's people," Alec
told him. "Maruli and some of the other smiths gave me a real earful. Not only
is Rythel Quarin's nephew, but he hasn't been with him that long. He had a shop
of his own down in Kedra, but it burned four months ago. That's when he showed
up here."
"Is Quarin fond of his nephew?"
"Not anymore. Old Alman Blackhand told me things were friendly at first, but
that there've been hard words. Quarin's hardly spoken to him since he handed him
the sewer job. And some think it's strange that Rythel lodges apart from his
uncle."
"Interesting. were any of those you spoke with part of Rythel's crew?"
"A few, and they don't much like him either. He has a sharp tongue and treats
them like first-month apprentices, always looking over their shoulder. Early on
in the job he found fault with the way the grates were being secured. Now he
does most of the final fitting himself."
Seregil raised an appraising eyebrow. "I'll just bet he does."
"They've been at it for a little over three weeks. All the old grates had to
be pulled out and the masonry knees repaired. That's why the guards are there.
They're putting in the new grates now. Alman is in charge of measuring the part
of the sewer tunnel where the grate will be, so that the flange pins and holes
will set in properly, but Rythel does the final seating and pinning. And the
grates are fixed, not gated. That's about it, except that I've been told to see
Quarin about an apprenticeship."
"Hopefully it won't come to that."
Alec leaned closer, lowering his voice. "Do you think Rythel could be
tampering with the grates?"
"Judging by his behavior, we can't afford to overlook the possibility. The
question is how, and whether any of the other workmen are in on it. And who's
backing this whole thing, of course."
"It's got to be the Plenimarans."
"I mean specifically who, and whether or not Rythel knows who's running the
show. We've got to move very carefully, Alec. We don't want another cock-up like
the raid at Kassarie's. We got the big snake there, but all the little ones
slithered safely away. We'd better go talk to Nysander. This looks to be Watcher
business."
He must still be keeping company with Ylinestra, Alec thought wryly as Thero
let them into Nysander's tower. Several long scratches were visible on the young
wizard's neck just above the collar of his robe. She'd left similar marks on
Alec during their single encounter.
He's welcome to her, Alec decided.
Having let them in, Thero returned to a worktable spread with open books.
"Nysander's downstairs," he told them.
"You'd better come down with us," said Seregil as he started down the stairs.
Thero shot Alec a look of surprise.
"Watcher business, maybe."
Alec was pleased to see the hint of an expectant smile cross Thero's face as
he hurried to join him. He was a cold fish, and no mistake, but in the months
since he'd helped secure Seregil's release from prison, albeit grudgingly, Alec
had come to feel a certain sympathy for the stiff young wizard, and respect. He
was talented, and his arrogance seemed a shield for his own inner loneliness.
As for the rivalry between him and Seregil, Alec had quickly learned that
this was as much Seregil's fault as Thero's.
They found Nysander in his favorite sitting-room armchair, the floor around
him covered in charts of some sort.
"Well, there you two are," he exclaimed, looking up with a pleased smile.
"How long has it been? Two weeks?"
"Closer to four," Seregil said. "Business has been slow lately, but we may
have run across something interesting."
With Alec's help, he quickly sketched out what they'd learned over the past
two days. Thero sat a little apart, arms crossed, nodding silently to himself as
he listened.
"Dear me, that does sound suspicious," Nysander said when he'd heard their
report. "I seem to recall "hearing that one of Lord Zymanis' valets disappeared
not too long ago. I had not heard of any stolen documents, though. Most curious.
I assume you mean to make a closer investigation?"
Seregil nodded. "Tonight, but we'll have to be careful. So far Rythel is the
only fish in our net. I don't want to get the wind up him before we find out
who's behind all this."
"Have you looked into his lodgings?" asked Thero.
"Not yet. Tenements are terrible for housebreaking—every room occupied and
half the time no corridors, just a series of rooms letting one onto another. I
thought we'd have a look at the sewer tunnel first, then proceed from there."
"Yes, that seems to be the logical course," said Nysander.
"How do you propose to get in with the tunnel so carefully guarded?"
"The lower end is, where they're still working," said Alec. "But it shouldn't
be at the upper end, where they started. There's no need, since the grates are
fixed and they started at the top and worked down toward the lower city end.
Seregil figures there must be at least five or six between the city wall and the
sea."
"Anyone planning to bugger about with any of the grates later on would have
to do them all," Seregil added.
"I know of an access passage near the south wall that should lead down to the
head of the channel. If we can get to it from this end, we should be able to
find out what they've been up to."
"When will you go?" asked Nysander.
"Tonight seems as good a time as any," replied Seregil, standing to go. "I'll
let you know if we need any help."
"Luck in the shadows," said Thero as he passed.
Seregil raised an eyebrow in mild surprise, then touched a finger lightly to
one of the scratches on Thero's neck. "And to you."
Tamir the Great's builders had laid down the sewers of Rhiminee before a
single building was constructed, thereby sparing the new capital the unpleasant
and often unhealthy filth common to most large cities. So extensive was it, and
so often modified and enlarged to accommodate the growth of the city over five
centuries, that now only the Scavenger Guild knew the full extent of it. Even
among the Scavengers, most knew only the section that they maintained, and they
guarded their knowledge jealously.
Alec and Seregil waited until the second watch of the night before making
their way to the southern ward of the city. Though armed, they went cautiously,
fading silently into alleys or doorways whenever a Watch patrol happened by.
The entrance they'd targeted was located in a small square behind a block of
tenements by the south wall of the city. Half-covered by an unkempt clump of
mulberry bushes, the low, iron-strapped door was set into the wall itself. The
small grate near the top of it reminded Alec uncomfortably of a prison door, but
he kept this to himself as they set down the torches and pry bars they'd brought
with them.
He stood behind Seregil and held his cloak out with both hands to hide the
light of his companion's light-wand. Kneeling in front of the door, Seregil
probed the keyhole with a hooked pick, soon producing a succession of grating
clicks.
The door swung in on blackness. Gathering their gear again, they slipped
inside.
Alec tacked a square of heavy felt over the grate, then looked around the
little entrance chamber. In front of them, stone steps led downward through an
arched passage and out of sight. The faint stench already permeating the air
left no doubt they were in the right place.
"Here, we'd better put these on now." Seregil pulled vinegar-soaked face rags
from a leather pouch and handed one to Alec. Leaving their cumbersome cloaks,
they lit their torches with a firechip and started down, Seregil in the lead.
"Why did they build it so big?" Alec whispered; the arched passage was nearly
ten feet high.
"For safety. The poisonous humours that can collect down here rise. The
theory is that this design lets them collect overhead, with good air below. Keep
an eye on the torches, though; if they burn blue or gutter, the air's bad."
The stairway led down to a tunnel below. Narrow walkways bordered a central
channel, full to the brim now with a swift, evil-smelling stream.
Turning to the right, they followed the tunnel for several hundred feet. The
recent rains had swelled the flow, and it had overflowed whole sections of the
raised walkway, forcing them to wade ankle deep in the foul, frigid waters.
Suddenly they heard high-pitched growling and squeaking coming from the
darkness ahead. Seregil edged forward, torch held high, until they came to an
iron grate fixed across the width of the tunnel.
The lower ends of the vertical bars extended down into the channel and the
body of a small dog was caught against them, held there by the pressure of the
stream as it flowed through. Dozens of fat, snarling rats swarmed over the
carcass, tearing at it and each other. Others paddled down the channel toward
the feast or perched on the crosspieces of the grate. They paid little attention
to the human interlopers as they fed, beady eyes glaring red in the torchlight.
"This one is gated," whispered Seregil, driving off the closest rats with the
burning torch. "It's locked up, but it's nothing we can't manage. Want to do the
honors?"
"Go ahead," Alec rasped, not wanting to have to squeeze past his companion in
such a narrow place.
Jiggering the lock, Seregil swung back a narrow section of grate on
protesting hinges and stepped through, Alec close on his heels.
There were more rats beyond, rats everywhere. The chuckle of the flowing
water and the sounds of the rats echoed in the silence as they paused at a sort
of crossroads where another channel flowed into the one they were following.
Leaping the four feet to the other side, they continued on to a second hinged
grate. Beyond this the way began to slope downhill noticeably.
No other tunnels intersected theirs and finally they came to a fixed grate.
The ironwork was new and of the same design Alec had seen at the work site.
The broad flanges set at the four corners of the grate rested against stone
knees jutting from the walls of the tunnel and were held in place by thick iron
pins set in holes drilled into the stone.
"Here we are," Seregil whispered, setting down his bundle. "Light your torch
from mine and go check that side."
"What are we looking for, exactly?"
"I don't know, so be thorough. It could be some fault in the iron or the
stone."
Alec jumped across the channel and began his examination of the ironwork,
looking first for something as obvious as bars sawn through. They seemed sound
enough, however. The sockets for the pins had been sealed with rivets hammered
in hot and the lower flanges, which bore the weight of the grate, rested solidly
against the stone knees.
"Let's try moving it," said Seregil.
Grasping two crosspieces, they braced their shoulders against the bars and
lifted. The grate lifted an inch or two.
"Push!" Seregil grunted, shaking his side of it.
But the grate was solidly held in place by the pins. Giving up, they let it
fall back into place with a dull clank.
"I thought maybe he'd sawn off the lower pins,"
Seregil panted, flexing his arms. "I guess not."
"It did move, though." Alec squinted up at the flanges overhead. It was
impossible to see anything from this angle, so he climbed the crossbars for a
closer inspection, torch in hand.
Across the channel, Seregil was about to do the same, but his torch was
burning low. Pulling a fresh one from his belt, he paused to light it from the
old one. "See anything?"
"There's nearly three inches of pin exposed up here," Alec replied, clinging
one-handed to the top of the bars.
"I'm no expert, but that seems like a lot. How does it look?"
"Like a metal pin." Alec held his torch closer. "No marks or cuts. Hold on.
Hey, it's melting like wax and there's—"
"Be careful!"
Searing white sparks erupted inches from Alec's face with an angry spitting
sound. With a startled cry, he dropped his torch and threw an arm across his
face.
"Alec! Alec, get down," Seregil yelled.
Alec crouched awkwardly, one leg jammed between the bars. Overhead, sparks
still rained down from the sizzling corona of light.
Dark spots danced in front of Seregil's eyes as he launched himself across
the channel. Grabbing Alec, he dragged him to the floor and tried to roll him
onto his belly to smother the smoldering patches on his tunic.
"My eyes!" Alec gasped, struggling away in pain and confusion.
"Hold still," Seregil began, but Alec's foot found sudden purchase against
the wall and, with a final lurch, he toppled Seregil backward into the icy
channel.
Fortunately, Seregil had the presence of mind to clamp his mouth shut as he
went under. For a horrifying second he tumbled helplessly against the side of
the channel, unable to find the bottom with his feet. Fetching up against the
grate, he righted himself and used the crossbars to pull himself back onto the
walkway.
Sputtering and retching, he grasped Alec by the back of the tunic and hauled
him out of range of the sparks, then held him forcibly still while the white
light faded slowly to a small orange glow. One torch still burned, and by it he
could see the thin pall of smoke curling lazily near the roof.
Alec groaned again, hands pressed over his face.
Fearing the worst, Seregil dug the lightwand from his sodden tool roll and
pulled the boy's hands away to inspect the damage.
Alec's hair and the vinegar mask had protected most of his face from the
sparks, but half a dozen tiny blisters were already bub-bling up on the backs of
his hands. Tears streamed down his cheeks as he turned his head from the light.
"Can you see anything?" Seregil asked anxiously.
"I'm beginning to." Alec pressed one sleeve across his eyes, then blinked.
"Why are you wet?" A look of shocked realization slowly spread across his face.
"Oh, no. Oh, Seregil, I'm sorry!"
Seregil managed a tight grin, trying hard not to think about the water
dripping down his face toward his mouth.
"What was that light?" Alec asked.
"I don't know." Going back to the grate, he climbed up to inspect the damage.
"The pin is burned completely away, stonework cracked from the heat, top of the
flange warped. And whatever it was, it must work on the other side, too, or you
still couldn't move the grate."
Jumping the channel, he gripped the handle of the lightwand between his teeth
and climbed up to inspect the upper corner.
"Tell me again what you saw."
Still blinking, Alec came across and picked up the torch. "I held the flame
close to the pin, trying to see if it had been cut. It must have been the heat,
because the surface of the pin began to melt and run like wax. I think I saw
something white underneath, just before it flared up the way it did."
Craning his neck cautiously, Seregil found several inches of exposed pin
between the flange and the stonework above. Using the tip of his dagger, he
scraped gently at the surface of the pin. Curls of some black, waxy substance
shaved off easily, revealing a white layer below.
"You were right. A band of silvery white metal has been set into the pin."
The white substance cut easily as lead.
Extracting a tiny sliver, he handed it down to Alec on the tip of his blade.
"Put it on the floor and light it."
Alec set the sliver gingerly on the floor and, standing well back, held the
torch to it. It burst at once into a brief, sputtering blaze of light that left
black burns on the stone.
Alec let out a low whistle. "Bilairy's Balls, I think we found what we're
looking for."
"There must be enough iron in the center of the pin to strengthen it, but
this stuff burns right through it."
"Is it magic?"
Seregil cut away another small sample of the white substance.
"Maybe. I've never seen anything like it, but Nysander might know."
Seregil placed the shavings carefully in the little ceramic jar he'd carried
the firechip in, then handed it down to Alec.
"I sure made a mess of that corner," Alec said, casting a worried look at the
blackened stonework.
"True." Seregil climbed down to join him.
"Our saboteurs are bound to come checking sooner or later and even if they
don't, there are the
Scavengers to consider. We'd better get Nysander down here, or Thero."
Alec's sight slowly returned to normal as they cleaned up the site as best
they could and started back.
"What about the locks?" he asked, reaching the first of the gated barriers.
"Best leave 'em as we found 'em," Seregil replied. "I'll scout ahead to the
next one. You catch up."
The lock was rusty; swearing softly under his breath, Alec ground a pick
against the wards until something dropped into place.
Seregil was out of sight beyond a bend in the tunnel by then. Anxious to
leave the rats and echoing dampness behind, Alec hurried after him.
He'd just caught sight of him ahead near the intersection of channels when
Seregil suddenly collapsed sideways into the water with a startled grunt. The
torch he'd been carrying hung precariously over the edge and by its light Alec
saw two ragged, hooded figures jump out from the side tunnel, cudgels raised as
they reached for Seregil's floating form.
Without stopping to think, Alec let out a yell, drew his sword, and charged.
The gaterunners were caught by surprise, but the one closest to Alec got a
long club up in time to block the first downward slash. Alec jumped back a pace
and braced, ready to fight.
The narrowness of the walkway kept the fight to a one against one affair, but
it also severely restricted the range of Alec's swings. His opponents were more
accustomed to such conditions. The second quickly jumped across the channel to
outflank him from behind. Alec did the same, keeping his face toward them. He
couldn't see Seregil anywhere.
The current must have swept him back the way we came, he thought, and for a
sickening instant he pictured the dog's carcass and its attendant rats trapped
against the lower bars of a grate. The gaterunners didn't allow him time to
dwell on the image, however. The one on his side of the channel was advancing,
cudgel at the ready. From the corner of his eye, Alec saw the other reaching
into his tattered tunic for something, presumably a knife or dart.
Suddenly, however, the runner slumped against the wall with a high- pitched
wail, clutching at a throwing knife protruding from his shoulder.
"Hammil!" the one facing Alec cried out, and he realized it was a woman.
"Let's not anyone be stupid," said a familiar voice from the shadows
downstream.
Alec and the woman both turned in time to see Seregil step into sight on the
far side. He was wetter than ever but held a second dagger at the ready as he
walked slowly toward the wounded runner.
The boy scuttled weakly back, still clutching his arm.
"We don't mean any harm here," Seregil said calmly, motioning for Alec to
back slowly away.
The woman pushed her hood back, showing a harsh, deeply lined face. "Get away
from my boy," she growled, shaking her club threateningly in Alec's direction.
"You started this. What do you want?" asked Seregil, stopping a few paces
from the boy, dagger in hand.
"Nothin'," the woman replied. "You's just strangers is all, and strangers is
getting to be a hazard down here. We've lost friends to strangers down here
lately."
Seregil sheathed his knife. Bending over the fallen boy, he examined the
wound, then pulled the small throwing blade out. "It's not too bad a cut," he
told the woman over his shoulder. "You're lucky my aim was off."
"I'm alright, Ma," the young gaterunner gasped, cringing away from Seregil.
By the dying light of the torch, Alec saw that he was younger than himself. He
could also make out a thin ribbon of blood running down Seregil's right cheek.
"You all right?" Seregil called over.
"Yes. Are you?"
Seregil nodded, then stepped over the wounded boy and addressed his mother
again. "I'll leave yours if you'll leave mine," he told her, holding his hands
out palm up.
Without a word, she sprang across, grabbed the boy up, and hurried him away
into the shadows.
Alec crossed over and reached to inspect the cut on Seregil's scalp. "That's
quite a lump she raised."
"Serves me right," he muttered through chattering teeth. "Illior's Fingers!
Jumped by a pair of gaterunners. If the cold water hadn't brought me around I'd
have drowned."
"I'm glad you didn't kill him. He couldn't have been more than twelve."
Seregil braced one arm against the wall and let out a long sigh. "Me, too.
It's strange for them to have attacked in the first place. Runners are usually a
pretty elusive lot. They steal and spy, but they generally avoid a fight."
Frowning, Alec pulled off his face rag and pressed it to the cut on Seregil's
head. "Are you sure you're all right? You're looking kind of shaky."
Seregil closed his eyes for a moment, resting one hand on Alec's shoulder.
Then, taking the cloth from him, he held it himself and continued on down the
tunnel. "Come on, let's get out of here. I've had all the swimming I care for
tonight."
They reached the upper entrance behind the mulberry bushes without incident,
but the combined effects of cold and the blow were beginning to take their toll
on Seregil.
"You go for Nysander," he said, shivering even with his dry cloak pulled
tightly around him. "I'd better stay and make sure no one tumbles to our little
adventure in the meantime."
To his surprise, Alec balked.
"No, you go," he stated flatly. "Your head is still bleeding and I can hear
your teeth chattering from here."
"I'll survive," Seregil retorted. "I don't want you here alone. What if
someone does show up?"
"All the more reason for you to hurry," Alec said stubbornly. "I'll stay out
of sight—they'll never know I'm here. You're the one needs looking after. Go
on!"
Seregil could tell by the set of Alec's jaw that his mind was made up.
Cutting a small strip from the hem of his cloak, he handed it to Alec. "Hang on
to this. Nysander can use it to find you. And keep out of sight no matter what,
understand? No heroics."
"No heroics."
Seregil let out a defeated sigh. "If I'm not back soon, you get back to the
Oreska, understand?"
"All right, yes! Will you just go? I don't want to be here all night."
Pulling up his hood, Alec melted back into the shadows.
The pounding in Seregil's head worsened as he dashed through the darkened
streets toward the Oreska, but he managed to ignore the pain by worrying about
Alec instead. Despite his faith in the boy's quick wits, he couldn't seem to
shake off visions of Alec being caught unawares by the Watch or stealthy spies
returning to check their handiwork.
Arriving at the Oreska filthy, wet, and bloody, he argued his way past the
watchman and hurried up the twisting stairs to Nysander's tower.
Thero opened the door and recoiled, covering his nose with one full sleeve.
"By the Four!" he gagged, blocking the doorway. "You smell like you just crawled
out of the sewers."
"Very observant of you. Get out of my way."
"You're not coming in here like that. Go down to the baths first."
"I don't have time for this, Thero. Now move or I'll move you."
The two glared at each other, years of mutual dislike laid open between them
without the gloss of banter or social nicety. Either could have done the other
considerable harm if it came to open confrontation, and they both knew it.
"Alec's alone out there, and we need Nysander's help," hissed Seregil.
With a last disgusted look, Thero stepped aside and let him through to the
workroom. "He's not here."
"Where is he?"
"Out for his nightly walk, I imagine," Thero replied stiffly. "Or perhaps
you've forgotten about those?"
"Then summon him!" Seregil paused, took a deep breath, and said through
clenched teeth, "If you please."
Thero conjured a message sphere with a casual wave of his hand. Balancing the
tiny light over his palm, he said to it, "Nysander, Seregil needs you right
away. He's in the workroom." The light shot away through the floor. He waved
Seregil to a wooden bench near one of the tables, but remained standing himself.
The young wizard was immaculate as ever, Seregil noted sourly, his robe
spotless beneath his leather apron, his curly black hair and beard neatly
trimmed, blunt-fingered hands unsullied. The thought that he'd inhabited that
angular frame himself, if briefly, still made him cringe inwardly. That Thero
had had the use of his body didn't bear thinking about.
"You're bleeding," Thero said at last, stepping reluctantly toward him. "I'd
better have a look."
Seregil drew back from his touch. "It's just a scratch."
"You have a lump the size of an egg over your ear and fresh blood on your
cheek," Thero snapped.
"What do you think Nysander would say if I let you sit there like that?"
Wethis, the young servant, brought clean water and dressings and Thero set
about cleaning the wound.
Nysander returned just as he was finishing. "What an unprecedented tableau,"
the wizard exclaimed, hurrying in between the stacks of manuscripts. He was
dressed in a threadbare surcoat and trousers. Seregil noted with a twinge of
pride how kind and unwizardly his old friend looked in comparison to his stiff
assistant.
"By the Light, Seregil, what an appalling stench! When you have finished
there, Thero, please go and find him a clean robe."
Folding the bloodied towel next to the basin, Thero disappeared down the back
stairway to their quarters.
Nysander smiled, examining his assistant's handiwork.
"He does surprise me sometimes. But where is Alec?"
"Take this." Seregil pulled out another scrap of cloth he'd cut from his
cloak and pressed it into Nysander's hand. "We found what we were looking for,
sabotage in the tunnels, but made one hell of a mess doing it. I need you to fix
it up for us. Alec's waiting by the entrance, so we'd better hurry."
Nysander shook his head. "Yes, of course, but I see no reason to drag you out
again. You are still chilled to the bone, and a translocation would not be the
best thing for you after such a knock on the head."
Seregil rose to protest and was very surprised to feel the floor lurch
beneath his feet in a decidedly unpleasant manner.
"There now, you see?" Nysander chided, pressing him back down on the bench.
"You go downstairs and sit by the fire. Alec can show me whatever it is I need
to see."
"I can't just sit here," Seregil insisted again, though his head was still
spinning. "We ran into one pair of gaterunners down there already tonight. There
could be others, or worse."
Nysander raised a shaggy eyebrow at him. "Are you suggesting that Alec would
not be safe in my company?"
Seregil sank his head in his hands as Thero reappeared with clean garments
over his arm.
"I leave Seregil in your able care," Nysander told him. "I suggest a cup of
hot wine and, by all or any means necessary, a bath." Clasping the scrap of
woolen cloth Seregil had given him, he traced a series of designs on the air and
disappeared into the wide black aperture that opened briefly beside him.
When Nysander opened his eyes again, he was in a small deserted square.
"There you are," whispered Alec, crawling out from behind a clump of leafless
bushes. "Is Seregil all right?"
"Yes, just a bit dizzy. He says you have something to show me."
"Something we need fixed," the boy replied with a familiar grin. "Follow me."
This was the first time he'd actually seen Alec at work, and he was impressed
with his quickness and efficiency.
"My, but Seregil has been busy with you!" Nysander remarked as Alec let him
through the second gate.
"Ruint me for honest work, he 'as," Alec replied, making a passable stab at a
dockman's accent. "It's not far now."
Reaching the damaged grate, Nysander climbed up to inspect the damaged stone
and ironwork, then moved across to see the intact corner.
"I see," he murmured to himself, peering closely at the remaining pin. "Most
ingenious. And ingenious of you to have discovered it. Yes, I am quite
satisfied.
Well done."
"Can you fix it?"
"Can I fix it?" Nysander snorted, climbing down again. Grasping the bars with
both hands, he closed his eyes and listened to the voice of the cold iron.
Letting his own energy pass into it through his hands, he visualized the
metal, felt it stir under his hands.
Standing beside him, Alec felt a powerful ripple pass through the rank air.
There were no flashes of light or magical signs, just the brief scrape and whine
of metal. For a moment it seemed to Alec that the metal came alive, like a
plant, growing and moving as it healed.
Looking up, he saw that the damaged corner now looked as it had before.
"Illior's Light!" he gasped, hardly able to believe his eyes.
Nysander laughed. "I hope you did not expect me to come down here with a
hammer and anvil." Opening his hand, he showed Alec a long iron pin. It was
scored along its length where it had been driven through the flange and
blackened from forging, except where the white metallic substance showed through
near one end.
Without a word Alec scaled the left side of the grate to find a solid pin in
its place.
"That's amazing," he exclaimed, tapping the iron with his knife blade.
Nysander shrugged. "It is only magic."
Seregil grudgingly accepted the willow bark infusion Thero prepared, then
went down to the baths. As soon as he was clean and dressed, however, he
returned to the workroom and refused to be moved, despite Thero's obvious desire
that he wait elsewhere.
Anxious and impatient, Seregil prowled the crowded room, fiddling with bits
of delicate apparatus.
"Give me that!" Thero snapped, snatching away a cluster of fluid-filled glass
spheres. "Drop that and we'll be up to our eyes in swamp sprites. If you won't
go downstairs then for Illior's sake, sit down."
"I know what it is." Scowling, Seregil climbed the stairway to the catwalk
overhead and stared out through the thick glass panes of the dome, watching the
movement of lights below.
By the time Nysander and Alec materialized neatly in the center of the room,
it would have been difficult to say which of the two looked more relieved.
"There you are!" Seregil exclaimed, bounding down.
"Any trouble?"
"No, everything looks as good as new," Alec told him, grinning.
"Shall I fetch fresh clothing?" Thero inquired, wrinkling his nose again.
"Yes, in a moment," said Nysander. "First, however, I must congratulate our
two able spies on a most valuable find." He shook the iron pin from his sleeve.
"I will keep this for now. Seregil, Alec tells me you took a sample of this
curious white material?"
Seregil held up the small container. "Right here. Want to see it work?"
"Yes, but not here, I think. Too many flammable items." Taking a crucible
from a nearby shelf, he ushered them into the casting room.
Placing a few of the white shavings in the crucible, Nysander set it on the
floor and touched a candle flame to its contents. A small fountain of white
sparks flew up and scattered across the floor.
"Incredible!" murmured Thero, nudging the remaining shavings about with a
small glass wand.
Seregil watched him surreptitiously, recognizing the sudden light of
enthusiasm in those pale eyes. At such moments he could almost see what
maintained Nysander's hopes for the young man—the keen and wondering mind that
underlay Thero's cold facade.
"Have you ever seen anything like this before?" Thero asked, turning to
Nysander.
The older wizard lit another fragment, then sniffed at the smoke left behind.
"It's a sort of incendiary metal, I believe. It's called Sakor's Bite or Sakor's
Fire for obvious reasons. Very, very rare but"—Nysander paused to raise one
bushy eyebrow at Seregil—"found in greater quantities in certain regions of
Plenimar."
Seregil exchanged knowing grins with Alec.
"Looks like we've got ourselves a decent bit of work at last."
Over the next few days Alec and Seregil shadowed their man closely, but
learned little more than that Rythel was annoyingly regular in his habits. He
rose early, gathered his crew, and worked the day through without leaving the
site. At night he took supper at his lodgings and turned in early.
Lounging across the street from the Sail-maker Street tenement the fourth
evening, they saw a broad, ruddy young man step out into the street.
"That's the landlady's grandson," Seregil whispered to Alec. "He's been down
to that tavern on the corner every night so far."
True to form, the fellow set off for the corner tavern, stopping to chat with
neighbors along the way.
Seregil stood up and stretched, still following the young man with his eyes.
"He looks like a talker to me. I think I'll nip in for a pint and try to strike
up a conversation."
It was a clear, windless night, but cold. Moving restlessly from one cold
doorway to another, Alec watched the house, and the half moon sailing slowly
over it. It had gained the chimney by the time Seregil reappeared, chuckling to
himself and smelling warmly of beer.
"You look pleased with yourself," Alec muttered, shifting his frigid feet.
"I am." Seregil threw his cloak back and presented him with a wooden cup of
the Dog and Bell's best lager. "Let's go home. Rythel's unlikely to stir out for
another couple of nights yet."
Alec took a grateful swallow of the watery beer as they headed back to the
court where they'd left their horses. "Then you did get something out of the
grandson?"
"Our smith appears to be equally disliked by almost everyone who knows him,
with the exception of his landlady, who judges her tenants solely by how
punctual they are with their rent. Her grandson, young Parin, has had a few
run-ins with him around the house. Apparently harsh words were exchanged when
Parin entered the smith's rooms unexpectedly one day. "Mind you" "grinning,
Seregil mimicked Parin's somewhat slurred complaints—""he was only messin" about
with some drawerings. Not like he was tupping nobody or nothin'. Just
drawerings, for the love a' hell! He's a queer one, and a miser, for all his
high and mighty ways."
"A shrewd judge of character, our Parin," Seregil said with a chuckle. "He
wasn't much help about the nature of the 'drawerings," but he did tell me that
Rythel always keeps to his rooms on work nights, but come end of the week he
goes on a regular spree."
Alec's hunter instincts stirred. "Tomorrow night."
"That's right. According to Parin, he appears downstairs in gentlemen's
clothes, sends Parin next door to hire a horse, tips like the miser he is, and
rides off not to be seen again until dawn or the next night."
"That explains how he came to be in the Street of Lights."
"And I'm willing to bet he makes a few other stops along the way. I think
it's time Lord Seregil put in an appearance."
Alec shot him a sharp look. "Just him? What about me?"
Seregil threw an arm around his shoulders and playfully ruffled his hair.
"Well now, if Master Rythel is out gambling and whoring all night, what better
time for a bit of housebreaking?"
The following evening Rythel rode out from Sailmaker Street just as expected.
The streets were busy, making it an easy matter for Seregil to follow him up to
the main city. A heavy cloak masked the fine surcoat and breeches he'd put on
for the evening's role.
The smith rode easily, apparently enjoying the evening air, and ended up at
the Heron, a stylish gambling house on the eastern fringe of the Merchant's
Quarter.
That's a lucky turn.
Seregil grinned to himself, watching from a distance as Rythel disappeared
inside. Lord Seregil was well known at the Heron from the days when he'd made
his living in such dens. And gaming-house friendships were easy enough to
manage.
Leaving Cynril with a groom, he strode inside.
The elderly doorkeeper took his cloak with a bow.
"Good evening, my lord," the old man said. "It's been some time since we last
saw you. Will anyone be joining you?"
"No. A canceled engagement has left me at loose ends." Pausing, he slipped a
discreet coin to the man, murmuring, "Any new blood tonight, Starky?"
Stark palmed the bribe and leaned closer. "A few, my lord, a few. Young Lady
Lachia has become quite addicted to bakshi since her marriage, but her husband's
with her tonight and he may know you rather too well from times past. There's a
country knight, Sir Nynius, with plenty of gold and a passion for eran stones
who plays badly as a rule. And there's a third, a newcomer. Not noble, but well
turned out. Calls himself Rythel of Porunta."
"How will I know him?"
"He's tall and fair, with quite an impressive beard. I expect you'll find him
in the card room. A bold player, as I hear it, though not always clever. He's
become a regular over the past month or so and takes both wins and losses
philosophically."
Seregil slipped him a second coin and a wink.
"Hlior's luck to you, my lord."
The Heron was a modestly opulent establishment divided into a number of large
rooms. Those near the front featured various sorts of games open to all corners;
smaller rooms at the back were reserved for private affairs.
Seregil found Rythel in one of the latter, settled down to a round of Rook's
Gambit with several rich merchants and a few officers of the Queen's Archers.
A number of them knew Seregil and invited him to join in. He took the empty
chair nearest Rythel and set his purse on the table.
"Good evening, Lord Seregil," Vinia the wool merchant greeted him, gathering
up the brightly painted cards for a new deal. "The hazard is three gold sesters,
the limit eight. As the new player, you begin the bid."
Keeping one eye on Rythel's style, Seregil played conservatively for the
first few rounds, managing to collect a modest pile of winnings. He chatted with
the others as they played, spicing the light banter with investment advice and
allusions to recent successful ventures, including an interest in the privateer
fleet being overseen by Nyreidian.
Rythel listened with polite interest, saying little until the deal came
around to him again.
"I suggest a change of game," he said, gathering the pack. "Sword and Coin?
There are enough of us to partner two games."
The other players were agreeable and when the chairs and tables had been
shifted, Seregil was not surprised to find himself sitting across from Rythel.
With a silent nod to Illior, he settled down to make his partner a richer man.
The less circumspect players were soon winnowed out as Seregil, no stranger
to creative card shuffling, gently tipped the scales in his and Rythel's favor.
Rythel, too, showed signs of certain talents; in an hour's time the two of them
had exhausted the resources of the other players.
Seregil gave him a slight bow as they rose to divide their winnings and
extended his hand.
"Well played. I'm Lord Seregil, as you may have gathered. And you?"
"Rythel of Porunta, my lord." His hand was hard in Seregil's, but not as
stained and roughened as he'd expected. The man had obviously taken pains to
hide his current occupation.
"Porunta? That's down near Stoneport, isn't it? What brings you so far north
this time of year?"
"I'm in commerce there, my lord, in a modest way."
Rythel paused, giving Seregil a disarmingly open smile. "I must confess, some
of the ventures you've mentioned tonight interest me."
"A man of vision, eh?" Seregil said with a knowing wink. "I'm a great admirer
of ambition, and our brief partnership tonight didn't do my purse any harm.
Perhaps you'd like to discuss things further over a bit of supper?"
"I'd be honored, my lord," Rythel replied, just a hint too eager.
"Anyplace in particular?" Rythel shrugged. "No, my lord. I've no plans for
the night."
Damn, thought Seregil.
Looks like we'll spend the evening plying each other with drink and fishing
for secrets.
A harsh, clear dawn was breaking when Seregil returned to the Cockerel. Alec
was asleep on the couch, legs stretched out toward the ruins of a fire.
He awoke with a start when Seregil flopped wearily down beside him.
"Well, how did it go?"
Seregil shrugged, running both hands back through his hair. "He's not the
greatest spy in the world, but he knows how to keep his mouth shut. We spent
most of the night drinking at the Rose, then he decided he wanted a woman. I
hoped maybe he needed to meet someone at a brothel, but instead he was ready to
take up with the first pair of clapmongers we passed in the street. I finally
managed to steer him into the Black Feather."
"The Feather? That's quite a comedown from Eirual's."
"The same thought occurred to me. Either he was putting on an act for my
benefit, or his fortunes fluctuate considerably from week to week. It's
something to keep an eye on. At any rate, we parted company there a few hours
ago and I followed him down to Sailmaker Street. He didn't go out again."
"Sounds like a wasted evening."
"As far as this sewer business goes it was. Still, you can't spend a whole
evening drinking and whoring with a person and not learn something. He's passing
himself off as some well-heeled merchant and, to tell you the truth, he carries
it off so well that I wonder if some of it isn't true. I'd say he's Skalan born,
and has done a bit of this kind of work before-a small-time noser. The
Plenimarans know how to find that type and use them."
Alec gave him a wry grin. "So do you."
"It's too soon to tell with this one, though."
Seregil stretched wearily. His night at the Feather had left him feeling
gritty and in need of a bath. "Although Lord Seregil clearly made quite an
impression on him. I let a few details slip about privateers and suddenly he was
my boon companion. I passed on a few rumors; it'll be interesting to see where
they pop up later. How'd you do?"
Alec pulled a flattened roll of parchment from inside his tunic and waggled
it triumphantly.
Carrying it to the table, he pinned the corners down with books. As he
reached to secure an upper corner , Seregil saw a ragged tear in his left sleeve
that appeared to be stained with blood.
"What happened to you?"
Alec shrugged, avoiding his eye. "It's nothing."
"Nothing?" Grasping his friend's hand, he pushed the torn sleeve back. A
rough bandage was tied around the boy's forearm and stained through with a
circle of dried blood the size of a two- sester piece. "Nothing doesn't usually
bleed like that."
"It's just a scratch," Alec insisted.
Ignoring Alec's objections, Seregil drew his dagger and cut away the
dressing. A shallow, jagged cut began at a puncture just below his elbow and
ended dangerously close to the delicate tendons just above Alec's wrist.
"Illior's Fingers, you could get blood poisoning with a cut like that!" he
gasped, fetching brandy to clean the wound. "What happened?"
"I just slipped going over the roof to his window,"
Alec admitted with a grudging sigh. "I figured that would be the safest route
in, but it was a little steeper than I thought, and the slates were really
slick—"
"Ever heard of rope?"
"By the time I realized I needed one, I was already up there. Anyway, my
sleeve caught-a nail sticking out of the gutter—"
"The gutter?" Seregil sputtered, feeling his stomach give a little lurch.
"You went over the edge? It's a forty-foot drop to stone paving! What in the
name of Bilairy's—"
"Actually, there's a shed right under his window," Alec corrected. "It
would've broken the fall—"
"Oh, so you had it all carefully planned, then?" Seregil said with heavy
sarcasm.
Alec shrugged again. "Learn and live, right?"
Illior's Light, that must be the same look I give Micum or Nysander when
they're berating me for surviving some stupid escapade!
Shaking his head, Seregil turned to inspect Alec's work, a crude, gridlike
drawing done in charcoal and smudged here and there with blood.
"This is a copy of a map I found in a hollowed-out post of Rythel's bed,"
explained Alec, frowning down at it. "It's not very good, I know, but I knew I'd
never remember any of it unless I marked it out somehow."
"You didn't steal this parchment from his room?"
"Of course not! I remembered what Parin said about drawings in his room and
thought I might need to copy something. I took all the materials with me."
"Except a rope."
At first glance Alec's map, done in a feverish haste by an unpracticed hand,
seemed little more than a meaningless scrawl of lines.
"I think it's a map of the sewers," said Alec.
"There wasn't any writing on it, just marks here and there, but it looked a
lot like those plans we found at Kassarie's, remember?" He pointed to a circle
near the bottom of the sheet. "I'd say this represents the outlet where they're
working, and this is probably the top of the channel, where we found the
sabotaged grate."
Seregil nodded slowly, then tapped a spot just beyond where a number of lines
radiated out from a single terminus. "Several large channels come together here.
One goes west, toward the Noble Quarter; this one here probably leads under the
middle of the city—Is this exactly what you saw, line for line?"
"I think so, but I didn't get all of it. It was really complicated and I was
jumping at every noise. Finally I did hear someone coming, so I just grabbed
what I had and rabbited. Sorry."
"No, no, you did well," Seregil mused, still puzzling over the layout. "This
is solid grounds for arresting him, but how in hell did he get this much
information?"
"Could the Plenimarans use it to attack the city through the sewers?"
"Not a mil-scale attack, but they could cause plenty of other mischief-enemy
sappers opening gates from inside, assassins popping out of the royal privies,
or anywhere else in the city, for that matter." Straightening up, he thumped
Alec proudly on the shoulder. "Good work. This is more than I came up with."
Alec colored, grinning. "The smiths I talked to from his crew expect to be
done in a couple of weeks. That means that Rythel has to complete whatever work
he has left on this by then." He paused. "What I want to know is how he learned
all this if he never goes out at night and never leaves the work site?"
"That's the real question, isn't it? Exploring and mapping out all these
tunnels would take weeks, months even. But what if you find someone who knows
already?"
"Like a Scavenger!"
"Or a gaterunner. What did that one who jumped me say?"
"Something about strangers in the sewers, someone she was afraid of."
"Right." Seregil looked down at the smudged parchment, tapping his chin
thoughtfully. "I wonder what Tym's up to these days?"
"Tym?"
"You must remember him, the thief who cut your purse for me that time?"
Alec grimaced. "I remember him, all right. He's not a gaterunner, is he?"
"No, but he has connections there, and just about everywhere else among the
poor and the criminal. That's what makes him so useful to us."
"I didn't think it was his charm," Alec remarked sourly.
"How do you know he'll come?" Alec asked as they climbed to the empty room
over the nameless lower city slophouse the following evening.
"He'll come." Seregil eyed the greasy table with distaste, then sat down on
one of the stools next to it. "He's probably already around somewhere."
He hadn't been hard to contact An informal network permeated the lowest
classes of the city like the roots of a tree; a coin and discreet word with the
right party was usually sufficient.
Almost before Seregil had finished speaking, they heard a light step on the
stairs behind them. Tym paused in the doorway, scanning the room suspiciously.
With a deferential nod to Seregil, he sauntered in.
Alec eyed the thief with carefully guarded dislike.
The last time Alec had seen him was outside the city that day with Micum and
Beka. Cocky with his new skills, Alec had surprised him in a crowd, hoping to
pay him back for cutting his purse.
Instead, Tym had nearly knifed him.
He was still thin and dirty as ever, and still cloaked in an air of hungry
arrogance. Slinging one leg over the bench opposite Seregil, he favored Alec
with a long, appraising sneer.
"Still with 'im, eh? Must be gettin' something you like."
Alec returned the look impassively.
Tym snorted a brief, humorless laugh and turned his attention to Seregil.
"You asked after me?"
Seregil rested one fist on the table and slowly opened it to display a thick
silver half sester.
"Any queer customers about?" he asked, using the common slang for spy.
Tym snorted again, a harsh, ugly sound. "What do you think?"
Seregil snapped his hand closed over the coin, opened it again. A second coin
glittered in the hollow of his palm. "Are you working for any of them?"
Tym eyed the coins, an almost thoughtful look smoothing his narrow face for
an instant. "Think I'd tell if I was?"
Seregil's hand closed, opened. Four coins.
Alec studied Tym's face. The aloof mask stayed firmly in place.
"Could be," Tym replied cautiously.
Close. Open. No coins.
That got a reaction. Tym sat forward, looking like a man who'd just
overplayed his game. "Bugger! No, I ain't working for nobody, but there's them
that might be."
Seregil opened his hand again. Five coins.
"Rat Tom come by a stash real suddenlike, wouldn't say where from," Tym
confided, all crafty compliance now.
"Where's Rat Tom now?"
Tym shrugged. "Turned up dead in an alley not two weeks ago, throat cut."
"Who else?"
"Fast Mickle claims he did a papers job in Helm Street."
"What house?"
"Don't know."
"Where could I find Fast Mickle?"
Tym shrugged again. "Ain't seen him for a while."
Seregil snatched the coins away with a disgusted sigh and rose, motioning for
Alec to follow. "Let's go. There's nothing to be learned here."
"There's talk," Tym added hastily.
Halfway to the door already, Seregil turned with an exasperated frown. "What
talk?"
"It's the gaterunners mostly. Some turn up flush all of a sudden, then they
turn up dead or not at all."
Alec exchanged a quick look with Seregil, thinking of what the woman had told
them in the sewers.
"Madrin, Dinstil, Slim Lily, Wanderin' Ki, all of 'em dead one way or another
just in the last month," Tym continued.
"Tarl's been lookin" for Farin the Fish for a week now."
"I thought Farin was a breaker?" Seregil returned to the table. Alec remained
standing just behind him.
"He is, but still it's funny he's gone. Him and Tarl been together for
years."
"Any others?"
"Virella maybe, she's another runner, but you don't never know with her. And
that young breaker, Shady—they found her floating in the harbor out past the
moles. Some are even wondering about the Rhiminee Cat, but he's another you
don't never know about."
Seregil jingled the coins in his fist. "Who's supposed to be doing all this
killing?"
For the first time Tym looked uneasy. "Don't know. Don't nobody know, and
that is strange. The snuffers claim ain't none of them doing it. Folks is
gettin' nervous. You don't hardly know whether to take a job or not."
"I have a job, if you're interested," Seregil told him, sliding the silver
enticingly closer.
Tym looked hungrily at the stack of coins. "This wouldn't be a running job
would it?"
"No, just a snoop. There's a house near here I want watched. If you see
anyone you know go in—breaker, runner, keek, anything —I want to know about it.
Or anyone you think doesn't fit with the neighborhood. Is that clear?"
"Breakers and runners?" Tym's eyes narrowed again. "This got to do with the
killings?"
"Maybe he's scared," Alec suggested quietly, speaking for the first time.
Tym lurched up, gripping the hilt of his knife. "Maybe I ought to fix that
pretty face of yours!"
"Sit down!" barked Seregil.
Alec stiffened, but remained where he was. Tym sullenly obeyed.
"Now," Seregil resumed calmly, "do you want the job or not?"
"Yeah, I want it," Tym growled. "But it'll cost you."
"Name your price."
"Two sesters a week."
"Done." Seregil spat in his palm and clasped hands with the thief. As Tym
tried to withdraw his, Seregil gripped it tight.
"You've never turned on me yet. This would be a poor time to start." Seregil
smiled, but that only made the threat implicit in his tone more ominous. The
force of it drove the cocky sneer from Tym's face. "If anyone tumbles and offers
you more to turn to them, you smile and you take their money, then you come
straight back to me."
"I will, sure I will!" Tym stammered, wincing. "I ain't never turned on you.
I ain't going to."
"Of course you aren't." Seregil relinquished his hold at last, but the
imprint of his long fingers glowed for a moment in white, bloodless stripes
across the back of the thief's hand. "The house is the tenement in Sailmaker
Street with the red and white striped lintel. You know the one?"
Tym nodded curtly, flexing his hand. "Yeah, I know it."
"You can start now. Report to me in the usual way."
Alec shook his head incredulously as Tym disappeared down the stairs. "You
actually trust him?"
"After a fashion. He just needs the occasional reminder." Seregil drummed his
fingers lightly on the table. "In his own way, Tym trusts me. He trusts that
I'll pay. He trusts that I won't double-cross him, and he trusts that I'll hunt
him to the ends of the earth and slit his throat if he turns on me. You'd do
well to watch your step with him, though. That was no idle threat just now."
"I was just trying to push him along," Alec began, but Seregil held up a
hand.
"I know what you were doing, and it worked. But you don't understand people
like him. He respects me because he fears me. I nearly killed him once and he's
the sort that takes to you afterward because of it. But he'd slice you open in a
minute and worry about my reaction later. Insulting him the way you did is
enough to make him your enemy for life."
"I'll keep that in mind," Alec said. He'd never quite gotten around to
telling Seregil of his last confrontation with Tym. Now didn't seem to be the
right time, either, but he stored away the advice.
Through the next week the dreary Klesin rains rolled in off the sea in
earnest, melting away the last of the filthy snow still lingering in the shelter
of alleyways and corners, and insuring that Seregil and his company were
perpetually damp.
Tym kept watch over the Sailmaker Street house, but reported nothing beyond
Rythel's expected movements between there and the sewer site.
Work for the Rhiminee Cat—a papers job—came in at midweek. This fell to Alec,
who spent the next few days scouting the household of a certain lord whose
estranged wife wanted certain papers stolen. During the evenings, however, he
became a welcome regular at the Hammer and Tongs.
Whether Rythel would remain in his uncle's shop once the work was completed
seemed to be a matter of speculation, though it was unclear whether this was
grounded in some hint from Rythel or mere wishful thinking on the part of the
other smiths. Meanwhile, Seregil set to work on the connection between the smith
and Lord General Zymanis, but his discreet inquiries yielded little beyond what
Nysander had already told them.
A young valet had disappeared four months before, but there was no evidence
that he'd stolen anything.
At week's end the winds changed, shredding the clouds into tatters of
vermilion and gold against the late afternoon sky.
"Rythel will be going out soon. What's the plan for tonight?" asked Alec,
gazing out the window beside the workbench.
Seregil looked up from a pick he'd been repairing and smiled. The slanting
sunlight bathed Alec's profile as he leaned against the window frame, striking
fiery glints in his hair and casting his cheekbones and the folds of his
clothing into fine relief.
A painter should capture him like that, all light and eagerness.
"What are we going to do?" Alec asked again, turning to look at him.
"Since we don't have any new information, I think I'll shadow him this time,"
Seregil replied, sliding the pick back into Alec's tool roll and handing it to
him. "Why don't you go ahead with that papers job for Lady Hylia?"
Alec grinned. "On my own?"
"You've done all the legwork. You're sure Lord Estmar will be away until
tomorrow?"
"That's what his cook says. It looks like an easy job, too. Lady Hylia's
instructions to the Cat said the papers she wants are hidden in the wine cellar.
The door leading down to it is in the second pantry, which has a decent-sized
window."
"All the same, take your time and be careful," Seregil cautioned. "The cook
knows your face. You can't afford to get caught."
"I know, I know," Alec muttered happily, only half listening as he checked
his tools and tucked the roll away in his coat. "I expect I'll be done by
midnight, in case you need me later on."
"I'll look for you here if I do."
Either he's following some plan, or he's the most dismally predictable spy in
Rhiminee, Seregil thought, watching from a discreet distance as Rhythel went
into the Heron.
A few coins to the doorkeeper, Stark, bought Seregil hourly reports on the
goings-on inside. Rythel asked after Lord Seregil and expressed regret at not
finding him among the company. He soon consoled himself by falling in with
another young noble, the son of Lady Tytiana, Mistress of the Queen's Wardrobe.
They parted company early, however, and Seregil shadowed him to the Maiden's
Laugh, a moderately respectable tavern and brothel near the center of the city.
Settling in with the tavern crowd downstairs, Seregil soon charmed a weary tap
girl into confiding which girl Rythel had gone up with, which room was hers, and
that he'd paid for the entire night.
After giving the pair time to settle in, Seregil slipped through the
boisterous crowd and made his way unnoticed up the stairs to a dim third-floor
corridor. Waiting until he was alone in the passage, he went to the door at the
end of it and peered through the keyhole.
Inside, Rythel and his woman were attending earnestly to business. The tiny
room had no window or other exit that Seregil could see.
Paid for the whole night, did you? Seregil thought, stealing back the way
he'd come.
Outside, he unhobbled his mare and glanced up at the moon; just past
midnight. Alec was probably back by now, waiting for word from him. Gathering
the reins, he headed for the Cockerel.
Alec was home. Seregil found him pacing morosely in front of the fire. He was
still wearing his cloak, and there were twigs and dead leaves tangled in his
hair.
"Problem with the job?"
Alec paused, scowling. "Lord Estmar is out for the night, but his new lady
friend isn't. Seems she decided to have a few hundred friends in while he's
gone. The whole damn place was lit up bright as noon. I skulked around the
garden for hours, thinking things might die down. I gave up when fresh musicians
showed up just before midnight. Anything new with Rythel?"
"Only his choice of whores," Seregil replied. "Come on. I've had enough of
trailing around after this bastard. Show me this map of his."
"All right." Alec arched an eyebrow knowingly, then went to his bed and
pulled a coil of rope from beneath it. "And this time, I'm prepared."
Galloping through the darkened city under a wan, lopsided moon, Alec felt a
hunter's-thrill of anticipation. The seemingly fruitless days of stalking Rythel
wouldn't be wasted if they could use him and his map to bring down larger game.
And for once, he was the one to lead. He was rather proud of himself for finding
the hollowed bedpost on his own and was looking forward to showing Seregil.
Just as they came within sight of the Sea Market, however, one of Nysander's
tiny message spheres materialized suddenly in front of Seregil. Although Alec
could not hear it, he knew by the way his friend reined sharply to a halt that
there was about to be a change in plans.
"What did he say?" he asked when the little light had winked out.
Seregil pushed his hood back and Alec saw that he was frowning. "He wants us
at the Queen's Palace immediately. He didn't say why, just that I should come
right away, and bring you if you're with me."
"Damn! Look, you could go back and I'll meet you—"
"He asked for both of us."
"But what about the map? And what if Rythel does come back and then heads out
somewhere else?"
"I know, I know—" Seregil shrugged. "But Watchers can't ignore a summons to
the Palace. Besides, Rythel's out for the night and Tym's clever enough to keep
an eye on things until we get back. Come on now. Back we go!"
But Rythel did return to Sailmaker Street, and not long after Seregil and
Alec turned back toward the Palace.
What the bloody hell are you doing home on this fine night?
Tym thought. More surprising yet was the fact that the smith was not alone. A
lantern still burned over the door and by its light Tym caught a glimpse of the
two men with him. They had their hoods pulled forward, but the gleam of their
fine boots in the lamplight told him they were not denizens of the area.
Reaching behind him, he gave a rough shake to the small ragged boy dozing
against the alley wall just behind him.
"Skut, wake up, damn you!"
The child jerked up, instantly tense and alert. "Yeah, Tym?"
"You ever see any gentleman types go in there?"
"Naw, nothing like that."
Watching a house was child's work, and it hadn't taken Tym long to find a
child to help him do it. Having survived to the lucky old age of nine, scrawny,
gap-toothed little Skut knew all the Folk as well as he did himself and feared
Tym's wrath enough to be dependable. It was Skut, in fact, who'd spotted a
gaterunner called Pry the Beetle late that same afternoon while Tym was off to
his supper. The Beetle had shown up soon after the smith returned from work that
evening and, by Skut's estimation, stayed long enough for a decent conversation.
Learning this, Tym had gone off again to track the Beetle down and soon found
him already half-drunk in one of the filthy waterfront stews the runner
frequented. A little silver loosened the man's tongue and Tym judged the
resulting information well worth the price. It seemed a certain tenant on the
top floor of the Sailmaker Street house was buying information about the sewers,
information only a Scavenger or runner was privy to, so to speak.
Tym allowed himself a wolfish grin; that was just the sort of information
Lord Seregil might loosen his purse strings for.
Returning to Sailmaker Street, he'd settled in for another uneventful
evening, but here was something else unexpected. And lucrative, no doubt.
He waited until light showed through a chink in the shutters of the smith's
room, then turned to Skut again.
"I'm going up for a listen. You keep your eyes open down here and give the
signal if anyone comes along that might see me," he whispered, punctuating his
instructions to the boy with a light cuff over the ear. "You doze off while I'm
up there and I'll strangle you with your own guts, you hear?"
"I ain't never dozed on nobody," Skut hissed back resentfully.
Unwittingly following the same route Alec had taken several days before, Tym
clambered up the rickety wooden stairs at the back of the house and crept over
the slates to the edge of the roof just over Rythel's window. Stretched out on
his belly, he peered carefully over for an upside-down view of the window below.
A crack at the top of the left shutter showed only a thin slice of the room, but
he could just make out scraps of the conversation going on inside.
"Three more days." That was the smith; Tym had heard him speak in the street.
"Well done," said another man. "You'll be well rewarded."
"I have another letter, as well."
"Are you certain no one—" a third man broke in, and this voice carried a
strong Plenimaran accent.
Tym heard movement inside and the voices dropped too low for him to make out.
Cursing silently, he kept still, hoping they'd move closer to the window.
He was just wondering if he should chance opening the shutter a bit more for
a peek when some inner alarm sent an uncomfortable prickle down his spine.
Gripping the lead gutter with one hand, his knife in the other, he twisted
sharply around, scanning back up the steep pitch of the roof.
There, just to the left of a chimney pot, the black outline of a head was
visible above the roof peak.
More of the figure rose up, moving with uncanny silence.
There's something wrong about him, was Tym's first thought.
The other stood in full view now, a long black stain against the starry sky.
He looked unusually tall, and he didn't move right, either. There was none of
the ungainliness of a cripple-and what in hell would a cripple be doing up
here?—but a queer set to the shoulders of the silhouette, the crooked thrust of
the torso over the legs—
The other suddenly jerked his head in Tym's direction. The thief could still
make out no more than the stranger's outline, but he knew instinctively that
he'd been spotted.
The figure stooped, bent down as if making Tym a ridiculously low bow. But
that was not the end of it, and Tym's mouth suddenly went dry.
The other somehow curled himself downward, arms still at his sides, until his
hooded head touched the roof slates below his feet. Down he went, and down,
sinuous as an eel-chest, belly, legs, all bent at angles chillingly wrong. And
like some huge and loathsome eel, the long black shape began slithering down
toward him.
A coldness that had nothing to do with the weather reached Tym, driving a
numbing ache into his bones that left his hands as stiff and useless as an old
man's. Still, it wasn't until the stench hit him that he began to suspect the
sort of nightmare that was bearing down on him.
For the first time in his hard, rough life, Tym screamed, but the ignominious
sound came out of his throat as a faint, futile squeak.
The thing came to a halt scant inches away from where he crouched and coiled
upright again.
Instinct overrode terror. Still clutching his knife, though he could scarcely
feel it in his fist, Tym lunged up and slashed at the apparition and felt his
hand pass through a vacant coldness where the thing's chest should have been.
The attack overbalanced him on the slick slates and he crouched again, wobbling
for balance.
The black thing hovered motionless for a moment, radiating its icy stench.
Then it laughed, a thick, bubbling laugh that made Tym think of rotting, bloated
corpses floating in foul water.
The hideous thing raised long, wrong-jointed arms and he braced for a blow.
But it didn't strike at him.
It pushed.
Standing faithful watch in the shadow of the alley,
Skut saw a dark form topple from the roof.
Plummeting down, headfirst, the falling man struck the cobbled pavement of
the yard with a dull thud.
Skut froze, waiting for an outcry. When none came, he crept out to the body,
squinting down at it in the waning moonlight.
Tym was unmistakably dead. His head had been smashed into a terrible lopsided
shape. His chest was caved in like a broken basket.
Skut stared down in shocked disbelief for an instant, then burst into tears
of frustration. The bastard hadn't paid him yet!
Tym carried no purse, no valuables. Even his long knife was missing from its
sheath.
Wiping his nose on his arm, Skut gave the body a final, furious kick and
disappeared into the night.
Vargul Ashnazai moved restlessly around Rythel's tiny room while the smith
was making his report to Mardus. So far the man's spying attempts had turned up
little of any significance, for all his self-important airs. But his sabotage of
the sewer channels had been brilliantly carried off and, more importantly still,
his compilation of the map of sewer channels beneath the western ward of the
city.
Mardus had it before him now, making a final painstaking check before paying
the smith for its delivery.
Ashnazai's job was to maintain a cloaking glamour about the two of them;
through Rythel's eyes, they were fair, heavyset men with Mycenian accents. He
also had a dragorgos on watch, ranging the courtyard outside—an especially
taxing task for a necromancer of his degree, but a necessary one, as it turned
out.
Soon after their arrival, he suddenly felt a silent call from the dragorges.
Closing his eyes, he sent a sighting through his dark creation and discovered
the intruder on the roof overhead, a rough-looking young fellow with a knife.
Vermin, he thought.
A common thief.
With a barely perceptible smile, he mouthed a silent command. A moment later
he felt the stalker lunge and heard a satisfying thud from the yard below.
Mardus glanced up from the document the smith was showing him.
"It's nothing," Ashnazai assured him, going to the window and pushing back
one of the warped shutters. As he looked down at the body sprawled below, a
small figure darted over to it from the deep shadows across the street. Ashnazai
sent a quick stab into this one's mind: a child thief, too grief-stricken at the
loss of his compatriot to notice the ripple of blackness flowing down the side
of the building toward him.
The dragorgos gave a hungry, questioning call. Ashnazai was about to release
it for another kill when his hand brushed something on the windowsill, something
that sent an unpleasantly familiar tingle through his skin.
Incredulous, he forgot the child completely as he bent to scrutinize the
sill.
There, so faint no one but a necromancer would ever have noticed, was a thin
smear of blood. And not just any blood! Pulling out the ivory vial, he compared
the emanations of its contents to these.
Yes, the boy! Known here as Alec of Ivywell, minion of the Aurenfaie spy,
Lord Seregil.
That much they'd learned since their arrival in Rhiminee. Urvay had tracked
the troublesome thieves as far as a villa in Wheel Street, where they acted the
fine gentlemen as they consorted with nobles and royalty.
Ashnazai had seen them several times since then, could easily have had them
at any point, but the two were still under Oreska protection; any move against
them would alert the real enemies in the Oreska House. So he had stayed his hand
and soon after the Aurenfaie and his accomplice had dropped maddeningly from
sight yet again.
Vargul Ashnazai clenched a hand around the vial for a moment, using its power
to detect other traces of Alec's blood around the room: droplets on the shutter,
a smudge on the table by Mardus' elbow, a tiny brownish circle dried on the
floor near the hollow bedpost that Rythel thought such a clever hiding place,
and none of it more than a day or two old.
Standing there, surrounded by the essence of the hated boy, Ashnazai
experienced a brief twinge of the fear a hunter feels realizing that the prey
he's been stalking has circled to stalk him. In the midst of his silent fury, he
was startled to hear Rythel speak the Aurenfaie's name.
Seated at ease across the table from the smith, Mardus was regarding his spy
with polite attention.
"Lord Seregil, you say?" Mardus inclined his head slightly as if greatly
interested, but Ashnazi saw through the pose; at such moments Mardus reminded
him of a huge serpent, chill and remorseless as it advanced unblinking upon its
prey.
"A lucky meeting, my lord," the smith told him proudly. "I happened across
him in a gambling house one night last week. He has quite an interest in the
privateering fleet and likes to brag about it. A puffed-up dandy, full of
himself. You know the sort."
Mardus smiled coldly. "Indeed I do. You must tell me everything."
Ashnazai bided his time impatiently as the smith described how he'd courted
the supposed cully, and the information he'd had from him. He made no mention of
the boy.
Standing behind the smith, Ashnazai caught Mardus' attention, pointed to the
window, and held up the vial with a meaningful look. The other gave a slight
nod, betraying no reaction.
"You've surpassed all expectations," Mardus told Rythel, passing him a heavy
purse in return for the sewer map, together with a packet of the sabotaged grate
pins. "You've done an excellent job with the map, and I believe I can arrange an
additional reward once you've completed your work in the tunnels."
"Another week and it'll be done," the smith assured him, eyes alight with
greedy anticipation.
"If there's anything else I can do for you, you just say the word."
"Oh, I shall, I assure you," Mardus replied with a smile.
Unseen and unheard under the cover of Ashnazai's magic, he and the
necromancer made their way down through the crowded rooms and stairways of the
tenement to the yard.
The thief's body lay where it had fallen, twisted like a child's discarded
doll.
Mardus turned the corpse's head with the toe of one boot. "The face is
damaged, but it clearly isn't one of them."
"No, my lord, just a common footpad who blundered into the dragorgos by
chance. But the boy has certainly been here within the past day or two. His
blood is all over the room. He must have been wounded."
"But not by Rythel, I think. There was nothing in his demeanor to suggest he
was hiding anything of the sort."
The necromancer closed his eyes for a moment, his pinched face narrowing
still more as he concentrated.
"There's blood on the eaves above the window. He must have cut himself
breaking in."
Mardus looked down at the dead man again.
"Two thieves in as many days? Rather a lot, don't you think, even for this
part of the city." He watched with satisfaction as a fish hook of anxiety tugged
in the necromancer's cheek. "A pity we weren't here the night our young friend
made his visit," he continued.
"Then it could have been him lying here dead and unable to be questioned,
instead of this useless piece of meat. Get rid of it before it attracts any
attention."
Vargul Ashnazai muttered a summons through clenched teeth and the darkness
beside them convulsed. A second dra'gorgos materialized, a wavering, faceless
presence that hung like smoke for an instant before streaming down into the dead
man's mouth and nose. The body gave a convulsive jerk, then lumbered clumsily to
its feet. There was no semblance of life in the face; the dead glazed eyes
remained fixed, the one on the ruined side of the head bulging grotesquely from
its smashed socket.
Mardus regarded the thing with detached interest. "How long can you maintain
it in this state?"
"Until it decomposes, my lord, but I fear it would be of little use. So much
of the magic is consumed simply to animate it that it lacks the dra'gorgos'
strength. That, of course, will not be the case once our purpose has been
accomplished."
"Indeed not." Mardus touched a gloved hand briefly to the corpse's chest,
feeling the black emptiness of death within—such power in that void, and so
nearly in his grasp.
The necromancer spoke another command and the corpse loped away in the
direction of the nearby harbor.
Still cloaked by the necromancer's spell, they rode up to the main city. The
few folk they passed in the streets at that hour were aware of little more than
a momentary chill, a fleeting bit of movement caught from the corner of the eye.
"It's of little consequence really, even if they do discover Rythel's work in
the sewers," Ashnazai ventured nervously as they rode down Sheaf Street toward
their lodgings near the Harvest Market. "The map is the important thing, and we
have that. Still, it's unsettling, having the two of them both nosing around
Rythel."
"On the contrary, I see the hand of Seriamaius at work in it," said Mardus.
"It seems our journey has been a long spiral path, one narrowing quickly now to
tighten around our quarry. You may have been correct after all about these
thieves being of some importance, Vargul Ashnazai. They wouldn't be crossing our
trail so often unless there is some greater purpose in it. We have only to bide
our time until the others arrive. Meanwhile, I think it's time to deal with
Master Rythel. Arrange something unremarkable, would you?"
Nearing the market, Mardus reined in. "I'm to meet with our new friend,
Ylinestra. I shouldn't be long."
"Very good, my lord. I'll check on Tildus and the others at the inn."
Parting ways with the necromancer, Mardus turned his mount down a side lane.
Halfway down it, he glanced at the fine pair of brass cockerels decorating the
entrance to an inn of the same name.
He'd passed through Blue Fish Street several times since arriving in Rhiminee
and the figures, each holding a lantern suspended from an upraised claw, often
caught his eye.
A Watcher password got them by the guards at the same postern gate Alec had
used as a refuge a few months before. Riding through the palace grounds, they
dismounted at a tradesman's door near the Ring wall of the Palace.
"I feared you would not come," Nysander said, hurrying them inside. As he
reached to close the door behind them, Alec noticed the hem of a finely
embroidered robe beneath the wizard's plain mantle.
"You caught us in the middle of a job," Seregil told him.
"I suspected as much, but I had no choice. Come, there is little time."
Nysander inscribed a faint sigil in the air over their heads, then led the
way silently down a servant's passage. They hadn't gone far when a serving woman
came around a corner ahead of them carrying an armload of linen. She looked
directly at Alec as she passed, but gave no sign that she'd seen him.
Magic?
Alec signed.
Seregil motioned him onward with an impatient nod. still hope I don't have to
find my own way out of here, Alec thought as Nysander hurried them up stairways
and through more corridors and increasingly lavish public rooms. Climbing a
final, curving stairway, they reached a closed door. Nysander took a key from
his sleeve and let them into a long, dimly lit gallery.
An ornate balustrade screened by panels of wooden fretwork ran the length of
the right side of the room. Light streamed up through the openings, casting
netted patterns on the ceiling overhead.
Nysander raised a finger to his lips, then drew them to one of the panels.
Putting his face close to the fretwork, Alec found himself looking down into a
brightly lit audience chamber.
He'd seen Queen Idrilain only once before, but he recognized her at once
among the small knot of people gathered around a wine table at the center of the
room. Phoria sat at her left with several other people in Skalan court dress. To
Idrilain's right sat a man and two women dressed in a fashion he'd never seen
before.
All three wore tunics of soft white wool accented only by the polished jewels
glowing on their belts, torques, and broad silver wristbands.
Two of them, the man and the younger woman, wore their long dark hair loose
over their shoulders beneath elaborately wrapped head cloths. The older woman's
hair was silvery white, and on her brow was a silver circlet set with a single
large ruby in a fan of blade-shaped gold leaves.
Intrigued, Alec turned to Seregil but found his friend pressed rigidly to the
screen, his face a mask of anguish washed with stippled light.
What's he seeing?
Alec wondered in alarm, looking down at the strangers again. Just then,
however, the younger woman turned her head his way and Alec felt his breath
catch in his throat as he recognized the fine features, dark shining hair, and
large, light eyes.
Aurenfaie.
Still staring down, he reached for his friend's shoulder, felt the slight
trembling there before Seregil shrugged him away.
The conference below continued for some time. At last the Queen rose and led
the others out of the chamber.
Seregil remained where he was for a moment, forehead resting against the
screen as a single tear inched down his cheek. Wiping it quickly away, he turned
to face Nysander, who'd stood silently behind them all the while.
"Why are they here?" Seregil asked, his voice husky with emotion.
"The Plenimaran Overlord died today," the wizard replied. "The Aurenfaie had
the news before we did and translocated a delegation here tonight. There is
still no official alliance between Plenimar and Zengat, but both Aurenfaie
intelligence and our own suggests that secret agreements have in fact been
made."
