EXILE'S CHILDREN - Angus Wells
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EXILE'S CHILDREN
Angus Wells
For Anne Lesley Groell and Jamie Warren Youll. With special thanks to Stephen Youll.
1—The Meeting Ground
When Morrhyn came out of the Dream Lodge the first thing he saw was a
heron chased across the sky by three harrying crows. The ungainly
fisherbird swooped and dove, its wide wings beating heavily, but the
crows were relentless in their pursuit, and as the heron reached the
stand of hemlock flanking the Meeting Ground, it squawked a protest
and gave up its catch to the robbers. Morrhyn wondered if this was an
omen, and if any of the other wakanishas attending the Matakwa had
observed the drama. He would mention it later, he decided, and
perhaps they would discuss its meaning; meanwhile, he had much else
to occupy his mind.
After the heat of the lodge, the early morning air struck chill on
his sweated skin and he shrugged his bearskin closer about his
shoulders. The year was young yet, the New Grass Moon barely full,
but the sky promised benevolence, and when he turned to make
obeisance to the Maker's Mountain, he saw the great peak shining
brilliant in the rising sun. Perhaps that, too, was an omen; perhaps
the Maker sent a sign to balance the other. Morrhyn was unsure:
lately, his dreams had left him turbulent with uncertainty. He felt
some dreadful threat approached the People, but what its nature or
when it should arrive remained mysterious. This past night, as
before, he had dreamed of strange creatures all clad in shining
metal, and mounted on such beasts as defied imagining, and knew their
purpose was evil. At their head rode a figure whose armor shone
sun-bright, and whose mount was huge and black with wickedly curling
horns and eyes that blazed fiery. No such folk, or such weirdling
beasts, existed in all Ket-Ta-Witko, and he feared the meaning of the
dream, and prayed earnestly that it not be realized. When it came his
turn to speak in the Dream Council, he would tell all this to his
fellow wakanishas and seek their advice. Perhaps others had shared
the dream: he could not decide if he hoped for that confirmation of
his oneiric power or dreaded its corroboration.
Sighing, he made his way through the sleeping lodges to the stream
that crossed the Meeting Ground and stooped to lave his face and
chest. Farther down the brook he saw Rannach watering his prized
stallion, laughing with several of the other unmarried warriors. The
young man stood bare-chested in the cold, and for a moment Morrhyn
envied him his youth and the overweening confidence it brought. He
had never enjoyed such confidence, but then, he had come early to his
calling, recognized as a Dreamer and claimed by old Gahyth before he
had opportunity to ride out after the wild plains horses or go alone
against the bear or the lion to earn the right of the warrior's
braids. He was wakanisha: his hair hung loose; Rannach's was tied in
the braids these seven winters now.
And now the young man prepared to choose a bride. There were maidens
enough amongst the lodges of the Commacht who looked favorably on
him, and their parents would welcome his bride-visit. Morrhyn wished
he would choose one of them; it should be so much simpler. But
Rannach had eyes only for Arrhyna, as if his first sight of the
Tachyn girl had hooked his heart and bound it firm. Had Morrhyn not
known better, he might have wondered if the maiden had entranced
Rannach, delivered him some love potion that enslaved him with ropes
of blind desire; but from Matakwas past he knew her for a modest
girl, seemingly unconscious of her beauty. He did not believe she had
worked some magic on Rannach but only been herself, and Rannach had
fallen honestly—and totally—in love with her. Which, of
course, was the strongest magic of all, and in the circumstances
perhaps the worst.
Morrhyn grunted as he straightened, absently cursing the years that
tolled their count in the stiffening of his limbs, and nodded
greeting as Rannach smiled and waved, hoping his silence should
indicate to the warrior his aversion to conversation. He had no
desire at that moment to speak with the young man: he knew where the
conversation must go, what he would say and what Rannach would reply,
and that it must leave him further troubled. He needed to think, to
ponder his dream and the days to come, to determine what part Rannach
and Arrhyna might play in the future of the Commacht; indeed, in the
future of all the People.
It would all, he thought as he burrowed deeper into his robe and
turned from the stream, be so much easier if Vachyr did not court the
girl: if Vachyr were not Chakthi's son, or Chakthi so intransigent.
But these things were immutable as the Maker's Mountain.
Intermarriage amongst the clans was not unusual, and if Rannach paid
court to any other Tachyn maiden, likely Chakthi could find no cause
for objection. The Maker knew the Tachyn akaman held little enough
love for the Commacht, but he would likely not argue Rannach's
pursuit of some maiden other than Arrhyna, only urge the parents set
an exorbitant bride-price. That his only child pursued the same
maiden changed everything: Chakthi would bring all his influence as
akaman to bear, seeking to deliver Vachyr whatever—or, in this
case, whoever—the warrior desired. Chakthi's love of his son
was blind and, since his widowing, untempered by feminine influence.
Nor did Morrhyn believe Hadduth likely to do other than second his
akaman, even though it was the wakanisha's duty to consider the
greater good, the welfare of all the People. Hadduth, he could not
help thinking, was a cringing dog to Chakthi's wolf: when Chakthi
howled, Hadduth barked his support. It needed no dreaming to prophesy
this looming future. Rannach was headstrong in his pride, and should
Vachyr contest with him, should it come to a challenge …
That, Morrhyn thought, he had rather not consider. Save he must, for
he was wakanisha of the Commacht and his burden was the contemplation
of fate's weaving. It was a burden he accepted, delivered when Gahyth
saw him for a Dreamer, but it brought him little pleasure. Its weight
sat heavy; nor was it shared, for amongst the young men of the
Commacht he could discern none with the talent. He was not yet so old
he need worry about that absence, but the time must surely come when
he need teach another the art. He thought that then he must perhaps
turn to another clan, to persuade some likely candidate to take the
oaths and vow fealty to the Commacht. And did it come to that, he
would not look for his successor amongst the Tachyn.
A voice intruded then on his musings, and he saw that he had come
absentminded amongst the lodges. Lhyn called to him from the mouth of
Racharran's tent and he smiled at sight of her, old memories, old
longings, stirring ruefully. Gray strands wove through her hair now,
but they seemed only to make the gold glow brighter, as if silver
joined the molten flow; and were there lines upon her face, they
served only to emphasize her beauty. Once, perhaps … But Morrhyn
shoved the thought away. Lhyn had made her choice and he would not
argue it; had not then, when he saw her eyes grow moist as she denied
him and told him she went to Racharran, and could not now, when he
saw her happy. He raised a hand and went toward her, still not quite
able to stem the swift thudding of his heart. Perhaps, he thought, I
am not so old after all.
"I've pan bread readying," she told him, "and
Racharran brought home a deer. Shall you eat with us?" She held
the lodge flap open as she spoke, knowing he would not demur.
Morrhyn beamed as the smells wafted tempting to his nose and said as
he entered the lodge, "Our akaman is, indeed, a great hunter of
deer."
"As our wakanisha is of dreams," Racharran answered,
chuckling from across the lodge fire. "Sit, my friend, and fill
your belly."
Morrhyn thought of the meager breakfast set by in his own lodge: this
should surely be better, and give him chance to speak with the akaman
of his dream and doubts. He sat, shucking off his bearskin, savoring
the odors as Lhyn took the pan bread from the flames.
They ate, as was custom, in silence, speaking only when all were done
and Lhyn filled cups of Grannach manufacture with sweet herb tea.
"I saw Rannach," Morrhyn began. "He's of the same
mind?"
Racharran nodded, his handsome face darkening somewhat. "My son
is obstinate," he murmured. "This day he intends to go to
Arrhyna; tomorrow Bakaan will make formal approach."
"The Maker grant Vachyr not be there," Morrhyn said.
"Surely not even Vachyr would sully the Meeting Ground."
Lhyn made a sign of warding as she spoke.
Her husband grunted, shrugging, "Vachyr's a temper fierce as our
son's pride," he declared. "I wonder if there's much to
choose between them."
Lhyn gave him a disapproving frown. "I'd not liken our son to
Chakthi's," she said. "Rannach is—"
"Obstinate," Racharran interrupted.
"His father's son," said Lhyn.
"Perhaps." Racharran spread his hands wide. "But he'll
not listen to me in this, and his choice could not be worse."
"He loves her," Lhyn said, "and she him. Would you
argue that?"
"Not that they share a passion," Racharran said. "Only
that it's a passion such as can deliver us to war." He turned to
Morrhyn. "How say you, wakanisha?"
Morrnyn wiped deer fat from his chin and pondered awhile. Then: "I
see both sides, I think. I'd wish the Maker had guided Rannach's eyes
elsewhere, but they fell on Arrhyna and they'll not be shifted. We
cannot forbid the marriage; neither can Chakthi. What comes of it …
"
The akaman said, "Trouble. Were it in my power, I'd forbid it."
"And make an enemy of our son," said Lhyn. "He'd take
Arrhyna and go away."
"Yes." Racharran ducked his head in unhappy acceptance.
"And so, instead, we make Chakthi our enemy. Come summer, our
folk must ride careful on the grass—the gift of Rannach's
desire."
"But you'll support him." Lhyn said. "Does Chakthi
take it before the Council?"
"Of course." Racharran's smile was sour with resignation.
"He's my son. I've spoken with him, and my words ran like water
off stone. He knows my feelings—and Morrhyn's—and he'll
not be diverted. But I shall support him in Council."
Lhyn smiled and filled their cups. Morrhyn said, "I dreamed
again."
Racharran said, "The same?" And when the wakanisha nodded
his confirmation: "Aught of Rannach?"
Morrhyn said, "No; and that troubles me. It's as if this dream
is so great, it drives all others out. It burns through my nights
like a prairie fire." He shuddered despite the lodge's warmth.
"It frightens me."
Racharran studied his old friend, reading concern like spoor on the
weathered face. That disturbed him, and when he spoke, his voice was
soft. "Can you put a meaning on it?"
"No." Morrhyn shrugged a negative. "Save danger
threatens, and a danger far greater than Chakthi alone. Ach!" He
sighed and shook his head. "I am not a very good Dreamer, that I
cannot interpret this."
Racharran said, "You are the best," echoed by Lhyn.
Morrhyn favored them with a smile. "Thank you for your faith,"
he murmured, "but it troubles me that I sense this yet cannot
discern its import." Conscious that he slumped, he straightened
his back, forcing a more confident tone. "I shall speak of it in
the Dream Council. Perhaps others have known this dream."
Racharran nodded: these were matters for the Dreamers, not yet of
immediate concern to the akamans. Was Morrhyn's dream shared, could
the wakanishas of all the clans gathered for the Matakwa put a
meaning to it, then it would become a thing for the Chiefs' Council.
Until then he had worry enough contemplating Rannach's suit.
He anticipated a summer of war, and could not help the kindled anger
that it was Rannach lit the flame. In the name of the Maker, why
could the youth not see reason? Arrhyna was a prize, but there were
others aplenty, and did Rannach only set the good of the clan before
his own desire, then he would forsake the girl and find some other
whose taking was less likely to bring the Tachyn raiding. Rannach was
not, Racharran thought sadly, the stuff of which akamans were made.
"You think of Rannach?"
Lhyn's soft voice intruded on his dark contemplation, and he answered
her with a silent nod. She sighed and looked to Morrhyn.
The wakanisha said, "The stallion roped, you'd best not let go."
Racharran grunted irritably. "This stallion is likely to trample
us."
"But still," Morrhyn returned, "the rope is on and we
must make the best of it."
"Did you offer Chakthi compensation?" Lhyn suggested.
Her husband snorted. "For a bride whose price is already paid?
I've some pride yet." His aquiline features softened and he
touched his wife's hand. "Besides, I suspect Chakthi would see
that only as added insult."
"There's no easy answer," Morrhyn offered. "Save pray
the Maker gentles Chakthi's temper."
"And Vachyr's," Racharran said.
When Morrhyn quit their lodge, the great encampment was awake. His
conversation had delivered no enlightenment, and he felt still no
desire to converse with any others, so he drew up his robe to cowl
his head and walked away from the lodges to where the toes of the
Maker's Mountain rested on the earth. The stone shone silvery in the
risen sun, aged as time and furrowed with cracks like the skin of an
ancient. Higher, the slopes rose steep, lofting above the Meeting
Ground as they climbed to shape the flanks of the great peak. That
stood smooth, carved by wind and untold years, a pinnacle that
stabbed the clouds, the pillar holding up the heavens: the Gate
through which the People had come to Ket-Ta-Witko. Perhaps up there,
closer to the Maker's weaving, he might find answers.
He set to climbing, the ascent soon warming him enough that he shed
the bearskin, leaving it where a clump of thorn bushes jutted spiny
from the rock. He clambered up until he reached a shelf that
overlooked the Meeting Ground and squatted there, surveying the
lodges of the gathered clans.
Once each year, always in the New Grass Moon, they came to this place
in Matakwa. Here they offered to the Maker, giving thanks for bounty
past and prayer for bounty to come. Here disputes were settled, and
marriages made. What could not be resolved by the akamans and
wakanishas of the individual clans was settled by the Chiefs'
Council, and the will of the Council was final. Here the wakanishas
met in Dream Council, speaking of their visions, seeking the advice
of their fellow Dreamers, initiating novices. Here the People met
with the Grannach, the Stone Folk, who lived inside the hills and
came out to trade their metalwork for skins and beadwork and bone
carvings. The Matakwa was a celebration both secular and holy, bound
by one overriding commandment: that no blood be spilled. Morrhyn
prayed earnestly that it continue so. He could not say how, but he
felt that was connected in some fashion to his dream—that no
blood sully the Meeting Ground, lest it bring on the burning horses
of his vision with their dreadful riders.
He chanted his prayer and heard the words carried away on the wind
that blew up. He hoped the wind carried them to the Maker's ears.
Then, seeking calm, he studied the camp.
The lesser limbs of the Maker's Mountain curved horn-shaped about the
great verdant bowl, fending the wind. There was grass for all the
horses and sufficient timber to augment the dung fires with ample
wood. The stream that wandered across the bowl turned and twisted
serpentine, so that none need pitch their lodges far from water. It
was as fine a place as any in Ket-Ta-Witko, and surely the only place
where all the clans might gather.
The lodges spread colorful below him, painted with the emblems of the
five clans and those personal to the occupants. The horse head of the
Commacht stood proud across the brook from the Tachyn buffalo; he saw
the wolf of the Aparhaso and the turtle of the Naiche, the eagle of
the Lakanti. Past the lodges the herds cropped the grass, watched by
the older children, the younger scurrying agile and loud between the
tents, their games joined by barking dogs. Streamers of smoke rose
blue from the cookfires, swirled and lost where they met the wind.
Folk wandered the avenues between the tents, pausing to hail friends,
renew old acquaintances. Toward the center, warriors displayed horses
for barter, women the blankets woven through the long moons of
Breaking Trees and Frozen Grass. It was a sight that always stirred
Morrhyn's heart, of which he never tired. He hoped that when the
Maker took him back, it might be here, where his bones could forever
lie close to this wondrous symbol of unity.
He knew he smiled as he watched it all; and then his smile froze at
the sight of Rannach splashing through the brook.
The warrior was dressed in his finest, no longer bare-chested but
wearing a shirt of pale buckskin, bead-woven and painted with the
horse head. His breeches were of the same hide, dyed blue and fringed
in red and white, and his dark hair gleamed from recent washing. Over
his left shoulder he carried a blanket. He went directly toward the
lodge of Nemeth and Zeil, Arrhyna's parents. At least, Morrhyn
thought, he bears no weapons; and then: he gave Racharran his word.
Even so, the wakanisha could not entirely quell his presentiment and
looked past the young warrior to Vachyr's tent, pitched beside his
father's. He let out his relief in a long sigh as neither Tachyn
appeared. Still, his heart beat fast as he returned his gaze to
Rannach, for he knew the absence of Arrhyna's other suitor was no
more than temporary respite, the quiet preceding impending storm.
What shape that storm should take he knew not, only that it surely
came on.
"You who made us all," he said, unaware he spoke aloud,
"grant this goes smooth."
Then he held his breath, as if he stood close by Rannach's shoulder
and not far off and high, as the young man halted before the lodge.
The flap stood open and Nemeth came out, speaking awhile with Rannach
before turning to call inside. Arrhyna appeared, and on the instant
Morrhyn saw she had awaited this visit: her hair shone a fiery red,
falling loose over her shoulders, and she wore a gown of deerskin
worked so soft it was almost white. Morrhyn imagined she had spent
the winter moons shaping that garment, in anticipation of this
moment.
Rannach spoke and the maiden smiled, demurely lowering her head as
she stepped toward him. He shrugged the blanket from his shoulder,
raising his arm so that it fell in a swoop of red, blue, and white.
Arrhyna stepped into its folds and Rannach settled his arm around
her, lifting the blanket to hood them both. Then, moving as one, they
walked away, first amongst the lodges of the Tachyn, then over the
stream to wander the lines of the Commacht.
Morrhyn drew his eyes away: the declaration was made, now only
formalities remained. Formalities and Vachyr's response, and
Chakthi's. The wakanisha craned his head around, staring up at the
Maker's Mountain. He sensed his dream thundering closer, but the
pinnacle offered him no sign of what approached, and after a while he
rose and began the descent.
It was time to face the future.
2—Ceremonies of the Horsemen
"Three hands of horses were offered." Chakthi flung out his
fingers in emphasis. "Prime stock, every one."
"No doubt, for the blood of the Tachyn herds is the envy of us
all." Juh of the Aparhaso spoke mildly, his tone a gentle
contrast to Chakthi's venom. Racharran smiled faintly: the old man
was ever a keeper of the peace. "But still the decision rests
with the girl."
Chakthi's hand sliced air, dismissive.
"Who chooses Rannach," said Yazte of the Lakanti. "Whose
bride-offer was accepted by Nemeth."
Beyond this inner circle of akamans and wakanishas, Racharran heard a
nervous shifting and guessed that was likely Nemeth. The man had
courage, he thought, to defy the Tachyn leader. He wondered if Nemeth
and Zeil might not soon come seeking the shelter of the Commacht
lodges: it was theirs for the asking.
"Rannach offered only ten." Chakthi pressed his point, his
lupine features painted sharper in the firelight. His pale eyes
flashed a challenge. "Ten against Vachyr's fifteen. How can that
be right?"
"Our women are not beasts, my friend." Juh frowned, his
wrinkles spreading like sun-cracks over the ancient clay of his face,
but still his tone was mild. "They are not bought and sold like
horses. Arrhyna has a say in this."
"And tells Rannach
yes."
Yazte spoke with studied calm, only the barest hint of
contempt in his voice.
Does this all come to war, we've an ally there, Racharran thought.
Yazte's no more liking for Chakthi than I. He turned his attention to
the others, wondering where their allegiances would lie. Juh, he
thought, would seek to hold his Aparhaso aloof from any conflict. He
looked to Tahdase of the Naiche but the young man's face was veiled,
as if he'd not yet cast his stone. Racharran could not blame him:
Tahdase was not long akaman of his clan—this was his first
Matakwa as leader—and, sensibly, he sought no enmities. Even
so, Racharran thought, Chakthi forces this to a vote, and then
Tahdase must make his choice.
He returned his eyes to the Tachyn akaman as Chakthi spoke again. "I
do not say our women are beasts." Chakthi attempted a placatory
smile: it seemed to Racharran like the grin of a wolverine. "Only
that any sensible father, any sensible maiden, must surely choose the
better price. Indeed, the better man."
Racharran had promised himself he would play the diplomat in this
Council, not invoke Chakthi's anger, but this was too calculated an
insult to ignore with honor. He raised a hand and said, "You say
that Vachyr is the better man?"
Morrhyn's elbow dug hard against his ribs, but he ignored the
wakanisha as he faced Chakthi. The Tachyn smiled stonily and ducked
his head. "Vachyr is Tachyn: yes, he is the better man."
Racharran stiffened even as Morrhyn's hand clasped his wrist. None
bore arms in Council, but had Racharran worn a blade then …
"Careful." Morrhyn's voice was a breeze against his ear.
"He rants; he seeks to provoke you. Do not rise to his bait."
It was not easy. Yazte stared at Chakthi as he might at some night
crawler found in his bedding. Old Juh frowned in open disapproval.
Even careful Tahdase looked shocked. At their sides, the wakanishas
of their clans scowled. Racharran reined in his anger, forcing back
the challenge that sprang to his lips. Carefully; measuring his
words, he said, "Your opinion is your own to hold, brother. As
is mine."
A shadow crossed the Tachyn's face, anger and disappointment flashing
an instant in his eyes. In the name of the Maker, Racharran wondered,
does he truly look to begin a fight here, now?
"We are the Council of the People." Juh's voice was no
longer so gentle; now it was edged with the steel that made him
akaman. "It is unseemly that we trade insults here, in Matakwa."
Yazte granted agreement; Tahdase nodded as solemnly as his youth
allowed.
Chakthi stared fiercely around for a while, then Hadduth spoke softly
in his ear and he lowered his head. "My brother Racharran speaks
the truth. Our opinions are our own to hold. I intended no insult to
the Matakwa."
It did not sound like an apology, but under the pressure of Morrhyn's
fingers, Racharran nodded his acceptance.
"So, then, do we return to this matter of Arrhyna?"Juh
sounded relieved.
"What's to discuss?" Yazte smiled with deliberate calm. "An
offer has been made, an offer rejected; the maiden has chosen. What
else is there?"
Chakthi's teeth ground behind his thin-pressed lips and the eyes he
turned on the Lakanti were cold as winter ice. "As akaman of the
Tachyn, I object to her choice." His voice was no warmer than
his gaze. "As akaman of the Tachyn, I ask that the Council
decide this matter for her."
This was without precedent, but it was no more than Racharran had
expected. Times were, a maiden could not decide between two suitors
or her parents might object to her choice, then the matter could be
decided in Chiefs' Council, all concerned presenting their views and
the Council's decision final. In this case there was nothing for the
Council to decide: Arrhyna had chosen, her parents did not object.
Chakthi pushed too far—as Racharran had feared—solely on
behalf of his son. He looked past the Tachyn akaman to where Vachyr
sat amongst the warriors. The young man was glaring across the
Council fire—at Rannach, Racharran guessed.
"Does my brother Racharran object to this?" asked Juh.
Racharran shook his head even as Yazte murmured, "You need not
do this, brother. This is a farce."
He flashed the Lakanti a smile and made a small, quieting gesture. It
was a farce: he had no doubt of the immediate outcome, for all
he might wish Arrhyna would stand up and renege her promise to
Rannach, declare her mind changed, and go to Vachyr. The future
should be easier that way. But still—he could not help the
small flame of malice—it should be good to see Chakthi humbled.
Ceremoniously, he rose to his feet, blanket cradled, and said, "I
have no objection. Let those concerned be heard."
Old Juh nodded. Yazte scowled dark at Chakthi. Tahdase looked
nervous. The ancient Aparhaso chief raised a hand. "Then I
summon them," he intoned. "Let the maiden and her parents
step forward and be heard. Let the warriors step forward and hear our
judgment."
The protagonists moved through the crowd encircling the Council.
Vachyr and Rannach trod proudly, glowering at each other like young
buffalo bulls in rut. Arrhyna came with downcast eyes, nervous as a
deer, Nemeth and Zeil close behind and no more confident. The crowd
fell silent.
Juh said, "Let the maiden Arrhyna speak," and smiled
encouragingly. "Child, you are much honored—two brave
warriors ask your hand and offer many horses. Which would you have?"
For a moment, Arrhyna's hair curtained her face, red as the fire's
glow. She spoke from behind its veil, too soft she might be heard.
Yazte said, "Child, do you speak up? You've naught to fear; none
shall harm you here, nor say you nay."
Arrhyna raised her head at that, green eyes wide as they fixed on
Rannach. "My choice is Rannach," she said.
Vachyr's scowl darkened, the corners of his angry mouth downturned.
Rannach beamed. Juh said, "Now we hear the parents."
Zeil glanced at Chakthi, clearly loath to earn the akaman's further
disfavor. Juh motioned that he speak, and the man touched his wife's
hand. With his eyes fixed on the ground he said, "Vachyr's
bride-offer is generous, but my daughter has made known her choice
and I cannot deny her."
"You name Rannach your choice?" Juh asked.
Zeil swallowed and said quietly, "I do."
"And there is agreement with your wife in this?"
Zeil nodded. Nemeth said, "There is. I would abide by my
daughter's choice. I name Rannach."
Racharran heard Chakthi's furious grunt, saw the tightening of
Vachyr's jaw. No good at all, he thought. This shall be a troubled
summer. But even so … He could not deny that the Tachyns'
discomposure afforded him a degree of pleasure.
"Then it is agreed by all who have a choice in this," Juh
said. "How speak my brothers?"
Yazte said, "It is agreed," beaming at Vachyr.
Slower and softer Tahdase said, "It is agreed."
Chakthi snarled and shook his head. "I say
no!"
Juh turned to Racharran. For an instant the Commacht thought he might
shock them all by siding with Chakthi, but that should only make an
enemy of his son, and likely drive him away. Then those headstrong
warriors who followed Rannach would go with him and the clan be
weakened. Nor, was he honest with himself, could Racharran perform so
dramatic a turnabout: it would be a diminishment of his honor. Loud,
he said, "It is agreed."
Juh climbed stiffly to his feet, his arms raised as he turned slowly
around the circle. "Then let all present know it is decided."
His voice was pitched to carry to the outermost ring. "The
maiden Arrhyna shall wed the warrior Rannach with the blessing of
this Council. Let none argue this, nor speak against it."
Chakthi did not speak against the decision—could not—but
instead sprang upright with a furious snort and stalked from the
circle, Hadduth trailing his heels. Vachyr hesitated a moment,
glaring first at Arrhyna then at Rannach before following his father.
Into Racharran's ear Morrhyn said, "Chakthi cannot argue this."
"No?" answered Racharran.
Morrhyn said, still soft, "To argue this is to go against the
Council. He would be cast out; no less Vachyr."
Racharran grunted, then looked to his son, who came past the fire
with his bride-to-be. Rannach's smile was wide and proud; Arrhyna
stood modestly beside him.
Racharran climbed to his feet and took the girl's hands. "I
welcome you to the Commacht, daughter." He glanced at Rannach.
"Perhaps you'll tame this stallion."
Arrhyna smiled shyly. "Thank you, my akaman. I am honored to
live amongst your lodges."
Rannach said, "Thank you, father. For a while there I feared you
might take Vachyr's side."
"For a while," Racharran said quietly, "I thought I
might. For the good of the clan."
The shock he saw on Rannach's face was gratifying, but then he
shrugged and smiled more warmly. "But how could I, after
Chakthi's insult? Vachyr the better man? Ach, no! Only"—he
placed a hand on both their shoulders—"tread wary about
those two, as you would about a wounded buffalo."
Rannach nodded gravely. "I'd see Arrhyna in our lodges this
night," he said. "And ask you offer her parents our
hospitality."
Perhaps, Racharran thought, there's yet hope for him. Perhaps
marriage
will gentle him. Aloud, he said, "That's wise.
Yes: I'll speak with them now."
"Thank you," Arrhyna said. "The akaman of the Tachyn
bears them little love for this, I think."
"Chakthi," Rannach declared, grinning, "bears little
love for anyone. Save Vachyr."
"Go." Racharran dismissed them with a wave. "Take your
cohorts with you. And remember your promise!"
"As my akaman commands."
Rannach spread his blanket to encompass Arrhyna and jerked his head.
On the instant, Bakaan and the others came hurrying up to form an
honor guard. Racharran went to where Nemeth and Zeil stood. They
looked to him like buffalo separated from their herd, and frightened.
"Your daughter sleeps under my protection this night," he
said, "and soon shall wed my son. Would you name yourselves
Commacht, then you are welcome in my clan."
Nemeth looked at Zeil, who nodded and smiled nervously. "My
thanks," he said. "We've angered Chakthi with this, and …
" He shrugged helplessly.
"Chakthi is not a man to forgive a perceived slight,"
Racharran finished. "Do you bring your tent across the water
now, and tomorrow we'll cut your horses from the Tachyn herd."
"And does Chakthi object, my Lakanti shall be there." Yazte
came up to join them, clapping Racharran cheerfully on the shoulder.
"In the name of the Maker, my friend, that was a thing worth the
seeing. Chakthi had the look of an old bear driven from his wintering
cave. His discomfort was a thing to relish."
"Old bears are grumpy," Racharran said. "And often
dangerous."
"True." Yazte's smile faded. "But should this
particular bear show his claws, you've but to ask my help."
Racharran nodded. "I'll see them wed soon as possible," he
murmured. "Perhaps the ceremony will cool Vachyr's ardor and he
look elsewhere for a bride."
"Perhaps." Yazte snorted. "But Chakthi's pride? That
shall not be cooled, I think."
"Ach, pride!" Racharran chopped a dismissive hand. "Such
pride is a curse."
"But what should we be without our pride?" Yazte asked.
"You'd not take the Tachyn's insult. Was that not pride?"
"It was." Racharran smiled, somewhat ashamed. "I rose
to that."
"As would any warrior," Yazte said. "Chakthi stepped
beyond the pale with that. I've not your calm. Had he said that to me
..
Racharran nodded, wearying of the conversation. He felt a need to
forget the bellicose Tachyn for a while. "I've tiswin in my
lodge," he said, "do you care to celebrate this decision."
"I do," Yazte declared eagerly. "Lead on, my friend."
"A moment." Racharran motioned that Yazte wait, and went to
where Juh sat, deep in conversation with the Aparhaso wakanisha,
Hazhe. He waited politely until they looked up, then extended his
invitation.
"Thank you," murmured Juh, "but these old bones of
mine crave rest, and the days when I could sit with you youngsters
drinking the night away are long gone. The wedding, though, I shall
attend."
Racharran ducked his head, accepting the subtle dismissal. He turned
toward young Tahdase, but the Naiche akaman was already quitting the
circle, surrounded by a protective band of warriors.
He returned to where Yazte waited. "We drink alone," he
said.
Yazte chuckled. "Then the more for us."
Racharran smiled and looked about for Morrhyn. The wakanisha was deep
in conversation with Kahteney of the Lakanti and Isten of the Naiche,
and when Racharran caught his eye and motioned the lifting of a cup,
he shook his head. Racharran shrugged—so it would be him and
Yazte, and therefore, no doubt, further discussion of Chakthi and his
famous temper. He went from the circle with the Lakanti, hoping Yazte
did not drink him dry.
"I've known the same dream," Kahteney said. "I fear it
bodes ill for the Commacht. I believe it means war with the Tachyn."
"That may well come," Morrhyn allowed, "but I cannot
believe the dream refers to that. I fear it is something larger."
He looked to Isten, hoping—or fearing—for confirmation,
but the Naiche Dreamer only shook his head and said, "This is a
thing for the Dream Council, not"—he glanced around as if
fearful of eavesdroppers—"so public a place."
Morrhyn frowned. Isten and his akaman shared the same cautious
nature; or the one fed the other: it was hard to decide. They both
prompted him to think of nervous deer, waiting, testing the wind,
before venturing forth. Surely neither would come readily or swiftly
to any decision; and he felt in his bones that swift decisions would
be needed ere long. But, by custom, he must allow Isten was right:
was the dream forewarning of events momentous as he feared, then it
was a thing for the Dream Council, for all the wakanishas. And after,
when interpretation was agreed, for the full Council. He wondered if,
after that night's events, concord could any longer be reached. He
lowered his head in silent acceptance.
"Best then we sit in council soon," Kahteney declared
tersely, favoring the Naiche wakanisha with an irritated glance.
"Yes." Morrhyn nodded, wishing it might be now. It seemed
that since arriving at the Meeting Ground his trepidation grew apace,
as if this gathering of the clans somehow accelerated his concern.
"But best Rannach and Arrhyna are wed first," said cautious
Isten. "Let that particular thorn be blunted before we seek
Hadduth's aid."
Morrhyn doubted the marriage ceremony would do much to blunt any of
the Tachyns' feelings, but it would, he supposed, finally resolve the
minor problem. "My brother Isten speaks wisely," he
declared diplomatically. "But once that is done?"
"We hold Dream Council," said Kahteney, and smacked his
lips, grinning. "Now, Morrhyn, did Racharran not invite my
akaman to drink tiswin? And do you not think we wakanishas should
attend them?"
Morrhyn hesitated. He would sooner speak of the dream or be alone to
contemplate its meaning. Save, he thought, Isten will not lend us his
advice; and Kahteney believes it means war; so … He ducked his head
and said, "I suppose so. Isten, do you join us?"
"I think not." The Naiche smiled apology. "Likely
Tahdase would have my counsel."
He nodded his farewell and left them. Kahteney watched his retreating
back and said, "A careful one, that. Like his akaman."
"Caution," said Morrhyn, "is no bad thing."
"Save it become vacillation," said Kahteney. "And
those two are like skittish colts. They prance and run directionless
when the stallions stamp their hooves."
Morrhyn refused to be drawn into criticism. Instead, he pointed in
the direction of the Commacht lodges. "Do we join our akamans
before they finish all the tiswin?"
Kahteney needed no further urging: together the wakanishas strode
from the circle.
Their path took them through the Tachyn camp, and there folk watched
them pass in silence. It was impossible to know their feelings.
Morrhyn saw light in Chakthi's lodge and the outlines of three men
cast shadowy against the hide. Chakthi and Vachyr spoke with Hadduth,
he surmised; he wondered of what. Kahteney appeared oblivious, or
careless, but the Commacht was relieved when they forded the stream
and came amongst the lodges of his own clan.
From where the tents of the unmarried men were pitched there came a
great clamor, laughter and shouts and dancing. They celebrated
Rannach's triumph with tiswin: Morrhyn hoped they would not drink so
much as to carry their merrymaking across the stream. He wished he
could share their carefree joy.
Racharran and Yazte sat outside the Commacht akaman's lodge, a
pitcher passing from hand to hand. They laughed and jested, but more
soberly than the young men, as befitted mature warriors. Space was
made for the two wakanishas, and Morrhyn accepted a cup that
Racharran filled. Lhyn, he saw, was not present, and assumed she saw
to the settling of Arrhyna and her parents, whose lodge the girl
would continue to share until the ceremony was concluded—the
usual safeguard against a groom rendered overly amorous by tiswin.
"Nemeth and Zeil are settled?" he asked.
Racharran nodded, his face a moment dark.
Yazte chuckled and said, "Chakthi watched their going like some
bile-ridden buffalo, then announced them banished from the Tachyn.
Ach, it was a sight to savor, his black face."
Morrhyn essayed a smile, not wishing to offend.
"We spoke of the Grannach," Racharran said.
Yazte said, "Of their absence."
Morrhyn felt a fresh prickling of doubt. The Stone Folk attended the
Matakwa each year, coming down from their high caves and secret
tunnels to trade their metalwork with the People—had since
first the clans came to Ket-Ta-Witko—but the Meeting Ground had
been filled for three days now and usually the Grannach would have
appeared on the first. That they had not seemed to the wakanisha a
further confirmation that all was not well. Lacking any explanation
of their absence, he only shrugged.
"When shall you hold Dream Council?" Racharran asked.
"Once Rannach and Arrhyna are wed," Morrhyn replied. "When
shall that be?"
"I'd see her parents' horses safe," Racharran said, "and
then announce the wedding. The horses tomorrow, the wedding the next
day?"
"Yes." Morrhyn stifled a sigh and took the pitcher, filling
his cup. Perhaps tiswin would still his fear a little. "You'll
feast them?"
"Modestly," Racharran said. "I'd not see my son's
pride too swollen, nor seem to flaunt the thing in Chakthi's face."
"That's wise," the wakanisha said. "And perhaps the
Grannach shall be here by then."
"I'd throw a great feast," Yazte declared, laughing, "and
make a point of inviting Chakthi and Vachyr." He paused, still
laughing. "Or perhaps a point of
not inviting them."
Morrhyn thought the akaman had taken his fair share and more of the
tiswin. Racharran said, "I shall invite Chakthi and Hadduth—it
should be insult otherwise."
Yazte snorted, but Kahteney nodded approvingly, Morrhyn said, "Might
you not ask Juh to arrange it? Will Chakthi listen to anyone, it must
be him. And does Chakthi accept, then it must surely be a step toward
settling these differences."
"That should be a wise move, I think—if it works,"
Racharran said soberly.
"I am outvoted, then," said Yazte, reaching for the
pitcher. "But I tell you, that sour face will spoil my
appetite."
Racharran reached out to grasp the Lakanti's wrist. "Does he
accept, my friend, then I ask that you bear that spoiling. I charge
you to curb your tongue and not give him cause for further offense."
"Me?" Yazte's eyes rounded and he slapped a hand to his
chest in mockery of innocence. "Offend Chakthi, me?"
"Yes," Racharran said. "Have I your word?"
Yazte's lips pursed as if he contemplated the matter, then he
shrugged. "It shall be hard, but yes. I'd not see your son's
wedding feast spoiled. Though " His smile grew broader. "I
think Chakthi's presence shall not improve it much."
Racharran said, "Perhaps not; but peace between us shall."
The morning of the wedding dawned fine. The sun lit the pinnacle of
the Maker's Mountain as if in blessing, and when Morrhyn emerged from
his lodge he perceived no ill omens—save perhaps, that he had
again dreamed of the fire-footed horse and its blank-eyed rider. Nor
was he comforted by the continued absence of the Grannach, and as he
bathed he cast his eyes toward the mountains, hoping all the time to
see the Stone Folk coming.
He was disappointed, and struggled to shake off pessimism as he
returned to his tent to dress in his finest buckskins, readying for
the ceremony.
Such affairs were conducted simply by the People, though the Commacht
lodges and, to a lesser extent, those of all their neighbors, were
abustle as the time approached. Usually, Rannach's chosen man would
have gone amongst the Tachyn to
summon forth the bride and
present her suitor, then lead them back to the groom's clan, but now
that Nemeth and Zeil were taken into the Commacht, Bakaan went to
their tent and called that they come out.
Rannach stood behind him. His hair was woven in the warrior's braids
and his wedding clothes shone with beadwork bright as his eyes. Three
times Bakaan called, and at the third cry Nemeth and Zeil threw back
the flap and led their daughter out. Arrhyna wore pale deerskin,
bracelets of Grannach work glinting on her wrists, little combs of
the Stone Folk's precious silver glittering in her fiery hair. Bakaan
took her hand and brought her to where Rannach stood, then motioned
that they follow him to the cleared center of the Commacht
encampment. Morrhyn waited there, with Racharran and Lhyn, and as the
procession drew near he was reminded of their wedding. Gahyth had
presided then, and he had stood behind the aging Dreamer, fighting to
curb his envy that his closest friend won the woman he loved. He had
thought such memories long buried, but as Rannach and Arrhyna
approached, he felt them rise anew, and must fight down the same
sense of loss. He hid behind a wakanisha's gravity as he motioned the
pair kneel and raised the sacred rattle over their heads.
The crowd fell silent as he intoned the ritual and the couple gave
back their responses. He touched them both with the rattle, asking
that the Maker regard them with favor, and it was done. Racharran led
out a piebald mare, her coat brushed to gleaming smoothness, and saw
Arrhyna mounted; Lhyn brought her son's favorite horse. Then Morrhyn
gestured that they follow him, the parents falling into step behind
the bridal pair as the wakanisha led them amongst the Commacht lodges
and then on in a wide circuit of the Meeting Ground, through ill the
encampments.
As they passed, he proclaimed the traditional words: "Let the
People see these two are wed. Let the People ask the Maker to bless
them." But as they went by the Tachyn lodges he was unpleasantly
aware of the muted response—even more of Hadduth's unsmiling
visage, the wakanisha's lips moving silently in what might have been
either agreement or curse. Few there were out to follow the
procession, and of Chakthi or Vachyr there was no sign. It was a
relief, like sunlight breaking through storm clouds, to go amongst
the Lakanti, and after them the Aparhaso and the Naiche, where folk
shouted joyously and came trotting behind calling greetings and good
wishes, laughing as they showered the bridal pair with dried petals
and sweet-scented herbs.
Bakaan and those other warriors closest to Rannach had erected a
lodge for the pair, set apart from the others on the edge of the
Commacht camp, close by the Maker's Mountain, that their first nights
together be spent close under the watch of the Maker and they have
privacy. There they would remain until the Matakwa was ended and they
pitched their lodge with the other married folk. Looking at their
smiling faces, Morrhyn thought they had sooner go there immediately,
but first they must partake of the feast.
That was ready on their return, the guests trailing them in a great
laughing crowd: a marriage made at Matakwa was considered most lucky.
And perhaps it is, Morrhyn thought as he watched the informal
celebration commence. But like a blade, luck has two sides, and he
wondered should that luck be good, or bad.
He found a place at Racharran's side, where the most favored guests
sat. Lhyn was on her husband's left, next to Nemeth and Zeil, with
Rannach and their daughter; Juh and Yazti and Tahdase were there,
each sided by their wakanishas am their wives. Kahteney favored
Morrhyn with a smile the Commacht Dreamer returned even as he
wondered, Where is Chakthi? Where is Hadduth? Do they intend to
insult the Commacht with their absence?
He grunted his relief as the two Tachyn appeared, for a they seemed
in no wise happy to be there. Chakthi offered only the curtest of
formal greeting to his hosts, and even terser to bridal couple;
Nemeth and Zeil he ignored.
Racharran climbed to his feet—smiling, Morrhyn thought less in
genuine welcome than relief similar to his own. "I bid you
welcome, brother." Racharran gestured that Chakthi and Hadduth
take their places. "And you, wakanisha. You favor us with your
presence."
Chakthi ducked his head as if receiving no more than his rightful
due; Hadduth's thin lips stretched in parody of a smile. They sat in
silence, accepting the tiswin Racharran himself poured.
"This is an auspicious day," he said, raising his cup in
toast. "My son weds a Tachyn maiden, and at Matakwa. Do we put
by those things that have stood between us and celebrate this wedding
in friendship? Do we drink to future amity?"
It was an unfeigned offering of peace. Juh beamed and nodded his
silvered head in commendation; Tahdase murmured encouragingly. Even
Yazte hid his dislike and showed the Tachyn his teeth in
approximation of friendship.
Chakthi stared awhile at Racharran, then slowly raised his own cup.
"To the future," he said.
"A toast." Juh's voice filled a moment of awkward silence.
"I drink to Rannach and Arrhyna. May their joining join their
clans."
Again Chakthi's cup was raised an instant slower than the others, but
still he drank. And still, Morrhyn thought, it is like inviting a
vicious dog to share the feast, all the time wondering if he'll eat
or turn on the guests.
Tahdase intoned a toast: "To Rannach and Arrhyna. May their
union bless this Matakwa."
Chakthi drank again, but again a moment late, as if he used the
tiswin to wash away the words.
Now Yazte spoke. "I drink to Rannach and Arrhyna. And to peace
at this Matakwa."
Morrhyn sighed gratefully as he raised his cup. Likely Kahteney had
reinforced Racharran's admonishment that the Lakanti not offend
Chakthi. But then Yazte spoke again; "And your toast, brother?"
His round face beamed amiably at the Tachyn akaman, and surely there
was no overt hostility in his question save, Morrhyn thought, it was
a kind of challenge.
Chakthi smiled then and raised his cup. "I drink," he said,
"to Rannach and Arrhyna. May they receive all they deserve."
It was no clear indication, but neither was it possible to find
offense in the words. They were ambiguous, perhaps, but not
insulting. Those present drank, and for the first time Chakthi's
smile seemed genuine.
3—Ill Omens
The feast lasted long into the night, thankfully without incident for
all Chakthi and Hadduth seemed less to celebrate than brood. They
spoke little, and then only when addressed directly, and their smiles
seemed to Morrhyn furtive and empty of humor, save they shared some
private jest. As soon as was meet, Rannach and his bride made their
excuses and departed for their lodge and, once they were gone,
Chakthi and Hadduth offered unsmiling farewells and quit the Commacht
camp. None were sorry to see them go, and the feast grew more lively
for their absence: tiswin flowed in renewed abundance and, as if the
cloud were blown away to reveal the sun, the camp rang loud with
laughter and bawdy songs.
Morrhyn drank his fill, but not so much that his senses were fuddled,
and he saw that all those of the inner circle—save Yazte, who
sat cheerfully swaying, his attention alternating between a cup of
tiswin and a rib of buffalo—shared his caution. He listened
alertly as Juh beckoned Racharran closer.
"This was well done," the old akaman declared. "That
Chakthi attended is a good sign, I think."
Racharran hesitated before replying, and from his expression, Morrhyn
saw that he did not share Juh's optimism. "I hope it be so,"
he murmured. "I had hoped to dissuade Rannach from this
courtship, but … " He shrugged eloquently. "You know my
son."
"Indeed." Juh smiled. "A warrior proud as his father.
And as determined."
"Headstrong," Racharran said. "He sets his own desires
before the good of the clan."
"Perhaps," Juh allowed mildly. "But marriage between
the clans is not forbidden, nor necessarily a bad thing—are
your hopes realized, then this wedding may bind the Commacht and the
Tachyn closer. And even I am not yet so old I forget what it is to
love." He reached out to touch his wife's hand, at which Guyan,
whose hair was silver as her husband's, beamed and nodded.
"Yes." Racharran sipped tiswin, his expression thoughtful.
"But still Chakthi loves Vachyr fierce as a bear sow her only
cub; and I think Vachyr is sorely disappointed."
"Young men often are," said Juh. "But they get over
it. Vachyr will turn his attention elsewhere—he's no choice
now."
"I hope it is so," Racharran said; but Morrhyn guessed that
he, too, thought on Chakthi's dark face and equivocal toasts.
"Ach, is this a wedding feast or a mourning?" Yazte
interjected. "The girl made her choice and Rannach has his
bride. Let Vachyr and his miserable father whine all they want, they
can do nothing."
"Not in Matakwa." Racharran nodded, unsmiling. "But
after? Our grazing shares a border, and that's ever easy cause for
disagreement."
Yazte snorted laughter. "Does Chakthi come raiding, send for me.
I'll bring my Lakanti against him and between us we'll crush him."
"Best not speak of war here." Tahdase made a gesture of
warding, his youthful face worried. "That's to bring ill luck
down on all."
"True." Juh nodded gravely. "The Matakwa is for peace,
not talk of war. Nor is this a war council, but a wedding feast. So
… "He lifted his cup. "I drink to friendship."
They drank, but as he raised his own cup, Morrhyn glanced to where
the moon struck silvery against the flanks of the Maker's Mountain
and saw an owl drift silent across the face of the disc. Symbol of
wisdom and death, both: he wondered which this bird presaged, and
felt a sudden chill. There was too much strange at this Matakwa—the
dream, the ill feeling, the absence of the Grannach. All felt to him
the disparate pieces of some momentous puzzle that he could not yet
comprehend.
Abruptly, he said, "I'd sit in Dream Council tomorrow or the
next day."
Across the fire Kahteney ducked his head and said, "I too. As
soon we may."
"The next day, if you will." Hazhe, whose years were not
much fewer than his akaman's, smiled and gestured with his cup. "I
shall need a while to recover."
"And Hadduth must be informed," said cautious Isten.
Morrhyn said, "The next day, then, but no later, eh? There are
matters we need discuss."
It was agreed and set aside: this feast was not the place for such
debate as Morrhyn sought. But still he could not help finding
Kahteney's ear to ask if the Lakanti had seen the owl.
"I did," he answered, "I believe it was a sign that
Racharran was wise to seek peace with Chakthi."
Or, Morrhyn thought even as he shrugged and ducked his head, that
death shall soon visit us.
That night—what little was left when the guests finally
departed—he elected to pass in his sweat lodge. Less, were he
honest, in search of enlightenment than from the desire to sweat out
the tiswin, that his head be entirely clear for the talks to come.
Even so, he dreamed: of a heron that fought uselessly with harrying
crows that fell like black thunderbolts from a stormy sky where fires
seemed to burn behind the louring clouds. An owl spun circles above
the combatants, its white wings painted red as blood, and when the
heron was driven down, the owl swooped after, driving off the crows;
but still the heron and lay broken-winged upon the ground. The owl
flew off, toward the snow-white pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain,
where the sky became all red, as if the heavens bled. There was
thunder then, like an uncountable herd of horses running wild across
the grass, and a shouting.
Morrhyn woke. Wind beat a tattoo on the hide of the lodge and the
fire was burned down to glowing coals, the stones dulled and
vaporless. His head throbbed somewhat, but nonetheless felt cleared
of the tiswin's effects. He found the water bucket and drank deep,
then realized the shouting continued: swiftly, he drew on his
buckskins and unlaced the lodge flap.
Racharran stood outside, his braids whipped by the wind, his blanket
drawn tight across his chest. His chin was lowered against the draft,
and when he raised his head Morrhyn saw trouble in his eyes.
"The Grannach are come." The akaman spoke without preamble,
the absence of greetings a further mark of his concern.
Morrhyn reached back to fetch out his bearskin. "Where are
they?"
"Lhyn feeds Colun; the rest are settled about the camp."
This was not untoward: usually the Stone Folk would come first to the
Commacht lodges. Their leader, Colun, was long a friend of Racharran,
and it was to the akaman's tent he customarily paid his first visit.
Now, however, Morrhyn sensed all was not well. "What's amiss?"
he asked.
"I've but a little piece of it." Racharran shook his head
as if that little piece were more than he could properly comprehend,
and not at all to his liking. "I'd have you hear the entirety
with me, then we must take it to the rest."
Morrhyn nodded, pausing a moment to glance in the direction of the
Maker's Mountain. The sun was not yet fully over the horizon and the
sky pierced by the peak was tinged with pink. It brought back the
images of the dream and the wakanisha shivered inside his fur. The
wind was chill—not unusual in the Moon of New Grass—but
he knew the cold he felt came from another source. He fell into step
beside Racharran, matching the akaman's long stride, neither man
speaking.
The lodge was warm, Lhyn piling wood on the central fire so that
tongues of flame rose crackling toward the smoke hole. There was the
savory smell of pan bread and hot tea, the spitting of roasting meat.
Morrhyn shed his bearskin as Racharran closed the tent flap and laced
it tight. Then he frowned as he saw Colun.
The Grannach chief was small, like all his people: standing, his head
would reach no higher than Morrhyn's chest. His hair was gray but no
indication of his age, for the Stone Folk all resembled the rock they
tunneled, as if they were carved from the same material. But Morrhyn
had never seen a rock look so miserable.
"Greetings, Morrhyn." Colun spoke from where he sat, like a
stumpy child ensconced in furs. His teeth flashed briefly from the
density of his beard. "You are hale?"
"I am." Morrhyn stared at the little man with a mixture of
sympathy and frank curiosity. It was a reflex to add: "And
greetings to you. What has happened?" There was no need to
inquire after Colun's health: it was written in his wounds.
Lhyn had already wound a bandage about his craggy head, and now knelt
to bathe the long cut scoring his cheek. His right hand wore a filthy
wrapping, and Morrhyn saw a red-stained gash in the thigh of his
leather breeches. His belt lay close to hand, as if he'd not be
parted from the weapons sheathed there: a wide-bladed sword and a
curve-headed ax. He winced as Lhyn sluiced off dried blood and set a
potion of curative herbs down the length of the cut.
"A long story," Colun said, "and one that troubles me
to tell it. A cup of tiswin would lubricate the tale."
Racharran brought out a pitcher. Morrhyn was vaguely surprised that
any of the spirit was left. He shook his head in refusal of the cup
Racharran offered and waited impatiently as Colun drank.
"That's good." The Grannach smacked his lips and raised his
brows in anticipation of more.