"What's that got to do with us?" Seregil's face was stony now, the naked
sorrow too thoroughly erased.
"Nothing, as yet," said Nysander. "I summoned you here because the lia'sidra
has granted permission for you to speak with her briefly. There is a small
antechamber just through that door behind you."
Still rigidly expressionless, Seregil stalked away into the next room.
As soon as he was gone, Alec let out a pent-up gasp. "Illior's Hands,
Nysander-Aurenfaie!"
"I thought you should see them, too," Nysander said with a rather sad smile.
"Who's he meeting?"
"That is for Seregil to tell you. And with any luck, before you wear a trench
in this excellent carpet."
Seregil paced the small, well-appointed sitting room, one eye on the side
door. And as he paced, he fought to maintain some semblance of inner calm. There
was a looking glass on the wall and he paused in front of it, ruefully
inspecting his reflection. His hair was tangled and windblown, and a week of
puzzling over Rythel had left dark circles under his eyes. The old surcoat he'd
thrown on that evening was frayed at the cuffs and one shoulder was torn.
Don't I look the ragged outcast? he thought, giving the glass a humorless
smile as he combed his fingers through his hair.
Behind him the side door opened and for a moment another face was reflected
next to his, the two images so similar, yet worlds apart. When had his eyes
grown so wary, the lines around his mouth so harsh?
"Seregil, my brother." Her pure, unaccented Aurenfaie washed through him like
cool water.
"Adzriel," he whispered, embracing her. The scent of wandril blossoms rose
from her hair and skin, blinding him with memories. She had been both sister and
mother and suddenly he remembered what it had been to be a child, smelling her
special scent as she comforted him or carried him home from some moonlit
festival. Now she felt small in his arms and for a long moment he could do
nothing but cling to her, his throat tightening painfully as he blinked back
four decades of unshed tears.
Adzriel stepped back at last, still holding him by the shoulders as if afraid
he'd disappear if she didn't.
"All these years I've carried the image of that unhappy boy looking down at
me from the deck that awful day," she gasped, her own tears flowing freely. "O
Aura, I missed seeing you grow into a man! Now look at you; wild as any Tirfaie
and wearing a weapon in the presence of your kin."
Seregil quickly unbuckled his sword belt and hung it over a nearby chair. "I
meant no offense. It's like another limb to me here. Come, sit down and I'll try
to remember how civilized people act."
Adzriel stroked a hand through his unkempt hair.
"And when were you ever civilized?"
Sitting down next to him on a divan, she drew a small bundle of scrolls from
her tunic. "I have letters for you from our sisters and your old friends. They
haven't forgotten you."
More memories held at bay pressed in, and with them a pang of long suppressed
hope. Swallowing hard, he examined the heavy silver bracelet of rank on her
wrist. "So you're a member of the lia'sidra now. And an envoy, too. Not bad for
someone who hasn't seen her hundred and a half birthday yet."
Adzriel shrugged, though she looked pleased. "Our family's tie to Skala may
be useful in the coming years. Idrilain welcomed me as a kinswoman when we
arrived, and spoke highly of you. From what little your friend Nysander i
Azusthra had time to tell me, I gather you've been of some service to her?"
Seregil studied her face, wondering how much Nysander had said about their
work. Little enough, evidently.
"Now and then," he told her. "What did your companions make of that, I
wonder, Seregil the Traitor praised by the Skalan Queen? I remember old Mahalie
a Solunesthra, but who's the other?"
"Ruen i Uri, of Datsia Clan. And you needn't worry about either of them;
they're both moderates, and good friends of mine."
"And you're here because of Plenimar?"
"Yes. All recent reports indicate an alliance being attempted with Zengat and
there can only be one reason for that."
"To keep Aurenen too busy defending her western borders to ally with Skala.
But if the Plenimarans had just left things alone, wouldn't the Edict of
Separation have done their work for them?"
"There's been considerable progress against the Edict since you left. The
recent discovery of our kinsman Corruth's body—well, you can imagine the effect
that has had in the lia'sidra."
Seregil watched her again; no, she didn't know the part he'd played in that,
and his oath as a Watcher prevented him from telling her. "Total uproar, I
hope," he said with a smirk. "All those years of accusing every Skalan in sight
of foul play. Old Rhazien's faction must be choking on their own isolationist
rhetoric."
Adzriel chuckled. "Nothing so dramatic, but it has tipped the scales a bit
for those of us who want to renew the old alliances. With Petasarian gone and
his successor, young Estmar, already rumored to be the puppet of his own
generals and necromancers, I don't think we can afford to stand alone any
longer."
"Adzriel?" He hesitated, knowing what he must ask next, but dreading the
answer. "Does this have anything to do with why you've been allowed to see me?"
"The lifting of your banishment, you mean?" Adzriel smoothed a thumb over one
of the jewels in her bracelet. "Not officially. The time isn't right. Not yet."
Seregil jumped to his feet, clenching one hand against his side where his
sword usually hung.
"Bilairy's Guts, I was a child. Willful, misguided, guilty as hell, but still
a child. If only you knew what I've done since then." We found their precious
Lord Corruth, Alec and I! The words burned his throat. "I know the Skalans,
their culture and politics, their language, better than any envoy."
"Yes, but whose interests would you be representing?" Adzriel's level gaze
stopped him in his tracks.
"So I'm to sit idle here while the Zengati boil out of the hills and descend
on Bokthersa once again?"
Adzriel sighed. "I hardly think you'll be idle, not when the might of
Plenimar is pounding against your shores and their armies roll across Mycena to
batter at your northern borders. And mark my words, it will come to that before
it's over. I understand your pain, my love, but you've spent more than half your
life here." She paused. "I sometimes wonder if things haven't worked out for the
best, somehow."
"My being exiled, you mean?" Seregil stared at her. "How can you say that?"
"I'm not saying I'm glad you were taken from us, but in spite of all the
loneliness and pain you must have known, I wonder if life among the Tirfaie
doesn't suit you better? Truly now, could you ever be content to sit under the
lime trees at home, telling tales to the children, or debating with the elders
of the Bokthersa Council whether the lintel of the temple should be painted
white or silver? Think back, Seregil. You were always restless, always demanding
to find out what lay over the next hill. Perhaps there's some purpose in it."
Rising, she took his hands in hers. "I know you've paid for your mistakes.
Believe me, I want your exile lifted, but you must be patient. Changes are
coming for Aurenen, great ones. Make your stand here for now, in this dangerous,
wonderful land of yours. What say you, my brother?"
Still frowning, Seregil muttered, "Silver."
"What?" asked Adzriel.
"Silver," Seregil repeated, looking up with the crooked grin that had always
won her over. "Tell the elders of the Council I said the lintel should be
silver."
Adzriel laughed, a wonderful, radiant sound. "By Aura, Father was right! I
should have beaten you more. Now where is this Alec i Amasa Nysander told me of?
He interests me greatly."
"You know about Alec?" Seregil said, surprised.
"More than he does himself, it would seem," Adzriel chided.
Seregil gave her a chagrined look. It seemed Nysander had packed a great deal
into a short conversation.
If Nysander hadn't been with him in the gallery, Alec would have been
hard-pressed not to eavesdrop. As it was, he could hear a steady murmur of
voices from beyond the door where Seregil had gone.
After what felt like an interminable length of time, the door opened and
Seregil came back into the gallery, accompanied by the young Aurenfaie woman.
His air of anguish was gone, erased by an almost sheepish grin.
Alec knew before his friend spoke who she must be. Her lips were fuller and
had none of the hard set of Seregil's, but the beautiful grey eyes were the
same, with the same expression of appraising intelligence.
"This is my eldest sister, Adzriel a Illia Myril Seri Bokthersa," said
Seregil.
"Adzriel, this is Alec."
What little Aurenfaie Alec knew deserted him.
"My lady," he stammered, making a passable bow.
The woman smiled, holding out her hands for his. "My people seldom use such
titles," she said in heavily accented Skalan. "You must call me Adzriel, as my
brother does."
"Adzriel," Alec amended, savoring the sound of it, and the feel of her cool
hands in his.
Rubies and moonstones glowed in the rings she wore on nearly every finger.
"Nysander tells me you are my brother's valued companion, a person of great
honor," she said, gazing earnestly into his face.
Alec felt his cheeks go warm. "I hope so. He's been a good friend to me."
"I am glad to hear such things said of him." Bowing gracefully to him and the
wizard, she stepped back toward the door. "I hope one day soon I may greet you
all in my own land. Until then, Aura Elustri matron."
"So soon?" Seregil asked, his voice hoarse with emotion.
Alec looked away in embarrassment as the two embraced, speaking softly to
each other in their own language.
"Aura Elustri matron, Adzriel tali, " Seregil said, releasing her
reluctantly.
"Phroni soutua neh noliea. " Adzriel nodded, wiping her eyes. Nysander went
to her side and offered his arm.
"Aura Elustri mdlron, dear lady. I shall accompany you back to the others."
"Thank you again, Nysander i Azusthra, for all your assistance in this
matter." As she turned to go, however, she spoke once more to her brother in
their own language, glancing at Alec as she did so.
"Quite right," Nysander said. "It is the boy's right to know; he should hear
it from you."
With that, he escorted Adzriel back the way she'd come.
Turning to Seregil, Alec found his friend looking pale and uncomfortable
again. "What did they mean?"
Seregil pushed a hand back through his hair and sighed. "I'll explain
everything, but not here."
The unexpected reunion with his sister had shaken Seregil to the core of his
soul. A fierce sorrow seemed to emanate from him as they left the Palace, and
the weight of it left Alec feeling mute and helpless. What could he say, what
could he offer in the face of this? And what was it Nysander had meant, that
Seregil had something to tell him?
He trailed anxiously in his friend's wake, the sound of their horses' hooves
echoing from the ornate walls of villa gardens as the misshapen moon sank slowly
toward the western rooftops. Alec couldn't forget the sight of that single tear
rolling slowly down Seregil's face. He'd never imagined him capable of weeping.
Seregil paused long enough to steal two flasks of sweet red wine from a
vintner's shop, then rode on until they reached the wooded park behind the
Street of Lights. Dismounting, they led their horses along a path to an open
glade beyond.
A small fountain stood at the center of the little clearing, its stone basin
filled now with rain and dead leaves. Sitting down on the rim of it, Seregil
handed Alec a flask, then uncorked his own and took a drink.
"Go on," he told Alec with a sigh. "You'll need it."
Alec found his hands were shaking. He took a long swig of the sweet, heavy
wine, felt the heat curl down into his belly. "Just tell me, will you? Whatever
it is."
Seregil was quiet for a moment, his face lost in shadow, then he gestured up
at the moon. "When I was a child, I used to sneak out at night just to walk in
the moonlight. My favorite times were in the summer, when people would come from
all over Aurenen to the foot of Mount Barok. For days they'd gather, waiting for
the full moon. When it rose over the peak, we'd sing, thousands of voices raised
together, singing to the dragons. And they'd fly for us across the face of the
moon, around the peak, singing their answering songs and breathing their red
fire.
"I've tried to sing that song once or twice since I've been here, but do you
know, it just won't come? Without all those other voices, I can't sing the Song
of Dragons at all. As things stand now, I may never sing it again."
Alec could almost see the scene Seregil had described, a thousand handsome,
grey-eyed folk in white tunics and shining jewels, massed beneath the round
moon, voices raised as one. Standing here in this winter-ruined garden, he felt
the crushing weight of distance that separated Seregil from that communion.
"You hoped your sister was going to say you could go home, didn't you?"
Seregil shook his head. "Not really. And she didn't."
Alec sat down beside him on the rim of the fountain.
"Why were you sent away?"
"Sent away? I was outlawed, Alec. Outlawed for treason and a murder I helped
commit when I was younger than you."
"You?" Alec gasped. "I-I can't believe it. What happened?"
Seregil shrugged. "I was stupid. Blinded by my first passion, I allowed what
I thought was love to cut me off from Adzriel and all the others who tried to
save me. I didn't know how my lover was using me, or what his intent really was,
but a man died all the same, and the fault was rightly mine. The details don't
really matter—I've never told anyone else this much, Alec, and I'm not going to
say more now. Maybe someday—At any rate, two of us were exiled. Everyone else
was executed, except my lover. He escaped."
"Another Aurenfaie came to Skala with you?"
"Zhahir i Aringil didn't make it. He threw himself overboard with a ballast
stone tied around his neck as soon as we lost sight of the coastline. I very
nearly did the same, then and many times later on. Most exiles end up suicides
sooner or later. But not me. Not yet, anyway."
The few inches between them felt like cold miles.
Clasping his flask, Alec asked, "Why are you telling me this now? Does it
have something to do with what Nysander meant?"
"In a way. It's something I don't want secret between us anymore, not after
tonight." He took another drink and rubbed his eyelids. "Nysander's been after
me since he met you to tell you that—"
Seregil turned to him and put a hand on his shoulder. "Alec, you're faie."
There was a gravid pause.
Alec heard the words, but for an instant he couldn't seem to take them in and
make sense of them. He'd rehearsed a dozen dark possibilities during their walk
from the Palace, but this had not been one of them.
He felt the flask slip from his fingers, felt it bounce on the damp, dead
grass between his feet.
"That can't be!" he gasped, his voice unsteady. "My father, he wasn't—"
But suddenly it all fell into place—Seregil's questions about his parents,
veiled remarks Nysander had made, all the rumors that he and Seregil were
somehow related. The impact of this sudden revelation made him sway where he
sat.
Seregil's grip on his shoulder tightened, but he could scarcely feel it. "My
mother."
"The Hazadrielfaie," Seregil said gently, "from beyond Ravensfell Pass near
where you were born."
"But how can you know that?" Alec whispered. It felt like the entire earth
was spinning out from beneath his feet, leaving him stranded in a place he
couldn't comprehend.
At the same time, it all made terrible sense: his father's silence regarding
his mother, his distrust of strangers, his coldness. "Could she still be there?"
"Do you recall how I told you the Hazadrielfaie left Aurenen a long, long
time ago? That their ways are different than ours? They don't tolerate any
outsiders, especially humans, and they kill any half-breeds that are born, along
with the parents. Somehow your mother must have broken away long enough to meet
your father and have you, but her own people must have hunted her down in the
end. Even if she'd gone back of her own accord, the penalty would still have
been death. It's a miracle your father and you escaped. He must have been a
remarkable man."
"I never thought so." Alec's pulse was pounding in his ears. This was too
much, too much. "I don't understand. How can you know any of this?"
"I don't, for certain, but it fits the facts we do know. Alec, there's no
getting around the fact that you are faie. I saw the signs that first morning in
the mountains, but I didn't want to believe it then."
"Why not?"
Seregil hesitated, then shook his head. "I was afraid I was wrong, just
seeing what I wanted to see—But I wasn't wrong—your features, your build, the
way you move. Micum saw it right away, and the centaurs and Nysander and the
others at the Oreska. Then, that first night we came back to the Cockerel, I
went out again, remember? I went to the Oracle of Illior about another matter
,and during the divinations, he spoke of you, called you a "child of earth and
light"—Dalna and Illior, human and faie—there was no question what he meant.
Nysander wanted me to tell you from the start but—"
At that, a wave of anger burst up through Alec's shocked numbness. Lurching
to his feet, he rounded on Seregil, crying out, "Why didn't you? All these
months and you never said anything! It's like that Wheel Street trick all over
again!"
Seregil's face was half black, half bone pale in the moonlight, but both eyes
glittered. "It's nothing like Wheel Street!"
"Oh, no?" Alec shouted. "Then what, damn it! Why? Why didn't you tell me?"
Seregil seemed to sag. Lowering his face, he rested both hands on his knees.
After a moment he let out a ragged breath. "There's no single answer. At first,
because I wasn't certain." He shook his head. "No, that's not true. In my heart
I was certain, but I didn't dare believe it."
"Why not?"
"Because if I was wrong—" Seregil spread his hands helplessly. "It doesn't
matter. I'd been alone for a long time and I thought I liked it that way. I knew
if I was right, and if I told you then, if you'd even believed me, then it might
create a bond, a tie. I wasn't willing to risk that either, not until I figured
out who you were. Illior's Hands, Alec, you don't know, you can't know, what it
was like—"
"Enlighten me!" Alec growled.
"All right." Seregil let out another unsteady sigh. "I'd been exiled from my
own kind for more years than you've been alive. Any Aurenfaie who came to Skala
knew who and what I was, and was under prohibition to shun me. Meanwhile, all my
human companions age and die before my eyes."
"Except Nysander, and Magyana."
"Oh, yes." Now it was Seregil who sounded bitter. "You know all about my
apprenticeship with him, don't you? Another failure, another place I didn't
belong. Then, from out of nowhere, comes you, and you were—are—"
Alec looked down at the bowed figure before him and felt his anger slipping
away as quickly as it had come. "I still don't understand why you didn't want to
say anything."
Seregil looked up at him again. "Cowardice, I guess. I didn't want to see the
look that's on your face right now."
Alec sat down next to him again and sank his face in his hands. "I don't know
what I am," he groaned. "It's like everything I ever knew about myself has been
taken away." He felt Seregil's arm go around his shoulders, but made no move to
push him away.
"Ah, tali, you're what you've always been," Seregil sighed, patting his arm.
"You just know it now, that's all."
"So I'll see Beka get old, and Luthas, and Illia and—"
"That's right." Seregil's arm tightened around him. "And that wouldn't be any
less true if you were Tirfaie. It's not a curse."
"You always talk like it is."
"Loneliness is a curse, Alec, and being an outsider. I don't have a clue why
the two of us ended up in the same dungeon cell that night, but I've thanked
Illior every day since that we did. The greatest fear I've had is losing you.
The second greatest is that when I finally did tell you the truth, you'd think
it was the only reason I'd taken you on in the first place. That isn't so, you
know. It never was, not even in the beginning."
The last of the shock and anger drained away, leaving Alec exhausted beyond
measure. Reaching down, he retrieved the wine flash and drained what was left in
it. "It's a lot to take in, you know? It changes so much."
For the first time in hours Seregil chuckled, a warm, healing sound in the
darkness. "You should talk to Nysander, or Thero. Wizards must go through these
same feelings when they learn they have magic in them."
"What does it mean, though, with me being only half?" asked
Alec as a hundred questions and comparisons flooded in. "How long will I
live? How old am I, really?"
One arm still around Alec, Seregil found his own flask again and took a sip.
"Well, when the faie blood comes from the mother it's generally stronger. I
don't know why that is, but it's always the case and all those I know of lived
as long as the rest of us, four centuries or so. They mature a bit faster, so
you're about as old as you thought. There's also a good chance you'd inherit any
magic she had, although it seems like that would have shown itself—"
He trailed off suddenly and Alec felt him shiver. "Damn it, I'm sorry I
didn't say anything sooner. The longer I waited, the harder it got."
Without giving himself time to evaluate the impulse, Alec turned and put both
arms around Seregil, hugging him tightly. "It's all right, tali" he whispered
hoarsely. "It's all right now."
Taken by surprise, Seregil hesitated a moment, then returned the embrace,
heart beating strong and fast against Alec's. A weary peacefulness came over
Alec at the feel of it, and with it a whisper of pleasure at their closeness.
From where they sat, Alec could see the glimmer of a few lanterns shining
through the bare trees from the Street of Lights beyond. Seregil's fingers were
twined in his hair at the nape of his neck, he realized with a guilty start, the
same way he'd touched the young man at Azarin's a few short weeks ago.
First that strange, perception-altering night, he thought wearily, and now
this. Illior's Hands, if things kept up in this manner, he'd end up not knowing
who he was at all!
Releasing him at last, Seregil looked up at the moon, half-hidden in the
tangled treetops.
"I don't know about you, but I've had about all the excitement I can deal
with for one night," he said with a hint of his crooked smile.
"What about Rythel?"
"I guess Tym can keep an eye on things one more night. We'll track him down
in the morning."
As they mounted for the ride home, it was Alec's turn to chuckle.
"What's so funny?"
"It could have been worse, I guess," Alec told him. "In the old ballads,
orphans turn out to be the long-lost heir to some kingdom, which means they end
up either cooped up in the family castle learning royal manners, or get sent off
to slay some monster for a bunch of total strangers. At least I get to keep my
old job."
"I don't think anyone will get much of a ballad out of that."
Alec swung up into the saddle and grinned over at him. "That's fine by me!"
"Where are we?" Zir shouted over the jingle of harness.
"We're in Mycena!" someone else called back. Beka grinned in spite of
herself.
They'd worn the joke threadbare weeks ago, but every once in a while someone
trotted it out again just to break the monotony.
Sergeant Mercalle's riders were in high spirits this morning. Beka had
received orders to take a decuria and ride to a nearby market town to buy
supplies for the troop. Mercalle had won the toss.
For weeks they'd ridden through rolling, snow-covered hills, oak forest, and
empty fields; past thatch-roof steadings and small country towns where soldiers
of any sort were regarded with guarded resentment. Mycena was a country of
fanners and tradesmen. Wars interrupted commerce.
It had taken the regiment nearly a month to reach the port city of Keston—a
month of cold camps and thrown-together billets in garrisons and courtyards, and
slow-march riding over frozen roads. At night, the green new officers sat around
the fire and listened to the veterans' war tales, hoping to pick up some of the
things they hadn't had time to learn during their brief six weeks of training.
The more Beka listened, the more she realized that despite all their drilling
and individual prowess with horse, sword, and bow, it would take a battle or two
to sort out how well the turma worked together and trusted one another.
And how much they trusted her.
She'd noticed that many of her riders still looked more often to her
sergeants for guidance than to her. That stung a bit, but then, they were the
turma's only seasoned veterans. To their credit, they all showed the strictest
respect for her rank, even Braknil, who was old enough to be her father.
In return, Beka was mindful of the fact that without Seregil's patronage and
the commission it had won her, sergeant would have been the highest rank she
could've hoped for in such a regiment. Some of the other squadrons' new
lieutenants—the sons and daughters of Rhiminee lords—seemed to keep this in
mind, too, and let her know with the occasional sneer or condescending remark.
Fortunately, her brother officers in Myrhini's troop were not among these.
At Keston the regimental commander, Prince Korathan, had taken Commander
Perris' Wolf Squadron and split off to follow the coastline.
Commander Klia's squadron headed inland toward the Folcwine Valley. The
Folcwine River was the southern leg of the great trade route that ran north all
the way to the Ironheart range in the distant northlands. The river was the
first prize the Plenimarans were expected to reach for.
That had been two weeks ago; it would be another two before they came to the
river.
Turning in the saddle, Beka looked back at the column snaking darkly over the
hills behind her: nearly four hundred horsemen and officers of Lion Squadron,
the sledges of the sutlers and armorers, provision wains, livestock and drivers.
It was like traveling with a small town in tow. Scouting trips, vanguard
duty, even mundane provision runs like this offered a welcome break.
Catching Mercalle's eye, Beka said, "Sergeant, I think the horses could do
with a run."
"You're right, Lieutenant," Mercalle answered with the hint of a smile; they
both knew it was the restless young riders who needed it more.
Beka scanned the rolling terrain ahead of them and spied a dark line of trees
a mile or so off. "Pass the word, Sergeant. At my signal, race for the trees.
The first one who gets there has first chance at the taverns."
Mercalle's riders fanned out smoothly, catcalling back and forth to each
other. At Beka's signal, they spurred their mounts forward, galloping for the
trees.
Beka's Wyvern could easily have outdistanced most of the other horses, but
she held back, letting Kaylah and Zir end the race in a tie.
"I hear they always finish together," Marten grumbled as the rest of the
riders reined in around the winners. A few of the others smirked at this.
Sexual relations in the ranks were frowned on, and a careless pregnancy got
both parties cashiered, but it happened, nonetheless. Still celibate herself,
Beka chose to turn a blind eye to who was sharing blankets with who. A number of
her riders had come into the regiment already paired, including Kaylah and Zir.
Others, like Mirn and Steb, had formed bonds during the march.
"Don't worry about it," Braknil had advised after she'd noticed certain
blankets moving late at night. "So long as it's honorable, it'll just make them
fight the enemy all the harder. No one wants to look a coward to their lover."
Kaylah and Zir already seemed proof of this; during training they'd competed
fiercely against each other and everyone else. Kaylah was a pretty blonde who
looked almost too fragile for a warrior's life, but she was like a centaur on
horseback, and could match anyone in the turma with a bow. Zir, a young, black-
bearded bear of a man, had
Sakor's own sword arm mounted or afoot.
The trees turned out to be a thick pine forest.
Skirting along its edge, they struck a well-packed road that led through in
the direction of the town. Just before noon they came out on the far side into a
valley overlooking the town. It was a prosperous-looking place, with a palisade
for protection and a busy market square.
Their dark green field tunics attracted less attention than their dress
tabards might have, but the townspeople still looked askance at their swords,
bows, and chain mail.
Better us than the Plenimaran marines, Beka thought, pulling her gorget from
the neck of her tunic to show her rank.
Their Skalan gold was welcome enough, however. In less than an hour's time
they'd found all the supplies they'd been sent for- parchment, flints, wax,
honey, meal and flour, dried fruit and beans, salt, smoked meats, ale, four fat
sheep and a pig, oats and winter fodder for the horses-and hired three carters
to haul the goods back to the column under escort.
Her riders had also found time to purchase items for themselves and those
left behind with the rest of the turma: tobacco, playing cards, sweetmeats,
fruit, and writing materials were always in demand. Some even had chickens and
geese slung from their saddlebows.
Mercalle shopped for the other sergeants; Portus was partial to nuts and
raisins, Braknil to Mycenian cider brandy.
Mercalle glanced up at the sun as the carters secured the last of their load
on their sledges and hitched up their oxen teams. "The column should have just
about caught up by now. It'll make a shorter return trip for the carters."
"Everyone back?" asked Beka, counting faces.
"All accounted for, Lieutenant."
"Good. You, Tobin, and Arna take the point. The rest of us will ride escort
with the sledges. We'll switch off point riders now and then, just to keep them
from getting bored."
Mercalle saluted, and galloped off with the two riders. Beka and the rest
fell in around the sledges.
No one seemed to mind the slower pace; it was pleasant to saunter along with
the sun on their backs and a cold breeze in their faces. Leaving town by the
same road they'd entered, they wended their way back up into the pines.
"Do you travel this road often?" Beka asked, striking up a conversation with
the lead driver.
The man twitched the reins across his team's broad backs and nodded. "Often
enough spring to autumn," he replied, his accent thick as oat porridge. "My
brothers and me drive goods up to Torbum-on-the-River. Boats take it on to the
coast."
"That must be a long trip at this pace."
He shrugged. "Three weeks up, three back."
"Have you heard much news here about a war coming?"
The carter spared her a sour glance. "I should think we have. Seeing as how
we're like to get trampled once again when you lot and the Plenimarans go at
each other. There's some say we ought to just trade land with one or't'other of
ye, so's ye can fight without bothering us."
Beka bristled a bit at this. "We're on our way east to keep that from
happening. Otherwise, your armies will be left on their own when Plenimar comes
after your land and the river."
"They ain't took it yet. And you lot ain't never stopped 'em from wading in
to try it."
Beka bit back a retort and eased her mount away from the sledge. There was no
sense arguing the point. "Marten and Barius, you go take point. Tell Sergeant
Mercalle I'll be up to relieve her as soon as the others get back."
"Right, Lieutenant!" Barius said, grinning through his new beard. He and
Marten set off at a gallop, cloaks streaming behind them as they raced each
other out of sight around a bend in the road.
The sound of their hoofbeats had just faded out of earshot when the scream of
a horse raised the hair on the back of Beka's neck. Wheeling Wyvern, she saw
Syrtas' mount buck him off behind the third sledge. The horse screamed again,
then bolted for the trees.
Rethus reined in beside the fallen man, then slung himself from the saddle.
"Ambush!" they shouted, dashing for cover behind the sledge.
An arrow sang past Beka's horse and struck the side of the lead sledge. A
glance told her that this was no military attack. The arrow was double fetched,
rather than the military triple vane style, and the fletching was done clumsily,
with one white vane and one a ragged brown.
"Bloody bandits!" the carter growled, pulling a short sword from under his
seat and jumping over the side.
"Take cover!" Beka yelled, although the others were already doing just that.
She slid off Wyvem with her bow in hand and whacked the horse on the haunches,
hoping he'd get clear of the archers.
Heart pounding in her ears, Beka dove for the scant cover at the front of the
sledge. Crouched there beside the carter, she tried to size up the situation.
The point riders weren't back yet; that left Zir, Kaylah, Corbin, Rethus,
Mikal, and Syrtas—assuming none of them were already killed—and the three
drivers.
Judging by the hail of arrows whining at them from the cover of the trees,
however, her group was considerably outnumbered. Worse yet, they were being
fired on from both sides of the road.
"You said nothing about bandits when we set out," she hissed to the driver.
"Ain't seen any most of the winter," he replied grudgingly.
"This crew's come north early. They must of laid for us until they saw you
send off them other two."
Beka moved to the opposite side of the sledge just in time to spot three
swordsmen running at them from the woods. Almost without thinking, she fitted an
arrow to her bowstring and shot one of them; the other two fell to someone
else's shafts.
Arrows snarled and hissed over her head as Beka dashed back to the next
sledge, where she found Mikal, Zir, and Kaylah shooting wildly into the trees to
either side.
"Stop shooting!" Beka ordered. "We can't afford to waste the arrows."
"What do we do?" Mikal demanded.
"Wait for a clear shot. And grab any spent arrow you can reach without
getting hit."
Ducking low, she made it to the last sledge.
Rethus and Corbin were unscathed. Their carter lay panting beneath the
sledge, an arrow shaft protruding from his hip.
That first enemy arrow had cut Syrtas just above the knee before striking his
horse. The wound was bleeding freely, but it didn't seem to be slowing him down
much as he and the others shot into the trees.
Beka repeated the order, and then nocked another arrow on her bowstring,
waiting for one of their attackers to show himself.
The bandits mistook their actions as a sign of surrender; in a moment the
arrow storm stopped and swordsmen burst from the trees, yelling wildly as they
charged the sledges on foot.
"Now hit them, both sides!" Beka shouted, scrambling to her feet. Heedless of
any archers who might still be lurking in the trees, she sent shaft after shaft
at the swordsmen running at her, downing three of them. For the first time since
the skirmish began, it occurred to her that she was taking human lives, but the
thought carried no emotion. The thrum of bowstrings and the cries and shouts of
battle filled her mind, leaving room for nothing else. Beside her, Rethus fired
with the same silent determination.
An arrow nicked the shoulder of her tunic and pinned her cloak to the side of
the sledge behind her. Yanking the brooch pin loose, she dropped to one knee and
continued to shoot.
A dozen or more bandits fell to their arrows, but an equal number were
closing in around them.
"Swords!" Beka shouted. Drawing her blade, she strode out to meet a bearded
man in scarred leather brigadine and ragged leggings. Ducking his wild swing
with a broadsword, she whirled and struck at the back of his neck.
She'd practiced the move a thousand times against her father and others; this
time she drew blood.
There were plenty more with him, though, and she drew a long dagger in her
left hand, using it to fend off thrusts to her open side.
Syrtas was to her right, Kaylah to the left.
Covering each other as best they could, they waded into the knot of bandits.
The attackers outnumbered her side at least three to one, but Beka quickly
realized that most of them relied more on brawn than skill. With almost
disappointing ease, she ducked another swing and ran a man through, then pulled
her blade free in time to strike another on the arm as he attacked
Kaylah. The girl flashed her a grin, then lunged at a tall, scrawny youth who
turned tail and fled.
Looking around, Beka realized that there were mounted fighters at work, too.
Mercalle and the others had come back at some point and were charging into the
fray, their helmets flashing in the sunlight as they scattered ambushers and
struck down the stragglers with their swords.
The bandits were already beginning to fall back when more riders of the Horse
Guard thundered down the road from the direction of the column. Tobin was at
their head, with Portus and Braknil beside him.
The enemy broke for cover and the horsemen followed, driving them into the
trees and dismounting to give chase.
"Come on!" cried Beka, rallying her blood-streaked comrades. "Let's not let
them steal all the fun!"
When the rout was over, more than twenty ambushers lay dead in the snow.
Beka's riders had sustained nothing worse than a few sword cuts and arrow
wounds.
"By the Flame, that was a fair-sized gang," Mercalle exclaimed.
The lead carter crawled from under his sledge. "Looks like old Garon's crew.
They been harrying the traders up and down the valley for nigh onto three years
now. The sheriffs couldn't never catch 'em."
"They chose the wrong prey this time," Sergeant Braknil remarked, grinning as
he strode over to join them. "Looks to me like you had things pretty well in
hand by the time we got here, Lieutenant."
"I wasn't so sure," Beka said, noticing for the first time how shaky her legs
felt. "What are you doing here, anyway? Not that I'm not glad to see you."
"When Barius and Marten showed up, I sent Tobin and Arna back," Mercalle
explained. "But all of a sudden they came belting back with word that you were
under attack. They didn't know how big the force was or who, so I sent Arna back
to the column for help and came on with the others. As it turns out, Braknil had
talked the captain into letting the rest of the turma come meet you. He and
Portus were less than a mile away when Arna met them."
The rest of the turma had drifted over to listen.
"Any losses?" she asked.
"Not a one, Lieutenant!" Corporal Nikides reported proudly. "Not bad for our
first battle, eh?"
"I don't know that I'd claim routing bandits as a battle, but we acquitted
ourselves well enough," Beka said, grinning around at the others. "You did well,
all of you."
Braknil exchanged a look with Mercalle and cleared his throat. "With all due
respect,
Lieutenant, there's a custom some of the riders should observe. For their first
kill, that is."
"Drinking the blood of the first man you kill to keep off the ghosts, you
mean?"
"That's the one, Lieutenant. Some call it superstition nowadays, but I say
the old ways are sound."
"I agree," said Beka. She'd heard of the custom from her father, and from
Alec, who'd done the same after his first fight. "How many of you made your
first kill today?"
Everyone in Mercalle's decuria stepped forward, and several more from the
others. "All right, then. All of you archers, find your first killing shaft.
Come back here when you find it. The rest of you bring your swords."
Beka walked to the body of the first swordsman she'd killed, a middle-aged
brigand with a braided beard.
He lay on his back, a look of mild surprise on his unremarkable face. She
stared down at him a moment, making herself remember the murder in his eyes as
he charged at her. She was glad to be alive, but not to have killed him.
It was an odd mix of feelings. Shaking her head, she pulled the arrow from
his chest and joined the others standing in a rough half circle beside the road.
When everyone else had come back, she looked around and felt the weight of the
moment settle upon her.
"Sergeants, I'm as new to this as the rest of them. Are there any special
words to be spoken?"
"Whatever you want to say," Braknil replied with a shrug.
Beka raised the arrow in front of her. "May we all fight together with honor,
mercy, and strength."
With that, she touched the arrowhead to her tongue and the coppery tang of
the blood flooded her mouth. She wanted to grimace and spit, but she kept her
face calm as she cleaned the arrowhead in the snow and dropped it back into her
quiver.
"Honor, mercy, and strength!" echoed the others, doing the same with arrows
and sword blades.
"I guess that's it. Now we've got supplies to deliver," she told them.
"Anyone seen my horse?"
That evening Captain Myrhini's troop feasted on the first fresh meat they'd
had in weeks and drank the health of Beka and her turma several times over.
When they'd finished and were settling in their tents for another cold night,
Captain Myrhini drew Beka aside.
"I've been talking with some of Mercalle's riders," she said as they walked
together past the campfires of the various turmae. "Sounds to me like you kept
your head and took care of your people."
Beka shrugged. She'd been doing some thinking of her own. "It's a good thing.
I made a mistake sending out two riders when three were already up on point. I
don't think it was any accident that those ambushers jumped us when they did."
"Oh?" Myrhini raised an eyebrow. "What could you have done differently?"
"I was going to relieve Mercalle anyway. I should've ridden up alone and sent
the other two back for their replacements."
"But that would have left your riders without an officer or sergeant."
"Well, yes—"
"And the way I hear it, it was you who kept those green fighters from wasting
all their arrows on the bushes, which the raiders were probably counting on. The
fact is, it was me who made a mistake today."
Beka looked at her in surprise, but Myrhini motioned for her not to
interrupt. "I assumed that because we were in neutral territory, it was safe to
send a decuria out on its own. If you'd had the turma with you, those brigands
would never have attacked. Of course, you were far too tactful and inexperienced
to bring this to my attention when I gave you that order, weren't you?"
Beka couldn't quite read the officer's cryptic smile. "No, Captain, it just
never occurred to me that we'd need any more people than that for a supply run."
"Then we were both in error," Myrhini said. "But learn and live, as a certain
friend of ours always says. You did well, Lieutenant. Sergeant Mercalle thinks
you've got the makings of a good fighter, by the way."
"Oh?" Beka asked, caught between pleasure at the veteran's appraisal and a
certain pique that the sergeant had evidently not had the same confidence in her
abilities before now. "What made her say that?"
"I think it was the way you were grinning as you fought," Myrhini answered.
"At least, that's what she hears from those fighting beside you. Tell me, were
you scared?"
Beka thought about that a moment. "Not really. Not during the fight, anyway."
"Sakor touched!" the captain exclaimed, shaking her head. But Beka thought
she sounded pleased.
Clutching the stolen loaf beneath his shirt, Skut sprinted through the late
afternoon crowd filling the marketplace.
Behind him he could hear the furious bread seller shouting, "Stop him, stop
thief!" A few people made halfhearted grabs at him, but the sympathy of the
waterfront crowd was obviously with him.
Reluctant to leave his wares open to further depredations, the bread seller
quickly gave up and returned to his handcart.
Hunger knotted Skut's empty belly. Tym's death had thrown him off his game
for three days now, and he'd had almost nothing to eat. Grabbing the loaf had
been a desperate move, but he couldn't stand the gnawing ache in his gut any
longer.
Keeping one eye out for trouble, he threaded his way through filthy alleys to
a ruined warehouse on the western fringes of the lower city, his current home.
One wall had burned and fallen in and the whole place reeked of old smoke,
but an attic loft was still sound. Picking his way over the rubble, he climbed
the makeshift ladder leading up to it.
Sunset light spilled across the floor below but the back of the loft was
already lost in shadow. The grey doves roosting overhead shifted suspiciously as
he peered over the edge of the platform.
"Kaber, you here?"
There was no answer.
That was a relief. He hadn't seen Kaber in a week and good riddance. The
older boy had provided a certain amount of protection, but he was lazy and had
lately taken to punching Skut when he didn't bring home enough for them to eat.
He went to the rusty brazier at the center of the loft and felt for the fire
makings. His hand had just closed around the tinder bowl when suddenly he sensed
movement behind him.
Skut was a quick lad, but not quick enough this time. Before he could stand
up someone had thrown a heavy cloak over his head and pinioned his arms.
Snuffers!
Skut thought desperately.
He squirmed wildly, struggling for his life, and felt his foot hit something
with satisfying force. There was a soft grunt of pain, but strong arms caught
his flailing legs. His captors lifted him off the floor, holding him so tightly
he could scarcely wiggle.
"We're not here to harm you," said the one holding his arms. It was a man's
voice, and soft. "I want to know about Tym."
"Don't know nothin"!" Skut whimpered, bucking helplessly.
"Oh, let's not go down that route, shall we? Word is you're the one who saw
it happen. I only want to talk to you about it. Settle down now and I'll make it
worth your while."
Skut resisted a moment longer, his thin body taut as a bowstring, then gave
in. Whoever had a hold of him clearly wasn't about to let go.
"All right then, I'll tell you. Only let me down."
"Put him down."
Skut felt his legs released, though the one behind him maintained a strong
hold around his chest and arms.
"Are you going to behave yourself?"
"Said I would, didn't I?" Skut mumbled, heart hammering in his throat.
"Sit down where you are."
Skut obeyed, then cried out in fear as something heavy settled on his thigh.
Looking out from under the edge of the cloak, he saw that it was a rough sack.
"Go on, open it," the man urged, still behind him. He could see the boots of
another just in front of him, the one who hadn't spoken yet.
With trembling hands, Skut opened the bag and was amazed to discover a small
sausage, a wedge of cheese, and half a dozen boiled eggs. The toothsome aroma
was unbearably good, but he was still suspicious. The one doing all the talking
had a highborn sound to him. What'd he want with Tym?
"It's all right," said the second one, speaking for the first time. Another
man. "Go ahead and eat. You look like you could use it."
The smoky garlic scent of the sausage was too much.
Praying it wasn't poisoned, Skut took a cautious nibble, then another.
"What happened to Tym?" asked the first one.
"Fell off a roof, that's all," Skut replied around a mouthful.
"Tym
fell?"
Skut shrugged, peeling one of the eggs with dirty fingers. "Saw him go over.
He didn't yell or nothin', just toppled down."
"No one's found his body. Are you certain he was dead?"
"Course!" Skut snorted. "Think I wouldn't make sure? The bastard hadn't paid
me yet. His head was all stove in and broken. He didn't have so much as a groat
on him, neither, not even his knife."
His unseen interrogator seemed to consider this for a moment. "What were you
doing there? What was it he was going to pay you for?"
"Well—" Skut hesitated. "I guess I could say, since he's dead and all. I was
watching a house for him, the one he fell off of."
"What house?"
"Tenement house in Sailmaker Street. Tym said I was to keep an eye out for
any shady sorts, especially breakers and gate-runners. And Scavengers, too."
"How long did you watch?"
"Most of a week." The sausage was good, best he'd ever tasted. On the
strength of this, he added helpfully, "I seen one, too. Pry the Beetle come by
day before Tym fell."
"Did Tym say why he wanted you to watch for these fellows?"
"No, and I didn't ask. When Tym wanted something done, you done it, that's
all," Skut told him, adding somewhat pointedly, "Would've paid me, too, if he
hadn't gotten his self killed."
The man chuckled in a friendly way. "A true man of honor, our Tym. Did you
see anyone on the roof, or hear anything strange before Tym fell?"
Skut absently cracked a louse on his sleeve as he thought hard. "No,
nothin'."
"What was he doing up on the roof in the first place?"
"Said he was going to have a listen on the feller he was watching, lived up
on the top floor. That's where he went over, right at that window. You ain't
going to kill me or nothing, are you?"
"No, but I'll give you a word of advice. Keep low and stop blabbing. You
don't know who else might take an interest in you. Now I want you to sit tight
awhile, until you know we're gone. I wouldn't want to have to hurt you after
you've been so helpful."
"I won't twitch!"
A strong hand clamped menacingly down on Skut's shoulder. "And not a word to
anyone about this little visit, right?"
"Right! You wasn't never here," he whispered, suddenly fearful again.
The hand withdrew. Skut heard a shuffle of boots, the creak of the ladder,
then silence. He made himself count to a hundred twice before he dared pull the
cloak off his head. When nothing stirred, he scrambled to kindle a light and
found a sturdy dagger and a small cloth purse lying on the brazier grill. The
bag held at least a sester's worth of pennies.
Highborn or not, those gents knew a thing or two, Skut thought wonderingly.
Showing gold or silver around these parts could get you killed right quick,
especially a skinny brat like himself. But a few coppers here and there were
safe enough and a stash like this could keep him going a month or more. He
turned the knife over with something like reverence, testing its wicked edge
against his thumb. Just let Kaber try knocking him around again! Gathering what
few belongings he owned, together with anything of Kaber's that struck him as
useful, he set off in search of new lodgings.
"Sounds like an accident," Alec said as soon as they were well away from the
ruined warehouse. "He must have slipped coming down those slates, just like I
did."
Seregil looked doubtful. "It's hard to believe Tym could fall. He's been over
those roofs all his life. And the missing knife, that bothers me. Tym only drew
his blade when he meant to use it. If it was in its sheath when he fell, Skut
would have taken it. He said himself it wasn't there. Besides, if Tym had gone
clattering over the slates, the boy would have heard it."
"And what happened to the body?" mused Alec.
They'd already made the rounds of the charnel houses.
"From the sound of it, he didn't just get up and walk away."
Seregil shrugged. "There are plenty strange characters in Rhiminee who'd pay
for a corpse."
Alec grimaced. "Like who?"
"Oh, the mad and the curious, mostly. There was one man, a lord, no less, who
wanted to determine which organ contained the soul. Artists have been known to
use them, too, sculptors in particular. I recall a woman was executed after it
was discovered that she'd used human skeletons as armatures for statues she was
casting for the Dalnan retreat house.
According to the story, a priest stopped by her shop to see how the work was
coming along and inadvertently knocked over one of the life-size clay models.
The head struck the floor at his feet and split open to reveal an all too
lifelike mouthful of teeth."
"You're joking!"
"It's the Maker's truth. Valerius has told that story a hundred times. "Burn
'em or leave 'em alone!" was generally the moral of the tale. As for Tym,
though, it could be necrophiles or just some poor starving sod—"
"Enough, I get the idea," Alec growled. He had no idea what a necrophile was
and didn't think he wanted to know; the thought of cannibalism was nauseating
enough all by itself.
"What? Oh, sorry. All that aside, I think it's more likely that Rythel or
some of his associates caught Tym spying and wisely disposed of the body. We'd
better have a look up there ourselves."
They waited until it was full dark, then rode down to Sailmaker Street. The
inhabitants of the house were still awake and at their suppers; their own
clatter would cover any noise Seregil might make going over the slates.
With Alec on watch below, he climbed the rickety stairs at the back of the
house and pulled himself onto the roof. Looping a rope around a chimney pot, he
crept cautiously down to the eaves just over
Rythel's window.
He spotted the knife at once, its naked blade gleaming cleanly in the gutter.
Stretched out on his belly, face just inches from the knife, Seregil regarded
it for a moment, wondering how Tym—quick, clever, deadly Tym—could have been
caught out on the edge of a bare roof and not drawn a drop of blood before he
died.
You were good, Tym, but it looks like we all meet our match sooner or later,
he mused, reaching for the dead thief's knife. The thought sent a brief chill up
his spine as he grasped the scarred hilt. Hurrying on its heels, however, came
the still more chilling memory of sending Alec to burgle the room by himself.
Was it any more than Illior's luck that whoever Tym had run afoul of had not
been on hand for Alec's visit?
Tucking the knife into his belt with a silent prayer of thanks, he worked his
way back the way he'd come and found Alec waiting across the street.
"I checked the yard," he told Seregil. "All I found was this." He held up a
small, fancy button of carved bone. "Anytime I saw him, his clothes were pretty
fancy under the dirt."
Seregil nodded. "True enough. What about bloodstains?"
"Too much rain and foot traffic. Did you have any luck?"
Alec's eyes widened a bit at the sight of the knife. "I'll be—But where does
that leave us?"
"Nose deep in the shit heap, I suspect,"
Seregil sighed. "I expect that map is long gone, and it's two more days
before we can check. Rythel will be done with his good work in the sewers by
then and we still don't have a clue who's behind him on this. Now the bastard's
cost me a good thief to boot."
Alec looked up at the place Tym had fallen.
"If Nysander hadn't called us away that night—"
Seregil shook his head. "Then we'd be wiser or dead, too. It's useless to
speculate. It's time to grab our man, but we've got to do it quick and proper.
And for that, we'll need a wizard's help."
He touched Tym's dagger again. "Maybe Nysander can get something out of this,
while we're at it. Let's see if he's home."
Galloping up the Harbor Way, they rode at full tilt through the streets
toward the Oreska House. Catching sight of its high spires looming ahead of them
at last, they were relieved to see a light burning in the east tower.
They found Nysander and Thero at work over a malodorous collection of
bubbling limbics and crucibles. At one end of the worktable a handful of
unpolished broad arrow points lay in a little heap on a leather pad.
Seregil saw Alec's eye stray toward these, but they had more pressing matters
at hand.
"Can you get any sort of a sighting off this?" he asked, showing Nysander
Tym's dagger.
Wiping his hands on a stained rag, Nysander took it and turned it over in his
hands for a moment, then grasped it and closed his eyes.
After a moment, however, he shook his head and handed it to Thero. "There is
a faint trace of magic about it, but I cannot say what sort or how long it had
been there."
"Objects seldom retain much," Thero observed. "His body would have told us
more."
"Obviously someone else knew that," Seregil muttered, dropping onto the
nearest bench with a disgusted grunt. "We're getting nowhere! Let's just reel
Rythel in. Week's end is the night after tomorrow. I say we keep a close eye on
him, and hit him then."
"That would appear to be the next logical step," Nysander agreed. "What will
you need?"
"A translocation key. Make it something small I can hand him without raising
suspicion. A rolled document should do the trick. As Lord Seregil, I can talk it
up to be a salable item. I think we can count on our man's greed."
"Excellent. And I shall make arrangements with the warder at Red Tower
Prison. We will pop him into a cell before he can wiggle loose."
Seregil turned to Alec, hovering expectantly beside him. "You'll nip in and
toss his room as soon as he leaves for his weekly whoring. Even if the map's
gone, there may be something else incriminating lying around. We don't want to
give anyone else time to clean up after him once we've got him. As soon as
you're done there, meet us at the prison."
Alec grinned, ready for the hunt. "This shouldn't take too long."
Seregil grinned back, glad to see an end to this particular job. "Hell, we'll
probably be able to catch the second performance at the Tirarie Theater!"
Vargul Ashnazai looked resignedly around his latest lodging. The deserted
house smelled of damp and mice, but the roof was sound and the hearth was
usable. He'd lost count of the inns and taverns they'd stayed at since their
arrival in Skala three months before. Winter was harsher here than in his native
Benshal, but not so harsh as those they'd endured for three years as he
helped Mardus scout the northlands for the Eyes and the Veil.
No, in Skala the necromancer's greatest hardship so far had been boredom. The
Oreska's reach was long; no matter if they were in Rhiminee tracking
Urvay's various spies and dupes, or sequestered at a deserted steading such as
the one they now occupied, he could not afford to practice his art without first
weaving a tight barrier of shielding spells. Such magicks had worked admirably
with the avaricious young sorceress Urvay had netted for them. Ylinestra was
altogether too sure of her powers; never once had she divined who, or what,
Mardus truly was.
Throwing back the warped shutters, Ashnazai blinked out at the cove below the
house. Great slabs of sea ice lay piled at the tide line, but beyond the shingle
open water rippled grey-green in the morning light.
Yet another impediment nicely cleared away, he thought, smiling to himself.
Urvay's actor dupe, Pelion, had leapt with predictable glee at the offer of a
series of special engagement performances in the southern city of Iolus. He
would have his triumphs there, no doubt, never knowing his life's thread had
been measured to its final length, to be cut two weeks hence by an assassin
already paid in full. And the beautiful Ylinestra, too, was living on ransomed
time, along with all the others.
The months of waiting were nothing now, compared to the coming triumph.
Ashnazai's revenge hung before him like a heavy, promise-filled fruit, almost
ripe and soon to be within his grasp, a fruit that would ooze with the sweet
liquor of blood when pressed.
Two short nights, and all would be in place.
She would be here.
The stars stood out like glittering eyes against the midnight vault of the
sky.
Standing beside Mardus on the beach, Ashnazai could hear Tildus' men moving
through the trees that fringed the little cove, and the nicker of the horses
that were tethered, ready for the night's ride. Other men patrolled the woods
beyond the gully where an unlucky peddler lay face down in a brackish pool of
water. There would be no witnesses.
They hadn't been waiting long when a black presence suddenly coalesced out of
the darkness in front of them.
Ashnazai bowed gravely to the dragorges.
"We will be with you presently," it announced in its hollow, wind-filled
voice.
"All is prepared," Mardus replied. "We await you here."
Soon the light splash of oars came to them from across the water. Tildus and
his men tensed, weapons drawn, as the black outline of a longboat came into
view. Two sailors pulled the oars, while their two passengers sat motionless in
the bow.
Reaching shore, one of the oarsmen jumped out and pulled the prow up onto the
beach so that his passengers could disembark dry shod. The first to climb out
was the gaunt, grey-beaded necromancer, Harid Yordun.
"Welcome, my brother," Ashnazai said, clasping hands with him, "and to Irtuk
Beshar, our most esteemed lady."
Yordun gave a terse nod, then lifted his companion out onto the shore. Silent
and invisible behind her thick veils, Irtuk Beshar extended a leathery,
blackened hand in benediction.
At week's end Seregil and Alec lurked for the last time in the evening
shadows across from the smith's tenement. "You don't think he'll, change his
pattern, now that the job's finished, do you?" Alec asked for the third time
that day. His new cronies at the Hammer and Tongs had passed on the news that
the sewer contract had been fulfilled. So far, there was no word of Master
Quarin awarding his nephew more work, or of Rythel requesting it.
Seregil stifled an impatient remark.
"Wait another few minutes and we'll know. Hold on, there he is, and dressed
fit for a ball, too!"
As Rythel paused by the lantern over his door, they saw the glint of gold
embroidery on the coat beneath his fur-trimmed mantle.
"Looks like we guessed right," Seregil whispered.
Under his black cloak he wore one of his finest claret-colored coats, white
doeskin breeches, and a weighty purse.
A boy brought Rythel his mount and the man headed off in the usual direction.
"Luck in the shadows," Seregil whispered, quickly clasping hands with Alec.
"See you at the prison."
Flashing him a happy grin, Alec ghosted off toward the tenement's back
stairs.
Seregil let Rythel round the corner down the street, then mounted Cynril and
set out to arrange a chance meeting with his quarry.
Tonight Rythel bypassed his usual haunts and made straight for the Street of
Lights.
They must have given you a nice bonus today, Seregil thought, shadowing him
to a gambling house called the Golden Bowl.
Perhaps you're even thinking of setting up in a new line of work with the
proceeds. I wouldn't make too many plans just yet, my dear fellow.
Reestablishing contact proved an easy enough matter.
Seregil had hardly stepped inside the card room where Rythel was playing
before the man was hailing him like an old comrade.
"Sir Rythel, how good to see you again!" Seregil greeted him, shaking hands
warmly as he joined him at the table.
This was clearly a triumph of sorts for Rythel; Seregil could see him
scanning the other nobles at the table, gauging their reaction to his reception
by one of their own.
"Well met, Lord Seregil," Rythel exclaimed, taking up his cards again. "We'll
be getting up a game of Coin and Sword next. Perhaps you'd partner me?"
With the subtlest of winks Seregil nodded, bidding his time.
As before, Seregil talked a great deal during the game, interspersing his
gossipy chatter with casual references to various business ventures. He could
see Rythel rising to the bait; another few rounds and he'd suggest they retire
for a quiet drink somewhere. A private room here would do nicely.
Seregil had just broached the suggestion when a ragged lad appeared with a
message for Rythel.
Laying his cards aside, Rythel scanned the scrap of parchment and then tucked
it carefully away inside his coat.
"You must excuse me," he said, sweeping his winnings into his purse. "I have
a small matter to attend to, but I shouldn't be long. Could we meet here in,
say, an hour or two?"
"I expect I'll be here most of the night," Seregil replied, nodding
cordially. Then, to set the hook, he gave him a rakish wink and added, "There's
a small matter I would appreciate your assistance with. Small but quite possibly
lucrative. We can discuss it when you return."
"I'm at your service, my lord." Giving Seregil and the others a bow, he
hurried out.
"And since my partner has deserted me, I think I'll take a moment to freshen
up." Leaving the table, Seregil retrieved his cloak and hurried outside.
To his surprise, he saw Rythel strolling away on foot. Keeping well back,
Seregil followed.
It was a warmish night. The last grimy remnants of snow steamed in the damp
night air, mingling with the light fog rolling up from the harbor. Early spring
was fast coming to Skala; the dank, rotted smell of it was on the air.
Rythel whistled softly through his teeth as he left the Street of Lights and
skirted the Astellus Circle to Torch Street. This soon led them to the narrower
streets of the nearby merchants district.
Where in Bilairy's name is he headed to? Seregil wondered.
Ahead of him, Rythel passed out of sight around a corner. Seregil was
hurrying to catch up when the quiet of the evening was shattered by the screams
of maddened horses. Running to the corner, he saw Rythel some thirty feet away,
standing frozen in the middle of the lane as a team of draft horses charged out
of the mists at him, the heavy wagon they pulled fishtailing wildly behind them.
The lane was desperately narrow; even if Rythel managed to dodge the horses, he
would almost surely be crushed by the cart.
With a nightmarish feeling of impotence, Seregil could not even shout as
Rythel just stood there, hands raised as if he meant to halt the beasts.
The lead horse struck him full on, cutting short his ragged scream and
trampling him beneath its huge hooves. Then the cart jolted sideways and a leg
spun out from beneath it, severed by one iron-rimmed wheel.
Seregil leapt back to the safety of the corner and watched the wagon thunder
by. Foam hung from the horses" mouths; their eyes rolled in panic.
There was no driver on the bench. One long rein whipped uselessly across
their backs.
As the wagon hurtled past, he saw several large hogsheads lashed in the back.
A brewer's wagon, out on the nightly rounds?
Like a nightmare vision, it vanished again into the fog with a thunder of
hooves and jangling harness.
Crouched in the shadows, sword drawn, Seregil waited until the clamor had
died away, watching to see if anyone would come. When no one did, he ran to
where Rythel lay crushed against the wet cobbles.
Bile stirred bitterly at the back of his throat.
It was as bad a mess as he'd ever seen made of a man. The torso was smashed.
Pressing the back of one hand over his mouth, he recognized a familiar sourness
amid the horrid stench that rose from the mangled flesh.
I bought you that wine, Seregil thought, averting his eyes from the contents
revealed in the ruins of the ruptured stomach.
Lips pressed in a thin line of anger and disgust, he dragged the severed leg
back and laid it over the corpse, then took out Nysander's magicked scroll, the
one he'd meant to hand Rythel only moments before. Grasping it in one hand,
Rythel's sound right arm in the other, he pried the wax seal loose with his
thumb. An instant later, the street was empty.
"NYSANDER!"
Seregil's furious shout echoed up the prison corridor, jarring Nysander,
Alec, and Thero from their patient vigil. Nysander was the first to recover.
Rushing to the cell door, he cast a light spell and peered in through the
grate. Inside, Seregil crouched over what appeared to be a tangled mass of
clothing. The stink that hit the wizard's nostrils told another story. The door
swung open at his command and he stepped in.
"By the Four! What happened?"
"He was run down in the street," Seregil hissed between clenched teeth. "I
was practically within arm's reach of him—He just stood there like a rabbit
while a runaway brewer's wagon rolled over him and I couldn't do a thing to save
him."
Nysander heard a gagging sound behind him and looked up in time to see Thero
staggering blindly out, one hand clapped across his mouth. Grim-faced and pale,
Alec remained at the open doorway, watching as Seregil stripped back the dead
man's blood-soaked garments with savage thoroughness, his fine clothing already
smeared with foul-smelling muck.
Seregil was pale as milk, too, but his eyes blazed with fury. Kneeling on the
other side of the body, Nysander held his hands a few inches above Rythel's
ruined head.
"Again, I sense nothing," he sighed. "You must tell me everything. Was it an
accident?"
"I'm getting very leery of accidents," was growled Seregil.
He turned the body over and a bloody purse fell into the straw with a sodden
chink of coins. He turned out the purse, inspected the remains of the coat, and
then flung the whole lot across the cell.
"Damn it to hell!" he raged. "Damn it to hell! There was a note. Someone
summoned him to that place, someone he knew. He sauntered off to his death
whistling like a bridegroom! Alec, get the boot off that leg and check it."
Alec dutifully tugged at the boot on the severed leg. It was snugly fit and
he had to brace his foot on the remains of the thigh to get it off.
Pulling it free, he felt inside and shook his head. "Nothing here either."
"Or here." Seregil tossed the other boot aside and yanked off the remains of
the dead man's trousers.
After another careful inspection, he leapt up with a guttural cry and slammed
one bloodstained hand against the cell wall.
Just then Thero reappeared at the doorway. "Forgive my weakness, Nysander,"
he mumbled, still looking green. "Is there anything I can do?"
"Look well," Nysander replied somberly. "Someday your vocation will take you
from the shelter of the Oreska House; you must be strong enough to face such
ugliness. This may have been an accident—"
"An accident!" Seregil burst out, glaring down at the body. "Bilairy's Balls,
Nysander, the man was murdered, and so was Tym."
"Probably so. And we still do not know who was masterminding this man's
work."
"But the map-?" Seregil turned to Alec.
"It wasn't there," Alec replied dully, staring at Rythel.
"Nothing was there. Clothes, papers, chests, everything—gone. The room had
been turned out. I don't think he was planning to go back there again. The old
woman who owns the house said everything had been taken away by cart this
afternoon."
Nysander closed his eyes a moment, then sighed. "Thero and I will retrace
your paths tonight using our own methods. Should we uncover anything, I shall
inform you at once."
Slipping a hand beneath Alec's arm, Nysander drew the boy from the cell. But
Seregil remained, crouching gloomily over the body.
"You clever son of a whore," he whispered at it, barely loud enough for
Nysander to overhear. "You were better than I thought."
"Father, where are you?"
Gripping a handful of Valerius' magical herbs, Alec ran headlong down the
bare passageway. There were no doors, no windows, just endless walls of stone as
he turned corner after corner, following the splashes of dark blood on the floor
and the wracking sound of his father's labored breathing. But no matter how fast
he ran. Alec couldn't catch up with him.
"Father, wait," he pleaded, blinded by tears of frustration. "I found a
drysian. Let me help you. Why are you running away? "
The hoarse wheezing changed as his father tried to speak, then fell deathly
silent.
In the awful stillness, Alec heard a new and ominous sound, the soft tread of
footsteps behind him, echoing his pace. When he stopped the sound disappeared;
when he went on, they dogged him.
"Father? was he whispered, hesitating again.
The sound of footsteps continued this time, and suddenly he was mortally
afraid. Over his shoulder he saw only empty passageway behind him, stretching
away until another bend cut off the line of vision. And still the footsteps came
on, closer and louder.
The flesh between Alec's shoulder blades tightened as he fled, expecting any
moment to be grabbed from behind. The sound of pursuit grew nearer, closed in
behind him.
Wresting his sword clumsily from its sheath, Alec whirled to fight. Instead
of his sword, however, he found himself grasping a blunt arrow shaft.
And facing a wall of darkness.
Alec lurched up in bed and hugged his knees to his chest, shivering. His
nightshirt was soaked with icy sweat and his cheeks were wet with tears.
Outside, a storm had blown up. The wind made a lonely moaning in the chimney and
lashed rain against the windows.
His chest hurt as if he really had been running.
Taking a few deep breaths to calm himself, he focused on the red glow of the
hearth and tried to exorcise the nightmare's bitter imagery. His heart had
almost slowed to normal when he heard a floorboard creak across the room.
"That's the third time this week, isn't it?"
Seregil asked, stepping into the glow of the hearth. His cloak looked sodden,
and water dripped from his tangled hair.
"Damn, you startled me!" Alec gasped, hastily wiping his eyes on a corner of
the blanket. "I didn't expect to see you back tonight."
It had been nearly a week since Rythel's death and none of them, not even
Nysander, had been able to find evidence tying the smith to anything other than
the sewer sabotage and a few indiscretions at various gambling houses. Everyone
had given up by now except Seregil, who'd grown increasingly short-tempered as
he pursued one false scent after another. Lately Alec had found it wiser to keep
out of his way when they weren't working. He'd taken it as a hopeful sign this
evening when Seregil slouched off to the Street of Lights in search of
consolation; his untimely reappearance now didn't bode well.
But Alec saw nothing but genuine concern in his friend's expression as
Seregil fetched cups and the decanter of Zengati brandy from the mantel shelf.
Sitting down on the foot of Alec's bed, he poured out liberal doses for them
both.
"Bad dreams again, eh?" he asked.
"You knew?"
"You've been thrashing in your sleep all week. Drink up. You're as pale as
old ashes."
The brandy warmed Alec's belly, but his nightshirt was clammy against his
back. Tugging a blanket around his shoulders, he sipped in silence and listened
to the wind sobbing under the eaves.
"Want to talk about it?"
Alec stared down into the shadows in his cup. "It's just a dream I keep
having."
"The same one?"
He nodded. "Four or five times this week."
"You should have said something."
"You haven't exactly been approachable lately," Alec replied quietly.
"Ah, well—" Seregil pushed his fingers back through his hair. "I never was
very gracious in defeat."
"I'm sorry about the map." The thought of it had plagued Alec through the
long, unhappy week. "I should have taken it when I had the chance."
"No, you did the right thing at the time," Seregil assured him. "We just
seemed to have a lot of bad timing with this business. If I'd gone after Rythel
sooner, or if he'd held off getting killed another half an hour, we'd have had
him. There's no changing what happened, though. Now tell me about this dream."
Alec took another sip of brandy, then set the half-finished cup aside and
recounted all the details he could remember.
"It doesn't sound so bad, just telling it," he said when he'd finished.
"Especially that last part. But in the dream, it always feels like the worst
part. Even worse than my father—"
He broke off, surprised at the tightness in his throat. He sat staring down
at his hands, hoping his hair veiled his face for the moment.
After a while Seregil said gently, "You've had a lot to contend with lately,
what with finding out the truth about your birth and then this. Seeing Rythel
all mangled in that cell must have dredged up some unpleasant memories. Maybe
this is your way of finally allowing yourself to mourn your father's death."
Alec looked up sharply. "I've mourned him."
"Perhaps, tali, but in all the time we've been together you scarcely ever
mention him or weep for him."
Alec rolled the edge of blanket between his fingers, surprised at the sudden
bitterness he felt. "What's the use? Crying doesn't change anything."
"Maybe not, but—"
"It wouldn't change the fact that I couldn't do anything for my own father
but sit there watching him shrink like a burnt moth, listening to him drown in
his own blood—"
He swallowed hard. "Besides, that's not even what the dream was about,
really."
"No? What, then?"
Alec shook his head miserably. "I don't know, but it wasn't that."
Seregil gave him a rough pat on the shin and stood up. "What do you say we
scrounge breakfast with Nysander tomorrow? He's good with dreams, and while
we're there, you could talk to him and Thero about this life span business. With
all the uproar over Tym and Rythel, you haven't had much time to absorb it all."
"It's been easier, not thinking about it," Alec said with a sigh. "But I
guess I would like to talk to them."
In the darkness of his own bed, Seregil lay listening to Alec's breathing
soften back into sleep in the next room.
"No more dreams, my friend," he whispered in Aurenfaie, and it was more than
a simple well-wishing. He could almost hear the Oracle's mad whispering in the
shadows, echoing over the weeks and months with increasing insistence and
clarity.
The Eater of Death gives birth to monsters.
Guard you well the Guardian! Guard well the
Vanguard and the Shaft!
The shaft. An arrow shaft, like the one Alec clutched in his dreams night
after night—useless, impotent, without its broadhead point could mean a thousand
different things, that image, he told himself, struggling angrily against his
own instant certainty that another fateful die had been irrevocably cast in a
game he could not yet comprehend.
The storm blew itself back out to sea before dawn. The soaring white walls,
domes, and towers of the Oreska House sparkled against a flawless morning sky
ahead of them as Seregil and Alec rode toward it. Inside the sheltering walls of
the grounds, the scent of new herbs and growing things enveloped them in the
promise of a spring not far behind in the outside world.
Nysander and Thero had other guests breakfasting with them. The centaurs,
Hwerlu and his mate Feeya, had somehow navigated the maze of stairways and
corridors, not to mention doorways not designed to admit creatures the size of
large draft horses. Magyana was there as well, sitting on the corner of the
table with her feet propped on a chair next to Feeya.
"What a pleasant surprise," Nysander exclaimed, pushing another bench up to
the impromptu breakfast spread out on a worktable. Most of the regular victuals
were laid out—butter and cheese, honey, oat cakes, tea-together with a huge
platter of fruit. The usual breakfast meats had evidently been banned for the
occasion, in deference to the centaurs. Giving Seregil a meaningful stare from
under his beetling brows, he added, "I do hope this is a social call."
"More or less," Seregil said, piling a plate with bannocks and fruit. "Alec's
feeling a bit lost about living for a few extra centuries. I thought you wizards
could give him some helpful guidance, since it takes your sort by surprise,
too."