The Stone Folk, Morrhyn thought as the cup was refilled, downed
tiswin even faster than Yazte, but it seemed to them no more than
water. His own head still ached somewhat, and he wished Colun would
tell his tale without protraction. A useless wish, he knew: the
Grannach spoke as they lived, at their own pace and to their own
rhythms.
Racharran settled himself on the furs, placing the pitcher in Colun's
short reach. Lhyn glanced at it and frowned, but made no comment as
she dressed the Grannach's wounds.
"There was a battle." Colun extended his bandaged hand in
evidence. Lhyn took it and began to unwind the dirty cloth. She made
a disapproving sound at the sight of the damage, and Colun said, as
if apologizing to her, "I deemed it best we come immediately to
the Meeting Ground with the news. These are only scratches."
"Who fought?" Morrhyn knew that sometimes the Grannach
contested amongst themselves for ownership of the tunnels, the lodes
of metal they worked, but such internecine struggles were not of such
import that Colun would hurry wounded to the Meeting Ground.
"All the tribes." Colun grimaced as hot water was splashed
across his hand. "In the western passes."
"Against the Whaztaye?" Morrhyn frowned in disbelief: he
had it from Colun himself that the People Beyond the Hills were
peaceful, friends to the Grannach as were his own Matawaye.
"No." Colun shook his head, his face become as mournful as
anything so stonelike could look. "I think there are no Whaztaye
any longer. I think they are all slain—or worse."
Morrhyn heard Racharran's sharp intake of breath; even calm Lhyn
paused in her ministrations. He stared in perturbed wonder at the
rugged little manling.
The People knew of the Whaztaye, for all they had no contact with any
who dwelt beyond the mountainous boundaries of Ket-Ta-Witko. The
Maker had set down all humankind in their appointed places when the
world was made, and to venture beyond those limits was to go against
the Will, the Ahsa-tye-Patiko that holds all things in their rightful
place. Nor was there reason: Ket-Ta-Witko was spacious and bountiful,
and fed all the People's needs. Thus it had been since first the sun
rose over the world; the Maker had given the Matawaye their place,
and the Whaztaye theirs, and ringed both lands with such peaks as
defeated trespass. Only the Grannach moved through those rocky
barriers, and only through those—never out of sight of their
home-hills. What news passed between the peoples of the world, they
carried along their secret ways, and denied passage to all others.
Sometimes they were named the Stone Guardians, for they were fierce
in defense of the Maker's boundaries.
Morrhyn heard himself ask, "How? Do the Whaztaye defy the Will?"
Colun refilled his cup before he spoke again. "Not the Whaztaye.
Some other folk."
He drank, impervious to his listeners' impatience as the rock he
resembled. Morrhyn stifled a sigh, knowing he must wait on Colun.
That the Grannach had come hasty with this news did not mean he would
tell it swift.
"We saw them—the Whaztaye—first in what you name the
Moon of Cherries Ripening." Colun glanced at the clean bandage
Lhyn wound about his hand and murmured, "Thank you. So, yes—it
was in the Moon of Cherries Ripening that they came in numbers to the
east of their land, hard against our mountains. They were refugees
and they were more than the land there could feed, but still the
clans gave them shelter. They were a sorry lot—the Whaztaye are
not like you Matawaye, but farmers and hunters, without much skill in
battle—and their sole baggage was sad stories. They sent some
of their chieftains and holy men into the hills, to bring the tale to
us, and I tell you, in the name of the Maker, the tale was doleful."
He broke off abruptly as Lhyn touched his thigh.
"I must clean this," she said. "Take off your
breeches."
Colun swallowed. "A pinprick, nothing worse." Morrhyn
thought he blushed, though it was hard to tell on a face so flinty.
Lhyn said, "Made by a very large pin. Now, shall you re move
these leathers, or must I ask my husband and Morrhyn hold you down
and I do it?"
Colun studied her defiantly awhile and found no retreat in her gaze.
Had Morrhyn time for laughter, he would have chuckled at the
Grannach's expression.
"Well?" Lhyn asked.
"In the Maker's name!" Colun fumbled, awkward with his
bandaged hand, at his belt buckle, grumbling all the while, had not
thought the women of the Matawaye so forward. "Were you my wife
… "
"You'd likely obey swifter," Lhyn said, and knelt to remove
the Grannach's boots. "
Ach,
think you you're the first man I've seen without his breeches? Or
the first I've tended? Now ..
She frowned as the wound was exposed. It seemed a lance had pierced
Colun's thigh. The cut was deep and lipped with swollen purple flesh,
crusted with old blood. Lhyn muttered something too low for the men
to hear and filled a bowl with steaming water into which she
sprinkled herbs. "This," she murmured, "will likely
hurt somewhat."
"In which case … " Colun downed a cup of tiswin and
readied another. Then, as if to hide his embarrassment: "Where
was I?"
"The Whaztaye sent a delegation," Racharran prompted.
Morrhyn saw the akaman shared his own impatience—and the same
resignation.
"Yes. Ach!" Colun stiffened as Lhyn began to wash the ugly
wound. "So, they sent a delegation of their chiefs and holy men
to the hills. Like you, they've a gate-place where the Maker brought
them to their land, and where, like you, they meet with us. This,
however, was not the time, and they said they waited there full half
a passing of the moon before my people noticed them. They were very
hungry when we came, but even more intent on telling their tale than
eating. Which reminds me of my own hunger."
His bushy brows rose in question, like two caterpillars arching their
hairy backs on a stone.
Lhyn said, "Soon. Let me first finish this, and then I'll see
your belly filled."
Colun mumbled something that sounded like "Women!" then
promptly smiled an apology as Lhyn glanced up, saying, "Forgive
me, but your culinary skills are legend, and the scent of that meat
whets my appetite so keen."
Lhyn snorted and set to plastering the wound with salve. The Grannach
looked disappointed, and then, almost reluctantly, resumed his tale.
"Yes, they told their story, which was most disturbing … They
spoke of their people—those who lived—fleeing in great
numbers out of the west, driven in panic and disarray before a
dreadful army. All their land, they said, was riven by this horde,
which none of their seers or holy men had foretold. They spoke of
awful slaughter and asked our help. They asked that we should take
their defenseless ones into our tunnels and send our warriors to join
in battle against the horde." He paused, frowning as if even now
he marveled at the request. "In all our history, none have asked
this of us; it was a thing that seemed defiance of the Will. It was a
thing we debated amongst ourselves."
He shook his head, his frown deepening. Morrhyn wondered how long
that debate had lasted, how many of the Whaztaye had died meanwhile.
"Finally, it was decided that we could not accede to all they
asked." Colun sighed noisily. "The Maker set us down where
we belong and charged we Grannach with the securing of the hills.
Besides, we had not enough food to satisfy them all, nor are you folk
who live under the sky happy in our caves and tunnels, and we could
not know how long this war might last."
Morrhyn wondered if the shadow that flitted across the craggy
features then was doubt at the charity of that decision. Even so, he
thought, Colun does no more than speak the Will correctly.
"It was not a decision we reached easily." Colun drank
tiswin, as if to cleanse the memory. "But it
was reached,
and by all my people. We told them
nay, and that we would
instead send our strongest warriors out into the foothills and fight
this stranger horde did it come there."
"Lift your leg," commanded Lhyn, "so I can bandage
it."
Morrhyn marveled that she could remain so practical as Colun unwound
his tale. His own attention was focused entirely on the Grannach's
words. He should likely have let Colun bleed to death telling this
story.
Colun raised his leg and then, with obvious relief, tugged up his
breeches. "Ach, I do grow somewhat faint. Perhaps I might eat
now, that I not lose my strength?"
Lhyn turned to the cookfire, filling a platter with bread and meat
that she passed to the beaming Grannach. When she raised the kettle,
he shook his head and patted the pitcher of tiswin. Morrhyn and
Racharran each took a platter, absently transferring food to their
mouths as they waited on Colun.
He emptied his dish and asked for more before resuming "Where
was I? Yes, we made our decision known—which saddened the
Whaztaye—and sent our strongest down with then to the
foothills. Ach, but they were truly a sorry lot we found there. It
seemed as if all the folk were gathered like animals driven from
their grazing by a fire, come up into the hills in hope the flames
not reach so far.
"But they did … The Maker knows, they did! We spoke with them
there, to learn what manner of foe we faced, and what we heard was
strange."
His second platter cleaned, he set it aside and drank tiswin. Then:
"They spoke of such creatures as I'd not ever heard of of,
terrible warriors whose only love seemed slaughter, who rode aback
strangeling beasts of no better humor than their masters. They came,
the Whaztaye told us, out of the western hills, out of the Maker's
gate."
"That cannot be!" Racharran's patience dissolved at this
announcement. "The gates are closed by the Maker's own hand.
What you describe surely could not be."
He looked to Morrhyn for support, and in his eyes the wakanisha saw
both stark rejection of Colun's statement and a measure of dread.
Morrhyn was abruptly reminded of his dream—of all his recent
dreams—and felt a terrible fear. Was this their inspiration?
Did they portend this horde? He heard a clatter, and turned from
Racharran's agitated gaze to see Lhyn retrieve a fallen dish. Her
eyes were wide, darting from him to her husband to Colun. He said
carefully, "Do we hear all of this tale before we declare 'yea'
or 'nay,' " and looked to the Grannach.
Colun shrugged. "I did not believe it at first either, but I saw
the Whaztaye gathered there like frightened beasts, by the Maker!
They had what sheep they'd not eaten with them, though they did not
last long, and I knew some terror was abroad. Whether it came through
the gate or was something of the Whaztaye's own making I did not at
first know, but then I saw them … "
His skin, as much as was visible under his beard, was the color of
old stone, but Morrhyn thought it paled. And when he drank this time
it was as though he needed the tiswin to fortify his tongue against
the telling.
"They came like a storm, like a grass fire. Swift as that, and
as heedless." He paused and drained his cup, shaking his head.
"By night, it was. I think they prefer the night: they fight
fiercest then, as if they are creatures of darkness and abhor the
sun. It was in what you name the Moon of the Turning Year: the time
before your New Grass Moon rises, when snow still covers the high
hills and the rivers run strong with melt. We saw them from our
heights, like a black wave lit by the moon, rolling across the grass
to where the Whaztaye had set their lodges. They came so swift! Nor
was there halt or hesitation—they only attacked, like rabid
wolves, and just as senseless. They seemed uncaring of hurt,
almost—almost, it seemed they welcomed death, as eager as they
slew.
"It was a terrible slaughter. The Whaztaye are not fighters, and
they fell before these … creatures … like … like their sheep to
wolves! The children and the women, the old folk—the
defenseless ones were slaughtered as thoughtless as you'd crush a
bug. I confess that I wished then we had granted them leave to enter
our tunnels! I'd sooner we had done that and asked the Maker forgive
us after, for I wept at what I saw done there."
He broke off, reaching for the pitcher. Morrhyn wondered, as his head
lowered, if he hid a tear.
"The men died too. Some fled and were cut down; others stood
their ground and died. We Grannach are of sterner stuff, however, and
rallied to defy the horde. It was like … " He frowned, staring
awhile into the flames of the cookfire as if he saw the battle
refought there. "It was like defying an avalanche, like damming
a flood with no more than your bare hands. Remember, we fought on our
own ground, those hills as familiar to us as your plains to you—we'd
that advantage. But even so we were driven back, steady as snow under
the springtime sun. We retreated, so ferocious were our enemies, and
had we not our caves and tunnels, I think we should have died there,
like the Whaztaye.
"Ach!" He chopped air as if he held his battle-ax still.
"It shames me to say it, but retreat we did. Though"—he
smiled wickedly—"we left not a few of them slain. I
believe we taught them not all the world's folk are such easy prey as
the poor Whaztaye."
"What are they?" Racharran's voice was soft, his expression
troubled. "What cause do they follow?"
"I did not," Colun said somewhat tardy, "engage them
in conversation. What they are, where they came from, why they engage
in such slaughter—these are things I do not understand. I know
only that they are savage beyond belief, and now command all the land
of the Whaztaye. For all I know, they hold the lands beyond too."
He shrugged and drained his cup, his face abruptly a mask of
disappointment when he found the pitcher empty. Unspeaking, Lhyn
brought another, and he drank with relish.
"But you held them?" Racharran asked.
"In a way." Colun nodded doubtfully. "We slowed their
advance somewhat in the ravines and the defiles. But only slowed
it—they are careless of losses. In the Maker's name! I saw them
press on across the bodies of their dead and wounded with no more
thought than they gave the Whaztaye fallen. On and on they came, even
when we sent rocks crashing down, avalanches that buried them by the
score; and every time we thought them halted, they came again. Like
ants, they were: remorseless. We had no choice but to fall back until
we reached our secret places. Had we not those refuges … " He
sighed and shook his head. "We went into the tunnels and sealed
the entrances behind us. Then we licked our wounds awhile and debated
what to do."
Morrhyn asked, "The seals held? These … invaders … could not
breach them?"
"Not then," Colun answered. "When I left, the seals
held intact. But … " He spread his hands wide. "Did the
Whaztaye speak aright and they
did come through the farther
mountains, then they've such powers as I've not seen before; nor ever
believed could be. Still, when I departed the tunnels were secure.
And do these creatures gain entrance, the passage shall cost them
dear. But if they succeed … I deemed it wise to warn you."
"And our heartfelt thanks for that," Racharran said.
Morrhyn said, "What did they look like?"
Colun shrugged again and told him, "I never saw their faces—I
saw only their armor, which is not like any I have seen before. Like
insects they were, all bright, shiny colors that hid their faces and
their forms."
"They were not men?" asked Morrhyn.
"They have two arms, two legs," Colun said, "and
they've each a head. But are they men, I cannot say. I thought them
demons."
Wakanisha and akaman exchanged a look. Racharran said, "This
news must be brought before the full Council."
Morrhyn nodded and said, "Yes, and must be discussed in Dream
Council." He turned to the Grannach. "You'll tell all this
again?"
Colun said, "Do you ask it," and favored them both with a
somber stare. "I fear this threatens us all. Perhaps all the
world."
"I'll send word now." Racharran stood, crossing to the
lodge's entrance.
When he stepped outside, Morrhyn saw that the sun was up, the wind
abated. Streamers of white cloud ran out across a sky of pure blue
and all the Matakwa camp was awake, loud with cheerful laughter. He
turned as Colun's gruff voice intruded on his thoughts.
"You dreamed of this?" the Grannach asked.
"Perhaps; I'm not sure." He felt that doubt dissolving even
as he spoke. "I've had such dreams as deny clear
interpretation."
He told the detail of his recurring dream, and when he was done Colun
said, "And the other Dreamers?"
"One at least," Morrhyn advised. "Save he believes it
a scrying of different trouble."
Colun gestured that he explain and Morrhyn told him of Kahteney's
interpretation. "Perhaps," the Grannach murmured, "you
are both right."
"How so?" asked Morrhyn. "Trouble with the Tachyn is
scarce so fearful as what you've described."
"Save," Colun said grimly, "that does this horde find
a way into Ket-Ta-Witko, it were better the clans fight unified, not
betwixt yourselves."
Morrhyn felt a hollow place open inside him at that, and for a while
could only stare aghast at the craggy little man. Then all he could
find to say was "Yes."
Racharran came back on the heel of the affirmative, halting as he saw
Morrhyn's face. "What is it?" he demanded. "Some new
alarm?"
Morrhyn reached out to clutch his wrist. "There must be no
trouble with Chakthi!" His voice was urgent. "There must be
peace between the clans."
Racharran studied his friend and ducked his head in confirmation.
"All well, there shall be. In light of Colun's news, I doubt
even Chakthi can harbor such petty grudges."
"Even so." Morrhyn did not release his hold. "Do you
impress that on Rannach? And in Council seek to bind Chakthi with
solemn vows?"
"I shall," Racharran promised. "Even now messengers go
out with word. I've asked that we sit in Council this night."
Morrhyn had sooner it be earlier, but it was not a thing to be
decided by a single akaman and he could only wait until the
messengers returned with their answers. He loosed his hold and
reached unthinking for a cup. He had raised it to his lips and drunk
before he knew Colun had filled it. He did not taste the tiswin, only
the heat spilling through the void inside him. Across the fire he saw
Lhyn watching him, her eyes clouded.
"Rannach," he said. "I'd ask him to hold to our camp
this day—to his lodge, if he will—that he not flaunt
Arrhyna before Vachyr or Chakthi."
"I'll go." Lhyn spoke before her husband, motioning that
Racharran remain seated. "Likely he'll take it easier from me."
Morrhyn said, "It matters little how he takes it, only that he
obey."
Lhyn nodded, pale-faced, and was gone, and then the three men could
only wait.
4—The tain Bride
Arrhyna hid giggling and naked beneath a fur as Rannach cursed and
tugged on his breeches. It was not unusual that a new-wed couple find
themselves the target of friends' tricks, and already her husband's
had played their share. She supposed this calling of his name was
another, but for all she wanted nothing more than to be alone with
Rannach, she could not find it in herself to object overmuch. These
Commacht were a cheerful folk, unlike her own Tachyn, whose mood
reflected their akaman's. Since Chakthi's wife had died, he had
become a surly, sullen man, his temper short, his judgments swift and
brutal, and that dour temperament seemed to infect all the clan.
There was not so much laughter amongst the Tachyn lodges. She frowned
as she thought on how he had treated her parents, then smiled at the
thought that they were now taken in by the Commacht. Racharran seemed
a kind man, if somewhat stern, and most assuredly of far graver
disposition than his son. She watched as Rannach—her husband
now!—laced his breeches, admiring the way muscle corded and
flexed across his broad shoulders. Did he curse, it was good-natured,
and the Maker knew, he was so handsome, she so fortunate.
Her smile faded as he flung back the lodge flap, an oath dying on his
lips, replaced with a mumbled apology. "Mother, forgive me. I
thought … " He stepped back, inviting Lhyn to enter. Arrhyna
drew the fur up to her chin, wishing there had been more warning of
this visit. What would Lhyn think of her, lying abed with breakfast
not even thought about yet? She bit her lip at sight of Lhyn's face,
but then the older woman smiled.
"What apologies are needed are mine to offer." Lhyn ducked
her head in Arrhyna's direction as Rannach draped a blanket about his
shoulders. "You're settled, daughter?"
Daughter. Arrhyna liked that: it seemed a further seal laid on
the happiness of her future. She nodded from behind the fur and said,
"I am … Mother."
"My son"—this with a mock stern glance at
Rannach—"treats you well?"
Arrhyna blushed and giggled and said, "He is a fine husband."
"Whose attentions I'd not deprive you of." Lhyn smiled
still, but behind her friendly expression Arrhyna could detect …
She was not sure: fear was her strongest impression. Despite the fur,
she felt a sudden chill.
Rannach, too, she thought, for he said, "What brings you,
Mother? Not, of course, that we are anything but happy to see you."
"Ach!" Lhyn waved a hand, dismissing his solicitous words,
"A new-wed couple happy to welcome visitors? Rannach, even were
you not my son I'd know better than that. Nor would I disturb you,
save … "
Her smile disappeared entirely and Rannach frowned. "What is
it?" he asked. "Some trouble with Vachyr? Chakthi?"
"Not yet." Lhyn shook her head. "Nor, the Maker
willing, shall there be. Your father calls Council this night, and
I've a thing to ask you."
Swiftly, she described Colun's news. Rannach's frown grew deeper;
Arrhyna was abruptly aware of her nudity. She wished she were
dressed: it seemed somehow more fitting that she receive such news
clad.
"I shall attend the Council," Rannach declared.
"As should you," Lhyn said. "But more … " She
spoke of Morrhyn's fears.
"My father would have me skulk in my lodge?" Rannach shook
his head in angry denial. "Am I an embarrassment, then? Have I
not given my word I'll not raise hand against the Tachyn whilst this
Matakwa lasts? Is that not good enough for my father, for my akaman?"
"It is Morrhyn, also, who asks this," Lhyn said patiently.
"And I. Nor does your father believe you would break your given
word. But Chakthi, Vachyr … Their tempers are short, and doubtless
they still chew on defeat. I ask only that you not give them cause
for resentment, but hold to this lodge until the Council sits."
Rannach chewed on this awhile, then turned suspicious eyes on Lhyn.
"I am not
commanded? My
father does not
bid me remain hidden?"
"No." His mother sighed, the shaking of her head a weary
movement, as if this were ancient ground they trod. "He—and
Morrhyn, and I—only
ask it of you. This news that Colun
brings, it frightens me; it … worries … your father. And
Morrhyn—it was he pressed hardest that you not give Vachyr or
Chakthi the least cause—"
"This is my wife!" Rannach cut short her words, stabbing a
finger in Arrhyna's direction. "I courted her as custom demands;
she made her choice. The council denied Chakthi's objections and now
we are wed, with the blessing of all this Matakwa. What
cause
might my presence give him?"
Lhyn sighed again and looked to Arrhyna, who said softly, "Chakthi
needs no cause for resentment, husband. It festers in him like a
poisoned wound."
"His problem," snapped Rannach, "not mine."
"Save are these creatures all Colun describes," Lhyn said
slowly, "then the People surely face such problems as transcend
these petty squabbles."
Rannach scowled and said, "I've no squabble with any present at
this Matakwa." He smiled fondly at his wife. "I've all I
want."
Arrhyna returned the smile, but fainter, her eyes drawn irresistibly
back to Lhyn's face. Racharran's wife was beautiful in an older,
dignified way: she hoped she might look like that when she owned as
many years as Lhyn. But now she looked drawn, as if trepidation
etched the passing of time deeper into her features. It was hard to
take such news hid under furs, naked; harder to see the worry in
Lhyn's eyes and know that differences existed between the man she
loved and his father. She caught Lhyn's eye and saw a plea there: she
knew she must make some contribution or accept the role of docile
wife.
"Mother speaks sense," she said, ignoring the flash of
anger that lit Rannach's eyes, tightened his jaw. "The Maker
knows, I've spent my life amongst the Tachyn lodges, and so can tell
you that neither Chakthi nor Vachyr need reason for resentment, or
honest cause for squabble—they find such where they will. Do
you only comply with this request … " The gratitude in Lhyn's
gaze was pleasing.
"And hide myself away like some skulking dog"—Rannach
shook his head—"for fear I offend Chakthi and his sorry
son?"
"For the good of all the People," Lhyn said. And smiled,
"Besides, had you other plans? The Maker knows, when I wed your
father we did not emerge from our lodge for days."
Arrhyna blushed and giggled. Rannach's scowl eased somewhat.
"Mother," he said, "you are shameless."
Lhyn shrugged. "It was hunger drove us out in the end … a
different hunger. Had your father only thought to lay in sufficient
supplies … " Her smile grew warmer, encompassing her son and
his bride. "But we were not wed in so propitious a place—our
lodge was, from choice, isolated—and so there was no one to
leave food outside."
"We've food enough."
Rannach refused to be mollified yet, but Arrhyna saw him weakening
and, encouraged by Lhyn's frankness, said, "And so no reason to
quit this warm lodge."
She felt her cheeks grow hot at her boldness, and was glad of Lhyn's
approving smile.
Lhyn said, "It should be a mother's pleasure to feed you both."
"And therefore"—Arrhyna allowed her covering fur to
slip a fraction—"we've no reason to go out. Save you grow
bored, husband."
Rannach swallowed, his scowl quite lost under the flush that suffused
his cheeks. Arrhyna saw Lhyn fighting laughter and let the fur slip
farther.
"Ach!" Rannach cleared his throat noisily, looking from one
woman to the other as if torn between amusement and embarrassment—and
perhaps, also, irritation. He threw up his hands. "I am
defeated. Do you ask it, Mother, then so be it. Tell my father I
shall quit this tent only to do what I must, naught else. But I shall
attend the Council."
"All shall attend that," Lhyn said gravely, "for it
shall affect all. But my thanks; I'll advise your father of your
decision."
Rannach nodded. Arrhyna said, "I've not yet prepared our
breakfast," and blushed anew. "But do you give me a moment
… "
"Stay there, daughter." Lhyn waved her back as she moved to
rise. "Let me honor my promise—I'll bring you food
betimes." She smiled and favored Arrhyna with a private look.
"And leave it outside, eh?"
"Thank you," Arrhyna said.
Lhyn rose and was gone. Rannach laced the lodge flap tight behind her
and loosed his breeches. Arrhyna threw back the sleeping furs, but
when he came to her she set a hand against his chest and said, "Tell
me of your father."
"My father?" Rannach's face was a mockery of outrage.
Arrhyna thought it not entirely assumed. "You'd discuss my
father now?"
"I'd know what stands between you," she said, fending off
his hands. "He is the akaman of the Commacht, but you defy him.
No Tachyn would argue Chakthi's wishes like that."
"We are not like the Tachyn," Rannach said.
"No." It was difficult to ignore his exploring hands, the
touch of his lips against her skin. "But it is more than that.
There is something stands between you and your father that sets you
to bristling like a dog with hackles raised."
"So I am a dog now?" Rannach's voice was muffled against
her breasts. "Your husband is a dog?"
"Dogs are not so strong," she said, fastening her hands in
his unbound hair that she might draw his face up. "Dogs are not
such great warriors, nor such mighty hunters—nor so handsome.
But dogs acknowledge a leader."
"I am a man," he said.
Doggedly, she thought, and almost laughed, but stifled the sound for
fear she offend him. "Tell me, husband. Please? I am come a
stranger into your clan, and I'd know these things."
Rannach sighed and gave up his amorous expedition. He rolled onto his
back, settling an arm beneath her shoulders. Arrhyna turned into his
embrace, running fingers through his hair. Which, she thought with
pride, she would braid later, and he be the most handsome warrior in
all the Meeting Ground.
He said, "My father is a wise man. He is a great warrior who
leads our clan as could no other. I am not like him, but he'd have me
so. I lack his patience, his wisdom. I cannot be he, and so I am a
disappointment to him."
Arrhyna said, "No!"
"Yes! He'd school me that I become akaman when he grows too old,
but I'd not shoulder that responsibility."