"So he finally told you," said Magyana, giving Alec a hug. "And high time,
too."
Hwerlu let out a snort of surprise. "Not until now does he know?" He said
something to Feeya in their whistling language and she shook her head.
Turning to Alec, Hwerlu smiled. "We saw it that first day you came here, but
Seregil says not to tell you. Why?"
"I guess he wanted me to get used to him first," Alec said, shooting Seregil
a wry look.
"I suppose that would take a long while," Thero threw in.
"Yet, as things have turned out, I now believe Seregil may have been wise to
wait," said Nysander. "It is more than a sense of obligation or fear which keeps
you with him, is it not, Alec?"
"Of course. But the idea that I could be sitting here three or four hundred
years from now—" He stared down at his plate, shaking his head. "I can't imagine
it."
"I sometimes still feel that way," said Thero.
Seregil looked at the younger wizard in surprise. In all the time he'd known
him, he'd never heard Thero reveal a personal feeling.
"I'd guessed it when I was a boy," Thero continued. "But it was nonetheless
overwhelming to have it confirmed when the wizards examined me. Yet, think of
what we'll experience in our lifetimes—the years of learning, the discoveries."
He's almost human today, Seregil thought, studying his rival's countenance
with new interest.
"I made a poor job of telling you," he admitted to Alec. "I was feeling a bit
shaky that night myself, after seeing Adzriel and all, but what Thero says is
true. It's what has kept me sane after I left Aurenen. Long life is a gift for
those with a sense of wonder and curiosity. And I don't think you'll ever have
any shortage of those qualities."
Nysander chuckled. "Indeed not. You know, Alec, that for over two centuries I
have studied and learned and walked in the world, and yet I still have the
satisfaction of knowing that should I live another two hundred years there shall
still be new things to delight me. Magyana and I have gone out into the world
more than many wizards and so, like Seregil here, we have seen many friends age
and die. It would not be truthful to tell you that it is not painful, yet each
of those friendships, no matter how brief, was a gift none of us would
sacrifice."
"It might sound hard-hearted, but once you have survived a generation or two,
it becomes easier to detach yourself from such feelings," added Magyana.
"It isn't that you love them any less, you just learn to respect the cycles
of life. All the same, I thank Illior the two of you found each other the way
you did."
"So do I," Alec replied with surprising feeling. He colored slightly, perhaps
embarrassed by his own admission. "I just wish I could have talked to my father
about it, about my mother. Seregil's spun out a good theory about what must have
gone on between the two of them, but now I'll never know the real story."
"Perhaps not," said Nysander. "But you can honor them by respecting the life
they gave you."
"Speaking of your parents, Alec, tell Nysander about that nightmare you've
been having since Rythel got killed," Seregil interjected, sensing the opening
he'd been hoping for.
"Indeed?" Nysander cocked an inquiring eyebrow at the boy.
"Can you describe it?" asked Magyana.
"Dreams are wondrous tools sometimes, and those that come to you more than
once are almost always important."
Seregil kept a surreptitious eye on Nysander while Alec went through the
details of the nightmare; he knew the old wizard too well not to see a definite
spark of interest behind Nysander's facade of thoughtful attentiveness.
"And that's always the last of it, and the worst," Alec finished. Even with
the morning sun streaming down through the glass dome overhead, he shifted
uneasily as he described the final image.
Magyana nodded slowly. "Violent events can summon up other painful memories,
I suppose. Though your father died of the wasting sickness rather than violence,
it must have been a time of terrible fear and pain for you."
Alec merely nodded, but Seregil read the pain behind his stoic expression.
"Yes, and coupled with the shock of learning your true parentage, it could
create such images in the mind," Nysander concurred, although the look he gave
Seregil showed that he had other ideas on the matter.
"I would not worry too much about them, dear boy. I am certain they will pass
in time."
"I hope so," sighed Alec. "It's getting so I hate to go to sleep."
"Nysander, do you still have that book of meditations by Reli a Noliena?"
asked Seregil. "Her philosophy might be of some use to Alec just now. I seem to
recall seeing it on the sitting-room bookshelves somewhere."
"I believe it is," replied Nysander. "Come along and help me look, would
you?"
Nysander said nothing as they descended the tower stairs.
As soon as the sitting-room door was firmly shut behind them, however, he
fixed Seregil with an expectant look.
"I assume there is some matter you wish to discuss privately?"
"Was it that obvious?"
"Really now. Reli a Noliena?" Taking his accustomed seat by the hearth,
Nysander regarded Seregil wryly. "I seem to recall that you have on numerous
occasions referred to her writings as utter tripe."
Seregil shrugged, running a finger along the painted band of the mural that
guarded the room. "First thing that popped into my head. What do you make of
this dream of Alec's, and the headless arrow shaft? I have a feeling it's tied
in with"—Seregil paused, acknowledging Nysander's warning look—"with that
particular matter about which I am not allowed to speak."
"It does seem a rather obvious correlation. No doubt you are thinking of the
words of the Oracle?"
"The Guardian, the Vanguard, and the Shaft."
"It is certainly possible that there is a connection, although why it should
suddenly surface now, I do not know. Then again, it could conceivably be nothing
more than it appears. Alec is an archer. What stronger image of helplessness
could there be for him than a useless arrow?"
"I've tried to tell myself that, too. We both know who this Eater of Death
is; I've been touched twice by the dark power and was damn lucky both times to
get away with life and sanity intact. So I want to believe that Alec isn't
getting pulled into this web, but I think he is, that that's exactly what that
dream means. You believe that, too, don't you?"
"And what would you have me do?" Nysander asked with a trace of bitterness.
"If we are dealing with true prophecy, then whatever must happen will happen,
whether we accept it or not."
"True prophecy, eh? Fate, you mean."
Seregil scowled. "So why dream? What's the use of being warned about
something if you can't do anything to avoid it?"
"Avoiding something is seldom the best way to resolve it."
"Neither is sitting around with your head up your ass until the sky falls in
on you!"
"Hardly, but forewarned is forearmed, is it not?"
"Forearmed against what, then?" Seregil asked with rising irritation as an
all-too-familiar guarded look came over the wizard's face. "All right then,
you're still guarding some dire secret, but it seems to me that the gods
themselves are giving hints. If you're the Guardian, which you've admitted
already, and Alec, our archer, is the Shaft, then am I the Vanguard?" He paused,
mentally trying the title on for size. But the bone-deep feeling of certainty
he'd had about Alec eluded him. "Vanguard, those who go before the battle, one
who goes in front—No, that doesn't resonate somehow for me. Besides, the Oracle
wouldn't tell me to guard myself. So why would he tell me anything at all
unless—"
"Seregil, please—"
"Unless there's a fourth figure to the prophecy!"
Seregil exclaimed, striding excitedly back and forth between the hearth and
the door as the myriad possibilities took shape in his mind. "Of course. Four is
the sacred number of the Immortals who stand against the Eater of Death, so—"
The inner certainty was there now. No matter what answer Nysander gave, he
knew instinctively that he was on the right track now. "Illior's Light,
Nysander! The Oracle wouldn't have spoken to me as he did if there wasn't a
reason, some role for me to play."
Nysander stared down at his clasped hands for a moment, communing with an
inner voice. Taking a deep breath, he said quietly, "You are the Guide, the
Unseen One. I did not tell you before for two reasons."
"Those being?"
"First, because I still hoped—continue to hope, in fact—that it will not
matter. And secondly, because I know nothing more than that. None of the
Guardians ever has."
"What about the Vanguard?"
"Micum, most likely, since he has also been touched by these events. For the
love of Illior, Seregil, do stop that pacing and sit down."
Seregil came to a halt by the bookshelves.
"What do you mean, you hope it won't matter?"
Closing his eyes, Nysander massaged the bridge of his nose with thumb and
forefinger. "Just as there have been other Guardians, so have there been other
Shafts, other Guides. It is as if they always exist from generation to
generation, kept in readiness in case—"
"In case what?"
"I cannot say. I confess I still cling to the hope that this terrible evil
may yet be forestalled. For now, I must guard my secret as I have done. What I
can tell you, seeing that you have guessed so much, is that the four figures of
the prophecy have always been known to the Guardians, but what their functions
are has never been revealed. But if you are the Unseen One, Seregil, if Alec is
the Shaft and Micum the Vanguard, then there is nothing any friend or foe can do
to alter that."
Seregil let out an exasperated growl. "In other words, all we can do is wait
for this terrible Something to happen. Or not happen, in which case we spend the
rest of our lives waiting because we won't know that it isn't going to happen
after all?"
"That is, no doubt, one of the reasons that the Guardians keep such knowledge
from the others. It serves little purpose for you to know, and will only make
you uneasy. On the other hand," he paused, looking up at Seregil with a mix of
concern and pity—"I suspect that my hope to pass my burden on to a new Guardian
will prove a vain one. Mardus had the wooden disks; other Plenimarans came to
the Asheks on your very heels, seeking the crown.
There are other objects—magical ones—some in Plenimar, others thankfully
scattered to lost corners of the world. It was only by chance that my master,
Arkoniel, came into possession of the palimpsest that led you to the crown.
Clearly the Plenimarans are making a more deliberate effort to recover them. It
bodes ill, dear boy, most ill.
"As for your dilemma"—Nysander gave him a weary smile—"may I remind you that
if you were not such a intolerable meddler you would not be in this quandary."
"What about the others?"
Nysander spread his hands. "I do not forbid you to tell them what you know,
but reflect a moment on what you have just said. Even knowing, there is nothing
yet to be done; our fates rest on the knees of the immortals."
"And a damned uncomfortable seat that is," Seregil grumbled.
"I agree. And perhaps a dangerous one now. We must all live cautiously for a
time."
"I can keep an eye on Alec, if that's the way you want it, but what about
Micum?"
"I placed a number of protective spells around the three of you as soon as
you came back from the north. Since then someone has tried to break through
those surrounding you and Alec a few times, but—"
"What?" An icy stab of fear lanced through Seregil's chest. "You never—"
"I was not surprised by such attempts," Nysander told him calmly, "and they
have failed, of course. The spells surrounding all of you are intact, making it
impossible for you to be seen magically. Thus far, there have been no
disturbances in the spells surrounding Micum or his family."
"Bilairy's Balls! Do you know who was doing this?"
"Unfortunately, the seekers are equally well shielded. Their magic is very
strong and they know how to protect themselves."
"I don't like this. I don't like this at all," muttered Seregil. "There are
more ways than magic to find someone. Hell, Rhal showed up, didn't he? Who's to
say Mardus or his dogs haven't, too? Poor Alec had no idea how to cover his
tracks."
"Whatever happens, you must not blame the boy," cautioned Nysander.
"Who said anything about blame?" Seregil ran his fingers back through his
hair in frustration. "He did a damn fine job, given the circumstances. He saved
my life. Now it's up to me to protect him. And Micum; knowing what I do, I'm
honor-bound to give him any warning I can."
Seregil braced for further argument, but instead, Nysander sighed and nodded.
"Very well, but only as much as is absolutely necessary."
"Fair enough. Damn, they'll be wondering where we are by now." Seregil rose
to go back upstairs, but Nysander remained where he sat.
"Seregil?"
He turned back to find Nysander regarding him sadly.
"I hope, dear boy, that no matter what the coming days bring, you will
believe I never foresaw this time coming during my Guardianship, or that its
advent would enmesh any of you."
Seregil gave him a grudging grin. "You know, I've spent most of my life
listening to legends or telling them. It should be interesting being part of
one. I only hope the bards who tell it years from now will be able to end with
'And the Band of Four all lived with great honor for many years thereafter'."
"As do I, dear boy. As do I. Make some excuse for me, would you? I would like
to sit here for a while."
Silence closed in around Nysander after Seregil had gone. With his hands
resting on his knees before him, he allowed himself to go limp in the chair,
listening to the sound of his breathing and his heart until he was aware of
nothing else. Then, slowly, he opened himself to the invisible currents of
foreseeing, using the faces of his three chosen comrades to call in the energies
he sought. Grey images stirred sluggishly before his mind's eye, the tangled
flux of
??
How to pluck crumbs of truth from a future as yet unfixed
-
The hands of Tikdrie Megraesh,
The icon of his dreams and visions, opened before him. Voices came faintly
through the murk, shouting, raging, weeping. He could hear the clash of weapons,
men shouting.Then, harsh as a blow, came the vision of a black disk surrounded
by a thin white nimbus of fire. It seemed to glare at him—an accusing eye.
A familiar perfume wafted out to Seregil as he neared the workroom door.
Opening it, he found Ylinestra sitting next to Magyana. A quick glance revealed
an interesting tableau around the breakfast table. As usual, Ylinestra looked
intentionally stunning as she chatted with Magyana, with her shining black hair
braided loosely over one shoulder of her loose-flowing gown.
Magyana appeared to be a willing conversationalist, but Seregil thought he
detected faint lines of distaste around her eyes. Feeya was not so subtle. She'd
moved to the other end of the table and stood eyeing the sorceress with evident
dislike.
Thero seemed torn between embarrassment and lust.
Alec stood at what might be considered a safe distance from his former
seducer, carrying on some earnest conversation with Hwerlu.
All eyes turned Seregil's way as he entered.
"Ah, here they are," said Magyana. "But where is Nysander?"
"Oh, he got distracted by something down in his study," Seregil replied.
"How unfortunate," sighed Ylinestra. "I was hoping I could lure him out to
the gardens for a while."
"You know how he is. He's likely to be a while."
"I'll tell him you were looking for him," Thero offered a trifle stiffly. "In
the meantime, perhaps
I—"
"Ah well, another time," Ylinestra said breezily, gliding to the door.
When she was gone Feeya whistled something to Hwerlu, who laughed. "She says
the smell of the woman makes her belly hurt," he translated.
"Mine, as well," Magyana agreed with a mischievous smile. "Although I daresay
most men find the scent alluring enough. She must be missing Nysander. That's
the third time this week she's come looking for him. Isn't that right, Thero?"
"I don't keep track," the young wizard said with a shrug. "If you'll all
excuse me, I've got work of my own I'd better get started on."
Alec chuckled as he and Seregil set off for the Cockerel again. "I'll bet you
a sester he waits until everyone else clears out, then goes after her."
"That's a loser's bet," Seregil said with a crooked grin. "I've never seen it
fail; when a cold fish like Thero finally does fall in love, it makes a total
fool of him."
"You know, I think you're too hard on him."
"Is that so?"
Alec shrugged. "I didn't care much for him at first, either, but now he
doesn't seem so bad. He helped save our lives during that raid on Kassarie's
keep, and he was useful during that whole business with Rythel, too. Since then,
he's been almost friendly. Nysander may be right about him, after all. As
arrogant and cold as he can seem, underneath I don't think he's so bad."
Seregil gave Alec a skeptical grin.
"You've a charitable nature. We've got more important things to worry about
than Thero right now, though. I'll explain it once we get home."
They both rode with hoods pulled forward, but Alec guessed even without
seeing his friend's face that something of note had come up during Seregil's
separate conversation with Nysander.
"What is it?" he asked, unable to guess from
Seregil's guarded tone whether the matter was likely to be a job or a
problem.
Seregil shook his head. "Not here."
They spoke little the rest of the way back to the inn, but Alec noted that
the route they took to approach it was more cautiously circuitous than usual.
Thryis hailed them as they passed the kitchen door.
"I didn't hear you go out," she said, sharpening knives by the fireside.
"Rhiri brought in a message for you last night, but it wasn't sent for the
Rhiminee Cat. It's there on the mantelpiece behind the salt box."
Seregil found it, a coarse square of paper tied with greasy twine and sealed
with candle drippings.
"Anything else?" asked Seregil, bending down to tickle Luthas, who sat
playing with a wooden spoon at his great-grandmother's feet.
"No, nothing."
"How many are there in the inn today?"
"I think this wind's blown all our customers away," the old woman grumbled,
testing the edge of a cleaver against her thumbnail. "There were those six
draymen in the big room, but they left first thing this morning. All we've got
left now is a horse trader and his son in the room at the front and a cloth
merchant in for the spring trade. I've never seen it so slack this time of year.
I sent Cilia and Diomis out to see what's what down at the market."
Suddenly Luthas startled them all with an angry squall.
"By the Flame, he's been restless all morning," Thryis sighed. "Must be
another tooth coming."
"I'll get him." Alec scooped up the child, bouncing him gently in his arms,
but the child howled on. "You're wanting your mother, aren't you, dear one?"
Thryis smiled, offering him his spoon. But Luthas knocked it away and cried
louder, squirming like an eel.
"Find me that rag of his," Alec called to Seregil over the uproar.
Rummaging in the nearby cradle, Seregil found a colorful kerchief with a knot
tied in the middle and held that within reach. Luthas grabbed it and stuffed the
knot in his mouth, chewing at it with a decidedly disgruntled air. After a
moment he relaxed drowsily against Alec's shoulder.
"You're quite the nursemaid these days," whispered Seregil.
"Oh, they're great friends, these two," Thryis said fondly.
Alec was just attempting to lay the child in his cradle when Rhiri stamped
in, slamming the door behind him.
Luthas jerked awake, crying ferociously.
The mute ostler gave Alec an apologetic nod, then pulled a small scroll tube
from his jerkin and handed it to Seregil.
"Come on!" groaned Seregil, motioning for Alec to follow.
Back in their disordered sitting room again, Seregil flopped down on the
couch and opened the scroll tube, which contained a jeweled ring and the usual
request for the Cat's services. Setting these aside with an impatient sniff, he
cut the string on the folded paper and smoothed it out on his knee.
"Well now, here's a bit of good news," he exclaimed happily. "Listen to this.
"In Rhiminee Harbor, awaiting your pleasure. Ask for Welken at the Griffin."
It's signed "Master Rhal, captain of the Green Lady," and dated yesterday."
"Yesterday? We'd better get down there."
"Another hour won't matter." His smile faded as he waved Alec to a chair.
"We've got something else to deal with first."
Alec sat down, studying Seregil's face uneasily; he didn't look happy.
"First, you have to swear secrecy under your oath as a Watcher," Seregil began
with uncharacteristic gravity.
A thrill of anticipation went through Alec as he nodded. "I swear. What's
going on?"
"Those dreams of yours, with the headless arrow shaft? They meant something
to Nysander. To me, too, really, the moment you told me about it last night, but
I had to have Nysander hear it to be certain."
"Of what?" Alec asked uneasily.
"There's so much to tell you, it's hard to know where to begin." Seregil
studied his clasped hands for a moment. "That first night we came here, I went
out again."
"To the Temple of Illior."
"That's right, but I never told you why I went there, did I?"
"No, never."
"I went hoping the Oracle could tell me something about that wooden disk we
brought back from Wolde."
Seregil touched a hand to his breast where the hidden brand lay.
Alec stared at him in disbelief. "Does Nysander know?"
"He does now, but that's not the point. The Oracle didn't tell me anything
specific about the disk, but he did say something that I know now was a piece of
a prophecy. He spoke of the Eater of Death—"
"Just like in the journal we found, and at the Mourning Night ceremony."
"Yes, and then he told me I was to guard three people he called the Guardian,
the Vanguard, and the Shaft. And there's a fourth, the Unseen One or Guide.
That's me, it seems, and Nysander's the Guardian. After hearing about your
dream, we think you might be—"
"The Shaft," Alec said softly, remembering the headless arrow and the feeling
of helplessness he always felt at the sight of it.
"Apparently Nysander has had some presentiment that Micum is the Vanguard."
"But the Eater of Death is Seriamaius." He saw Seregil flinch as he said the
name aloud. "This Shaft and Guardian business, it's connected somehow. Oh, wait
a minute—"
Alec's belly twisted into a queasy knot. "That disk, that damned wooden disk
that made you so sick and crazy. That's what you went to the Oracle to ask
about, so it must have something to do with the prophecy."
"It does," said Seregil. "But what, I don't know. Nysander won't say, except
that the disk is part of something bigger, something the Plenimarans are willing
to go to any lengths to get. When I went away just before the Festival of Sakor,
it was to get another object before the Plenimarans did, a sort of crown. It had
the same sort of evil magic about it, only worse." His face darkened as some
memory surfaced. "Much worse, and much more dangerous. But I got it."
"There were other disks just like the one we stole," Alec recalled, his mind
racing. "Maybe they had to be all together to have their full effect."
"That's right. Which means if we'd been greedy and taken them all, you and I
probably wouldn't have made it as far as Boersby. I've wanted to tell you all
this before, but Nysander swore me to silence. I wouldn't be telling you now,
except that you seem to be part of it, too."
"Of what?" demanded Alec. "What does the Shaft do? If Nysander has the disk
and the crown, then the Plenimarans aren't going to get them and whatever
they're part of can't happen, right?"
"I guess that's the idea. But why would you be having these dreams now, if
that's all there is to it, eh?"
"Do you think Mardus could still be after us? Bilairy's Balls. Seregil, if
Rhal could find us, then why not him?"
Seregil shrugged. "It's not impossible. He didn't strike me as the sort who
gives up easily. But why hasn't he shown up yet? It's been months now, and if he
had any idea that we have the crown as well, then he or somebody like him will
be certain to come after it sooner or later. There's something else, too. You
remember Micum's description of the ritual sacrifice he found up in the Fens?"
"All those bodies cut open," Alec said with a small shudder.
"I found the same sort of thing with the crown. All the bodies were ancient
there, but the mutilations were the same, breastbone split, ribs pulled back
like wings. Now Nysander claims that all this may come to nothing, that there
have always been Guardians and Shafts and so forth chosen just in case. But he
didn't sound all that confident. That's why I'm telling you this, and why we've
got to warn Micum. I want you to ride out there tomorrow and tell him just what
I've told you."
"What about you?"
Seregil smiled darkly. "There are a few old mates of Tym's I'd like to have a
chat with. If Plenimarans are getting into Rhiminee, then someone has got to
know about it."
"They covered their tracks pretty well with that business in the sewers,"
Alec reminded him.
"Except for Rythel. There's almost always a Rythel in any plot. When you get
to Watermead, what I've told you is for Micum's ears alone. Do whatever you can
to get him alone but try not to raise suspicion. Kari usually knows when
something's up. And ask him about his dreams while you're at it, although I
expect he'll scoff.
"It's a lot to take in, I know. Like I said, Nysander claims this may all
come to nothing, but I don't think he really believes it. I know I don't."
Half-realized images whirled through Alec's mind, too chaotic to grasp. Yet
bits and pieces seemed to stand forth from the general maelstrom, like branches
in an eddy. "So Nysander has at least two pieces of whatever this thing is: the
disk and the crown. But there must be something else, right?"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, if he's been the Guardian all these years, then what's he guarding?"
Seregil's eyes widened in surprised realization.
"That's a good question. But somehow I doubt we'll ever know."
Resuming their roles of Lord Seregil and Sir Alec for the day, they emerged
from the Wheel Street villa at midday and rode down to the lower city to inspect
a certain privateering vessel anchored just beyond the quays. They found Rhal's
man still waiting at the Griffin. A day and night spent in a tavern
notwithstanding, he was still sober enough to row them out to the ship.
"That's 'er," he said proudly, nodding over one shoulder as he rowed them
toward a sleek, twin-masted raider. The Green Lady sported fighting platforms
fore and aft. Even to Alec's untutored eye there was no mistaking her prime
purpose.
"Bilairy's Balls, what's that supposed to be?" Seregil asked as they crossed
beneath her prow. Fitted under the bowsprit was the painted statue of a woman.
"Figurehead," Welken replied. "Lots of the new ships has 'em. Said to bring
luck. Captain Rhal got the best carver in Iolos to do our lady there; she's even
got a real golden ring on her finger with a great red stone winking in it.
Captain says her round belly'll bring us a full hold."
Dark hair streamed over the woman's shoulders and the carved skirts of her
emerald-green gown flowed back from a rounded, pregnant belly. One outstretched
hand pointed ahead; the other lay modestly over her heart.
Alec broke into a broad grin as he squinted up at the painted wooden face; it
was not fine work, but the resemblance to Seregil was obvious to anyone who'd
seen him playing a Mycenian gentlewoman aboard the Darter.
Still staring up, Seregil swore pungently under his breath.
Alec stifled a snort of laughter and asked innocently, "Does she have a
name?"
"Oh, aye. Captain calls her Lady Gwethelyn."
"It suits her," Alec observed, still fighting to keep a straight face.
"Charming," muttered Seregil.
Climbing a rope ladder, they found Rhal waiting for them on deck. After a
brief tour, he ushered them belowdecks to his aft cabin. Though by no means
luxurious, it was a far cry from the cramped quarters he'd entertained them in
aboard the Darter.
"I hope that figurehead of yours brings you luck," Seregil remarked dryly,
taking a chair.
"Aye, and I don't doubt we'll be needing it soon," Rhal said, pouring wine
for them. "The weather is settling out early this year. With the old Overlord
dead, there isn't much to hold the Plenimarans back now. Of course, his son
Estmar isn't Overlord yet. According to Plenimaran custom, there's a month of
official mourning before he can be crowned. That should give us another few
weeks."
Seregil shook his head, frowning. "I wouldn't count on it. There have been
rumors of Plenimaran scouts sighted as far west as the Folcwine River."
This had come as troubling news, Alec reflected.
The swift- moving units of the Queen's Horse Guard were scouting there, too,
but there'd been no word from Beka in weeks.
"Well, whatever happens, the Lady and her crew are ready," Rhal assured them
stoutly. "She sailed easy as a swan coming up from Macar and as you saw, we're
fitted out with grapples, catapults, and fire baskets. When we set off raiding
I'll have twenty archers among my crew and ten more hired on special."
"Impressive. When do you sail?" Rhal stroked his dark beard. "Soon as we get
the Queen's Mark."
"The only thing that separates privateers from pirates," Seregil interjected
for Alec's benefit.
"That, and the percentage of the take appropriated for the royal treasury,"
Rhal added. "I figure we'll do coasting trade until the war breaks out in
earnest; goods loads, transporting soldiers, that sort of thing. The crew needs
a proper sea run.
Word is there's already plenty of activity down around the Inner Sea and the
Strait, lots of fat Plenimaran merchant ships carrying supplies and gold up
toward Nanta. And of course, I stand ready to honor our bargain, though I don't
see how you'll find me if you need me."
"We thought of that," Alec said, flipping him a silver medallion. "It's
magicked. Just hang it up in here somewhere and a wizard friend of ours can
sight off it wherever you are."
Rhal studied the emblem of Illior stamped into the face of the disk. "This
has a lucky feel to it, too, and we can use all of that we can get."
"Then the best of it to you," said Seregil, rising to go.
"I hope your ship's belly is as full as your figurehead's before long."
Rhal scratched his head sheepishly. "Oh, you noticed that, did you? She was a
fine-looking woman, that Gwethelyn. Thinking back to that night I caught you
out, I don't know if I was more angry or disappointed. But in the end I'd say
meeting you brought me luck, so there she is. The Green Lady's a fine ship and
she'll do us all proud."
Since they were already dressed for the part, Alec and Seregil put in a
suppertime appearance at Wheel Street, then slipped back to the Cockerel after
dark. Once there, Seregil went straight to his room and rummaged out his
tattered beggar's rags.
"Are you going out tonight?" asked Alec, leaning in the doorway as Seregil
changed clothes.
"There are some thieves and nightrunners I want to speak with. I'm not likely
to find them in daylight. I probably won't be back before you go, so get some
rest and leave early. Before I go, though, let's hear what you're going to tell
Micum. Things happened pretty fast today. I want to be sure you've got
everything straight."
Alec recited as best he could what Seregil had told him about the prophecy
and dreams. Seregil made one or two corrections, then nodded approval.
"Just right. I don't know what Micum will make of all this but
least he'll know what's in the wind."
Clapping on his old felt hat, he stepped past Alec and began dusting himself
with ashes from the hearth.
"I'll come back as soon as I've talked to him," said Alec, "I could be back
by nightfall."
"There's no need. Stay the night and come back in daylight."
Alec opened his mouth to protest further, but Seregil forestalled him with an
upraised hand. "I
mean it, Alec. If we are in danger, then the more care we take the better. I
don't want you getting caught out in some lonely place after dark."
Still slouching unhappily in the doorway, Alec frowned down at his boots. The
truth was, he suddenly didn't like the thought of leaving Seregil alone here,
either, though he knew better than to say so.
Seregil seemed to guess his thoughts just the same.
Adjusting a greasy patch over one eye, he came over and grasped Alec by the
shoulders. "I'll be all right. And I'm not shutting you out of anything,
either."
Despite the patch, tangled hair, and ridiculous old hat that partially
obscured his friend's features, Alec heard the warm earnestness in his voice
clearly enough.
"I know," he sighed. "You missed a spot."
Reaching over, Alec smeared ashes over a bit of clean skin just under
Seregil's right cheekbone. His friend's one visible eye widened noticeably.
Strange feelings stirred again, and Alec felt himself blush.
Seregil held his gaze a moment, then cleared his throat gruffly. "Thanks. We
don't want any telltale signs of cleanliness giving me away, do we? I'll take a
run through the stable dung heap before I go, just to make sure I've got the
right odor about me. Take care."
"You, too." Alec felt another twinge of unease as Seregil headed out the
door. "Luck in the shadows, Seregil," he called after him.
Seregil looked back with a crooked grin. "And to you."
Left to himself, Alec set about packing the small bundle for his journey. But
he soon found himself repeatedly packing and unpacking the same few items as his
thoughts wandered over the harried events of the day, and his strange unease
over Seregil's departure.
That night Alec's nightmare returned, but this time there was more to it.
In the end, when he turned to look for his pursuer, blocks of stone slid out
of the wall beside him, tumbling to the floor with a hollow crash. Gripping the
headless arrow, he forced himself to go to the opening in the wall and look
through. He could see nothing but darkness beyond, but he could hear a new
sound, one that was at once as ordinary and as inexplicably terrifying as the
sight of the simple arrow shaft.
It was the booming grumble of the sea battering a rocky shore.
Alec opened his eyes well before dawn. Too anxious to sleep, he dressed
quickly and went down to the stable to saddle Patch.
A damp grey mist hung over the city, presaging a foul day, but in the Harvest
Market the first traders and stall keepers were already preparing for the day's
business. Alec paused to buy a bit of breakfast, then headed for the gate. To
his surprise, pikemen of the City Watch stepped out to block his way.
"State your name and business," one of them said, stifling a yawn.
"What's this?"
"Queen's orders. Anyone going in or out of the city gets recorded. State your
name and business."
Just a spy riding out to warn an old friend that the Immortals may have
designs on his future. Alec thought wryly. "Wilim i Micum of Rhiminee," he said
aloud. "I'm heading up to Tovus village to see a man about a horse."
A guard seated at a rough table by the gate busily recorded this information
in a day book.
"When do you expect to return?" asked the first guard.
"With luck, late tonight" As he said it, Alec realized that sometime between
last night and now, he'd made up his mind to return that day, no matter what
Seregil said. There was no good reason he couldn't make the trip in a day if the
weather didn't turn too bad.
Riding north along the highroad, he watched a cheerless grey dawn crawl
slowly up from the eastern horizon. The first crocus and snowdrops were
blossoming in the ditches, but the pallid light seemed to rob both them and
Alec's spirits of any color.
His dreams had left him feeling gritty-eyed and dour. The farther he rode
from Rhiminee, the more heavily the weight of a formless dread seemed to weigh
on his heart.
It was midmorning when Alec crossed the bridge and started up the hill toward
Watermead. Micum's hounds came pelting out to meet him, but there was no sign of
any other welcome.
Wondering where Illia could be, he entered the courtyard to find a farm hand
waiting for him.
"Good morning, Sir Alec. If you're looking for the master, he ain't here. He
and the family up and headed over to Lord Warnik i Thorgol's estate in the next
valley day before yesterday. Folks are gathering there from all over the
district to talk about defenses for the war."
Alec slapped his gloves against his thigh in exasperation. "When do you
expect them back?"
"Not until tomorrow, maybe longer."
"Is that Master Alec?" Kari's old woman servant, Arna, called out the front
door. "Come on in, love. This house is always open to you. You can put up here
until they return. Is Master Seregil behind you on the road?"
"No, I'm alone." Still mounted, Alec considered the offer. "How long would it
take for me to get to Warnik's?"
Ama considered this a moment. "Well, you'd have to go down to the highroad
and then north to the next valley. What would you say, Ranil, he could be there
in two hours or so, couldn't he?"
"Two hours, eh?" Two there, two back here, and another two back to the city,
plus however long it took to explain things to Micum. Alec frowned to himself.
With this weather, he would be riding home in the dark.
"Oh, aye," said Ranil. "And you'd be wanting a fresh horse to give young
Patch here a spell. Course, if you're in a particular hurry, you might want to
try the old hill track."
"He doesn't want to go riding up the hills today," scoffed Arna, pulling her
shawl closer about her skinny shoulders. "That trail will be nothing but a
ribbon of mire with all the thaw and rain."
"How long does that way take?" Alec pressed, trying hard not to let his
impatience show.
"I dunno." Ranil scratched his head as he considered the question. "Perhaps
no more than an hour, if you rode hard and didn't lose yourself. Myn's the one
who'd know best. He comes from over in that valley."
"There now, so he does," said Arna, sounding as if the next valley were some
exotic distant land.
"Myn's the one could tell you, Master Alec. Perhaps he could guide you."
"Where is he?" Alec asked.
"Myn? Now let's see, Ranil, where's Myn today?"
"Gone over to Greywall with the reeve," Ranil replied. "That's five miles or
so east of here."
Another costly detour. "Ranil, is this hill track of yours far from here?"
asked Alec.
"No, you know the one, sir. Ride back down to the stream at the bottom of the
hill and you'll strike it running to your right along the near bank."
"You mean that trail that leads up to the pool where the otters live?" Alec
exclaimed in relief.
He'd ridden there with Beka.
"Aye, that's the one," said Arna. "It's a rough track beyond, though, or so I
hear."
"I'm used to that," said Alec, dismounting. "I will borrow a horse, though,
and leave my pack here. I'll be back for Patch before dark."
He was underwater. Looking up, he could see the surface shimmering just above
him, a shifting silver mirror that reflected nothing. Just beyond the surface
something dark moved, like a man standing against the sky.
Seregil uncurled with a startled grunt as something prodded him roughly
between the shoulder blades.
"Told you he was alive!" he heard a woman say.
Two bluecoats were looking down at him from horseback, early morning light
glinting from their helmets. A third stood over him holding a truncheon in both
hands.
"Come on, you. On your feet," the one with the truncheon growled, looking
like he'd just as soon give a beggar another good jab for good measure.
"Maker's mercy and blessings on you," Seregil whined.
"Keep your blessings, you Dalnan mudlark."
Seregil pulled his dirty rags closer about him and got stiffly to his feet,
wondering how in hell he'd let himself doze off in the middle of the east end
stews.
He'd been watching a nearby slophouse, hoping to snag a certain informant who
often drank there. The dingy establishment was shuttered now, his man long gone.
Grabbing Seregil roughly by the arm, the bluecoat marched him past the horses
to a high-sided cart.
"Get up there and be quick about it."
Scrambling over the tailboard, Seregil found half a dozen sullen beggars and
whores already huddled inside.
Disgusted with himself, Seregil clung to the hard bench as the cart lurched
on. Something nagged at the back of his mind, some dream he'd been having when
the bluecoats had woken him. But it was gone. Time now to deal with the present
situation.
"I ain't done nothing," he protested querulously, tucking his chin down
against his chest.
"I've done nothing a'tal. What are they at, taking a poor cripple up like
this?"
"Haven't you heard?" a ragged girl asked tearfully. "Word come that war's
started. It's the Beggar Law for us!"
Seregil stared at her mutely as the irony of the situation struck home.
Ancient and time-honored, the Beggar Law stated that in time of war all
vagrants, beggars, and criminals were to be either pressed into military service
or cast out of the cities to fend for themselves. In the event of a siege, no
precious stores would be wasted on societal parasites.
Looking around at his fellow unfortunates—the tearful whore, a pair of
vaguely familiar thieves, a one-armed drunken giant covered in sour vomit, a
half-starved boy—Seregil had all he could do not to laugh at his own unwitting
miscalculation in choosing a disguise.
Stay with this lot and I'll find myself facing down a Plenimaran cavalry
charge with nothing but a pike in my hands, he thought grimly. still might just
as well have taken a pleasant ride out to Watermead with Alec for all the use
I've been so far.
Alec didn't see the otters as he rode past their pool, although there were
footprints and slide marks enough to show that they were still in residence
there.
Beyond the pool, the trail grew steeper, winding steadily uphill around thick
fir trunks and boulders bigger than his borrowed mare. Crusts of snow still
lingered under roots and rocky overhangs, but the air was sweet with the scents
of tender new growth and moist earth. Despite the rain already pattering down
through the boughs, it felt good to be in the woods. After a winter spent mostly
in the confines of Rhiminee's intricate streets, the simple task of following a
disused woods trail held a comfortable familiarity.
Spring runoff and fallen needles had obscured long stretches of the trail. In
other places, it crossed open expanses of bare ledge with nothing but the
tumbled remains of a few small cairns to show the way.
The forest grew thicker as he went along. Thick stands of hemlock and fir
laced their branches overhead, shutting out what little light the day had to
offer. Winter storms had felled trees across the trail, forcing him to dismount
frequently and lead his horse around or over.
After an hour of struggling along, he still hadn't seen any sign that he'd
reached the pass Ranil had spoken of. The wind picked up suddenly, lashing a
torrent of icy rain down through the trees. Cursing, Alec pulled his cloak
around him and tucked it under his thighs to keep out the wet as long as he
could.
At last he reached the crest of the pass. From here the trail seemed to open
up a bit, but before he could make up any lost time he rounded a bend and found
himself faced with the worst deadfall so far.
The ground was steep here, and the path hugged a small cliff face to the
left. A thick hemlock had fallen across against the rock face, its thick
branches forming a dark green palisade higher than Alec's head.
He could have wormed his way through, but the horse was another matter.
Cursing Ranil again, and himself for listening, he dismounted again to look for
a way around.
Trees groaned in the wind around them as Alec led his horse off the trail,
following the trunk to its base. A tangled network of roots twenty feet across
lay exposed there, torn from the thin, stony soil in some past storm.
His horse shied as they went around it, spooked perhaps by the gnarled fists
of the roots or the roar of the storm.
Gripping the reins in one hand, he pulled the animal's head down and threw
his cloak over its eyes. By the time he'd climbed the bank back up to the trail
he was soaked to the skin and covered in mud.
He had one foot in the stirrup to mount when the mare shied again. Alec
staggered awkwardly, pulling his foot free in case she bolted.
The move probably saved his life. He'd just gotten both feet on the ground
when he caught a hint of motion out of the corner of one eye and instinctively
flinched.
Something struck his left shoulder hard before he could turn, hard enough to
knock him sideways.
Scrabbling backward, he tugged his sword free and got it up in time to make
his attacker pause.
The ragged bandit held a club in both hands, grinning wolfishly as he circled
for another strike. He was gaunt but sinewy, with a long reach behind the long
club he wielded. Alec suspected he was overmatched, but that his sword had
surprised the man, judging by the wary way he watched it, still not pressing the
attack.
"What do you want?" Alec demanded as the first shock of the attack passed.
The bandit gave him a nasty, gap-toothed grin.
"What else you got?" he sneered, jerking a thumb down the trail. "We already
got yer 'orse."
Alec glanced quickly in that direction and saw a harsh-faced woman leading
his horse away.
"I have gold," Alec told him, ignoring the dull pain that ran down his left
arm as he pulled his purse from his belt and shook it so the coins inside
jingled. "You're welcome to it, but I need that horse."
"Did you hear the fine young gentleman's offer, me love?" the bandit
exclaimed gleefully. "He wants to buy back his 'orse!"
The woman gave a listless shrug and said nothing.
"Give us the bag, then, and we'll shake on the bargain," the bandit offered,
sidling closer.
Alec lowered his sword and held out the purse, as if he'd been gulled into
the bargain. As he'd-expected, the bandit immediately struck at him.
Jumping back, he blocked the blow and swung a slashing stroke that opened the
front of the man's jerkin and some of the skin below.
"Bilairy's Collops, the little bastard cut me!" the bandit snarled in
surprise. "Got teeth, have you, you whelp? I'll soon blunt 'em!" Gripping his
club in both hands, he flew at Alec and swung another blow at his head.
The bandit was strong; blocking the swing with a two-handed parry, Alec felt
a nasty jolt down both arms. Pushing him away, he fell back, letting the man
push him toward the deadfall. Rain ran down into his eyes as he blocked blow
after blow, hoping to make his attacker think he was a novice swordsman.
Still moving backward, he felt branch, tips graze his neck. It was time to
hazard his one gambit.
He lowered his sword and turned slightly, as if he meant to run for it. As
Alec had hoped, his opponent struck at him, and hit the springy branches of the
hemlock instead. Overbalanced by the force of his own swing, he stumbled.
Alec whirled and struck him a savage blow to the shoulder. The blade glanced
off bone, flaying the muscle from shoulder to elbow in a great bloody flap.
Alec had expected the blow to stop the man in his tracks, but it didn't. With
a howl of pain, the bandit dropped his club and grappled Alec, locking his good
arm around the boy's neck and dragging him to the ground as he choked him.
Raw, severed flesh slapped against Alec's face, and the hot blood pulsing
from the wound spurted into his mouth and eyes. His sword was useless at such
close quarters. Dropping it, he tore at the arm around his throat, but the man
held on, pinning him down as he locked his hand around Alec's windpipe.
Blood loss alone should be weakening him,
Alec thought grimly as his vision began to darken.
Through a red haze he saw mindless determination still burning in the
haggard, white face above his, felt it in the hard hand crushing his throat; the
man might just live long enough to kill him first.
Letting go of the man's arm, Alec felt for the slender, black-handled dagger
in his right boot. His fingers found the rounded pommel and closed over it,
pulling it free. Gripping it, he drove it with the last of his strength into the
bandit's neck. More blood spurted out, steaming hotly against his face as the
world went dim around him.
The sound of fading hoofbeats brought him around again a moment later. From
the sound of them, the woman had decided the horse was booty enough and taken
off with it as soon as her man went down. Alec pushed the dead man off and sat
up, but it was too late. She was already out of sight.
Wet, bruised, and muddier, than ever, Alec got to his feet only to find that
his legs were not ready to support him just yet. Staggering away from the body,
he braced himself against the tree trunk and waited for the world to stop
spinning around him. He tasted blood in his mouth and spat repeatedly, trying to
get rid of the revolting metallic taste.
He supposed he should be grateful for the woman's cowardice. She'd taken the
horse, but had left his purse, his weapons, and his life, for that matter. She'd
had ample opportunity to knife him.
Hoping he'd already covered at least half the distance to Warnik's valley, he
set off on foot again.
The trail was no better on this side of the pass but the downhill grade made
for easier walking. Coming to a stream, he waded in to wash off some of the
filth.
His clothes were ruined, but it was a relief to cleanse away more of the
blood. He could still taste it at the back of his mouth and retched suddenly,
remembering the feel of it spurting down on him.
A more immediate worry, however, was whether or not the bandit's woman would
decide to circle back for another try, drawn by a delayed desire for revenge or
his purse. Wading out of the stream,
Alec scanned the surrounding forest with renewed wariness. Thick underbrush
pressed close on both sides of the trail, the potential for ambush unlimited.
The storm blew on, hastening the afternoon darkness already thickening into mist
beneath the tangled forest roof.
Seregil was obliged to delay his escape. Soon after they picked him up, the
Watch patrol entered the East Ring to begin a sweep of the shanties there. Even
if he got away now, there was nowhere to run.
Other bluecoats were already at work there, pulling down the shacks and
piling the scrap wood onto carts, clearing the Ring to serve its wartime purpose
as a killing zone between the inner and outer walls of the city.
The marketplaces and circles all around the city would be cleared as well for
similar reasons.
Despite its size and grandeur, Rhiminee had been designed first and foremost
to be a defensible citadel.
Most of the shantytown denizens had cleared out already, warned by the
vagrant's sixth sense that trouble was brewing. Those that had remained were
rounded up and sorted out. Cripples and mothers with young children were allowed
to stay in the city, as well as any able-bodied person willing to work for their
keep or fight.
Unpatriotic ne'er-do-wells would have to fend for themselves in the
countryside.
The cart was full by midday and the patrol headed back through the east ward.
Seregil stood at the rear of the cart, maintaining his air of sullen
bewilderment until a familiar street corner came into view.
Taking the three bluecoats riding behind the cart by surprise, Seregil
vaulted over the side, dodged between their horses, and tore off down the
street. Behind him, his fellow prisoners cheered him on with delighted jeers and
catcalls.
Two of the guards wheeled in pursuit, but Seregil had chosen his moment
carefully. Running back to the familiar street, he bolted around the corner.
It was more of an alley than a street. There were no side ways leading off it
and the far end was blocked by a high wooden barrier. Without slowing, Seregil
launched himself at it, found purchase with hands and feet, and clambered over
the top just as the furious guards thundered up.
On the far side, another alley angled off toward a larger street. The
bluecoats knew this section of the city nearly as well as he did himself; he
could hear the approaching clatter of hooves ahead of him as he ran. Dodging
down a side lane before they caught sight of him, he slipped into the narrow
space between two sagging tenements and came out in a tiny, weed-choked
courtyard.
Here he bounded up a rickety exterior stairway to a disused attic. The cache
of spare clothing and knives he'd hidden there months ago was still under the
warped floorboards, no worse for wear except for a few beetles and some mouse
turds.
Whistling softly through his teeth as he shook them out, he changed clothes
and settled down at the garret window to outwait his pursuers' patience. It was
only a filthy beggar they'd lost. They wouldn't waste much time hunting for him.
Hungry, wet, and footsore, Alec finally reached the edge of the woods by late
afternoon. Through the trees ahead he could see a rolling valley stretching out
before him.
A small log house stood near the trail, with a low byre and a goat pen beside
it. Too tired to care what he must look like, he headed for it, hoping to beg a
little food and some directions.
As he approached the place, a huge mongrel charged out of the byre, baying as
it charged toward him.
"Soora thasdli," Alec said quickly, making the left-handed charm sign Seregil
had taught him. It worked to a degree; the dog halted a few feet away, but
remained on guard, growling every time he moved.
"Who's that?" a man called out, emerging from the byre with an ax gripped in
both hands.
"Sir Alec of Ivywell," Alec replied, holding his hands out, palm up. "I had
some bad luck up the trail. Bandits stole my horse. Could you—"
"That so?" The man stepped nearer, squinting for a better look at him.
Alec had managed to wash off most of the blood, but his bedraggled clothing
and sword appeared to inspire little confidence.
"Lots of bandits about just now," the man went on, still wary. "Stole two of
my milch goats just the other day. Could be you're one of 'em come back to rob
me again. Tugger!"
The dog crouched, baring its fangs.
"No, please! Soora thasdli." Alec fell back a pace, making the sign again.
"Listen, I'm only trying to get down to—"
"Here now, what're you up to with my dog?" the man demanded. "Tugger, on
him!"
"No-soora thasdli—if you'd just listen—"
"Damn you, Tugger, at him!"
"Shit!" Alec took to his heels with Tugger snapping at the ends of his cloak
close behind.
The dog chased him until they were well out of sight of the cottage, then
stood its ground in the center of the trail, snarling every time Alec chanced a
backward look.
Winded and irate, Alec ran on until he was certain the dog had given up, then
collapsed on a rock to get his breath. Evidently Seregil's dog magic worked best
without the cur's master on hand to countermand it.
Less than half a mile farther on he struck the main road and soon met a
string of heavy oxcarts heading for Warnik's estate. At
the sight of Alec's gold the lead carter and his wife agreed to let him ride
with them.
Climbing into the cart, Alec stretched out gratefully among the bales and
baskets.
"Maker's Mercy, lad! You've had rough traveling, ain't you?" the woman asked,
turning to look him over.
"I had a little trouble coming over the hill trail," Alec told her.
"The hill trail," snorted the carter.
"What in the world made you go that route when it's faster on the highroad?"
"Faster?" Alec groaned. "I thought the hill track was a shortcut."
"What looby told you that? It's my livelihood, driving these roads, so I
guess I know a thing or two. It don't take more than two hours by cart from this
valley around to the next one, less on a good horse. The hill track this time of
year? By Dalna, you're lucky you got over at all."
The late afternoon light was already beginning to fail when they arrived at
Lord Warnik's fortified keep. A gate in the curtain wall swung wide for the
carts and they rumbled to a halt in the bailey yard.
"We've got someone looking for one of his lordship's guests," the carter told
the reeve who came out to take charge of their stores.
"I'm looking for Micum Cavish of Watermead," Alec explained. "I need to speak
with him at once."
The reeve gave him an appraising once over, then motioned to a stable boy
loitering nearby.
"Portus, go and find Sir Micum. Tell him there's a messenger boy waiting his
pleasure in the bailey."
Alec stifled a smile, then bid the carter and his wife farewell. A large
brazier had been set up in the yard and he drifted over to join the knot of
guards and servants who'd gathered around it. Sitting in the cart in wet clothes
had chilled him through.
Leaning close to the fire, he ignored the curious glances his sword and
filthy clothes attracted.
A few minutes later he saw Micum stride into the bailey. He was dressed in a
fine coat and furs, and looked rather harried.
"Someone looking for me?" he called out.
"Me, sir," Alec said, reluctantly leaving the brazier.
"What is it then?" Micum asked impatiently.
He stopped, recognizing Alec as he came closer. "By the Flame—"
"Greetings, Sir Micum," Alec said, covering a discreet warning gesture with a
bow. "Is there someplace we could speak privately?"
Taking Alec by the arm, Micum drew him into the stable. Grabbing a horse
blanket from a nearby stall, he handed it to Alec.
"What happened to you?" he whispered. "And what are you doing here of all
places?"
Alec pulled the smelly blanket around him gratefully and sat down on an
upended bucket with his back against a post. "It's a long story," he sighed. "I
ran into a bandit on the hill track—"
"The hill track. What possessed you to come that way this time of year?"
Alec cut him short with a weary gesture. "Believe me, I won't do it again."
"And you were attacked by bandits. were you on foot?"
"As a matter of fact, no. I borrowed a fresh mount at Watermead, and they
took it. That is, she took it, his woman. I killed the man. Anyway, I'll pay you
for the horse and I'll need another to get home from here. But that's not what I
came to tell you. Seregil and Nysander think the four of us—them, you and I—may
be mixed up in some sort of prophecy having to do with the Eater of Death and
that wooden coin we found up in Wolde."
Micum looked less surprised than Alec had expected. "After what I saw up in
the Fens, that makes some sense. But what have we got to do with it?"
Alec told him what Nysander had revealed, his own dreams, and the possible
connections between the coin and the Plenimarans.
Micum listened without comment. When Alec finished, he shook his head slowly.
"These Illiorans and their dreams. You mean to tell me that he sent you clear up
here by yourself in this weather just to tell me that something bad might happen
and that he's not even certain what it is?"
"Well, yes. But Seregil says he thinks Nysander's not telling us everything
yet, and that he seems genuinely worried."
"If Nysander's worried, then we'd do well to pay heed. But first we need to
get you into some dry clothes. I'll wager you haven't eaten all day, either.
Come on in."
"I'd better not," Alec said. "Seregil didn't want Kari or anyone to see me up
here like this."
"All right, then. You wait here and I'll bring things out. Stay here."
Micum returned quickly with a bundle of clothes and a mug of steaming soup, a
hunk of fresh bread balanced on top.
"Strip off those wet things," he ordered.
Alec pulled off his coat and shirt, anxious to get into warm clothes. As he
was about to pull on the thick tunic Micum had brought him, the man let out a
low whistle and touched a finger to a long purple bruise darkening across Alec's
left shoulder.
"Fetched you a good one, didn't he?"
"I was lucky; he was aiming for my head. My arm's fine, though." Pulling on
the tunic and breeches,
he wrapped his hands around the hot mug and took a sip of the thick, steamy
broth.
"Maker's Mercy, that's good! So, about that horse? I mean to go back
tonight."
Micum's heavy red brows drew together ominously. "Now look here, Alec. You're
hurt, tired, and chilled through and it's already starting to get dark. Stay
here tonight and get an early start in the morning."
"I know I should, but I can't. Seregil's trying to track down some Plenimaran
spies, and he may need my help."
Whether he knows it or not, he added mentally. It wasn't exactly lying to
Micum. Not exactly.
Micum looked like he was about to argue the point, but then he just shook his
head and said gruffly, "All right then. I can't force you. I've got a horse you
can take if you promise to stick to the road and not go gallivanting around
through the woods with it in the dark!"
Alec grinned as he clasped his friend's hand. "You have my word on it."
Alec saddled Micum's Aurenfaie black quickly, not wanting to give him time to
reconsider.
"I should be home before midnight," he said as he mounted and settled his
sword against his thigh under his borrowed cloak.
"Maybe," said Micum, still looking dubious.
"Don't gallop yourself into a ditch for the sake of an hour, you hear?"
"I hear."
Micum reached up and clasped Alec's hand tightly again, a shadow of worry
crossing his face as he looked up. "Safe journey to you, Alec, and luck in the
shadows."
Alec returned the grip, then walked the black toward the gate. He was just
about to ride out, however, when he realized he'd for gotten something. Turning,
he rode back to where Micum stood watching by the stable door.
"By the way, Seregil wanted me to ask if you've had any strange dreams
lately."
Micum shrugged, grinning. "Not a one. Tell him I leave that sort of thing to
you. I do my best fighting when I'm awake."
Thryis and the others sat pushing their suppers around their plates in
silence that night. The announcement of war had come at midmorning and the news
of Plenimar's attack on Mycena the previous day had thrown the city into an
uproar.
Bluecoat patrols were out in force, rounding up beggars and keeping the
peace. Down in the harbor, fighting ships that had rocked at anchor like winter
ducks hoisted their colors and sailed out through the moles to join others from
ports up and down the coast.
At the Harvest Market vendors' stalls were being moved aside to make way for
ballistas and catapults.
Diomis had spent the afternoon in the streets, trying to sort some sense out
of the ebb and flow of rumors flying freely around the city: the Plenimaran
fleet had been spotted off the southern tip of Skala; the fighting was centered
around the island of Kouros; it was a land attack-the enemy had crossed the
Folcwine and was marching west toward Skala; Plenimaran marines were at the
Cirna Canal.
A Queen's herald had arrived at the market at last with solid news; the
Plenimarans had made a surprise attack against Skalan troops somewhere in
Mycena.
"It makes my old fingers itch for a bow string even now," Thryis commented
wistfully as her family and Rhiri gathered in the kitchen for the evening.
"I still remember that battle we fought above Ero. A clear summer morning,
not a breath of wind to spoil the shot, and a hundred of us lined up behind the
infantry with our longbows. When we let fly, the Plenimarans fell like a swath
of wheat before a scythe."
"They'll be fighting in mud and rain, starting in this early. I wonder how
Micum Cavish's girl is making out." Diomis broke off in surprise as a tear
trickled down his daughter's cheek.
"Why, Cilia, you're crying. What's the matter, love?"
Cilia wiped her cheek and hugged the baby to her, saying nothing.
"Luthas' dad is a soldier, isn't he, dear?" her grandmother asked gently,
patting the girl's shoulder.
Cilia nodded mutely, then hurried up the back stairs with Luthas in her arms.
Diomis rose to follow, but Thryis stopped him.
"Let her go, son. She's never talked of the man before; I don't suppose
she'll say anything now until she's a mind to."
"What do you know about that?" he said, scratching under his beard in
bemusement. "You'd think if she cared for whoever this fellow is enough to weep
for him now, she'd have said more about him to us. Why do you suppose she keeps
it such a damned secret?"
"Who knows? I always thought maybe he'd broken promises to her, but she
wouldn't cry for him if he had. Ah well, Cilia's always had her own way of doing
things."
They sat quietly a moment, listening to the crackle of the fire. Then Rhiri
tapped the table with his spoon and made a hand sign. "No, I have had no word of
them since yesterday," Thryis told him. "Alec's Patch was gone this morning, but
both of Seregil's horses are still in their stalls, aren't they?"
Rhiri nodded.
"I wouldn't worry about those two," said Diomis. "You go on up to bed now,
Mother. Me and Rhiri will see to things down here."
"Make certain the doors are barred," Thryis warned as he helped her to her
feet."Rhiri, don't you forget to put oil in the lanterns out front. With all the
excitement today some folks may get up to mischief. I want the court well lit."
"Aye, we will, Mother," sighed Diomis.
"Haven't we seen to the closing up these last twenty years? Rhiri, you go on
out and check the stable. I'll take care of the front room."
Rhiri gave a quick salute and went out through the lading-room door to the
back court.
In the front room Diomis checked the bar on the door and extinguished the
lamp. The hearth fire was out; with only two guests in the inn, he hadn't
bothered to keep it burning when they'd turned in early. He was just checking
the shutter hooks when he heard the familiar rattle of the front door latch.
Diomis peered through the crack of the shutter but saw no horses in the
courtyard.
"Who's that?" he called.
There was no answer except a crisp rap on the door.
Diomis had no patience for games tonight. "We're closed up! Try the Rowan
Tree, two streets over."
The unseen visitor knocked again, more insistently this time.
"Now look here—" Diomis began, but was cut short by the crash of the kitchen
door slamming back on its hinges.
Topping the crest of a hill just north of Watermead, Alec was surprised to
see a long line of torches in the distance. As they came closer, he saw it was a
column of cavalry under the red and gold insignia of the Red Serpent Regiment.
Reining in, he hailed the first of the outriders as he came abreast of him.
"What's going on?" Alec called out.
The soldier slowed his horse. "War, son. It's war at last. Pass it on to all
you meet."
"This early in the year?" Alec exclaimed.
"Looks like the bastards were spoiling for a fight," the man replied grimly.
"A Plenimaran raiding party ambushed some of our cavalry up in the Mycenian hill
country. We're headed north to join with the Queen's Horse Guard. Word is they
took the brunt of it, as usual."
"The Queen's Horse? I know someone in that regiment. Could you take a message
for me?"
"No time, son," the man said, spurring away as the column caught up.
The hundred or more riders wore red and gold tabards over their chain, and
their huge black horses rang with harness and breast plates. Then, like an
apparition in the deepening dusk, they disappeared over the crest of the hill.
"Maker's Mercy, here you are at last!" Arna exclaimed, coming out into the
courtyard to meet him.
"Did you have trouble on the way?"
Alec was in too much of a hurry to properly address that. "Just tell that
fellow Ranil not to send anyone else that way," he said, leading Micum's black
to the stable. "I had news on the road, though. The war's started."
Arna's hands flew to her wrinkled cheeks. "Oh, my poor Beka! She's up on the
border already. Do you think she's in it yet?"
Alec didn't have the heart to lie.
Turning, he took the old servant by the shoulders.
"The soldier who gave me the news said the Queen's Horse was in it, yes.
Micum didn't know any of this; word hadn't reached Warnik's yet. I imagine
they'll hear it there before long, but in case they haven't, you tell Micum
first, then let him break it to Kari, all right?"
"I will, love, I will," Arna sighed, dabbing her eyes with a corner of her
shawl. "Wouldn't you just know it? Nothing will do for her but to enlist, then
doesn't she land smack in the middle of things. And her not even twenty yet."
"Well, she's a good soldier," said Alec, as much for his own comfort as hers.
"With Micum and Seregil for teachers all those years, and then Myrhini—that's as
good training as anyone could have."
Arna gave his arm a squeeze. "Maker love you, sir, I hope you're right. I'll
go get you something to eat as you ride. Don't you go off without it, hear?"
By the time he'd shifted his borrowed saddle onto Patch's back, she was back
with a bundle of food tied up in a napkin and several torches. Mounting he lit
one from the courtyard lantern and set off on the final stretch to Rhiminee
under a clouded, moonless sky. He met more columns of riders and foot soldiers
along the way, but didn't stop for news.
He came in sight of the city just before midnight. The highroad followed the
top of the cliffs above the sea and from here he could see down to the harbor
where lines of watch fires outlined the moles, shining brightly across the dark
expanse of water. More signal fires burned on the islands at the mouth of the
harbor, and torches had been lit along the city walls above.
The north gate was open under heavy guard to allow for the passage of troops.
Inside, the Harvest Market looked as if a war had already been fought there.
Piles of scrap wood and tangled shreds of colored canvas were all that appeared
to be left of the booths and stalls he'd ridden past that same morning. Despite
the lateness of the hour, soldiers were at work everywhere, setting up ballistas
and hauling off refuse. From now on, it appeared, merchants would have to carry
on their business under the open sky or from the backs of carts.
Steering Patch through the chaos of the market square, Alec rode on into the
maze of side streets beyond to Blue Fish Street. Light still showed around the
front shutters, although in the excitement Rhiri had let the lanterns hanging at
the Cockerel's front gate go out.
Thryis will be after him for that.
Alec thought, riding around to the back courtyard.
He stopped at the stable long enough to unsaddle Patch and throw a rug over
her steaming back. Leaving her with water and feed, he let himself through the
lading-room door and hurried up the back stairway. With all the uproar around
town, perhaps Seregil would overlook the fact that Alec had ignored his
admonition to spend the night at Watermead.
He knew the way upstairs well enough not to bother with a light. On the
second floor he gave the corridor a cursory glance, then headed up the hidden
stairs to their rooms. The keying words for the glyphs had become habit to him
by now, and he spoke them with absent haste as he went up. In his eagerness to
find Seregil, he failed to notice that the warding symbols did not make their
usual brief appearance as he passed.
No final dream or vision prepared him.
Nysander was dozing over an astrological compendium by his bedroom fire when
the magical warning jolted him to his feet; the Oreska defenses had been
breached. The alarm was followed by a storm of message spheres, swarming like
bees through the House as every wizard in the place called out for information.
Or in fear.
Invaders in the atrium!
Golaria's voice rang out in a red flash.
A dying cry from Ermintal's young apprentice stabbed at Nysander's mind like
a shard of glass, and then that of Ermintal himself—
The vaults!—cut short by another burst of blackness.
Through the onslaught of voices Nysander called out to Thero. There was no
response.
Steeling himself for the battle he'd hoped never to fight, Nysander cast a
translocation and stepped through the aperture into the corridor of the lowest
vault just beyond the secret chamber. Shadowy figures waited for him there. He
took a step toward them and stumbled. Looking down, he saw what was left of
Ermintal and his apprentice, recognizing them by the shredded remains of their
robes. Other bodies lay heaped beyond them.
"Welcome, old man." It was the voice from Nysander's visions. Magic crackled
and he barely managed to throw up a defense before it struck him in a roar of
flame. The corpses sizzled and smoked as it passed.
Regaining his balance, Nysander retaliated with lightning, but the smaller of
the two invaders merely lifted a hand and brushed it aside to explode against
the wall. By its light, Nysander saw it was a dyrmagnos. Beside it stood a
figure so cloaked in a shifting veil of shadows that Nysander could not be
certain at first if it was human or supernatural.
"Greetings, old man," the dyrmagnos hissed.
"How weary you must be after your long vigil."
Not Tikarie Megraesh, but a woman, Nysander thought as he took a step toward
her. She was a tiny, wizened husk of a creature, blackened with years,
desiccated by the evil that animated her. This was the ultimate achievement of
the necromancer—the embodiment of life in death wearing the sumptuous robes of a
queen.
Raising gnarled hands, she held up two human hearts and squeezed them until
blood oozed out in long clots, spattering to the floor around her feet.
"The feast has begun, Guardian," the figure beside her said, and Nysander
again recognized the voice of the golden-skinned demon of his visions. But it
was an illusion. Through the veils of darkness, he saw a man—Mardus—speaking
with the voice of the Eater of Death.
Just behind them, several other robed figures came into view. Nysander could
smell the stench of necromancy coming from them and with it something
heartbreakingly familiar—the unmistakable sweetness of Ylinestra's special
perfume.
"After all these years of anticipation, you have no reply?" the dyrmagnos
sneered.
"There has never been any reply for you but this."
Raising his hands, Nysander launched the orbs of power that burned against
his palms.
The moon had passed its zenith by the time Seregil came back to Blue Fish
Street. It had been a pointless day overall. With the Beggar Law in force, most
of his more valuable contacts had fled or gone to ground. Those that he had
managed to track down had no fresh information on Plenimaran movements in the
city. If the enemy was in town, he was keeping a low profile.
Weary as Seregil was, however, the sight of the unlit lanterns in front of
the inn brought him up short. A tingle of presentiment prickled the hairs on his
neck and arms. Ducking quickly into a shadowed doorway across the street, he
scrutinized the courtyard for a moment, then drew his sword and crept cautiously
across to the front door.
It was slightly ajar.
Leaving it untouched, he crept around to discover the back door open as well.
He pushed it wide with the tip of his blade, tensed for attack, but there was no
sound from inside.
An unlucky door filled his nostrils as he entered the kitchen; the stale,
flat smells of a cold hearth and lamps left to gutter out on their own. Taking
out a lightstone, he saw nothing out of place, except for Rhiri's pallet, which
was missing from its place near the hearth.
On the second floor the signs were more ominous.
Thryis and her family were not in their rooms and only Cilia's bed appeared
to have been slept in;-the linens were thrown hastily back, and the coverlet
hung awry over the side. Next to the bed, an overturned chair lay in the
shattered remains of a washbasin.
A grim heaviness settled in the pit of Seregil's stomach as he moved on to
the guest rooms at the front of the inn. Only one had been occupied. The unlucky
carter and his son lay dead in their beds, smothered with the bolsters.
The hidden panel leading to the stairs up to his rooms appeared untampered
with from the outside but opening it, he found that the warding glyph at the
base of the stairs had been tripped. There were spots of blood on the lower
steps, and several were smeared where more than one person had stepped in them
before they'd dried. The glyphs farther up were simply gone. Still gripping his
sword in his right hand, he drew his poniard with his left hand and mounted the
stairs.
The doors at the top of the stairs stood open, showing darkness beyond. If
there was anyone lurking in the disused storage room, it was best to find out
now while there was still a chance of easy retreat. Fishing a lightstone from a
pouch at his belt, he tossed it into the room. The stone skittered noisily
across the floor, illuminating the few crates and boxes scattered there. No one
jumped out to attack, but the floor told a tale it didn't take Micum Cavish to
read; people had been in and out of his rooms, quite a number of them. Some had
been dragged and some had been bleeding.
The final warding glymph on the door to the sitting room was gone, too.
Taking a deep breath,
Seregil flattened himself against the wall next to the door frame and slowly
turned the handle.
A band of eerie, shifting light spilled across the floor at his feet, and
with it came a horrendous slaughterhouse stench. Weapons clutched at the ready,
he stepped inside. Even with all the warning he'd had, his first glimpse of what
lay beyond struck like a blow.
Several lamps had been left burning, and pale, unnatural flames danced on the
empty hearth.
Someone had turned the couch to face the door, and on it four headless bodies
sat as if waiting for him to return.
He knew who they were even before he looked past them to the heads lined up
on the cluttered mantelpiece.
The strange light cast their features into tortured relief: Thryis, Diomis,
Cilia, and Rhiri seemed to look with dull incomprehension toward their own
corpses, which some monstrous wit had arranged in attitudes of repose. Diomis
leaned against his mother, one arm draped over her bloody shoulders.
Cilia sat next to him, slumped against the remains of Rhiri.
There was blood everywhere. It hung in congealed ribbons from the mantelpiece
and pooled on the hearthstones below. It had dried in scabrous crusts on the
pitiful bodies. There were great sticky smears and handprints on walls.
There had been a struggle. The dining table had been knocked sideways,
spilling a sheaf of parchment onto an already blood- soaked carpet. The writing
desk was overturned in a litter of quills and parchment, and the shelves to the
left of it had been pulled down. As he stooped to inspect the mess more closely,
something in the shadows beneath the workbench caught his eye, stopping his
breath in his throat.
Alec's sword.
He dragged it out and examined it closely. Dark stains along its edge showed
that Alec had put up a fight before losing it. Gripping it by the hilt, Seregil
was surprised by a brief, irrational burst of anger.
I told him to stay at Watermead!
The door to his bedroom was shut, but bloody footprints led inside. Taking a
jar of lightstones from a nearby shelf, he kicked the door open and tossed them
in.