"It should be a great honor," Arrhyna said. "Already
Chakthi names Vachyr his successor; and I think the Tachyn shall not
argue him."
"I am not Vachyr!" Rannach's voice was suddenly harsh; she
tensed against him, abruptly aware of things she had not sensed
before. "Nor is my father Chakthi."
His voice softened and she heard admiration in it, and love. She
said, "No, I'd not compare either of you to those two. But why
should you not become akaman?"
He groaned. "And carry all that burden? My father took it up
when he was not much older than I, and I saw the years it set on him.
I'd be no more than a warrior—free to ride and hunt where I
will, not always thinking on the clan. I'd"—he chuckled
into her hair—"go out to steal Tachyn horses without
concerning myself with Chakthi's feelings. I'd be free, Arrhyna! I've
no interest in the politics of akamans and wakanishas."
"But," she began, and was silenced by his finger against
her lips.
She bit it gently as he said, "Listen. This is such decision as
my father makes—when I told him I'd approach you and ask you to
be my wife, he looked to dissuade me. He told me Vachyr courted you,
and I should offend the Tachyn; that—were I Vachyr's rival, I'd
offend Chakthi, and likely he find reason to come against us. He
pointed out all the Commacht maidens I might have. Their beauty,
their parents' wealth … "
Arrhyna loosed her teeth from his finger as he chuckled and said,
"Many of them were very lovely. Indeed … Ach!"
Her teeth fastened again, harder.
"But none compared to you," he said, his hand no longer
against her lips, but tracing the contours of her body. "I told
him I'd have no other. That could I not have you, then I'd live
solitary and never wed. He told me I was crazed; that I risked the
welfare of all the Commacht in pursuit of blind love. He did his best
to dissuade me … "
"But," she said, "did not succeed. For which I thank
the Maker."
"As do I," he said earnestly. "But my father would
have it otherwise. Had he his way, then you should now be wed to
Vachyr."
She shuddered: the notion was horrible. But still … "He has
shown me only kindness," she said. "Him and your mother
both."
Rannach said, "He
is kind. That makes it harder. Think on
it." His voice grew fierce and she cringed, but against him. "To
know what someone wants—what they desire fierce as life
itself—and tell them, 'No, do otherwise.' To tell them, 'So you
love this woman, but forget her, quit her. Choose another, for the
good of the clan.' I could not do that, but my father did."
"Surely," she said even as she thought how glad she was
Rannach had ignored him, "he had to. For the good of the clan.
And he supported you in the end."
"Yes." Rannach loosed a gusty breath. "But only when
he saw I'd not be shifted from my course."
"He's akaman," she said.
Rannach said, "Yes," again and sighed again. "And for
such reasons I'd not be. And that disappoints him."
"What," she asked, "would you have done?"
"Were I akaman?" He laughed. "I'd have given my
blessing and told Chakthi to set his head under his horse's tail; and
did it come to war, then so be it."
Arrhyna felt pride warm her: that he could love her so well. But even
so, he seemed foolhardy. She remembered friends and said, "It
shall not, eh? Not now, not after what your mother told us?"
Rannach said, "Not by my hand. Ach, my father thinks I am
foolish—he fears I'll flaunt you before Vachyr and Chakthi! He
thinks me a fool, even though I gave him my word. He thinks me
entirely irresponsible."
Against his shoulder she said, "Perhaps he is only careful of
all the People. And knows the course Chakthi's temper takes."
"And so," Rannach said, "he sent my mother to speak
with me? Not come himself?"
"Had he?" she asked, thinking she already knew the answer,
that she discovered momentarily layers of this relationship she had
not suspected. "What then?"
Rannach snorted humorless laughter. "Likely," he admitted,
"we'd have argued. And I taken you out on that fine piebald
mare, all around the Meeting Ground, both of us dressed in our
finest, that all here could see my prize."
"And rub Vachyr's nose in it?" she asked. "And
Chakthi's?"
"Yes!" he said, and laughed honestly. "But you see how
wise my father is? He sent my mother instead, knowing she might
persuade me."
Arrhyna feared his pride might get the better of his sense and moved
closer against him. "I am glad," she said, "that your
mother succeeded."
For a moment she thought this little battle lost, but then he relaxed
and turned toward her. "As am I," he said.
Neither of them heard Lhyn's discreet cough as she left the promised
food outside their lodge, and by the time they found it, it was cold
and the dogs had eaten most of it.
The night was cool, the sky above the Meeting Ground a star-pocked
expanse dominated by the gibbous moon that shone silvery on the
pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain as Rannach quit the lodge. Arrhyna
had braided his hair, fixing the plaits that marked him as a warrior
with little silver brooches of Grannach manufacture that glittered
bravely in the moonlight. She thought he looked magnificent as he
settled his blanket about his shoulders and bade her farewell.
"You'll not attend?" he asked again.
She shook her head, smiling. "I'd not spoil so good a day with
sight of Vachyr. His sullen face would surely sour it." The
Maker knew, but she became diplomatic; Lhyn would be proud of her.
"You can tell me what's decided when you return. Or in the
morning."
Languidly, she stroked their sleeping furs. Rannach laughed. "You
grow forward, wife."
She grinned. "Also, I'd tidy this lodge. I'll not have your
mother think me a slattern."
"My mother," he said, "likes you."
"And I her," Arrhyna replied. "And so
I'd show her how good a wife I shall be to her son."
"You are," he said.
"So, now go." She rose to touch his cheek. "The drums
are calling, and I've work to do."
Rannach smiled, studying her awhile as if he would fix her forever in
his memory, then nodded and ducked through the lodge flap.
Folk were already moving toward the center of the camp, where a
wide-spaced ring of fires marked the inner circle where the akamans
and wakanishas gathered. The more senior warriors sat between the
flames, an informal barrier between the gathered mass and those who
would debate Colun's news. Thus the clan leaders might talk with some
degree of privacy, without undue interruption. Later they would speak
with their clans, make their suggestions and hear the views of their
own folk before returning to the Council, that consensus be reached.
Such was the way of the People.
As Rannach approached the Commacht lodges, Bakaan stepped from the
shadows. Zhy and Hadustan were with him, falling into step like a
bodyguard.
"We waited for you." Bakaan sounded excited. "By the
Maker, I thought you'd never quit your lodge."
Rannach grinned with all the lofty pride of a new husband. "I
had good reason not to," he said, "but I'd hear what
Colun's to say, and what the akamans decide."
"Arrhyna does not come?" asked Zhy.
Rannach shook his head, trusting they'd see the splendid brooches.
"She was"—he glanced from one to the other—"too
tired."
His friends howled laughter. Hadustan said, "And you? Do you
need a shoulder to lean on?"
"I," Rannach declared solemnly, "am strong. I can
still stand without your help. Just."
More laughter at that, then a sobering as they crossed the stream and
skirted the edge of the Tachyn lodges. Bakaan said, "It is
likely wiser she not attend. I hear that Vachyr and Chakthi spent the
better part of this day skulking in Chakthi's lodge." He turned
to study Rannach's face. "You've made an enemy there, my
brother."
"Those two," Rannach said loftily, "are beneath my
contempt."
"Even so." Bakaan's homely face grew serious. "A
vicious dog is best watched, lest it creep up and bite you."
"Or slain," Zhy muttered.
"Is this why you escort me?" Rannach looked from one to the
other, frowning. "Did my father ask this of you?"
They looked a moment shamefaced. Zhy shook his head; Hadustan laughed
nervously. Bakaan said, "No, not Racharran."
There was something hesitant about his answer and Rannach demanded:
"Who, then?"
Bakaan licked his lips and said, "It was your mother."
Rannach snorted. Hadustan said, "She'd not see her son harmed.
And we know how fragile you are; so when she asked us, how could we
refuse?"
"Your mother," said Zhy, "is very persuasive."
"And most careful of her son's health," said Bakaan. "Now,
my own would never show such care for me. Why, did I walk in your
boots, I think she'd send me into the Tachyn camp with her blessing."
Rannach swung up a hand in mock attack. Bakaan aped terror as Zhy
laughed and Hadustan said, "We told her a warrior so mighty as
you knows no fear, that Vachyr will likely hide behind his lodge flap
at your passing. But you know what mothers are."
"And fathers," Rannach said, then shook his head resignedly
and laughed. "So you
are my bodyguard."
"Your devoted followers," said Hadustan.
"A guard of honor," said Zhy.
"That you come to the Council as a new groom should," said
Bakaan, and flipped a finger against a brooch hard enough that
Rannach winced. "Looking splendid."
Rannach said, "Gifts from Arrhyna's parents," and let his
irritation fade away.
They came to the camp's center and eased through the outer throng to
the fire circle. The talking was begun, Colun standing as he told his
story, his people in a group amongst the senior warriors. Rannach saw
his father seated beside Morrhyn, Yazte and Kahteney on one side of
them, Tahdase and Isten on the other; then Juh and Hazhe, Chakthi and
Hadduth. There was silence as the Grannach spoke, and for a while
after he was done, still silence. It was as though his words imposed
a weight on the night the Council found hard to bear.
Then Juh spoke. "This is alarming news," he said. Rannach
wondered if the ancient face wrinkled in concern or doubt.
"It is a matter hard of believing," said Tahdase. "That
a horde breaches the Maker's wards?" He turned swiftly as Colun
grunted. "It is not that I name our Grannach friend a liar, but
this is unprecedented."
Chakthi said, "I find it hard to believe."
Rannach looked past the Tachyn akaman, thinking to see Vachyr
standing close to his father. There was no sign of Chakthi's son, and
he wondered if Vachyr hid himself in shame. Then all his attention
was focused on the Council as his own father spoke.
"It is surely," Racharran said, "hard to believe. But
that does not mean it is not true. I have no doubt but that Colun
speaks the truth."
"Nor I," said Yazte. "And so it seems to me that our
decision must be what we do about it."
"How so?" Chakthi's tone was a challenge. "Is it true,
then some horde has come into the land of the People Beyond the
Mountains. What concern is that of ours? We've no dealings with the
Whaztaye. They are not our brothers—what is their fate to us?"
"Did they enter the Whaztaye country through the gate,"
Racharran said, "then they might well come down through our own
mountains. And then it must surely be of great concern to us."
"We should prepare for war," said Yazte.
Rannach felt a thrill: was Colun's description of these strangeling
invaders told true, then they should surely be far finer enemies than
even the Tachyn. He felt his blood run swifter along his veins: there
would be glory to be won in such fighting.
"I think," he heard Juh say, "that it is early to
speak of war. The Maker set us Matawaye down here in Ket-Ta-Witko
because this is our land: the place we belong. The Maker ringed the
land with the holy mountains that we not be threatened, neither
threaten those other folk who live in the places beyond. I wonder if
we do not question the Maker's wisdom when we assume the gates may be
breached."
He turned to Hazhe for confirmation; the Aparhaso wakanisha nodded
his agreement.
Tahdase said, "Juh speaks wisely. Surely the Maker will protect
us, and not allow this horde passage through the hills."
"They slew the Whaztaye!" Colun said, rising to his feet.
"In the Maker's name, I tell you I saw them!" He raised his
bandaged hand; slapped it against his thigh. "I got these wounds
off them! They are not like any folk I have seen—they fight
like demons, and they came over the lands of the Whaztaye like fire
across the plains."
"But, like fire, were halted," said Tahdase. "Against
the mountains."
"For now." Colun ducked his head, returning to the ground.
"For now."
Yazte asked, "You think they'll come through?"
"That should be a hard-fought passage," Colun declared. "Do
they attempt our ways, we Grannach shall fight them down all the
tunnels; down all the caverns. But we are not so many, and they are
like a locust swarm. Do they attain the high passes … "
"Surely none can," said Juh. An arm still corded for all it
was thinned by age thrust up to indicate the encircling hills. "Men
cannot breathe up there. Thus the Maker decreed."
"Men cannot," said Colun, "but I am not sure these
creatures are men like you and me."
"You slew them, no?" Chakthi asked; and when Colun nodded:
"Then surely they are men."
Colun made a helpless gesture and said, "Perhaps some. But you
would as easily stem a prairie fire with flapping hands." He
looked around the circle, staring fiercely from under overhanging
brows. "I tell you, they are a
horde; a terrible flood.
And you had best prepare."
"Do you?" asked Chakthi.
"Yes!" Colun nodded vigorously. "My Grannach are ready
to seal the secret ways with rock and magic. Our manufactories are
turned to blades and shields and arrows; to spear points and armor.
Oh, yes, we prepare."
"Then," Chakthi said, "we've both the Maker's wards
and your strength to defend us; and so Ket-Ta-Witko is likely safe."
"These are our friends!" Racharran cried. "Shall we
leave the Grannach to fight alone? To fight our battles for us?"
Rannach was proud of his father at that moment, disgusted with
Chakthi's response.
"It is not our battle yet," the Tachyn said. "Does
this horde move against the Grannach, then I'll give them my support.
Does this horde look to enter Ket-Ta-Witko, then I'll bring my
warriors to battle. But that time is not yet come! I say we trust in
the Maker—these invaders shall not pass through the sacred
hills. I say that Juh and Tahdase speak wisely when they tell us to
trust in the Maker. I say we take no decision now, but wait."
Rannach saw Yazte's hand rise angry, halted by Racharran's gesture.
His father said, "Wait? Wait for what? This horde to come? Or
Colun's people to come tell us we are invaded? Shall we wonder if the
fire burns and not go look? Only
wait until we see the flames
rise?"
"What do you suggest?" asked Juh.
"That we set watchers, at the least," Racharran answered.
"Warriors to guard the hills and speak with the Grannach. That
we may know what threatens us."
"I think my brother doubts the Maker," Chakthi said.
"Surely the Will promises us safety here."
Tahdase leaned toward Isten, whispering a moment, then said, "This
is the promise of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko: that we be secure
here."
Chakthi nodded gravely. Rannach saw Colun stiffen, and Racharran
murmur with Morrhyn even as he reached out to touch the Grannach's
hand, silencing his angry retort.
Carefully, Racharran said, "I do not question the Will. But I
ask the Council to consider a question: Are we tested? Perhaps the
Maker chooses to test us."
"And finds some wanting," said Chakthi.
Juh motioned for silence. "It may be so." He looked to
Racharran, to Colun, at each akaman and wakanisha in turn. "If
all we have heard is true, then it may well be a great test comes to
us. If this horde our Grannach friend speaks of owns such strength as
he describes, then we face a dreadful test; and we must think
carefully about what we are to do. I say this is not a thing we can
decide in a single Council, but a matter to sleep on, to ponder and
approach with caution."
Caution? Rannach thought. Colun brings warning of a horde come out of
the Maker-knows-where with blood and fire, and we must ponder it?
What we should do, old man, is what my father says—ready for
the fight.
"This is wise." Tahdase's voice interrupted his angry
thoughts. "We need time to think on this."
"What's to think on?" Yazte stabbed a finger in the
direction of the Maker's Mountain. "Do you doubt Colun? Are we
to sit talking—
thinking!—until this horde comes to
us?"
"Shall it come tomorrow?" Tahdase addressed himself to
Colun, who—irritably—shook his head. "Surely we've a
little time?"
The Grannach shrugged and nodded reluctantly. Juh said, "And the
wakanishas sit in Dream Council tomorrow, no? Can we not give it that
long, at the least?"
"I support my elder brother," Chakthi said.
"And I," said Tahdase.
Juh smiled. "Then shall it be so? Shall this Council form again
after our wakanishas have spoken? And we decide then?"
Tahdase and Chakthi ducked their heads in ready accord; Racharran and
Yazte were slower, but—with scant choice left them—agreed.
"Then so," Juh said, "let the wakanishas speak of this
and all other matters on the morrow, and all well, this Council shall
reconvene and we reach a decision."
They seemed to Rannach blind as horses grazing downwind of a lion:
oblivious of impending danger. All save his father and Yazte. He
thought that Chakthi likely argued for procrastination only because
Racharran argued for preparation. Juh, he thought, was an old man
dreaming of a peaceful old age, disinclined to consider such turmoil
as Colun warned of; and Tahdase was aged beyond his years, cautious
as a rabbit with fox-scent on the air. He snorted his disgust loud
enough one of the older warriors turned to fix him with a
disapproving stare. Rannach knew what he would do were he akaman of
the Commacht.
He turned his head to see the faces of his friends, and knew that
they should be with him: their eyes burned with dreams of glorious
battle.
"I'd speak with Colun of these warriors," Bakaan whispered.
"When my father addresses the clan," Rannach answered, "you
shall have your say. And Colun will be about our camp tomorrow."
Hadustan said, "Think you Racharran shall speak for war?"
Zhy said, "It must be the decision of all the People. How say
you, Rannach?"
"That my father," he said slowly, "would do as he
says—prepare."
"And you?" Zhy pressed.
Rannach laughed. "I'd send warriors out now, to watch the hills.
By the Maker! I'd lead them into the Grannach tunnels myself, to meet
these invaders and defeat them before they set foot on our grass."
"And we," Bakaan said, "would follow you into battle."
"Yes," said Zhy.
"Save," said Hadustan with a lubricious grin, "that we
are unwed warriors, whilst Rannach is now a married man."
"I am myself," Rannach declared, frowning. "Wed or
not, what difference?"
Hadustan's grin spread wider and even more lascivious. "I
wonder," he said, draping an arm about Rannach's shoulders, "if
there are not matters that need explaining to you, my friend. Had I
the choice of riding out to face such creatures as Colun describes,
or lingering snug beneath my furs with a woman like Arrhyna … Well,
that should be no decision at all."
Rannach caught his wrist and turned, twisting Hadustan's arm even as
he laughed. "Which?" he demanded.
"Why," said Hadustan, "I'd send you out to fight, and
I"—he fell to his knees, mimicking pain, pitching his
voice high—"Oh, Rannach, you're so strong. Stay warm under
the furs, Rannach. Please, don't leave me."
Rannach chuckled and let him go as faces turned toward them. "Envy!"
he said. "Perhaps someday you shall find a woman like Arrhyna.
It is not likely because of your resemblance to an ugly horse, but
perhaps the Maker will take pity on you."
Hadustan rose, grinning, "And meanwhile she lingers lonely in
your lodge … Oh, Rannach, I'm so alone."
"Yes." Rannach nodded solemnly. "For a fool, you speak
wisdom." He glanced toward the circle of the Council. The
akamans spoke now of clan affairs, of disputed grazing and such other
matters: none of interest. "I've duties you'd not understand. I
shall go."
"Oh, Rannach!" Hadustan cupped hands between his legs. "I
believe I understand."
Rannach smiled and shook his head, turning away. The others fell into
step around him as he pushed back through the crowd. They passed
through the surrounding lodges and forded the stream, traversing the
Commacht camp, where he waved them back.
"I think I am safe now," he said. "I thank you for
your brave duty as my bodyguard, but now … The rest, I believe I
can manage alone."
"Are you sure?" Hadustan asked. "You'll not require
our aid?"
Rannach stooped to scoop up a round of horse dung and fling it at his
friends. As they ducked and laughed, he strode toward his lodge,
ignoring the catcalls that followed him.
Light showed through the hide and around the edges of the entrance.
He thought on Arrhyna, wondering what she might have cooked, or if
Lhyn would have delivered a meal. Mostly, he thought on Arrhyna, and
his step quickened.
When he thrust the flap aside and found her gone, the lodge in
disarray, his anguished scream split the night.
It was like the shriek of a pained lion, full of anger and anguish.
Bakaan and the others halted in their tracks, spinning around to run,
swift, to Rannach's lodge. They found him readying his war gear, his
eyes wild with rage and loss.
"What is it?" Bakaan glanced about the disordered tent,
seeing there the signs of a struggle. "Where's Arrhyna?"
"Stolen!" Rannach's voice was a snarl. "Vachyr did not
attend the Council; now I know why."
Bakaan said, "I'll saddle your horse. And mine."
"This is my fight." Rannach snatched up his bow and quiver,
his expression softening a moment as he turned to his friend. "When
I find Vachyr, it shall go ill for him, and that shall not please my
father. I'd not have you suffer his wrath."
Bakaan shrugged. "I'm your brother; Arrhyna is my sister. Your
loss is mine."
Hadustan said, "And Vachyr might not be alone. I'm coming with
you."
An instant later Zhy said, "I too. We ride together."
Rannach looked at them and said, "My father will be angry."
Bakaan shrugged again, said, "Wait for us," and beckoned
the others to follow him.
Rannach shouted after them, "Hurry!"
The lodge was disordered and he had little time, but amongst the
litter he found his paints and a mirror of Grannach silver: when his
companions returned they saw the bands of black and yellow striped
across his cheeks and nose. Silently, Bakaan took up the pots and
decorated his own face in the colors of vengeance, then Hadustan and
Zhy.
"Where will he run?" Zhy wondered.
Hadustan suggested to the Tachyn grass, but Rannach shook his head
and said, "Too obvious. He'll look to hide his trail, confuse
pursuit; and Arrhyna will slow him."
Zhy swallowed nervously and said, "If she can. Likely she's tied
or unconscious." His voice faltered.
Rannach fixed him with a gaze both hot with fury and cold as ice.
"Has he harmed her, his life is mine."
Zhy nodded and glanced at Bakaan, who said, "Remember your
promise."
"He's stolen my bride: he reneges all promises!" Rannach's
mouth stretched in a wolfish smile that contained no humor, only
threat. "Now do we find his trail?"
They moved out, leading their animals, their eyes downcast, searching
the ground for sign. Around the lodge the grass was trampled, but
they were hunters, and as they cast wider afield they found spoor,
the tracks of two horses angling to the southwest. They mounted then
and rode under the moon, slowly at first, casting back and forth
where the trail was confused with earlier hoof prints, but then
swifter as the tracks cleared the Matakwa grazing and became a double
line pointing into the doubtful future. They were each armed with
blades of Grannach steel and hatchets, and each one carried a bow and
full quiver, a lance and a hide shield.
And all were painted for war.
5—A Thief is Taken
Rain drummed out a rhythm on the roof tiles of Davyd's crib,
counterpointed by the steady dripping where slates had torn loose in
the last gale. It was too much to ask that Julius repair his
property, even at the exorbitant rate he charged for the tiny
under-the-eaves chamber. At five guineas a week—in advance, or
else—to find a decent place with no questions asked and dinner
thrown in was as much as the young thief could expect. So he forwent
any notions of complaint and consoled himself with the thought that
at least he had a roof over his head and need not daily face the
problem of accommodation. Best of all, Julius cared only that his
rent be paid—not how it was acquired.
And, Davyd told himself, it was not a very large hole. The pot placed
beneath caught the inflow and—a bonus—gave him fresh
water without the need to traverse the winding corridors and
circuitous stairways of the rookery to the well. There were some
there who would not scruple to waylay and rob a fellow lodger; some
who'd not hesitate to denounce a Dreamer to the God's Militia, did
they suspect; and in Evander, under the rule of the Autarchy,
suspicion alone was enough to speed a body to the scaffold. Julius,
at least, could be trusted to keep his mouth closed—so long as
the coins found their weekly way into his purse.
The greater danger lay outside, in the streets, in the risk of
capture and subsequent revelation. That thought Davyd pushed
assiduously aside: he was uncertain just how far the powers of the
Inquisitors stretched and he was absolutely certain he did not want,
at first hand, to find out.
And there lay the crux of his problem.
His last theft had netted him sufficient to rest awhile, not worry
about the rent, and eat fairly well. Now that haul was all but gone
and he must replenish his funds—which his dreams suggested was
not a good idea. It was a quandary: to risk detection or risk losing
his room. Neither was much palatable.
He rose from the age-mottled chair and went to the corner where wall
and rafters met, finding the nook in which he hid his purse. Counting
the pennies again did nothing to increase them. He must, somehow,
find the coin Julius would demand before the week was out. That or
find some other lodgings: Julius's only rule. He hid the few coppers
and moodily resumed his place in the ancient chair, staring at the
rippled surface of the catchpot.
Begging held neither much appeal nor much hope. He could, at a pinch,
beg with the best of Alehouse Bob's crew—he was young enough,
and thin enough of face and frame that folk felt sorry for him and
pitched him small change when he stooped to such activity—but
he considered it beneath his dignity. He was a thief, not a beggar.
Besides, in such miserable weather—which looked set to continue
for some time—there would not be many folk abroad, at least not
on foot, and the gentry in their carriages never thought to toss out
a share of their easy-found wealth. More likely that some Militia
patrol would come upon him and, at best, deliver him a sound
drubbing, at worst arrest him. Davyd fancied neither.
Endeavoring to take a more optimistic view, he told himself that the
rain would keep the Militia as surely under cover as it would honest
folk. That it would also render rooftops slippery was of no great
consequence—he was surefooted as a cat when it came to rooftop
work.
The problem was the dream.
He had survived as a thief to the ripe age of thirteen thanks to the
dreams. He did not understand them, or much care to. It was enough to
know them reliable, and had come to trust them surer than he did any
living soul. They told him when he might successfully mount a
larcenous venture, and when not. This was not, they had told him, an
auspicious time. Indeed, the last had featured red-coated Militiamen
and faceless, black-clad Inquisitors, and had brought him gasping up
from sleep to stare wild-eyed around his crib, his chest heaving as
he anticipated the pounding on his door, the shouts of warning.
But nine pence would not pay Julius's rent, and if he did not go to
work soon he must go hungry and homeless: he had procrastinated long
enough.
He felt his heart begin to flutter and reached to the table where the
last of his brandy stood. He poured a small measure—enough to
calm his nerves or fortify his courage—and brought the battered
silver cup to his lips. That was worth a crown or two, but not five
guineas; and besides, it held a sentimental value. Aunt Dory had told
him his mother owned it—before the Militia took her, before
they took Aunt Dory and left him entirely alone—and he would
not part with it. So he drank and set the cup down, finding no
alternative but to venture out.
The dream had told him
no, but what else could he do?
He sat awhile longer, pondering it, images running apace through his
mind. There was a merchant's office on the edge of the port quarter
where he was confident of finding coin—a watchful eye and
attentive ear had told him that much—and he doubted the hexes
would be stronger than his skill with the picklocks. He could see
himself opening the strongbox, filling his pockets with crowns and
even golden guineas. Enough to pay off Julius and leave himself
secure for a few weeks.
On the other hand, he could see—or, at least, imagine—the
Inquisitors' dungeons and the instruments there. Vividly, he could
see the last witch burning. It had taken place in Bantar's chief
plaza, the great square formed by the cathedral, the palace of the
Autarchy, the Temple of the Inquisitors, and the Militia barracks.
The condemned had been a woman, not very old, found guilty of
soothsaying. He could not understand how, were she truly able to
foresee the future, she had not predicted her fate and fled. But she
had not, and the Militia had taken her. The Inquisitors had put her
to question, and on a dull gray day the flames of her burning had lit
the plaza bright.
Davyd could hear her screams still; he felt no wish to echo them, as
surely he would, were his own ability discovered. The Autarchy
frowned upon any but its own agents wielding the power of magic, and
what the Autarchy frowned on was ruthlessly eradicated. Which was why
Aunt Dory had impressed upon the orphaned child the need to keep his
dreams secret, once the old woman recognized their nature. To that
end she had taken him to the plaza and forced him—no more than
five or six years old then—to watch as a condemned warlock was
given to the flames. He had taken the lesson to heart, firm as the
officers of the God embraced their faith. Had he one fear greater
than all others, it was of that awful consumption by fire. Only his
dread of water came near that terror. It had served him well; it had
kept him alive. But now he had only ninepence and the rent soon due.
He groaned, his mouth gone dry, and filled his cup again, swallowing
the last of the brandy. The rain still tapped against the roof like
impatient fingers, as if awaiting his decision. He made it in a
rush—no time to doubt; not now, when Julius would any day
demand his tithe. He took his coat from the bed and shrugged it on.
It was a good coat, quite waterproof, and of a blue-black shade that
blended into shadows or the color of slates. Concealed within the
lining were pockets for his picklocks and the rewards they gained
him. He settled a cap over his telltale red hair, and before he might
change his mind—come to his senses, said a loud voice inside
his head—he thrust open the crib's one window and clambered
out.
Across the sloping roof to its gable he crept, then down and across,
to the overhang of the rookery's neighbor. Along the ledge there to
an attic window, loose-hung and opening on a dusty, web-draped
storeroom. His nimble fingers sprung the door easy enough and locked
it behind him—caution, always caution; Aunt Dory had impressed
that on him too—and down the narrow stairs to the lowest level.
Another easily picked door lock saw him in the alley behind, and he
marched briskly toward his destination.
The rain-slick streets were mostly empty—this was not a quarter
frequented by upright citizens even in dry daylight—and soon he
was hurrying down the narrow alleys of the docklands.
The merchant's building was as easy of access as he'd anticipated—for
a roof-topper. There was a yard at the rear, overlooked only by the
blank windows of warehouses, and he climbed astride the bricks, then
along to where a drainpipe afforded purchase for the upward climb. He
found the roof and paused a moment. The rain still fell, but here it
was scented with the tang of the ocean, and dark in the twilit
distance he could see the skeletal outlines of masts and crossbeams
where ships lay at anchor in the harbor. He suppressed a shudder at
the thought of venturing out onto the open water in one of those
vessels, and then another as his imagination replaced the twigs of
rigging with images of flame. He spat and crossed his fingers, and
went spiderlike over the tiles to the small window set flush with the
slates. It was dusty and water-swollen and it creaked horrendously as
he worked it open, but there were no ears save his to catch the
sound. Even so, he waited awhile before dropping into the room below,
and then again at the door, listening.
The building was quiet. From what he'd heard, this merchant was too
mean to invest in dogs or watchmen. He hoped the same parsimony
applied to hexes. He fought off the images of his dream that sought
to penetrate his mind as he descended to the ground floor, where the
owner located his personal office.
That door yielded easy as any other, and Davyd slipped into a
bare-boarded room with one window that looked onto the yard behind.
He found a lantern and struck a lucifer. The strongbox sat square and
bulky in a corner. Too heavy to lift, it was secured with a padlock
that would have defied a less skilled thief: Davyd took out his picks
and set to work.
It was not long before he sprung the lock and raised the box's lid,
grinning triumphantly as he surveyed the contents. The sundry papers
interested him not at all, but on them lay three pouches that weighed
heavy as he snatched them up. He loosed the drawstrings and his grin
spread wider as lamplight shone on gold and silver—there was
enough there to last him some months. He spilled the coins into his
secret pockets and trimmed the lantern's wick. His coat was heavy
now, and he chuckled, quite forgetting the dream.
Then remembered every vivid detail as he heard the sound of a door
opening, a commanding voice, and the thud of approaching feet.
For an instant he froze, panic curdling in his belly. Boots beat a
threatening tattoo on the floor outside the office, and through the
open door he saw the glitter of lamplight on metal and polished
leather, heard the same voice bark the order to watch the outer door.
It seemed his mind ran out of gear: thoughts came with dreadful
clarity, but he could not set his feet in motion. Hexes, he thought.
There
were hexes! And then: They'll burn me!
As if touched by the flames, he sprang into action.
Crouching, he moved to the office door. There were two lanterns, held
aloft by Militiamen—five of them and a lieutenant, the silver
insignia on his cap like a vigilant eye, watchful for thieves. They
were in the outer hall, moving purposefully between the desks there.
All save the lieutenant held muskets. The stairway was to Davyd's
left: he might reach it, were he quick enough.
Still bent over, he eased out from the office and began to shuffle
toward the stairs. A gap showed, three yards or so of open floor. He
drew a breath and crossed his fingers, then flung himself desperately
for the stairway.
Shouts echoed, then were drowned by the roar of musket fire. Davyd
felt splinters strike his face and screamed in unalloyed terror, his
nostrils filled with the reek of burning power.
"Halt, or you're dead!"
The command sounded loud as the musket's shot. He chanced a backward
glance and saw the lieutenant at the stairway's foot, a pistol in his
hand. He wished he'd heeded the dream. He raised his hands and took a
half-step downward, then reversed his movement and scrambled
pell-mell up again. The pistol discharged, and it seemed that all the
long, tall chamber was filled up with the muzzle flash. He felt the
ball pluck at his coat; he heard the clatter of coins falling as a
pocket tore.
The lieutenant cursed and bellowed an order. The stairs stretched out
before Davyd, long and straight, offering no obstacle to the muskets
that were now aimed at him. It seemed the bare wood clutched at his
feet and he felt his limbs grow heavy.
"Come down. Now, else we fire!"
Five muskets: not all could miss. Davyd swallowed and clenched his
eyes against the tears that threatened to spill. He nodded and raised
his hands. This time he did not attempt to fool them.
"God, he's but a boy."
There was a hint of sympathy in the Militiaman's voice, but his aim
did not waver.
"Devil's spawn." The lieutenant's voice was hard,
contemptuous. "A sneaking, misbegotten thief, no matter his age.
Take him."
"Please, sir." It was worth a try. "I'd not have done
it but that I'm starving."
The officer cuffed him, setting his ears to ringing, and whilst his
head still spun, his hands were dragged back and bound with cord. He
did not attempt to halt the tears now, but they won him no more
sympathy.
"Thought you'd defeat hexes, eh?" The lieutenant's voice
was calmer now; gloating, it sounded to Davyd. "Well, boy, you
did not, and you've earned yourself a place in the dungeons.
Starving, you said? Well, they might feed you there. What think you
of that?"
What Davyd thought was: only let them not learn I dream.
As they searched his pockets and he stared numbly at the lantern
flames, a dreadful fear gripped him, pinching his tongue and his
innards so that all he saw, all he knew, was that fiery glow. It
seemed, almost, he could feel it on his skin.
It was not the first time Davyd had been imprisoned, though it was
the most serious charge. Once he had spent a month in jail for
begging, and once been sentenced to six on charges of picking
pockets. He had been somewhat younger then, and supposed that counted
in his favor—certainly he had gotten off lightly—nor had
there been Inquisitors in either court. This time, however … This
time he was older, and the charge more serious. He thought he likely
faced some years in the prison barges or the quarries, perhaps even
the mines. He did not relish the notion, and the relative comfort of
his cell was small consolation in face of such a future.
It had been a surprise to find Julius come with bribe-money for the
jailer—enough,that the food was decent and the cell lit by a
good lantern, clean bedding provided, and even a somewhat rickety
chair and table. He had not thought Julius so kind, but the big,
bluff fellow had come armed with coin and his knowledge of Bantar's
ways, and shrugged off Davyd's startled gratitude as if embarrassed
to be found out. His largess, however, did not extend to the hiring
of a lawyer, and Davyd must play his own advocate when he came to
trial.
At least Julius had managed to find out when that should be, thus
rescuing Davyd from the torment of speculation. Tomorrow, it was; and
thanks to Julius, he was able to assuage his worry with a bottle of
good wine. That had been Julius's farewell gift: he did not
anticipate seeing Davyd again, would not—for sake of
anonymity—attend the trial. At least he had wished his former
lodger well.
Now Davyd drank his wine and prepared to sleep. He did not think the
morrow should provide any great surprises, not beyond the judge's
choice between the barges, the quarries, or the mines. He supposed he
preferred it be the quarries: at least there he should see the sky.
If he had only, he thought as he dimmed his lantern and readied
himself for slumber, heeded his dreams, he would not be in this
predicament. But he had not, and there was no point to dwelling on
that foolishness now. Life had taught him to be pragmatic, and save
for learning what lessons experience taught him, he saw no point in
conjecture. He would, however, he, vowed as he closed his eyes,
always heed the dreams in future
The one that came that night, though, was mightily difficult to
interpret.
He floated on a vast expanse of water and could not tell whether he
stood alone, somehow suspended above the waves, or on the deck of a
ship. It mattered little either way: Davyd was afraid of water, and
in this oneiric state it represented terror as great as that of
burning. He looked about and saw no shoreline, no hint of land at
all, but only the gray and rolling ocean all around, the waves
white-topped under a blue sky absent of any feature other than the
unwinking eye of the sun. There were things beneath the waves—he
knew, for all they remained invisible—that slowly rose
to drag him down into the deeps or swallow him like some morsel of
flotsam.
He woke sweaty, his heart beating arrhythmic, dread tearing a cry
from his gasping mouth. Panting, he flung himself from his bed to
find the lantern and extend the wick until the honest yellow flame
drove off the afterimage of waves and eternity and lost hope. He
reached for the wine bottle and cursed long when he found it empty.
He contented himself with water instead, splashing some against his
face that he fully regain his senses. After that he dressed and
waited full-clad for dawn. He did not want to return to that dream;
he did not understand it, only that it filled him with an awful fear.
It was a lengthy wait, but in time the prison made those sounds that
prisons make in announcement of another day. Light came pale past the
bars on the window and the nocturnal rustlings, the moans of other
inmates, the night cries, gave way to muted conversation, the jangle
of keys, the clatter of the breakfast trolley.
Davyd felt no appetite for the porridge, white bread, and aromatic
coffee that should be Julius's final purchase on his behalf. His
belly felt filled with liquid that rolled and shifted like sea swell,
and he only tidied himself and waited to be summoned.
His case was not heard until noon, and when the Militiamen came to
fetter him and bring him before the judge, his belly rumbled
protestingly. He thought that might perhaps serve him well—that
he appear not well fed but as a starveling orphan forced by unkind
fate to a life of crime. He hoped the judge would not inquire too
deeply of his circumstances and confreres, for he knew he would not
live long—no matter where he be sent—did he give up
Julius and the others. Most strongly, he hoped the magicks warding
the court would not reveal him for a dreamer; he prayed there be no
Inquisitors present.
He need not have worried: such inquiries seemed not to have occurred
to the judge, whose aim appeared to be the swiftest possible
dispensation of the Autarchy's justice. Nor did any Inquisitors
attend, only the watchful Militiamen and a tipstaff.
Davyd was asked his name, to which he answered, "Davyd Furth,
sir," doing his best to sound utterly miserable and equally
penitent. It was not difficult to manage the misery. His age was
established as thirteen and his abode as the street, after which the
judge pronounced his sentence.
When he declared that Davyd be indentured and held prisoner until the
next transportation ship sailed for Salvation, Davyd broke down. He
shrieked his objections, pounding manacled fists against the ledge of
the accused's box, quite oblivious of the hexes that burned his skin.
He begged that he be sent to the quarries, to the mines—even
the barges. Only not condemn him to crossing the ocean. He wailed as
the Militiamen dragged him away.
He was sobbing as the door of his cell closed. He
knew that he
must surely suffer a horrid fate upon the Sea of Sorrows, and had he
not been left chained and his belt and foulard taken from him, he
would likely have become a suicide.
6—Virtue Assaulted
Work as a tavern wench in the Flying Horse was not the employment
Flysse Cobal had hoped to find in Bantar, but she bore her
disappointment as cheerfully as she could. She had hoped to find a
position as a lady's maid, or perhaps a seamstress, but the bustling
city had proven unkind to her dreams and she had been forced to
settle for serving ale and avoiding the groping hands of amorous
patrons. And it was easier here, she told herself, than in 'sieur
Shaxbrof's mansion in Cudham. There, it had been quite impossible to
escape the master's attentions or, though it was no fault of hers
that he pursued her, the animosity of his wife. She had thought it a
fine thing to be accepted as a parlor-maid, a great honor for a farm
girl whose family could barely support three daughters when the
harvest had failed for two years running, and she had gone eagerly to
her new post. She had not anticipated that so elevated and aging a
man as 'sieur Shaxbrof would prove so lecherous, nor that his wife
should blame her rather than him and order her dismissal. That had
been a terrible blow for Flysse, and she had elected to seek work in
the city before burdening her family again.
At least, she told herself, she had been able to save a few silver
crowns, and Bantar was surely a wondrous place, even though working
in a tavern was not the life she had envisaged. One day, she promised
herself, she would find more congenial employment. But for now, the
Flying Horse was the best she could find, and she would make the best
of it.
If only the inn's patrons did not assume she was as available as most
serving wenches, forever praising her beauty … Flysse supposed she
was pretty, but almost wished she were not. It would make life
easier.
She studied her face in the mirror she shared, like the room, with
the other seven girls. It seemed to her an ordinary enough face—round
and framed with blond curls, the eyes and nose a little too large to
her mind, the mouth too wide. But men told her it was a sight to
behold, especially Lieutenant Armnory Schweiz of the God's Militia,
who seemed quite deaf to her reiterated protestations that she did
not—most definitely and unrelentingly not—wish to become
his mistress.
Most men, their advances once rejected, accepted they'd not have her
and contented themselves with flirtatious comments, laughing at her
blushes. But not Armnory Schweiz, who appeared determined to break
down her resistance and ignored her honest avowals that she wished
only to be left alone. He would be there tonight—he was there
every night—and Flysse sighed unhappily at the thought. It
seemed to her that the lieutenant's watery blue eyes pierced through
her clothing to study the naked flesh beneath with gloating
anticipation; and no matter how she tried to avoid his hands, they
always found a way to her waist or thigh or backside. She had
believed the officers of the Autarchy above such behavior—before
she came to Bantar. Now she knew better: since Armnory found her, she
knew the men of the God's Militia were not much different from 'sieur
Shaxbrof, or any other men—save in the powers they held. Were
he not a lieutenant in the Militia, she thought, I'd spill a tankard
over his grinning head, or dent it on his skull. But he was, and
she'd been warned of the consequences.
With a last long sigh she finished the tidying of her hair and
readied herself to go down to the taproom. She was already late, and
Master Banlyn's patience was not inexhaustible.
When she entered the long, already smoke-filled room, the first thing
she saw was Armnory Schweiz. He looked to be in his cups, but even so
his eyes were focused on the door and a lecherous smile stretched his
narrow lips as he spotted her. Instantly, he raised his tankard, and
Flysse had no choice but to nod and go to his table.
His smile grew broader as she approached, exposing uneven teeth
stained brown by tobacco, and he brushed at his moustache like some
gallant on the stage of the playhouse. As Flysse came near and
reached to take his empty mug, he seized her hand, gazing earnestly
at her face. She forced herself to stand, and if she did not smile,
at least she did not recoil in disgust.
"Flysse, dearest Flysse." He raised her trapped hand to his
lips. "Have you thought on my proposal, my dear?"
"Sieur, you've had my answer," she told him not for the
first time, repeating the lie that seemed her best defense: "I've
a sweetheart awaiting me in Cudham."
"Pah!" Schweiz dismissed with a careless wave the notion of
a patient sweetheart. "Some yokel stinking of dung and sweat?
Flysse, I tell you, you've captured my heart and I'll not rest till I
have you."
Flysse glanced round, hoping Master Banlyn—anyone—would
come to her rescue, but there was a space about Schweiz's table, as
if his scarlet uniform created an aura that defied approach surely as
any hex. There was no hope of rescue save by her own wits.
"Sieur," she extemporized, "it's as I've said—we
are engaged, and I cannot forswear that vow. Surely you, an officer
in the God's Militia, understand the import of such a promise?"
Schweiz snorted. He seemed to Flysse more drunk than usual, more
pressing. He said: "An officer in the God's Militia, yes! And
consequently of far greater position than any yokel. You must forget
your promise, Flysse. Shall it make your mind easier, I'll have our
padre bless you and absolve you. Only—"
"Sieur!" She feigned amazement, shock. "You suggest I
renege a vow made in God's name?"
Schweiz said, "I do; you must. Listen to me, Flysse—I
think of you hourly, and I swear I cannot live lest you agree to my
proposal."
Now her shock was genuine. "That I allow you to set me up as …
as your
doxy … your
kept woman?"
"As my
mistress"
Schweiz said. "There's a difference, you know."
"I think not, 'sieur. I think you suggest the unthinkable."
She captured his tankard, hoping he'd free her to gain more ale. "I'm
not some street woman, to be bought and housed for your pleasure."
"For my love," he argued. "Only for my love."
But there was not, now or ever, Flysse thought, any mention of honest
marriage. She felt fear stir—Schweiz seemed mightily determined
this night, and did he continue in this vein and not leave her go,
she thought it should be very hard to rein her temper, her disgust.
It should prove very hard not to strike him, and damn the
consequences.
"I think," she said, hoping her voice did not tremble,
"that I'd best refill your mug, no?"
"No," said Schweiz, "for I've made up my mind this
day. I
shall have you,
Flysse."
He jerked his arm then, tugging her forward and down, reaching out
with his free hand to grasp her shoulder so that she was toppled and
turned to land across his knees. He set an arm around her and a hand
beneath her chin, holding her head still as he planted a beery kiss
on her lips.
Flysse closed her mouth tight and struggled furiously, pounding at
his shoulders and back. But he was strong and ignored her blows,
endeavoring to force his tongue between her lips even as the hand
that clutched her chin descended busily down her body to find its way
beneath her skirts.
Flysse felt nauseated, and the queasy feeling galvanized her to a
more ferocious defense of her honor. She raked nails down her
attacker's cheeks, gratified even through her panic to hear Schweiz's
pained cry. His hand left off its clumsy tumblings and rose to touch
the wounds. When he saw the blood upon his fingers, he gaped in
disbelief. Then snarled in anger.
"God's blood, girl, you've marked me! You'll pay for that in
kind."
He took a handful of her hair and slapped her hard. Flysse felt her
eyes water, then shrieked in outrage as he cupped a hand about a
breast and squeezed viciously. Dimly, she was aware of an abrupt
silence throughout the taproom, so that Schweiz's panting sounded
unnaturally loud. She wondered why no one came to her aid. Surely
Master Banlyn would not stand idly by; surely there must be someone
would take this creature off her. But none came: there was only
Armnory Schweiz's hand tearing at her bodice and his face descending
again. She supposed it was not so unusual, a patron disporting with a
tavern wench; likely the other girls would laugh it off and return
the kisses, nor object to the hand unlacing her bodice to delve at
the flesh beneath. Some, she knew, would invite him to bed.
But she was not like them. In Cudham she had fought off 'sieur
Shaxbrof—and others since coming, to the Hying Horse—and
she would not willingly submit to attentions so distasteful. She felt
his tongue probe into her mouth. It tasted of ale, tobacco, and stale
food. She felt her breast freed from the confines of the bodice, and
his fingers toy there, then slide down her waist, her hip, to lift
her skirts, exposing her legs. She clamped them tight, but ragged
nails scratched between her thighs, forcing crudely upward to her
undergarments. He laughed as the cotton ripped under his exploring
fingers. She thought that he would surely rape her.
She did not think of what she did then, nor of the consequences. She
was hardly aware of her hand—which still, somehow, held the
emptied tankard—rising to strike his temple, slamming the
pewter mug against his skull.
Lieutenant Armnory gasped and fell back on the bench. Flysse leapt up
and, as he stared at her and reached out a hand, struck him again,
full in the face. The blow jarred her knuckles; the tankard was
dented. Schweiz's nose spread wide across his cheeks, spurting blood
that splattered over his tunic, darkening the scarlet. He grunted,
and clutched at her again, and she drove the mug straight into his
face. He yelped as teeth shattered, spitting fragments from between
his pulped and bloody lips, his eyes glazing. Flysse felt dizzy,
dropping the mug as she instinctively adjusted her disordered
clothing, her eyes wide as Schweiz moaned, cursed, and dribbled
blood.
Across the taproom, Master Banlyn said softly, nervously, "In
God's name, girl, do you know what you've done?"
Defended my honor, Flysse thought. Only that.
Armnory Schweiz touched cautiously at his ruined face. When he raised
his head, his eyes were furious. When he spoke, his voice came thick.
"To attack an officer of the God's Militia is a crime, you
bitch. You'll pay for this!"
He fumbled his pistol from the holster. Master Banlyn cried, "No!
For God's sake, Lieutenant, don't shoot her!"
"Shoot her?" Schweiz shook his head, sending a spray of
blood and mucus arcing over the floor. "I'll not shoot the
bitch. Oh, no—I'll not end it so easy."
Flysse took a step back: there was a madness in his eyes that filled
her with dread. She flinched as he cocked the pistol, but he only set
the muzzle on her chest and grimaced a horrid smile.
"In the name of the Autarchy, I arrest you, bitch." He
flourished the pistol at the door. "Now come with me."
Flysse had cleaned her share of stables and pigpens, and even they
were preferable to her cell. For one thing, they were sunlit, not
sunk in the perpetual gloom of the prison with its few sputtering
tallow candles and small, barred windows; and the straw on their
floors was considerably fresher than the noisome, insect-infested
stuff littering the flagstones of this tiny cubicle. Nor were the
inhabitants so threatening as her neighbors here—the catcalls
and lewd comments that greeted her arrival had made Flysse blush. She
had not known women did such things together as were suggested, and
she was grateful—a small mercy—that none other shared the
cell.
She wondered how long she should be confined, and what the outcome of
her trial might be. The jailer—a gaunt woman who seemed to
Flysse no kinder than her charges—told her that such injury as
she had inflicted on an officer of the God's Militia must guarantee a
strict punishment. It seemed the lieutenant's nose was soundly broken
and several of his teeth knocked loose, and that amused the jailer as
much as it amused her to frighten Flysse with speculation of her
impending fate. Almost, she wished she had not struck the man, but
what else might she have done? Certainly not submit to his desires;
and surely a judge would understand that, no matter what the jailer
said.
She had determined from the first to tell the truth and, did the
court allow it, call upon Master Banlyn and the other girls from the
Hying Horse to stand as witnesses. Surely they must confirm her
story, that Armnory Schweiz had persecuted her with his attentions,
suggesting such liaisons as no God-fearing woman should be asked to
accept. The trouble was she had no more experience of courts than of
jails, and no real idea whether or not she might summon witnesses to
her character and conduct. She had asked the jailer, but for such
information the woman demanded payment, in coin or kind, and Flysse
lacked the one and had no taste for the other. She wondered if her
meager savings were safe. She could not, currently penniless, send
word to those she named her friends, nor had any visited her in the
few days of her incarceration. She believed her only hope was truth,
and the understanding of the judge; but the jailer's ominous
declarations filled her with dread. Even so, she hoped her hearing
might be soon: at least it would remove her from this stinking
cell—forever or awhile. Beyond that she could not—dared
not—think. She must cling to the hope of freedom, anticipate
her return to the Hying Horse and a resumption of her life. The
alternative—whatever it be—was altogether too terrifying
to consider. She slumped despondent on the splintery bench that was
both seat and bed, watching the roaches scuttle busily amongst the
straw, then rose as a lantern illumined the corridor outside and the
rattle of the jailer's keys heralded the woman's approach.
She came with two Militiamen, their expressions scornful as they
ignored the obscene suggestions echoing their footsteps. They halted
outside Flysse's cell, waiting as the wardress applied her key and
flung open the cage. Flysse saw that one held manacles, and in her
sudden nervousness came close to giggling that it be thought needful
she go chained. Perhaps they feared she should attack them. But
manacled she was, wrists and ankles fettered, a chain between her
legs that caught up her skirts immodestly and made her totter as they
brought her from the cell and up the old stone steps to the hall
beyond.
She asked them, "Where are we going?" and had back a curt,
"To court," after which she had no time for questions. Nor
did she see any point in pleas, so stern were their faces.
She had not known the courtroom stood above the cells until she was
brought in and ushered to a walled stand raised some three steps from
the floor. Sudden fear rendered her giddy, and she set her hands upon
the ledge before her, only to gasp and snatch them back as the magic
in the hexes there burned her palms. Through watered eyes she saw a
small, thin man dressed all in red-edged black seated behind a high
desk. He wore a powdered wig and she assumed him to be the judge.
There was another official she did not know was a tipstaff, and the
only other person present was Armnory Schweiz, his face masked with
bandages. He did not look at her.
"You are Flysse Cobal, formerly employed in the tavern named the
Flying Horse?"
The judge's voice rasped like a file drawn across protesting metal.