An unearthly yowl burst out from inside and Seregil raised his sword in
alarm. It came again, ending in a drawn-out snarl. Following the sound, he saw
Ruetha crouched on top of a wardrobe, eyes glowing like swamp fire. She hissed
at him, then leapt down and scuttled away toward the front door.
Nothing appeared to have been disturbed here except the green velvet curtains
of his bed. He never used them, but someone had pulled them shut all around the
bed.
Someone who'd left the bloody foot marks on the carpet.
Seregil's breath sounded loud in his ears as he forced himself across the
room, knowing already whose body he'd find when he pulled the hanging aside.
"No," he said hoarsely, unaware that he was speaking aloud. "No no no please
no—"
Gritting his teeth, he flung the curtain aside.
There was nothing on the bed but a dagger-a dagger with a hank of long yellow
hair knotted around the hilt.
Seregil picked it up with shaking hands, recognizing the black horn grip
inlaid with silver; it was the knife he'd given Alec in Wolde.
For one blinding second he seemed to feel Alec's thumb on his face again,
reaching to smudge over the clean spot on his cheek.
"Where is he?" Seregil hissed. Grabbing up his sword, he rushed out into the
sitting room again. "You bastards! What have you done with him?"
An evil chuckle erupted beside him and Seregil froze, scanning the room. The
laugh came again, lifting the hair in the back of his neck. He knew that voice.
It was the voice of the apparition that had dogged him through the Mycenian
countryside; the one he'd fought through a fever dream the night Alec had torn
the wooden disk from his neck.
But this time there was no black, misshapen specter. The voice issued from
the writhing lips of
Cilia's severed head.
"Seregil of Rhiminee and Aurenen!" Her glazed eyes rolled in their sockets,
seeking him. "We found you at last, thief."
Diomis' jaws gaped with the same terrible voice.
"Did you think we would allow you to escape? You have desecrated the
sanctuary of Seriamaius, and defiled his relics."
"The Eye and the Crown." It was Rhiri now, who'd never had a voice in life.
"Thief! Defiler!" Thryis spat out, her withered lips curling back in a leer.
"Defiler! Thief!" the other heads cried in moaning, joyless chorus.
"Aura Elustri mdlrei, his gasped Seregil, watching the grotesque performance
with a mixture of outrage and revulsion. "What have you done with Alec? Where is
he?"
They made no answer, but Rhiri's head tumbled to the floor and rolled at him,
snapping its jaws and laughing, followed by the others.
"Forgive me, all of you." Feeling as if he were trapped in the worst of
nightmares, Seregil raised his sword and hacked at the heads until only a
scattered mass of hair and brains remained. In the midst of it he found four
small charms, charred human finger bones wrapped with nightshade vine.
Choking back a wave of nausea, he cast a suspicious eye over the bodies,
still slumped together on the couch.
"You deserved better than this," he whispered thickly. "Somehow-somehow I'll
make this right."
Going back to his bedchamber, he pulled out his old leather pack and thrust
in a few essentials. Then he wrapped Alec's dagger carefully in a large scarf
and slipped it inside his tunic.
In the sitting room he took Alec's bow and quiver down from their hook over
the bed and put them by the door, not allowing himself to wonder whether they
would ever be needed again. The sword he slipped into his own sheath; he had no
plans for sheathing his own until he was well away from here.
Skirting the mess on the hearth, he pulled the box of loose jewels on the
mantelpiece free front a puddle of congealed blood and upended it into his pack.
The spoils of years of casual pilfering tumbled out, glittering in the unnatural
light of the fire. Alec had sorted them recently during a lesson on gem
appraisal. A layer of bright rubies slid into the pack to fill the spaces
between clothes and pouches, then emeralds, opals, amethyst, a handful of gold
and diamond buttons they'd used for gaming stones.
His hands were beginning to shake. A lord's ransom spilled over the lip of
the pack but he left the stones where they fell. Cinching the pack shut, he
carried it to the door, then turned for a last look at the home he'd inhabited
for nearly thirty years.
He'd been happy here, perhaps happier than anywhere else in his life. Now all
of it-the books, weapons, tapestries and statues, the shelves of accumulated
relics and curiosities-all of it was nothing more than stage dressing for the
mocking tableau centered around the mutilated corpses gathered at his hearth.
Taking a large lamp from the table, Seregil whispered a quick prayer and
emptied the oil over the bodies. Then he gathered every other lamp within reach,
flung them against the walls, and scattered a jar of firechips over the spilled
oil. Flames sprang up, quickly spreading out into sheets of hungry, purifying
fire.
Shouldering the packs and weapons, Seregil fled down the stairs, leaving the
doors open behind him.
As he hurried past Cilia's room on his way to the kitchen stairs, however, a
muffled cry brought him to a halt. Dropping everything but his sword, he dashed
into the room and flung the overturned chair aside. There, tightly wrapped in
thick blankets to keep him still, Luthas lay squalling in his small trundle bed.
Cilia had heard her attackers coming. In what little time she must have had,
she'd hidden her child, overturning the chair and pulling the blankets down over
the edge of the bed to cover him from view.
He must have been asleep when I was in here before, Seregil thought,
gathering up the furious child.
And if he hadn't cried.
As Seregil turned to go, he caught sight of himself in Cilia's mirror. The
image reflected there, white-faced, eyes black with rage, might have been his
own vengeful ghost.
Smoke poured down through the ceiling boards as he hefted the pack and
weapons again and carried Luthas downstairs. In the first, thin light of dawn,
the familiar back courtyard had an unreal look, like a familiar place seen in a
dream just before it transforms into something sinister. The weight of pack,
swords, and child pulled at him, sapping his strength.
"Thank the Lightbearer, there you are!" a familiar voice called.
Turning in confusion, Seregil saw Nysander's young servant Wethis coming
around the corner of the inn on a sorrel horse.
"I saw the smoke from up the street," Wethis told him, reining in. His
clothing was torn and he had a bandage wound around one hand, Seregil noted with
a fresh pang of dread. "When no one answered out front—"
"Everyone's dead," Seregil told him, his voice coming out thin and strained.
"What happened to you? What are you doing here?"
"The Oreska was attacked last night," Wethis answered, his voice cracking
with emotion. "It was terrible. Nysander- They found him in the lowest vault—"
"Is he dead?" barked Seregil.
Wethis flinched. "I don't know. Valerius and Hwerlu were with him when I
left. They sent me after you. You have to go at once!"
Seregil dropped his gear and thrust Luthas up at the boy. "Take him, and have
the rest of this brought to the Oreska. And see that the rest of the horses get
out of the stable before the whole damn place goes up."
Leaving the boy to fend as well as he could, Seregil dashed into the stable
and bridled Cynril.
Patch nickered at him from the next stall. Alec had taken the time last night
to feed and cover her before going up, never suspecting what lay in wait.
Mounted bareback, Seregil rode out past Wethis and away from the burning inn
without a backward glance.
The world seemed strangely muted as he galloped toward the Oreska. The
streets, the pale morning sky, the sound of Cynril's hooves-all had a vague,
muffled air, as if he were observing the scene from a distance through one of
Nysander's magnifying lenses. But somewhere behind the protective barrier of
shock, the anguish was building.
Not yet. Not yet. So much to do.
He pelted on through the streets, through the Oreska gate and the scented
gardens, not slowing his horse until he reached the House itself. Reining in, he
leapt from the saddle and took the steps two at a time.
The atrium reeked of smoke and magic. The mosaic floor was scorched and
cracked, the dragon design nearly obliterated. Where the arched doors leading to
the museum had been, there was now a gaping hole partially blocked by rubble.
Afterward, Seregil could not recall how he got upstairs, or who had let him
into the tower, but when he finally stopped running, he was at Nysander's
bedroom door and Valerius was blocking his way.
"Is he alive?" Seregil panted, heart hammering in his chest.
The drysian nodded, frowning. "Yes, for the moment at least."
"Then let me pass. I've got to talk to him!"
Seregil tried to shoulder past but Valerius grabbed his arm, holding him back
with considerable insistence.
"Gently, Seregil. Gently," he warned.
"By all the medicine I know, he shouldn't have survived such an attack. A
good many others weren't so fortunate. But all the same, he won't let any of us
ease his pain as much as we should until he's spoken with you. Be quick and
don't tax his strength. He's got none to spare."
Stepping aside, Valerius opened the door and followed Seregil in.
Nysander lay on his side beneath a clean white sheet. His eyes were shut, his
face slack.
Hwerlu knelt at the end of the bed, tears streaming from his strange horse
eyes as he played a song of healing. Two unfamiliar drysians, a woman and a boy,
stood chanting softly nearby.
Valerius exchanged a brief word with them and they withdrew.
Seregil went to the bed and knelt beside Nysander. The wizard's breathing was
so shallow Seregil could scarcely hear it.
"What happened?" he whispered, gently touching the old man's cheek. It was as
cold and moist as clay.
"There was a great noise in the night, like thunder and battle," Hwerlu told
him, still playing as he spoke. "The sound of it woke us in our grove. As I ran
to the House, I saw a dark shape rise above it, very large. It disappeared
against the darkness of the sky.
I ran on, and inside I found a scene of such carnage—"
The centaur's fingers faltered briefly on the harp strings. "The intruders
had brought swordsmen as well as wizards. So many dead!"
"But how?" Seregil asked in disbelief. "How did they get so many in? lllior's
Hands, this is the Oreska House!"
"Through the front gate, and the sewers, it appears,"
Valerius said behind him.
"The sewers? But I thought that had all been taken care of after Alec and I
found out about Rhythel."
"As it turns out, the authorities concentrated only on those routes that
might lead toward the Palace. It's also possible someone was paid to turn a
blind eye here and there. Whatever the case, just after the alarm went up,
another group, mostly swordsmen, burst through the garden. How they got in
unnoticed is another mystery, but the main attack seems to have come up through
the vaults."
Seregil sank his head into his hands. "All those dead gate- runners this
winter. By the Four, if I'd gotten to Rythel sooner, we might have been able to
stop this!"
Nysander's eyelids fluttered slightly.
"Mardus," he whispered, the word scarcely audible.
"It was Mardus, I saw him, a dyrmagnos, more—"
His voice failed, but his lips kept moving.
Seregil leaned down, placing his ear close to Nysander's lips to catch the
faint words.
"Eater of Death." It was hardly more than a breath, but unmistakable.
Nysander shuddered and closed his eyes, fighting a wave of pain. Yet he
struggled on, forcing the words out breath by breath. "Where-Alec?"
"They took him, left me this." Seregil pulled out the dagger and held it up
for Nysander to see.
The wizard gazed at the lock of hair, then squeezed his eyes shut as another
spasm wrenched through him.
"It's not your fault." The words felt like ashes in Seregil's mouth. His
emotional defenses were beginning to erode, laying bare the first jagged shards
of rage and grief lying just beneath the surface.
"It has begun," Nysander gasped out, his agitation clear. It took every ounce
of will he possessed to go on shaping the words. "One place and one time-in
Plenimar, beneath the pillar of the sky- The temple-temple—"
"A temple in Plenimar. Where, Nysander? Damnation, you have to tell me
where!"
"Synodical—"
Nysander murmured regretfully as blackness surged over him again.
"What? Nysander, what does that mean?" Seregil turned to Valerius. "Isn't
there anything you can do? Alec's life may depend on it!"
Taking Seregil by the arm, Valerius drew him away from the bed. "Give him a
little time. He must rest or he may never recover. You look like you could use
some attention yourself. I'll call for Darbia."
"I don't need anything," Seregil hissed through clenched teeth, straining to
see over the drysian's shoulder as the larger man urged him toward the door.
"I've got to know what he meant! It may be too late already."
"If he doesn't rest now he'll never be able to tell you anything again. A few
hours, perhaps less. Don't leave the tower, I'll come to you as soon as I've
finished here. Now get out!" With a final none-too-gentle shove, Valerius thrust
Seregil out into the corridor and shut the door in his face.
Seregil stood there, alone in the corridor, Alec's dagger clutched in one
fist. Smoothing the lock of hair between his fingers, he spoke half aloud the
words he'd bitten back in the sickroom.
"Tell me, Nysander, can your magic protect him now?"
Micum felt the roundness of Kari's belly between them as they embraced.
Magyana's message sphere hovered nearby, gleaming greenly in the corner of their
guest chamber at Lord Warnik's keep.
"I'm sorry, love, but something's happened and Magyana's waiting." Micum
gently stroked a tear from her cheek. How many times had there been someone
waiting, calling him away? How many times had she sent him on his way with that
small, tight-lipped smile?
"Go on then," she said brusquely, folding her arms. "Sakor guide you safely
back."
Shouldering his traveling bundle, Micum turned to the sphere. "I'm ready."
A large oval of darkness yawned where the sphere had been. With a final wave,
he stepped through. An instant later he found himself standing in Nysander's
casting room. A few feet away the wizard sat on a low stool, looking utterly
exhausted. Her brocade robe was dirty and bloodstained, her long silver hair in
disarray over her shoulders.
"What's happened?" Micum asked in alarm.
Sinking down on one knee in front of her, he took her hands in his and found
them icy cold.
"The Oreska House was attacked last night,"she told him, her voice trembling.
"Nysander was hurt terribly, and many others are dead. I'd have brought you
in sooner, but I had to rest a bit first. Oh, Micum, it was terrible, so
terrible."
"Then they were right, after all," he groaned, gathering the old woman in his
arms. "It was the Plenimarans?"
"Led by Duke Mardus himself. He had necromancers, and a dyrmagnos."
"Where's Seregil? And Alec?"
Magyana shook her head. "Wethis was sent to fetch them. They may be here
already. Come, I must be with Nysander."
Downstairs they met a drysian woman coming out of Nysander's chamber with a
basin and stained clothes.
"How is he?" asked Magyana.
"No worse," the woman replied gently.
Valerius was applying compresses to Nysander's chest and side as they
entered. He pulled the sheet back over him as Micum approached, but not before
he'd seen the terrible burns there. Nysander appeared to be asleep or
unconscious, his face white as carved marble. Magyana drew a chair to the head
of the bed and placed her hand on NySander's brow.
"He's got a dragon's own constitution," Valerius said quietly, stroking his
unruly black beard thoughtfully as he gazed down at
Nysander. "How he fights! He'll heal if I
can keep the infection from him. Have you seen Seregil yet?"
"No, I only just arrived. But they're here? They're all right?"
The drysian laid a hand on his arm and Micum's heart sank. "Seregil burst in
about half an hour ago. He hasn't spoken to anyone except Nysander, but Alec's
not with him. Wethis says he set fire to the Cockerel. As far as I know, only
the baby—"
"Damnation!" Micum spun for the door. "Where is he?"
"The sitting room. If you—"
Micum didn't wait to hear more. Dashing the short distance down the corridor,
he found the door open.
Seregil stood leaning against the mantel, dressed in what appeared to be
borrowed breeches and shirt. A great drift of maps and scrolls lay spread out
around one of the armchairs, as if he'd been sitting there going through them
earlier. There was a wine cup on the floor beside it, but as he looked up,
Micum knew his friend was far from drunk. His pale face was nearly
expressionless, except for his eyes. What Micum saw there sent a black stab of
dread through him.
"Did Alec tell you about all this?" Seregil asked, far too calm for Micum's
liking.
"The prophecy? Yes." Micum approached him slowly, the way he would a maddened
horse. "Where is he? What happened at the Cockerel?"
Seregil held up something he'd been holding all along, a dagger with a long
lock of blond hair knotted around it.
"Is he—?"
"I don't know."
Micum sank into a chair with a stricken groan.
"He was in such a lather to get back. He was worried about you, I think, but
I should've stopped him from going back."
"Perhaps I can help," Valerius said from the open doorway. Going to Seregil,
he took the dagger and held it to his brow, murmuring a prayer or a spell.
"He's alive," he said, handing it back. "That's all I can tell from this, but
he is alive."
"But for how long, eh?" Thin lines of tension around Seregil's eyes and mouth
showed darkly in the firelight as he took the dagger back, clutching it against
his heart. "We know what these bastards are capable of. It was Mardus after all,
you know. Nysander saw him during the attack. And I think it's safe to assume
that those were his men who came to the Cockerel, too."
"They found you."
Seregil's lips quirked into a parody of his old grin that sent another chill
through Micum. "In a manner of speaking," he said, his voice nearly toneless now
as he stared into the fire. "Alec walked into an ambush. I didn't show up until
it was all over." His hands were trembling visibly now as he leaned against the
mantel.
Giving Micum a compassionate nod, Valerius slipped quietly out.
"They killed—They killed everyone," Seregil whispered. "In my rooms. Except
Luthas. Wethis has him. It's burning now, the whole place. Everything."
Micum shook his head as the horror of it sank in. "But Cilia, Thryis?"
"All of them."
Seregil's face seemed to crumple in on itself like a parchment thrown on a
fire. "I did this, Micum," he gasped raggedly, clutching his head in both hands.
"I brought this down on them, led the bastards to them. They were—"
Micum said nothing, simply put his arms around his friend and held him tight
as Seregil shook helplessly with harsh, strangled sobs. In all the time Micum
had known him, he'd seldom seen Seregil weep, and never as violently as this.
Whatever he'd seen at the inn, whatever had been done there, it had wrenched
something from his very soul.
"You couldn't have known," he said at last.
"Of course I should have!" Seregil shouted. Jerking away, he stared at Micum
with wild, desolate eyes. "All the years they protected me, kept my secrets.
Slaughtered! Slaughtered, as if they were animals, Micum! Then the shit-eating
carrion scum—They cut off—"
He sank to his knees, burying his face in his hands as another fit of weeping
rocked him.
Micum knelt, one hand on Seregil's shoulder, and listened with mounting
horror and outrage as he choked out the details of what he'd found, what had
been done to the bodies of those good people.
When he'd finished, Micum gathered him in again, unresisting now, and held
him until Seregil had cried himself limp and silent. He remained there, leaning
against Micum, for a moment longer, then sat back on his heels and wiped his
face on his shirttail. His eyes were red, but he looked calmer now.
Micum's knees ached from kneeling. Sitting down among the strewn papers, he
stretched one leg, then the other. "Tell me more about Alec."
Seregil held up the black and silver dagger, which he'd been clutching
through the whole outburst. "It's his. They left it for me so I'd be sure to
know they had him. From the looks of the room, they killed the others, and then
waited for some length of time, hoping we'd show up. I found his sword under a
table. He gave them a fight before they brought him down; there was blood on the
edge of the blade." He took a deep breath, fighting for control. "I showed this
to Nysander when I got here this morning. I think he knows where they're headed.
He was trying to tell me when he fainted, but I think I may have figured it
out."
Seregil retrieved a map from the scattered pile by the chair. As he spread it
on the floor between them,
Micum recognized the outline of the Plenimaran peninsula, but the spidery
writing that covered it was unintelligible.
"What is that? I can't read any of it."
"Nysander's own writing system," Seregil explained. "I learned it back in my
apprentice days. Before he passed out, Nysander spoke of a temple in Plenimar,
saying it was under "the pillar of the sky." At first I thought it must be a
monument of some sort and didn't have much hope of finding it. But look here."
He pointed to a place on the northwestern coastline just above the isthmus. "See
that small cross there? It marks the position of Mount Kythes, only here it's
labeled "Yothgash-horagh.""
Seregil looked up at Micum, the old intensity rekindling. "In the ancient
tongue of Plenimar, that means Sky Pillar Mountain."
"Under the pillar of the sky." Micum looked at the map again. "You do
realize, of course, that this place is well behind enemy lines now?"
"Yes, but if I understood what Nysander was trying to tell me, it's
imperative that the four of us be there at some specific time. "One place, one
time," he said, and "synodical."
"What's that?"
Seregil shook his head, frowning. "I don't know yet, but it's important."
"It's all to do with that damn prophecy of yours, isn't it?" Micum scowled.
"But what in hell did the Plenimarans attack the Oreska for?"
"They were after that wooden coin I stole from Mardus back in Wolde. Nysander
had it and at least one other item of interest to them. He'd hidden them down in
the lowest of the vaults. That's where the worst of the wizard battle took
place."
Getting to his feet, Seregil straightened his ill-fitting clothes and headed
for the door. "Come on, I want to see if Nysander's conscious yet. Then I'll
need a look at the damage down below."
Micum followed, thinking of Mardus, and the fact that he'd taken Alec instead
of killing him on the spot. This was tied in with what he'd found up in the
Fens, he knew, but it was best not to think of that just now.
Valerius met them outside the bedroom door.
"Well, you're certainly looking better," he observed, looking Seregil over
with gruff approval. "Red eyes, flushed cheeks. A good cry's just what you
needed. Damn shame about the inn. That baby's fine, by the way. I've sent him to
the temple for the time being. I suppose you'll tell me about the others when
you're ready."
Seregil nodded. "Can I see Nysander now?"
"Still sleeping. Magyana and Darbia are watching him. They'll send for us as
soon as there's any change."
"How soon do you think he'll wake up?" asked Micum.
"It's difficult to say. These old wizards are strange creatures; he has his
own way of fighting for life." Valerius cocked an eyebrow in
Seregil's direction. "I gather you haven't heard about Thero?"
"What about Thero?" Seregil asked sharply.
"He's gone," snorted the drysian. "They've searched high and low. He's not
among the dead, nor anywhere in the House or the city. My guess is, he's with
whoever it was attacked here last night."
"That traitorous bastard!" Seregil snarled.
"He knew Nysander's ways, his habits, not to mention something of the Oreska
defenses. There's more than iron grates guarding the sewer channels under this
place. He let them in! Bilairy's Guts, he let them in!"
"We don't know that," Micum warned but Seregil wasn't listening.
"He knew whenever I was around, and where I lived!" White with anger, Seregil
slammed a fist against the wall. "Agrai methiri dos prakra, he betrayed all of
us. I'll feed him his own balls when I find him. Lasot arma kriunti!"
Micum took the news more calmly. "If he was in on it, then so was Ylinestra.
I suppose she's gone, too?"
Valerius shook his head. "Her body was in the vaults, among the enemy's
dead."
Seregil loosed another sizzling volley of Aurenfaie curses. "How many of the
Oreska House were killed?"
"Eight wizards, seventeen apprentices, twenty-three guards and servants, last
I heard. And there are plenty of others who may not survive their wounds."
"And the enemy?"
"Twenty-seven dead."
Seregil gave the drysian a questioning look. "And the others? Wounded,
prisoners?"
"Not a one," Valerius replied darkly. "That dyrmagnos creature saw to that
herself. According to those who witnessed the fight, as soon as Mardus and his
creature had disappeared from the vaults, and I do mean "disappeared" in a
thaumaturgic sense, every one of the surviving Plenimaran swordsmen there and up
in the atrium just fell down dead where they stood. I've seen the corpses;
there's not a mortal wound on them."
"I'll need to see them." said Seregil.
"I rather suspected you would. They've been laid out in the west garden."
"Good. But first I want to see the vault."
Tiles and rubble grated beneath their boots as Seregil and Micum crossed the
atrium to the museum chamber. Whatever magic had blasted the doors from their
hinges had carried through and smashed half the cases in the chamber. The case
holding the hands of the necromancer was among these; the hands lay palm up
among the splinters and shards like huge brown insects.
There were people everywhere in the vaults now. As they made their way down
one level after another they met servants and apprentices carrying up rescued
artifacts, and wizards weeping or wandering past in stunned silence.
A doorkeeper at the final door let them through without question. Torches and
wizard's lights lit the maze of brick-paved passageways. By their light Seregil
followed the traces of battle: a bloodied dagger abandoned at the turning of a
hallway, dark smears and spatters on the pale stone walls, shattered pieces of
an ivory rod, a corselet buckle, the charred remains of a wizard's robe.
Micum nudged a broken sword with his foot, then spread his arms to find that
he could nearly touch both walls at once. "Sakor's Flame, it must have been a
slaughter."
The sound of voices guided them the last of the way to Nysander's long-hidden
cache hole behind an unremarkable expanse of wall halfway down one of the
innermost corridors. A blacked hole a few feet above the floor led into
darkness. Beside it stood a young assistant wizard Seregil vaguely recognized,
together with several servants:
"You're Nysander's friend, aren't you?" she said. "Magyana told me you might
come."
"This is it, then?" he said, peering into the hole.
"Yes, it's a room of containment, masterfully done. I don't suppose anyone
but Nysander knew it was here all these years."
"Obviously, someone else guessed," Seregil retorted humorlessly. "Where did
the attack come from?"
The girl colored indignantly as she pointed farther down the corridor.
"There's a breach in the wall at the far end of this passage where a sewer
channel runs within a few yards of the wall. As you say, they seemed to know
just where to look."
She and the others retreated, leaving Seregil and Micum to their
investigation.
"Thero could have known," Micum admitted, watching Seregil take out his tool
roll and select a lightwand. "He might have guessed. Perhaps Nysander even told
him."
"No. He didn't." Stooping, Seregil inspected the jagged opening. "Illior's
Fingers, the stonework is three feet thick here, but there's no debris. I see
something shiny on the far edge, though."
The opening was large enough for Seregil to wiggle through.
Reaching in, he ran his fingertips cautiously over what felt like metallic
nodules beading a section of broken stonework. "It feels like—Of course, it's
silver. And something melted it; it ran like wax before it cooled. I'm going in
for a look."
Micum frowned as he peered doubtfully into the dark, cramped space. "Do you
think it's safe? Nysander must have had one hell of a lot of magic protecting
whatever he had hidden in there."
"Any safeguards that existed must surely have been destroyed," the wizard
said, placing his palms against the stone above the hole. "I sense only the
residue."
Holding the lightstone in one hand, Seregil squeezed in headfirst. It was a
tight fit. Jagged stone scraped at his hands and belly as he crawled through to
the small chamber beyond.
"I'm in," he called back to the others. "It is a room of sorts, but too small
to stand up in."
"What's in there?" asked Micum, peering in at him.
"Nothing. It's empty. But every surface from floor to ceiling is all black,
and covered with magical symbols."
Seregil touched his palm to the wall beside him and recognized the soft,
almost velvety texture of the surface at once; rubbing at a small section of it
with his sleeve, he uncovered gleaming metal.
"It's silver, the whole room is sheathed with it."
He was not surprised; taking all the details into consideration, he knew it
to be nothing more than a larger version of the silver-lined box Nysander had
given him to carry the crystal crown. "And here at the back there's a shelf
running the width of the wall."
Examining this, he found three areas of bright metal on the shelf, as if
whatever had sat there had kept it from tarnishing. The central mark was roughly
circular and about the size of his palm. To the left was a smaller, but more
perfectly round circle. To the right was a large square of silver, not so bright
as the other two. Seregil recognized the last two outlines as those of the boxes
holding the coin and crown, but what had the central object been? Judging by the
relative lack of tarnish, it had been there the longest of the three, proving
Alec's supposition that Nysander had been guarding something long before they
had brought him the disk.
Bending over the mark with his light, he touched the outline, tracing it with
his finger—his vision dissolved into a brief curtain of sizzling sparks, then
darkness.
A single clear, attenuated note broke the silence surrounding him and for as
long as it lasted he knew nothing else. It pierced him, bathed him, dancing
along on the threshold dividing pleasure from pain. Gradually other notes joined
the first and they had form, long heavy forms that gradually wrapped together
like the strands of a great rope.
And he was one of those strands, twisted tight and drawn along with the rest
toward some destination. It was not fear that shot through him now, but an
horrific elation.
Other sounds gradually filtered in from beyond the umbilicus, and these were
different.
Removed.
Not of the flow.
Countless black-feathered throats raising a deafening collective cry that
swelled to a roar of diseased laughter, then faded away as the flow passed on.
Human screams, voices crying out in every language of the world.
The clash of battle.
Impossible explosions.
He burrowed deeper into the umbilical bundle but the intrusive sounds
followed, rising to an awful crescendo before they faded as quickly as they had
come.
Silence, gravid with a sense of immediacy.
At last another sound crept in between the strands; Seregil knew this sound
and it inexplicably filled him with a greater dread than all the rest. It was
the heavy rumble of ocean surf.
"Seregil?"
The sound of Micum's worried voice broke through the vision, yanking him back
to the cramped chamber.
"You all right in there?" Micum called again.
"Yes, yes, of course," Seregil replied thickly, although suddenly he didn't
feel all right. He felt pissed as a newt.
Rising slowly, he staggered back to the opening and pulled himself through.
Micum helped him to his feet, but his legs didn't seem to want to support him
just yet. Sliding down with his back to the wall, he rested his elbows on his
knees.
"What happened in there?" Micum demanded, studying him with apparent concern.
"You don't look right."
"I don't know." There had been something, a fleeting glimpse of-what? Gone,
nothing.
Seregil scrubbed his fingers back through his hair to clear his head. "Must
have been some residual effect of Nysander's magic, or a pocket of bad air
maybe. I just went a little light-headed. I feel better now."
"You were saying something about a shelf in there," said Micum. "Did you find
something?"
"Just the marks. From the coin and the crown and the bowl."
"What bowl?"
Seregil blinked up at Micum. "I don't know. I just—know."
For the first time since he'd learned of Nysander's prophecy Seregil felt the
faint, chill brush of fear, but it was tempered with a sudden burst of grim
anticipation.
The blare of battle horns brought Beka up out of sleep just after dawn.
Grabbing her sword, she ran from the tent. "To arms! To arms!" a messenger
shouted, riding through the encampment. "An attack from the eastern hills. To
arms!"
Shading her eyes, Beka looked across the small plain that lay between the
camp and a line of hills a mile to the east. Even with the sun in her eyes she
could see dark ranks of horsemen and foot soldiers in the distance, perhaps as
much as a regiment. The Queen's Horse was still at half strength; Wolf Squadron
was patrolling the supply route that stretched back to the Mycenian coast twenty
miles to the south.
Sergeant Braknil rushed up fully armed, his blond beard bristling. "What is
it, Lieutenant?"
"Look there," said Beka, pointing.
"Damn! The scouts from Eagle troop said those hills were clear yesterday."
The edge of Plenimaran territory lay more than twenty miles to the east.
The rest of the turma scrambled from their tents in various-stages of
readiness.
"Full armor," shouted Beka, dashing back to finish dressing. Outside, she
could hear Portus, Braknil, and Mercalle barking at their riders.
"Lances and swords! Come on now, this is it!"
Minutes later all thirty riders were mounted and ready. Their chain mail, and
the white horse and sword insignia on the fronts of their green tabards, showed
bravely in the early morning light.
Beka gave them a satisfied once-over, then led the way to where Captain
Myrhini and the troop's standard-bearer were waiting. Lieutenant Koris' Second
Turma galloped up to join them.
Myrhini sat her white charger and barked out orders in a voice that carried
over the general outcry of the camp.
"Commander Klia wants our troop to hold this far right end of the battle
line. Commander Perris' squadron will be to our left. Lieutenant Beka, I want
your turma on our right. Koris, you've got the left. We'll show these sneaky
bastards that you have to get up earlier than this to catch the Queen's Horse in
bed on such a fine morning. Form up!"
Beka turned to her riders. "Sergeant Mercalle, you've got the center of our
section. Sergeant Braknil, take right; Portus, the left."
The three decuriae fell into formation, lances waving like the spines on a
sea urchin. Watching their faces, Beka saw in them a mix of fierceness and
elation.
And fear.
They were a young group, among the youngest in the regiment and, despite all
their hard training, they hadn't seen any worse action than their skirmish with
bandits weeks ago. This was just as unexpected as that had been, but a hundred
times more daunting.
Thirty-three faces turned to Beka as she buckled on her white-crested helm.
She knew as she looked at them that no matter how brave they were or how well
they fought, there were bound to be some who wouldn't live to see the sun set.
"We'll show 'em today, right, Lieutenant?" called Corporal Kallas, giving her
a nervous, cocky grin.
She grinned back. "Damn right we will! Honor, strength, and mercy, First
Turma."
Waving bows and lances, they returned the cry.
The trumpet signal "canter advance" came down the line. Unsheathing her
sword, Beka brandished it and yelled out, "Blood and Steel, First Turma!"
"Blood and Steel!" they roared back at her, shaking their lances.
The rumble of hooves and harness rang out on the morning air as the line
advanced to meet the enemy cavalry. The trumpets sounded again, and the line
sprang forward at a gallop across the plain.
Spring was creeping slowly up into Mycena and their horses kicked up clods of
half-frozen mud as they ran.
As the two forces hurtled at each other, closing the distance to seconds,
Beka felt only a deadly stillness as she marked an oncoming Plenimaran officer.
Both sides set up a blood-chilling battle cry as the two forces collided-cries
quickly swelled by the screams of horses and soldiers.
Myrhini's troop was in the thick of it from the outset. By midmorning they
had battled their way behind the enemy's flank. Regrouping, they wheeled back to
attack the rear guard, only to have the Plenimaran cavalry fade away like smoke
before wind at their advance, leaving a line of archers and pikemen in their
wake to meet the Skalan charge.
Bloodied to the elbows, Beka and her remaining riders heard the trumpets
sound the advance again and rode down on the enemy line through a hail of
arrows.
As she rode, Beka glimpsed soldiers falling and riderless horses veering
wildly across the field.
Sergeant Portus went down under his own horse, but there was no time to stop
for him.
Plowing into the ranks of infantry, Beka's turma fanned out, striking left
and right with swords as they pressed their mounted advantage.
Hewing her way through the chaos, Beka caught a welcome glimpse of regimental
standards on the far side of the melee.
"Look there," she shouted to the others. "Second Turma's with us. Close the
gap!"
She was wheeling her horse for a renewed charge when an enemy soldier struck
at her with a javelin, catching her a glancing blow across the front of her left
thigh just below the edge of her mail shirt.
He struck at her again, aiming for her throat.
Beka rocked back in the saddle and grabbed for the shaft, using the man's own
forward momentum to pull him off balance. As he staggered forward she struck him
over the head with her sword. He fell back and disappeared under the crush of
fighters surging around them.
Looking up, she saw Second Turma's standard tilt drunkenly in the distance,
then disappear.
Cursing, Beka called out new orders and spurred forward to aide Corporal
Nikides, who was about to be skewered from behind.
The battle raged on into early afternoon as the two forces battered each
other in repeated charge and melee. There was no quarter given to the dead or
dying; those who weren't carried from the field were trampled into the cold,
reeking mud. Combatants on both sides were so filthy that it was difficult to
tell friend from foe.
Though outnumbered, the Skalans refused to break and finally the Plenimarans
gave way, disappearing back into the hills as quickly and mysteriously as they'd
come.
Beka gritted her teeth and tried to concentrate on other things while the
troop surgeon tugged the last stitches tight, closing the gash in her leg.
The hospital tent was crowded, the air rank with the stench of the wounded.
Moans and cries came from all sides as the more seriously hurt begged for help,
water, or death. A few feet away, a man screamed as an arrow was pulled from his
chest.
Dark blood bubbled out ominously from the wound. When he cried out again,
more weakly this time, air from his punctured lung whistled through the hole.
The gash on Beka's thigh was a deep one and it hurt like hell now, though
she'd hardly noticed it during the battle. No one had been more surprised than
she when she'd fainted across her horse's neck when the fighting was over.
"There now, that should heal nicely if it doesn't fester," Tholes assured
her, laying his needle aside and pouring a bit of sour wine over the wound.
"Vinia will bind it up so you can ride."
There was a stir at the door of the hospital tent as Commander Klia entered,
flanked by her three remaining captains, Myrhini, Perris, and Ustes. All four
officers were covered with the filth of battle and Beka noted that Myrhini was
limping on a bandaged foot. Captain Ustes, a tall, black-bearded noble, wore his
sword arm in a sling and Perris had a stained bandage around his brow. Klia
alone appeared to have come off without a scratch, although word was she'd been
in the thick of it the whole time.
Magic, Beka wondered, or just charmed skill?
Klia was a skillful tactician, to be sure, but it was her preference for
leading from the front that made her so popular with her squadron. After
exchanging a word with one of the surgeons, she moved off among the wounded,
praising and encouraging them, and asking for details of the battle as the
fighters had seen it.
Myrhini spotted Beka and hobbled over. "First Turma distinguished itself
again today. I saw you break through the line. How's the leg?"
Beka grimaced as Tholes" assistant finished bandaging her thigh. Hauling her
torn breeches up, she flexed her leg. "Not so bad, Captain. I can ride."
"Good. Klia wants reconnaissance patrols out before dawn tomorrow. What state
is your turma in?"
"Last I knew for certain, four dead including Sergeant Portus, and thirteen
still unaccounted for.
As soon as I get out of here I'll round up the rest and let you know." The truth
was, she dreaded the final count. Lying here, she'd been unable to block the
memory of young Rethus' broken body trampled in the mud. He'd been the first to
stand with her during their first fight with the bandits.
Myrhini shook her head grimly. "Well, you may be better off than some.
Captain Ormonus was killed in the first charge, along with most of his second
turma. All told, we've lost nearly a third of the squadron."
Klia came over and squatted down beside Myrhini.
Beka made her commander an awkward salute from where she lay. Klia looked
older than her twenty-five years today. Tired lines had sunk in around her eyes
and mouth and creased the smooth brow below her dark widow's peak.
"A force that large—" Klia growled under her breath, tugging absently at the
end of her long brown braid. "A full regiment of Plenimaran cavalry and foot
soldiers boiling down out of hills we've been patrolling for a week!"
She pinned Beka with an appraising look. "How do you suppose they managed
that, Lieutenant?"
Beka looked out the tent flap to the distant hills visible beyond. "There are
hundreds of little valleys up there. Anyone who knew the area could sneak small
groups into them, keep quiet, no fires. When the time came, they'd send out
runners with orders to mass at some central point."
Klia nodded. "That seems to be the general opinion. Myrhini tells me you're a
good tracker. If you learned any of it from your father and Seregil, then I know
you're better than most. I want your turma to go up into those hills tomorrow,
see what you can find."
"Yes, Commander!" Beka sat up and saluted again.
"Good. I can give you a few more riders if you think you'll need them." Beka
considered the offer, then shook her head.
"No, we can move faster and quieter if there aren't too many of us."
Klia clapped her on the shoulder. "All right, then. This is like finding
adders in the haymow, I know. Find what you can and send back word. Don't engage
unless you're cornered. Myrhini, who else are you sending?"
"Lieutenant Koris is taking a decuria north into the steeper country. The
rest of his turma will go up the central pass with me."
"I've sent word to Phoria that we need reinforcements here," Klia told them,
rising to go. "With any luck the rest of the regiment will come up from the
coast in a day or so. Good luck to you both."
"Take care of yourself, Commander." Myrhini grinned, thumping the toe of
Klia's boot with her fist.
"Don't go getting yourself gallantly killed while I'm gone."
"I'll wait until you get back," Klia shot back wryly. "I wouldn't want you to
miss it."
"Sakor touched!" Myrhini muttered, watching her friend stride away. "Good
luck to you, Beka, and take care."
"Thanks. I will," Beka said.
When Myrhini was gone, she got up and looked around for familiar faces among
the wounded. She soon found some—too many, in fact. Ariani, a rider in Braknil's
decuria, beckoned to her from a back corner of the tent.
She was wounded but looked able to ride. Some of those with her hadn't been
so lucky. Mikal had taken a spear in the belly, and Thela had a shattered leg.
Next to her, Steb sat slumped against his friend
Mirn, one hand pressed to a bloody dressing over his left eye. That wasn't
the worst of it, though.
The little group was gathered around the body of another comrade. It was
Aulos, Kallas' twin.
A Plenimaran foot soldier had unhorsed him just before the retreat, then
hacked his lower belly open.
His brother had carried him off the field and now sat cradling Aulos' head on
his lap.
Beka felt her stomach go into a slow lurch. The surgeon had cut the remains
of Aulos' uniform and chain mail away, only to find that there was not enough of
his abdomen left to stitch back together. White and panting, the young man lay
staring mutely up at his brother, their faces mirrors of agony. They'd always
been inseparable, Beka recalled sadly, equally quick to sing or fight.
"They gave him a draught, but he still feels it," Kallas said softly as she
knelt down beside him.
Tears were coursing down his cheeks, but he remained motionless, patient as
stone. "Tholes says there's nothing to do but to let him go. But he won't! He
hangs on." Kallas paused, closing his eyes.
"As his kinsman, Lieutenant, I ask permission—to spur him on."
Beka looked down into the wounded man's face, wondering if he understood what
was going on. Aulos locked eyes with her and nodded slightly, mouthing. Please.
"Find someone, Mirn. Quickly!" Beka ordered.
Mirn hurried off, returning a moment later with an orderly who quickly opened
an artery in Aulos' leg. The wounded man's labored breathing slowed almost at
once. With a last long sigh, he turned his face to his brother's chest and died.
"Astellus carry you soft, and Sakor light your way home," Beka said, speaking
the soldier's brief prayer for the dead. The others echoed it in a ragged
chorus.
"Those of you who can ride, help Kallas bury him, then find the rest of the
turma. The rest of you stay here and wait for transport to the coast. You fought
bravely, all of you. Captain Myrhini's proud of you. So am I."
Accepting the murmured thanks of the others, she limped outside as quickly as
her leg allowed, only to be met by the sight of scores of bodies lined up on the
ground like bundles of harvested grain.
Syrtas was there, and Arna, Lineus, and Sergeant Portus. They lay looking up
at the blue sky with empty eyes, like dirty, broken dolls discarded once and for
all.
"Astellus carry you soft, and Sakor light—"
Beka's voice failed her. How many more times would she have to say that
parting blessing today? Wiping a hand roughly across her eyes, she whispered the
rest.
"Lieutenant Beka?" It was Zir, calling to her from the next hospital tent. He
appeared to be unhurt, but his face was deathly pale. "It's Sergeant
Mercalle—She's in here."
Squaring her shoulders, Beka followed him back into the stinking dimness.
The surgeons must have given Mercalle something for pain, for she smiled
sleepily up at Beka.
Both arms were splinted, and one of her legs. There were bandages wrapped
tightly around her chest and rib cage, as well, and blood had seeped through
these below her right breast and on her left side.
Beka knelt and rested a hand lightly on the sergeant's shoulder. "By the
Flame, what happened to you?"
"Damned horse—"
Mercalle rasped, shaking her head slightly. "When I heal up, I'm joining the
infantry."
"She got thrown and trampled," Zir whispered. "Corbin was carrying her off
the field when they both got hit with arrows. He was killed. I got her on my
horse and brought her in. Tholes expects she'll live."
"Thank the Maker for that. Where are Kaylah and the others?" Beka asked.
"She's out looking for the missing ones, Lieutenant. You saw—" Zir nodded in
the direction of the bodies outside, and she saw tears glistening in his eyes.
"We'd just fought our way into the open, and thought we'd have a moment to
collect ourselves. But there were Plenimaran bowmen there, too. By the Flame,
Lieutenant, they hit us hard! Arna, Syrtas, and the others-they were in the lead
and didn't have time to turn their horses."
Beka clasped his hand. "Go on. Find Kaylah and the rest. I'll be along soon."
"Lieutenant?" Mercalle's eyes were bleary, but she fixed Beka with a direct
look. "You were fine on the field, Lieutenant. Real fine. And you're fine with
them off the field, too. But you can't care too much, you know? You've got to
care for them, but not too much. It's a hard thing to learn, but you won't last
if you don't."
"I know." Beka sat a moment longer with her, realizing how much she was going
to miss the older woman's presence in the turma. "When you get back to Skala—if
you need anything—my father is Micum Cavish, of Watermead near Rhiminee."
Mercalle smiled. "I thank you for that, Lieutenant, but I've got a couple
daughters back home. I'll try and get word to your folks, though."
There didn't seem to be much left to say after that.
With a final word of thanks, Beka left the tent and limped past the corpses
in search of the living.
The Plenimarans had mown through the encampment, destroying tents, wagons,
and anything else in their path. Soldiers were at work everywhere now, trying to
salvage what they could from the tangled wreckage.
Beka was just wondering which direction to try first when she heard her name
called again and saw Corporal Rhylin waving to her from atop an overturned
sutler's wagon.
"Praise the Flame!" he exclaimed, jumping down. He was taller than she by
nearly a head and had an awkward, storklike quality when on foot that belied his
prowess as a horseman.
"We didn't know what to think when you disappeared at the end," he told her.
"There's been all sorts of rumors. Someone claimed Captain Myrhini went down."
"She's fine and so am I," Beka assured him, though the stitches felt like
burning claws in her skin, "Where is everybody?"
"Just over that way." Rhylin waved a hand back beyond the line of hospital
tents, adding glumly, "What's left of us, anyway. You'd better take my horse."
"We'll ride double. I want everyone together."
Rhylin swung up into the saddle and extended a hand.
Gritting her teeth as another hot rope of pain pulled taut across her thigh,
Beka climbed up behind him and gripped his belt.
"What can you tell me?" she asked as they set off.
"There are about a dozen of us accounted for who aren't too badly wounded.
Sergeant Braknil's in charge of them. Mercalle's hurt badly and Sergeant
Portus—"
"I saw him go down," said Beka, hearing the sudden strain in the man's voice.
Rhylin had been Portus' corporal.
"Anyway, Sergeant Braknil sent some of us out looking for you. The others are
scouting up food and gear," he told her.
Thank the Flame for that at least, Beka thought gratefully, imagining the
stocky, blunt-spoken sergeant striding through the wreckage to whip things into
order again.
"That's good. Mim, Kallas, and Ariani will be back later. Steb and Thela are
out of it for the time being—"
"Aulos?" Rhylin asked, and Beka felt him tense again. He'd come into the
regiment with the twin brothers. They were from the same town.
"Dead," she told him. There was no use glossing it over, she thought, feeling
weary for the first time that day. Like Mercalle had warned, death was something
they'd all better get used to, and quickly.
As expected, Braknil had things well in hand.
Food had been salvaged from somewhere, a few tents were up and, best of all,
a dozen or more horses were hobbled nearby, a good many of them sporting
Plenimaran tack.
A cheer went up as the others caught sight of them riding up.
"What's the word, Lieutenant?" Braknil asked as the others gathered anxiously
around.
He had a bloody rag wrapped around one forearm, but it didn't seem to be
slowing him down.
Beka counted fourteen in all, plus the sergeant.
"The word is we got caught with our britches down," she replied wryly.
"Commander Klia isn't too happy about that, but she thinks that First Turma can
help make it right. What do you say?"
Another cheer went up, mingled with angry shouts of "Let's raid the
bastards!", "Blood and
Steel!", and "Lead on like you did today, Lieutenant, we'll follow!"
Beka eased herself down on a crate and motioned for silence. "It looks like
two decuriae will have to do for now. Rhylin, I'm making you sergeant of Second
Decuria. Who do you have left?"
Rhylin looked around. "Nikides, Syra, Kursin, Tealah, Jareel, and Tare."
"Braknil, what about First Decuria?"
The sergeant waved at the two exhausted young men beside him. "Just Arbelus
and Gilly, so far."
"And us," called Steb, who'd just arrived with Kallas, Ariani, and Mirn.
"You're missing an eye!" Braknil said gruffly.
"I've still got one left," Steb replied, though it was clear he was in pain.
"Come on, Sergeant. There aren't enough of us left to spare me. I can fight."
"All right, then," the sergeant said with a shrug.
"Corporal Kallas, you're still sound?"
Still deeply shaken by the death of his brother, Kallas nodded grimly.
"So that makes seven in each decuria so far," Beka observed, counting them
up. "All of you who were with Sergeant Mercalle, step forward. Tobin, Barius,
you go into Braknil's decuria. Marten, Kaylah, and Zir, you're with Rhylin. As
soon as we've got horses and gear sorted out, we have orders to head up into
those hills as scouts."
"We couldn't make a worse job of it than Eagle troop," Kaylah muttered.
Others growled angry agreement.
"Never mind that. The Plenimarans pulled a good trick this morning, it's
true. It's up to us to make sure they don't do it again. We're going to poke our
nose down every gully and snake hole until we find out where they're hiding.
They can't conceal that many men and horses for long now that we know what
they're up to. Sergeants, see that everyone scrounges up a decent horse, patrol
gear, and a week's rations. Stow your tabards again, too. Maybe we can pull a
few surprises of our own, eh? We ride out at dusk."
Beka sat where she was for a moment, watching the remains of her command
bustle about. Most were sporting minor wounds. It was probably a mistake to take
Steb, but as he'd pointed out, they couldn't afford to spare anyone who could
still ride.
Twelve riders and two sergeants lost in a single day's fighting, she thought,
and half of those dead.
It was a lucky thing they had a mission to take up their thoughts tonight.
A white linen pavilion had been erected for the
Oreska dead. As Seregil and Micum passed by it the next morning, they heard soft
chants and the weeping of those preparing the bodies for pyre or grave.
Farther on, the enemy corpses lay under the open sky. Judged by their
clothing, they could have been laborers or thieves, but most of them had the
build and scars of soldiers. A Scavenger cart stood ready nearby. Untended and
unmourned, they would be hauled away and burnt without ceremony.
"Valerius said that after the attack was over, any of Mardus' men who weren't
already dead just dropped in their tracks," Micum mused as he and Seregil walked
around the bodies, seeking faces they'd seen with Mardus in Wolde all those
months ago. "You figure the dyrmagnos did that?"
"Probably," Seregil said. He was still wearing his baggy borrowed clothes and
looked as if he hadn't slept in a week. Micum knew for a fact that he'd sat
awake with Nysander all night. They both had.
"But I doubt they killed all of their own people," Seregil went on, taking a
closer look at a ragged, one-handed beggar. "Have you noticed that no one
remembers seeing Mardus and the necromancers leave? Except Hwerlu, maybe. He
said something about a huge dark shape rising over the House as he ran toward
it. He didn't get there until it was over, so that may have been Mardus' exit. A
dyrmagnos could have that kind of power."
Micum felt an unlucky chill go up his back.
"Let's hope we can stay clear of the thing, then. Anything that can lay
Nysander low and then fly off like a bat is nothing I want to face down."
A swarthy man with a scar through his bottom lip caught his eye. "I know him.
He's one of Captain Tildus' men," Micum said, pointing him out to Seregil. "I
drank with him a few times at the Pony in Wolde. He's one of them who gave Alec
a hard time."
"I see an old friend, too." Seregil stood looking down at a lanky, rawboned
man dressed in a soiled leather jerkin. "Farm the Fish, a gaterunner who came up
missing a month ago. Tym mentioned him to me just before he disappeared himself.
I don't recognize any of the others. Probably all Plenimaran soldiers and spies
brought in for the job." He tapped his chin with one long forefinger as he
frowned down at the dead. "You remember I ran into a Juggler up in Asengai's
dungeon, that night Alec and I first met?"
"The Plenimaran assassins guild, you mean?"
"Yes." Seregil jerked a thumb at die corpses. "What would you bet there's a
guild mark on one or two of these fellows?"
Micum grimaced in distaste. "Guess there's wily one way to find out. What's
it look like?"
"Three small blue dots tattooed to form a triangle. They're usually in the
armpit,"
Seregil told him, adding with a wry grin, "At least this is better than going
to the charnel houses."
Even in the scented coolness of the Oreska garden, however, it was not
pleasant work.
Pulling at clothing and cold, stiff limbs, Micum found no tattoos, but two
men did have suspicious scars about the size of a sester coin under their arms.
The healed tissue was still pink and new.
"I think this might be something," he said.
Seregil came over for a look and nodded. "There are three more just like it
over there. That scar isn't a burn or a puncture; the skin was sliced away on
purpose. If it wasn't a Juggler's mark they cut out, then I'll wager it was
something similar."
"That Mardus is a cagey bastard," Micum said with grudging admiration. "He
wasn't taking any chances. Not that we can prove it now, though."
Seregil examined the scar. "You know, I've heard that these skin marks go
deep. What do you think?"
Micum sighed. "It's worth a try, so long as no drysians catch us at it."
Slipping a tiny, razorlike blade from the seam of his belt, Seregil held the
skin on either side of the mark taut with two fingers and sliced away the
surface of the scar. When he'd pulled back the flap of skin, he and Micum
inspected the livid flesh beneath.
"See anything?" asked Micum.
"No, they must've cut deep on this one. Let's try another."
Their second attempt was more successful. Scraping gently this time, Seregil
uncovered the faint triangular imprint of the Juggler's guild mark still visible
in the flesh.
Seregil rocked back on his heels with grim satisfaction. "That's proof enough
for me."
"Maker's Mercy! What do you think you're doing?"
It was Darbia, the dark-haired drysian who'd been helping tend Nysander.
Bristling with indignation, she strode up and made a quick blessing sign over
the corpse.
"Enemy or not, I cannot condone such barbarous behavior," she snapped.
"It's not desecration," Micum assured her, getting to his feet. "This man and
several others wear the mark of Plenimaran spies. The
Queen should be informed before any of these bodies are taken away."
The drysian crossed her arms, still scowling. "Very well then, I'll see to
it."
"Did Valerius send you after us?" asked Seregil.
"Yes, Nysander is stirring a bit."
Without waiting to hear more, Seregil and Micum ran for the tower.
Magyana was still in the armchair by Nysander's bedside where she'd spent the
night, one hand still on his brow.
Seeing her like that, Micum could almost feel her willing her own energy into
her old love, trying to heal and sustain him with her own life force.
To Micum, Nysander looked worse than ever. His face was a dull, chalky grey,
his eyes sunken deep in their sockets beneath the unruly white brows. His
breathing scarcely lifted the sheet covering him but Micum could hear it,
rasping faintly as dry leaves across stone.
The sight of him must have struck Seregil hard as well. He read a hint of
despair in Seregil's face as he approached Nysander, and knew it was born of the
conflict between Seregil's great love for Nysander and his desperate need to
learn whatever he could to save Alec.
Seregil paused long enough to cleanse his hands at the washstand, then knelt
beside the bed and took Nysander's hand between his own. Micum moved around
behind Magyana's chair in time to see Nysander's eyes slowly open.
"I found your map," Seregil told him, not wasting any precious time.
"Yes," Nysander mouthed, nodding slightly against the pillow. "Good."
"The Pillar of the Sky, Yothgash-horagh. It's Mount Kythes, isn't it?"
Again, a slight nod.
"This temple you spoke of, it's on the mountain?"
"No," Nysander told them.
"Beneath it, underground?"
No response.
Seregil watched the wounded man's face for any movement, then asked as calmly
as he could manage, "At the foot of it?"
Nysander's throat worked painfully as he struggled to speak. Seregil bent
close, but after a few desperate efforts, the wizard's eyes closed.
Seregil rested his forehead against his clenched fists for a moment. Micum
couldn't see Magyana's face from where he stood, but her hand was trembling as
she reached to clasp Seregil's shoulder. "He's gone deep within himself again. I
know how desperately you need to speak with him, but he's just too weak."
"Could you make anything out of that last bit?" Micum asked, refusing to give
up hope.
Still kneeling by the bed, Seregil shook his head doubtfully. "He was trying
to tell me something. It sounded like "late us" or "lead us," but it was so
faint I can't be certain."
Magyana leaned forward, gripping his shoulder more forcefully this time as
she turned him to face her.
"Leiteus? Could it have been the name Leiteus?"
Seregil looked up at her in surprise.
"Yes! Yes, it could have been. And I've heard that name somewhere—"
Magyana clasped her hands together over her heart.
"Leiteus i Marineus is an astrologer, and a friend of Nysander's! They've
been consulting with each other about some comet for over a year now."
Seregil jumped to his feet and began searching the floor around Nysander's
hearth. At last he bent and pulled a book from beneath an armchair.
"I noticed this lying open by his. chair yesterday," he said, handing it to
her.
She opened it and Micum saw that it was full of tables and strange symbols.
"Yes," she said, "this is one of Leiteus' books."
"Have you ever heard the word "synodical'?" Seregil asked her with growing
excitement.
"I believe it refers to the movements of the stars and planets."
Micum looked to Magyana in surprise. "You mean Nysander really was trying to
send us to this astrologer fellow?"
"So it would seem."
"One place and one time." That's what he said yesterday," Seregil reminded
them. "A synodical event, like the advent of this comet. It must have some
bearing on whatever Mardus is up to."
He bent to lay a hand against Nysander's pale cheek. "I don't know if you can
hear any of this," he said softly, "but if you can, I'm going to Leiteus. Do you
understand, Nysander? I'm going to speak with Leiteus."
Nysander gave no sign of consciousness. Seregil sadly stroked a lock of
grizzled grey hair back from the old man's brow. "That's all right. I'm the
Guide. You just leave it to me for now."
Outside the Oreska walls an early spring wind had blown up, clearing the sky
and whipping corner whirlwinds out of the dead year's dust and leaves.
Galloping north out of the Harvest Gate, they left the highroad for a smaller
one that wound along the sea cliffs.
The astrologer's modest walled villa sat perched on a headland overlooking
the sea. Above it, gulls wheeled gracefully against the morning sky.
The courtyard gate was shut tight, but a servant soon answered Micum's
relentless knock.
"My master is not accustomed to receiving visitors at this early hour," the
man informed them stiffly, eyeing Seregil's unkempt appearance and ill-fitting
coat with undisguised skepticism.
"We're here on a matter of the utmost interest to your master," Seregil
replied, affecting his most arrogant tone. "Tell him that Lord Seregil i Korit
Solun Meringil Bokthersa and Sir Micum of Cavish, Knight of Watermead, require
his attendance at once in a matter pertaining to his friend Nysander, High
Thaumaturgist of the Oreska House."
Duly intimidated by the onslaught of titles, the man relented enough to
escort them to a small sitting room overlooking the sea, while he went to speak
with his master.
"Prophecies and astrologers," Micum grumbled, pacing around the tiny room.
"Alec's carried off by crazy butchering bastards and we're weaving sails out of
smoke!"
"It's more solid than that. I can feel it." Seregil sat down on a bench under
the window and rested one elbow on the sill as he gazed out.
Having a thread to follow, even as tenuous a one as this, appeared to have
restored the inner calm Seregil needed to function. After all the horror of the
previous day, however, Micum wondered if he wasn't just a bit too calm.
And what if this astrologer doesn't have all the answers?
"How did Kari take you going off like this?"
Micum shrugged. "She's nearly four months gone with child, Beka's off in the
middle of a war, and I charge off again with you. I swore to her I'd be there
when her time comes."
Still looking out the window, Seregil said quietly, "You don't have to come,
you know. Prophecy or not, the decision is yours."
"Don't talk like an idiot. Of course I'm coming," Micum retorted gruffly.
"I've made my choice and I'll stick by it," he went on, sitting down next to
Seregil.
"Though I'll admit I don't like it. Nysander talks of a band of four and here
we sit, knocked down to two before we even begin."
"We're still four, Micum."
Micum stared down at the mosaic under his feet for a moment, then laid a hand
on Seregil's thin shoulder. "I know what Valerius said yesterday. I want to
believe it as much as you, but—"
"No!" Seregil glared at Micum. "Until I hold his body in my hands, Alec is
alive, do you hear?"
Micum understood the anguish behind Seregil's anger all too well. If Alec was
alive, Seregil would fight through fire and death to save him. If Alec was dead,
then he'd do the same to track down his killers. Either road, he blamed himself.
"You know I love the boy as much as you do," he said gently, "but it won't do
him a damn bit of good for us to let that cloud our thinking. If we're going to
come up with any sort of plan we have to at least take into consideration that
he might be dead. If this "Shaft" person of yours is really meant to be an
archer, then we'd better—"
Seregil stared out the window, his mouth set in a stubborn line. "No."
They were interrupted by the arrival of a short, well-fed man in an enormous
dressing gown.
"I beg pardon, gentlemen," he apologized, yawning as he ushered them into a
spacious consultation room. "As you've no doubt surmised, the nature of my
studies requires that I work at night. I'm seldom awake at this hour. I've sent
for strong tea, so perhaps you would—"
"Forgive me, but I assume you're unaware of the attack on the Oreska House
last night," Seregil broke in, "or that Nysander i Azusthra has been seriously
wounded."
"Nysander!" Leiteus gasped, his robe billowing around him as he sank into a
chair. "By the Light, why would anyone want to harm that decent old fellow?"
"I can't say," answered Seregil, his manner now betraying none of the emotion
of a moment before. "He sent us to you, though he was too weak to tell us why.
Magyana says he'd consulted you on some astrological matter recently. It could
have some bearing."
"Do you think so?" Leiteus fetched a pile of charts from a nearby shelf and
shuffled quickly through them.
"If only he'd allowed me to do that divination for him. He was gracious about
it, of course, but so- Ah, here it is!"
He spread a large chart out on a polished table and peered down at it. "He
was interested in the movements of Rendel's Spear, you see."
"A comet?" asked Seregil.
"Yes." The astrologer pointed to a series of tiny symbols arcing across the
chart. "It has a synodical cycle of fifty-seven years. This is the year of its
return. He helped me calculate the date of its appearance."
Seregil leaned forward eagerly. "And you have it?"
The astrologer referred to his parchments again. "Let me see, going by the
observations recorded in Yourindai's Ephemeris, as well as our own calculations,
I believe Rendel's Spear should be visible on the fifteenth night of Lithion."
"That gives us just over two weeks, then," Micum murmured.
"Of course, it will remain in the sky for nearly a week," Leiteus added.
"It's one of the largest comets, a most impressive display. Of particular
interest both to Nysander and myself, however, is the fact that this cycle of
the comet coincides with a solar eclipse."
Seregil shot Micum a meaningful glance, then asked, "Would that also be
considered a synodical event?"
"Certainly, and one of the rarer variety," replied the astrologer. "I assumed
that's why Nysander was so curious about it."
"Eclipses are unlucky things," Micum noted. "I once knew a man who went blind
afterward."
"It'll be a doubly unlucky day with the comet in the sky," Seregil added,
though to Micum's ear he sounded more pleased than alarmed. was "Plague stars,"
I've heard these comets of yours called, bringers of ill fortune, war, disease."
"That's true, Lord Seregil," Leiteus concurred. "The College of Divination
has already sent word to the Queen, advising the suspension of all trade on that
day. People should keep to their homes until the evil influence passes. Such a
conjunction has not occurred in centuries."
"And do you have a date for that?" asked Seregil.
"On the twentieth."
"Was there any other sort of information Nysander seemed interested in?"
The astrologer stroked his chin. "Well, he did ask me to calculate if such a
conjunction had occurred before."
"And did you?"
Leiteus smiled. "I didn't have to, actually.
As every Skalan astrologer knows, it was that very same conjunction that
heralded the beginning of the Great
War six hundred eighty-four years ago. So you see, Lord Seregil, your talk of
unlucky "plague stars" does have some basis."
Leaving the astrologer with assurances to send word of Nysander, Micum and
Seregil headed back to the city.
"I admit, it makes some sense if you accept that Nysander's right about
Mardus aiming for that conjunction," Micum said as they rode.
"He is right, I'm sure of it. Think about it, Micum. There haven't been any
major incidents between Skala and Plenimar for twenty years, yet all of a sudden
Plenimar decides to launch another war of aggression, just as they did in the
Great War.
And the old Overlord, who opposed such a war, conveniently dies just in time for
his hawkish son to take the throne? And there's the same conjunction?
And the attack on the Oreska? And if that whole business does all revolve around
some rite or ceremony having to do with their Eater of Death, then what more
propitious time could there be than during the conjunction?"
"But what is it all for?" Micum growled. "Those odds and ends that Nysander
was guarding, what does
Mardus want with them? If the Plenimarans need them that badly, and now, just as
war is breaking out again—"
"That's just it, though. Nysander said he wasn't the first
Guardian. His mentor, Arkoniel, was before him, and the wizard before him. Who
knows how long Oreska wizards have been watching that same hidey-hole in the
vaults? Those things could date all the way back to the Great War. You've heard
the legends of necromancers and walking dead from that time, and everyone knows
it was the wizards who finally turned the tide."
"You mean to say that the Plenimarans are going to use those things to summon
the power of this god?"
"Something like that."
They both rode in silence for a long moment.
"Well, we'd better get moving," Micum said at last. "If you and Nysander are
right, then we've only got two weeks to find this mysterious temple, if it
exists, and a long way to go to get there. We'll have to hire a ship."
"I had Magyana send out word to Rhal this morning.
We should be able to set sail by tomorrow or the next day."
He kicked his mount into a gallop toward the city gate. Micum spurred grimly
on behind him.
Returning to the Oreska, they found Magyana and
Valerius in Nysander's workroom. Seregil quickly outlined what they'd learned
from Leiteus.
"So you see," he added, "it's imperative that we all be at this place
together, at the given time."
"Haul Nysander off in a ship over spring seas? Are you both mad?" Valerius
burst out, glaring at him and Micum. "It's absolutely out of the question. I
forbid it!"
Clenching his fists behind his back, Seregil fought to remain calm as he
looked to Magyana for support. "There must be some way we could make him
comfortable."
But Magyana shook her head firmly. "I'm sorry, Seregil, but Valerius is quite
right. Nysander must have solitude and peace to heal. Such a voyage in his
present state would certainly kill him."
"Not to mention the fact that you're sailing off into the very teeth of a
war," the drysian sputtered. "Even if he could stand being moved—which he
can't-what if you're boarded or sunk? Bilairy's Balls, man, he's scarcely
conscious more than a few minutes at a time!"
Seregil ran a hand back though his hair in exasperation. "Micum, you talk to
them."
"Calm down," said Micum. "If Valerius says Nysander can't survive the voyage,
then that's the end of that. But what about a translocation?"
Magyana shook her head again. "He's too weak to survive it, and even if he
could, it would not be possible. Since the attack there are only three wizards
left, including myself, who possess the skill to perform that spell. And it will
be some time before any of us are strong enough to attempt it."
Seregil let out a frustrated growl, but Micum was still thinking. "Well,
assuming that these Illiorans are on the right track with their prophecies and
comets and all, then we wouldn't necessarily have to move him for almost—"
"Two weeks," cried Seregil. "Praise the Flame for hardheaded Sakoran common
sense! You may have just saved us all, Micum. What do you say to that, Valerius?
Would he be strong enough in two weeks?"
"With his will, it's possible," the drysian admitted grudgingly. As for the
state of his powers, though, only he could say."
Seregil gave the wizard a hopeful look. "Magyana?"
She contemplated her folded hands for a long moment, then said softly, "By
then, yes, I should be able to assist him with a translocation of that distance.
But the decision must be his."
Micum slapped a hand on the table and stood up. "Then it's settled. We'll
sail without him and he can catch us up when the time is right."
Reaching into his purse, Seregil took out a small silver amulet, the twin of
the one he'd given to Rhal.
"This will guide you to our ship, the 'Green Lady,"" he told Magyana, giving
it to her. "There's no guarantee we'll still be with her then, but Rhal may be
able to tell you where we've gone. Wait, there's another way, too."
He took a clean rag from a pile near the worktable. Pricking his thumb with
his dagger, he dabbed a few spots of blood onto the cloth and knotted it
tightly.
"You won't miss me with that," he said. "Micum should do one, too, just to be
safe. If you'll excuse me now, I want a moment with Nysander."
Magyana looked down at the stained cloth in distaste when Seregil had
disappeared downstairs.
"I abhor blood magic," she said. "So does Nysander. Oh, Micum, do you really
believe all this is what Nysander intended? Seregil has had so many terrible
shocks."
"I don't know," Micum said quietly, pricking his own finger and staining
another bit of cloth for her.
"But I do know that nothing short of death is going to stop him from going on
with it. If he's right, then maybe there's a chance of getting Alec back, and
perhaps even stop whatever it is that the Plenimarans are up to. If he's wrong—"
Micum gave a resigned shrug. "I can't just let him dash off by himself, can
I?"
"And what of your own family?" asked Valerius as Micum stood to go.
For the first time that day Micum managed a wry smile. "Kari won't budge from
Watermead unless the enemy's in sight. Wamik's given me his word to watch over
her until I return."
The drysian smiled through his unruly beard. "A
strong-minded woman, your wife. The eldest, Beka, is no different."
"By the Flame, Beka!" groaned Micum. "I promised Kari I'd ask Nysander to
look for her."
"Rest yourself, Magyana," Valerius said as the wizard moved to rise. "Give me
your hand, Micum, and think of your eldest daughter."