It sounded to Flysse as hard. She said, "I am. I—"
"Silence." The judge raised a hand. "It is true that
some nine days ago you attacked Lieutenant Armnory Schweiz of the
God's Militia?"
"No!" she cried. "That's not true!"
"You deny you struck the lieutenant violently in the face with a
tankard?"
There was no hint of sympathy, only a dry indifference tinged with
boredom and irritation.
Flysse said, "No … yes, I struck him, but … "
The judge looked up from the papers spread before him and fixed
Flysse with an angry glare. "Young woman, do you answer me aye
or nay, and no more save I tell you so. Confine yourself to only
that, else it shall go harder with you."
"But," said Flysse, and fell silent in face of his pursed
lips and narrowed eyes.
"You confess that you did strike the lieutenant?"
"Aye," said Flysse.
"Thereby inflicting considerable injuries to both his person and
the dignity of the uniform he wears."
Flysse was not sure whether a question was asked or a statement made,
so she remained silent. She was trying hard not to cry now; she
wished there were some friendly face in the room.
The judge glanced at his papers, then at Schweiz. "Lieutenant,
do you describe your injuries."
Schweiz rose to his feet. "My lord, my nose was broken and four
of my teeth shattered." His voice was thick and lisping. "Also,
she scratched me and struck me about the head."
"And you were at the time in the uniform of the God's Militia?"
"I was."
"And was there any justification for this attack?"
"My Lord, there was not."
"Liar!" Flysse could not help it: she must protest. "He's
lying! He molested me. He said—"
The judge motioned at the two Militiamen standing behind Flysse.
Abruptly she felt her arms seized, and before she could turn her head
or say another word, a ball of leather was forced between her jaws
and secured in place about her neck. She gagged, afraid of choking
now. Tears ran helplessly down her cheeks and she thought she should
likely faint.
"So," the judge declared, "without provocation an
attack was launched on an officer of the Autarchy. A grave offense,
indeed, and one demanding of a grave penalty." He looked at
Flysse with eyes cold as winter ice. "Do you heed me, Flysse
Cobal."
To her surprise, she did. Her ears were ringing and she fought the
impulse to vomit against the gag. Her eyes were blurred with tears,
but somehow she still saw the spiteful face clear and clearly heard
the sentence pronounced.
"I decree that you shall be sent into exile. To Salvation, where
you shall be indentured for the remainder of your life."
The last thing Flysse saw before she fainted was Armnory Schweiz
smiling as best he could with his ruined mouth.
7—Honor Betrayed
"La!"
As he said it, Arcole Blayke lunged forward, driving his sword almost
casually past the defending blade, the point entering his opponent's
chest. The viscount Ferristan gasped, an expression of absolute
disbelief clouding his face. As he withdrew the rapier, Arcole
wondered why they always looked surprised. God knew, they engaged in
the duel with the intention of killing the other man—that was
his own purpose; what point else?—but seemed never to think
they might themselves be harmed. Always, that look of disbelief.
He stepped a pace back, blade lowered as the viscount tottered,
frowning, and opened his mouth. Had he intended to speak, he was not
successful; instead, he emitted only a coughing sound and fell on his
face. Arcole shook a kerchief loose from his sleeve and wiped his
blade, handing both cloth and sword to his second.
Dom said, "A fair fight, fairly won," in a voice intended
to carry to Ferristan's men as they rolled their master onto his back
and shouted for the surgeon to come forward.
Softer, to Arcole, he said, "But even so, best you lie low
awhile, or even quit Levan. The House Ferristan has friends in high
places."
"He called me out," Arcole returned, extending his arms to
take the jacket a servant offered. "He impugned my honor, and it
was
he issued the challenge."
"Even so," said Dom.
"Is the aristocracy entirely without honor now?" Arcole
demanded. "The fight was fair—and witnessed. What
reasonable charge might be brought?"
"Does the Autarchy need a reason?" Dom gave him back,
cautiously modulating his voice that none save Arcole hear him.
"Those black-garbed bastards make their own rules since the
Restitution."
"And forget the ancient laws of Levan?" Arcole shrugged,
idly studying the surgeon's fruitless attempt to restore life to the
dead. "Surely not, my friend."
"God!" Dom shook his head, thinking his own efforts to
instill some measure of caution in Arcole were useless as the
surgeon's. "The House Ferristan walks hand in hand with the
Autarchy. His father"—this with a nod toward the
corpse—"entertains the governor to dinner. Think you he's
not their ear? Or that he'll forgive this?"
Arcole shrugged again and beckoned a servant, who passed him a cup.
He drank the brandy and sighed contentedly. The surgeon rose from his
labors to pronounce, officially, that Luis, viscount of House
Ferristan, was dead. Dom, addressing the Ferristan seconds, said,
"The fight
was fair, no? You stand witness to that."
The Ferristan seconds gave no reply, only looked dour and nervous as
they lifted up their dead master and bore him away to his carriage.
"You saw it, no?" Dom turned to the surgeon, wiping blood
from his hands. "There can be no question, eh?"
"No." The surgeon shook his balding head vigorously. "No,
none. The duel was fought fair."
"And is he questioned by Ferristan men or the Autarchy's
lackeys," Dom said, eyeing the surgeon's retreating back, "he'll
swear the opposite with equal enthusiasm."
Arcole smiled. "You grow cynical, old friend."
"I grow realistic," said Dom. "And I'd wish the God
gifted you with as much sense."
"But he did not," Arcole declared. "He gave me a
certain skill with a blade and as much with the cards. I thank him
for that, and that I've yet some notion of honor."
"Notions of honor," said Dom, "are oftimes the
cerements of the foolish."
"Do you name me a fool?"
Dom shook his head: friend though he was, Arcole Blayke was no less
unpredictable. And, to say the least, incautious. A gambler and a
duelist—both of repute—he did not go unnoticed by Levan's
new masters. He made, Dom thought, no attempt at caution; rather, he
flaunted his habits. And in these years since the Evanderans had
conquered Levan, such habits were disapproved of. The Autarchy had
scant affection for such independent spirits—and a way of
rendering them docile. He wished Arcole might make himself less
noticeable, but then he'd not be Arcole. Dom sighed, knowing he'd as
well beat his head against a rock.
"Still, a … holiday … might be advisable," he said.
"There are salons in Bantar, no?"
"Rubbish." Arcole set a companionable arm about Dom's
shoulders, steering the smaller man toward their carriage. "I've
too many friends here; and what should I do in the very seat of those
glum God's men? Why, I'd languish in Bantar."
Dom sighed and shrugged, abandoning the attempt, and allowed his
friend to hand him into the coach.
Inside, Arcole leant back against the velvet plush of the seats. The
carriage rocked, the matched pair moving eagerly to the coachman's
bidding, drawing the phaeton over the rutted track to the paved road
beyond. They passed through the city gates and came to the hotel in
which Arcole had taken rooms. It was amongst the finest, all painted
panels and crystal chandeliers—memories of a time before the
Restitution, before Evander had conquered the surrounding countries
and the Autarchy established its governors and their Militia, puppet
masters holding the strings of a tamed and toy-like class that now
ruled solely in name. Save, Dom thought as the carriage was dismissed
and they entered the luxurious foyer, that some had the ear of the
true rulers and might well be heard, did they whine loud enough.
Arcole called him from his gloomy musings with a hand on his
shoulder. "Breakfast? I confess myself quite famished." He
seemed to have forgotten the duel. Was it so easy to dismiss the
taking of a man's life, Dom wondered. But he kept the thought to
himself and only nodded.
As they made their way to their customary table, conversation ceased
a moment, then started up again, louder. Heads turned toward them—or,
more correctly, Dom thought, toward Arcole. He saw admiration on some
faces, disapproval on many others. That Arcole Blayke fought a duel
that morning was common knowledge amongst the patrons of the Hotel
Dumoyas. Before the morning was out, it would be known across the
city that the viscount Ferristan was dead. Dom saw money change
hands, and marveled that there were yet folk foolish enough to wager
on Arcole's defeat.
At his side, Arcole was bowing and murmuring greetings, his smile
sunny; Dom saw more than one lady return that smile with an unspoken
invitation. He, too, ducked his head and voiced pleasantries, but
that was only formality: attention was focused on his companion. He
was not at all surprised, nor any longer put out—he was not
unhandsome, but Arcole was possessed of a charisma that surpassed
mere looks, though he had those in abundance as well. The God had
favored him with more than just skill with a sword and cards, and if
he lacked a measure of common sense, then that vacancy was balanced
with charm and wit and education and … (Dom had sometimes amused
himself by compiling a list of Arcole Blayke's winning
characteristics. It had proved a long list.)
They reached their table and allowed a waiter to seat them. Arcole
ordered a bottle of Levan's famous sparkling wine; Dom asked for
coffee. They agreed on deviled kidneys and kedgeree, fresh fruit and
toast. As they ate—Arcole with the appetite he'd claimed—Dom
was aware of the eyes that shifted constantly in their direction.
"They wonder at your future," he remarked, "what
measures House Ferristan will take."
"What measures can be taken?" Arcole returned. "Luis
was their only decent swordsman. Think you they'll hire some
mercenary?"
His smile suggested he found the notion amusing, the likelihood a
hired sword could defeat him ridiculous. Dom only sighed and shook
his head.
Arcole washed down a mouthful of kidneys with a measure of wine,
dabbed a napkin to his mouth, and said, "I've promised young
Alleyn Silvestre a hand of cards this noonday. Shall you join us?"
"You've an appointment with your tailor," Dom reminded him.
"Of course." Arcole pushed away his emptied plate. "But
there's time enough before I relieve Alleyn of more coin."
"And we're to attend the duchess this evening."
"Dear Madelyne, yes." Arcole nodded solemnly. "I'd not
forgotten, but I doubt it will take me long to empty Alleyn's purse."
"The Duchess Fendralle would be a valuable ally," Dom
remarked. "Did the count of Ferristan bring some charge, her
affections might prove most useful."
"Her affections? Do you suggest I bed her, Dom?" Arcole's
brows rose in feigned surprise. "Why, she's almost old enough to
be my mother, nor gifted with much in the way of looks! And what of
the duke?"
"A husband," Dom murmured in answer, "has never
stopped you before."
"True enough," Arcole acknowledged cheerfully, "but I
think not Madelyne."
"At least sweet-talk her?" Dom asked. "And young
Silvestre, might you not let him win a hand or two?"
"Dom," said Arcole, "you worry too much. I tell you,
nothing will come of Ferristan's demise. Levan's known duels too
long; the Autarchy will take no notice of this morning's squabble.
So, do we attend the tailor?"
They returned to the hotel to find Alleyn Silvestre awaiting them
with three companions, but before the cards were dealt a commotion in
the foyer caught Dom's attention. It went unnoticed by the players
until he saw the scarlet uniforms of Militiamen appear in the doorway
of the gaming room and coughed a warning.
Arcole glanced around. Dom gestured toward the captain advancing at
the head of ten men, all bearing muskets save the officer. He wore
only a saber, a pistol, and an expression of grim resolution.
Arcole set down his cards as the captain said, "Arcole Blayke?
I've a warrant for your arrest."
"On what charge?" Arcole demanded.
His tone suggested a mistake was made, and the officer scowled as he
fumbled in his sabertache for a document bearing the heavy seal of
the Autarchy. Unfolding the sheet, he intoned:
"That you did, in the early hours of this morning, take the life
of Luis, viscount Ferristan. And for that offense—"
"Offense? It was a duel! And fought honestly."
Arcole was genuinely outraged. The captain ignored his protest. "You
confess, before witnesses, that you slew the viscount?"
Dom said, "There were witnesses to the duel. I'm one; there were
others."
"Indeed," the captain said. "Who shall all, in due
course, give testimony. You are?"
"Dom Freydmon," said Dom.
The captain nodded. "Doubtless you'll attend the hearing, 'sieur
Freydmon. Meanwhile"—he turned his attention back to
Arcole—"you, 'sieur, will come with me."
Alleyn Silvestre said, "This is ridiculous! All Levan knows
Arcole fought Ferristan; all Levan knows it was a fair fight. Arcole
would not have it otherwise."
"My thanks," Arcole said, smiling.
"You saw it?" the captain asked, and when Silvestre shook
his head: "Then I'd suggest you hold your tongue, else you'll
accompany this duelist to the cells."
"The cells?" Arcole sprang to his feet, right hand touching
the hilt of his rapier. "You'd jail me like some common
criminal?"
Dom cried a warning as the ten muskets were cocked and raised to fix
their sights on Arcole's chest.
"Or shoot you down," said the captain, "do you not
come peaceably."
"I've committed no crime," Arcole protested. "In the
God's name, is this Evanderan justice?"
"You question Evander's justice?" The captain's eyes fixed
hard on Arcole's face. "You'd add that to the catalogue of your
crimes?"
"I'd claim my innocence."
Arcole's hand closed on his sword's hilt. Dom said, "Arcole, no!
Go with them—I'll find an advocate."
"Your friend"—the captain managed to make it an
insult—"gives sound advice. Now, do you give me your
blade, or do I take it from you?"
Arcole said, "Alone you could not, 'sieur. Dismiss your men and
try to take it."
"Threatening the life of an officer of the God's Militia is
another offense," the captain replied, "punishable by
execution."
"He did not threaten you," Dom said. "That was an
invitation."
"The court shall decide," the captain promised. "Now,
'sieur, I grow impatient. Do you obey me, or shall you die here?"
Dom said, "You've no chance, Arcole! Go with them. An advocate
shall surely have you loose ere dusk."
"And we've the duchess's soiree to attend, eh?" Arcole
smiled with far more confidence than Dom felt. "Indeed, I'd not
miss that. So, shall we settle this ridiculous matter?"
He took his hand from the rapier and, with his left, loosed the belt.
The captain took the proffered sword and nodded at the door. A crowd
was gathered there, Dom saw, thankful the Militiaman did not attempt
to cuff or bind Arcole.
"Gentlemen." Arcole bowed to young Silvestre and his
companions. "It seems you shall keep your money today."
"It shall be spent on an advocate," Silvestre declared.
Arcole smiled and turned to the impatient captain. "So, do you
lead the way?"
The captain glowered, motioning for his men to hold their muskets
ready as he marched from the gaming room. Dom watched them go before
he asked urgently, "Alleyn, you've the name of a reliable
advocate?"
At least, Arcole reflected, Dom had managed to bribe his jailers so
that he need not appear before the court disheveled and shabby as
some common criminal. Indeed, as he stood in the box reserved for the
accused, Arcole decided he was the best-dressed man in the room—save
for the manacles about his wrists and ankles. They quite spoiled the
hang of his cuffs, and likely scored his polished boots beyond
repair. No matter; soon as these tiresome formalities were dispensed,
he would rid himself of these clothes. He would, he thought as he
watched the officers of the court take their places and the tipstaff
call the chamber to order, arrange a celebration at which all
memories of this interlude would be ritually burned. That should
certainly be amusing, and as the charge against him was read, he
began to compile a list of guests.
" … And knowing yourself the superior swordsman did thus
conspire to murder him. How plead you?"
Arcole realized the question was addressed to him. He stared at the
prosecutor, thinking the man had poor taste in tailors. Or perhaps
Levan's rulers paid their officers too poorly to afford to dress
decently. He frowned and said, "Not guilty, of course."
The prosecutor smiled back. He was a Levanite, by his looks—one
of the turncoats who curried favor with the Evanderans, like old
Ferristan there. Arcole glanced at the count and got back a glare of
such unalloyed hatred, he wondered if the old man lost his mind.
Surely he understood his son had died in a duel: a matter of honor
that he, born of Levan's oldest stock, should comprehend. In better
days—those lost to Evander's conquest—this affair would
never have been allowed to come thus far.
But, to Arcole's bemusement, it had; and now Raymone of House
Ferristan glowered at him from behind that oiled white beard as if he
were some rabid dog to be slain on sight before he might spread his
infection. Was it not enough Militiamen had taken him captive as if
he were a criminal? And more—oh, yes, far more indignity—had
he not been locked with chains on his feet in a filthy cell that
stank of urine and vomit, been forced to eat slop he'd not feed the
lowest servant, allowed to shave and bathe and change his clothes
only when faithful Dom handed over an exorbitant amount of coin?
And now they accused him of murder?
It was ridiculous. His frown deepened into an expression of genuine
outrage and he looked away from Raymone, letting his gaze wander over
the courtroom.
Two Militiamen guarded the door and two more stood at his back, even
though the box he occupied was painted with hex signs he recognized
as powerful. The judge was an Evanderan, as were the two advocates
attending him. Tipstaff and prosecutor were Levanites; there was no
jury—the Autarchy had dispensed with juries—but the
accused was allowed his own counsel. Arcole's advocate was a bewigged
young man whose sallow face was drawn, his movements nervous as if he
were the one on trial. Which, in a way, Arcole supposed, he was—the
Levan's new rulers had little affection for any who argued their
authority. Perhaps this advocate—Arcole could not quite recall
his name—was braver than he looked. Surely he wasn't the only
lawyer Dom could find willing to take the case.
"You find these proceedings amusing?"
The judge's voice was querulous, his florid face darkening in
irritation; Arcole shook his head and said, "I find them
pointless."
Dom winced; the defending advocate climbed heavily to his feet. "My
lord, if I may?"
The judge waved a hand and the advocate bowed and continued: "My
client was born in the Levan, my lord; he was raised here, in the
customs of his country. One of those customs is that matters of honor
be settled by the duel."
"He murdered my son," Ferristan cried.
The judge failed to order him silent. Instead, he said, "Levan
now resides under protection of the Autarchy, and Evander, matters of
honor are
not so crudely settled."
"Of course, my lord." The advocate bowed again; Arcole
thought he cringed. "The Autarchy leads us on a more civilized
path, but still … old customs die hard."
"Had he a quarrel," said the judge, "he should have
brought it before the courts.
That is the civilized way—not
these bloody brawls you Levanites resort to."
"It was not," Arcole declared, "a brawl."
Eyes beady and cold as a raven's studied him a moment? then,
disdainfully, to the Militiamen at his back the judge said "Does
the accused interrupt again, gag him."
Arcole opened his mouth to protest, to ask if this was
civilized
Evanderan justice, but his advocate spoke first, urgently,
motioning him silent.
"Please forgive my client, my lord. He is not accustomed to
legal proceedings—he intends no offense."
"But gives it nonetheless," the judge said. "Continue."
"The sadly departed viscount Ferristan was engaged in game of
petanoye with 'sieur Blayke," the advocate said, "and lost
a considerable amount of money."
Arcole was tempted to remark that the dead man was an excruciatingly
bad player, but Dom was shaking his head and grimacing at him, so he
bit back the words and only stood silent, listening.
"He had been drinking heavily throughout the game," the
advocate was explaining, "and grew offensive. I've depositions
to that effect, my lord, do you care to study them."
The judge beckoned and the tipstaff took the affidavits and brought
them to the bench. The judge glanced at them and pushed them away.
The prosecutor asked, "Where are the witnesses? Depositions are
useless without witnesses."
"Quite," said the judge.
Arcole's lawyer looked to where Raymone Ferristan sat and said, "I
fear the witnesses are unavailable, my lord. Three are gone to
country estates and two are incapacitated; one has simply
disappeared."
"Then I'll not allow their testimony," the judge announced.
"These depositions are worthless."
The young advocate sighed, but the count of House Ferristan was
smiling now. By God, Arcole thought, the old bastard's bribed or
beaten them! No wonder I've no friends here save Dom. He felt a
little of his certainty wither.
"Sieur Freydmon is present," the advocate said.
Dom rose, but the prosecutor cried, "My lord, Dom Freydmon is a
known associate of the accused. They are old accomplices—"
Arcole's lawyer said, "I object! Sieur Freydmon is a respected
man. To suggest he is an
accomplice—"
The judge motioned him silent. To Dom he said, "Is this true?"
"That I am Arcole's friend?" asked Dom. "Yes. I've
known him seven years now."
"Then I find this man unsuitable as a witness," the judge
declared. "Clearly any testimony he may give will be colored by
his acknowledged association with the accused. Sieur Freydmon, seat
yourself."
Dom stood a moment with open mouth, disbelief in his eyes. The judge
fixed him with a beady stare and he sat. Arcole felt a little more of
his confidence dissipate.
"The viscount grew offensive," the advocate went on, weary
as a man pushing a heavy weight uphill, "and insulted 'sieur
Blayke. Aspersions were cast as to sieur Blayke's antecedents, and
accusations made of his honesty—"
The prosecutor interrupted. "All hearsay! These are no more than
allegations. Without corroborative testimony the court is asked to
accept the word of the accused alone. And Luis, viscount Ferristan,
is not here to defend himself.
"No," said the judge ponderously, "he is not."
Helplessly, Arcole's man said, "My lord, do you refuse to allow
the depositions and 'sieur Freydmon's testimony ..
"I apply the law," said the judge. "No more than that.
Do you accuse me of error?"
The count of Ferristan's smile grew wider, fiercer. Arcole felt the
last of his confidence dissolve, to be replaced with growing outrage.
This is a farce, he thought, Raymone and this damn Evanderan judge
work hand in glove.
He heard his advocate say quickly, "No, my lord. Nothing of the
sort."
"Then present your case."
"I am left with little to present," said the advocate
helplessly. "Sieur Blayke is well known in Levan as a man of
honor. He has never faced such charges before. It is common knowledge
that the viscount insulted him and challenged him, and that 'sieur
Blayke acted as must any man of honor—he accepted the
challenge. To do less should have been an insult to House Ferristan.
I assure you, my lord, that the duel was fairly fought. There were
witnesses … "
"My lord." The prosecutor darted in like a terrier on a
rat. "I've no doubt that 'sieur Freydmon will be one of these
alleged witnesses. Where are the others?"
Bought off, Arcole thought, or else terrified into silence.
"Were I allowed time," pleaded the advocate, "I might
find them."
"Too late," the judge declared briskly. "Are they not
now present, I'll not grant more time. Have you aught else to say?"
The advocate shook his head. The judge waved the prosecutor forward.
"I'll not take up much of your time, my lord," he promised.
"I've but a few plain questions for the accused, and I believe
this matter may be soon settled." He turned to Arcole. "You
are known as a gambler and duelist, no?"
Arcole looked down on the thin-faced prosecutor and said, "I've
some skill with cards, and with a blade."
"Do you make a living from your gambling?"
Arcole shrugged and answered, "Aye."
"And you have fought numerous duels?"
Arcole nodded.
"How many?"
"I've not kept count."
"Two? A dozen? A score? A hundred?"
"Less than a hundred. Perhaps fifty."
"And won them all?"
Arcole smiled coldly. Hope seemed lost; his pride remained. "I
am here, no?" he said.
"So you have slain perhaps as many as fifty men. That suggests
you are greatly skilled. Were you a soldier?"
"I fought for the Levan," Arcole said.
The prosecutor smiled. "In the Restitution? Did you kill men
then?"
Again Arcole only nodded: there seemed no point to words.
"My lord." The prosecutor turned to the bench. "Luis,
viscount of House Ferristan, had fought only three duels in his young
life; he was never a soldier. I put it to you that the accused boasts
such skill as surely rendered this fight unfair. He might have
refused the challenge, but knowing he held the upper hand, he engaged
with the unfortunate viscount confident of victory. It was no less
than murder, my lord, and I ask you pronounce Arcole Blayke guilty of
that crime."
The judge nodded. "Do you have aught to say?" he asked of
Arcole.
It seemed a bitter taste filled Arcole's mouth and he was tempted to
spit. Raymone was beaming triumphantly; the prosecutor oozed
confidence. Arcole's lawyer stood with downcast eyes; Dom stared
aghast. The judge waited with obvious impatience.
"Save this be a travesty and House Ferristan entirely devoid ]
of honor," Arcole said, "no."
"Then it is my duty as an officer of the Autarchy," said
the judge, "to pronounce sentence. I find you, Arcole Blayke,
guilty of murder. I sentence you to die."
"You did
what?"
The chains fettering Arcole's
ankles rattled as he rose. Dom started back, so angry was his
friend's voice, so outraged his expression. For a moment he
thought Arcole about to strike him, but instead the fists struck only
empty air and Arcole shook his head, his eyes wide now in disbelief.
Dom said, "I thought it best. I thought you'd be pleased. At
least … "
"Oh, Dom." Now Arcole's voice came weary and Dom saw his
shoulders sag. "What have you done? Why did you not ask me
first? That, at the least." He slumped on the wooden bench, his
back against the dirty wall, careless of his shirt.
"I had little enough time," Dom said, "and none too
much money. By God, Arcole, it costs fifteen golden guineas to buy my
way in here. And most of our coin is taken by the court … "
"Stolen by the court!" snarled Arcole. "I tell you,
Dom, there's as little justice left in the Levan as there's honor."
"Be that as it may," Dom went on, more aware than Arcole of
the ticking minutes: fifteen golden guineas did not buy many. "The
bulk of our savings was taken in fines and compensation to House
Fernstan—he ignored Arcole's snort—"and what I
managed to rescue, I thought to employ on your behalf."
"And now it's gone?"
When Dom nodded, Arcole tipped back his head and groaned, then sank
his face in his hands and from behind that barrier muttered, "Dom,
what have you done to me?"
"Saved your life," his friend said. "I thought you'd
be pleased."
The face that rose to meet his was at first difficult to recognize as
Arcole's. The eyes were leeched of their usual sparkle and marked
beneath by dark crescents. Stubble decorated cheeks and chin, and the
hair—usually so carefully barbered—was lank and uncombed.
Then Arcole smiled, and Dom saw a flash of the old sardonic humor.
"Is there any left?"
Dom said, "A few guineas."
"So what shall you live on? Have you enough?"
"I'll get by," he said, and waved a dismissing hand. "It's
you we need concern ourselves with."
"I?" Arcole chuckled: a cynical sound. "My fate's
decided, no?"
"I thought you'd be pleased," Dom repeated. "They were
planning to hang you."
"I had prepared myself for that, old friend. But this … ?"