Clasping his staff in one hand, Valerius took Micum's in his other and closed
his eyes. After several minutes he announced, "She is well. I see her riding
with good companions."
"And Alec?" Micum asked, still gripping the drysian's hand. "Can you see
anything of him?"
Valerius concentrated, frowning. "Only that he is not among the dead, nothing
more. I'm sorry."
Alec's teeth rotted and fell loose in his mouth.
Hot bile rose in the back of his throat, made doubly foul by the feel of the
snakes squirming in his belly. He wanted desperately to curl up, writhe away
from the interminable agony, but the iron spikes driven through his hands and
feet held him spread-eagled. Blind and helpless, he lay waiting for release back
into the dark dreams where there was only the sighing of wind and water—
Occasionally faces would intrude on his darkness, swimming out of the murk
only long enough to leer, fading back out of sight before he could put names to
them.
Fevers rose, flaming across his skin to burn out every memory until nothing
remained but the rush of the sea—
Alec felt the chill of a salt-laden breeze against his bare skin, but no
pain. His limbs felt heavy, too heavy to move just yet, but he ran his tongue
over his teeth and found them sound. How could a nightmare feel so real, he
wondered, or leave him so drained and confused?
The cold breeze helped clear his mind, but the world was still rolling under
him in a vaguely familiar fashion. Opening his eyes, he blinked up at broad,
square-rigged sails bellied out against a noonday sky.
And two Plenimaran marines.
Scrambling up to his knees, Alec reached instinctively for his dagger, but
someone had stripped him to his breechclout, leaving him helpless. The marines
laughed, and he recognized them as two of the men who'd pushed him around in
Wolde.
"Don't be frightened, Alec."
Alec rose slowly to his feet, too stunned to speak. Less than ten feet away,
Duke Mardus leaned at his ease against the ship's rail.
He'd been seated the one time Alec had seen him.
He hadn't guessed how tall Mardus was. But the man's handsome, aesthetic
face, closely trimmed black beard, and scarred left cheek-Alec remembered those
well enough. And the smile that never quite reached his eyes.
"I trust you slept well." Impeccably dressed in leather and velvet, Mardus
regarded him with all the solicitude of an attentive host.
How did I get here? Alec wondered, still at a loss for words. A few details
trickled back to him: the frantic ride to Watermead, a snarling dog, unlit
lanterns, hoping to find Seregil home. Beyond that, however, there was only a
blank greyness tinged with dread.
"But you're cold," Mardus observed, unpinning the gold broach that secured
the neck of his cloak.
He motioned to the guards, who pulled Alec roughly forward and held him while
Mardus swung the heavy folds around his bare shoulders.
Holding the brooch in place with one gloved hand,
Mardus slid the long pin through one of the holes until its blunt point
pressed against Alec's windpipe.
Terrified, Alec fixed his gaze in the buttons of Mardus' velvet surcoat and
waited. The pin pressed harder against his throat, but not quite hard enough to
break the skin.
"Look at me, Alec of Kerry. Come now, you mustn't be shy."
Mardus' voice was disarmingly gentle. Without wanting to, Alec found himself
looking up into the man's black eyes.
"That's better." Still smiling, Mardus fixed the brooch in place. You must
not fear me. You're quite safe under my care. In fact, I shall guard you like a
lion."
Alec felt someone come up behind him.
"Perhaps he does not understand his situation well enough to be properly
grateful," a heavily accented voice hissed near his ear.
The speaker moved to stand by Mardus, and Alec recognized him as the silent
"diplomat" who'd been with Mardus at Wolde.
"Perhaps not," Mardus said agreeably. "You must understand, Alec, that Vargul
Ashnazai was all for gutting you like a fish the moment he laid hands on you.
Not an unjustified reaction, considering the trouble you and your friend have
put us to over the past few months. It was I who prevented him from doing so.
"Why, he's nothing but an impressionable boy," I said many times as we stalked
the two of you through the streets of Rhiminee."
"Many times," the necromancer said with a poisonous smile. "Sometimes I fear
that the softness of my Lord Mardus' heart will lead him into harm."
"And yet how else am I to feel when I see such an intelligent and
enterprising young man fallen in with such company." Mardus shook his head
sadly. "A renegade Aurenfaie spy, outcast from his own people to whore for the
queen of a decadent land, and a wizard admitted even by his own kind to be a mad
fool?
"No, Vargul Ashnazai," I said, "we must first see if this poor lad can be
saved.""
Mardus grasped Alec by the shoulders, slowly pulling him close enough for
Alec to feel the man's breath on his face. His eyes seemed to go an impossible
shade darker as he asked, "What do you think, Alec? Can you be saved?"
Trapped in the intensity of Mardus' gaze, Alec kept silent. Despite'the
implicit threat behind those honeyed words, there was something dangerously
compelling in the man's manner, a force of personality that left Alec feeling
powerless.
"This one has a stubborn nature," the one called Vargul Ashnazai muttered. "I
fear he will disappoint you."
"Let's not be hasty in our opinion," said Mardus. "This Seregil of Rhiminee
may have some claim upon his loyalty. You did say, after all, that you believe
young Alec here has Aurenfaie blood in his veins."
"I am certain of it, my lord."
"Perhaps that's the impediment. There were so many conflicting rumors around
the city. Tell me, Alec, is he by chance your father? Or a half brother? Age is
so difficult to gauge with these Aurenfaie and they are by nature deceitful."
"No," Alec managed at last, his voice sounding faint and childish in his
ears.
Mardus raised an eyebrow. "No? But friend, certainly. He may have called you
his apprentice during that unfortunate masquerade in Wolde, but your
circumstances in Rhiminee belie it. So then, friend. Perhaps even lover?"
Alec felt his face go hot as the soldiers snickered.
"I recognize loyalty when I see it," Mardus said. "I admit I am impressed to
find it in one so young, even if it is blind loyalty to a man who abandoned
you."
"He didn't!" Alec snarled.
Mardus gestured around them at the ship, the empty sea stretching away on all
sides. "Didn't he? Ah, well. I suppose it's of little consequence to me what you
choose to believe. Still, you might wonder why this trusted friend of yours
chose to leave you to your fate when he might have saved you."
"You lie!" Alec was trembling now. He still couldn't remember anything that
had happened after his arrival at the Cockerel.
"Are you so certain?" Mardus' smile was tinged with pity. "Well, we'll speak
again when you're less overwrought. Vargul Ashnazai, would you be so kind as to
assist Alec with some calming meditations?"
"Of course, my lord."
Alec tried to flinch away, but the guards held him still as the other man
pressed cold, dry fingers against his cheekbone and jaw. For an instant Alec was
overwhelmed by a thick, rotten odor, then a terrible blackness engulfed him,
plunging him back into a morass of illness and pain where he couldn't escape the
mocking echo of Seregil's long-forgotten warning, Fall behind and I'll leave
you, leave you, leave you—
Alec awoke in the dim confines of a tiny cabin.
Still panting from the residual terror of the necromancer's trance, he sat up
in the narrow bunk and tried to make out his surroundings. There was no lantern,
but the weak light filtering in through a grate in the cabin door was enough to
illuminate the foot of another bunk against the opposite wall.
Above the rush of water against the hull, he heard the distant, muffled sound
of someone weeping loudly. The smell of rich broth wafted in from somewhere
nearby, and he realized that he was hungry in spite of the lingering effects of
the necromancer's magic.
Throwing off the thin blanket, he climbed out of the bunk, then froze. Now
that his eyes had adjusted to the dim light, he could see that the other bunk
was occupied. A figure lay stretched there under a blanket, face hidden in the
shadows. Clearing his throat nervously, Alec reached out to touch the person's
shoulder.
"Hello. Are you—"
A hand shot from beneath the blanket, grasping his wrist in a ferocious,
ice-cold grip. Alec lunged back, but the other man hung on, lurching up as Alec
tried to pull free.
"By the Light," Alec gasped. "Thero!"
The young wizard was as naked as Alec, and a set of branks had been fastened
around his head. Iron bands encircling the lower part of his face held an iron
gag piece in his mouth, while another passed tightly over the top of his head
between his eyes to join the first in the back. An opening for his nose had been
left in the vertical band and the whole thing was secured under his chin by a
chain. When Thero tried to speak around the gag his voice was hardly
intelligible. Saliva dripped from the corners of his mouth to collect in his
sparse beard and Alec guessed from the look in his eyes that he was either
insane or terrified.
"Ah'ek?" Thero managed, still gripping his wrist with one hand as he brought
the other up to touch Alec's face. Wide iron bands inscribed with symbols
encircled his wrists.
"What are you doing here?" Alec whispered in disbelief.
Thero gabbled thickly for a moment, his desperation clear. Then, releasing
Alec, he beat his fists against his head until Alec had to restrain him.
"No, Thero. Stop it. Stop!" Alec shook him roughly by the shoulders. Thero's
pale, bony chest heaved with emotion as he shook his head violently and tried to
pull away.
"You've got to calm down and talk to me," Alec hissed, caught somewhere
between anger and terror himself. "We're in one hell of a mess and we're going
to need each other to get out of it. Now let me try and get this contraption
off."
But the branks were locked securely in back and he had no tools to open it.
He searched the cabin with the scant hope of finding something-a nail, perhaps,
or a splinter of wood-to use as a makeshift pick.
He found nothing except a bowl of broth by the door. Hungry as he was, he
left it untouched in case it was drugged or poisoned.
Perhaps that's what's wrong with Thero, he told himself as his stomach
rumbled. The drooling creature cowering on the bunk bore little resemblance to
Nysander's reserved assistant.
Giving up at last, he sat down beside Thero on the bunk. "There's nothing
here. You've got to tell me what you know. Go slow so I can understand you."
Still wild-eyed, Thero nodded and said slowly around the gag, was
"Eye'ander's 'ead."
"What?" Alec gasped, praying he'd misunderstood.
" 'ysander dead. Dead!" Thero wailed, rocking violently back and forth in
misery. "My fault!"
"Stop that," Alec ordered, shaking him by the shoulders. "Thero, you talk to
me. What happened to Nysander? Did you see him killed or did Mardus just tell
you it happened?"
"Carried me 'own, "lack creatures-through walls, floors-to— " Thero hugged
himself, shuddering. "'tacked 'reska—'sander on the floor, they made me look. My
fault, mine!"
"Why is it your fault?" Alec demanded, shaking him again. "Thero, what did
you do?"
With a low moan, Thero wrenched away and curled deeper into the corner. There
were long, curved scratches on his back and sides, and little crescent-shaped
bruises along the tops of his shoulders.
"It was Ylinestra, wasn't it?" Alec asked, a vague, half-formed memory
shifting uneasily at the back of his mind. "She did something, or you told her
something?"
Thero nodded mutely, refusing to look at him.
Alec stared at him a moment longer, then rage exploded like a blazing sun in
his chest. Grasping the iron band at the back of Thero's head, he yanked the
young wizard out of his corner and shook him like a rat.
"You listen to me, Thero, and you listen well. If it does turn out that you
betrayed us and got Nysander killed, then by all the Four I'll kill you myself
and that's a promise! But I'm not sure about anything yet and I don't think you
are, either. They've done something to your mind and you've got to fight it.
Fight their magic and tell me what it was you said or did. What she did!"
"'on't know," Thero whispered hopelessly, spittle running from the corners of
his mouth. "She kep' me with her 'at night. When black 'uns came, she 'eld me
with 'agic. "en she thanked me and she laughed—She laughed!"
Releasing Thero in disgust, Alec pressed his fists against his eyes until
fiery stars danced behind his closed lids.
"Thero, what did they do to you? Why can't you use your magic?"
Thero held out one arm, showing him the strange iron band.
"These keep you from using your magic?" Alec reached out and felt the
unnatural coldness of the burnished metal. Running his hands over them, he could
find no sign of any seam, joint, or hinge.
"Think so—" Thero shifted uneasily, wiping at his damp beard. "Not 'ertain.
So much confused, nightmares, voices! "don't dare, A'ek, I don't dare!"
"You mean you haven't even tried?" Alec grasped
Thero's arms, bringing the bands in front of his face.
"You've got to try something, anything. For all we know these may just be a
trick, something to cloud your mind."
Thero shrank back, shaking his head desperately.
"You have to," Alec insisted, feeling his own desperation creeping back.
"We've got to get away from Mardus. There's a lot you don't know, but believe
me, Nysander would want you to help me. If you want to make things right, then
you've got to at least try!"
"'ander?" Thero's chest heaved as he looked distractedly around the cabin, as
if he expected to find Nysander there. " 'ander?"
Sensing a chink in whatever madness held Thero, Alec nodded encouragingly.
"Yes, Thero, Nysander. Concentrate on him, his kindness, Thero, all the years
you spent with him in the east tower. For the sake of the faith he placed in
you, you've got to at least try. Please."
Thero twisted the edge of the blanket in his fists as tears rolled from his
mad eyes. "P'rhaps," he whispered faintly, "p'rhaps—"
"Just something very small," Alec urged. "One of those little spells. What
are they called?"
Thero nodded slowly, still twisting the blanket. " 'an'rips."
"That's right. Cantrips! Just a simple one, a tiny little cantrip."
Trembling visibly, Thero half closed his eyes in preparation for the spell
but suddenly looked up again. "You 'aid there's some'ing I 'on't know," he asked
with a sudden flash of his customary sharpness. "What? I's his 'sistant; why
didn't he tell me?"
"I don't know," Alec confessed, getting the gist of Thero's question. "He
told us—told me so little I'm not even sure what it's all about. But he swore me
to secrecy. I shouldn't have said anything at all, I guess. Maybe later, when
we're out of this—"
Alec trailed off, suddenly wary. Thero was watching him intently, hanging on
every word. "We'll talk about it later, all right? Please, try the spell now."
"'ell me first! Could 'elp!" Thero insisted, and this time there was no
mistaking the feral intelligence in his eyes.
"No," Alec said, slowly moving away, though there was nowhere to go. "I can't
tell you."
He tensed for some attack, but instead Thero slumped over sideways on the
bunk like a discarded puppet.
The cabin door opened behind him and Alec felt a wave of terrible coldness
roll into the room.
Whirling in alarm, he confronted a walking horror.
It took a moment to see that the wizened husk had once been a woman. Lively
blue eyes regarded him slyly from the masklike ruin of her face.
"That is most ungrateful of you, boy," she rasped, the cracked remnants of
her lips curling back to reveal uneven yellow teeth, "but I think that you will
tell me."
Stretched prone on the crest of the hill, Beka and Sergeant Braknil shielded
their eyes from the drizzle and surveyed the little village below. There were
large granaries and warehouses there, the walls of which still had the pale
gleam of new wood.
Empty wagons of all descriptions stood near a sizable corral. All this,
coupled with the cavalry troop billeted just outside the wooden palisade, added
up to one thing: a supply depot.
"Looks like you were right, Lieutenant!" Braknil whispered, grinning
wolfishly through his beard.
Satisfied with their reconnaissance, they made their way cautiously back to
the oak grove where the rest of the turma was waiting.
"What's the word?" asked Rhylin.
"We found Commander Klia's adders," Braknil told him.
"A good nest of them, too," said Beka. "But only one nest, and it took us
four days to do it. From the looks of it, I'd say it's just one link in a supply
chain."
"You think we should look farther before we go back?" asked Corporal Kallas.
He was still mourning his brother and had the look of a man who'd welcome a
fight.
Beka looked around at their dirty, hopeful faces. The depot was an important
emplacement, enough of a find to go back with now that their food was running
low and the weather had turned foul.
Her leg ached dully as she shifted her weight.
The gash in her thigh had festered just enough to kindle a fever. Though it
broke her sleep at night with confused dreams, it seemed to sharpen her wits
during the day, as fevers sometimes did.
"We'll circle wide and see if we can learn where the wagons are coming from,"
she said at last.
For two days they followed the supply route as it wound south into the
steeper country above the head of the Plenimaran isthmus. Beka kept her riders
well up in the wooded hills, sending scouts ahead and behind as they went. They
spotted two separate wagon trains heading west, but both were too heavily
guarded to attack.
Their seventh day out dawned cold and foggy. Reining her horse to the side of
the steep track, Beka watched as the remains of her turma rode past; the fog
made it difficult to see more than thirty feet in any direction and she couldn't
afford to lose any stragglers. The uncertain light and muffling effect of the
mist lent the riders a ghostly, insubstantial look.
They all rode with growling bellies. Their food was nearly gone and game was
scarce. With the rain and the plentiful mountain springs they had water enough,
but hunger soon took the edge off a soldier's strength. It would probably be
wisest to turn back today.
Just as she was about to call a halt, however, Braknil materialized out of
the fog and cantered over to her.
"The scouts found a way station ahead, Lieutenant. They report four big
wagons unhitched there and only a handful of guards," he informed Beka quietly,
then added with a knowing wink, "Quite a manageable gathering, I'd say.
Especially in this weather, if you take my meaning."
"I believe I do, Sergeant."
Leaving Rhylin in command, she followed Braknil to a stone outcropping where
Mirn was waiting with several horses.
"You can see it from just around the next bend in the trail," he told them,
his face flushed and eager beneath his shock of pale hair. Mirn had always
reminded Beka a bit of Alec, though a taller, more muscular version.
Proceeding on foot, they found Steb keeping watch.
"You can see better now," he told them, pointing down a gap. "This breeze
that's coming up should clear it off before long."
From where they stood, Beka could see a road winding through the narrow cleft
of a pass. There was a way station there, an old tumble-down log building, but
the stable and large corral next to it were sturdy and new.
Rocky slopes rose steeply on both sides of the road, making it the only
passable route of attack or escape.
"I've been watching the place," Steb told them. "I'd say there's no more than
two dozen soldiers and a few wagoneers down there. Nobody's ridden in or out
since we found the place an hour ago."
Judging by the activity in the yard, Beka guessed the wagoneers were getting
ready to move out, though neither they nor their military escort seemed in any
particular hurry. Many still lounged around the station door with trenchers and
mugs. The breeze coming up the pass carried the tantalizing aroma of breakfast
fires.
She studied the fog still shrouding the road leading up to the station. "If
we move fast, we might get within two hundred yards of the enemy before they
catch a good look at us."
"And if we circle by this trail and come in on the road from the east,
chances are they'll think we're friendly forces anyway," whispered Braknil.
"Good idea. The Plenimaran cavalry columns travel at a canter in ranks of
four. We'll line up in the same formation. Put anyone who's riding with
Plenimaran tack in front in case they recognize the jingle of the harness."
Sergeant Braknil raised an eyebrow, looking impressed. "Who taught you to be
such a sly thinker, Lieutenant?"
Beka gave him a wink. "A friend of the family."
Their ruse paid off. The Plenimarans scarcely looked up from their breakfasts
as the turma came cantering toward them out of the mist. By the time they drew
swords and broke into a gallop, it was already too late.
They thundered up to the station, whooping and screaming at the top of their
lungs. A few of the Plenimaran soldiers stood their ground. Most broke and ran
for cover in the station and outbuildings.
Galloping at full speed, the Skalans rode down the men who stood against
them. The Plenimarans put up a brief, determined fight but were no match for the
flashing swords and iron-shod hooves that mowed them down.
With the station's one line of defense destroyed, Beka shouted an order and
the riders split into decuriae.
Braknil spotted men running for the cover of the stable and chose that as his
target. Wheeling toward the low-roofed building, he and his riders drove the
would-be escapees into the stable, then tossed the Plenimarans' own night
lanterns into the straw piled outside the back door. Within seconds, screams
rang out from the panicked horses stabled inside. Choking and cursing, those
who'd taken refuge there came stumbling out again and were herded at sword point
into the corral.
Rhylin and his decuria attacked the station building.
Dashing up to the door, the ungainly sergeant leapt from his horse and threw
himself against the door, knocking it open just as the men inside were trying to
thrust the bar into place. His assault was successful, but he was nearly
trampled for his efforts as the rest of his decuria, led by Kallas and Ariani,
stormed in to his aid. The soldiers and wagoneers inside surrendered
immediately.
Beka and a handful of riders rode off in pursuit of the Plenimarans who had
fled at the first sign of attack. Most of those on foot were easily overtaken,
but several who'd gotten onto horses broke away down the east road. Beka and her
group took off in pursuit, but their quarry had the advantage of fresh horses
and a knowledge of the country. Cursing under her breath, she turned back.
The remaining Plenimarans had been gathered in the station building.
"I took count, Lieutenant," Braknil informed her as she dismounted. "Nineteen
enemy dead and fifteen taken, counting the wagoneers and stationmaster. Sergeant
Rhylin's got the prisoners under guard."
Beka surveyed the bodies scattered between the buildings and the road. "Any
losses for us?"
"Not a scratch," the sergeant replied happily. "Those little tricks of yours
worked!"
"Good." Beka hoped her relief wasn't too obvious. "We don't want to make the
same mistake as our friends in there, so post lookouts on the road. Corporal
Nikides!"
"Here, Lieutenant." The young man rode over to where she stood.
"Get someone to help you check the wagons. Let's hope we haven't gone to all
this trouble for a load of horseshoes and slop pails."
"Yes, Lieutenant!" Grinning, he snapped a salute and rode off again.
Inside the station, the Plenimarans sat packed together at the far end of the
building's single narrow room under the watchful eyes of Rhylin's guards. Six of
the captives were wagoneers; the rest wore black military tunics displaying a
white castle emblem.
Rhylin snapped Beka a smart salute as she entered. "We've searched the
prisoners and the buildings, Lieutenant. Nothing of note found. It looks like a
routine supply train."
"Very good, Sergeant."
Beka's long red braid fell free over her shoulder as she removed her helmet.
The prisoners exchanged glances and low murmurs among themselves at the sight of
it. Several stared at her boldly and one spat sideways onto the floor.
Gilly moved to avenge the insult, but Beka stayed him with a glance.
"Who's the ranking officer here?" she demanded, not bothering to sheath her
sword. The prisoners simply stared back at her, silent and insolent.
"Do any of you speak Skalan?"
Again the blank silence. The Plenimarans" disdain for female soldiers was
legend, but this was her first exposure to it. A trickle of sweat inched down
her back as all eyes turned to her.
Rider Tare, a young, red-haired squire's son with the solid build of a
wrestler, stepped forward with a respectful salute. "By your leave, Lieutenant,
I speak a little Plenimaran."
"Go on, then."
Tare turned and addressed the prisoners haltingly.
A few snickered. None replied.
Well, I've got the badger by the hind leg, as the saying goes. Now what the
hell do I do with it?
Beka thought, racking her brain. The thought of Seregil's sly, lopsided grin
brought her inspiration.
With a careless shrug, she said aloud, "Well, they had their chance. Sergeant
Rhylin, see that they're securely bound. Sergeant Braknil, your decuria is in
charge of burning the place."
A few of her own people exchanged worried looks, but the sergeants obeyed
without question.
One of the wagoneers whispered excitedly to a grizzled soldier next to him.
The man went an angry red, then hissed something back. Rising on one knee, the
wagoneer bowed awkwardly to Beka.
"A moment, Lieutenant, I speak your language," he said in passable Skalan.
"Captain Teratos says he will parley with your commanding officer as soon as
he arrives."
Beka favored the Plenimaran captain with an icy look. "Wagoneer, first tell
this man that I am the commanding officer here until the rest of our troop
arrives. When my captain arrives, she will have less patience with him than I
do. Then inform him that Skalan officers do not parley with those they have
defeated. I will ask questions. He will answer them."
The wagoneer quickly interpreted Beka's words for the captain. The man stared
at her for a moment, then spat wetly between his feet. This time Beka made no
move to stop Gilly as he brought the flat of his sword down on the man's head.
"My men don't approve of his discourtesy, wagoneer," Beka went on calmly.
"Tell him that we're hungry, and that the roasted flesh of our enemy is more
succulent than pork. Sergeant Braknil, fetch the torches." Turning on her heel,
she strode outside.
Braknil followed her out. "You don't really mean to burn those men?"
"Of course not, but we don't want them to know that, do we? Let's give them a
few minutes to consider their situation."
Syra ran over to her just then, clutching a strip of salted fish and a cup of
beer. "Lieutenant, Corporal Nikides sends you breakfast with his compliments,"
she said, handing them to Beka. "There's barley meal, too, but he said to tell
you 'no slop jars.""
Beka took a swallow of warm beer. "That's a relief. Spread the word; each
rider is to take as much fish and meal as they can carry. We'll have to leave
the beer. As soon as everyone has what they need, burn the rest. Sergeant
Braknil, see that Rhylin's riders are relieved as soon as yours are supplied—"
She was interrupted by the sound of a horse coming in from the west. It was
Mirn, who'd been sent out as a lookout.
"Enemy riders headed this way!" he shouted to her.
"Cavalry column, two score riders at least."
"Damn!" Motioning the others to silence, she listened intently for a few
seconds; no sound of the approaching riders yet. The mist was still with them,
but the smell of the burning stable would carry for a mile. "Spread the word,
Mirn. Everyone grabs an extra horse and food and heads east. If anyone gets
separated, they're to circle back and head for the regiment with word of what we
found. Go!"
Rhylin came running out of the station with his people. "What about the
prisoners?"
"Leave them. Get out of here!" The staccato rumble of the approaching column
was audible now.
Leaping onto her horse, Beka galloped to the wagon and yanked out the first
sack her hand fell on.
An arrow sang over her head as she slung the bag over her saddlebow. Another
shaft thudded into the side of the wagon as she wheeled her mount, galloping
down the eastern road just as the first of the Plenimaran outriders burst out of
the thinning mist.
Hoping the fire at the station would halt at least some of the enemy, Beka
led her riders deeper into Plenimaran territory.
It was silent and dark under the water. Seregil could see the bright silver
surface wavering above him as he struggled, but something in the depths below
gripped his ankle, holding him just out of reach.
A tall, dark figure loomed over him, distorted by the surface refraction. It
saw Seregil floating helplessly below and beckoned to him.
With a final, frantic kick, he managed to get his face above water just long
enough to fill his bursting lungs. As he did so, he looked up into the face of
the man standing over him. The lips moved as he told Seregil what he must do.
He couldn "t understand the words, but they filled him with such horror all
the same that he cried out and water poured into his mouth as the unseen force
below pulled him under again-
"Seregil! Seregil, wake up, damn it."
Gasping for air, Seregil focused on Micum's worn, freckled face, the ship,
the open sea around them.
The ship. The open sea.
"Oh, shit, not again," Seregil groaned, pressing his fingers against his
throbbing temples. Over his friend's broad shoulder, he saw a few sailors
gathered nervously nearby, craning their necks for a glimpse of him.
"Did I-?"
Micum nodded. "They heard you clear back to the stern this time. This is the
third time."
"Fourth." In the week since they'd set sail, the dream—whatever it was, since
he couldn't recall it when he woke—had come more often. Worse yet, he was
beginning to nod off at odd times during the day to have it, this time in broad
daylight right here at the foot of the bow platform.
"Any man with time on his hands can report to me for extra duty," barked
Captain Rhal, scattering the knot of gawkers as he stumped up the deck.
Reaching Micum and Seregil, he lowered his voice to a growl. "You said you'd
keep to your cabin after the last time. The men are beginning to talk. What am I
supposed to tell them?"
"Whatever you can," Micum replied, helping Seregil to his feet.
"Those two who were with you on the Darter, can they still be trusted?"
Seregil asked.
"I've told them to keep their mouths shut about that and they will." Rhal
paused, still frowning. "But Skywake's muttering about you being a jinx, a
stormcrow. He knows better than to say it outright but the others are starting
to sense it."
Seregil nodded resignedly. "I'll keep out of sight."
Micum followed as he headed for the companionway. "By the Flame, you'll get
us pitched over the side for certain if you don't mind yourself," he muttered.
"These sailors are worse than soldiers when it comes to anything that looks
like an omen." Seregil ran a hand back through his lank hair.
"What did I say this time?"
"Same as before, just 'no, I can't' over and over until I got to you. I
suppose I shouldn't have left you when I saw that you'd dozed off." Entering
their cabin, Micum dropped onto his bunk.
"Did you remember any of it this time?"
"No more than before," Seregil sighed, stretching out on his own bunk with a
flask of ale. "I'm drowning, and I see someone looking down at me through the
water. That's all I can ever recall, but it scares the hell out of me. The
closer we get to Plenimar, the worse it feels."
"I'm not so happy about it myself," Micum said with a wry grin.
Since rounding the southern tip of Skala two days before, they'd spotted half
a dozen enemy vessels in the distance, and outrun two of these. This was another
point of contention with the crew; there would be no bounty to divide up if they
didn't engage.
"You don't suppose Nysander could be trying to reach you this way?" Micum
asked without much hope.
"I wish it was, but I think I'd feel it if it was that." He took a sip of ale
and stared disconsolately up at the cabin ceiling.
"Illior's Light, Micum, what I do feel is a wrongness in him not being here.
And Alec."
Seregil reached inside his coat, felt the dagger hilt there, and the soft
lock of hair. If they were too late, if Alec died, was dead already—
"You never said anything to him, did you?" asked Micum. "About your feelings
for him, that is?"
"No, I never did."
His friend shook his head slowly. "That's a pity."
Aura Elustri malreis, Seregil prayed silently, clenching the hilt until his
knuckles ached. Aura Elustri watch over him and keep him until I can plunge this
same knife into the hearts of his enemies.
The pounding of feet on deck overhead woke them just after dawn the next
morning.
"Enemy sail off the port bow!" a lookout shouted.
Snatching up their swords, Seregil and Micum ran above.
Standing at the helm, Rhal pointed toward the northeastern horizon, where a
black and white striped sail was just visible. "The bastards must've sighted us
last night and trailed us."
"Can we outrun them?" asked Micum, shading his eyes. At this distance he
could already make out the vessel itself, running low and fast over the waves.
"From the cut of their sails, I'd say not. Looks like we'll have to fight
this time," Rhal replied with a certain grim satisfaction. "I know your feelings
on this, Seregil, but it'd be best if we take the offensive."
Seregil said nothing for a moment, but appeared to be studying the oncoming
vessel. "The sails on that vessel aren't so different from ours, are they?" he
asked.
"No, we're rigged out about the same."
"So you could sail this ship with those sails?"
Rhal grinned, catching his drift. "In the proper navy they'd call that a
dishonorable trick."
"Which is why I stick with privateers," Seregil replied, grinning back. "The
closer we get to Plenimar, the less attention we'd attract, at least from a
distance."
"By the Old Sailor, Lord Seregil, you've the makings of a great pirate in
you. Trouble is, if you want the sails off her, we can't use our fire baskets."
"Keep it as a last resort and throw everything else you've got at her."
"All hands, prepare for battle," Rhal sang out, and the call was passed down
the deck.
The crew of the Lady sprang to action with a will. The pilot have the ship
around to meet the Plenimaran challenger. Hatches were dragged back, the
catapults fitted into their bracing sockets along the deck and on the battle
platforms fore and aft, and baskets of stones, chain, and lead balls hauled up
from the hold. Rhal's archers took their places and the edge of every sword and
cutlass was given a final touch of the thumb.
"She's showing the battle flag, Captain," the lookout shouted as they bore
down on the enemy ship.
"Run up the same!" answered Rhal.
Micum lost sight of Seregil in the general confusion, but his friend
reappeared moments later with Alec's bow.
"Here," he said, handing it to Micum without meeting his eye. "You're better
with this than I am."
Before Micum could think of a reply, Seregil hurried off to join one of the
catapult crews.
The Plenimaran ship swooped toward them across the waves like an osprey,
closing the distance rapidly.
"A warship, Captain, and they got fire baskets lit!" the sharp- eyed lookout
called down.
"How are they set?" Rhal bellowed back.
"Two catapults to a side, fore and aft! Fire baskets to the fore."
"Keep at her bow, helmsman!"
As the ships closed within a few hundred yards of each other, archers on both
sides took aim.
Standing with Rhal's bowmen along the port rail, Micum listened to the
bowstring song of Alec's Black Radly as he loosed shaft after shaft at the
enemy. The song was quickly answered. Plenimaran arrows whined and buzzed across
the water at him like angry dragonflies.
Welken, the faithful lookout, crashed to the deck with a shaft through his
chest. Nettles was hit in the leg but kept on shooting. Others fell and the
shouting and screams on both sides echoed over the water between the vessels.
No shortage of arrows,
Micum thought, pulling enemy shafts from the deck and rail and sending them back
the way they'd come.
The heavy thud of the catapults sounded fore and aft as catapults on both
sides let fly. Flaming balls of a pitchy concoction known as Sakor's Fire sailed
across the
Lady's bow, narrowly missing her forward sail. The Lady responded with double
loads of chain that clawed through the enemy's rigging, collapsing one of her
mainsails like a broken wing. Panicked shouts rang out on the enemy ship as she
slowed.
"Hard about and give her another!" Rhal ordered.
Skywake fought the rudder to port and the Lady leaned dangerously into the
waves as they wheeled to press their advantage. A groaning volley from the port
catapults smashed the Plenimarans' forward mast and the enemy ship yawed,
wallowing in the swells.
Like a wounded dragon, the Plenimarans released a second volley of Sakor's
Fire as the Lady passed. This one found its mark, striking the forward platform.
An oily sheet of flame engulfed a catapult and its crew. Burning men fell
writhing to the deck or leapt overboard. Sailors tore the covers from sand
barrels lashed against the rails, smothering the flames before they could
spread.
Choking on the smell of burning flesh, Seregil dropped his load of chain and
ran up the platform ladder to help drag the wounded away from the flames.
"What now?" he called, spotting Rhal on the deck below.
"Hard around, strike sails and board 'em,"
Rhal yelled. "Makewell, Coryis, tell your group to stand ready with the
grapples."
A final volley of stones from a Plenimaran catapult shattered the Lady's main
mast as she bore down on them. Dodging the fallen spars, the grappling crew
tossed their hooks across and hauled the two ships together before the
Plenimarans could cut the ropes. As soon as the bulwarks were close enough to
leap, Rhal's
fighters boarded the other ship and waded into the black-uniformed marines
massed to repel them.
From his vantage point on the platform, Seregil scanned the fray for Micum's
red mane. As expected, his companion was already across in the thickest of the
fight.
The gods chose you well for the Vanguard, Seregil thought, shinnying down the
ladder and elbowing his way to the rail. Reaching it, he did his best to ignore
the foaming chasm that opened and closed beneath him as the two disabled vessels
wallowed in the swells. He-made his jump, drew his sword, and was immediately
confronted by a Plenimaran sailor armed with a cutlass.
The battle soon spread to both ships. Somehow in the confusion, Micum and
Seregil found each other and fought shoulder to shoulder, back to back, as the
precariously balanced fight raged on.
For a time it seemed that it would go on indefinitely, but in the midst of
the melee one of Rhal's seamen killed the captain of the Plenimaran ship. At
almost the same moment, Micum struck down the commander of the marines.
Confusion spread among the remaining enemy and they finally surrendered.
A cheer went up from the Lady as the surviving enemy sailors and soldiers
threw down their weapons in surly submission. Whooping and howling their
triumph, Rhal's men surged forward to loot the vanquished ship.
Exhausted, Seregil and Micum left them to it and jumped back aboard the Lady.
"By the Flame, that was a proper fight," Micum gasped, nudging a severed hand
out of the way with his foot before collapsing on a bulkhead.
Looking his friend over, Seregil saw that Micum had come out with no more
than a cut over one eye. He'd taken a shallow cut across the shoulder himself.
Stripping off his tunic and shirt, he glanced at it, then held a wad of cloth
against it to stanch the bleeding.
"Too close quarters for my taste," he said, collapsing on the deck with his
back to the bulkhead.
Rhal appeared from out of the surrounding confusion and strode over to where
they sat. "Well, we caught your ship for you but there's still better than
twenty of her crew left standing," he informed Seregil. "I know we don't want to
be weighed down with prisoners, but I'll tell you straight that I won't be a
party to the execution of beaten men."
"Neither will I," Seregil told him wearily.
"I say strip whatever we need off her, take the sails, and set the crew
adrift on her with food and water. How long will repairs to the Lady take?"
Rhal rubbed his jaw, looking around at the damage. "We'll have to step a new
mast and rig the new sails. No sooner than sunup tomorrow."
"How many days to Plenimar?"
Rhal eyed the sky. "Barring foul weather, I'd say three days, maybe four.
Running with Plenimaran sails could save us a fight or two."
Seregil looked to Micum, but the big man merely shrugged.
"Do it, then," Seregil told the captain. "And put the Plenimarans to work,
too."
Hands. Hands on him, touching, seeking, tormenting.
Alec wrapped his arms around his knees, curling tightly in the darkness of
the tiny cabin as he fought to block out the memory of being touched and wishing
he still had Thero for company. He'd seen no sign of the young wizard since that
first night on board the Kormados.
Mardus and his people were subtle in their methods; in all the terrible time
since his capture they hadn't once broken the skin, or drawn so much as a drop
of blood. But inside he hurt.
Oh, yes. He hurt very much.
The dyrmagnos Irtuk Beshar, a walking nightmare, had straddled him with her
withered hams, flaking fingers scrabbling over him in a grotesque parody of lust
as she ripped her way into his mind, raping the memories from him. She'd kissed
him afterward, thrusting a tongue like a ragged strip of moldy leather against
his clenched teeth.
The necromancer, Vargul Ashnazai, assisted her in these interrogations and
Alec soon came to fear him on a deeper level than he did the dyrmagnos or
Mardus.
The former carried out her hallucinatory tortures with zest, but as soon as
she'd finished,
Alec seemed to cease to exist in her mind. Mardus was more difficult to read.
It was he who directed the tortures and put the questions to Alec, his eyes flat
and soulless, his voice as gentle as a father's as he named the next obscenity
to be carried out.
Otherwise, however, he treated Alec with a peculiar mix of distance and
solicitude that bordered on courtliness. In the worst moments of torment,
Alec sometimes caught himself inexplicably looking to Mardus for rescue.
Ashnazai was different. In the presence of others, the necromancer maintained
an impassive demeanor.
Left alone with Alec, the searing hatred spilled out like acid.
"You and your vile companion cost me great status that night in Wolde," he'd
hissed in Alec's ear as the boy lay trembling in the darkness after one of the
dyrmagnos' assaults. "At first I thought only of killing you, but now, you see,
I am given by the Beautiful One to relish my revenge."
And relish it he did, until Alec came to dread the sight of him more than any
of the others.
Ashnazai's attacks left no marks, drew no blood. Instead, he salted his
spells with lurid descriptions of the murders he'd helped carry out at the
Cockerel.
"It's a pity you didn't arrive earlier that night," he told Alec. "The old
woman never said a word, but how that foolish son begged. And the girl! She
stayed proud right up until they hacked off the old bitch's head, then she
screamed, those great breasts of hers heaving. The men wanted to take her right
there on the bloody floor—"
Held silent and immobile by the magic, Alec could only shudder as Ashnazai
passed a clammy hand over his chest, then traced a hard line down his
breastbone. "Did you ever take her on that floor, boy? No? Ah, well, I suppose
other things happened there, eh? But then, snik, snik, snik, like so we had the
heads off for the mantel decoration.
I must say, your reaction was all that I'd have hoped for. I nearly added
your head to the collection, but then I thought of a more—how would you say?"
The necromancer traced the line down Alec's chest a second time with a look
of almost dreamy pleasure.
"A more satisfying revenge. You shall pay for the difficulties you made, and
be of great use."
The implication was clear enough. Thinking of the bodies Micum and Seregil
had seen, with their chests split open, ribs pulled back on either side like
wings, Alec wished they had killed him that first night.
The rounds of torture continued for several days and when they'd finished
with him, Alec finally understood why Nysander had told Seregil and him so
little. They wrung everything from him, though it was nothing more than the
fragment of the prophecy.
"There now. Well done, Alec," Mardus said, smiling down at him when the
dyrmagnos had finished. "But your Guardian is dead, this mysterious band of four
he spoke of sundered, broken. Poor Seregil. Even if he did desert you in the
end, he must be feeling a bit guilty at having brought such destruction down on
so many of his friends."
Torn loose from any shred of hope or pride, Alec could only turn his face
away and weep.
After the torture ceased, the soldiers became Alec's chief source of daily
misery. Among them were Mardus' captain, Tildus, and the men-at-arms who'd
bullied him in Wolde. With Seregil's training to guide him, he looked for a weak
link among them, a man with some fatal streak of sympathy, but Mardus had chosen
his personal guard with care.
A harsh, brutal lot, they'd crowded to the grate to listen when he was
tortured. Now they were the ones who dragged him above for the daily airings on
deck that Mardus insisted upon. They stood over him at meals, sniggered when he
begged for a pail to relieve himself. Few of them spoke any Skalan, but they
managed to get their crude jests and insults across.
A few of them made free with their hands, too, and laughed when he lashed out
at them.
The worst among them was a hairy, muscular brute called Gossol. During the
brief struggle at the Cockerel the night of his capture, Alec had smashed him in
the mouth with the hilt of his sword and broken off the man's front teeth.
Gossol held a grudge over it and made a special effort to torment him at every
opportunity.
On the morning of Alec's sixth day aboard, Gossol showed up alone to escort
him above. One look was enough to make Alec brace for trouble.
"Come you, man child," Gossol ordered in broken Skalan. The stumps of his
broken front teeth showed as he leered slyly and held up a cloak, the only
garment Alec was allowed except for his clout.
Alec understood. He'd have to go get it.
"Come quick, not seshka Mardus keep wait," Gossol chided.
"Toss it here," Alec said, holding out his hand.
Gossol's grin widened dangerously. Leaning against the door frame, he gave
the cloak a taunting shake. "No. You come, man child. Now."
Getting to his feet, Alec cautiously reached for the cloak. Gossol snatched
it away and laughed as Alec jumped back.
"What? You afraid of Gossol, little man child?"
He offered the cloak, pulled it back again with a sneer, then advanced on
Alec, backing him into the narrow space between the bunk and the wall. "You be
afraid, good. You break mouth of Gossol. Think whores like this mouth now? Eh?
You know whore, I think." Gossol made a lewd gesture.
"Whores don't like this broken mouth. Maybe you like, eh?"
Shoving Alec back against the wall hard enough to knock the breath out of
him, he pinned him there with the weight of his body and kissed him savagely on
the mouth.
Alec struggled furiously, but Gossol held him fast with one hand and ran the
other up Alec's belly to his nipple and gave it a vicious twist.
With a snarl, Alec gave up trying to push the heavy man off and instead bit
him on the lip.
Gossol pulled away and drew back his fist, but Alec beat him to the punch.
The moment his arms were free, he drove his fist into the startled guard's face
and felt the satisfying crunch of bone as Gossol's nose splintered.
Maddened, he grappled with Alec again, throwing him back onto the hard bunk
and locking a hand around his windpipe. As Alec fought for breath he heard
someone else storm in, cursing in Plenimaran.
Tildus dragged the enraged soldier off and struck him hard across the jaw
before pushing him into the arms of the other soldiers waiting at the door.
"Hell damn little bastard fool!" Tildus shouted, seeing blood on Alec's face
and chest.
He barked an order to another soldier in the companionway, then rounded on
Alec again. "If any of this is, yours, you dead as Gossol. No good if damaged.
Mardus slice you up like an eel, eat your rezhari for dinner!"
Someone fetched a bucket of water and a rag and Tildus set about sponging the
blood off Alec and looking for wounds.
As the guards pulled him this way and that, Alec considered what the captain
had just let slip; Mardus wanted him with a whole skin, no blood spilled. That
explained why they'd tortured him in the manner they had, but not why it was
necessary.
When Tildus had finished, he pushed Alec back onto the bunk and threw him the
cloak, really lucky bastard today. No cuts."
"Very lucky indeed."
Looking past Tildus and the guards, Alec saw Mardus standing in the doorway
with Vargul
Ashnazai.
"There has been some unpleasantness, I understand," Mardus continued, giving
Tildus an ominous look.
The captain rattled off a terse reckoning in his own tongue. Mardus answered
curtly in the same, and motioned to the necromancer.
Smiling thinly, Vargul Ashnazai made his own inspection of Alec. "The boy
remains unblemished, my lord."
"I'm glad to hear it. It would have been a great pity to have him come so
close to our destination and then go to waste. Come, Alec, walk with me. There's
something I think you'll enjoy."
Alec doubted it, but there was no choice but to obey.
Under close guard, he followed Mardus above.
It was an achingly beautiful day. The sky arched over the rolling sea like a
deep blue bowl. The ship cut through the white-capped waves, her striped sails
filled by a sweet following wind that sang through the yards and seemed to
cleanse some of the stench of captivity from his skin.
A large square of white canvas had been nailed to the deck just below the
forward battle platform.
Irtuk Beshar knelt at the center of it in an attitude of meditation, her
hideous hands curled on her knees.
For the first time, Alec saw how most of the sailors and marines gave her a
wide berth. Those who had to pass her kept their distance and averted their
eyes.
This was also the first time he'd been able to observe her with any
detachment. As usual, she wore rich, elaborate robes that contrasted hideously
with her scabrous head and hands. A few wisps of long dark hair still clung to
her scalp, and over it she wore a sort of veil fashioned from tiny gold chains
and beads.
Kneeling there in the bright sunshine, she looked as fragile as the dried
carapace of a locust, but Alec knew better all too well. In the Oreska museum
he'd seen the hands of another dyrmagnos, who'd been hacked to pieces and
scattered. Even after a century, those hands still moved. Looking down at the
small figure still meditating in front of him, Alec shuddered, wondering what
the true extent of her power was.
Captain Tildus shouted something in Plenimaran and a contingent of marines
lined up in two ranks flanking the square of canvas. A few sailors drifted over,
but not many. Mardus nodded to Alec's guards and they moved him in front of the
soldiers to the left.
Vargul Ashnazai went below through a different hatchway. While he was gone,
guards brought up another prisoner and stood with him opposite
Alec.
It was Thero.
Alec's relief at seeing him was short-lived, however. The young wizard's face
was as vacant as before beneath the iron bands of the branks, and there was the
gleam of madness in his wide, staring eyes. A grizzled man in nondescript robes
stood just behind him; another necromancer, he guessed.
Ashnazai returned, followed by two marines carrying a large chest on carrying
poles. The box and poles were both covered with gold and unfamiliar symbols.
This was set down in front of the dyrmagnos. As the others began chanting,
Ashnazai opened the chest and lifted out a crystal diadem that glittered in the
sunlight.
"Behold the Crown," he intoned reverently, placing it on the canvas before
Irtuk Beshar.
The sight of it wrenched at Alec's heart. This was the mysterious object
Seregil had risked his life to find for Nysander.
Ashnazai next lifted out a bowl made of crudely fired clay and placed it
inside the circlet. "Behold the Cup!"
Last came a loop of golden wire on which had been strung a number of wooden
disks. "Behold the Eyes of Seriamaius!"
Alec let out an involuntary gasp as the dyrmagnos began placing them, one by
one, inside the cup.
Mardus turned to Alec. "You recognize those, I'm sure. Just think, if the two
of you hadn't stolen one, you and poor Thero would not be standing here now. All
those lives lost, all that destruction, Alec, because of that one impetuous act.
Ah, but
I'm forgetting that it was Seregil who committed the actual theft. That's what
you told Irtuk Beshar, that you simply helped. But it all comes out the same in
the end, doesn't it. Here you are with me, and there he is, safely back in
Rhiminee, no doubt thinking himself very lucky. Can you still be loyal to this
faithless friend of yours?"
"Yes." Alec met Mardus' gaze levelly in a show of bravado he didn't feel.
Past Mardus, past the ship's rail and out over the wide sea he could see the
tiny dot of an island on the horizon, too far away to be of any use.
Just like Seregil.
A wave of longing rolled over Alec, bringing the sting of tears to his eyes.
All those days with Seregil taken for granted the memory of them made him ache
as he stood stranded among these enemies.
The dyrmagnos placed her withered hands over the crown for a moment, then
called out harshly in her own tongue.
There was a scuffling sound from belowdecks, followed by a terrified cry. A
moment later Gossol was hauled on deck by several soldiers. Bootless and
stripped to the waist, he looked around wildly at the gathering before him. When
he saw the dyrmagnos, however, he went ashen, his great barrel chest heaving in
voiceless terror.
"We were debating the choice of victim, but you have spared us the tiresome
inconvenience of a lottery," Mardus informed Alec pleasantly.
"This is only a preliminary sacrifice, of course. The blood of this ignorant
lump has neither the power nor purity of, say, a half Aurenfaie boy or an Oreska
wizard, but it's sufficient for our purposes today."
"That's why I'm still alive?" Alec managed, his voice scarcely more than a
dry croak.
"Certainly," Mardus assured him, as if promising him some gift. "You and
Thero are being reserved for the supreme moment. The power of your blood, Alec!
The long years sacrificed. Yours will be deaths of highest honor. You should pay
careful attention to this ceremony. Yours will be very much the same."
Gossol was thrown down on his back and held by four marines marked apart from
their fellows by white headbands.
A fifth man knelt holding a gag across the condemned man's mouth.
In the midst of his fear, Gossol suddenly locked eyes with Alec and shot him
a look of pure hatred. The power of it tightened Alec's throat and he quickly
averted his eyes, hating the guilt washing through him.
As the incomprehensible chanting went on, he looked instead at Thero, trying
to guess what was going on in the wizard's addled mind. Thero stood motionless,
locked mute by whatever magicks the necromancers had placed over him. Only the
spasmodic twitching of his fingers clutching the front of his cloak suggested
that he comprehended anything around him.
Irtuk spoke again and the second necromancer lifted something from where she
sat. As he passed it to Ashnazai, Alec saw it was a strange axlike weapon. The
heavy, curving head had been chipped out of black obsidian and bound onto an
iron haft. Despite its obvious weight, Vargul Ashnazai raised it above his head
with practiced ease. With no other paean than Gossol's strangled scream, he
struck and the black blade cleaved open the doomed man's breastbone as neatly as
a wood cutter would split an oak stave.
Alec turned his head quickly, squeezing his eyes shut until his head
throbbed. But he could not escape the sounds that followed. Gossol's screams
rose to a squeal before they choked off to a gurgle. There was the dry-stick
sounds of bones breaking, and the wet suck of a carcass being opened. Eyes still
closed, Alec remembered the feel of Vargul
Ashnazai's cold finger tracing a line down his bare chest.
He suddenly felt very light. Opening his eyes, he saw the sanded planks of
the deck rushing up to meet him.
Beka's scouts spotted the convoy of horse-drawn wagons that morning and
trailed it as it wended south through the coastal foothills. There were only ten
of them, Gilly reported, and only one decuria of cavalry to guard them, a fact
that confirmed Beka's assumption that they were deep in the Plenimarans'
northern territory now.
The country they'd come into was steep and well wooded. Beka let the scouts
keep the wagons in sight, biding her time until they stopped for the night.
The wagoneers made camp in a little forest hollow by a stream just before
sundown. Leaving her main group of riders a quarter of a mile down the road,
Beka chose her fastest runners, Zir, Tobin, and Jareel, to accompany her, and
left Rhylin with orders to disrupt the camp as soon as she had accomplished her
mission.
Darkness fell, and the wagoneers lit cook fires for the evening meal. Their
escort posted a few guards up and down the road.
Beka and her raiders stole through the darkness toward the supply wagons,
each of them armed with jars of firestones they'd captured in a similar raid two
days before. Reaching the wagons, Beka looked underneath the nearest and saw
unsuspecting wagoneers cooking their evening meal less than twenty feet away.
With Zir keeping watch, Beka and the others split up and scattered firestones
over the crates and bales in the wagon beds. Ribbons of smoke curled up quickly,
but the wind was in their favor, blowing it away from the camp.
Rhylin had been watching for it as his signal, however. Beka's group had
hardly finished their work before a frantic whinnying came from the Plenimaran
horses picketed nearby.
Whooping and waving torches, Rhylin and his decuria drove the draft animals
into the camp, scattering startled soldiers and drivers. Flames shot up in the
wagons, adding to the confusion.
Before the Plenimaran guards had time to act, Braknil's decuria charged in
with bows and loosed a hail of arrows to cover me retreat of the others.
Beka and her group skirted the camp to meet Tealah, who was holding horses
for them down the road.
An enemy shaft nicked Zir in the shoulder as he swung up into the saddle.
Tobin took an arrow through the heart before he'd reached his horse.
Beka saw him fall but there was nothing she could do but look after the
living.
"Retreat! Come on, before they get their horses back," she yelled. A
Plenimaran swordsman charged at her, only to fall with a Skalan arrow in his
back.
Leaving the camp in flames behind them, her riders thundered back down the
dark road with victorious whoops and catcalls. Among the last to leave, Beka
listened to the Plenimaran's angry outcry with satisfaction.
"Do you know what they called us?" Tare called out with a wild laugh as they
rode away.
"Urgazhi! Wolf demons."
An eerie chorus of yells and wolfish howls erupted from the others.
"Well done, Urgazhi Turma!" Beka laughed, as elated as the others.
"I say we've earned the honor," Sergeant Braknil added.
They were like wolves now-traveling by night, employing stealth and speed to
attack any target weak enough to be taken, then fading back into the darkness
before the enemy could get a clear look at how few of them there actually were.
Over the past two weeks they'd made nine raids, harrying small convoys,
burning barns and way stations, and fouling wells as they worked their way south
through the hills toward the sea.
Their plan was to strike the coast and follow it north again in the hope of
meeting a friendly force.
What Beka wasn't certain of was just how far south their raiding had driven
them, or where the Skalan line currently was. Whatever the case, they'd have to
fight like true urgazhi to get back.
"It's only me, Lieutenant!"
Beka opened her eyes to find Rhylin's long, homely face just inches above
hers.
"It's almost sundown. You said to wake you," he said, hunkering down beside
her.
Beka sat up and rubbed a hand over her face. "Thanks. I wasn't sleeping so
well anyway."
Rhylin handed her his drinking skin, then ran a hand over the brown scruff of
beard covering his jaw.
"The fever hasn't come back on you, has it?"
"No, the leg's fine." Beka took a drink and handed it back.
They'd made camp in a beech grove. Buds were just breaking out on the
branches overhead and through them she could see the first golden streaks of
sunset.
"But you've still got the dreams, eh?" he asked, then shrugged when Beka
glanced up sharply. "You've been thrashing and muttering some in your sleep."
"Well, I wish you'd tell me what I'm saying," Beka replied, hoping it was
dark enough not to betray the color that rose in her cheeks. "I don't remember a
damn thing when I wake up. Any word from Mirn or Gilly yet?"
"That's what I came to report. Kallas and Ariani just got back from tracking
them. It looks like they've been captured."
"Damn." From what they'd seen so far, the Plenimarans weren't keeping
prisoners alive, and her urgazhi had suffered losses enough already.
Getting to her feet, she glanced around the clearing. In Braknil's decuria
only Kallas, Ariani, Arbelus, and one-eyed Steb were left. Rhylin had Nikides,
Syra, Tealah, Jareel, Tare, Marten, Kaylah, and Zir. Of those, Tealah had
suffered a sword cut during the third raid and couldn't use her left arm. Zir
and
Jareel had festering wounds, and Steb, still recovering from the loss of an
eye, had a bad case of the scours.
Now Mirn and Gilly were gone.
"Who's out now?" she asked.
"Syra has the watch. Arbelus and Steb went scouting about an hour ago."
"Go wake the others and tell them to eat quickly. We ride as soon as it's
full dark."
Rhylin gave a quick salute and started around the camp. Beka let out a slow,
exasperated breath.
She'd hoped the others hadn't noticed her nightly struggles. At least it had
been Rhylin who'd brought it to her attention. Despite his ungainly appearance,
he'd proven a good choice for sergeant.
He had a calm steadiness about him that only seemed to increase under
adversity.
Still, the last thing any of them needed right now was an officer who had bad
dreams behind lines; yelling in your sleep was a good way to bring the enemy
down on your neck. Rubbing her eyes again, she tried to remember what the dream
had been, but nothing would come except a vague feeling of anxiety.
Giving up, she turned her thoughts to more practical matters. Reaching for
her tucker sack, she dipped out a cupful of soaked meal and hastily downed it.
Coarse and full of grit, the barley meal they'd captured in the last raid was
hard on both teeth and stomach. Most of the time they couldn't chance a fire to
boil it into porridge. Instead, they threw it into a leather bag with some water
and fragments of dried fish for a few hours until it swelled into a gluey mass
Nikides had dubbed "broken tooth pudding."
They were just saddling up for the night's ride when Steb came riding back.
"We found Mim and Gilly, Lieutenant!" he informed Beka.
"Praise Sakor! Where?" Beka demanded as the others crowded around in uneasy
silence.
"There's a Plenimaran column ahead about two miles. They've just stopped to
make camp for the night. It's big, Lieutenant, fifty soldiers at least. And
maybe twice that in prisoners marching afoot in chains."
"Prisoners?" Rhylin raised an eyebrow.
"That's the first we've heard of that. And you're sure you saw Gilly and
Mirn?"
Steb nodded, his good eye blazing with grief and anger. "The whoreson
bastards planked them."
Braknil cursed, then spat angrily over his left shoulder.
"What do you mean, planked?" Beka demanded.
"It's an old Plenimaran soldier's trick,
Lieutenant," the sergeant scowled. "You take a man, tie a plank across his
shoulders, and then nail his hands to it."
Beka stood silent for a moment, feeling a black void opening in her heart.
They'd been lucky so far, facing no more than a decuria or two of fighters and
panicked wagoneers. And so far, they'd left no one behind but the dead. This was
different.
She gripped her sword hilt and growled, "Let's go have a look."
Taking Braknil and Kallas, Beka followed Steb.
What must this be like for him? she wondered, stealing a look at Steb's drawn
face; the bond between him and Mirn was strong. The two were always together,
whether it was around the fire at night, or fighting side by side like twin
avenging furies. They usually took scout duty together, too. What had happened
today?
The young rider remained grim and silent as he led them to the little
hillside gully where Arbelus was keeping watch. Less than a mile below, the
scattered campfires of the Plenimaran column winked in the darkness. Beyond the
camp, the black expanse of the Inner Sea glimmered with the light of the first
stars. The wind was coming off the water tonight and Beka caught a faint,
unsettling sound on the air. After a moment she realized it was only the distant
crash of surf growling like a hound in its sleep against the rocky cliffs.
"There's an old road that runs along above the shore," Arbelus told her.
"They set up camp on the landward side of it."
"You're certain our men are still alive?" Beka asked, squinting down at the
pattern of campfires.
"They were at sundown. I saw the guards prodding them in with the other
prisoners for the night."
Beka chewed at her lip, still glowering at the enemy encampment. At last she
turned to Braknil.
"It's the first real force we've encountered so far. What do you think? Any
chance of grabbing them out tonight?"
Braknil scratched under his bearded chin a moment, looking down at the fires.
"I'd say not much, Lieutenant. They'll have the perimeter sewed tighter than a
virgin's bodice. Even if we did manage to slip in, we'd never fight our way out
if they tumbled to us."
Beka let out an exasperated sigh. "Sakor's Fist, first they aren't taking
prisoners, then they've got a couple hundred. And where in hell did they get
that many this far inside their own borders?" " Braknil shrugged. "That's a good
question."
Arbelus looked up in surprise. "I never thought of that. But I'll tell you
something even stranger."
"What's that?"
"Before they settled down for the night, they were marching north."
"North!" Beka exclaimed softly. "The Mycenian border can't be more than fifty
miles from here, and not a single Plenimaran city in between. If they're going
to all the trouble to take that many prisoners, why on earth aren't they taking
them south where they could use them?"
She rested a hand on Steb's rigid shoulder.
"Still, it makes our task easier. We planned to turn north along the coast
anyway. We'll trail them, haunt them, by the gods, and watch for a chance to
grab Mirn and Gilly!"
The guards handled Alec with superstitious care after Gossol's sacrifice, but
they clearly blamed him for the death of their "soldier brother."
Ashnazai came less often, too, although he still paid occasional visits in
the middle of the night. Starting up out of some nightmare, Alec would smell the
man's unclean odor in the darkness, feel the touch of cold fingers on his skin
as Ashnazai plunged him into another punishing miasma of torment.
Locked alone in his tiny dark cabin, Alec grew increasingly despondent. He'd
searched in vain for some means of escape, even if it meant throwing himself
overboard, but there was none. Left with nothing to do, he slept a great deal,
but his dreams were full of violence and omens. The dream of the headless arrow
came far more often now, sometimes twice in one day.
Under such desperate conditions, he grew to look forward to his daily walk on
deck with Mardus.
Despite his chilling revelation at the ceremony, Mardus continued to treat
him with a strange sort of solicitude, as if he enjoyed Alec's company.
At midmorning each day Alec was given a cloak and escorted above under guard.
Fair weather or foul, Mardus would be waiting for him, ready to hold forth on
whatever subject had taken his fancy that day. To Alec's considerable surprise,
Mardus was a remarkably intelligent, well-spoken man, with interests as broad
and varied as Seregil's. He was as likely to launch into a discussion of
Plenimaran war tactics or a detailed comparison of Plenimaran and Skalan musical
conventions, although his discourses often took a darker turn.
"Torture is an undervalued art form," he remarked as they strolled up and
down with Vargul Ashnazai one brisk morning. "Most people assume that if you
cause enough pain you will achieve your end. While this may be true in some
cases, I've always found that outright brutality is often counterproductive.
Consider your own recent experience, Alec. Without drawing so much as a drop of
blood, we were able to extract every scrap of information from you."
"Necromancy is a subtle art," Ashnazai interjected smugly.
"It can be," Mardus amended dryly, "although "subtle" is hardly how I'd
describe many of the necromantic procedures I have witnessed. But to return to
the subject at hand, I assure you that had it not been for the prohibition
against shedding blood, I could have accomplished the same result without such
an extraordinary expenditure of magic."
Giving Alec a poisonous smile, Ashnazai asked, "I am curious, my lord, as to
what your method would have been?"
Mardus clasped his hands behind him, considering the question as coolly as if
Ashnazai had asked what he thought the price of grain would be this year. "I
often begin with the genitals. While the blood loss is negligible, the pain and
emotional anguish are exquisite. Once that level of pain is established, the
prisoner is usually quite easy to manipulate. In Alec's case, I could leave him
still fit for the slave markets. Only a fool would destroy such a pretty
creature unnecessarily."
Trapped at sea in such company, Alec nearly succumbed to despair. By day he
was the toy of his executioners. By night the muffled cries that sometimes came
up from the hold below increased his sense of helplessness. The few times he
dreamed of better days with Seregil or his father only made things worse when he
woke up. Lying in the darkness, he would try to recall the smell of their rooms
at the Cockerel or the color of Beka's eyes.
Mostly, however, he thought of Seregil and cursed Mardus for the seeds of
doubt he'd planted.
"He didn't abandon me. He didn't!" he whispered into the darkness one night
when his spirits were at their lowest. He forced himself to recall his friend's
grin when Alec had mastered a new skill, the delight Seregil took in tormenting
Thero, the grip of Seregil's hand when he'd pulled him back from the edge of the
cliff after the ambush below Cirna.
And the way he'd looked that night at the Street of Lights. Alec suddenly
remembered the guilty pleasure he'd felt that evening, and later at the casual
touch of Seregil's hand resting on his shoulder or the back of his neck.
His cheeks went warm now at the memory of that touch.
It was too painful to think of, now that he'd never feel it again.
"Stop it!" he hissed aloud. "He could come. He could be following right now!"
But not even Micum could track a ship across water.
Foundering in his own misery, Alec pulled the thin blanket around himself and
tried to recall fragments of conversation he and Seregil had shared, just to
imagine a friendly voice. He dreamed of him that night, although he couldn't
recall any particulars when he awoke. But something had come back to him,
nonetheless. Seated on the bunk that morning, he chewed his breakfast
thoughtfully, summoning various lessons Seregil had instilled in him over the
long months of their acquaintance.
Everyone on board considered him powerless, a prisoner of little consequence
beyond whatever fate Mardus had in store for him. It was time to put aside fear
and begin to pay attention, real attention, to what was going on around him, and
then to ask questions—small, inconsequential ones at first—as he tested the
water. After all, he wouldn't die any faster for at least trying.
Learn and live, Seregil's voice whispered approvingly at the back of his
mind.
The soldiers' newfound wariness of him made it slightly easier to talk to
them, though Alec quickly discovered that all that mattered to them was their
unswerving loyalty to Mardus, a fact which made any overtures to them pointless.
But he did learn that they were making for some point on the northwestern coast
of Plenimar.
Later that same morning he made more of an effort at conversation with Mardus
during their daily walk, allowing himself to be drawn into a discussion of
archery.
The next day they spoke of wines and poisons.
Mardus seemed pleasantly surprised and began sending for him more frequently.
On the fifth day following Gossol's sacrifice, Tildus came for him at sunset.
The bearded captain said nothing, but Alec didn't like the smug, secret smile
Tildus gave him as they went above.
On deck Alec saw with alarm that the ritual space had been prepared again. A
line of soldiers held torches to illuminate the freshly laid square of canvas
where Irtuk Beshar was already bent over the bowl and crown. Beside her, Vargul
Ashnazai stood ready with the stone ax.
Thero was there, too, standing next to Mardus as slack-jawed as ever. All
eyes seemed to turn to Alec as he approached.
"O Illior," he whispered hoarsely, feeling his knees go weak. Mardus had had
some change of heart, his god had sent different instructions, Alec's
questioning had led him into some fatal misstep.
Tildus gripped his arm more tightly and muttered, "Easy, man child. Not your
time yet!"
"Good evening, Alec!" Mardus said, smiling as he swept a hand toward the
eastern horizon. "Look there, can you make out the coastline in the distance?"
"Yes," Alec replied, a fresh coil of apprehension running up his back at the
sight.
"That is Plenimar, our destination. Seriamaius has been kind, guiding us so
smoothly along our course. And now it is time for the second act of
preparation."
As Alec watched with mounting dread, ten men and women were dragged up on
deck by the black-clad marines.
This was the source of the weeping he heard in the night.
This had all been planned in advance, the sacrificial victims packed away in
the hold as carefully as the wine and oil and flour.
They were not soldiers, but thin, pale, ordinary-looking souls who blinked
and wept as they were herded together near the rail. Most were ragged or dressed
as laborers, just innocent victims, he guessed, plucked from the darkened
streets of whatever ports the ship had put into before Rhiminee.
"O Illior," Alec whispered as Mardus came to stand beside him, hardly knowing
that he spoke aloud. "No, please. Not this."
Mardus slipped an arm around his shoulders and closed his hand over the back
of Alec's neck. Giving him a playful shake, he purred, "Ah, but you should savor
it. Don't you understand yet how great a part you played in bringing this
about?"
Faint with revulsion, Alec made the mistake of looking up at Mardus. For the
first time he saw the depths of naked cruelty in his eyes, and in that awful
moment he knew as certainly as he'd ever known anything that Mardus had
purposefully allowed him to see behind the mask, was delighting in his fear and
confusion, savoring it the way another man might savor the first caress of a
long-desired lover. And perhaps worse even than this was the conviction that
Mardus was nonetheless sane.
Some of the prisoners were staring at Alec, mistaking him for one of their
murderers.
He couldn't watch this again. Tildus had moved away when his master had come
over, and the rest of the soldiers were watching the ceremony. Jerking out of
Mardus' grip, Alec dashed to the rail behind him with some instinctive,
half-formed notion of throwing himself overboard, swimming as far as he could
toward the shore, giving up if he had to.
He'd gone no more than two paces when a deadly coldness engulfed him, locking
his joints, forcing him painfully to his knees. Some unseen power forced his
head around to see Vargul Ashnazai holding up a small vial of some sort that
hung around his scrawny neck on a chain.
"Nicely done, Vargul Ashnazai," said Mardus. "Move him a bit closer so that
he can see."
Unable to turn his head or blink, Alec had no choice but to watch as the ten
victims were dragged down onto the deck at Ashnazai's feet. Ten times the blade
rose and fell with deadly efficiency and each heart was taken by the dyrmagnos
and drained into the reeking cup.
Thero stood just beyond her and through his own helpless tears of rage and
impotence, Alec saw tears coursing slowly down Thero's cheeks. It was an eerie
sight, like watching a statue weep, but it gave him a sudden thrill of hope in
the midst of the nightmare being acted out before him.