He shook his head. "There's no chance you might get the money
back?"
Before Dom could reply, while he still stared in disbelief at his
friend, Arcole answered himself: "No, of course not. That
God-cursed Evanderan judge would never return it, not once in his
thieving pocket."
"He's already signed the papers," Dom said.
Arcole nodded, less like a man reprieved than one hearing himself
condemned. He had taken it better in court, Dom thought. He seemed
far better disposed to death than to this news. Warily, he said,
"They'd have hung you, Arcole, and left your body on the gallows
for the crows to pick. That was the verdict—Raymone of House
Ferristan made sure of that."
"Then you risk his anger," Arcole said. "When this
gets out, he'll likely seek to take your life."
"I know." Dom nodded. "I leave for Tarramor at dawn.
He'll not find me there—I've friends—"
"How shall you live?"
It seemed odd that Arcole should concern himself with that) and
typical. Dom shrugged and said, "I can teach … whatever. I'll
find something. Perhaps"—he vented a small, sad
laugh—"perhaps I'll write a book about your exploits."
"Lie low awhile," Arcole advised him. "House Ferristan
has a long arm, and Raymone a long memory. The old bastard," he
added.
"At least you'll thwart him," Dom said.
"Aye." Arcole's smile showed briefly, then: "Do you
know what they do, Dom?"
Dom nodded, not wanting to say it. It seemed to him that anything was
better than hanging: he was not, he knew, of Arcole's mettle.
"Exiles are branded," Arcole said. "On the cheek, are
they male; women on the shoulder."
"But you'll be alive," said Dom quietly. "Is that not
something, at least? Surely that's preferable to the gallows."
"Is it?" Arcole asked in a voice Dom found horribly
reasonable. "They'll put their mark on me as if I were a … a
common criminal! A footpad, or some highwayman. They'll put me in the
hold of some stinking ship and send me over the Sea of Sorrows to
Salvation—the wilderness!
And I shall never return! Is
that truly better, Dom?"
Dom swallowed, close to wishing he'd not invested such coin, such
time—and both at some considerable risk to himself once word
reached House Ferristan—to save his friend's life. Then Arcole
took his hand and smiled and said, "Dom, I know you've acted for
what you believe the best. Do I seem ungrateful, forgive me. It's
that I was ready to die, not live in exile. I cannot envisage myself
indentured in the wilderness."
"It may not be so bad," Dom said, trying hard himself to
smile. "There's at least one town there. Grostheim, they name
it."
"Indeed." Arcole affected a tone of languid interest. "And
think you it's gaming salons? And I shall be allowed to play a hand
or two of petanoye? Perhaps there shall be dances?"
Sorrowfully, Dom said, "I'm sorry."
Arcole laughed with sudden humor and slapped a hand to his friend's
shoulder. "Oh, Dom; Dom, it's I should apologize, not you. You
risk your own safety to save my life and I reward you with curses and
mockery—forgive me." He rose, bowing. "Likely, in
time I'll come to make some life there, and thank you for it. Only
now put off that mournful face and accept my thanks, and my earnest
apologies."
"I do." Dom forced his lips apart in semblance of a smile.
"Not that you need to apologize."
"So." Arcole returned to the bench. "When do I depart
on this great adventure?"
"Tomorrow, so I understand," Dom said. "You go first
to Bantar, overland; a ship from there."
"Then this is our farewell," Arcole said.
"Aye," said Dom. "By the day after tomorrow Raymone
will know you're not hung. But you'll be on your way by then, and
he'll not have chance to stop you."
"And you'll be bound for Tarramor. Fare well there, old friend."
Dom nodded. There seemed little else to say, and he could hear the
turnkey approaching: fifteen golden guineas bought so little time. He
took Arcole's hand and then was drawn into his friend's embrace.
Almost, he wept against Arcole's shoulder, but that should not do,
and so he only held his friend a moment and then drew back.
"May God protect you, Arcole."
"Better, I hope, than he's done so far," Arcole declared,
and grinned.
Dom heard the turnkey cough noisily outside the cell. He wanted to
say more, but could think of nothing; and knew he
should weep
did he linger. So he bowed, as if they stood in some grand salon, and
went out through the door the turnkey held for him. He heard it slam
behind him and the key turn in the lock, and then tears did come, for
he knew he would never see Arcole again.
In the cell, Arcole rubbed absently at his cheek, wondering what it
should feel like when the red iron was pressed there. Soon enough, he
thought, he would know—and that brand would mark him all his
life. There'd be no hiding it from the ever-watchful eyes of the
cursed Autarchy. He damned Evander then, and all its priests and
Inquisitors and Militiamen, and vowed that had he ever the chance to
bring them down, he would seize it and laugh as they fell.
The branding came soon enough—at dawn the next day—which
suited Arcole better than waiting.
The turnkey came with four Militiamen, who took hold of Arcole even
though he did not struggle, and drew his hands behind his back,
locking them there with heavy cuffs that were connected to the
manacles around his ankles by a length of chain. He must perforce go
tottering, with a Militiaman to either side, their hands upon his
arms, and two vigilant behind, to the low, dark hall where a brazier
glowed red and a man clad all in scorched and greasy brown leather
tended his irons.
There was a chair of wood and metal, high-backed and bolted to the
floor, its purpose obvious. Before the Militiamen might prod him
onward, Arcole shuffled of his own accord toward the seat.
"Master Torturer, good day." He nodded a greeting to the
leather-clad man, and had the satisfaction of seeing the fellow gape
in startlement at his casual tone. "Shall I sit here?"
The man nodded dumbly and looked to the Militiamen as if for
reassurance that the prisoner was secured safely. Three favored
Arcole with reluctantly admiring smiles; the fourth's was scornful.
"You'll use a different voice when you feel the iron," he
said.
"Think you so?" Arcole determined he would not scream.
The Militiaman said, "Take his arms," and two of them
grasped Arcole firmly as the speaker produced the handcuff key and
removed the shackles.
He was pushed down onto the chair, where bands of dark iron locked
about his wrists, more around his ankles. A leather strap was bound
tight around his chest, and another across his forehead, holding his
head rigid against the chair's high back.
"He's secure."
The Militiamen stepped back; the one now wore a grin of horrid
anticipation, the rest watched stoically. The torturer drew on a
heavy gauntlet and took an iron from the brazier. The head glowed
bright in the dim light. Arcole gritted his teeth: he would not cry
out.
The torturer stood before him, and he closed his eyes against the
iron's heat as it was thrust close.
Such was the pain, he could not prevent the shout that burst forth.
He heard it echo off the indifferent stone; his nostrils filled with
the stench of burning flesh. He was grateful for the darkness that
encompassed him.
He woke suddenly, unwilling to leave the soothing blankness. Cold and
wet denied him that solace, however, and he spluttered indignantly as
he realized a bucket of water had been thrown over him. A hand took
his chin, steadying his head as another smeared some salve over the
raw pain that covered one side of his face. The pain subsided to a
dull throbbing, and he opened his eyes to find the same four
Militiamen studying him with calm indifference.
"Not so brave now, eh?"
He recognized the speaker and forced a smile that seemed to crack his
face apart. "Have you a mirror?" His voice was thick, and
every word sent shafts of pain through his skull. "Perhaps I
shall start a new fashion."
The Militiaman scowled; his companions smiled. Then they hauled
Arcole upright and locked the cuffs about his wrists again, this time
at the front, and marched him from the hall.
He thought they might return him to his cell and that should be a
small blessing, for he felt very weak and would stretch out on his
bench and sleep awhile, but instead, he was led down a long corridor
to a flight of steps that rose to an arched doorway opening onto a
courtyard. Blue sky showed above high walls, and somewhere a bird
sang. The air smelled clean and fresh after the malodorous cellars of
the prison, and rain glistened on the flags as Arcole was brought to
a wagon.
It was such a vehicle as he had seen often enough in the streets of
Levan: painted black, with high, solid walls and roof, a single
window in the rearward door covered with a metal grille. It was such
a vehicle as transported prisoners; he had never thought to ride in
one himself.
A ladder granted access to the interior, and the Militiamen stood
back as Arcole climbed awkwardly inside. He grimaced at the smell
that succeeded in combining all the body's fluids in one overpowering
fetor, then he was pushed down onto a narrow bench and the chain
unlocked from his shackles and fixed to a ring set in the wall above
his head. The /viiimamen departed and he looked about.
Five other prisoners sat watching him with the numb indifference of
lost men. All were branded, their cheeks displaying the letter
E
that was the damning mark of the exile. Arcole winced at the
sight.
"None too pretty, eh?"
The speaker was a hulking fellow, his dirty black beard serving to
throw the scar into vivid relief against the prison pallor of his
cheek. Arcole prayed he did not look so dreadful. He said, "No.
I think we'd none of us win prizes for our looks at present."
The bearded man coughed laughter and asked, "What they got you
for?"
"I killed a man," Arcole said.
The bearded man was unimpressed. "So'd I," he said. "In
a tavern. Bastard pulled a knife on me, so I broke his neck. They'dve
hanged me, save they want slaves out there in Salvation."
"Salvation," Arcole grunted. "Hardly our salvation."
"Better'n hangin', no?" the giant said.
"Think you so?" Arcole replied.
The bearded man gaped at him as if he were deranged. "Livin's
better'n dyin', no?"
"It depends," said Arcole, "on the manner of one's
existence."
"You one o' them philosophers?" the giant demanded. He
pronounced it
fill-oss-off-er.
Arcole shook his head and sucked breath as the movement set his cheek
to burning. "No," he replied, "I'm"—he
corrected himself—
"was a gentleman of leisure."
The giant guffawed. He seemed not to feel any pain. "Not no
more," he hooted. "A gentleman o' leisure, eh? Won't be
much leisure in Salvation, friend. Hard labor's what you'll get out
there—same as the rest o' us. Just hard labor till you're
spent, then you die. Gentleman leisure, hah!"
He leant back against the wall, grinning through his beard. Arcole
closed his eyes and fervently wished he were somewhere else; he
thought the gallows should have been preferable to weeks in such
company.
Then the door was flung closed and the interior was abruptly dark. A
key grated in the lock; the wagon rocked as the driver climbed to his
seat, then lurched as he cracked his whip over the team and the
horses flung themselves into the traces. Faint came the clatter of
hooves as the escort of Militiamen formed about the vehicle. It began
to move, across the prison yard and out through the gates Arcole
could not see. The wheels rumbled over cobblestones. Someone
whimpered; someone else began to hum unmelodiously. Arcole closed his
eyes. He thought this should be a most unpleasant journey.
Davyd stared around the barnlike hall at his fellow exiles. They
looked to him like any crowd found on the lesser thoroughfares of
Bantar, save that all wore manacles, and all were branded. His own
scar no longer pained him, but the cuffs about his wrists chafed. He
thought that had he his picklocks, it should not be too difficult to
get free; but those were long lost and, even could he use them, the
brand decorating his cheek marked him for all to see. Not even Julius
would offer refuge to one bearing the mark of exile.
No: he was condemned now, without hope of rescue. He sniffed noisily
and tried to tell himself that he was lucky, that it could be
worse—had the Autarchy discovered he was Dreamer, he should
likely have been burned by then. It failed to help: he faced a fear
almost as great. Soon he would be herded out of this solid, safe,
earthbound hall and onto a ship that floated on water. And
that ship would slip its moorings and turn from the harbor toward the
open sea. Its sails would fill and it would progress westward, to the
Sea of Sorrows and beyond, out where there was nothing but ocean. An
ocean that was filled with monsters, like the creatures in his dream.
He shivered, trying without success to drive those oneiric images
from his mind, and his shivering became a trembling that set his
teeth to rattling and, against his will, the tears to flowing
helplessly down his cheeks. He drew up his knees, hugging himself as
best he could with shackled wrists, his eyes screwed tight as he
rocked back and forth, chased by the monsters he
knew awaited
him.
It was a while before he felt the hands that stroked his shaking
shoulders and heard the voice that murmured soothing words such as
he'd not heard since Aunt Dory died. Unthinking, he turned toward the
sound, burrowing into the consolation of the arms and the warm body
that offered him temporary refuge.
"There, there. It's not so bad, eh? Don't cry; please don't cry.
It's not so bad."
"It is," he mumbled, and almost added, I know it is,
because I dreamed it. But the habit of that concealment was grained
too deep, and so he only repeated: "It is."
"I'll look after you," the voice promised, and Davyd opened
his eyes and blinked back the tears that he might see his comforter.
She was not that much older than he, and he thought she looked like
an angel, one of the carved and gilded angels that decorated the
churches he so seldom visited. Her face was an oval framed by golden
curls, that managed even in disarray to tumble artfully as if
arranged by a coiffeuse. Her eyes were big and blue as cornflowers,
and her mouth was wide, the lips full and red. She was, he decided,
absolutely beautiful. Suddenly he was embarrassed and drew back a
little.
She smiled and said, "My name's Flysse. What's yours?"
"Davyd Furth," he answered, sniffing. He saw that his tears
had marked her blouse, which had once been white. "And it
is
bad."
For an instant her smile faltered, became forlorn, but then she
rearranged it in the shape of confidence. "The ships cross the
ocean all the time," she said. "They come and go, and
they're really quite safe."
"They sink," he said.
"How do you know?" she asked gently.
"My mam was drowned," he said gruffly. It was difficult to
talk about it even then, so many years later, but it was the only
acceptable reason he could offer. He couldn't mention his dreams, the
fluid visions that had haunted him since childhood, his mother's
death by water only enhancing their terrifying import. It was his
dreams that had always told him that. Turning back to his companion,
he added, "She went out on a fishing boat, and there was a
storm, and she was drowned. So I know!"
"Oh," she said, "I'm sorry."
He shrugged, swallowing noisily. "It was a long time ago. I
don't hardly remember her, but it made me scared."
"But we'll be on a big ship," she said, trying to comfort
him. "Much bigger than a fishing boat. I'm sure it will be
safe."
"On the ocean?" He shook his head miserably. "There
are storms and sea monsters. And they get becalmed and everyone
starves, or goes mad because they've no water."
"How do you know?" she asked again.
"Because," he said, "I do. How do you know they
don't?"
"I used to work in a tavern," she said, "and sometimes
sailors came there."
"Sailors lie a lot," he said.
"And sea captains," she said, "who are respectable and
don't lie; they told me about it. And if they could, then they
must've crossed the ocean, no?"
He thought about that a moment, then frowned and shrugged again. She
still held him, though not so close, and he did not want to quit her
embrace. Nor did he wish to seem a sniveling coward in her eyes, but
that was hard—he was still very afraid.
"I suppose so," he allowed. "But I don't want to go."
She laughed at that, not mockingly but softly, as he remembered Aunt
Dory laughing when he brought her some childhood fear. It was a
comforting sound, and he felt a flash of anger. He was no child, to
be fed soft words and meaningless noises.
"I'm not a coward," he said.
"No, I didn't think you were."
He felt a little better for that. He suspected she said it only to
soothe him, but he liked her the more for it.
"I'm afraid too," she said, "do I tell the truth."
Davyd forgot his tears then, and that he was by several years the
younger. He straightened his back and said, "I'll protect you."
"Thank you," she said, sounding absolutely sincere.
"Perhaps we might protect each other?"
"Yes." He nodded vigorously. "What did you say your
name was?"
"Flysse," she said. "Flysse Cobal."
He held out a hand and they shook as best the manacles allowed,
sealing their bargain. They were both encouraged: it was good to find
a friend in hardship.
"When do you think we'll"—Davyd hesitated: he still
did not like to think of the imminent future—" … sail?"
"I heard a guard say soon," Flysse answered him. "They're
waiting for some other prisoners. When they arrive, we depart."
"I hope they take a long time. The longer the better."
Flysse laughed at that. The sound was odd in this miserable place,
like a hurdy-gurdy in a graveyard. Davyd found his smile become
genuine. He saw faces turn their way, most frowning as if the owners
wondered at their sanity, and he began to laugh himself, defiantly.
He thought perhaps he
was a little crazed, for the memory of
the dreams remained and he knew past any doubting that his dreams
told the truth. Danger waited for them on the open sea. He wondered
if he should tell this newfound friend, but habit bade him not. In
his life he had learned more of mistrust than of faith, and it
occurred to him that Flysse might buy her freedom with revelation of
a Dreamer. Likely the thought was unworthy, but even so—wiser
for now that he hold his tongue. Did he come to trust her fully,
perhaps then—but not now, when careless words might save him
from the sea only to give him to the flames. It was an unpleasant
choice, but the fire was certain; the sea … Well, while the dream
had threatened horrors, it had not
specifically foretold his
death, so perhaps there was hope. He clung to that straw like a
drowning man.
Two more days they waited in discomfort and ignorance. They were fed,
albeit poorly, and were free to move about the hall, but most
remained huddled in their places as if staking some claim to that sad
patch of ground. When the guards came in with their food, the briefly
opened doors admitted a wafting of air that smelled of the sea and
tar and wet rope, reminding them they were held in the harbor
quarter. Davyd thought the hall must once have been a warehouse—faint
through the overlaid scent of unwashed bodies there were more exotic
odors of spices and tobacco—and the few windows were set high
and very dirty. It was still, he supposed, a kind of warehouse, save
now its contents were human—living goods awaiting shipment
across the ocean. He thought he might have lost his mind were it not
for Flysse.
She remained determinedly cheerful, so that he must match her and
pretend he was no longer afraid. He hoped they might be indentured
together, when they reached Salvation—if they survived the Sea
of Sorrows.
For her part, Flysse was grateful for the company of this odd boy,
and—though she hid it—was as much shocked as intrigued by
his tales of robberies and rookeries, of pockets picked and locks
undone. He was unashamedly, a thief; indeed he was rather proud of
his larcenous skills, which sat ill with her honest upbringing. Yet
as he told her of his sad childhood, of a mother barely remembered
and of the woman—Aunt Dory—who had raised him, she could
not help but feel sympathy. He seemed to her less a genuine criminal
than a luckless victim of unkind fate. In Cudham a home should have
been found for him, a place to sleep, and honest work. He might well
have had no more than a corner of some hayloft, but the folk of her
village would have seen him fed and clothed, not left him to his own
devices.
Such a reminder of home saddened her, for she knew she would never
see Cudham again, and likely her parents never know her fate. She
wondered if they would assume her dead, or—far worse—believe
she had forgotten them, seduced by the city. She did not believe word
would ever reach them of her exile, and with that thought tears
threatened. Then it was Davyd who comforted her, with tales of daring
thievery and colorful accounts of folk who seemed to her quite
bizarre, so that before long she smiled again and listened eagerly to
his yarns.
So the days passed until, around noon on the third day, the last of
the exiles arrived.
Davyd and Flysse were deep in conversation. Flysse was speaking of
the summer fair in Cudham, which seemed to Davyd a marvelous thing.
She broke off as the doors opened and six men were ushered in. They
were unshaved and dirty and none too steady on their feet, as if
walking were a thing they had forgotten. The doors banged shut behind
them and they stared around, blinking and squinting in the poor
light.
Five were dressed in the clothes of ordinary workingmen, but the
sixth was in gentlemanly attire; and though his coat was soiled and
his boots scuffed, and his chin as stubbled as the rest—save
for one giant fellow who sported a voluminous beard—he managed
an air of elegance that set him apart. He looked about with narrowed
eyes, his lips pursed in an expression of distaste, as if he found
himself in unfamiliar surroundings not at all to his liking. Flysse
thought she had never seen a man so handsome.
"I wonder what he did to end up with us."
Flysse blushed as Davyd spoke, thinking her observation overly
brazen; but then she saw that she was not alone in remarking the
newcomer. He was, after all, the only man present to wear such
finery, or such an air of disdain.
"Looks like a toff," Davyd murmured, and chuckled. "And
if he keeps his nose in the air like that, someone's likely to dent
it for him."
Flysse thought that should be sad—it seemed to her a very
attractive nose.
"Nice clothes," Davyd remarked, watching as the stranger
picked a way between his fellow prisoners in search of a space. "I
wonder if he managed to bring any coin?"
"How could he?" Flysse asked, turning toward Davyd whilst
still managing to watch the man from the corner of her eye. She found
herself hoping he might find a place beside them, then berated
herself for such silly notions. He was clearly a gentleman fallen on
hard times, and unlikely to consider her worthy of notice.
"It can be done," Davyd assured her from the depths of his
worldly wisdom. "It all depends on who you know, who your
friends are."
"What good would money do?"
Davyd winked and told her, "Guards can be bribed—to give
you extra food, light work, that kind of thing."
Flysse nodded, thinking not for the first time that she was an
innocent in such matters.
"But I reckon not," Davyd continued. "A toff like
that—why, if he had any coin, he'd surely have bought himself a
barbering, likely had his boots polished … "
There was a hint of regret in his voice, and Flysse gave him all her
attention. "And if he had?" she asked. "What good to
you?"
"To
us," Davyd
corrected her, and waved expressive fingers.
"You'd pick his pockets?" Flysse was shocked.
Davyd grinned and shrugged, quite unabashed. "Likely not,"
he said ruefully, "while I've got these cuffs on. But are they
removed … "
"You'd steal his money?" Now Flysse frowned, prompting
Davyd to a perplexed expression.
"I'd make our journey as easy as possible," he declared.
"What's wrong with that?"
"It would be stealing," Flysse said.
"That's what I do," Davyd replied. "I'm a thief."
"And see where it's got you." Flysse was stern now.
"Aye." Davyd glanced around. "Here—where I've
not much to lose. Except"—he turned his gaze back to the
stranger—"perhaps my life."
"No!" Flysse was suddenly afraid: she'd not lose this
new-won friend. "You mustn't. Promise me!"
Davyd was still watching the man. He shook his head absently and
said, "I doubt I'll have the chance, even if he does have coin.
Look at him. See how he moves?"
Flysse obeyed: he seemed to her most graceful. In her ear she heard
Davyd whisper: "I'd wager he's a duelist. He's that look about
him."
Flysse had no idea what a duelist looked like.
Davyd said, "Am I right, he'd make a good friend. And we could
use a friend."
Flysse thought it unlikely so gentlemanly a fellow would have much
inclination to befriend an urchin thief and a tavern girl, but before
she had time to voice such pessimism, Davyd was calling to the man.
"Hey, 'sieur! We've room aplenty here."
The man looked toward them. As his eyes met hers, Flysse blushed anew
and lowered her head.
"A smile would help," Davyd whispered.
She refused to look up or answer, and the next thing she knew the
boots halted before her and a deep voice said, ; "Madam, may I
join you?" as if she sat not in this dingy hall all filled with
branded prisoners but in a salon, free.
She heard Davyd say, "Of course, 'sieur, and welcome. I'm called
Davyd, Davyd Furth. This is Flysse Cobal."
There was a movement. Flysse looked up from under lowered lashes and
saw the man bow. Along the hall someone laughed.
"I am Arcole Blayke. With your permission?"
She nodded and managed to mumble an affirmative. Arcole Blayke said,
"Thank you," and settled himself beside her.
"So," asked Davyd, "what brings you here, 'sieur
Blayke?"
"I killed a man in a duel," Arcole replied, and chuckled
bitterly. "Unfortunately, he had a powerful father."
"I thought as much." Davyd sounded triumphant. "You're
a duelist."
Arcole nodded gravely. "And you?"
"A thief," Davyd said.
Arcole frowned as if this news did not please him and looked to
Flysse. "And what was your crime, Mistress Cobal?"
"She struck a lieutenant in the God's Militia," Davyd
answered for her. "He tried to seduce her and she broke his
nose, and most of his teeth."
Flysse saw Arcole duck his head approvingly, then turn a bright smile
on her. "Then you've my congratulations, mistress. Such an act
deserves applause."
Flysse could not help but smile back, even as she felt her cheeks
grow warm.
"You're not from Evander," Davyd said.
"No, I come from the Levan," Arcole replied.
"And," Davyd began, then halted as the doors opened again
and Militiamen appeared, framed in afternoon sunlight, a captain at
their head.
"On your feet!" the captain shouted. "You're
Salvation-bound."
9—The Die Is Cast
Throughout the Council, Morrhyn felt a niggling doubt tug at his
mind. He wondered at Chakthi's expression: it seemed to him sly, and
he did not understand why the Tachyn akaman drew out the debate.
Surely the vital question was the People's response to Colun's
alarming news, not the trivial matters Chakthi brought up. What could
grazing rights and disputed boundaries count against the possibility
of impending invasion? It was as if the Tachyn would have the Council
sit longer than any there cared for. And why was Vachyr not in his
usual position, behind his father? He sensed the rest growing wearied
with the seemingly endless procession of petty matters, but—conscious
of the delicate balance of allegiances—said nothing.
It was plump Yazte, in the end, who said what was in all their minds.
He raised a hand as Chakthi waxed loquacious on the subject of a
stream that boundaried the Tachyn grass and asked bluntly, "Can
this not wait? The Maker knows, but we've larger decisions to take,
and much to ponder."
Chakthi said, "I'd have these smaller matters settled that they
not trouble us when we come to these greater things."
To which Yazte replied, "And I'd find my bed. My ears ache with
all this talking, and I'd speak privately with Kahteney. Remember,
the wakanishas would sit in Dream Council on the morrow."
"Yes, I remember." Chakthi nodded, his smile unctuous. "So
surely better no little troubles disturb their concentration."
Yazte snorted, shaking his round head, and looked to Racharran for
support.
The Commacht akaman shrugged, diplomatic, not wishing to offend
Chakthi.
Yazte frowned and turned to Juh. "How say you, brother? Do you
not grow weary?"
Juh smiled his ancient smile and lowered his head. "It is not
for me to bid my brother silent," he said, "but I think we
might set aside these lesser things."
"Do we vote on it?" asked Tahdase.
Yazte said, "I vote for sleep. I say we leave all lesser matters
for another day."
Juh nodded and raised a hand in agreement, soon followed by Tahdase.