The white canvas was scarlet by the time the necromancer had finished. He and
the dyrmagnos were smeared to the elbows, their robes sodden, hair matted with
it. Blood had soaked across the deck to where Alec knelt, staining his bare
knees.
Leaving the soldiers to pitch the bodies overboard, Mardus took Thero below
again.
Vargul Ashnazai walked over to Alec and laid one bloody hand on his head,
breaking the spell.
Alec doubled over retching. Ashnazai snatched the hem of his blood-soaked
gown out of the way with a grunt of disgust, then gave Alec a shove with one
foot that sent him sprawling in sticky blood and vomit.
"I look forward to cutting you open," he sneered.
Scrambling back to his hands and knees, Alec glared defiantly back at him.
The necromancer took an involuntary step back, raising his hand.
Alec braced for some new agony, but Ashnazai merely turned on his heel and
stalked away, snarling something to Captain Tildus as he passed.
Dread returned as a pair of soldiers stripped Alec and washed him down with
buckets of cold seawater. When he was clean, they thrust him into a soft robe
and turned him back to Tildus, who led him below to a spacious cabin in the
stern.
To his amazement, he found Mardus, Ashnazai, Thero, Irtuk Beshar, and the
silent, grey-bearded necromancer, Hand, reclining on cushions around a low
table. A young serving boy placed another cup on the table, motioning for Alec
to be seated.
"Come, Alec, join us," Mardus said, patting an empty cushion between himself
and the dyrmagnos. He and the others had also changed clothes and cleansed away
all traces of the murders he'd just witnessed.
It's as if none of that happened, he thought numbly, too shocked to protest
as Tildus steered him to his place and pushed him down.
Thero sat on Irtuk Beshar's left. At her nod, he raised his cup mechanically
to his lips.
Wine dribbled down through his beard as he drank, his eyes locked on some
distant point.
The sight filled Alec with a strange guilt, as if he'd spied on something
unseemly.
Looking away, he fixed his attention on his cup as the servant filled it with
pale yellow wine.
"Come now, dear boy, why so shy?" Mardus coaxed, the mask of gentlemanly
solicitude in place once more. "It's an excellent wine. Perhaps it will put some
color back in those wan cheeks of yours."
"Strong emotion does so spoil a young man's beauty," Irtuk Beshar added, her
coquettish tone as incongruous with her cracked, blackened face as her robes and
veil.
The entire situation had such a surreal quality that Alec found himself
replying, "I don't care for any, thank you," as if he were Sir Alec of Ivywell
dissembling at some noble's banquet with Seregil.
"Such pretty manners, too," Ashnazai noted.
"I am beginning to see your point, my lord. It will be a pity to kill him. He
would ornament any gentleman's household."
Alec's sense of dreamlike detachment increased as the grisly conversation
flowed around him in polite salon tones. If this was the onset of madness, then
he welcomed it as a gift of Illior.
Whatever the case, he suddenly felt a giddy lightness coming over him. He'd
experienced this before, though never so intensely. When death was your only
option, it made you feel very free indeed.
"My lord," he began. "What is this all about? The wooden disk, the crown? I
know you're going to kill me as part of it, so I'd just like to understand."
Mardus smiled expansively. "I would expect no less of a person of your
intelligence. As I have said, you and all your misguided friends have been
instrumental in a grand and sacred quest. At first even I didn't perceive the
significance of it, but Seriamaius has revealed how you were all simply
instruments of his divine will."
Mardus raised his cup to Alec in a mocking salute. "You can't imagine the
trouble you saved us, bringing so many parts of the Helm together for us to
reclaim with a single brief stroke. Not to mention the damage we were able to
inflict upon the Oreska in the process. Why, in one night we managed to
accomplish what might otherwise have taken months, even years. And we do not
have years, or even weeks, now."
"A helm?" Alec asked, seizing on this new reference.
Mardus turned to his companions, shaking his head.
"Imagine! This Nysander, great and compassionate wizard that he is, had his
closest friends carry out his thievery without the least hint of what they were
being embroiled in. Why, he regarded Seregil and poor young Alec and Thero here
almost as sons.
"Yes, Alec, the Helm. The Great Helm of Seriamaius. The coin, as you so
amusingly refer to it, the cup, and the crown are all elements of a greater
design. When brought together with the other fragments at the proper time, they
will rejoin to form the Helm revealed to our ancestors by Seriamaius more than
six centuries ago."
"It is the ultimate artifact of necromantic power," Irtuk Beshar told him.
"He who wears it becomes the Vatharna, the living embodiment of Seriamaius."
"The legends from the Great War. Armies of walking dead," Alec said softly,
thinking of the ancient journal he and Seregil had discovered in the Oreska
library.
"Perhaps we have underestimated this child," the dyrmagnos observed, cocking
her head to regard Alec more closely. "There may be depths within him still to
be sounded."
Alec shuddered inwardly under the greediness of her scrutiny.
"Yet these tales of yours said nothing of the Helm?" Mardus continued. "I am
not surprised. At the end of that war we were betrayed. Aided by traitors,
fawning Aurenfaie wizards, and a pack of ragged drysians, the wizards of the
Second Oreska managed to capture and dismantle the Helm before its full power
could be invoked. Fortunately, they could not destroy the individual pieces. Our
necromancers managed to recapture a few of them; the rest were carried off and
hidden. For six centuries my predecessors have hunted for them, and one by one,
they have been recovered."
"That's what you were doing in Wolde," Alec said slowly. "You'd been to the
Fens, that village Mi—"
"Micum Cavish?" Ashnazai smiled as he broke off suddenly. "Don't trouble
yourself. You screamed that name out to us already, just as you did all the rest
of it."
Mardus paused as the serving boy brought in platters of roasted doves and
vegetables.
"Do try to eat something," he said, serving Alec himself.
Surprised at his own hunger, Alec obliged.
"Now, where was I?" Mardus asked, spearing a dove for himself. "Ah yes. The
three fragments guarded by Nysander were the last, and of those, the bowl was
the most gratifying discovery. We knew of the others, you see, both stolen from
under our very noses by your friend Seregil, as it turns out. But all trace of
the bowl had been lost until the two of you led us to it with the theft of the
Eye. And only just in time, too. As it is, we've only just enough time to
complete the ritual preparations."
"The sacrifices, you mean?" asked Alec.
"Yes." Mardus sat forward as the servant brought in a course of roasted pork.
"Each soul taken, each libation of heart's blood, brings us closer to
Seriamaius, to his great power. No man could be a vessel for such power, but
through the Helm we may partake of some small portion of it. By "small portion"
you must understand I am speaking in relative terms. Once restored, the Helm
will increase in power as more lives are fed to it until a single thought by the
wearer can level whole cities, control thousands. And you, Alec, you and Thero,
I am holding in reserve for the final sacrifice of the reconstruction ceremony.
A hundred people will have perished before you, allowing you the privilege of
watching every death until your own turns come, two last, perfect sacrifices.
The blood is to a great extent merely symbolic of the life force given up to the
god. The younger the victim, the more years taken, the richer the sacrifice."
Irtuk Beshar patted Alec and Thero on the shoulders. "A young Oreska wizard
and a half faie boy—the youth of our greatest enemies! What could be more
pleasing to our god than that?"
Alec regarded them a moment in stunned silence, trying to take it all in.
No, he thought numbly. No, I will not be apart of that. "Thank you," he said
finally. "I think I'm beginning to understand."
There were no guards in the room now. No spells or chains held him. Forcing
himself to give no leading hint of his intentions, Alec suddenly lashed out
across the table and snatched up a carving knife lying next to the platter of
fowl. Clutching it in both hands, he drove the blade at his own ribs, praying
for a quick kill.
To his horror and astonishment, however, he twisted around instead and
plunged the blade into the chest of the young servant. The boy let out a single
startled cry and collapsed.
"Really, Alec, where are your manners tonight?"
Mardus exclaimed regretfully. "I've owned him since he was a child."
Alec stared down at the body, horror-struck at what he had done.
"Did you think us so lacking in imagination that we would not anticipate such
a noble action on your part?"
Irtuk chided. "You forget how intimately I know you, Alec. One of the first
wards I placed upon you was one to guard against such ridiculous heroics.
Anytime you try to hurt yourself, you shall only end up hurting another, like
this poor innocent."
"O Illior!" Alec groaned, covering his face with his hands.
"Perhaps I am somewhat to blame," Mardus sighed. "My explanation may have
given the boy the impression that he and Thero are necessary for the final
realization of our plans."
Mardus' hands closed over Alec's, squeezing painfully as he pulled them aside
to fix Alec with a look of sardonic pleasure.
"Understand this. The presence or absence of either one of you will not make
the slightest difference to the god. It merely pleases me, and Vargul Ashnazai
as well, I am certain, that the two of you should be the final victims. Just
imagine, dear Alec—watching all those others die, and you quite helpless to save
them. And then, as your chest is split and your heart pulled free, your final
thought will be that after all your meddling, all that extraordinary effort, it
is your life bringing the Helm back into being! I'm only sorry that your friends
will not be there to share in your reward. Now do try to eat something more.
You're looking quite pale again."
Seregil woke drenched in sweat, still caught in the nightmare's grip.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he tried to hang on to the images of the dream, but as
usual could recall nothing but the vague memory of a tall figure towering over
him and the terrible sensation of drowning.
Micum had already gone above. Seregil lay a moment longer, half dozing as the
first faint light of dawn brightened the cabin's single window. Was Alec awake,
seeing that same light? he wondered, as he'd wondered every morning of the
voyage. Was Alec alive at all? Would he be when the sun set?
He rubbed at his eyelids and felt the wetness seeping through his lashes.
Early morning was the worst.
During the day he could keep busy, bury his fear in the semblance of doing
something useful. At night he simply closed his eyes and escaped into dreams and
nightmares.
But here, in the half world of dawn, he had no defenses, no diversion. The
longing for Alec's presence, the guilt and remorse at having brought him to
this, the shame at never having told the boy how much he cared for him—it was
all as raw as a wound that refused to heal.
And there was nothing to do but go on to the end. Rolling out of the bunk, he
threw on a surcoat over his shirt and went above without bothering to fasten it
up.
On deck he turned his face to the wind and spread his arms. The cold salt
breeze lifted his hair from his neck and blew his coat open, whipping his shirt
against his ribs. Tilting his head back, he inhaled deeply, trying to cleanse
away the sense of oppression. As he did so, he noticed a new scent on the wind,
the smell of land.
Going to the starboard rail, he saw a dark, uneven line of mountains looming
through the morning mist like a promise just out of reach. His sail-changing
ploy had worked. They'd sailed within sight of Plenimar's northwestern coastline
without challenge.
Rhal called put sharply somewhere to stern and Skywake barked an order.
Looking around the deck for Micum, Seregil spotted him sitting on the forward
bulkhead. He had a small mirror propped on one knee and was shaving his chin
with the aid of a knife and a cup of water.
Micum looked up as he approached, then frowned.
"Another bad night, eh?"
"Worst yet." Seregil combed his fingers back through his windblown hair. "It
feels like someone's trying to tell me the most important thing in the world in
a language I can't understand."
"Maybe Nysander can make something of it when he gets here."
"If he gets here," Seregil replied listlessly. He felt as if they'd been on
this ship for years instead of weeks; Rhiminee, Nysander, Alec, the deaths
they'd left behind, perhaps it was just all part of the same bad dream.
Micum gestured with his knife at a lonely peak to the north. "Rhal says
that's Mount Kythes there. He thinks we can put ashore tonight. There's
a—Bilairy's Balls, you're bleeding!"
Setting his knife and cup aside, he stood and tugged at the loose ties of
Seregil''s shirt.
"Damnation, it's that scar. It's opened up again," he whispered, touching a
finger to Seregil's chest and showing him the blood.
Using Micum's shaving mirror, Seregil inspected the small trickle of blood
oozing from the raised outline of the scar. He could even make out the faint
whorls left by the disk, and the small square mark of the hole at its center. He
also caught a glimpse of his own face, looking sallow and hollow-eyed in the
early light. Pulling his coat shut, he fastened the top buttons.
"What does it mean?" Micum asked.
"Don't you remember what the date is today?"
Seregil replied grimly.
Micum's jaw dropped. "By the Flame, I'd lost track being on a ship so long."
"The fifteenth of Lithion," Seregil said, nodding. "If Leiteus and Nysander
were right in their calculations, Rendel's Spear should be in the sky tonight."
Seregil saw awe and concern mingle in his friend's eyes as Micum took a last
look at the bleed on his fingers before wiping them on his coat.
"You know I came along on this trip mostly to look out for you, don't you?"
Micum said quietly.
"Yes."
"Well, I just want you to know that as of now, I'm beginning to be a
believer. Whatever it was that left its mark on you there, it's working on us
now. I just hope Nysander is right about Illior being the immortal who's leading
us around."
Seregil grasped his friend's shoulder. "After all these years, maybe I'll
finally make an Illioran out of you."
"Not if it means waking up looking like you do this morning," Micum
countered.
"Still no dreams?" Seregil asked, still puzzled by the fact that of the four
of them, Micum was the only one who hadn't had a premonition of some sort.
Micum shrugged. "Not one. Like I've always told you, I do my fighting when
I'm awake."
The mountain loomed steadily larger ahead of them as they followed the coast
north through the day. From a distance it seemed to rise directly up from the
sea itself, its summit lost in a mantle of cloud.
"Pillar of the Sky, eh?" Rhal remarked, standing with Seregil and Micum at
the rail that afternoon.
"Well, they sure named it rightly. How in hell are you going to find this
temple of yours on something that big?"
"It's somewhere along the water," Seregil replied softly, rubbing
unconsciously at the front of his coat; Micum had tied a wadded bit of linen
over the raw circle of skin. Oddly enough, the wound hardly hurt at all.
"Well, it'll take some doing to put you ashore."
Rhal shaded his eyes, peering landward. The weather had remained clear
through the day but-a wind was blowing up out of the west, piling up the waves
and lashing the foam from their white crests. "I see breakers against the rocks
all up and down there. Most of it's cliff and ledge. You'll just have to coast
along until you see a likely landing place."
"Is the boat ready?" asked Seregil.
Rhal nodded, his gaze still on the distant coastline.
"Water, food, all that you asked for. I saw to it myself. We can cast you off
as soon as you've packed in your gear."
"We'd best get at it then," Micum said.
"It's been a while since either of us has sailed. I don't want to try this
sea without some daylight ahead of us."
When the final pack and cask had been lashed into the Lady's starboard
longboat, Seregil and Micum took leave of Rhal.
"Good luck to you," the captain said solemnly, clasping hands with them.
"Whatever it is the two of you are up to over there, give those Plenimaran
bastards merry hell for me."
"Nothing will make me any happier," Micum assured him.
"Lay off the coast as long as you can," said Seregil. "If we're not back in
four or five days, or if you get run off yourself, head north and put in at the
first friendly port you find."
Rhal gripped Seregil's hand a moment longer.
"By the Old Sailor, when this whole thing is over, I'd like to hear the tale
of it. You look out for yourselves, and find that boy of yours."
"We will," Seregil promised, climbing into the boat. Crouching down beside
Micum, he wrapped his hands around one of the ropes securing the boat's small
mast.
"Hold tight!" Rhal called as his men set to work lowering it over the side.
"Wait until we're well away before you put up your sail. Good luck, friends!"
The little boat swung precariously from the halyards as it was lowered down
the side of the pitching ship.
Waves slapped at it as they neared the water, then rolled in over the side.
Clinging on as best they could Seregil and Micum waited until they'd cleared the
Lady, then unfurled the triangular sail.
The little boat yawed sharply, catching another wave over the side. Micum
took the tiller and turned her into the wind while
Seregil hauled on the spar rope. As soon as they got her headed properly into
the waves, he looped the spar rope over a cleat and set about bailing the craft
out.
"You're the Guide," Micum said, shrugging out of his sodden cloak and
settling himself more comfortably at the tiller. "What do we do now?"
Seregil gazed toward the distant shore. "Like Rhal said, get in close and
coast along until we spot a landing place."
"There's a lot of coast there, Seregil. We could end up miles from wherever
this temple of yours is."
Seregil went back to his bailing. "If I am the Guide of Nysander's prophecy,
maybe I'll know the right place when I see it."
The words sounded weak and half-convinced even to him, but he didn't know
what else to say. This certainly didn't seem like the proper moment to confess
that except for a few fragmentary dreams and the bleeding scar on his chest, he
was painfully unaware of any feelings of divine guidance.
As Rhal had observed, much of the coastline was ledge or cliff. The boom of
the surf echoed back at them across the water and they could see the spume
thrown up by the breakers. Great blocks of reddish granite shot through with
bands of black basalt lay in tumbled disorder between the water and the trees
above.
As far as the eye could see the land looked desolate and uninhabited. Dark
forest blanketed the hills.
Higher up, the stark, stony peak of the mountain rose forbiddingly against
the evening sky. The setting sun behind them cast a thick golden light over the
scene, enhancing briefly the color of water, sky, and stone. Great flocks of sea
ducks and geese floated on the swells just beyond the pull of the breakers.
Overhead, gulls uttered their whistling calls as they circled and dove.
"I never thought I'd be setting foot on
Plenimaran soil," Micum remarked, steering them closer in. "I've got to admit,
it's nice-looking country."
The sun sank lower. Kneeling in the bow, Seregil squinted intently at the
harsh shoreline.
"I think we may be spending the night out here," Micum said, steering them
past a rocky point.
"You may be—Wait!"
The forest was thick here, but he caught the distinct yellow flicker of
firelight in the shadow of a cove. "Do you see that?"
"Could be a campfire. What do you say?"
"Let's have a look."
Steering into the cove, they discovered a tiny, sheltered beach at its head.
Above the tide line, a large fire crackled invitingly, illuminating the thick
tangle of evergreens that edged the shingle.
"It looks more like a signal fire," whispered Micum, tacking just off shore.
"Could be fishermen or pirates."
"Only one way to find out. You stay with the boat."
Slipping over the side into the hip-deep water, Seregil drew his sword and
waded ashore.
The beach lay at the head of a deep cleft in the surrounding ledge, making an
oblique approach impossible, and the slanting evening light lit it like a stage.
The shingle was made up of small, wave-polished stones that crunched and rattled
under his boots as he continued up toward the fire.
Might just as well tie a bell around my neck, he thought uneasily, picturing
archers tracking him from the ledges and swordsmen in the thickets.
But the cove was peaceful. Standing still, he listened carefully. Over the
sigh of the wind, he heard the mournful music of doves and white throats in the
woods, the clacking croak of a heron stalking the shallows somewhere nearby. No
one was disturbing them.
Encouraged but wary, he crunched up the shingle to the fire. There was no
sign of habitation, no packs or refuse. As he came nearer, he realized with a
nasty start that the flames were giving off no heat. It was an illusion.
A branch snapped in the forest and he crouched, bracing for ambush. A tall,
spare figure stepped from the trees.
"Here you are at last, dear boy," a familiar voice greeted him in Skalan.
"Nysander?" Still wary, Seregil remained where he was as the wizard pushed
back his hood. Dressed for traveling, Nysander wore an old surcoat and loose
breeches, and his faded cloak was held at the throat with the worn bronze brooch
he always used.
As he came forward into the light, Seregil let out a startled gasp. Even in
the ruddy light of sunset, Nysander looked ghostly. His face was the color of
bone and more deeply lined than ever. Worse yet, he looked shrunken in on
himself, diminished, like the gnarled caricature of an old man carved in fresh
ivory. Only his bright eyes and the familiar warmth in his voice seemed to have
come back to him intact.
The surprise of their unexpected meeting left Seregil wary of illusion,
however. Quelling the impulse to embrace his old friend, Seregil kept his
distance and asked, "How did you find us?"
Nysander made a sour face. "That blood charm you left with Magyana, of
course. It took some managing and magic, but here I am."
Sheathing his sword, Seregil gave the old man a joyous hug. "I knew you'd do
it, but by the Light, you look awful!"
"As do you, dear boy," Nysander chuckled.
Micum hauled the boat in and ran up the shingle to join them.
"You mean to say you were here waiting for us?" he cried, looking Nysander
over in wonder. "How did you know? And why didn't you send us a message by
magic?"
"All in good time," the old wizard sighed, sinking down on a driftwood log
and waving the illusory fire out of existence. "I must admit, I am equally
relieved to see you. I feared I might have missed you after all."
"Do you know anything about Alec?" Seregil asked hopefully, sitting down
beside him.
"No, but you must not despair," Nysander told him, patting his shoulder
kindly. "If he were dead, I would know it. The force of the prophecy is binding
us closer with every passing day."
Micum kicked together a pile of driftwood sticks and fished a firechip from a
pouch at his belt. "Well, I haven't had any great visions or dreams, but the
more I see of this business, the more
I believe it. By the Flame, Nysander, look at you. How can you have gotten here
at all?"
"Look at me, indeed," Nysander replied rather ruefully. "One does not return
from such a journey as the dyrmagnos sent me on without showing a bit of wear.
But there was some value to it. While my body healed, my mind floated free among
dreams and visions. I believe I know how to find the temple we seek. It is
marked by a large white stone surrounded by black ones. And it is near the sea."
Disappointment settled in Seregil's belly like a bad dinner. "That's it?
You're telling me in all the hundreds of square miles around that mountain we
have to find one rock?"
"That's not much to go on," Micum noted, echoing his skepticism.
Yet Nysander appeared perfectly complaisant. "We will find it," he assured
them. "It does not guarantee our success, but we will find it."
"I've been having dreams of my own," Seregil told him.
"You've done more than that," Micum snorted. "Show him your chest."
Seregil peeled off the bandage and showed Nysander the crusted yellow scab
that had formed around the scar. "It must be some kind of sign. Leiteus claimed
this was the night the comet would appear."
"Undoubtedly," Nysander agreed. "Whether it is an omen of good or ill remains
to be seen. What was your dream?"
Seregil picked up a knife-shaped stone and rubbed it between his hands. "I
can never remember much of it, just the image of a figure with a misshapen head
looking down at me through water while I drown. Isn't there something you could
do to sort of pull more of it out of me?"
Nysander shook his head. "I must conserve both my strength and my magic. What
little I have was hard-won and will be needed for what lies before us now. Even
the fire I used to signal you was from a spell
Magyana made for me. As for the dream, it must be some sort of preparation for
the task ahead."
Micum ran his hands back through his thick red hair and sighed. "Do you think
you could be a bit more specific?"
Nysander nodded. "Before the attack on the Oreska I hoped I would never have
to tell you. Afterward, I was unable to."
"As Seregil has told you, there is a prophecy which names four persons, the
Guardian, the Shaft, the Vanguard, and the Guide. I am the Guardian, and have
been since the days of my apprenticeship with Arkoniel. What we have guarded,
there below the Oreska House, was a fragment of a necromantic object called the
Helm of Seriamaius."
"The bowl," Seregil interjected.
Nysander glanced at him in surprise. "How on earth did you learn that?"
"More visions," said Micum, tossing wood on the fire. The sun was
disappearing into the western sea, leaving the stars spread like a diamond veil
above them.
"Yes, it was a bowl," Nysander went on. "And then Seregil and Alec brought me
the wooden disk. Just before the Festival of Sakor, I sent Seregil after a third
object, a crown which had been hidden deep in the Ashek mountains. He knew at
once, both by the condition of the bodies of sacrificial victims he found there
and the evil magic that surrounded it, that it was related to the disk.
However, I told him nothing and swore him to secrecy. Not even Alec knew."
"I still don't see how you'd get any sort of helmet out of those odds and
ends," said Micum.
"Their appearance hides their true form. A powerful protective glamour was
placed on them by the necromancers who created them. Who would guess, even
having all the pieces in hand, that a lopsided clay bowl, a crystal crown, and a
handful of wooden disks could be parts of a common whole?"
"What does it do, when it's all put together?"
"It was created to channel the power of the dark god. No one knows how long
it took to forge the different elements, or what magicks were used. It first
appeared near the end of the Great War, when it was assembled and placed on a
man they called the Vatharna, or chosen one. Fortunately, the wizards of Skala
and Aurenen overcame the first Vatharna before he had the opportunity to fully
manifest the magic of the Helm."
"You mean to say that this Vatharna of theirs would eventually have all the
powers of their death god?" asked Micum.
"No one knows what the extent of its abilities might have been, but there is
evidence that even in the short time it existed, the Helm granted its wearer
terrible necromantic power. If it had not been dismantled when it was, I doubt
anyone could have overcome it."
Seregil shook his head slowly. "Then those old tales of walking dead, armies
of them, were true?"
"It is likely there is at least a kernel of truth in them."
"You said dismantled, not destroyed," Micum noted.
"So it was, to the great sorrow of subsequent generations. The wizards
managed to reduce it to its component parts, but before they could learn how to
destroy them, Plenimaran forces attacked to reclaim them.
When it was clear that the Skalan position would be overrun, six wizards were
chosen to flee with the pieces and hide them. Only one was ever seen alive
again."
"The one who took the bowl," said Seregil. "Reynes i Maril Syrmanis Dormon
Alen Wyvernus. It was he who eventually created that chamber in the lowest vault
of the Oreska, and he who passed the onus of Guardianship down to his successor,
Hyradin, who passed it to Aikoniel, who passed it to me. Neither the Queen nor
the Oreskan Council ever knew of its existence there. Any who tried to learn
their secret were killed."
"These Guardians didn't even trust the other wizards?" said Micum.
"Who could be trusted with such knowledge? The Empty God understands nothing
better than the dark corners of a mortal heart. Fear, pity, remorse, greed, the
lust for power-these are the Eater of Death's most potent weapons."
"Did Thero know?" asked Seregil.
"No, he was not ready for such knowledge." Nysander rested a hand on
Seregil's shoulder. "Part of my grief in losing you as an apprentice was the
knowledge that you would have been such a worthy successor. From the day took
you on, I knew in my heart that you were capable of assuming the burden. When
you could not learn the magic, I was devastated. But now I see that I was not
mistaken about your worthiness, only about the role which you were destined to
play. What you learned after leaving me, the life you went on to, it all
prepared you to be the Unseen One."
Seregil scowled. "You think the gods made me a thief and a spy, just so I
could steal the disk from Mardus? You think my whole life means nothing more
than this one task? I refuse to believe that!"
"No, not entirely," Nysander said. "You recall me telling you that there is
always a Guide somewhere, and all the others of the prophecy? Perhaps your life
would have been no different if the Helm never existed, but being what you are,
you are the Guide. I have speculated on it many times over the years, but it was
only after you brought me the disk that I truly began to believe. When you were
also able to snatch the crown away from the Plenimarans, I prayed that it was
simply good fortune, that by being vigilant I could keep all the fragments out
of Mardus" hands and prevent the restoration."
"Then you knew about Mardus already?"
"Only that he was a bastard relation of the old Overlord, a noble of
tremendous ability and ambition, and one of Plenimar's most formidable spies.
Now I suspect he means to make himself Vatharna."
"He sounds like the right man for the job," Micum said, scowling. "But you
still haven't told us where this prophecy of yours came from, or what it says."
"No one but the Guardians have ever heard it, or were ever meant to,"
Nysander replied solemnly.
"While still a young man, the second Guardian had a dream vision which has
been passed down from one Guardian to another ever since as our greatest source
of hope. "The Dream of Hyradin" is this:
"And so came the Beautiful One, the
Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the world.
First clothed in Man's flesh it came, crowned with a dread helm of great
darkness.
And none could stand against this One but a company of sacred number.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness.
Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the
Guide, the Unseen One, goes forth."
"This same prophecy names the Pillar of the Sky, and speaks of a temple
there."
"That gives us about as much to go on as your rock dream," Micum grumbled.
But Seregil felt a sickening chill pass through him, recalling the visions he
had experienced when in contact with those pieces—the scenes of death and
choruses of agony. "Then everything Mardus has done since Alec and I ran into
him up in Wolde—the disk, Rythel and the sewer plot, the attack on you—it's all
leading to him bringing all the pieces together again?"
"Of course, and bringing them together at the correct time and place. The
time is during a solar eclipse five days from now."
"We'd guessed that already, after talking to your astrologer friend," said
Seregil.
"Well done. Now that the three of us are together again, we must find the
temple and see where the gods lead us from there. This time the Helm must be
destroyed completely, and to accomplish that we must allow it to be
reassembled—"
"What?"
Seregil sputtered.
"It is the only way we can be certain that every fragment is accounted for,"
Nysander went on.
"Arkoniel himself believed it was the only possible course of action and I
believe he was right. If the knowledge passed down from Reynes i Maril is
correct, then it takes a certain amount of time for the power of the Helm to
gather itself, and more time for it to increase to its full potential.
Therefore, once it has been reassembled we will have some brief moment of
opportunity to strike. As the Guardian, I charge you both by your life and honor
to strike whatever blow necessary to destroy the power of the Helm. Will you
swear to that?"
"You have my oath on it." Micum extended his hand.
Nysander took it and they looked to Seregil.
He hesitated, still toying with the beach stone, as an inexplicable ripple of
misgiving went through him.
"Seregil?" Nysander raised an eyebrow at him.
Shrugging off his apprehension, Seregil tossed the stone aside and covered
their hands with his own. "You have my word—"
As soon as his hands touched theirs, a sharp stab of pain lanced through his
chest like an arrow shaft. Gasping, he pressed a hand over the scar.
Pushing Seregil's hand aside, Micum opened his coat and gently pulled the
bandage off. "You're bleeding again," he said, showing Seregil and Nysander
fresh blood on the linen dressing.
"It's nothing," Seregil rasped. "It must have broken open when I moved."
"Look there!" Nysander exclaimed, pointing up at the night sky.
A distant streak of red fire had appeared against the white band of stars to
the east.
"Rendel's Spear!" Micum exclaimed.
They gazed up at the comet for a moment in silence, then Nysander said
softly, "The necromancers call it by a different name."
"Oh? What?"
"Met 'ar Seriami," the wizard replied. "The Arm of Seriamaius."
"Met 'ar Seriami!"
Framed against the last light of sunset as he stood on the forward battle
platform, Mardus swept a hand toward the fiery scintilla just visible above the
eastern horizon. A victorious cheer went up from his men.
The throng assembled on the nearby shore echoed the cry, waving torches and
shooting flaming arrows into the air over the cove. Drums throbbed out in the
darkness.
Even before being brought on deck, Alec was uneasily aware of changes in the
ship's routine.
First, Mardus had foregone their walk that morning.
Then the guards had brought Alec a long tunic, the first clothing he'd had
since his capture. As the interminable day wore on, he felt the motion of the
ship change and guessed that they were nearing the
Plenimaran coast. He was proven correct that evening. When he and There were
finally brought on deck, the Kormados was riding at anchor off a desolate shore.
Desolate, but not uninhabited. There was an encampment of some sort, and he
could see black uniformed men hailing the ship excitedly.
On board, Alec sensed an air of expectation.
Everyone seemed to be watching the eastern horizon as the sun set. Finally,
the comet appeared with the stars, a red point of light clearly visible below
the waxing moon, and the great shout went up.
Standing under guard on deck, Alec leaned closer to Thero and whispered,
"Look there. A plague star! Do you see it?"
"Plague star for you, maybe!" Captain Tildus scoffed disdainfully. "For us
great sign. Lord Mardus and voron had say there should be such sign tonight."
"What did Mardus say just now—'Mederseri'?" Alec asked.
"Met "ar Seriami. " Tildus searched for the words in Skalan to explain. "It
is 'The Arm of Seriami." A very great sign, I tell you before."
"Seriami? What I call Seriamaius?" A vague sense of dread gripped Alec as
Tildus nodded. "Aura Elustri mal—"
"Shut that," Tildus growled, seizing Alec roughly by the arm. "Your madness
gods don't be here. Seriami eat hearts of the false ones."
No other prisoners remained. Alec and Thero had been given proper clothing
before being brought on deck, and their hands were bound securely behind their
backs.
Thero moved like a sleepwalker, obeying simple commands, moving when ordered.
Otherwise he remained motionless, his expression betraying nothing of what
thoughts, if any, were going on within. The seamless iron bands on his wrists
glinted softly in the torchlight as he moved, the unreadable characters incised
into their burnished surfaces lined black with shadow.
That's the secret, Alec thought, convinced that these, rather than the
branks, were the source of their enemies' control over Thero. If he could get
those off somehow—
There was considerable activity on deck. Irtuk Beshar and the other
necromancers stood together at the base of the platform, talking quietly among
themselves as their traveling trunks were brought up from below and stacked by
the rail.
Captain Tildus and a few of his men went ashore in a longboat, returning
quickly with some news. Although Alec couldn't understand what they were saying,
it was clear that Mardus was pleased with Tildus' report. When they'd finished,
the captain shouted out a command and the sailors hurried to ready the rest of
the ship's longboats for departure.
Mardus crossed the deck to where Alec and Thero still stood with their
guards. "We'll be continuing our journey by land from here," he told Alec.
"Thero is suitably restrained and I expect no difficulty from him. You, however,
are another matter." He paused, and the scar beneath his left eye deepened as he
smiled.
"You've already proved yourself a slippery customer and once ashore you will
no doubt be tempted to escape. I promise you, it would be a futile effort, and
the consequences would be extremely unpleasant, but not fatal."
"More unpleasant than having my chest hacked open with an ax?" Alec muttered,
glaring up at him.
"Immeasurably so." Mardus' eyes were depthless as the night sky, and as
enigmatic.
Turning on his heel, he strode away to oversee his men.
Shivering in spite of his warm clothing, Alec looked back at the comet
glimmering on the lip of the world. This might not be the night for the final
ceremony, but it couldn't be far off now. Whatever schedule
Mardus was following, this comet was clearly a significant indicator.
Somewhere on that dark shore lay their destination, and his death. It was only a
short dash to the rail, he thought. If he moved quickly he could dodge the
guards, take them by surprise. leap over.
And then what?
Alec could almost see Seregil frowning impatiently at him from the shadows.
Assuming that you could swim with your hands tied, there are probably only
about two hundred soldiers over there, not to mention at least one necromancer.
Or were you just planning to take a nice deep breath down there in the
blackness?
And where, by the way, would any of that leave Thero?
Alec clenched his fists as desperation threatened to overwhelm him again. He
wasn't ready to die, and he knew he couldn't abandon Thero. He had no idea how
much of this whole business, if any, was actually the young wizard's fault;
There's garbled confession had been too enmeshed in Irtuk's manipulations for
Alec to give it full credence, though the doubt in his own mind was real enough.
But guilty or not, he wouldn't leave him behind.
"You go now," one of his guards ordered, prodding him toward the last
longboat.
It was too late to do anything but obey.
Illior and Dalna, gods of my parents, I beg your aid, he prayed silently,
moving forward.
As he neared the rail, he caught sight of something lying half hidden in the
shadow of a bulkhead in his path, something he'd long since given up all hope of
finding.
A nail.
Two inches long, square forged and slightly bent with use, it lay in plain
view less than five feet from where he stood.
For one awful moment Alec was certain the guards had seen it, too, that
someone was sure to snatch it away if he so much as glanced back at it. Perhaps
Mardus himself had dropped it there, as a last cruel test.
There was only one way to find out.
The guard pushed him again, less gently this time.
Alec pretended to stumble, then fell flat on his face.
He landed hard, but when he opened his eyes the nail was within an inch of
his nose. Shifting as if he were struggling to get up, he quickly rolled over
the nail, caught it with his lips and teeth, and had it safely stowed in his
cheek by the time the guards pulled him to his feet.
It was as simple as that.
"What's all the fuss about down there?" Beka asked, joining the scouts on the
crest of the hill overlooking the Plenimaran camp.
The Plenimaran column had headed steadily north since Beka and her riders
began shadowing them. After three days they'd stopped on this lonely stretch of
plain overlooking the Inner Sea. Beka and her people kept their distance, using
their Plenimaran shod horses for closer scouting so as to leave no enemy
hoofprints to betray their presence.
For the past two days the Plenimarans had remained there with no apparent
purpose. Just before sundown, however, a Plenimaran warship had sailed in from
the west and dropped anchor.
"Looks like someone from the ship is putting ashore,"
Rhylin said, squinting into the last glare of sunset.
"I don't know what all the hoorah is, though.
They're all yelling and waving torches back and forth."
"Maybe that's it," Kallas whispered suddenly, pointing to the sky.
Looking up, the others saw a fiery streak of light moving slowly up the sky
from the eastern horizon.
"Maker's Mercy, a plague star!" Jareel muttered, making a warding sign. "I'd
take that for an omen if ever there was one,"
Rhylin said, making a sign of his own. "If that's what they're cheering about
down there, then I don't like it."
Beka had never seen a comet, yet the sight of this one brought with it a
strange feeling of recognition similar to the one she'd experienced when she'd
first heard the sound of the surf a few nights before. This time it was
stronger, more unsettling. There was also a vague impression of-tightness.
"Lieutenant?"
Beka turned to find the others regarding her solemnly in the failing light.
"Could you make out any insignia on the ship?" she asked.
"She was running without colors," Rhylin replied. "We didn't see any cargo
come off her, either, just people. What do we do now?"
"We could go down for a closer look once it gets dark," Steb suggested
hopefully.
"Urgazhi style, quick in, quick out," urged Rhylin, taking his part.
Beka considered their limited options carefully before answering. She shared
their frustration, knew how badly they wanted to make a move. More than once in
the days since they'd been dogging the column they'd caught glimpses of Gilly
and Mirn among the crowd of prisoners, staggering along under the weight of the
planks nailed across their shoulders, in the end, however, it still boiled down
to the fact that they were just fourteen against a hundred or more.
She shook her head slowly. "Not yet. If they don't move out tomorrow I'll
reconsider, but I can't afford to lose any more of you. For now we wait and if
they move north again tomorrow, we'll follow."
Steb turned away angrily, and several others groaned.
"I guess nobody'll be going by ship!" exclaimed Rhylin, gesturing toward the
sea again.
The anchored vessel was on fire. As they watched in amazement, the rigging
caught fire and sheets of flame spread to the sails.
"Bilairy's Balls, they scuttled her!"
Jareel gasped. "A fire couldn't spread that quickly unless someone meant for
it to. What the hell are they up to?"
Beka settled cross-legged on the grass, watching the reflection of the flames
dancing across the water. "I guess we'll just have to stick with them until we
find out."
The following morning Alec's guards woke him at dawn and led him to an iron
cage mounted in the back of a small cart, the sort strolling players used to
transport their trained animals. A thick mattress covered the floor of it, and
there was a canvas awning over the top, but it still stank faintly of its former
occupants.
Thero was already inside, seated cross-legged in the far corner. Like Alec,
his hands were no longer tied, and he'd been allowed to keep his tunic and
cloak.
"What a mangy pair of bear cubs," Ashnazai sneered, coming up to the bars
behind Alec.
Alec moved away from him, although there wasn't really anywhere to go; the
cage was only ten feet on a side.
"Lord Mardus is very busy now that we have landed, so I will be looking after
you now," the necromancer went on.
He wrapped his hands around two of the bars, and Alec saw blue sparks dance
over the iron, as if the cage had been struck by lightning. He jumped in alarm,
and Ashnazai smiled his thin, unpleasant smile. In the clear light of the
morning sun, his skin had a damp, unhealthy look, like the flesh of a toadstool.
"Don't you fear, dear Alec. My magic won't hurt you. Not unless you try to
get out. And of course, you are far too intelligent to do anything so foolish."
Still smiling, he walked away. He looked like a winter scarecrow as the wind
off the sea tugged at his dusty brown robe.
Hatred boiled in Alec's veins. Never in his life had he wanted so badly to
kill a man.
When Ashnazai disappeared beyond a row of tents,
Alec turned his attention to the camp around him.
The back of the cart afforded a good view. From up here he could see the
ranks of small white tents belonging to the soldiers and the herd of horses
staked out beyond. The column that had met them on shore had at least fifty
riders, as well as a crowd of people who were not in uniform and had the look of
prisoners, although he was too far away to be certain. They had slept in we open
under the watchful eye of swordsmen and archers. Mardus had brought at least a
score of men of his own, making it a
formidable force, all in the black uniforms of the marines. Going to the other
side of the cage, he could see the smoking remains of the
Kormados lying in the shallows like the skeleton of some wretched leviathan.
What happened to her crew? he wondered. They'd even burned the longboats.
He didn't recognize the pair of soldiers who brought him breakfast a short
time later. He spoke to them in the hope that they spoke some Skalan. If they
did, they didn't let on.
Giving him a scornfully direct look, they passed some remark between them,
spat on the ground, and walked off a few paces to join the other guards assigned
to watch him.
Alec hadn't really expected better from them.
Sitting down beside Thero, he put a bit of bread in the young wizard's hand.
When Thero did nothing, Alec said, "Eat."
Thero raised the bread to his mouth and took a bite. Crumbs fell into his
beard as he slowly chewed and swallowed. Alec brushed them off and gave him a
cup of water.
"Drink," he ordered wearily.
The column formed up at midday and set off north along the coast. The
northwest coast of Plenimar was wild, rugged country. The track they followed
wound in and out of swamps, meadows, and forests of pine and oak, always with
the shadow of mountains on their right and the sea in sight on their left. The
farther north they moved, the more forbidding the coastline became. Rocky
shingle gave way to red granite ledges and cliffs.
A cold, constant wind sighed through the trees, stirring the twisted branches
of the jack pines and bringing Alec the sweet scents of the forest. It was
colder here than in Skala, but he guessed that it must be sometime in
mid-Lithion by now.
The nail was his talisman, his one remaining secret and symbol of hope. It
was too large to keep in his mouth without attracting notice, but he didn't dare
let it out of his possession, even to hide it in the mattress tick. Instead, he
pierced it securely into the folds of his clothing. Recalling the incident on
the ship, he was careful to keep it hidden from Thero, in case the necromancers
or dyrmagnos decided to use the wizard to spy on him again.
So, keeping it hidden as best he could, Alec bided his time, waiting for some
opportunity to present itself.
Guards surrounded the cart day and night, but even without their presence
he'd have hesitated to attempt picking the lock;
Ashnazai's little warning demonstration with the bars suggested that such an
effort would be futile and probably dangerous. It was a frustrating situation.
He recognized the type of lock securing the door and knew the nail would have
been more than adequate for the job.
It was clear from the first that Vargul Ashnazai was relishing his new
commission. He had none of Mardus' deceptive smoothness, but contented himself
with riding along beside the cart like a dour specter.
Alec did his best to ignore him as the bear cart rolled and jounced northward
along the rutted coastal trail. Nonetheless, he was often aware of the
necromancer's gloating gaze.
Their first night on the road the column camped in the shelter of an ancient
pine grove. The sound of surf was loud. Looking west past the huge, straight
trunks, Alec could see the white spume of the waves as they thundered against
the ledges. It reminded him of the sea sounds of his dreams, but it was not
quite the same.
As darkness fell, another cheer went up and he guessed that the comet must be
visible again, although he couldn't see up through the branches. Much later, he
heard agonized screams in the darkness and knew that the sacrificial ritual was
being carried out again somewhere nearby. Even the guards around the cart
shifted uneasily and several made warding signs.
The cries went on longer this time. Feeling cold and sick, Alec moved closer
to Thero's sleeping form and covered his head with his cloak.
Less than a year before, a younger, more innocent Alec had lain awake all
night in Asengai's dungeon, trembling and weeping at every fresh cry that echoed
from the torturer's room.
Weeks of death and torture in Mardus' company had almost emptied him of such
emotion. Pressing his hands over his ears, he drifted into a restless doze with
the survivor's uneasy prayer of relief: This time, at least, it wasn't me.
In his nightmare there was no invisible pursuer this time, only the hoarse
screams leading him on, faster and faster. With tears of frustration coursing
down his cheeks, he gripped the useless arrow shaft and ran until his chest
ached. Rounding a corner, he staggered to a halt, his way blocked by a section
of collapsed wall.
A thrill of hope shot through him at the sight of the ray of sunlight
streaming in through a jagged break high in the stonework. From outside came the
familiar rush and rumble of surf.
Clambering up the pile of broken stone, he squeezed out through the hole—and
found himself standing alone on a granite ledge surrounded by thick fog that
shrouded the view on all sides. Overhead, the faint disk of the noonday sun
burned through the mist.
The crash of the surf was loud now, so loud that he couldn't tell which
direction it was coming from. If he moved too far, went the wrong direction in
the mist, he'd surely fall off the ledge. Crouching low, he moved slowly along
on all fours until his hands touched water. The waves surged around him
suddenly, flipping him on his back and tumbling him across the rocks. When the
foaming waters receded again, the ledges were covered for as far as he could see
with corpses of drowned men and women, their blue-white skin gleaming in the
shadowless light.
The sea sound was fainter now, and over it Alec could hear harsh grunts and
heavy, wet tearing sounds coming toward him in the fog. Terrified, naked,
unarmed, he crouched among the corpses. Even the headless arrow was gone,
carried off by the sea.
Soon he caught sight of weird, humped forms moving among the dead. The
grunting and snuffling grew louder, closer.
Suddenly something grabbed him from behind in an icy grip, pulling him to his
feet. Alec couldn't turn his head far enough to see what it was, but the putrid
stench that rolled off it made him gag.
"Join the feast, boy, was a gloating, clotted voice whispered close to his
ear. Struggling out of that loathsome grasp, Alec whirled to see what the
creature was, but there was nothing there.
"Join the feast!" the same voice said again, still behind him no matter how
fast he turned.
Stumbling backward, he fell into a heap of bloated corpses. No matter how he
struggled he couldn't get up; every move enmeshed him more in a tangle of
flaccid limbs.
"Aura Elustri malrei!" he screamed, flailing wildly.
"Join the feast! was the voice howled triumphantly.
Then the sun went black.
Alec jerked awake, still smelling the terrible death stench of the dream. A
plump slice of moon visible through the branches told him it was still far from
morning.
Hugging his knees miserably, Alec took a deep breath, but the air smelled
fouler every moment.
"Oh, Alec, I'm so frightened!"
Looking up in amazement, Alec saw Cilia crouched a few feet away. Illuminated
by some ghostly inner light, she looked imploringly at him. Ghost or not, he was
too relieved to see her whole again to be frightened.
"What are you doing here?" he asked softly, praying she wouldn't disappear as
suddenly as she'd come.
"I don't know." A tear slid slowly down her cheek. "I've been lost for so
long! I can't find Father or Grandmother anywhere. What's happened, Alec? Where
are we?"
She looked so real that he took off his cloak and placed it around her
shoulders. She pulled it around herself gratefully and leaned against him,
feeling very solid and real. For a moment he simply knelt next to her, trying
hard not to question her presence. At last, however, he pulled back a little and
looked down at the top of her head resting against his chest.
"Why did you come?" he asked again.
"I had to," she whispered sadly. "I had to tell you—"
"Tell me what?"
"How much I hate you."
Her voice was so soft, so gentle, that it took a moment for the import of her
words to sink in.
As his heart turned to lead in his chest, she said, "I hate you, Alec. It was
your fault, even more than Seregil's. They saw you, followed you. You led them
to us. I'm glad you're going to die."
"No! Oh, no, no, no, no"
Scrambling away, Alec flung himself into the farthest corner. "That's not
true!" he cried. "It can't be true."
Cilia raised her head slowly, her eyes black hollows in the dim light of the
moon. She smiled, and the fetid stench rolled through the cage again. Her smile
widened to a grimace, a snarl, a silent scream, then a black arm shot from her
mouth, lengthening impossibly as it reached for Alec.
Locking black talons around his arm, it dragged him over Thero's limp body
and back to her. For a moment his face was inches from hers, her wild eyes
boring into his, mouth stretched obscenely around the arm protruding from it.
Then her whole body swelled into a black, man-shaped form.
"Are you so certain?" the thing asked in the voice from
Alec's nightmare. "Are you so very certain?"
Releasing him, it wavered, then flowed out through the bars like smoke.
"Damn you!" Alec screamed, knowing Vargul Ashnazai was close by, watching.
"Damn you, you blood-swilling son of a whore! You lie! You lie!"
A single harsh, mocking laugh answered him from the darkness beneath the
trees.
The wind whipped Seregil's cloak around his knees and pulled at the bow case
and quiver strapped to his old pack as he stopped to wait for Micum and
Nysander. Looking back along the ledges to the north, he could just make them
out, Nysander leaning on Micum and a stout staff as they picked their way over
an expanse of tumbled stone. Over them loomed
Mount Kythes, its jagged peak thrusting above the tree line like an elbow from a
worn green sleeve.
Seregil shook his head in wonder. Despite Nysander's fragile appearance, the
wizard had managed to keep up a steady pace over the past two days. Seregil and
Micum took turns supporting him while the other scouted ahead. They were at the
foot of the great mountain now, toiling south along the edge of the forest that
flanked the coastline for as far as they could see. The area was rough and
uninhabited, but there was the faint line of an overgrown road through the woods
that followed the ledges.
Looking ahead, he shaded his eyes against the afternoon sun and scanned the
forest and ledges.
How in the name of Illior were they supposed to find one stone, white or
otherwise, in this wilderness? For all they knew they'd passed it somewhere
yesterday. Yet Nysander insisted on pressing forward, the light of hope growing
brighter daily in his eyes as they moved southward. Micum said little, but
Seregil suspected he was as daunted by the unlikely nature of their quest as he
was.
What if Nysander is wrong?
Seregil fought a daily battle against that question, and others. What if by
losing the battle at the Oreska, Nysander had failed in his Guardianship? What
if the wounds he'd received in that fight had addled his brain and he was
leading them a fool's errand while Alec was carried off to some other part of
Plenimar?
Yet each night the comet blazed ever closer in the night sky and the mark on
Seregil's breast grew clearer as the skin healed, so he could not voice his
doubts. Rational or not, in his heart he believed that Nysander was right.
Clinging to this, he pressed on each day, scanning the coastline along the
forest's edge until his eyes burned and his head ached, feeling his heart leap
into his throat every time a patch of sunlight or the reflection of a tide pool
tricked his eye.
Nysander and Micum had almost caught up. Sitting down on a slab of red
granite, Seregil watched a flock of sea ducks bobbing on the waves beyond the
breakers. Gradually his gaze wandered to the greenish-brown beards of bladder
wrack clinging to the damp rocks below. Scattered patches of it marked the high
tide line. Farther down, where the tide was nearly out, it blanketed the wet
rocks in thick, slippery beds. He'd noted the difference the day before and the
fact had been nagging at the back of his mind ever since, though he wasn't quite
certain why.
Micum and Nysander climbed slowly up to where he stood. The wizard sank down
on an outcropping, wiping his brow on his sleeve.
"My goodness," he panted, "I believe I must sit for a moment."
Seregil uncorked his water skin and handed it to him.
"We only have a few hours of daylight left," he said, suddenly restless.
"I'll go on ahead. If I'm not back by dusk, light a fire and I'll backtrack to
it."
Micum frowned and held up a hand. "Hold on, now. I don't like the idea of us
getting split up again."
"Not to worry," Nysander assured him. "I shall only need a short rest, and
then we can follow. I agree with Seregil; there is no time to lose."
"It's settled," Seregil said, setting off again before Micum could protest.
A quarter of a mile farther on a broad cove cut into the shoreline like a
bite from a slice of bread. An expanse of smooth ledge several hundred feet wide
sloped gently up to the base of steeper layers of sea-weathered granite that
embraced the cove like ruined battlements. Gulls picked their way through the
rock pools and seaweed near the water's edge, spying out a meal left behind by
the tide. It was a rather pretty place, Seregil thought, climbing up the rocks
to stay near the edge of the forest.
Looking through the trees, he saw that the disused road curved to follow the
upper ledges. He was just wondering if he should follow it for a while when
something white caught his eye in the edge of the undergrowth across the cove.
Clambering over rocks and fallen trees, he braced for another disappointment;
an equally promising flash earlier that morning had turned out to be the
shoulder blade of an elk. Another had been nothing more than sunlight striking a
spring-fed pool. As he came closer, however, he saw that it was a boulder of
milky white stone nearly four feet high.
Dropping his pack, he pushed his way through the thicket of leafless bushes
and dead fern that partially obscured it.
It was real-a great chunk of white quartz that had no business being in this
type of country. He circled it, looking for carvings or marks, then reached down
through the dry bracken until his fingers found a small, smooth stone. Pulling
it out, he saw that it was a piece of polished black basalt the size and shape
of a goose egg. Digging in farther, he found more of the black stones, as well
as a tiny clay figure of a woman and an ornament of carved shell.
Clutching his finds, Seregil bounded back the way he'd come until he saw
Micum and Nysander heading his way.
"I found it!" he shouted. "I found your white rock, Nysander. It's real!"
Micum let out a happy whoop and Seregil answered with one of his own.
"What do you say for Illioran mysticism now, Micum?" Seregil demanded
breathlessly as he reached them.
Micum shook his head, grinning. "I'll never understand it, but it's surely
led us well so far."
"There were black stones around the base of it, and I found these, too,"
Seregil told Nysander excitedly, showing him the clay figure and the carved bit
of shell.
"Illior's Light!" the wizard murmured, examining them. "Come along," he
urged, grasping them both by the arm. "Carry me if you have to, but get me to
that stone before the sun goes down."
But they didn't have to carry him. Swinging his staff ahead of him, Nysander
strode over the ledges with much of his old energy. It was as if his news had
revitalized the wizard, Seregil thought. Perhaps Nysander had needed this solid
affirmation of his visions as much as the rest of them.
"Oh, yes, this is the one," Nysander said as they reached the stone. Placing
both hands on it, he closed his eyes.
"It is old, so old," he said almost reverently.
"It was placed here long before the first Hierophant landed on Plenimaran
soil, but the echo of ancient worship is still so strong in it."
"You mean this is some ancient shrine?" asked Micum, examining it more
closely.
"Something of the sort. Those objects Seregil found have been here for over a
thousand years. They should be put back."
Seregil replaced the figure and shell ornament as he'd found them. "I looked
the big stone over, but I didn't see any markings. Still, if this was a shrine,
maybe it's the temple the prophecy meant."
Nysander shook his head. "No, this is only a marker. Of that I am certain.
Before the forest grew up it would have been visible from the sea. From the
trail, too, if it existed whenever this was placed here."
"Then the temple must be back up in these woods somewhere," said Micum. "You
rest here, Nysander.Seregil and I'll take a look."
The forest here was old virgin growth, Micum saw with a certain degree of
relief. The huge, wind-twisted pines were widely spaced, with little undergrowth
beneath them. Despite the good visibility, however, after an hour's searching
neither he nor Seregil had found anything remotely resembling a temple or any
other structure.
Returning to the shore, they found Nysander down on the ledges. It was late
afternoon by now, and the tide was nearing its lowest ebb.
"Nothing, eh? That is very puzzling." Leaning on his staff, Nysander frowned
out at the sea. "Then again, if we are not finding what we seek, then perhaps we
are not looking for the right thing."
Micum sank down on a rock with a discouraged groan. "Then what should we be
looking for? We've only got three more days before this eclipse of yours."
Seregil scanned the cove pensively, then set off toward the waterline. "All
it means is that it isn't a building."
"I know that look," Micum said, watching him cast back and forth along the
ledges like a hound seeking a scent.
The wizard nodded in bemusement. "So do I."
"What are you looking for?" called Micum.
"Don't know yet," Seregil replied absently, poking through the seaweed
floating in one of the larger tide pools.
"See how the formation of the stone forms a natural amphitheater?" Nysander
pointed out. "You try those higher ledges. I shall take the right."
Micum scrambled diligently up and down the rocks, but found nothing but
bleached shells and bird droppings. He was just wondering if Nysander ought to
spare a bit of magic after all when Seregil let out a triumphant cackle below.
"What is it?" Micum demanded.
Seregil lay sprawled on his belly, his arms plunged nearly to the shoulder
into one of the long, narrow fissures that ran down the lower ledges to the sea.
"Come see for yourself."
Climbing down, Micum and Nysander knelt and peered into the cleft in the
stone.
"Look here," said Seregil, pushing aside a clump of rock weed. Beneath it,
they saw rows of crudely carved symbols cut into the rock six inches below the
top of the crack. Moving along on hands and knees, they found that the symbols
formed a continuous band spanning both sides of the fissure all the way down to
the sea. A second crevice near the other side of the cove was filled with the
same sort of carvings.
"What are they?" asked Micum.
Nysander's pale face lit up with excitement as he studied the whorls,
circles, and cross-hatching that formed the patterns. "Such carvings have been
found all round the inner seas, but no one has ever deciphered them. Like that
stone up there, they were placed here before our kind arrived."
"Another sacred spot," Seregil said, sitting up. "I found the crown in a cave
the Dravnians called a spirit chamber. I felt their spirit after I'd gotten the
crown. Micum, you remember that underground chamber you found in the Fens?"
"Of course." Micum grimaced, recalling the scene of slaughter.
"You said there was an altar stone of some sort there," Nysander said,
exchanging an excited glance with Seregil. "That chamber could have been some
sort of holy place, too, before the wooden disks were hidden there." He waved a
hand at the carvings they'd found.
"And now this place, this ancient temple site. All this suggests that the
necromancers use the power of such places to enhance their own magic. Assuming
that this is the case, then there must be some significance in Mardus' choice of
this rather obscure location."
"I was just thinking the same thing," Seregil said, sighting down the
right-hand fissure. Waves surged up the cleft with the gentle heave of the tide,
churning up white foam as they lifted the seaweed. After a moment he began
pulling off his boots.
"Fetch a rope, would you, Micum?" he asked, stripping off his tunic and shirt
as well.
"What are you up to?"
"I just want a look at where these cracks in the rock lead."
Seregil tied one end of the rope around his waist and handed the rest to
Micum, then waded into the icy water.
He was thigh deep when the undertow knocked him off his feet. Micum tightened
his grip on the rope, but Seregil surfaced and motioned for nim to slack up
again. Struggling against the waves, he swam farther out and dove beneath the
surface.
"What is it he's after?" Micum muttered nervously, paying out more line.
"I cannot imagine," Nysander replied, shaking his head.
Seregil dove twice more before shouting for Micum to haul him in.
Pale and blue-lipped with cold, Seregil staggered up the rock and flattened
himself against its sun-warmed surface. Nysander unfastened his cloak and laid
it over him.
Micum squatted down beside him. "Find anything?"
"Nothing. I had thought maybe, with the gift tide coming—"
Seregil broke off. Sitting up, he smacked a hand across his forehead.
"Illior's Fingers, I've had it all backward!"
"Ah, I think I see!" For the first time in days a little color stole into
Nysander's bleached cheeks.
"How could I have overlooked such an obvious factor?"
"A gift tide?" Micum asked, wondering if he'd heard right.
Seregil's teeth clattered like bakshi stones in a leather cup as he
exclaimed, "It's the last piece of the puzzle. Now the rest falls into place."
"What in the hell are you—"
"Twice each month, the moon causes the tide to rise and fall to unusual
extremes," Nysander explained. "The fishermen call it a gift tide. On the day of
the eclipse there will be such a tide."
"It was the seaweed," Seregil went on, as if that explained everything. "It
grows thickest around the low tide line. Last night I noticed that an unusually
thick band of it was laid bare at low tide."
"But you just said there was nothing out there," said Micum.
"That's right." Seregil jumped to his feet and headed up the ledges. "And I
might have saved myself a swim just now. Leiteus said the eclipse would occur at
midday, which is when the tide will be unusually high. That's the other half of
the cycle!" Water dripped from the tip of his nose as he scrutinized the fissure
again, following it up toward the high ground.
Suddenly he stooped over a collection of stones jumbled together near one of
the parallel fissures, then began tossing them aside.
"Look, a hole," he said, showing them a round hole a hand's span wide bored
deep into the stone.
Scrabbling along on his knees he soon found another, and then a third.
With the help of the others, he uncovered a total of fourteen of the holes,
spaced evenly to form a half circle around a broad, shallow depression in the
stone just above the high tide mark.
It was an unremarkable looking spot, littered with driftwood, shells, dried
seaweed, and other debris, but both of the mysterious crevices in the rock ran
through it.
"Here's your temple," Seregil announced.
"I think you may be correct," Nysander said, looking around in amazement.
"It's above the normal tide line now, but from the looks of the debris, the
highest tides reach it. It's a sort of natural basin."
"It must have been used by the people who left the writing we found carved
there," Nysander speculated. "I wonder what the holes represent?"
"So the eclipse and the high tide that fills this thing will happen at the
same time," observed Micum, helping Seregil cover the holes as they had found
them.
"The highest point of the tide will lag some minutes behind the completion of
the eclipse," the wizard replied.
"Which means Mardus will have only a few moments in which to complete
whatever ritual he plans before the sun returns. It is generally believed that
the more rare the conjunction, the more powerful its effect. With the added
factor of the comet, I should say this conjunction will be an extraordinarily
potent and dangerous one. That it is so focused on a specific locale makes it
all the more so."
"By the Flame!" Micum muttered. "And the three of us are supposed to take on
that, with however many Plenimarans thrown in?"
"Four," Seregil amended darkly, shooting Nysander a pointed look. "When the
time comes, there are supposed to be four of us."
Time passed like a slow nightmare for Alec.
By day the cart bumped and jolted over the rough coastal track the column
followed. His mounted escort ignored him for the most part, talking among
themselves in their own language. With only Thero for company, Alec spent the
daylight hours dozing and watching the mountainous countryside go by.
And dreading nightfall. At night the bear cart was stationed somewhat apart
from the camp. Alec quickly learned to fear the moment when his guards faded
away into the shadows; this was the signal for Vargul
Ashnazai's festival of nightmares to begin.
Later, when the final horror was over and Alec had been reduced to terrified
fury, the guards would reappear and whatever was left of the night would pass in
relative peace.
The second night Diomis and his mother materialized in the cage, heads
clutched beneath their arms as they cursed and accused him. Alec knew they were
only illusions, but their accusations stabbed at enough of his own doubts to
bring real pain. Turning his back on them, he stuffed his fingers in his ears
and tried to ignore the prodding and buffeting of their cold, ghostly hands. It
was pointless to fight back—they had no more substance than air.
Curling tighter in his misery, he waited for Ashnazai to tire of the game.
When it was over, Alec lay listening to the small sounds of the night-an
owl's hunting call, the distant nickering of horses, the low murmur of the
guards, who'd come back as soon as Ashnazai had gone.
Where did they go? he wondered, letting his mind wander where it would.
A better question: why do they go?
His eyes widened as he stared up into the night sky.
Every time Ashnazai had tormented him, on the ship and now, he did it without
witnesses. This seemed to verify something Alec already suspected. Vargul
Ashnazai did not want anyone, especially Mardus, to know what he was up to.
The following night there was no sign of Ashnazai.
Huddled close to Thero's sleeping form, Alec stared out into the shadows,
bracing for whatever new horror was to come.
The moon rose. The stars wheeled slowly past the branches, but nothing
disturbed the surrounding stillness.
A sweet spring breeze swept through the boughs, carrying to him the scents of
resin, damp mosses, and tender green herbs sprouting from the forest loam.
Closing his eyes, he imagined himself walking through those wooded hills with
his bow as he had with his father. In spite of his fear, he drifted off and
dreamed of hunting and forest trails and freedom.
He was awakened by someone whispering his name. A dark figure stood next to
the cart, beckoning him to the bars.
Alec crouched warily. "What do you want?"
"Alec, it's me," the man replied softly. He pushed his hood back and the
moonlight struck his face.
"Seregil!" Alec managed a choked whisper. Scrambling over, he thrust his hand
out to his friend.
Seregil clasped it and pressed it to his lips.
He was real, solid, warm. Alec clung to him, heedless of the tears of relief
rolling down his own cheeks. "I never thought—How did you find us?"
Reaching through the bars, Seregil cupped Alec's face in his hands. "No time
to explain, tali. I've got to get you out of there." Releasing Alec reluctantly,
he went to the back of the cart to examine the lock.
"Be careful. Vargul Ashnazai put some kind of magic on it."
Seregil glanced up. "Who?"
"The necromancer who was with Mardus in Wolde. And he's not the only one
around, either. They've got a dyrmagnos with them."
"Bilairy's Balls! But there's got to be some way. I'm not leaving you here!"
Alec's heart hammered in his chest as he watched Seregil inspect the lock. It
was torture, being this close but still separated.
"Ah, here's something—" Seregil began, but just then torchlight flared behind
him.
"Seregil, look out!"
Turning, they found Vargul Ashnazai leering up at them, flanked by a
half-dozen armed soldiers.
"How clever of you to have found us," the necromancer gloated. "I much
appreciate your effort. And your boy played his part very convincingly, no?"
Seregil shot Alec a startled look.
It was the cruelest blow yet, that accusing look. It froze Alec's throat, so
that he could only shake his head imploringly.
Seregil drew his sword and sprang from the wagon, away from Ashnazai's men.
But others were waiting for him in the shadows.
Flinging himself against the bars, Alec watched with horror as Seregil fought
for his life. He ran a guard through and slashed another across the neck before
the others leapt at him from behind, knocking him to the ground and pinning him.
The necromancer barked an order and they yanked Seregil to his feet. His face
was bloody, but he held his head high and spat at the necromancer, eyes blazing
with hate.
Ashnazai gave another order. This time Seregil was dragged up into the bear
cart and lashed hand and foot to the bars facing Alec.
"I didn't help him, I swear," Alec whispered hoarsely. "Oh, Seregil, I—"
"It doesn't matter much now," Seregil growled, turning his face away.
"Not in the least," Ashnazai agreed, climbing into the cart behind him with
Seregil's sword in his hand.
"It's a pity you were cut, but then I'd hardly dare chance putting the two of
you together again." He grabbed Seregil by the hair, pulling his head back. "Who
knows what mischief you'd make, eh?"
Stepping back, he placed the point of the sword against the small of
Seregil's back and pushed slowly, twisting the blade.
Seregil let out a strangled cry and grasped the bars. Alec reached through,
grappling for the sword, but one of Ashnazai's men pulled him away, holding him
back as the necromancer drove the blade out through Seregil's belly and then
yanked it free.
Seregil let out a harsh scream and sank to his knees. Struggling free, Alec
caught at him, trying to hold him through the bars. He felt hot blood under his
hands. More ran from the corner of Seregil's mouth.
Alec wanted to speak, but no words would come.
Seregil looked at him, his wide grey eyes full of sorrow and recrimination.
Pulling the dying man's head back again, Ashnazai drew the blade across
Seregil's throat. More blood pumped from the severed arteries, spattering Alec's
face and chest.
Seregil struggled weakly for a moment, his last breath gurgling horribly
through the gaping wound. With a final spasm, he went limp, eyes open and
vacant.
Sobbing, Alec clung to his friend's body until the soldiers cut it loose from
the bars and dragged it from his grasp.
Ashnazai looked down at him with disdain. "That was most enjoyable. Your turn
comes soon, but not so mercifully. But then, you know that, I think."
It had been an illusion, just another of
Ashnazai's tricks.
Alec repeated this over and over to himself as the cart rumbled north the
next day.
But the dried blood on his hands and clothing was real enough. So were the
stains on the canvas ticking of the mattress and the wood at the back of the
cart where Seregil had fallen.
Seregil is dead.
It was an illusion.
Seregil is dead.
It was—
His grief was too deep for tears. It was so vast that it blotted out
everything else. He couldn't eat or sleep or take in his surroundings. Hunched
in a corner of the cage, he clasped his hands around his knees and rested his
head on them, shutting out the world.
Seregil is dead.
As the flat, empty day wore on, Alec often felt Ashnazai's gloating gaze on
him, sipping at his anguish like wine. He kept his eyes averted, unable to bear
the sight of that smug, satisfied smile. The necromancer bided his time, keeping
his distance until the afternoon.
"The guards tell me you eat and drink nothing all day," he said, riding
beside him.
Alec ignored him.
"Too bad not to keep up your strength," Ashnazai went on airily. "Perhaps a
diversion will cheer you. The scouts found a cave where we will make camp.
After so many days of this cage—so drafty, so many eyes looking—a snug cave
will be nice for you, eh?
It will be most, how do you say—?"
He paused. "Most cozy."
His parting laugh left no doubt that something particularly unpleasant was in
the offing. Alec shivered, partly out of dread, partly from a sudden burst of
excitement. This could be his final chance for escape.
He gazed out over the ocean, trying to imagine how many miles lay between him
and Rhiminee.
Nysander was dead.
Seregil was dead.
Cilia. Diomis. Thryis. Rhiri.
The names fell like stones against his heart. If he couldn't get away
tonight, then he'd just as soon die trying.
Sometimes total despair was the best substitute for hope.
The column halted for the night at the base of a small cliff surrounded by
forest. Below the road, the ground fell way sharply to sea ledges.
By this point, Alec had taken stock of his limited options. Somewhere to the
north lay the Mycenian border. If he did manage to get free tonight, it was the
only direction worth going. If he followed the coast, it improved his chances of
meeting friendly forces. It meant fleeing with Thero in tow and Mardus close
behind, but if he could elude him, stay concealed and some distance ahead, then
maybe they had a chance.
If not, he'd put up a fight.
When the column showed signs of stopping for the night he quickly transferred
the precious nail from the seam of his tunic into his mouth and stood at the
bars, watching. The wagoneer drove the bear cart some way apart from the main
camp as usual, trundling to a halt at the ledges on the seaward side of the
trail. Their position, Alec noted with growing hope, had the added advantage of
being to the north of the main camp, which meant fewer pickets between him and
freedom.
Ashnazai was taking no chances. Half a dozen armed guards came to escort the
prisoners to their new quarters. The cave was a rough, deep fisslire beneath a
shelf of ledge overlooking the sea. It was damp, but large enough for a man to
stand up in. A stout iron staple had been driven into a crack in the back wall
and two lengths of heavy chain hung from it.
One of the guards asked something in Plenimaran. The necromancer answered at
some length and his men laughed, then looped the end of a chain around Alec's
neck and secured it with a padlock.
"He asked if I wished you shackled by the leg," Ashnazai told Alec. "I told
him, "An animal will chew off a limb to escape a trap but I think even this
clever young thief cannot chew off his own head."
Still chuckling darkly at the varan's little joke, the guards chained Thero
in the same fashion while Vargul Ashnazai looked on with obvious satisfaction.
"That should hold you nicely," he said, giving the staple a final tug. "I
suggest you waste no effort in trying to free yourself from these bonds. Even if
you did somehow manage to do so, you would find your way blocked by things more
dangerous than chains or guards. Rest now, while you can."
Favoring Alec with another sly, repulsive smile, he added, "Our time together
grows short. I look forward to making this a memorable evening for us all."
Hatred welled up in Alec's throat like bile.
Ashnazai was only a few feet away, well within the reach of the chain. Alec
clenched his fists at his sides and mumbled, "I won't forget you anytime soon."
Ashnazai followed the guards out through the low opening, then turned and
wove a series of symbols in the air in front of it. He walked away out of sight,
but Alec could see at least two guards stationed outside. They spoke among
themselves in low, bantering voices, their shadows passing across the entrance
as they kindled a watch fire and settled down to the night's vigil.
With one eye on the entrance, Alec spat the nail out into his hand and set to
work. First he examined the lock they'd used on Thero's chain. It was large and
sturdy, but he recognized the design as one of only moderate complexity.
With the proper tool, he amended mentally. The nail was not a particularly
delicate instrument for such work, but it did fit inside the keyhole. Closing
his eyes, he gently worked it in against the wards until he felt them give way.
There were four in all; it took several tense minutes to jigger them, but at
last the lock fell open in his hand. He left the curved link holding Thero's
chain in place. Anyone coming in for a quick look would be none the wiser so
long as it was turned around to the back of his neck. He did the same with his
own, then turned his attention to Thero's other restraints.
The lock at the back of the branks was too small for his crude pick. Shifting
Thero into the faint light from the watch fire, he inspected the iron
wristbands.
They were seamless, presumably put on by magic.
Though too snug to slip off over Thero's hands, they turned easily on his
bony wrists. Alec could easily slip a finger into the space between arm and
band.
Perhaps, he smiled darkly to himself, the bands had been tighter before two
weeks of abuse and scant rations had taken their toll. Apparently no one, not
even Mardus, had taken that into account.
Looking up, he found Thero staring at him. It sent a chill over his heart.
Irtuk Beshar had made a speaking puppet of the wizard before; who was it now,
looking at him out of those foggy eyes?
"Thero," he whispered, taking one of the man's cold hands in his own. "Do you
know me? Can you understand what I say?"
Thero gave no sign of understanding, but his gaze did not waver.
Alec shook his head, hardening his resolve. They had nothing to lose and
everything to gain. If the dyrmagnos was spying on him through Thero's eyes and
alerted Mardus, then he'd just shed a little of his own blood and force their
hand tonight.
"I've had enough, Thero. I'm done going along like a sheep to slaughter," he
went on softly, tearing a strip from his tunic and tucking it around the mouth
plate of the branks. Thero offered no resistance as Alec moved the crude gag
into place.
"You need to keep quiet no matter what happens next, all right? You hear? No
matter what, don't make a sound."
Alec stood up and grasped Thero's thumbs firmly. Placing his foot against the
young wizard's chest, he took a deep breath and yanked the thumbs with all his
strength, twisting sharply as he pulled.
He'd seen Seregil do this trick, but had never had the nerve or opportunity
to try it himself.
To his mingled relief and amazement, both joints dislocated cleanly on the
first attempt. Thero's thin hands folded in on themselves with sickening ease,
allowing Alec to work the bands off. There was no time for gentleness;
fortunately whatever magicks kept Thero dazed held until the second band was
off.
As it slipped free, he gave a soft, strangled groan and curled forward
against Alec's knees, holding his limp hands to his chest.
Resetting the joints proved less easy. Alec could feel the bones skating
around under the skin as he pulled and strained, trying to seat the bones back
in their sockets. He could hear Thero's breath whistling harshly around the gag
as he fought not to cry out. Both of them were drenched with sweat by the time
the job was done.
"Damnation!" Thero whimpered, still biting down on the mouth plate.
"Not so loud," Alec pleaded, holding
Thero's head against his chest to muffle any cries.
His own stomach was doing a slow lurch of its own.
"I'm sorry, it was the only way. Are you free of it?"
Thero nodded. "Saw, "eard everythin". Couldn't move—Saw every—"
"So did I," Alec told him, patting his shoulder. "We've got to forget that
for now, while we figure out how to get away from here. What about these,
though?" He pointed to the wristbands, unwilling to touch them again. "Can the
necromancers tell you're not wearing them?"
Thero sat up. "Don' know, "magos work."
"What about your magic?"
Before Thero could answer, they heard the warning sounds of the guards moving
around outside. Alec's heart sank as he listened to their footsteps fading away.
Thero hid the wristbands in the shadows behind him.
Alec moved a few feet away, out of the light.
This is it, he thought coldly, rising to his feet.
Whatever happens, this is it.
A moment later Ashnazai entered carrying a small lantern. The sudden light
stung Alec's eyes and he looked away, noting as he did that
Thero sat half-turned to the wall, wrists out of sight in his lap.
Ignoring the young wizard, Vargul Ashnazai closed in on Alec. "I trust you're
prepared for the evening's entertainment?"
There was a mad possessiveness in his manner; not even the fear of Mardus was
going to get in the way of whatever obscene pleasures he intended to grant
himself tonight. The man's raw hatred was a palpable force in the confines of
the cave. Trapped in the gaze of those hungry black eyes, Alec suddenly felt his
plans of escape turning to dust in his hands.
"What about the guards?" Alec managed, his voice a hollow whisper. He was
grasping at straws and they both knew it.
Ashnazai set the lantern on the floor beside him and pulled off his gloves.
"They're of no concern. No sound will be heard beyond these walls until I choose
to allow it. And even if it did, who would rush to your aid? Duke Mardus,
perhaps? How fond he is of you! Almost as fond as I, but distracted just now by
practical concerns. Fortunately, I have no task at the moment except you."
"Ah, I have been patient," he crooned, raising one pale hand to stitch a
spell pattern on the air. "How I have waited for such a moment as this."
"So have I, necromancer!"
Alec scarcely had time to realize that the harsh, ragged voice was Thero's
before he was blinded by a brilliant explosion of light. A screech of rage or
pain rang out, but Alec couldn't tell which of them it came from.
Blinking away the black spots dancing across his eyes, Alec saw the twisted
remains of the branks lying on the ground at Thero's feet. He also saw with
alarm that whatever spell Thero had cast, it had only wounded Ashnazai, and not
nearly enough.
Bloodied but still standing, the necromancer rounded on Thero, hands raised
for another attack.
Tearing the open lock off, Alec pulled chain from around his neck. Grasping a
length of it in both hands, he sprang at Ashnazai, got the chain around the
necromancer's throat, and yanked it tight.
Vargul Ashnazai writhed like a huge serpent, tearing at the chain. Alec
pulled it tighter and dragged him to the ground. He'd never strangled anything
before, but rage proved a willing teacher. Nothing existed except the feeling of
power coursing through his body as he braced a knee against the necromancer's
back and hauled the chain tighter until it cut into the flesh of his hands and
the necromancer's throat.
"This is for Seregil, you son of a bitch!" he snarled. "For what you did to
Cilia and Thryis and Rhiri and Diomis and Luthas and Thero. And me!" He yanked
the chain back and heard bones snap.
Ashnazai went limp under him, head lolling.
Alec pushed him onto his back and stared into the hated face. Ashnazai's
tongue protruded from his foam-flecked lips. His bulging eyes were wide with
agony and surprise.
Satisfied, Alec pulled the ivory vial from the necromancer's neck and hung it
around his own.
Whatever this was, no one was going to use it against him again.
"We've got to get out of here now," Thero warned, still weak and breathless.
"That spell, the attack—We've got to go before the guards come back!"
"What about the warding spells he cast on the entrance?" Alec asked, helping
the wizard to his feet.
Thero was shaky, but determined. "They were dispelled when you killed him."
"Good." Vargul Ashnazai was nothing more to him than forgotten carrion now.
Turning his back on the body, he extinguished the lantern, then crept to the
mouth of the cave.
The guards were still off minding their own business somewhere, leaving their
master to his pastimes, but the fire they'd built was still bright. The minute
he and Thero stepped out, they'd be visible to anyone lingering nearby.
"Can't you translocate us or something?" Alec whispered, surveying the scene.
"I'd have done that already if I could!" Thero replied with a welcome hint of
his customary brusqueness.
"Get me away from here and I may be able to do something else, though."
"You'd better be praying for Illior's luck, then." Alec pointed north into
the darkness. "We're going that way, understand? We'll have to keep low and
follow the ledge below the road until we get away from the main camp."
Alec left unsaid the fact that any number of guards could be within fifty
feet of them and they wouldn't know it until it was too late; he was trying hard
not to think of that himself. With Thero at his side he sent up one last silent
prayer and hurried past the fire into the darkness beyond.
There didn't seem to be anyone around, but peering up over the ledges they
could see men hunkered around a campfire less than a hundred feet way.
Their bare feet made no sound as they stole along the rocky shore to the edge
of the forest just north of the camp. The open ground between the stunted trees
was treacherously laced with exposed roots jutting out of the thin soil. Alec
clutched Thero by the arm, pulling him along as he stumbled.
They soon spotted several men on picket duty ahead of them. The guards were
watching for trouble coming from outside the camp, however, and Alec skirted
around their position with no trouble. Gauging their direction by the moon, he
led the way north.
They'd been going for less than half an hour when Thero suddenly pulled Alec
to a halt in a small gully.
"Look, I'm tired, too, but we can't afford to rest," Alec urged.
"It's not that," Thero whispered. "They know we're gone. I just felt
something, a searching, I think. It won't take Irtuk Beshar any time to find
us."
"Oh, gods!" Alec gasped, looking back the way they'd come. "We can't get
taken, Thero. They'll sacrifice you and now that I've been bloodied there's
nothing to stop Mardus from—"
"Shut up," Thero interrupted, giving him an abrupt shake. "Kneel down."
"You've got your magic back!" Alec breathed, relief washing over him. "Can
you translocate us now?"
"No, I don't have the power." Thero's lean, bearded face was lost in shadow
as he laid cold hands on Alec's shoulders. "Clear your mind and relax. This
spell will only last until sunrise; remember that if you can. Sunrise. You'll
have to run hard, go as far as you can before—"
They both froze as a weird, preternatural howl burst out from the direction
of the camp. It rose to a mad, sobbing cackle, fell away, only to erupt again,
closer this time.
"Too late!" hissed Alec, then winced as Thero grabbed him by both arms and
forced him back to his knees.
"No it's not!" Thero held him down, speaking urgently. "Clear your mind,
Alec, relax. This takes only a moment."
Another gibbering howl floated to them through the night.
Alec bowed his head, wondering what it was that There intended, and why it
suddenly seemed so familiar.
"That's good, very good," whispered There. "Alec i Amasa Kerry, untir
maligista."
It was the unaccustomed sound of his full name that triggered Alec's memory.
He opened his mouth to protest, but the magic had already taken hold.
"Untir maligista kewat, Alec i Amasa Kerry." There continued, pouring out all
his disremaining power as he pressed down hard on Alec's shoulders. Whatever
horror Irtuk Beshar had unleashed was crashing through the trees toward them,
bellowing its lunatic hunting call.
Throwing back his head, Thero cried out, "Let thy inner symbol be revealed!"
The change was nearly instantaneous. One moment Alec was kneeling before him,
the next a young stag was shaking the remains of the tattered tunic from its
antlers. Nostrils flaring, it leapt away from Thero, then looked back in
confusion. A ghostly residue of magic still glimmered faintly around it, but
that would soon fade.
Thero took a tentative step toward it, though he knew Alec was probably past
understanding human speech.
"I didn't intentionally betray the Oreska," he told him. "Let this be the
atonement for my blindness. Go on. Run!"
The stag lowered its head, lashing its antlers from side to side as if
refusing to leave him.
"No, Alec, go."
A greedy snarl from the shadows settled the issue; the stag turned and
bolted.
The last thing Thero saw was the white flash of its tail.
They'd had time now to learn the pattern of the Plenimaran camp. Pickets were
stationed along the landward perimeter a quarter mile out, with a second line
closer in. It made a tight net but, like any net, it was also a pattern of
holes.
Silent and deadly as true urgazhi, Beka and her raiders quietly killed four
pickets, stripped them of their tunics and weapons, then worked their way toward
the mass of sleeping prisoners.
The clearness of the night was against them. The moon was nearing full and by
its light they could make out the details of each other's faces as they gathered
for the raid. By that same betraying light, they also saw that Gilly and Mirn
had again managed to keep themselves as close as possible to the outside edge of
the group.
Stripped to the waist, they lay on their backs, heads resting on the plank.
Just then, angry shouts burst out somewhere on the far side of the camp.
Whatever was going on, it was attracting the attention of the whole camp.
Several of the sentries stationed among the prisoners moved off in the direction
of the noise. From somewhere nearby came the snort and bellow of a bull.
"By Sakor, we'll never have a better chance than this!" Beka whispered.
Her plan was simple, direct, and fraught with the possibility for complete
disaster. The others understood this, but had been unanimously in favor of the
rescue.
Bows at the ready, Beka and the others watched from the cover of the trees
while Steb, Rhylin,
Nikides, and Kallas pulled on the stolen enemy tunics and strode casually out
in the direction of the prisoners.
Still focused on the outcry, none of the sentries challenged the four raiders
as they quickly lifted the planked prisoners and rushed them into the shelter of
the trees. The whole act was accomplished in a moment's time.
The raiding party ghosted back the way they'd come until they reached Jareel
and Ariani, who'd been left behind to guard the horses well outside the
Plenimaran perimeter.
"Knew you'd come," Gilly said faintly as Kallas and Nikides lowered him
gently to the ground on his back beside Mini.
Their hands were swollen and purple where the long spikes pierced their
palms. Their shoulders had rubbed raw against the rough planks. Looking more
closely at them now, Beka saw from the numerous other bruises and abrasions that
covered both men that they must have often stumbled and fallen beneath their
awkward burdens.
"Rest easy, riders," she said, kneeling next to them. At her nod, several of
the others held their legs and shoulders. Nikides bent to cut the ropes lashing
their arms to the wood, but Sergeant Braknil stopped him.
"Best leave those on 'til we're done," he cautioned. "Give them both a belt
to bite down on and let's get this over with."
Using a pair of farrier's pliers, he set his foot against the plank and
wrenched the first spike from
Gilly's hand.
It was an excruciating process. The flesh had swollen and festered badly
around the spikes and
Braknil had to dig into the skin to get a proper grip.
Gilly fainted as the first spike pulled free.
Mirn gnawed doggedly at the belt between his teeth while tears of pain
streamed down into his ears.
"Easy now," Beka murmured, trying not to let the rage and revulsion she felt
show in her voice as she pressed her hands down on his shoulders. "It'll be over
soon."
When it was over, Braknil bathed their wounds with seawater and bandaged them
with strips of sweat-stained linen and wool each rider had cut from their
clothing.
"Neither of them is in any condition to ride," said Beka. "Rhylin, you and
Kallas are the strongest riders so you'll take them. Nikides, see that those
planks come with us, and the spikes. Don't leave the bastards any more sign than
we can help."
As the rest of the turma mounted for the retreat, a new cry came from the
direction of the camp, one that brought gooseflesh up on every arm.
The mad, unnatural howl rose and fell, then burst out again, quavering as if
some monstrous throat was about to burst with the effort. The horses tossed
their heads, nervously scenting the wind.
"Bilairy's Balls! What was that, Lieutenant?" gasped Tealah.
"Let's hope we don't find out," Beka muttered. The awful cry came again. "No,
it's headed away from us. Let's move on before it changes its mind."
"Which way?" Rhylin asked, shifting his hold around Mirn, who'd finally
fainted.
"Inland, out of their path," Beka replied as another faint howl floated back
to them through the trees.
"And away from whatever that is!" someone muttered as they spurred away.
Alec?
Nysander's brow creased as he stared unseeingly into the darkness. It had
been Thero's essence he felt first; now there was only Alec's, glimmering in his
mind like a distant beacon.
It took no expenditure of power to sense it—the energy was clear, perhaps due
to the strong magic fused with it. Nysander recognized the familiar imprint of
the spell.
Well done, Thero!
But why had the young wizard's own essence disappeared so suddenly?
Feeling Alec's fleeting tremor again, he focused the slightest burst of magic
on it, silently mouthing, Come to us, Alec. We need you.
They'd taken shelter beneath an old salt pine in the forest above the temple
site. The tips of the tree's lower limbs swept nearly to the ground, forming a
low, tentlike space inside.
Stretched out on the thick fragrant bed of fallen needles, Micum snored
softly. Beside him, Seregil tossed restlessly, muttering in Aurenfaie.
The wizard had felt little need for sleep since his arrival in Plenimar. The
quiet hours of the night were too precious to waste. Instead, he kept watch and
wove his meditations, nurturing his returning strength. He only hoped it would
be enough when the time came.
Seregil shifted again, uttering a low moan.
Nysander considered waking him, sharing this first sign of hope, but it was
too soon; if Seregil believed Alec, was nearby, then he would strike off on his
own after him. Alec was still too far away.
Leaning back against the pine's knobby trunk, he resumed his lonely vigil.
The Four was whole again; they would find each other.
Beka's raiders pushed due east until the moon set. At dawn they found
themselves on a rocky highland overlooking the misty blue sea in the distance.
Mim's and Gilly's hands looked like bloated gloves, mottled with angry shades
of purple, red, and yellow. When Braknil had finished with the new dressings,
Beka drew him a little apart from the others.
"You've seen this before. What do you think?" she asked, keeping her voice
low.
"I'd give a year's bounty for a drysian." The sergeant was careful to keep
his back to the others.
"Even then I don't know if the hands could be saved. As it is here, field
dressing's the best I can do and I've got no simples to work with but brine.
That might be enough to draw the pus off, but if they take the blood poisoning—"
He gave a small, expressive shrug. "Well, it'd be kinder to speed them on."
Looking back to the others, Beka watched Tare coaxing the wounded men to
drink.
"Thirty-four of us rode out of Rhiminee together, a green lieutenant and
green troops, except for you," Beka said grimly. "Now look at us."
"It was that attack on the regiment that cleaned us out,"
Braknil reminded her. "You led us well there. What happened wasn't your
fault. Every one of us that fell went down with honor. We've fared damn well
with all the raiding we've done since and that is your doing. All that counts
now is getting back to our own lines with what we've learned."
Beka gave her sergeant a weary half smile. "So you keep telling me. Let's see
if Mirn and Gilly have anything to add."
"Some of the other prisoners spoke some Skalan," Mim told them weakly, his
head resting on Steb's leg. "One of them said the general's name is Mardus, a
lord of some degree. He's got necromancers with him, too."
"Necromancers," snorted Gilly, staring down at his useless hands. "One of
them looked more demon than wizard. Black as something raked out of the fire,
but alive as you or me! No one knew where we were headed, but everyone knew what
was going on at night and it was her doing it!"
"It was some kind of sacrifice," explained Mirn. "The guards came every night
at sundown and you could see everyone trying to shrink down out of sight any way
they could, hoping they wouldn't be the ones chosen. We were on the other side
of camp from the ceremony most nights, but we could hear well enough to know
that they were cutting up the poor buggers alive—"
He broke off, shuddering. "Afterward the other wizard, the man, would conjure
up a black fetch to take away the bodies. The next day we'd march right over the
spot where it happened and I swear to you, there wouldn't be so much as a drop
of blood anywhere."
"A black fetch?" several riders murmured uneasily.
"By the Flame! You suppose that's what we heard howling in the woods last
night?" Tare asked.
"Go on," Beka urged, ignoring the others.
"What I'll never figure is why they didn't do us," Gilly groaned, his voice
suddenly unsteady. "By the Flame, Lieutenant, we were enemy captives. They
planked us, all right, but nothing more. All the rest of the lot were plain
folk: sailors taken by press gangs, Skalans, Mycenians. Women and children, too.
But most of them were Plenimarans. Their own people!"
Both men fell silent, then Mirn sighed. "Sorry, Lieutenant, that's about all
there is to tell."
Beka shook her head. "Don't apologize. You rest easy now." Getting to her
feet, she looked around at the others.
"I figure we can't be more than four or five days ride from Mycena. If we're
lucky, our side's made some headway south by now. Ariani, I'm sending you back
to the regiment with a verbal dispatch. Take the two best horses, ride as hard
as you can, and get word back to Commander Klia about what we've seen."
Ariani snapped a proud salute. "I will, Lieutenant."
"Corporal Nikides, you're in charge of taking back the wounded. We'll rig up
drag litters for Mirn and Gilly here. Steb, you'll go with them. The rest of us
will dog the column for a few more days."
Steb looked down at Mirn, clearly torn in his loyalties. "With all due
respect, Lieutenant, that only leaves twelve of you. I can shoot and fight as
well with one eye as ever I did with two."
"That's why I need you to protect the wounded," she told him, and saw his
look of relief. "That goes for you, too, Nikides," she added, seeing that the
corporal was about to object. "Head north as fast as you can. You're my
secondary couriers in case Ariani doesn't make it. The rest of us are staying to
spy, not fight."
Leaving Braknil in charge, Beka made a wide circuit of the camp, coming to a
halt at last on a west-facing outcrop downhill from the others. She could hear
them grumbling among themselves.
Those being sent away were none too happy about leaving the others behind;
those staying wondered what more there was to be learned.
Beka sighed heavily. She'd already wrestled with the decision to further
fragment what was left of the turma. None of her superiors would fault her for
turning back now.
But what would they say about her reasons for staying? As her eye wandered
north up the coastline she again felt the strange impression of familiarity and
lightness that had come over her the night they'd first seen the comet.
Whoever this Lord Mardus was, whatever he was up to with his necromancers and
pointless marches to nowhere, newly honed instincts told Beka that she was too
close to learning his secrets to leave off now.
Cries rang out behind him as Alec fled the little clearing. The voices of the
Man and the Other mingled for a moment, then were silent. An inchoate sense of
confusion stirred again, but his animal consciousness drove him on, deeper into
the forest and away from the carrion reek. He scented other Men in the forest
around him but they were easy enough to evade.
The first time Nysander had cast the spell of intrinsic nature on him, all
those months ago in the safety of the Oreska garden, Alec's conscious identity
had been so totally overwhelmed by that of his beast form that Nysander had
hastily changed him back before he could harm himself or anyone else in the
resulting confusion.
It was the same this time, and it had been his overpowering animal flight
instinct that had undoubtedly saved his life.
The wind was alive with scent as he dashed headlong through the darkness.
Heeding the warnings that came to his nose, he avoided the Plenimaran pickets,
bounding through thickets and over gullies and deadfalls with unthinking ease.
As he fled, his mind slowly recovered from the shock of the change, blending
with that of the stag into a state of heightened awareness that was neither
animal nor human.
Emerging from the trees onto a rocky sea cliff, he stopped for a moment,
muzzle dark with foam. Below him the tide crashed against the rocks, sending up
great fans of spray.
The comet was burning across the sky and sight of it sent a fresh wave of
panic through him. Every muscle trembled and twitched, every instinct screamed
flight.
But he remained still, long sensitive ears sharply forward, nostrils wide. As
his strange blood slowly cooled, something new caught at his senses.
Pawing the rock with one cloven hoof, he uttered a plaintive bellow, then
stood motionless, listening.
The answering call was nothing more than the faintest of whispers in the
silence of his mind. There was no voice or scent or image, only the summoning of
instinct.
North, still north. Follow and trust.
Like a bird that suddenly recalls the route south after the first frost, Alec
gave himself up to the pull of that faint glimmer, his mind still too clouded by
the stag's to question or doubt.
With another deep-throated cry he set his face to the wind and bounded
onward.
Moon shadow patterns slid across his broad back as he ran and his human mind
gradually began to marvel at the sensation of this startling new body.
He could feel the strain and bunch of the stag's muscles as he sprang, the
pumping of its great heart, the weight of the heavy rack that it bore with no
more thought than he'd ever given to a hat.
The familiar scents of sea and forest took on a new richness beyond human
perception. Pausing to drink at a flowing spring, he couldn't resist the aroma
of young mallow shoots growing around it. The wet green taste of them filled his
mouth like honeycomb. A little grey owl winged across his path with a soft rush
of feathers as he set off again.
The coastline grew more desolate as he moved north, and in the distance he
could see a solitary peak jutting up against the stars. The ledges were broader
here, extending out into the sea and cleft with crevasses and bands of darker
stone. Farther up, where rock met grassland, mats of crowberry and lichen sent
up a sweet aroma as he trampled across.
The sea slowly retreated down the rocks toward the low mark, leaving behind
glistening tide pools that shone like black mirrors in the darkness. The moon
sank into the sea and the stars danced toward home. As the wind shifted and
night scents began to fade he smelled horses and men.
Picking his way down into a gully, he stood motionless, sniffing the breeze,
until they'd passed him and disappeared to the north.
Alec sensed the coming dawn long before the first tinge of it appeared in the
sky. The pellucid light of the false dawn welled up behind the mountains, waking
flotillas of gulls and ducks that had ridden the waves out beyond the pull of
the breakers. Something in the change of light tugged at his memory, but
consumed by the irresistible pull of instinct and the summons, he could not
recall what it was.
The first ray of true dawn touched him as he sprang across a foaming cleft in
the rocks. The stag form blurred in midair, leaving in its place a thin, naked
youth.
Sheer momentum carried Alec across. He landed awkwardly, skinning his knees
and elbows. Still reeling from the transformation, he sprawled on his back and
blinked up at the marbled gold sky, wondering dully where he was and how he'd
come to be there.
Waves surged up the cleft he'd just jumped, flinging glittering white spray
across his bare skin.
As Alec struggled to his knees, he realized he was still wearing the ivory
vial he'd taken from Vargul Ashnazai. Prying it open, he emptied the contents
into his palm, a few dark slivers of wood.
A blinding flash of memory rocked him—Ashnazai toying with the vial as he
wove his tortures aboard the Kormados, the look of satisfaction on his face when
he cut Seregil's throat, There's last despairing cry as it mingled with the howl
of whatever had been unleashed against them after their escape. With a choked
sob, he flung the pieces into the sea and screamed his sorrow after them.
But even as he mourned, the summons was still there, fainter somehow but
still clear enough.
North.
The first Plenimaran scouts reached the temple site just after dawn. Micum
was on watch and heard their horses in time to hide in the underbrush next to
the track. He waited until they passed him, heading toward the white stone, then
hurried back to the pine shelter to warn the others.
"They're on their way," he whispered, crawling under the screen of branches.
"Two Plenimaran scouts just went by on the road, headed north."
"It is fortunate that they keep to the road," Nysander murmured, stroking his
chin absently.
"Why is that?" asked Seregil.
Nysander sighed heavily, then looked up at his two companions. "Alec is on
his way to us. He is keeping to the shoreline, so it is fortunate that the
Plenimarans take the road."
"He's on his way?" Micum gasped, incredulous. "How do you know? When did you
know?"
Seregil said nothing, but Micum saw the sudden tension in him, and the hectic
spots of color that leapt into his sunken cheeks.
"I sensed him just after midnight last night," replied Nysander.
"You knew he was out there and you didn't tell us?" Seregil hissed. "Illior's
Light, Nysander, why not?"
"You would only have charged off in the darkness with very little hope of
accomplishing anything but damage to yourselves. He was too far away for you to
reach on foot. Thero seems to have had a hand in his escape—"
"That traitorous bastard?" Seregil's eyes narrowed dangerously.
"Stop it, Seregil!" Nysander ordered, finally giving rein to his own anger.
It flashed across his face, startling as lightning from a clear sky.
"Whatever Thero's past actions may have been, it would appear that he used
his own magic to aid Alec's escape, quite possibly at the expense of his own
life. Alec is alone. This has brought him closer to us than losing either of you
would have. If Mardus' scouts have reached us already, then the man himself
cannot be far behind."
Seregil opened his mouth to protest but Micum spoke first. "I don't like it
either, but he's right and we both know it," he said grudgingly.
"Well, what about now, then?" demanded Seregil, still boiling. "We can't just
sit here hoping he finds us by sheer luck! Bilairy's Balls, Nysander, if you're
so certain of where he is, magick him in!"
"You know I cannot expend that kind of power now. However, I was able to send
a summoning and place some protections around him, as well. Mardus will not find
him by magic."
Seregil reached for his boots and sword belt.
"But you knew about him last night," Micum said, frowning. "How did you do
that, if not with magic?"
"I did nothing. The knowledge simply came to me."
"Then why don't Micum and I sense him?"
Seregil demanded.
"Who knows? Go to him now; help him. He is coming from the south."
"Ah, that's one of my titles, isn't it? The Guide?" Seregil growled, grabbing
up a water skin and pushing out through the branches.
Micum moved to follow, but Nysander laid a hand on his arm. "Let him go."
Seregil's anger quickly gave way to cautious joy as he loped along over the
rocks. During the long days on the Lady, hope had dwindled to a stubborn refusal
to imagine the worst. Now it seemed Nysander's faith in the prophecy had been
proven. Against all odds, the four of them were being brought together again on
this hostile shore.
The tide had just turned past low, leaving tide pools and treacherous masses
of bladder wrack gleaming in the morning sun. Great green swells rolled in from
the open sea, wave upon wave smashing to geysers of glistening spume against the
rocks. A freshening wind off the water carried the spray up the shore; Seregil
turned his face to it as he stalked along, tasted salt on his lips.
Nothing else mattered. Alec was alive.
He kept one eye on the trees as he went. One patrol had shown up already;
there would be others. Within the hour he spied the glint of sunlight off metal.
Taking cover in a rocky cleft, he listened as a group of riders passed at a
gallop. From the sound of it, there were at least a dozen of them. Waiting until
the last sound of their horses had faded away to the north, he continued on his
way.
Another hour passed and he began to worry that they'd somehow missed each
other. Alec could have taken refuge, as he had, under an outcropping or in the
forest. Or had an accident or been recaptured. Reining in these dark thoughts,
Seregil sat down on a damp block of stone to catch his breath.
His arrival dislodged a small nation of striped periwinkles, which clattered
and rolled away like a cascade of marbles into the tide pool at his feet. A gull
circled down to drink on the opposite side.
"I'll find him," Seregil sighed aloud, resting his head in his hands. "He's
here and I'll find him."
The gull regarded him with one skeptical yellow eye, then flapped off with a
derisive jeer.
Turning his head to watch it, Seregil froze in disbelief. A wan, battered
spector stood looking down at him from a shelf of rock not twenty feet away.
"Alec!"
Thin, bruised, and naked, Alec swayed visibly as the wind buffeted him.
Despite his obvious exhaustion, however, he was poised for flight.
"Alec, it's me," Seregil said more gently, watching hope and fear warring in
those dark, narrowed eyes. What had put such deep distrust there?
"What's wrong?"
"What are you doing here?" Alec croaked, and the wariness in his voice went
through Seregil like a knife.
"Looking for you. Nysander's here, too, and Micum. They're back that way."
"Nysander's dead," Alec said, taking a step backward.
"No, he almost died, but he's alive, I promise you. We know what Mardus is up
to now/ We were right, Alec. We are the Four-you, me, Nysander, and Micum. We're
all here to stop him."
Alec shivered miserably as the wind whipped his hair across his pale face.
"How do I know it's you?" he mumbled faintly.
"What are you talking about?" Seregil asked in growing confusion. "What did
they do to you? It's me! I'm coming up to you now, all right? Don't be afraid."
To his amazement, Alec turned and fled.
Scrambling up the rocks, Seregil dashed after him and caught him in his arms,
holding Alec tightly as he struggled.
"Easy, now! What's wrong?" He could feel
Alec's heart hammering beneath his ribs. Panting, Alec twisted around and
gripped the side of Seregil's face in one hand. Fighting back his own sudden
fear, Seregil loosened his hold.
Alec gingerly touched his hair, shoulders, and arms, his expression almost
feral in its intensity and distrust. After a moment, however, the look
disappeared, replaced by the most wondrous look of relief Seregil had ever seen.
"O Illior, it is you. You're alive," Alec gasped, tears welling in his eyes.
"That bastard! I should have guessed, but the blood, your voice, everything. But
you're alive!"
Shuddering, he grabbed Seregil in a fierce embrace.
"Last time I looked," Seregil rasped, his throat tight with emotion as he
hugged Alec to him.
The boy was trembling badly now. Releasing him just long enough to get his
cloak off and swing it around Alec's bare shoulders, Seregil helped him down in
the lee of a large rock and held him close as the boy trembled and wept.
"I thought you were dead," Alec exclaimed hoarsely, still clinging to Seregil
as if terrified that he'd disappear. "It was Vargul Ashnazai. He made me think
you'd come to rescue me, and he killed—" Alec let out a harsh sound between a
sob and a laugh. "But I killed the son of a whore!"
The story that spilled from him was broken and confused, but Seregil was able
to piece enough together to begin to guess what kind of torture Alec had been
subjected to. Tears of helpless rage stung behind his own eyes as he stroked
Alec's hair, murmuring softly to him in Aurenfaie.
Coming to the end of his tale, Alec rested his head wearily on Seregil's
shoulder and drew another shuddering breath. "The worst of it—When Ashnazai
killed you, tricked me into thinking he had—he said things—" Alec squeezed his
eyes shut. "I thought you died believing I'd betrayed you."
Seregil stroked a strand of hair back from Alec's forehead and kissed him
there. "It's all right, tali. If it had really been me, I wouldn't have believed
him. I know you too well for that."
"And I never told you—" Alec's pale face flushed crimson. "I don't understand
it, but I—"
He faltered and Seregil pulled him closer. "I know, tali. I know."
It was Alec who brought their lips together.
Seregil's first reaction was disbelief. But Alec was insistent, clumsy but
determined. It lasted an instant, an eternity, that one awkward kiss, and it
spoke silent volumes of bewildered honesty.
The moment that followed was too fragile for words.
He's exhausted, confused. He's been tortured past the point of endurance,
Seregil warned himself, but for once, the doubts refused to take root.
Father, brother, friend.
Lover.
He closed his eyes, knowing that whatever grew up between them, it would be
enough.
Alec was the first to break the silence. Wiping his face on the corner of the
cloak, he said, "We'd better keep going. If I fall asleep now I don't think
you'd be able to wake me again. Mardus is on his way."
"You'd better get some clothes on." Seregil stood to pull off his tunic and
felt the weight of the black dagger he'd carried inside it.
"I almost forgot, I've been saving this for you."
Taking the knife out, Seregil unwrapped the scarf he'd wound around it. He
held it a moment, his symbol of both defeat and hope through the long days of
their separation. At last he tugged the knotted hank of hair loose from the hilt
and let the wind snatch the golden strands from his fingers, scattering them
over the rocks and into the sea.
Irtuk Beshar rode to the front of the column and fell in beside Mardus.
Captain Denaril, leader of the land force that had met them upon landing, gave
place with a barely concealed shudder.
Mardus greeted her with a gracious nod. "Good morning, Honored One."
"And to you, Lord Mardus. Have your scouts returned?"
"Yes. They report no interference. We'll make camp by late afternoon today
and be well in place for the final ceremony tomorrow."
"The will of Seriamaius is with you, as always, my lord." Irtuk studied the
dark man's comely profile. "I must say, you seem remarkably sanguine, given the
death of Vargul Ashnazai and the escapes last night."
Mardus shrugged eloquently. "Ashnazai brought his death on himself, despite
all my warnings. Losing Alec was regrettable, though. What a remarkable young
man."
"But the prisoners?"
"My trackers say the Skalan raiding party numbered less than a dozen riders
and that they fled east. No, the Helm will be restored and I shall serve
Seriamaius as the Vatharna."
Mardus' cold smile broadened perceptibly.
"Not a shabby attainment for an Overlord's unacknowledged bastard, eh?"
"I have foreseen this day since you were a child at my knee," the dyrmagnos
said fondly. "Even now the young Overlord suspects nothing. When the time comes
he will be forced to give place to you, his trusted half brother. With the Helm
on your brow and the hand of Seriamaius over you, no one can contest your claim
to the throne."
"And how is young Thero this morning?"
Irtuk Beshar gave a dry, whispery laugh.
"Subdued. Most subdued."
The second scouting patrol was larger. Watching from the shelter of several
large boulders, Micum counted a dozen Plenimaran riders moving up the track
toward the temple site.
Stealing back to the salt pine, he found Nysander listening calmly to the
scouts calling back and forth to one another as they spread out through the
trees behind the site.
"What are they saying?" whispered Micum.
"From the sound of it, they are looking for a place for an encampment."
Before long the Plenimarans backtracked to a sloping meadow a quarter of a
mile back the way they'd come.
Micum and the wizard followed cautiously.
"Looks like they're settling in," Micum said, watching as several soldiers
set to work felling trees at the edge of the clearing. "And right in Seregil's
path, too. You can see the ledges from there."
"He must have seen them earlier," Nysander replied, heading back to the pine
shelter.
"Let's hope so," Micum muttered. "I didn't like the way he stormed out of
here. You know, there's nothing to do here just now. Maybe I should head out
looking for him. Will you be safe?"
Nysander smiled. "From that lot? Oh, yes. You go on."
Keeping behind the underbrush along the road, Micum passed the Plenimaran
camp without being seen. From the cover of a fallen tree, he counted ten
soldiers in the clearing. That left two unaccounted for.
When he was well away from the camp he moved out onto the ledges and looked
south for some sign of movement. Nysander had not been specific on how far away
Alec was. Checking the sun, he guessed Seregil had been gone a little better
than an hour.
The incoming tide boomed against the rocks as he continued south. Another
hour passed before he finally caught sight of two figures moving toward him in
the distance. Though too far away still to make out details, he could see that
Seregil was supporting Alec as they made their way unsteadily over a rocky
stretch of shore.
Seregil drew his sword at the sight of him, then sheathed it again as he
recognized Micum.
"By the Flame, we found you after all!" Micum exclaimed joyously as he
reached them. Throwing an arm around Alec, Micum gave him a welcoming hug and
helped him to a seat on a driftwood log. The boy was hollow-eyed with
exhaustion, and dressed in Seregil' boots, tunic, and cloak.
"Are you all right? Where's Thero?"
"Dead or captured," Alec told him, and Micum heard the strain in his voice.
Seregil gave Micum a quick warning look. "Thero helped him escape. He's had a
rough time of it these last few weeks. We've still got a ways to go, Alec. Do
you want to rest before we go on?"
"No, let's just keep going," Alec replied.
"Where's Nysander?"
"Don't you worry about him. He's safe. And by the Flame, so are you!" Micum
said warmly, clasping Alec's shoulder. "Bilairy's Balls, Alec, I was afraid we'd
lost you."
"Have the second group of scouts reached the place yet?" asked Seregil.
"Two hours ago, I'd say. They staked out a camp just below the temple. I
didn't want the two of you running into them by accident, so I came out to meet
you."
"Thanks. I'll need you to get him the rest of the way." Seregil glanced down
at Alec with concern.
"He doesn't have much left in him. I'm surprised we made it as far as we
did."
"I'll be all right," Alec insisted, swaying as he got to his feet again.
"We'd better stick to the woods," Micum said, slipping an arm under Alec's.
"It's too exposed out here and I don't know where they've posted guards. How far
behind would you say Mardus is?"
"I lost all track of distance last night," Alec confessed. "If the scouts
have reached you, he can't be much more than half a day behind."
"What kind of force does he have with him?"
"I'm not certain, but I think he has at least forty soldiers, plus a gang of
prisoners—maybe a hundred. And there's the necromancer and a dyrmagnos."
Micum's eyes widened in alarm. "Damnation! He's got one of those things with
him? And prisoners?"
"I imagine it takes a lot of blood to make this Helm of theirs," Seregil said
bitterly. "Alec claims there were sacrificial murders on the ship as they came
over, and more since they landed and met up with another force. That's where
this bunch of prisoners came from."
"And the four of us are here to stop them?" Micum shook his head as they
climbed up to the forest and started back.
With the help of Micum and Seregil, Alec managed to make it to the salt pine.
"Here you are at last, dear boy!" Nysander whispered, embracing Alec as he
collapsed onto the carpet of dried needles. "I knew you would come back to us.
And only just in time."
"Seregil told me about the eclipse tomorrow," said Alec, yawning as he
settled with his back to the trunk.
"I know how weary you must be, but you must tell me all that you've learned.
Then I promise, you shall rest. And you must eat!"
Seregil passed him some biscuit, cheese, and a skin of fresh water. Alec took
a long gulp before he began.
"You were right, both of you," he said, looking ruefully at Micum and
Seregil. "I should've stayed at Watermead that night, but I was worried about
Seregil. When I got back to the Cockerel—"
He paused, blinking back fresh tears.
"They know," Seregil told him, moving closer beside him. "I got there at dawn
and saw everything. What happened after that?"
"They jumped me as soon as I came in, Ashnazai and his men. I managed to
wound a couple of them before they took me down."
"Vargul Ashnazai?" asked Nysander. "Ah, yes, I have heard of him."
Alec smiled bitterly. "You won't anymore. I killed the bastard last night.
That's how Thero and I got away. At least I did."
He looked around at the others earnestly. "He saved my life. Whatever else he
did, he saved my life and he's probably dead now because of it. He used his
magic to help us escape, then he changed me into a stag the way you did,
Nysander." Alec's chin trembled but he didn't stop. "I-I ran away. He chased me
off and I ran. I can still hear—"
The wizard clasped Alec's hands between his. "I won't tell you not to grieve,
dear boy, but you mustn't blame yourself. Please, continue with your story. You
were speaking of the inn."
Alec wiped at his nose with a dirt-streaked forearm. "I don't remember much
after that, until I woke up aboard the ship. Mardus was there, and Ashnazai,
another necromancer I didn't see much of, and a dyrmagnos woman called Irtuk
Beshar."
Steeling himself, he related his treatment aboard the Kormados.
Nysander listened in silence until he reached the nightmarish dinner with
Mardus. "Mardus himself told you that the Helm must be given lives to build its
power? You are certain of this?"
Alec nodded grimly. "He said the younger the victim, the more power the death
gives. It was Mardus' idea of revenge to have Thero and me be the last
sacrifices at the final ceremony."
Seregil looked up sharply at this. "That's the key! If we strike quickly,
before they complete the sacrifices, maybe we have a chance against this thing."
"Perhaps, but we must not underestimate its initial capabilities," warned
Nysander. "It may well have some degree of power from the moment of completion.
Very well. Go on, Alec."
Too tired to be anything but matter-of-fact about the nightly horrors Vargul
Ashnazai had visited on them, Alec quickly outlined the details of the overland
journey.
Seregil went pale as he described the visitation by Cilia and the invectives
she'd hurled at him.
"Phantasms, nothing but illusions conjured up by this terrible man," Nysander
assured him. "Such spells turn your own fears and imaginings against you."
"But what about when I saw Seregil?" Alec asked. "That was real. I touched
him, felt him bleeding. There was blood on my hands the next day."
"More illusion," said Nysander. "He created Seregil's image using some poor
victim so that the death would be convincing. Someone certainly died in front of
you that night. I imagine Ashnazai meant to break your spirit once and for all."
Alec glanced guiltily in Micum's direction. "I enjoyed killing him. I know
that's wrong, but I did."
"Don't fret over it," Micum said with a grim smile. "I'd have felt the same
in your place. There's no dishonor in killing a mad creature like that."
Seregil chuckled blackly. "I plan to enjoy killing Mardus just as much."
"Vengeance is not our purpose," Nysander reminded them firmly. "Never allow
yourselves to forget that their god can use our own emotions and weakness
against us. Now allow Alec to finish his account so he can rest."
"There's not much to tell. After we got away from the camp Thero used the
same spell you showed me the day you turned us into animals. I didn't know what
he was doing until it was too late to stop him. Once he'd turned me into a stag,
I ran. If he'd just given me a chance maybe I could have helped him, but
something happened to my mind, just like the last time."
"There was nothing you could have done against anything conjured up by the
likes of Irtuk Beshar," Nysander said. "Thero's decision was wise and
honorable."
"As I see it, the real question is how to get at the Helm in the first
place," Micum interjected.
"Alec says Mardus has at least two score soldiers with him. They're not just
going to stand flatfooted while we waltz in."
"We'll have to see how they distribute themselves at the temple tomorrow,"
Seregil said, going to his pack.
"Assuming Mardus wasn't lying to Alec, then the prisoners will have to be
close at hand during the ceremony. If we could get them loose, they could
provide a diversion." Turning, he handed Alec his bow case and sword.
"You brought them!" Alec exclaimed, pulling the limbs of the Radly from the
case and fitting it together.
"And your quiver," Seregil told him. "If Nysander's right about this prophecy
of his, then you'll be needing these."
"There's plenty of high ground overlooking the temple site," Micum noted.
"Alec could pick off some of the guards around the prisoners, start a panic. If
the prisoners have any spirit left in them at all, they'll fight or run. Either
way, it would give the rest of us a chance to make a dash for it in the
confusion."
"There are only a score of arrows here," Alec said, opening the quiver to
check his fletching. "Even if I made every shot, that still leaves a lot of
armed men to deal with. These are Plenimaran marines we're talking about."
"We'll have our hands full, all right, but I doubt we'll have to take them
all on at once," said Micum. "My guess is Mardus will post sentries and leave
some others on guard at their encampment. It's the dyrmagnos I'm most worried
about. Tell me more about her."
"She's pure evil," Alec answered bitterly.
"What she did to me, and to Thero—I don't even know how to tell you. By the
time she was finished with me, I'd told her every damn thing she wanted to know.
Nysander was right not to tell us very much. Once she started in on me, there
was nothing I could do to stop her."
"I feared as much," murmured the wizard.
"When we finally did escape, she sent something after us. I didn't see it,
but just the sound of it was enough to freeze your blood!"
"This is all excellent news," Nysander exclaimed, rubbing his white hands
together in satisfaction. "The sacrifices, the spells she used on Alec and
Thero, the creature. From the sound of things, she has allowed herself little
respite since her attack against me at the Oreska House. No one, not even a
dyrmagnos, can expend so much power over such a short period of time without it
exacting a toll. Once she has finished with the Helm, she should be at least
somewhat weakened. If we attack her then, perhaps we can disable her long enough
to carry out our mission. And now, Alec, you should get what sleep you can. The
greatest trial of all still lies before us."
"That's for certain," Micum muttered. "Four against forty. I'm going back
down the road to keep an eye out for Mardus."
But Alec felt no dread as he stretched out under Seregil's cloak. No matter
what happened, it couldn't be worse than what he'd already been through.
Micum found an outcropping that overlooked the coastal track and settled down
to wait.
The weather had held fair; the sun felt warm against his back as he lay in
his hiding place, listening to the sound of the birds in the woods around him.
Looking out through the trees on the west side of the road, he could see the
green waves rolling across the Inner Sea and the flocks of sea ducks that rode
them.
What little he'd seen of Plenimar didn't look all that different from Skala.
In fact, it appeared to be a pretty fine place overall- except for the
Plenimarans.
It was midafternoon before he heard the first horses approaching. A vanguard
of riders passed at a gallop. Soon after he saw more riders coming on at a walk
at the head of a column of marines.
Micum had seen enough of Mardus up in Wolde the previous autumn to recognize
him now, riding at the head of it. He wore military dress and the way he sat his
mount told Micum this man was accustomed to command.
A woman in rich riding apparel rode at his side, her presence puzzling until
Micum caught sight of her face and realized what she was. Flattening lower, he
lay scarcely breathing, until the dyrmagnos had ridden past.
Behind them came more riders and marines. Micum spotted a few familiar faces
among them, Captain Tildus and several of the soldiers who'd been with him in
Wolde. The dispassionate calm that had kept him alive through so many battles
settled over Micum as he silently marked men for death.
A line of wagons followed, including the bear cart
Alec had described. As it came abreast of Micum's hiding spot, he saw a thin,
half-naked man sprawled face down in the bottom of it. He couldn't make out the
face, but from the build he guessed it was Thero. Another wagon was loaded with
small wooden cages, and a black bull was tethered to this one.
Next came a long procession of prisoners stumbling along in chains. Women,
men, and children, some hardly older than Illia, marched in dispirited silence
beneath the watchful eye of their mounted guards.
Behind them came wagons, servants, and livestock.
Micum's heart sank as he watched the last of the column pass. Alec had missed
his guess; there were closer to a hundred soldiers.
By the Flame, he thought. We've got our work cut out for us this time.
While Micum was gone, Seregil spent some time spying on the Plenimaran camp,
then went back to check on Alec.
He was still asleep, curled on his side beneath the cloak. A pained frown
furrowed his brow, and his fingers twitched restlessly as he fought his way
through whatever dreams still haunted him. Sitting down next to him, Seregil
gently stroked Alec's tangled hair until the shadow left his face.
Nysander sat with several arrows across his lap. He'd produced a small dish
of paint from somewhere and was painting symbols on one of the shafts with a
fine brush.
Watching Alec sleep, Seregil shook his head with concern. "Do you really
think he'll be up to fighting tomorrow?"
"He is young, and not badly hurt," the wizard assured him, not looking up
from his work. "All he needs is rest."
Seregil rubbed absently at his chest. The last of the scab was peeling away
and it itched. As his fingers brushed across the scar, he felt the tiny raised
whorls of the disk's imprint.
It felt different.
Reaching for Micum's pack, he dug out the shaving mirror and held it out to
see the scar. The round shape of the disk and the small square mark left by the
hole at its center were still outlined in shiny new skin, but the imprint of the
design had changed. What had originally been a cryptic pattern of lines and
whorls had somehow transformed into a circular device of stylized knives, eyes,
and necromantic runes.
"Nysander, look at this!" He pulled the neck of his tunic wider.
Nysander's bushy white brows shot up in surprise. "Do you recall me telling
you that the design on the wooden disk concealed another? This is one of the
siglas of the Empty God."
Seregil inspected it again. "I can read them. The runes, I mean. They're
right way around in the mirror. I hadn't thought of it before, but since this is
a brand, the whole design is backward."
Nysander tugged thoughtfully at his beard. "If this sigla is intrinsically
magical rather than merely symbolic, such a reversal would have a significant
effect on its power. It may even have helped protect you from the effects of the
crown."
He smiled ruefully. "I should have guessed it sooner, I suppose, but I had
been putting your survival down to your magical dysfunction. This may well have
been an ameliorating factor."
Seregil, hoping to get a little sleep stretched out beside Alec. "I'd call
that left-handed luck, but I guess I'll take it—I just hope it works for us
tomorrow."
Nysander took up his brush again. "As do I, dear boy." I take any kind I can.
Alec slept on through the night while Nysander and the others listened to the
Plenimarans at work preparing the temple site. They also heard the chanting, and
later the screams and moans that drifted to them on the wind from the
encampment. Micum wanted to investigate, but the wizard forbade it.
"We know well enough what they are doing. The dyrmagnos is more dangerous
than ever during such ceremonies. If not for the protective magic I have placed
around us, she would have sensed us already. We are safe enough for now, but we
must wait for morning before we move. You should rest while you can. I fear
there will be little opportunity to do so tomorrow."
Scratching a circle around the base of the pine, he seated himself against
the opposite side of the trunk and closed his eyes.
Alec woke just before sunrise the next morning and was surprised at how
rested he felt. He had a few scrapes and aches from the previous day's journey,
but he scarcely noticed them.
Seregil was asleep close beside him, one arm under his head, the other
stretched out toward Alec.
His face was wind-burned and there were pine needles tangled in his long dark
hair, but that only seemed to enhance his strange beauty.
I kissed him! Alec thought in a sudden agony of embarrassment. In the midst
of all the horror they had faced, and all they'd face today, he had kissed
Seregil.
His teacher. His friend. His—what? Worse yet, if Nysander hadn't been sitting
a few feet away, he might have been tempted to do it again.
I can't think about that now, he groaned inwardly, cheeks flaming. It wasn't
that he regretted it. He just didn't know yet what it meant, or what he wanted
it to mean.
Sitting up, he saw that Micum had gone out already.
Nysander was sitting on the other side of the tree and didn't stir or look
around when Alec went over to the pile of packs. He found a spare set of
breeches and some low boots in Seregil's, then turned his attention to his bow.
Stringing it, he ran careful fingers up and down the braided string, looking
for any frays or weak spots. After so many weeks of disuse, it needed waxing.
There was a tack pouch in his quiver, but he didn't see it with the rest of
the gear. Looking around, he spied it lying on the ground next to Nysander. In
with his red-fletched arrows were four newly fletched with white swan feathers.
Taking up the quiver, he touched one of the crisp white vanes and felt a sharp
tingle of magic against his finger. He jerked his hand away, then gingerly
pulled the arrow from the quiver for a closer look. The shaft was covered from
point to nock with tiny, intricate symbols painted in blue ink.
"No spell can improve on the skill of your hand and eye," Nysander murmured,
eyes still closed, "but those four arrows carry magic that will pierce the skin
of the dyrmagnos. She must be your first target once the Helm is complete. See
no one else, aim for nothing else until one of these has struck her. Even my
magic cannot kill her, but it will weaken her while we attack. Strike her in the
heart if you can manage it."
"You can depend on it," Alec replied stonily.
The boy who'd wavered taking first aim at a man was long gone. He touched the
nock, imagining the feel of it on the string just before he let it fly.
I still hope I see her face when it hits her.
Seregil sat up and brushed pine needles from his hair. "Any sound from our
neighbors?"
"Not for some time now," Nysander told him, opening his eyes and stretching.
"Micum went out a short while ago to check their camp."
Seregil peered out through the pine boughs. "I think I'd like a look at the
temple again before too many people are stirring. What do you say, Alec. Fancy a
walk before breakfast?"
They kept a sharp eye out for sentries as they made their way down to the
north side of the cove.
"So that's what those holes were for," Seregil muttered, looking across to
the temple site through the underbrush.
Sturdy wooden posts had been set upright in the mysterious holes surrounding
the dry basin at the head of the ledges. A few men were still at work clearing
debris from the area.
"There are plenty of good vantage points up on those rocks, but I bet they'll
have men up there," Alec whispered.
"We'll manage something. Beshar will most likely be up there, behind those
posts. Look for a place that will give you the best shot at her."
"Don't worry, I'll hit the bitch." Seregil glanced at Alec in surprise and
saw a hardness in his expression that had never been there before.
Soon more men began to wander up from the camp.
Hurrying back to the pine, they found Micum there ahead of them. He held a
finger to his lips as they entered, then pointed to Nysander kneeling in the
center of a dancing circle of white sparks. Inside the circle he'd scraped back
the pine needles and scratched a complex pattern of symbols into the packed
earth beneath.
Eyes half-lidded, Nysander was calmly weaving shining figures in the air. He
had stripped to his breeches and covered his arms, chest, and face with designs
drawn in blue ink. A horizontal band of black paint across his eyes gave him an
uncharacteristically barbaric appearance. In front of him, Alec's bow and quiver
lay amid a clutter of bowls, wands, and parchments.
Alec and Seregil hesitated at the edge of the light circle, but Nysander
motioned for them all to enter. Once inside, they smelled the scent of magic
mingling with the aroma of the pine like the faint, rich odor left behind in a
cupboard where spices had once been stored.
"The eclipse will begin soon," said Nysander, taking up a brush and a bowl of
black paint. "This band across your eyes will ward off the blinding effects of
it, even at the full. Unless the Plenimarans take similar precautions, it may
work to our advantage."
Nysander painted a heavy band across each of their faces, then set the bowl
aside. "Now, if you would hand me your weapons."
Using several colors of pigment, Nysander painted a few small sigils on each
blade. He took the longest over Seregil's sword, covering it from hilt to tip
with a line of tiny figures that flickered and disappeared as soon as they were
completed.
"What's all this?" Micum asked.
"Just some necessary magicking. The dyrmagnos is not the only one with
protective magic. Kneel with me here, close together, and hold out your hands."
Gathering them in a small circle, Nysander painted their palms with
concentric circles of black, red, brown, and blue, then instructed them to press
their raised palms to those of the person on either side of them. Seregil was on
the wizard's right, Alec to his left, with Micum closing the chain.
The moment the circle of hands was complete they were enveloped in a sudden
sensation of tingling warmth that raised the hairs on their arms and made their
eyes water. A collective shudder ran through them as the feeling swelled and
faded away.
Nysander was the first to lower his hands. "It is done."
The paint was gone. In its place each of them bore a complex pattern of red
and gold on each palm.
"The great sigla of Aura," Seregil murmured, touching his left palm.
"What is it, some kind of protection?" asked Alec.
"It will not keep you from being wounded. It is to protect your soul,"
Nysander explained. "If any of us are killed today, the Eater of Death will not
have us. The design will fade from sight in time, but the protection is
permanent."
Seregil regarded his hands with a humorless, lopsided grin. "Well, that's one
less thing for us to worry about."
At that moment, less than two miles to the north, Beka Cavish shivered
suddenly when a sharp tingle passed through her as she tethered her horse with
the others.
"You all right, Lieutenant?" asked Rhylin, who'd been out scouting the
Plenimaran camp with her.
"Guess a snake must've crawled across my shadow." The strange sensation
passed as quickly as it had come, except for a slight tingling in her gloved
hands. Flexing them, she walked over to where Braknil and the others sat waiting
in the shadow of a gully.
They had preparations to make.
An hour before noon a tiny, curved paring disappeared from the lower edge of
the sun.
"There it goes," Seregil whispered as he and Micum lay in a brush thicket
overlooking the temple.
The dry pool near the head of the cove had been cleared of all debris and
painted with white symbols neither he nor Micum had ever seen before.
More symbols had been outlined between each of the fourteen posts set into
the rock and a large square had been painted to contain the entire site.
The sacrificial victims huddled under close guard on the rocks above the
pool. Slightly apart from these, Thero stood between two of Tildus' men.
He was dressed in wizard's robes, but below its full sleeves Seregil caught a
glimpse of metal on Thero's wrists.
"Well, he's alive but they've got him under control again."
"Too bad," muttered Micum. "My guess is we could use his help before this is
over."
Twenty soldiers stood formed up in ranks before the captives, unlit torches
piled at their feet.
A brazier stood nearby, filling the air with fragrant smoke.
Mardus sat on the white marker stone, studying a parchment. He was dressed in
ceremonial splendor for the occasion; beneath his sweeping black cloak, his
burnished cuirass and gorget glinted with gold chasing.
As Seregil and Micum watched, the dyrmagnos stepped from the trees and the
failing sunlight glinted from the jewel work on her veil and gown.
"Don't they just make a handsome pair." Micum glanced up at the sun again.
"Nysander said the eclipse would take about an hour. Looks like you were right
about it matching the tide. It's already as high as it was yesterday and still
coming in."
"Come on then, time to get started."
Irtuk Beshar laid a wizened hand on Mardus' sleeve. "The conjunction has
begun, my lord."
Mardus glanced up from the document he'd been studying. "Ah, yes. Tildus!"
"Yes, my lord?" Never far from his master, the bearded captain stepped
forward.
"Pass the word, Tildus; the eclipse has begun. Remind the men to avoid
looking at it, particularly once it's complete."
Tildus snapped a quick salute and strode off.
The tide was climbing steadily toward the pool and with it came a warm breeze
smelling of rock weed and salt.
Soon enough it would smell of blood, Mardus thought with satisfaction.
When all his men were in position, he strode down into the temple, his black
war cloak sweeping out behind him. The waves were surging close to the dry basin
now, and lines of foam ran ahead up the two narrow fissures that contained the
carvings. He paced a slow circuit around the declivity, then moved to stand on
the landward side of it and raised a hand. Trumpeters at the head of the ledges
blew a blaring fanfare.
Irtuk Beshar stepped from the trees above at the head of a small procession.
First came silent Harid Yordun bearing the carved chest containing the elements
of the Helm. Behind him, soldiers led four unblemished white heifers with the
symbol of Dalna painted on their brows and four young black bulls bearing the
sign of Sakor. These were followed by large wicker cages containing four gulls
and four large brown owls, symbolic of Astellus and Illior.
Harid placed the chest reverently at the landward edge of the dry pool and
the animals were divided, one of each sort at the four corners of the great
square.
Irtuk Beshar moved slowly from one group to another, laying hands on the
beasts. They sank dead beneath her touch and were immediately gutted and piled
in reeking heaps.
Lifting her arms to the sky, she threw back her head and shouted in the
ancient necromantic tongue,
"Agrosh marg venv Kui gri bara kon Seriami. Y'ka Vatharnaprak'ot!"
Tongues of shimmering, unnatural fire flared up from the piles of carrion.
The assembled soldiers cheered at the sight of it.
The sun was a thin, inverted crescent now against the leaden purple sky.
Beneath it, the long tail of the comet hung like an evil, slitted eye. Shadows
blurred and faded in the uncertain light, lending a strange flatness to the
landscape. Birds that had been singing noisily since dawn gradually faltered to
silence except for the occasional puzzled hooting of doves and the rasping croak
of a lone raven.
Water surged up the fissures and spilled into the rock basin. Mardus signaled
to the guards standing over the prisoners. Ten frightened men were dragged
forward, stripped, and tied to the posts. With Irtuk Beshar chanting tonelessly
behind him, Mardus drew his dagger and slit their throats in quick succession.
They died quickly, these first ones, their blood flowing down to stain the
swirling waters of the salt pool.
As the last sliver of sun narrowed to an edge, a raucous clatter suddenly
came from all sides.
An immense flock of ravens appeared out of the surrounding gloom, croaking
and sawing in a cloud of black wings as they settled on tree and ledge and post
top. At the same moment, crabs of every size and color came boiling up out of
the water. Sidling up the rocks, they swarmed over the piles of dead animals and
the corpses, feeding greedily.
Cries of terror burst out among the remaining prisoners. Tildus barked orders
and the torchbearers lit their brands at the brazier. The whole ghastly scene
leapt into sharper relief.
No one, not even the dyrmagnos, noticed when the three guards stationed on
the northern promontory were jerked back out of sight. Any sound they may have
made was lost in the general outcry below.
Carrion eaters. Eaters of the dead, thought Seregil as he, Alec, and Micum
shoved the men they'd just killed into the undergrowth behind them. The black
stripes across their faces gave them all a deadly, feral look as they
belly-crawled back to the edge of the overlook where Nysander was keeping watch.
The moon overtook the last curve of the sun and a hazy corona burst out
around it. The black disk hung framed in light, like a baleful, glaring eye.
The burning arc of the plague star, visible now in the darkened sky, glowed
just below it.
With every surge of the surf, water foamed into the stone hollow at Irtuk
Beshar's feet.
The dead men were cut from the posts and thrown onto the offal pile. Ten
women took their places and Mardus' knife flashed again, severing their cries.
Seregil winced. It was agonizing to watch and not act. Beside him, Alec
clenched his hands around his bow, eyes wide with horror.
"How can we just lay here and watch them die?" he hissed.
Nysander was on Alec's other side and Seregil saw him close a hand over
Alec's. "Think of how many will die if we fail," the wizard reminded him. "Be
strong, my boy. Let nothing distract you."
Raising her hands toward the sky, Irtuk Beshur began to chant again, her
cracked, dry voice loud above the rush of the sea. More victims were dragged
forward to the edge of the pool and beheaded by swordsmen, who then held the
bodies so that the blood still pumping from the severed necks fell into the
water.
Mardus opened the chest and lifted out the crystal crown. Taking it from him,
Beshar held it up to the sky a moment, then cast it into the surging waters of
the pool. Next came a plain iron hoop, then the crude clay bowl.
"It is almost time," whispered Nysander.
Seregil gripped Alec's arm. "Shoot true, tali."
Alec pressed a white-fletched arrow to his lips. "I will, tali," he whispered
back, blue eyes glinting fiercely under the black paint.
Holding that image in his heart, Seregil hurried away after the others.
Alec gripped the arrow in his fist, feeling the power in it. The sound of the
sea now was the sound from his nightmares, but this time the arrow had a head.
Looking down, he saw the dyrmagnos scatter the handful of wooden disks into
the water. As the last one sank from sight the face of the pool went still and
glassy. The tide still surged and thundered to its edge, but the power of the
dyrmagnos kept any more water from flowing into the pool, which was now full.
Like a dark mirror, it reflected the black eye of the sun.
The dyrmagnos raised her hands above it and began a new chant. A man was
brought forward and thrown down on his back at her feet. Soldiers held him by
the hands and feet and Harid Yordun came forward with the black ax.
Alec wanted desperately not to watch as he hacked the man's chest open, but
he knew he must not look away for an instant.
Harid cut out the heart and threw it into the water.
Quick, skirling ripples appeared and faded on its glassy surface as if a
flock of swallows had darted past. Another heart was thrown in, and the ripples
reappeared, more numerous this time.
Alec felt a silent tremor roll through the stone he was lying on. It came
again as the ax rose and fell, growing to a steady rhythm like the pounding of a
labored heart.
The pool went black; and dull as tar. Tendrils of mist rose from it, and with
them came disembodied moans that echoed softly on all sides.
Seregil recognized those ghostly voices, remembered standing over the crown
as his blood fell into ice and crystal while they whispered around him.
Crouched with the others now behind a fallen tree near the waterline, he saw
shifting, half-formed shapes gathering out of the gloom beyond the torches,
mingling restlessly with the vaporous exhalations of the pool. The black water
began to swirl as if stirred with a dyer's paddle. The spirit voices grew
louder, sighing and shrieking. Wraiths buffeted them, plucking at their clothing
and weapons, twitching strands of hair. The air thickened perceptibly, muting
what little light remained. Nysander sketched a quick sigil on the air and the
wraiths retreated.
Working their way into the woods without being seen by the sentries, they
followed the road to the head of the cove.
"Be ready," the wizard whispered. "It is nearly time."
Something slipped coldly across Alec's back beneath his tunic. The weird
disturbances in the air were worse now, tenuous but too insistent to be denied.
Spectral forms, half-seen from the corner of the eye, brushed light as cobweb
against his face, only to flit out of sight when he tried to look at them
directly.
The soldiers' torches flared green and spit off fragments of flame that
skittered like rats around the edge of the pool before being sucked up into the
column of ghostly mist that was forming over the roiling pool. Up and up it
rose, thrusting a twisting grey pillar flecked with tongues of fire into the
burnt sky. It stood over the pool for a long moment, spirit forms darting around
and through it, then a single blue-white bolt of lightning forked down through
its center with an apocalyptic roar, blasting the pool into an explosion, of
steam and rock fragments.
Soldiers fell to their knees, covering their faces in terror. The ravens rose
in a screaming cloud, adding their raw voices to the din. From the direction of
the road came the frenzied screams of the horses tethered there, and the clatter
of carts being dragged off as the panicked beasts bolted. The mist slowly rolled
back, revealing a shattered, steaming hole where the pool had been.
With a shout of triumph, Irtuk Beshar climbed down into it and retrieved
something from the water and rubble.
Straightening again, she raised a helmet in both hands with a screech of
sheer triumph.
The bulging, peaked top and nasal of the helm were fashioned of dull iron but
it was circled at the brow with a wide circlet of ruddy gold. This band was set
around with eight dull blue stones and surmounted by a bristling crown formed
from eight twisted black horns. A curtain of black mail hung down from the back
of the Helm and skeletal, long-taloned hands served as the cheek guards.
Climbing out, she held it up before Mardus and launched into an invocation of
some kind. Although Alec did not understand her language, he recognized two
words: "Seriamaius" and "Vatharna."
Alec drew the bowstring to his ear.
Before he could loose the shaft, however, shouting broke out in the forest to
the south. All eyes turned to see the bright glow of fire above the tops of the
trees in the direction of the camp.
Mardus drew his sword and shouted an order, sending half the guards off in
the direction of the disturbance.
Still clutching the helm, Irtuk Beshar gabbled urgently at him.
Time slowed to dreamlike unreality as Alec rose to his feet and took aim
again at the dyrmagnos.
Ghostly forms imposed themselves between him and his target, swirling around
him to buffet and natter but he ignored them, concentrating on his shot.
Shoot true, tali.
"Aura Elustri malreil, his he whispered.
The black bow quivered like a live thing under his hand as he drew it,
calling on every ounce of power the Radly possessed. When the nock was level
with his ear he released it. The fletching nicked his cheek as it flew, carrying
a drop of his blood away with it.
The arrow sped straight and true as any shaft he'd ever loosed, and made a
sound like a sudden crack of summer thunder when it struck Irtuk Beshar in the
chest just below her throat. The impact spun her like a broken doll. The Helm
fell from her hands, tumbling back into the blasted pool.
"And now you, you bastard!" Alec yelled, taking aim at the startled Mardus.
But an arrow buzzed by his head, spoiling the shot.
Another whined past and he dropped for cover as pandemonium broke out below.
Still clutching his bow, he scrambled to the edge of the outcropping to see what
was going on.
Arrows flew from all directions, but most found targets among the
Plenimarans. By the wavering light of the fallen torches Alec could just make
out a small group of archers on the high ground opposite where he lay. They were
shooting down at the exposed men below. In the melee, he saw Seregil and Micum
dashing down over the rocks with their swords drawn, closing in on the wounded
dyrmagnos.
Mardus was nowhere to be seen, so Alec turned his attention to the soldiers,
shooting two in rapid succession before he was momentarily blinded by a
brilliant flash of light that flared among the prisoners.
As his vision cleared, he saw Thero standing over the smoking bodies of
several dead soldiers, but apparently unaware of the armed man coming at his
back.
The wounding of the dyrmagnos must have weakened her hold on the wizard, Alec
thought. "Look out," he whispered, sending a red-fletched shaft at the guard.
The man fell and Thero was lost from sight as the other prisoners surged forward
in rebellion or panic.
"Got her on the first try!" Seregil exclaimed under his breath, watching from
the ledges above as Irtuk Beshar whirled suddenly, clutching at the shaft
protruding from her chest. The Helm fell from her hands, tumbling back into the
hole it came from.
Mardus dove after it.
Ignoring the sudden arrow storm that erupted around them, he and Micum left
Nysander in the shelter of the rocks and charged down. Irtuk Beshar's spells on
the pool were already unraveling. Water surged back into the basin, washing
corpses and entrails down into the hole, and sweeping the Helm out of reach as
Mardus bent to grab it.
Praying to Sakor that Nysander was right about her powers being exhausted,
Micum charged the wounded dyrmagnos. She saw him and raised one gnarled hand. He
swung, severing the arm, then struck again, taking her between the neck and
shoulder. Her body split under his blade like a dry gourd. She screamed curses
at him as her head and remaining arm tumbled away from her torso.
Despite the warnings of Seregil and Nysander,
Micum hesitated for an instant, transfixed with horror as the severed parts
writhed on the ground at his feet. Then a hint of motion caught his eye and he
turned in time to deflect Tildus' sword.
Sakor's smiling today, he told himself as he sidestepped another blow and
caught the Plenimaran captain a solid blow to the neck.
Other marines leapt forward to avenge their captain's death. Micum crippled
two and killed a third.
A fourth pressed in on his left side but fell before Micum could strike at
him, an arrow through his back. Micum scarcely had time to register that the
fletching color was not Alec's before more Plenimarans rushed at him. He
doggedly stood his ground, aware of the clash of swords behind him but too
closely pressed to look.
As hoped, the revolt of the prisoners, together with the mysterious fire at
the encampment, had drawn off many of the soldiers. Micum made short work of the
few who remained.
He was just looking around for Seregil when a searing bolt of pain shot
through the back of his right thigh.
Staggering, he twisted around to find Irtuk Beshar clinging to him, eyes
shining like a wildcat's as she tore at his leg with nails and teeth. Too late
he realized his mistake; she was whole again.
The lower portion of her gown had fallen away and Micum could see both the
livid, uneven line of the joining and the splintered end of the arrow shaft
still protruding between her shriveled husk. Her legs, black and withered as
those of a burned corpse, kicked spasmodically as she tightened her grip and
sank her teeth into his flesh. A deadly coldness spread slowly out from the
wounds.
Micum hacked awkwardly at her. One withered leg flew off, then he managed the
cleave her in half at the waist. Determined not to make the same error twice, he
grabbed the lower torso by its remaining leg and flung it with all his strength
into the sea, then kicked the other limb into the shadows beyond the torches.
But Irtuk Beshar was still horribly alive and clung on to him like a curse.
The coldness of her bite spread up through Micum's vitals, stopping his ears,
darkening his vision, numbing his fingers. His sword fell from his hand and he
tore clumsily at her. Dried bone collapsed beneath his fists, strips of dusty
scalp pulled away like rotten cloth, but still Irtuk Beshar hung on, plunging
her poison into his veins with the last of her strength.
Micum's deadened leg folded under him and he felt her grip change as she
slowly pulled herself up his body. He could hear Seregil shouting nearby.
Micum's throat worked soundlessly, choked with the vengeful hate of the
dyrmagnos.
Alec was down to the three white arrows when he saw Micum thrashing on the
ground just above the pool. His belly went cold as he realized what the
monstrous thing clinging to him must be. It was pointless to shoot from here;
there was no way to hit the dyrmagnos without killing Micum at the same time.
Gripping the arrow like a dagger, Alec bounded down over the rocks, praying he
wasn't already too late.
Looking back over her shoulder, Beka saw that Braknil's decuria had succeeded
in setting fire to the Plenimaran camp. At this signal, she and Rhylin's decuria
opened fire on the Plenimaran soldiers massed in the natural amphitheater below.
From where they stood on the ledges, it was like shooting pigs in a sty.
They were not the first to fire, however. Even as she loosed arrow after
arrow, Beka wondered how
Braknil had gotten back here so quickly and what his group was doing on the
opposite side of the cove.
One of them had managed to hit the sorceress before Beka could give the order
for her group to fire.
Whatever the case, the prisoners were breaking free below, just as she'd
hoped.
"That's got them moving," she growled, turning to the others. "Come on,
urgazhi, let's leave them to it."
"Hold on, Lieutenant," whispered Rhylin.
"It looks to me like we're not the only ones who were after them!"
The frantic prisoners were pushing their captors back toward the cliffs, but
a smaller knot of fighting was concentrated near the water's edge.
Torchlight glanced off steel in the shadows of the natural basin that lay in
the embrace of the two ridges of high ground. General Mardus was nowhere in
sight, but the Plenimaran's sorceress was still alive and wrestling with a large
swordsman.
Beka's heart skipped a beat.
"It can't be!" she gasped. Then Alec bolted into view from behind a jumble of
rocks, splashing wildly through the shallow water toward the struggling pair
with nothing but an arrow in his hand.
Dropping her bow, Beka began scrambling down the steep rock face.
"What are you doing?" Rhylin cried, catching her by the wrist.
Beka pulled free so violently that she nearly dragged the startled man over
the edge.
"My father's down there!" she snapped over her shoulder as she plunged on.
"Riders," barked Rhylin behind her, "follow the lieutenant's lead! Attack!"
Micum was still struggling weakly beneath the dyrmagnos when Alec reached
him. Grasping Beshar by what was left of her hair, Alec plunged the arrow into
her neck. The resulting blast knocked him over onto his back, ears ringing.
Releasing Micum with a wild screech, Irtuk Beshar dragged what remained of
herself at Alec and locked a hand around his ankle.
"I'll have you after all," she rasped, pulling herself along his leg with
both hands like some nightmare lizard.
Alec saw his own death in her eyes. In his haste to aid Micum, he'd left the
last two white arrows behind with his bow.
"Aura Elustri!" he panted, struggling to wrest his sword from the scabbard
pinned beneath his leg. Before he could shift it, another blade flashed down,
sending the dyrmagnos' head spinning into the surf.
Shaking off the clinging hands, Alec lurched to his feet and stared in
disbelief as Beka Cavish hacked furiously at the flailing arms and trunk.
"Get away from it," he warned. "You can't kill it."
"What are you doing here?" she demanded, backing away from the twitching
remains.
"No time for that. Where's Micum? Go see to him."
Beka found her father lying motionless where he'd fallen, eyes shut as he
fought for breath. Sweat ran down his face in rivulets, carving trails in the
black strip painted across his eyes.
"Father, it is you!" Beka exclaimed, kneeling to inspect the terrible wound
in his leg. The dyrmagnos had torn away skin and muscle in her frenzy, and the
raw flesh was already going dangerously dark.
"Beka?" he gasped, opening his eyes. "Scatter the parts, scatter—it won't
die."
"Alec's doing that," she assured him. She pulled off her gloves to take his
hand and saw for the first time the strange designs that had somehow appeared on
her palms. Her father's hands bore the same device.
"First I find you here and now this," she said, bewildered. "What in Sakor's
name is going on?"
Micum held his hand next to hers. "So you're a Vanguard, too. Things have
come together in a strange way, Beka. You don't know the half of it." He closed
his eyes and drew a wheezing breath.
She pulled open his tunic and laid an ear to his chest. His heart was
pounding too hard and his skin was too cold. Looking around for help, she saw
Alec and Rhylin hurrying toward her, supporting another man between them. This
thin one with his matted black hair and young beard looked vaguely familiar.
He'd been wounded, too; the side of his face was bloody and he had a sword cut
across his ribs. Nonetheless, his pale green eyes were sharp and alert as he
sank down beside Micum.
"Help him, Thero. There must be something you can do,"
Alec pleaded. "I've got to find Seregil! Has anyone seen him? Or Nysander?"
"I am here, dear boy," a hollow voice replied from the shadowed rocks above
them.
Mardus crouched opposite Seregil in the uneven basin, the surge of the tide
rushing around their ankles. They sloshed through icy water as they circled,
vying for possession of the Helm that lay partially submerged between them, the
newly awakened glow of the blue eye stones casting a pale phosphorescence up
through the water. The blast that had formed it had deepened the shallow basin
into a broad pit deeper in places than the height of the two men who fought
there. Strewn with bodies, lit only by the dead glow of the eclipse that still
stood overhead, it was like a place from a fever dream.
"I should have killed that whelp of yours when I had the chance," snarled
Mardus.
"Yes, you should have," Seregil retorted through gritted teeth, sizing up his
opponent.
Mardus was not a brawny opponent, but he did have the protection of his
cuirass. "You missed Nysander, too, you know. He's alive and the Four remains
unbroken."
"Yet you failed all the same," Mardus gloated, pointing to the Helm with the
dagger clutched in his left hand. "I am the Vatharna, the Chosen of Seriamaius.
Do you think you can stand against me now?"
"I was chosen, too, you fatherless son of a whore." Seregil tugged open the
neck of his tunic with one hand to show him the reversed symbol pulsing there.
"But it's my people at the Cockerel that I'll kill you for, and for what you
did to Alec. For the runners and keeks you used and betrayed, the innocents
who've died at your order. Hell, I'll kill you for the sheer fun of it. Come on,
Lord Eater of Shit. Let's get this over with."
He lunged at Mardus and their swords locked in a resounding parry that sent a
shock up both their arms. Seregil ducked Mardus' guard and tried for a stab
below his cuirass. He missed his footing and the tip of his blade glanced off
metal, but the point cut the man's left arm and fresh blood spotted the already
stained waters of the pool; neither of the combatants had time to notice how the
bleary light of the Helm brightened as it rolled in the wash of the tide.
Fighting for purchase on the broken stone underfoot, Seregil quickly realized
that he was overmatched. On better ground his speed would have evened the odds,
but trapped here in this watery pit he could only stand firm and fend off the
taller man's bone- jarring swings. Mardus slapped his blade back and nicked
Seregil's left shoulder. Seregil got his guard back up, made a lucky sidestep,
and repaid him with a slash across the right forearm.
For the first time it occurred to Seregil that his role in the prophecy had
been fulfilled, that he was expendable now. That he might lose.
Sensing his doubt, Mardus pressed the advantage and scored a shallow cut
across Seregil's thigh.
More blood spotted the water and the Helm, brighter now with this and every
death that occurred in the fight that was still raging above them, shone more
brightly still.
It was Mardus who finally noticed the light, understood its significance.
Redoubling his attack, he beat Seregil back against the rocks.
Pinned off balance in an indefensible position, Seregil decided to take a
desperate chance.
Springing past Mardus, he dove for the Helm. He hadn't gotten two steps when
his foot lodged in a hidden crevice and he stumbled painfully.
Mardus struck at his back, slashing him across the ribs. Just as he drew back
for the killing stab, however, a wave surged in over the shelf of rock, knocking
them both off their feet with a blinding wall of spray that slammed them against
the rocks.
Mardus was the first to recover when it subsided. Still gripping his sword,
he looked around to find
Seregil sprawled stunned and unarmed against the seaward rocks. Blood
trickled down over one closed eye from a cut on his forehead.
A look of dark triumph spread across Mardus' face as he stalked toward him
through the knee-deep water. Long experience had taught him where to strike to
cripple and give a lingering death.
It was the glow of the Eyes that distracted him. As the foaming surge of
waves cleared for an instant, Mardus found the Helm shining up through the water
at his feet.
"It seems I'll have the pleasure of offering you to the Beautiful One after
all," he gloated. "Wounded or not, you're still an admirable sacrifice."
Gripping the Helm by one of the twisted black horns, he raised it over his
head.
"Adrat Vatharna, thromuth—"
Seregil chose his moment. Opening his eyes, he reached underwater, yanked the
poniard from his boot, and threw it.
Mardus froze, the Helm still poised over his head as he stared down in
amazement at the knife buried between his ribs where the edge of the cuirass
left his side exposed.
"You should've killed me when you had the chance," Seregil snarled, trailing
blood as he waded unarmed toward his adversary.
"You played a brilliant game until now, but you should always finish your
enemy off before you reach for the spoils. Arrogance, my lord. It's a deadly
vice. It makes you predictable."
Mardus' lips stretched in the parody of a smile.
"Tricks. Always your tricks," he whispered.
Clutching the Helm in one hand, his sword in the other, he turned woodenly
and began to stumble toward the edge of the pool.
Seregil followed and blocked his way. Mardus was dying, but still he looked
down at Seregil with searing disdain.
"The Eater of Death—" he began thickly, gouts of blood spilling down over his
chin from his mouth. "will eat your heart today, not mine," Seregil finished,
glaring up into his enemy's dark eyes.
He grasped the hilt of the poniard and twisted it, tearing through muscle and
sinew until the long blade lodged fast in bone. A hot, bright fresh spurt of
blood poured out over his clenched fist.
Mardus dropped the Helm and toppled backward into the water. A ribbon of red
bubbles streamed up from his nose and mouth, then ceased. His eyes, already
vague with death, mirrored tiny dual reflections of the sun's first, bright edge
as it emerged from the moon's dominance.
Seregil spat into the water. A smaller wave surged over the edge of the pool,
hiding Mardus for a moment beneath a rushing sheet of foam.
When it cleared again, the long reflection of another man had interposed
itself across the surface of the water in front of him. Seregil looked up to
find Nysander standing above him at the edge of the pool, the sound of scattered
fighting still audible from beyond.
"Well done," the wizard said gravely. "Now the Helm must be destroyed once
and for all. Give it to me, then find your sword."
Reaching down, Seregil grasped the glowing Helm by two of its black horns,
just as he had grasped the crystal points of the crown months before. And as
before, invisible voices and insubstantial spirits coalesced around him as he
touched it, trying to stay his hand.
The blue eye stones set in the band had taken on the appearance of flesh now
and swiveled accusingly in their lidless sockets as he passed the Helm up to
Nysander.
The wizard drew a fold of his cloak around the Helm, screening it from view.
"Your sword," he said again, his voice gentle but firm. "I must have your help
in this, Seregil. You are the only one who can aid me."
Seregil scarcely felt his wounds as he splashed back across the pool to find
his weapon.
"Here it is," he called. "But what about—?"
The words died in his throat. With the foam of a fresh wave boiling in around
his legs, he looked up at the tall figure from his nightmares towering over him.
But this time he knew the face beneath the spiked brim of the misshapen Helm.
It was Nysander's.
The skeletal hands that formed the cheek guards clenched inward against
Nysander's face, sinking their talons into his cheeks until the flesh dimpled.
The unnatural blue eyes blazed, sending out rays of light. Nysander stood
unmoved, waiting.
"Nysander, why?" Seregil rasped the skin around the brand on his chest
crawled and tingled, the sensation growing as it crept down his right arm.
Sparks flickered over the quilions of his sword and along the shining blade.
But Seregil was aware of nothing except the sorrowful determination he read
in Nysander's eyes.
Nysander—oldest friend, wisest teacher, second father.
Some sane part of Seregil's mind screamed for him to throw the sword away
into the sea, but he couldn't move or look away.
"Nysander, I can't!" he pleaded, echoing the forgotten words of his dreams.
"You must." Nysander's voice was already thin and strained. "I have accepted
this burden freely.
"First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness. Then the
Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the Guide, the Unseen
One, goes forth. And at the last shall be again the Guardian, whose portion is
bitter, as bitter as gall."
"You must strike now, dear boy. Too much blood has been spilled and I cannot
hold back its power for long. If you fail, I shall become their Vatharna, the
anathema of my life's work. Strike now, I beg you. There is no other way, and
never has been."
Seregil's body felt weightless as he climbed up the broken rock, sword naked
in his hand.
Lock away grief, a voice whispered deep in his heart.
Lock away horror and fear and outrage and pity—
I understand. Oh, yes!
The Eyes of the Helm rolled to focus on him as he took his place in front of
Nysander; this was a blow that could not be struck from behind. Hideous moans
split the air around them, blending with the cries from mortal throats nearby as
he raised his arm to strike. Some part of him recognized Alec's voice among the
others but he did not turn.
Nysander staggered, sank to his knees, arms extended on either side. Orbs of
light burned in the hollow of each palm, illuminating the symbols that still
showed on his skin.
"To protect your soul—"
The orbs flared and began to fade as the Helm blazed brighter. Even then
Seregil might have hesitated if Nysander hadn't raised his head and looked up at
him with eyes that glowed already with the same horrible light as the Helm.
Something broke inside Seregil at the sight of those alien eyes staring up at
him from that familiar, beloved face.
Raising his sword in both hands, he brought it down with all his strength.
The symbols Nysander had painted on the blade flashed out like lightning as
it cleaved through iron, horn, and gold, shattering the great Helm of Seriamaius
into a thousand ragged fragments that dissolved into shreds of shadow in the
milky light of the returning sun.
A sudden wind filled with a thousand tortured voices roared down out of
nowhere, smashing the waves against the rocks. Flinging the twisted, blackened
sword away, Seregil fell to his knees and lifted Nysander's ruined head onto his
lap, cradling the dead man in his arms. Another wave crashed in against the
ledges, foaming around his knees, tugging at the dead man's legs.
You knew, Seregil thought as he gazed down into Nysander's face, plain and
kind again in death.
You knew.
All along you knew.
youknewyouknewyouknewyouknew—
"You knew!" he screamed against the raging wind, blind to the friends
gathered in horrified realization around him.
Bowed over Nysander's limp body, Seregil waited for the next wave to drag
them both from the rocks and down into the trackless depths beyond.
Seregil watched the smoke from Nysander's pyre rise against the brilliant red
and gold of the sunset and wondered why he couldn't weep.
Alec was crying softly beside him and Micum, too, as he lay supported by
Beka, one broad hand over his eyes. Thero stood a little apart, tears streaming
down his pale cheeks as the flames crackled up through the carefully stacked
tinder and driftwood.
Seregil longed to join them. His grief was a dry, sharp-edged stone lodged in
his chest; he could scarcely draw breath around it.
Rhal's sailors and Beka's soldiers stood in respectful silence on the
opposite side of the pyre. Patrolling loyally off the coast, Rhal had seen the
fire at the camp and taken it as a signal. Braving the crashing surf, he'd come
ashore with twenty of his men in time to help Beka's raiders clear out the last
of the Plenimarans. As word spread of Mardus' death, however, most of the
remaining soldiers simply scattered into the hills to fend for themselves.
Afterwards, Beka and Rhal had marshaled their people together, clearing away
the dead and all trace of the ceremony.
When the site was cleansed, they stacked a funeral pyre on the ledges below
the basin, then stood aside as Seregil and Thero placed Nysander on the bed of
oil-soaked kindling and sweet herbs.
Standing here now, watching unflinchingly as the flames blackened Nysander's
skin and clothing, Seregil forced himself to recall the old wizard kneeling
calmly among his paints and symbols, speaking words of encouragement.
But still the tears would not come.
Stars appeared overhead in the darkening sky and with them the comet, robbed
now of its dread significance. The pyre began to settle in on itself and
Nysander's corpse sank out of sight in a whirling cloud of sparks. Several of
Rhal's men came forward and added more wood and oil, stoking the blaze until the
heat of it pressed the onlookers back into the surrounding shadows.
With the solemnity of the funeral circle broken, people began to drift away.
The fire would burn long into the night, reducing skin, bone, and wood alike to
a fine ash for the tide and winds to scatter.
Turning, Seregil limped slowly up to the white stone and sat there waiting
for some release.
None came; the emptiness he'd been plunged into from the moment he'd accepted
Nysander's final charge still enveloped him, leaving him isolated, deadened
inside. He could see Alec and the others gathered around Micum, a knot of shared
comfort against the oncoming night.
He should be with them, he knew, but somehow he couldn't move. Sinking his
head into his hands, he remained where he was, alone in the shadows where
Nysander had stood awaiting his moment just hours before.
Some time later, he heard the sound of someone climbing up the rocks toward
him. Looking up, he was surprised to see that it was Thero.
Worn and battered, dressed in borrowed clothes, he bore little resemblance to
the prim young wizard Seregil had sparred with for so many years. Thero stared
down at the pyre below for a moment before speaking.
"I wasted too many years being jealous of you," he said at last, still not
looking at Seregil. "It hurt him, and I'd take it back if I could."
Seregil nodded slowly, sensing that there was more to be said between them
but not knowing how to begin. Instead, he asked, "Will Micum be all right?"
"I think I've stopped most of the poison," Thero replied, sounding relieved
to speak of practical things. "Still, even if he doesn't lose the leg, I doubt
it will ever be much use to him."
"He's lucky to be alive at all. And the dyrmagnos?"
"She's finished. Alec saw to that."
"Good."
Another uncomfortable pause raveled out and Thero turned to leave.
"Thank you," Seregil managed, his voice thin and strained. "For helping Alec
and all."
With a curt nod, Thero moved off through the shadows along the road.
Micum saw Thero leave.
"You go up to him," he croaked, looking up at Alec with fever bright eyes.
"He's right," Beka said, raising a cup of drugged wine to her father's lips.
"It's not proper, him being alone now."
"I know. I've been thinking that all afternoon," Alec whispered miserably.
"But I don't know what to do for him, what to say. We all loved Nysander, but
not like he did. And then he had to be the one to—"
Reaching out, Micum closed a hot, dry hand over Alec's. "His heart is broken,
Alec. Follow your own."
Alec let out a heavy sigh and nodded. Climbing the rocks, he walked over to
where Seregil still sat on the rock, face lost in shadow.
"It's turning cold. I thought you might need this," Alec said, taking off his
cloak and draping it over his friend's shoulders. Seregil mumbled a thank you,
but didn't move.
Feeling desperately awkward, Alec rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder, then
slid an arm around him. He'd half expected Seregil to shrug it off, or finally
weep, but not the black waves of emptiness he felt, leaning there beside him.
Something intrinsic in Seregil had fled or died; it was like touching a statue,
a scarecrow.
A fresh trickle of tears inched down Alec's cheeks, but he didn't move, just
stayed there, hoping
Seregil would draw some comfort from his nearness. His tongue felt like a
dead thing in his mouth. Words were dead leaves lodged in his throat. What was
there to say?
A breeze stirred, sighing through the forest at their backs, mingling its
sound with the rhythmic surge of the waves. An owl sailed by close enough for
Alec to hear its wings cutting the air. Its hooting call drifted back to them
through the darkness.
They remained like this for some time before Seregil finally spoke, his voice
barely audible. "I'm sorry, Alec. Sorry for everything."
"Nobody blames you. You did what you had to, just like the rest of us."
Seregil's short, angry laugh was startling after such silence. "What choice
did I have?"
They sailed the following morning, heading north along the coast. Still
running with stolen canvas, the Green Lady again raced unchallenged through
enemy waters, though she caused something of a stir at Nanta until Rhal showed
his commissioning papers.
They lay in port for two days while Rhal refitted the sails and took on fresh
stores.
Beka found a drysian to tend Micum's wounds and Seregil's, then set about
making her own preparations for departure. She and her riders were duty-bound to
find their regiment. By the second day Braknil and Rhylin had rounded up
sufficient horses and supplies, as well as word that their regiment was
stationed a few days ride to the north.
Rhal had given over his cabin to the survivors of Nysander's Four and Micum
lay on the narrow bunk, his leg swathed in linen bandages. Sitting down beside
him, Beka pushed her long braid back over her shoulder.
"Word around the city is that the Plenimarans have been pushed behind their
own borders for the moment," she told him. "We'll ride northeast until we find
Skalan troops, then start asking directions from there."
Micum clasped her hand. "You take care of yourself, my girl. This war is far
from over."
Beka nodded, her throat tight. "By the Flame, Father. I don't like to leave
you, but I have to get back. I sent some of my people on ahead before we met up
with you and I've got to see if they made it."
Micum waved aside her concern with a smile.
"I've been talking with your Sergeant Braknil and some of the others. From
what they say, you're a good officer and a brave fighter. I'm proud of you."
Beka hugged him tight, feeling the familiar roughness of her father's cheek
against her own. "I had the best teachers, didn't I? I just wish—"
"What?"
Beka sat back and wiped a hand across her eyes.
"I always thought, once I had some experience on my own, that maybe Nysander
would, you know, find use for me the way he did with you and Seregil."
"Don't you worry about that. There'll always be enough trouble in the world
to keep our kind busy. None of that dies with Nysander. I'll tell you, though,
it's Seregil I'm worried about."
Beka nodded. "And Alec, too. You can see what it's doing to him, having
Seregil so silent and sad. What's happened with them?"
Micum lay back against the bolsters with a sigh. "Poor Alec. He cares so much
for Seregil he doesn't know what to do about it, and now this. And Seregil's
hurting so deep I don't know if any of us can help him."
"Perhaps he has to help himself." Beka rose reluctantly. "You get Valerius to
see to that leg when you get back. I still don't like the look of it. And take
my love to Mother and the girls. Send word of my new brother when he's born."
"You keep yourself in one piece, you hear?"
Beka kissed him a last time, then hurried above.
Seregil was standing alone by the rail.
As they clasped hands, he turned her palms up to look at the faded traces of
the symbols there.
"You've got your father's heart as well as his hair," he said with a ghost of
the old smile. "Trust either one of you to show up when you're least expected
and most needed. Luck in the shadows, Beka Cavish, and in the light."
"Luck to you, too, Seregil, and the Maker's healing," Beka returned warmly,
relieved to see even this small break in his sorrow. He'd scarcely spoken since
they'd set sail. "Bring Father safe home again."
Alec was waiting for her by the longboat. Putting her arms around him, Beka
squeezed him tight and felt the embrace returned.
"Take them to Watermead, both of them," she whispered against his cheek.
"Stay there as long as you need to. Poor Nysander, I can't believe he'd ever
have wanted things to turn out like this."
"Me neither," Alec said, still holding her by the arms as he stepped back.
He looks so much older, Beka thought, seeing the depths of sadness in his
eyes.
When Nanta had slipped away to the horizon Alec went below. Seregil was
sitting on the end of Micum's bunk.
"I found something for you in Nanta before we sailed," Alec said, handing
Seregil a cloth-wrapped parcel. Inside was a small harp, like the one he'd
carried in Wolde.
"It's nowhere near as good as yours, I know," Alec went on quickly as Seregil
folded the wrappings back and touched the strings. "But I thought it might—Well,
Micum is still in pain and I thought maybe if you played for him it might give
him some ease."
A white lie, perhaps, but it did the trick.
Micum gave Alec a knowing wink as Seregil propped the instrument on his knee
and plucked out a few tentative notes.
"It's a fine instrument. Thank you," Seregil said, not looking up. He plucked
out a few searching chords, then swept the strings, releasing a glissando of
plaintive notes.
Thero came in to tend Micum's leg and stayed awhile to listen. Seregil didn't
sing, but plucked out tune after tune, the music mournful and soothing.
Micum slipped into a peaceful doze and Alec sat quietly in the corner,
watching Seregil's face as he played on through the afternoon. His expression
betrayed little. The mantle of silence remained in place.
Seregil's spirits seemed to rally somewhat during the voyage back to
Rhiminee. He spoke more freely, though not of Nysander or the Helm.
Never of those. He walked the deck with Alec and Thero, ate sparingly with
neither relish nor complaint, and played the harp by the hour, covering his own
pain a little by easing Micum's.
Micum and Thero took heart at these small changes but Alec, who shared a
pallet withSeregil on the floor of Rhal's cabin, knew how he trembled and
groaned in his sleep each night. An intuition uncomfortably like the one that
had dragged him back to the Cockerel that fateful night kept him by Seregil's
side as much as possible. The man he'd known for so long was gone, leaving in
his stead a quiet stranger with distance behind his eyes.
Alec sat alone with Micum the afternoon of their fifth day out from Nanta.
Micum was dozing, his face pale and haggard against the bolsters. The harp lay
at his feet where Seregil had left it after soothing him to sleep. There's
continued ministrations had kept rot from setting into Micum's leg, but the
little cabin was stifling with the flat, heavy odor of unhealthy flesh.
Moving quietly so as not to disturb Micum, Alec opened the cabin window and
propped the door open with a pack. Just as he was about to steal out again,
however, Micum opened his eyes.
"That's a long face you've got on," he rasped, motioning for Alec to sit by
him. "Out with it. What's wrong?"
Alec shrugged unhappily. "It's Seregil. He's like a shadow. He doesn't talk,
he doesn't smile. It's like he's not really here at all. I don't know what to do
for him."
"I think you're doing right by just standing by him for now, just as you did
when he ran afoul with that wooden coin. It made all the difference to him then.
He's told me so himself."
"That was magic and he was fighting it, too. But killing Nysander—" Alec
fiddled with the edge of the blanket, searching for words. "It's like he killed
part of himself."
"He did. We have to give him time to sort out what's left."
"Maybe." But in his heart Alec feared that the longer they waited for Seregil
to come around, the farther away he drifted.
Magyana was waiting for them on the quay the day they sailed into Rhiminee
harbor. Alone and unattended, she wore a dark mourning veil over her silvery
hair.
Seregil placed a little bundle containing Nysander's few belongings in her
arms, his voice failing him when he tried to speak.
"I know, my dear," she murmured, embracing him.
"Nysander and I said our farewells the day I sent him across to find you. He
suspected that he would not return, and asked me to tell all of you not to
grieve for him, but to forgive him if you can."
"Forgive him?" gasped Thero, standing rigidly beside Micum's litter. "What
could there be to forgive?"
Magyana did not answer, but her gaze stole briefly back to Seregil, who'd
turned away.
Alec's eyes locked briefly with hers and in that instant the mutual
understanding ran deep.
"It was also Nysander's wish, Thero, that you should complete your training
with me," she continued.
The color fled from the young wizard's thin cheeks as he sank to his knees
before her. "I can't go back to the Oreska, not after what happened that night.
The attack, the Plenimarans getting in, it was my fault. If I hadn't told
Ylinestra about Nysander's walks, his studies—Looking back now, I see what all
her questions were leading to, but at the time—I just didn't know! But the
Council would never allow me back."
Magyana laid a hand on his bowed head. "You forget that I, too, am a member
of the High Council, as was Nysander. He spoke with them one last time before he
left. There is no impediment to your return. His last words to me on the matter
were that he hoped I would see to it that you completed what you have begun so
well."
Cupping his chin, she gently raised his anguished face. "I would be honored
if you would accept me as your teacher, Thero. In truth, it would be a great
comfort to have you with me, and to see the education of my friend's last pupil
completed. It would be the greatest honor to his memory."
Thero rose and bowed. "I'm yours to command."
Magyana smiled gently. "You will learn that, like
Nysander, I seldom command anything. I hope the rest of you will accept my
hospitality tonight?"
"I thank you, Magyana, but I don't think—"
Seregil broke off, unable to meet her gaze.
"I understand." She touched his cheek. "Later then. Tell me where you plan to
stay and I'll send word for Valerius to see Micum."
"Wheel Street tonight, then out to Watermead."
"I will see that he comes to you at once. Aura Elustri mdlreis, Seregil
tali."
Clasping hands with Alec, she bid him farewell, then bent over Micum. "Shall
I send word to Kari?"
Micum took her hand with a meaningful look and said softly, "Maybe we'd
better wait until Valerius has had a look at me, eh?"
Magyana pressed his hand. "Very well. May Dalna speed health to you, Micum,
and peaceful hearts to you all." With Thero at her side, she walked away through
the dockside throng to a waiting carriage.
"If you've no further need of the ship, the men are anxious to put out
again," said Rhal, coming over to take his leave of them. "We've made two
crossings with an empty hold and there are enemy ships to be plucked."
"The ship is yours to command, Captain," Seregil told him. "And the luck of
Astellus go with you. I expect the Green Lady will be the scourge of both seas."
Moving Micum into a hired cart, Alec and Seregil set off for Wheel Street.
The house was just as they'd left it. Evidently Mardus had been well apprised
enough of their movements not to waste time on unnecessary destruction.
Old Runcer greeted them with his usual lack of surprise, as if they'd been
gone for a day or two instead of months. Seregil's white hounds, Zir and Marag,
showed equal equanimity toward their master, padding softly on ahead as Seregil
and Alec helped Micum up the stairs to Seregil's chamber.
Valerius arrived soon after, dour as ever, but subdued. His scowl deepened as
he inspected Micum's wound.
"You're lucky to be here," he exclaimed, wrinkling his nose. "Who's been
looking after you?"
"Thero, mostly," Alec told him. "He was there when the dyrmagnos attacked
him, and he tended him all the way home."
"He may have saved your leg, Micum. He certainly saved your life. There's
still a great deal of healing to be done, though." He turned to Seregil and
Alec. "Runcer can help me. I suggest you both go out for a while."
"I'm not leaving," Seregil protested with a flash of his old fire.
"You heard him, Seregil. You'd just be in the way. Get out," Micum said from
the bed, making a passable job of sounding cheerful. "Come see me in the
morning."
"Come on," said Alec, taking him by the arm. "I could do with a walk after
all that time at sea."
Valerius closed the door firmly behind them.
Seregil glared at it for a moment, tight-lipped and grim, then followed Alec
downstairs without another word.
Seregil hadn't worn a sword since the day of Nysander's death, but Alec
hastily buckled on his own as they headed out into the cool spring evening.
Lithion had passed into Nythin since he'd been gone and flowering trees
scented the air.
They both still wore their rough traveling clothes and, with his sword
swinging against his leg with no cloak to cover it, Alec worried fleetingly that
the Watch might stop them to ask why two such ill-dressed strangers were
hurrying through the streets of the Noble Quarter.
But Seregil soon took the lead, heading into poorer courtyards and alleyways.
He was still limping slightly, but seemed not to feel it as he strode silently
along. Along the way they passed Lazarda's Black Feather brothel. The door stood
open and, glancing at Alec saw that the carved ship on the mantelpiece was
facing west, signaling that a message had been left there for the Rhiminee Cat.
If Seregil saw this, he ignored it and they wandered on like ghosts through the
familiar shadows of their city.
A slender moon stood high over the rooftops before Seregil finally broke his
silence. Stopping suddenly in a weed-choked courtyard, he turned to Alec as if
they were in mid conversation.
"He thinks he might die, you know?" he said, his face half-lost in shadow.
The part Alec could see was a mask of misery.
"Micum? I don't think he will," Alec replied, adding without much conviction,
"Valerius wouldn't have made us leave if he thought he would."
"I don't think I could stand to lose him, too,"
Seregil said, betraying more emotion than he'd shown in days. But before Alec
could respond he was off again, heading west.
They'd gone several blocks in silence before Alec realized where it was that
they'd been headed all along.
One scorched brass cockerel remained to guard the courtyard gate, its
upraised claw empty. Beyond the low wall lay nothing but a gaping foundation
hole choked with charred timbers. Everything had burned-the inn, the stables,
the wooden gate of the back court.
The stink of rain-soaked ashes hung rank on the air.
"O Illior!" Alec whispered in stunned dismay. "I knew it was gone, but
still—"
Seregil looked equally bereft. "It was just starting to burn when I left.
Cilia was only two years old when I bought it."
Alec shuddered, hating Vargul Ashnazai all the more for giving him such
memories of her and the others.
"Do you think their ghosts are here?"
Seregil kicked at a bit of cracked stone. "If they did linger, you gave them
peace the moment you strangled that bastard."
"What about Luthas?"
"I suppose the drysians at the temple will foster him out or make a priest of
him—"
Seregil broke off as a small form bounded up out of the cellar hole with a
loud, familiar trill.
Purring frantically, Ruetha went back and forth between them, twining herself
around their ankles and arching to have her ears scratched.
They stared down at the cat for a moment in mutual amazement, then Seregil
scooped her up with shaking hands. She butted him under the chin with her head.
"By all the gods! Thryis used to complain about the way she'd disappear until
I came back."
Burying his fingers in the sooty fur of her ruff, he muttered huskily, "Well,
old girl, you'd better come with us this time. We're not coming back."
"Not ever." Alec rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder as he reached to stroke
Ruetha. "Not ever."
When they returned to Wheel Street a few hours later, Seregil and Alec found
Valerius just finishing a hearty late supper in the dining room.
"Cheer up, you two. Micum will be fine," the drysian told them, brushing
crumbs from his beard.
"What about his leg?" asked Seregil.
"Go see for yourself."
Elsbet was at her father's side, holding his hand as he slept. Weariness made
her look older than her fifteen years; with her smooth dark hair bound back in a
thick braid over the shoulder of her simple blue gown, she was the image of Kari
as Seregil had first known her.
"He's going to be all right," she whispered.
The room smelled of healing herbs and fresh air.
Bending over Micum, Seregil saw with relief the faint flush of healthy color
that tinged the sleeping man's cheeks. Fresh blood had soaked through the lines
wrapped around his thigh, but the leg was still intact.
"Valerius says he'll be able to ride again in time," she told them. "I've
already arranged for a carriage to take him home tomorrow. Mother's been so
worried!"
"We'll come out with you," Seregil replied, wondering what sort of reception
he'd have from her mother.
"Mother! A carriage is coming, and riders," cried Illia from the front gate.
"It must be Father coming home!"
Shading her eyes against the slanting afternoon sun, Kari joined her at the
gate and watched the covered carriage make its way slowly up the hill toward
them. She recognized the riders as Seregil and Alec. Micum wasn't with them.
She unconsciously pressed a hand across her belly as she set off down the
road to meet them. Catching her mother's mood, Illia hurried solemnly along
behind her.
Seregil cantered on ahead to meet her and Kari's sense of dread deepened as
he came near. She had never seen him so pale and worn. There was something in
his face, a shadow.
"Where's Father, Uncle Seregil?" demanded Illia.
"In the carriage," he told her, reining in beside them and dismounting. "He's
wounded but he'll be fine. Elsbet's with him, too, and Alec."
"Thank the Maker!" Kari exclaimed, embracing him. "Oh, Seregil, I know about
the Cockerel. I'm so sorry. Those poor good people."
He returned the embrace stiffly and she stepped back to look into his face
again. "What is it? There's something else, isn't there?"
"You've had no news, then?"
"Magyana sent word at dawn that you'd returned, that's all."
Seregil turned away, his face disturbingly expressionless as he looked out
over the new green of the meadow. "Nysander's dead."
Kari raised a hand to her mouth, too stunned to speak.
"That nice old man who did magic tricks for me on Sakor's Day?" asked Illia.
She danced around them impatiently, her face puckering to cry. "Why is he dead?
Did a bad man kill him?"
Seregil swallowed hard, his face still grim. "He did something very brave.
Very difficult and very brave. And he died."
The others drew up and Seregil straightened, his face betraying nothing but a
strained composure.
Too composed, it seemed to Kari as she hurried to the carriage door. But then
all her thoughts turned to Micum.
Haggard as he was, he greeted her with a rakish grin as she flew into his
outstretched arms.
"I may be home for good this time, love," he said ruefully, patting his
bandaged leg propped before him on the carriage seat.
"Make me no idle promises, you wandering scoundrel!" Kari gasped, wiping away
tears of relief. "Where's Alec?"
She leaned out the window and took his hand as he sat his horse. "Are you
well, love?"
"Me? Hardly a scratch," Alec assured her, though he looked as drawn and
careworn as the others.
Kari held his hand a moment longer, seeing what Beka had seen; he was no
longer the boy he'd been when he first came to Watermead. Whatever had happened
to him through these past weeks, it had stripped the innocence from him, and who
knew what else besides?
The household hounds leapt around the carriage and horses as they entered the
courtyard. A loud answering hiss issued from somewhere near Kari's feet. She
looked down to find a pair of green eyes shining out at her from a crack in a
wicker hamper.
"What in the world—?"
"Seregil's cat," Micum told her. "I bet there'll be some slashed snouts among
the dogs before she's through. Poor creature, she's the last survivor of the
inn."
Kari smiled to herself, but held her peace until Alec and Seregil had helped
Micum into the main hall. When he was settled comfortably in front of the fire,
she drew Elsbet aside, then whispered to Illia. The little girl disappeared into
the kitchen, returning a moment later with a plump, curly-headed baby in her
arms.
"Father, look what Valerius brought us. Isn't he pretty?"
Alec was the first to react. Jumping to his feet again, he lifted the child
from Illia's uncertain grip and held him up, looking him over with a mix of
wonder and joy.
"Cilia's baby?" Micum asked.
Kari took his hand. "Valerius brought him to me a few days after you left and
asked if I'd foster the child. I knew Cilia would want him here, rather than
raised by strangers who knew nothing of his people. I didn't think you'd mind."
"Of course not," replied Micum, watching in bemusement as Luthas tugged at
Alec's hair, crowing with delighted recognition. "But with the new one coming,
do you think you're up to it?"
"Up to raising the orphaned child of a friend? I should think so!" Kari
scoffed. "With the older girls gone, I've got far too much time on my hands. And
Illia adores him."
She looked up at Seregil, standing alone by the hearth. "When he's old
enough, I'll tell him how you saved his life," she added.
"It might be better if he didn't know," Seregil replied, watching Alec and
Illia fussing over the child.
"I'll leave it to you, then," Kari said, catching another glimpse of the
desperate unhappiness she'd sensed in him on the road.
Lying close to Micum that night, she listened in silence as he slowly
explained the manner of Nysander's sacrifice and death.
"No wonder Seregil's so lost," she whispered, stroking her husband's strong,
freckled arm. "How could Nysander have demanded such a thing of him?"
"I don't completely understand it all myself," Micum admitted sadly. "But I
do believe Nysander was right in thinking that no one but Seregil would have the
heart to strike him down when the time came. I couldn't have done it, and I
don't think Alec could have, either."
"We forget sometimes how cruel the gods can be!" Kari said bitterly. "To turn
love to murder like that."
"You'd have to have been there," Micum said, staring up into the shadows cast
by the fire on the hearth. "If you could have seen Nysander's face—It wasn't
murder. It was an act of mercy, and love."
During the weeks that followed mixed reports came of the war; for the time
being the Plenimaran army was held back in eastern Mycena, but their black ships
ruled the seas, raiding the eastern coast of Skala as far north as Cirna, though
they hadn't yet won control of the Canal.
Except for the absence of the young men who'd gone off to war, life at
Watermead continued on largely unchanged. Gorathin followed Nythin, and then
Shemin, bringing with it the lushness of high summer.
Gentle morning rains nourished the fields and strong spring lambs and colts
bounded after their dams in the meadows.
Kari flourished with the land and her great belly swayed proudly before her
as she went briskly about her daily work and the welcome tasks of summer. But
she continued to worry about Seregil, though the only outward sign of trouble
was his unusual quietness.
She knew Micum and Alec felt the same concern, yet none of them could see a
way to help him.
He sought no solace from any of them, to be sure, but kept himself busy
around the estate. Micum had made it clear that he and Alec were welcome to live
at Watermead for as long as they wished, and Seregil seemed content to do so.
From Alec, Kari learned that he'd sworn never to set foot in Rhiminee again.
If he'd been morose or self-pitying, she might have tried to cajole him out
of it, but he wasn't. When asked, he would tell tales and play the harp. He
worked with the horses, helped build a new stable, and spent his evenings
devising clever devices to help Micum cope with his crippled leg, including a
specially designed stirrup that let him ride again. Of late he'd even been able
to bring himself to hold Luthas again, but left to himself he sank again into
that inner stillness.
Alec, who'd endured the most abuse of any of them, was the quickest to
recover. Farm labor agreed with him and he quickly grew brown and cheerful
again. Kari saw him watching Seregil, however, trying to gauge the inner turmoil
that underlay his friend's long silences and distant eyes.
At night they shared the bed in the guest chamber, but Kari could tell that
no comfort was being found there either.
One morning in mid-Shemin Kari awoke just before dawn, too uncomfortable to
sleep. No matter how she turned, her back ached. Not wanting to wake Micum, she
threw a shawl on over her shift, checked Luthas, who lay asleep in the cradle by
their bed, then went off to the kitchen to make tea.
To her surprise, the kettle was on the hook over the fire already. A moment
later Alec came in carrying a basket of pears from the tree in the backyard.
"You're up early," he said, offering her the fruit.
"It's this wretched child." She frowned comically, kneading her lower back.
"He kicks his mother and puts his knees and elbows in all the wrong places. What
woke you so early?"
"Seregil was tossing around in his sleep again. I thought maybe I'd go
hunting."
"Sit with me a moment, won't you? It's so peaceful this time of the day."
Kari sat on the hearth bench to warm her back while Alec made the tea.
"Seregil isn't getting any better, is he?"
"You and Micum both see it, too, don't you?" he said wearily, pulling up a
stool beside her. He held out one tanned, callused hand. "He hasn't once told me
to wear gloves. He was always after me about it. Before."
He looked up at her and Kari saw the depth of unhappiness in his young face.
"Now he goes out at night or sits up writing. He hardly sleeps at all."
"Writing what?"
Alec shrugged. "He won't talk about it. I even thought of stealing a look at
his papers, but he's got them hidden somewhere. It's like he's fading inside,
Kari, leaving us behind without going away. And I keep thinking about something
he told me once, about when he was exiled from Aurenen."
He spoke of that to you? thought Kari. Even Micum knew almost nothing of that
part of Seregil's life.
"Another boy was sent away with him then, but he threw himself off the ship
and drowned," Alec went on. "Seregil says most Aurenfaie exiles end up suicides
because sooner or later they fall into despair living among the Tirfaie. He said
it hadn't happened to him. But the way things are now, I think maybe it has."
Kari watched his hands tighten around the mug he was holding. There was
something else going on behind those blue eyes, something too painful to share.
She reached to stroke his cheek.
"Then keep good watch over him, Alec. You two share the same blood. Perhaps
in his sadness he's forgotten that."
Alec sighed heavily. "He's forgotten more than that. The day he found me
again in Plenimar, something happened, but now he won't—" Kari flinched suddenly
as a sharp stab of pain lanced down one leg.
"What it is?" he asked, concerned.
Kari gasped through her teeth again, then grasped his arm to raise herself.
"It's only the eight-month pains. A walk in the meadow will ease them and we can
keep talking." The pain passed and she gave him a reassuring smile. "Don't look
so worried. It's just the Maker's way of preparing me for the birth. You know,
I've got a craving for some of that new cheese. Run and fetch us a bit from the
dairy, would you?"
"Are you sure? I don't like to leave you."
"Maker's Mercy, Alec, I was bearing children before you were even thought of.
Go on, now." Pressing her fists into the small of her back, she went outside by
the kitchen door so as not to waken the servants still sleeping in the hall.
Alec was halfway to the dairy before he realized he'd forgotten to bring a
dish for the fresh curds.
By the time he found one, Kari was already out of sight around the corner of
the house. Going around to the courtyard, however, he saw that the postern was
still barred.
A deep groan came from behind him, and he turned to find Kari sagging against
the stone watering trough near the stable. Her face was white, and the front of
her shift was wet to the hem.
"Oh, Dalna!" he gasped, dropping the cheese as he hurried to her. "Is it the
baby? Is it coming now?"
"Too early and too fast! I should have realized—"
Kari grabbed his arm, digging her fingers painfully into his wrist as another
spasm took her.
She was a tall woman and too heavy with child for him to carry. Getting an
arm around her waist, he supported her as best he could to the front door.
It was still barred and he kicked at it, shouting for help.
The door disopened at last. Elsbet and several servants helped bring her
inside.
Beyond them, Micum limped from his bedchamber. "What is it?" he demanded
anxiously, catching sight of Kari in the midst of the commotion.
"It's the baby," Alec told him.
"I'll go for a midwife!" Seregil offered, halfway to the door already.
"No time," Kari gasped. "My women can help me. We've delivered a whole house
full of babies between us. Stay with Micum, you and Alec both. I want you with
him! Elsbet, Illia, come to me!"
Arna and the other woman helped their mistress into her chamber and closed
the door firmly, leaving the men stranded in the hall.
"She's not so young as she was," Micum said, lowering himself shakily down
into a chair by the fire. Kari let out a cry of pain in the next room and he
went pale.
"She'll be all right," Seregil told him, although he was looking a bit green
himself. "And it's not so early for the child. She was due in the next few weeks
anyway."
They sat exchanging uneasy glances as her cries echoed through the house.
Servants drifted in and out, listening nervously. Even the hounds refused to be
put out and lay whining at their feet. At last Seregil fetched his harp and
played to soothe them all.
A final straining groan rang out just before noon, followed by a thin wail
and exclamations of delight from the women. Micum pushed himself up as old Arna
emerged beaming from the birthing room.
"Oh, Master Micum!" she cried, wiping her hands on a towel. "He's the
sweetest little redheaded mite you ever saw. And strong, too, for an early babe.
He's sucking already, nice as you please. It was Dalna's own mercy she brought
him out early or she'd have had a worse time of it than she did, poor lamb. Give
us a moment to clear up the bed and then come in, all of you. She wants you
all!"
"A son!" shouted Micum, wrapping his arms around his friends" shoulders. "A
son, by the Four!"
"He's all wrinkled up and red and covered in muck!" squealed Illia, bounding
out to hug him.
"And he has red hair like you and Beka. Come and see. Mother's so happy!"
Kari lay tucked up in the wide bed with a tiny bundle laid to her breast. To
Alec, the least experienced in such matters, she looked dreadful, as if she'd
been ill, but the serene smile she greeted him with belied it.
Micum kissed her, then took the child in his arms.
"He's as lovely and strong as all the others," he whispered huskily, gazing
down into the wizened little face beneath the damp shock of coppery hair. "Come
on, you two, and greet my son."
"I'm so glad you were there this morning, Alec." Kari reached for his hand
and laughed. "You should have seen your face, though."
Seregil peered over Micum's shoulder for a better look at the child, and Alec
saw a smile of genuine pleasure soften his friend's drawn features for the first
time in months.
"What will you call him?" Seregil asked. "We'd thought to call him Bornil,
after my father,"
Kari replied, "but looking at him now, it doesn't seem to fit. What do you
think, Micum?"
He laughed and shook his head. "I'm too fuddled to think."
Kari looked up at Seregil, who was still smiling down at the child. "Then
perhaps you can help us again, as you did with Illia. As the oldest and dearest
friend of this family, help us name our son."
Micum handed the baby to Seregil. Gazing at him thoughtfully, he said,
"Gherin, I think, if you'd have another Aurenfaie name in the family."
"Gherin?" Kari tried the sound of it. "I like that. What does it mean?"
"Early blessing," was Seregil replied quietly.
Thank the Maker, Alec thought gratefully, watching Seregil with the child.
That's the most peaceful I've seen him since we got back. Maybe his spirit is
finally healing after all.
A warm night breeze sighed in through the open window.
The sound of it seemed to echo Seregil's inner loneliness.
It was ironic, really. The first time he and Alec had stayed in this room,
Alec had kept stiffly to his side of the bed; these past weeks Seregil often
woke to find him lying close beside him, as he was now. Alec had thrown one arm
across Seregil's chest, his breath soft at his bare shoulder.
Why can't I feel anything?
Lying there in the moonlight, Seregil stroked Alec's fair hair and summoned
the memory of the kiss they'd shared that day in Plenimar.
Even that had been sucked pale and flat.
Since Nysander's death all his emotions seemed to have fled to a distance,
felt dimly, as if through a pane of thick glass.
It was too late now, too late for anything. He was too empty. Covering Alec's
hand with his own, he watched the stars wheel toward morning, thinking of
Gherin.
His mind had ranged far these last weeks, turning round and round on itself
as he struggled to reach some decision that would bring him peace. Looking down
into the face of Micum's tiny new son today, he'd suddenly felt that the sign
he'd been waiting for had been given at last. With this last thread of the past
tied off, he could go.
An hour before dawn, he slipped out of bed and pulled on his clothes.
Throwing his old pack over one shoulder, he took a small bundle from its hiding
place behind the wardrobe, then closed the shutters to keep out the morning
light. Alec mustn't waken until he was well away from here.
Moving with his natural silence past the sleeping servants in the hall, he
went to Micum's chamber. A night lamp still burned there, and by its light he
watched his old companion sleeping so peacefully in his wife's arms. Micum was
home.
Seregil laid a rolled parchment at the foot of the bed, along with small
packets of jewels for each of the children. On his way out, he paused beside
Gherin's cradle.
The infant lay on his back, arms flung over his head. Seregil ran a fingertip
lightly over one tiny fist, marveling at the fragility of the silken skin.
Gherin stirred, sucking contentedly in his sleep.
In twenty years you'll be the young man your father was when I met him,
Seregil told him silently, touching the infant's fuzzy red hair.
What would it be like to see you then?
Seregil pushed the thought away and stole hurriedly away. He wouldn't be
back, not in twenty years, not ever. He owed them all that much.
Leaving Alec was even harder than he'd feared.
Against all better judgment, he went back to the open doorway of the room
they'd shared so chastely, knowing full well that if Alec so much as opened an
eye, he was lost.
Alec lay curled on his side now, blond hair tumbled over the pillow. A dull
ache gripped Sergil's heart; all the nights he'd been lulled by that soft
breathing, all the things that might have been, seemed to come together at once
in a tight knot at the base of his throat.
If only Nysander hadn't—
Seregil placed a thick roll of parchments on the doorsill: the letter, too
painful to be anything but brief; documents making Alec of Ivywell heir to all
Lord Seregil's holdings in the city; the lists of names and secrets and money
holders. It was all there, carefully set down. When Alec sorted them out he'd
discover that even minus what Seregil had deeded to Micum and a few others, he
would be one of the wealthiest young men in Skala.
Good-bye, tali.
The stars were dying as he led Cynril down the road below Watermead. When he
judged he was far enough away to ride without waking the house, he swung up into
the saddle and nudged the horse into a brisk trot. It was a little easier now,
riding along at first light, the air already warm and redolent with the scent of
the wild roses blooming in the meadow.
A flight of wild geese rose from the river. He could almost see Alec on the
bank below, trying to coax Patch out of the stream with a scrap of leather.
The boy had been all innocence and good intentions then; why had he worked so
hard to sully that?
He rode up onto the bridge and reined Cynril to a halt. Mist was rising from
the stream's surface, coiling up to turn gold with the first touch of dawn. It
looked, Seregil thought, like some magical pathway leading up to unexplored
realms. Pulling the poniard from his boot, he tested the well-honed edge, then
looked up the shining stream again.
It was as good a direction as any.
Something brushed Alec's hand and he opened one eye, expecting to see Illia
or one of the dogs.
Nysander was standing beside the bed.
"Go after him," Nysander whispered, his voice faint as if it came from a
great distance.
Alec lurched up, his heart pounding. Nysander had disappeared, if he'd-ever
been there at all.
Worse yet, Seregil was gone. Alec slid his hand over the sheets where Seregil
had slept. They were cold.
Whether dream or vision, the urgency of Nysander's warning grew stronger by
the second.
Just like that other night, riding back to the inn.
Scrambling out of bed, Alec hauled on breeches and a shirt and headed for the
door. His bare foot struck something as he crossed the threshold. It was a thick
roll of parchments bound with plain string.
Untying it, he quickly scanned the familiar flowing script covering the first
page.
"Alec tali,
Remember me kindly and try—"
"Damn!" Pages scattered in all directions as Alec ran for the stables.
Too much to hope that Seregil had gone on foot; Cynril was missing from her
stall. Mounted bareback on Patch, Alec searched for and quickly found Cynril's
tracks, the distinctive print of the slightly splayed right hind hoof plain in
the dust of the road outside the courtyard gate.
Kicking Patch into a gallop, he rode down the hill and across the bridge,
reining in where the two roads met to see which way Seregil had gone.
But there was no sign of Cynril here. Cursing softly to himself, Alec
dismounted for a closer search, then walked back onto the bridge and scanned the
hillside, looking for telltale lines across the dewy meadow. Nothing there
either, or on the hill trail. He was about to ride back for Micum when a patch
of freshly turned gravel on the stream bank above the bridge caught his eye.
You went up the streambed, you sneaky bastard!
Alec thought with grudging admiration. The bridge was too low to ride under
and there were no other signs downstream. Upstream lay Beka's otter pond, and
the ill-fated pass that Alec had crossed to Warnik's valley.
And beyond that, the whole damn world.
Mounting again, Alec rode up the trail. The streambed grew steeper and he
soon found where Seregil had been forced to come up onto the trail.
Judging by the tracks, he'd traveled quickly from here.
Heedless of the branches that whipped at his face and shoulders, Alec kicked
Patch into a gallop again.
When the clearing around the pond came into view ahead, he was both relieved
and surprised to see Seregil there, sitting motionless in the saddle as if
admiring the morning.
Alec's first reaction to Seregil's letter had been only the desperate desire
to find him. He realized now that there had also been a generous leaven of anger
mixed in.
When Seregil raised his head now, looking back at him with an expression of
startled wariness, the anger took over. It was the look you'd give an enemy.
Or a stranger.
"Wait—" Seregil called, but Alec ignored him. Digging his heels into Patch's
sides, he charged Seregil, bearing down on him before he could turn his own
horse out of the way. The animals collided and Cynril reared, throwing Seregil
off into the water. Alec leapt down and waded in after him.
Grabbing Seregil by the front of his tunic, he hauled him to his knees and
shook the crumpled note in his face.
"What's this supposed to be?" he yelled. "'All I have in Rhiminee is yours
now"? What is this?""
Seregil struggled to his feet and pulled free, not meeting Alec's eye. "After
everything that's happened—" He paused, took a deep breath. "After all that, I
decided it would be better for everyone if I just went away."
"You decided. You decided?" Furious, Alec grabbed Seregil with both hands and
shook him. The wrinkled parchment drifted across the pool, hung a moment against
a stone, and spun away unnoticed down the stream. "I followed you over half the
earth to Rhiminee for no other reason than you asked me to! I saved your damn
life twice before we even got there and how many times since? I stood with you
against Mardus and all the rest. But now, after moping around all summer, you
decide you're better off without me?"
Color flared in Seregil's gaunt face. "I never meant for you to take it that
way. Bilairy's Balls, Alec, you saw what happened at the Cockerel. That was my
fault. Mine! And it was only thanks to Ashnazai's twisted vanity that you didn't
end up dead with them. Micum's crippled for life, in case you didn't notice,
lucky to be alive. Do you have any idea how many times I've almost gotten him
killed before? And Nysander—Let's not forget what I did for him!"
"Nysander sent me!"
Seregil went ashen. "What did you say?"
"Nysander sent me after you," Alec told him. "I don't know if it was a dream
or. a ghost or what, but he woke me and told me to go after you. Illior's Hands,
Seregil, when are you going to forgive yourself for just doing what he asked you
to?"
He paused as another thought dawned on him. "When are you going to forgive
Nysander?"
Seregil glared at him wordlessly, then pushedAlec's hands away. Sloshing up
to the bank, he sank down on a log overlooking the pond. Alec followed, settling
on a rock beside him.
Seregil hung his head and let out an unsteady breath. After a moment he said,
"He knew. He should have told me."
"You would have tried to stop him."
"Damn right I would have!" Seregil flared, clenching his fists on his knees.
Angry tears spilled down his cheeks, the first Alec had ever seen him shed.
"If you'd done that, we'd have failed," Alec said, moving to sit beside him
on the log. "Everything Nysander worked for would've been lost. The Helm would
have taken him over and he'd have ended up as their Vatharna"
For an instant Alec thought he felt the wizard's touch against his hand
again. "I think he must be grateful to you."
Seregil covered his face, giving way at last to silent sobs. Alec wrapped an
arm around him, holding him tightly. "You were the only one who loved him enough
not to hesitate when the time came. He knew that. In the end you saved him the
only way you could. Why can't you let yourself see that?"
"All these weeks—" Seregil shrugged helplessly.
"You're right, right about everything. But why can't I feel it? I can't feel
anything anymore! I'm floundering around in a black fog. I look at the rest of
you, see you healing, going on. I want to, but I can't!"
"Just like I couldn't make myself jump that time at Kassarie's keep?"
Seregil let out a small, choked laugh. "I guess so."
"So let me help you, the way you helped me then," Alec persisted.
Seregil wiped his nose on his sodden sleeve. "As I recall, I threw you off
the roof into a gorge."
"Fine, if that's what it takes to show you that I'm not about to let you
slink away like some old dog going off to die."
The guilty look that crossed his friend's face told Alec his worst fears had
been correct. "I'm not letting you go," he said again, gripping Seregil's sleeve
for emphasis.
Seregil shook his head miserably. "I can't stay here."
"All right, but you're not leaving me."
"I thought you'd be happy at Watermead."
"I love everyone there like my own family, but not—" Alec broke off, feeling
his face go warm.
"But not what?" Seregil turned and brushed a clump of damp hair back from
Alec's face, studying his expression.
Alec forced himself to meet Seregil's questioning gaze squarely. "Not as much
as I love you."
Seregil looked at him for a moment, grey eyes still sad. "I love you, too.
More than I've loved anyone for a long time. But you're so young and—" He spread
his hands and sighed. "It just didn't seem right."
"I'm not that young," Alec countered wryly, thinking of all they'd been
through together. "But I am half faie, so I've got a lot of years ahead of me.
Besides, I've only just begun to understand Aurenfaie, I still don't know one
style of snail fork from another, and I can't jigger a Triple Crow lock. Who
else is going to teach me all that?"
Seregil looked out over the pond again. "'Father, brother, friend, and
lover.""
"What?" A coldness passed over Alec's heart; Mardus had spoken almost those
same words when asking about his relationship to Seregil.
"Something else the Oracle of Illior said that night I asked about you,"
Seregil answered, watching an otter slip into the water. "I kept thinking I had
it all sorted out and settled, but I don't. I've been the first three to you and
swore that was enough, but if you stay on with me—"
"I know." Catching Seregil off guard, Alec leaned forward and pressed his
lips to Seregil's with the same mix of awkwardness and determination he'd felt
the first time.
But when he felt Seregil's arms slip around him in a welcoming embrace, the
confusion that had haunted him through the winter cleared like fog before a
changing wind.
Take what the gods send, Seregil had told him more than once.
He would, and thankfully.
Seregil drew back a little, and there was something like wonder in his grey
eyes as he touched Alec's cheek. "Anything we do, tali, we do with honor. Before
all else, I'm your friend and always will be, even if you take a hundred wives
or lovers later on."
Alec started to protest but Seregil smiled and pressed a finger across his
lips. "As long as I have a place in your heart, I'm satisfied."
"You always have to have the last word, don't you?" Alec growled, then kissed
him again. The feel of Seregil's lean body pressing against his own suddenly
felt as natural and easy as one stream flowing into another. His last remaining
worry was that he had very little idea about how to proceed from here.
The sound of a horse coming up the trail at a gallop forestalled the issue
for the moment.
"I can guess who that is," Seregil groaned, standing up.
Micum burst into the clearing. "So here you are!" he exclaimed, glowering
down at Seregil. "By the Flame, the whole house is in an uproar because of you!"
He pulled a rolled letter from his coat and held it up angrily. "You gave us
a scare with this, you idiot. I don't know whether to kiss you or kick your ass
from here to Cirna!"
For the first time in months, Seregil summoned a cocky, crooked grin. "Don't
strain your leg on my account. Alec already done both."
Micum took a second look at the two of them and returned this'. grin
knowingly. "Well, it's about time!"
Two days later Micum and his family gathered in the courtyard to wish Alec
and Seregil a proper farewell.
"Will you be heading to Mycena from here?" asked Micum as they made a final
check of their horses and gear.
"I imagine the queen will have some use for a couple of trustworthy spies."
Seregil shrugged noncommittally. "Winter's not that far off. Idrilain is
supposed to be somewhere above Keston now. There won't be much to do once the
snow flies. Maybe in the spring."
Kari shifted Gherin in her arms and embraced him tightly, then Alec. Blinking
back tears, she whispered, "Take care, both of you."
Micum rested a hand on Seregil's shoulder, looking at him as if he didn't
expect to see him again. "By the Flame, it's hard not riding out with you. I
wish you'd take my sword."
Seregil shook his head. "That blade belongs with you. I'll find another if I
ever feel the need of one again. In the meantime, Alec'll keep an eye on me."
"You see that you do, Alec, or you'll answer to us," Micum said with gruff
affection, exchanging a quick look with Kari. They'd both noted the new light in
Seregil's eyes whenever he looked at Alec, and how that same warmth was
returned.
After all their farewells had been said, Seregil and Alec swung up on their
Aurenfaie mounts and rode out the gate.
"What if the Queen doesn't want us for spies in the spring?" Alec asked as
they cantered down toward the bridge.
Seregil shrugged again. "Well then, we're still some of the best damned
thieves I know of. Never any shortage of work there."
Kicking their mounts into a gallop, they raced down the hill side by side,
and swung north to the open road beyond.
About the Author
Lynn Flewelling grew up in Presque Isle, Maine. Since receiving a
degree in English from the University of Maine in 1981, she has studied
veterinary medicine at Oregon State, classical Greek at Georgetown University,
and worked as a personnel generalist, landlord, teacher, necropsy technician,
advertising copywriter, and freelance journalist, more or less in that order,
She currently lives in western New York with her husband, two sons, and other
assorted mammals.