Racharran raised his hand. Hadduth whispered in Chakthi's ear and the
Tachyn akaman smiled and said, "So be it." Morrhyn hid a
frown: he sensed something went on here that he could not interpret.
He quit the Council at Racharran's side. Lhyn emerged from the crowd
to join her husband, and Colun walked with them.
The Grannach was grumpy. "My belly aches for want of
sustenance," he complained. "And a pitcher of tiswin would
not go amiss."
Lhyn laughed and promised him both Racharran said, "Chakthi does
not usually speak so much. I wonder what oiled his tongue this
night."
"There was something about him." Morrhyn shook his head,
perplexed. "As if he and Hadduth shared some secret. Nor was
Vachyr present."
"No." Racharran's eyes narrowed in sudden suspicion and he
looked to his wife. "Rannach quit the fires soon after Colun
spoke. Have you seen him?"
She said, "I suspect our son was eager to return to his bride.
Like any new-wed young man."
"Perhaps." Racharran nodded. They came amongst the Commacht
tents and he looked to where Rannach's lodge was pitched. The moon
was bright, the tent a shadow on the grass, faint firelight visible
at the entrance. A grunt escaped his lips and he said, "His
horse is gone, and Arrhyna's."
Morrhyn suddenly felt all his doubts knot tight in his belly.
Lhyn said, "Likely they ride under the moon," and jabbed an
elbow against her husband's ribs. "Once you had such romantic
notions."
Racharran frowned, ignoring the sally.
Mournfully, Colun asked, "Does this mean I go hungry?"
"No." Lhyn favored her husband with a disapproving glance.
'Do you and I go on, and I'll see that belly of yours filled. My
suspicious husband will meanwhile go skulk about our son's lodge—and
we'll laugh at his blushes when he returns."
"And tiswin?" Colun demanded.
"And tiswin," Lhyn confirmed. She pushed Racharran forward.
"Shall you embarrass yourself, husband? Or shall you leave them
be?"
Racharran, not looking at her, said, "Feed Colun; all well, I'll
join you soon. Morrhyn?"
Akaman and wakanisha crossed the open ground to the lodge. As he saw
the unlaced entry flap, Morrhyn groaned. Racharran cursed,
shouldering the flap aside to enter. The interior elicited a louder,
fiercer oath.
This, Morrhyn thought with dreadful realization, is why Chakthi
delayed us so long. To give his Maker-cursed son time. Damn them
both! He snatched at Racharran's arm as the akaman moved away.
"No, you cannot! Think on it—even is Vachyr gone, what
proof have we he'd anything to do with this? Shall you accuse Chakthi
without clear proof?"
"Think you this is not his work?" Racharran demanded.
"I think it is." Morrhyn set himself before his akaman like
a man facing an angry bull buffalo, he thought. He set his hands
against Racharran's shoulders. "But even so, we've no proof."
"What proof do we need?" Racharran pushed against the
wakanisha. "Shall we wait for Rannach to bring him back across
his saddle?"
"Is he alive, then yes," Morrhyn cried. "Pray for
that. Do you go storming through the Tachyn lodges now, you only give
Chakthi cause for greater insult, and legitimate!"
For a while Racharran stood rigid, straining against Morrhyn. Then he
slumped, the tension leaving his frame. He nodded wearily. "We're
caught, no?" He raised his face to the moonlit sky as if in
supplication. "Oh, by the Maker! Had Rannach only listened,
found some other bride … "
"But he did not," Morrhyn said. "He found Arrhyna and
wed her, with the blessing of the Council. Has Vachyr stolen, her,
then he stands condemned before all the Matakwa."
"Does he live to be condemned." Planed by the moonlight,
Racharran's face was haggard. "But does Rannach slay him within
the boundaries of the Meeting Ground, then it shall be my son who
stands condemned."
Morrhyn said, "He gave his word."
A barking laugh escaped Racharran's tight-drawn mouth. "Did some
wife-stealer take Lhyn, think you
I'd remember such a promise
when I faced him? Would you?"
Almost, Morrhyn said no, but he held that back and instead said,
"Then the Maker grant Rannach remembers."
They were blooded warriors, accustomed to the hunt and—sometimes—clan
warfare. They could read a trail and, with the Maker's blessing,
outguess their quarry. But those skills were also Vachyr's, and he
could ride hard and fast, thinking only of escape and the obscuration
of his spoor, while they must seek out his tracks by night, and
ensure which were his and which those of other riders. With all the
People come to Matakwa, the country around the Meeting Ground was
busy with trails: they must ride slower, and carefully, lest they
lose the sign.
"Ach!" Bakaan rose from his examination of the trampled
grass and swept out an arm, indicating the profusion of tracks. "I'd
guess a party of Tachyn came to meet him, then scattered two by two."
Hadustan leaned from his saddle, scanning the ground. "All two
by two," he murmured. "And look." He pointed to the
dung piles littering the area. "They waited for him."
"Chakthi's hand!" Rannach said it like a curse. "His
father must have aided him, sent warriors out to hide his trail."
"Then," said Zhy, "it was all planned in advance. And
it might be," he surveyed the tracks, "they join later, and
we face … what? Two hands of warriors?"
Bakaan asked, "Do you say we turn back?"
"No." Zhy shook his head. "Only that we ride
cautious."
"Ten warriors are too many." Rannach held the stallion in
check as the animal pranced, sensing his urgency. "The absence
of ten warriors from the Council would be noticed."
"How so," Zhy asked, "amongst so many?" Rannach
thought a moment, then: "Chakthi would not give such a task to
any save his most trusted men. And I saw none of those absent from
the Council fires."
Bakaan asked, "What do you tell us?"
Under the moon's light it was hard to decide whether Ran-nach snarled
or frowned. Perhaps it was both; he said, "That earlier this day
Chakthi sent men out to hide his son's tracks. They gathered here, as
if meeting Vachyr, then rode out in pairs in different directions.
Vachyr came here and rode on, thinking to confuse any pursuit."
He dropped from the saddle, tossing the stallion's rein to Bakaan as
he walked an impatient circle around the hoof-marked ground.
"See? These are older; harder." He stooped, fingers
delicate as they probed the prints. He checked them all, then:
"These, they're more recent. And one animal has smaller
hooves—like Arrhyna's mare." He pointed northward. "Vachyr
goes that way."
Bakaan asked, "You're sure?"
Rannach said, "I pray the Maker I am."
He leapt astride the stallion and heeled the big horse into the
night.
Lhyn was unhappy with Racharran's decision, and her displeasure
encompassed Morrhyn. He cringed under her frown.
"Alone?" She expressed her anger with the spoon, ladling
stew into their bowls hard enough they must clutch the platters
two-handed, lest gravy splatter them. "You send no senior
warriors after him? To … protect him? Or prevent him from
slayingVachyr?"
Colun, already emptying his second bowl and his second pitcher of
tiswin, beamed and said, "He's a warrior, no? He's my old
friend's son—he'll come to no harm."
"Be quiet!" Lhyn withered the Grannach leader with a single
furious glance. "Eat, and drink your tiswin, and hold your
tongue. This is my son we speak of."
Colun belched and shrugged. "Forgive me," he said, and
filled his cup.
"I've explained it, no?" Racharran looked to the wakanisha
for support. "It's as Morrhyn says—do I send riders out,
then Chakthi can claim I took a hand in whatever happens."
"And is Rannach slain?" Lhyn asked. "Or he slays
Vachyr? What then?"
"Does he slay Vachyr," Racharran said, "then likely we
shall have war with the Tachyn when we need peace, alliance against
these invaders. I think that Chakthi planned this well."
Lhyn settled by the fire, and when she spoke her voice was no cooler
than the flames. "And is our son killed?"
Morrhyn ventured an opinion. "He is not alone," he said.
"Those comrades of his ride with him—Bakaan and the other
two, Hadustan and Zhy."
"And has Chakthi sent warriors to halt them?"
Was this, Morrhyn wondered, what marriage was like? Was it this
furious exchange of views? Did the presence of children bring forth
such differences? He thought how difficult it must be for Racharran:
father and akaman of the clan, both.
He said, "I doubt Chakthi risks that."
Lhyn stared at him and he thought of lions.
He said, "I think that Chakthi agreed this with Vachyr, but
would not risk sending others. I think that Vachyr rides alone,
whilst Rannach has his companions."
"And shall likely slay Vachyr," Lhyn said, granting him no
release. "And stand condemned for breaking the Matakwa truce."
Morrhyn lowered his face: it was hard to meet the burning of her
eyes.
Racharran said, "Does it come to that, then surely the Council
will understand. By the Maker, Vachyr stole our son's bride! He must
be condemned."
"And we Commacht," Lhyn said coldly, "then find
ourselves at war with the Tachyn. Which you, my husband, and you"—her
icy gaze took in Morrhyn—"say that is what we must avoid
at all costs."
"There is no other way." Racharran's voice sounded empty,
bereft. "It's as we say—Chakthi's tied our hands."
"Oh, Chakthi's clever." Her answer was a snort of contempt
that gathered in her husband and Morrhyn and Chakthi in one maternal
basket. "He's tied your hands, eh? And does Vachyr slay our
son?"
Morrhyn sympathized with Racharran even as he felt grateful that that
question was directed at the akaman. He knew what he wished his
answer should be, and what it must be. He fixed his eyes on the fire
as Racharran spoke. He thought he could not bear to look at either
face, the father's or the mother's.
"Then I must go before the Council and demand Vachyr be
condemned as a bride-thief and a murderer." Racharran's voice
reminded Morrhyn that they were none of them any longer young: it was
the voice of years, weighted with responsibility. "But I must
also remember that I am akaman of the Commacht; and that our clan—and
all the People—face an unknown threat."
"And our son?" Lhyn asked.
"Is one man," Racharran said. "The Maker help me, but
does it come to it, I must sacrifice him."
"Our son?" she demanded.
Her husband ducked his head. As if, Morrhyn thought, a terrible dread
hand pressed it down in rueful acceptance.
As Racharran said "Yes," Coiun belched noisily and pitched
sideways over the furs, spilling the dregs of his tiswin.
The tracks went north into the stones of the foothills, moon bleached
the pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain the color of old bone. The
timber spanning the long legs of rock disgorged owls that hooted soft
protest at their passage. The needles the trees dropped were soft and
resilient, not given to the, holding of tracks—the bride-thief
was not stupid.
Nor were the hunters.
There were always signs to be read: a twisted branch, a scarred root,
a place where water oozed and held the spoor. They followed: up into
the wide spurs where the rock shone white under the moon and only the
gravel drift below afforded mark of hoof-passage. Along ravines where
turned stones guided them, lit blue and black by the silent moon. Up
and around, along a wide circle that as dawn came on fell into a line
moving south and east, skirting the Meeting Ground; likely to
traverse the boundary of the Commacht and the Tachyn gras before
moving onto the safer ground of Vachyr's own clan.
Rannach pushed them hard, allowing but a single halt to rest and
water the horses, riding through the night as if demons bayed at his
heels.
In time, the eastern horizon shone pink as the heart of a
river-washed mussel shell, and the moon faded reluctantly behind the
mountains. The landscape ahead glowed gold and red as the sun came
up, chasing herds of white clouds across the paling sky. Birds rose
in chorus of the dawn and insects joined their song.
The tracks turned eastward, and showed the tired signs of weary
horses.
Bakaan said, "Soon; he's slowing."
Rannach hefted his lance, the Grannach blade sparking sunlight in
glittering shards against the morning. "Yes, soon."
It was the voice of a questing wolf, scenting prey.
Bakaan said, "Remember your promise."
"To Arrhyna?" Rannach spoke harshly. "Or to my
father?"
Bakaan shrugged. "Better alive, eh? That he face the humiliation
… "
Rannach looked into his friend's eyes and offered no answer.
Hadustan said, "He's not running for the Tachyn grass. Look."
He angled his lance in the direction of the tracks glistening dewy in
the rising sun. They went toward a dense stand of pine and maple that
shone dark green in the burgeoning light. "I think he looks to
lose us there, but if we ride hard around … "
"We might lose his trail," Rannach said.
"Or get ahead of him," Hadustan answered.
Rannach said, "He might double back, and then we lose him."
Bakaan said, "This is your hunt, brother; it's your decision,
but I believe Hadustan is right."
Rannach's hands flexed indecisive on lance and rein. His head dropped
as he thought, chin resting awhile against his chest before he looked
up and said, "We ride for the wood. It might be Vachyr watches
us. So … "He thought a moment longer; then said, "It's
not so large a wood, eh? So—Bakaan, do you patrol this side in
case he does double back; Zhy and Hadustan, you ride the edges. I'll
go around."
"And if we find him?" Zhy asked. "Remember, we're
still within the Meeting Ground."
"Take Arrhyna from him!" Rannach's voice was the snarl of
an outraged lion. "How, I don't care. Only take her back."
Zhy said, "I doubt he'll give her up easy."
"Do we find him," Hadustan said, "then we'll ask him
gently to release her. And if he refuses, well … " He raised
his lance, turning the pole so that the blade caught sunlight.
"Does it come to that," Rannach declared, "the crime
is mine. I take responsibility."
Bakaan said, "We'd not let you do that, brother."
"Does Vachyr fall to me, I want to boast his slaying,"
Hadustan said.
Rannach shook his head, slower now, and smiled. "I could not ask
for finer friends, or better brothers. But is there payment to be
made, then I claim it. You agree?"
"Time passes." Zhy glanced skyward. "Do we ride, or
sit here talking?"
Rannach said, "We ride!" And heeled the stallion onward.
Morning came warm, shifting transitory with the moods of this New
Grass Moon: one day chill, the next like summer. Morrhyn stepped from
his lodge with the sun on his face and stared up into a sky all
decked with drifting billows of white cloud, like snow-colored
buffalo charging across the blue. The only birds he saw were the
crows that gathered annually about the Meeting Ground: none
ill-omened, nor had he dreamed. He had sunk weary into his furs, to
wake hoping Vachyr and Rannach both lived, and there be no cause for
war between the Commacht and the Tachyn.
O, Maker, he asked as he looked toward the Mountain, Might it not be
so? Could you not intercede and stay their hands, their anger?
He did not anticipate an answer. The Maker moved mysterious; and did
the deity hear, then the reply would come in kind, not plain words.
The wakanisha sighed and spat into the grass, and settled to the
preparation of his breakfast. He thought he could not expect Lhyn's
hospitality this morning.
Rannach held the stallion to a gallop around the edgewoods. His
companions rode slower behind him, and as he left them behind he told
himself they must be right. Hadustan's guess must be correct. The
Tachyn grass lay that way and the Maker-cursed wife-thief would run
for that safety. He'd not dare risk the Meeting Ground, not with a
stolen bride.
Rannach felt the pulsing of the stallion's brave heart between his
legs. It matched the pulsing of his own. The blood ran hot and heavy
in his head, dispelling hunger and lack of sleep. He knew only
desperate hope and the heat of anger. The promises made to his father
were forgotten: his wife was stolen—a crime demanding
blood-payment.
He rounded the wood as the sun touched its midmorning point, and
eased the tired stallion to a halt. Not far off, the grass ran smooth
and green to the banks of a river that sparkled blue and silver.
Willows bowed over the water and herons waded there, and from the
timber, crows rose in raucous chorus. Rannach scanned the wood and
turned his horse toward the stream. He walked the animal until the
beast was cooled and no longer panting, all the while praying he not
be wrong, that Vachyr
should appear. Then he watered the
horse, even knelt and slaked his own thirst; splashed water on his
face and told himself that if he could, he would try to leave Vachyr
alive.
It should not be easy, not after what Vachyr had done. But if it were
possible … Yes, perhaps even better than killing him, to bring him
back captive, slung shamed over the saddle of his own horse, to face
the condemnation of the Matakwa—of all the People. To see
Vachyr and his father both condemned. That, and keep his promise to
Racharran.
Save only Vachyr had not harmed Arrhyna: that he could not tolerate.
He swung into the saddle and walked the stallion back i toward the
wood.
The crows were not rising now in morning's flight. They came in
waves, first from their central roosting, then closer, as if riders
disturbed them. Rannach hefted his lance, fixed his shield firmer
about his left arm, and faced the timber.
Vachyr came out. He rode a chestnut gelding that moved tired. He held
a lead rein in his left hand, attached to Arrhyna's piebald mare.
Rannach's wife lay across the saddle, her hands and feet lashed firm,
her auburn hair spilled loose about her face, so that Rannach could
not see it.
He raised his lance and shouted, "Ho! Wife-stealer!"
Vachyr halted. He looked weary, and angry. Long scratches ran down
both his cheeks. He let go the lead rein and allowed Arrhyna's
piebald to walk toward the water.
"So, you found me."
Rannach said, "Yes. And now I am going to take you back—so
all the People see what you are."
Vachyr smiled an ugly smile and said, "And also tell them what
I've done to your wife. Shall you be proud of that?"
Rannach looked at the mare as she passed him. Arrhyna groaned and
raised her head, the curtaining hair parting so that he saw the
bruises decorating her face. She said, "Kill him," through
swollen lips.
"I've had her," Vachyr shouted. "Last night I took
her!"
Rannach watched the piebald mare go by. Then he vaulted from the
saddle and ran to halt the horse. He cut Arrhyna's bonds and eased
her to the ground. The horse walked free as he cradled his bride in
his arms. He stroked her face, easing her hair away. It was painful
to look at the bruises.
Arrhyna said, "I fought him. In the Maker's name, I swear I
fought him!"
Rannach said, "I know. He dies for this." All thoughts of
returning Vachyr alive were forgotten, burned away in the heat of his
rage. He vaulted astride the bay and couched his lance.
Vachyr laughed and said, "Remember, we're not off the Meeting
Ground yet."
Rannach shouted back: "Fight or die!"
Vachyr answered: "Do you harm me, you shall be condemned for
shedding blood at Matakwa. Can you bring me back alive, then your
wife faces disgrace. Listen! Let me go and I'll say nothing of the
pleasure I took of her. How say you?"
Rannach glanced at Arrhyna. Her lips moved, and though he could not
hear what she said through the pounding of the blood in his head, he
recognized the words she shaped: "Kill him!"
He shouted, "Yes!" and heeled the stallion to the charge.
Vachyr brought his shield across his chest, leveled his lance. The
bay gelding sprang forward as he drove his heels against its ribs.
Both horses were battle-trained: they attained their full pace in
instants. Both men were warriors: they steered their mounts with
knees and heels, shields protective, lances poised to strike.
They came together and Rannach caught Vachyr's lance on his shield,
turning it up and away as his own drove at the Tachyn's belly. Vachyr
twisted sideways in his saddle, using his shield to deflect the
thrust. Rannach's lance scored a bloody line across his ribs and he
was pitched sideways across his horse.
Momentum carried them apart; both hauled their mounts around to
charge again.
Rannach's lance took Vachyr in the groin. He felt the Tachyn's pierce
his shield and ride up fiery across his shoulder. It was a distant
sensation: he was entirely concentrated on Vachyr's face, which split
in a wide and awful grin. He saw Vachyr lifted from the saddle,
spilled backward off the gelding even as he seemed to slide along the
length of the lance; it protruded from his back. Rannach went by and
turned the pole, depositing Vachyr on the grass.
He swung the stallion around.
Vachyr rested on hands and knees. His breeches and the ground between
his legs was dark. His head hung down, and he blew like a wounded
buffalo. Long streamers of bloody spittle hung from his mouth.
Rannach shouted, "Look at me!" And when Vachyr's head
slowly rose, "For Arrhyna!"
He charged and drove his lance through Vachyr's chest, leaving the
Tachyn pinned like a bug to the grass.
He came out of the saddle before the stallion halted, leaping down to
clutch Arrhyna in his arms and stroke her hair, her damaged face. He
held her gently, afraid of giving further hurt.
She said, "I am spoiled, husband."
He shook his head and said, "No! Not in my eyes."
She put her arms around him, nestling into his embrace and, against
his chest, said, "He forced me."
Rannach said, "His sin, not yours."
"And what shall you tell the Council? When the Matakwa asks
about this?"
"That Vachyr stole you," he said, "and rode away with
you. And that I slew him for that."
"On the grass of the Meeting Ground?"
She raised her head to look into his eyes. When he saw the bruises
again, it was hard to hold back the tears, but he nodded and said,
"Yes. And am I condemned for that, it shall be worth it—to
have you back."
"I must tell them," she said, "that all the People
know why you slew him."
Rannach hesitated an instant—there was pride, disapprobation to
be considered, gossip—then he smiled and said, "All that
matters to me is that I have you back. Must you speak of what
transpired, then so be it. But I do not ask you to do that. You need
say only that Vachyr stole you, and I won you back. That is all that
matters to me."
Arrhyna looked a long time into his eyes. Then she said, "I am
fortunate in my husband."
Rannach shrugged and smiled and said, "No less than I in my
wife."
10—Of Things to Come
Morrhyn chewed on the pahe root, his gums and tongue numbing as the
drug took effect. He saw Hazhe reach out to toss a scoop of water
over the coals, and it was as if the Aparhaso Dreamer moved in slow
motion, the rising steam billowing no faster than a lazy cloud in the
summer sky. Hazhe caught his eye and smiled solemnly, his gray head
nodding in decorous rhythm. Morrhyn smiled back and rested against
the hide-covered frame, letting his gaze rove—slowly—about
the Dream Lodge.
The sides of the wa'tenhya glowed in the morning sun and fragrant
steam hung misty about the interior. Kahteney lounged to Morrhyn's
right, his eyes already fogged, mouth gone slack. On Morrhyn's left,
Isten beamed; past him, Hazhe went on nodding. Across the seething
coals Hadduth sat with closed eyes. Morrhyn wondered how much the
Tachyn wakanisha knew of Arrhyna's kidnap, how much was his design.
He thought it likely Chakthi's idea, but probably embellished by
Hadduth. He thought that sooner or later—inevitably—there
must be a confrontation; as he had warned Racharran, it had been
planned cleverly, leaving no opportunity for accusation without
insult.
Then he felt the numbness in his mouth spread out through his skull,
encompassing his mind so that he fell back, his eyes wide and blank,
incapable of closing as they stared at the unfolding images of the
dream he now shared with all the wakanishas of the Matawaye.
Racharran sat with Colun outside the akaman's lodge. The Grannach was
entirely recovered from his drunkenness—a recuperative ability
Racharran envied—and sat cross-legged before the six of the
folk he had brought with him, all eager to speak of their experiences
with the strangeling invaders. Lhyn, not yet ready to forgive her
husband, bustled within the tent, emerging to shake blankets or comb
furs with sidelong glances of disapprobation at the men.
Racharran maintained a dignified, if somewhat nervous, expression. It
was not easy: he worried no less than Lhyn about their son. Often, as
his clan came to speak with him of Colun's news and the deliberations
of the Council, he thought that it were better he go to Chakthi and
plead with the Tachyn akaman for peace, for unity. But he doubted
Chakthi would listen, nor could he quite bring himself to go
supplicant to a man he despised.
So he sat and listened to the folk of his clan, told them what he
knew and what he believed, and watched them hear out Colun and his
Grannach, then walk away, knowing they should come back to express
their opinions, that he take back the decision of all the Commacht to
the Council.
He looked to where the Dream Lodge was pitched on a shelf of stone
above the Meeting Ground. It was set apart that the wakanishas not be
disturbed, close to the flank of the Maker's Mountain, where
wide-limbed cedars shaded the grass and the pinnacle of the holy
Mountain rose above.
He wondered what they dreamed with the pahe in them and what answers
they would bring out from the wa'tenhya. He felt afraid.
There was fire, and dread riders on beasts that stamped flame from
the grass, fanged jaws clacking in anticipation of prey. They were
unknown and horrid, but their masters were worse. They rode in
rainbow colors that should have been beautiful but were not: were,
rather, malign as a cyclone-spoiled sky, like once-bright flesh
decayed and spoiled. They carried poles on which skulls rattled,
those empty sockets no less empty than the bearers' eyes. Mouths
opened in soundless laughter and shrieks of triumph, all proclaiming
the same awful challenge: "We come!"
Before them stood a mountain wall Morrhyn did not recognize but
nonetheless knew to be the farther side of those peaks that ringed
Ket-Ta-Witko, seen as once the Whaztaye must have seen them. There
were no Whaztaye in the dream, only the strangelings who came on
inexorable, like a brilliant, dreadful tide, closer and closer to the
hills.
Morrhyn shuddered in his trance. He wished to wake—this vision
awed and terrified him—but knew he must not, that he must
suffer the images and glean from them what knowledge he might for the
sake of all the People. He knew that sweat beaded his face: it was
chill as the wind in the Frozen Grass Moon and hot as the sun in the
Moon of Ripe Berries. He felt afraid.
Rannach wound Vachyr's body in the Tachyn's blanket as Arrhyna
bathed. He wondered what should happen when he brought the corpse
back to the Meeting Ground, and found it hard to care. He had got
back his bride, and he had slain Vachyr in honest battle. How could
he be blamed? Was he accused of truce-breaking, surely the Matakwa
must understand: Vachyr had stolen his wife. Surely that was the
greater sin.
He waited until Arrhyna was done with her bathing and then loaded the
body across Vachyr's horse. He helped Arrhyna into her saddle and
climbed astride his stallion.
Arrhyna said, as he took up the rein of Vachyr's animal, "Do you
want to do this? Do you want to go back? You had best be sure,
husband."
Rannach said, "As I told you, yes. But you need not say
anything."
"Still, he did what he did."
"Do you love me?" Rannach said.
Arrhyna said, "Yes. More than life."
"Then it does not matter what he did. Only that you love me, and
I you."
Arrhyna smiled. Rannach heeled his stallion, Vachyr's bay gelding
snorted protest at the weight of the body, and they rode toward the
wood.
"I cannot doubt the word of the Grannach." Racharran
gestured at the squat folk seated around him. "Does Colun say
the Whaztaye are slain, then I'd not gainsay him. It is my belief
that such folk as might broach the gate are come; it is my belief we
should prepare. But you must make up your own mind. Speak with the
Grannach, if you wish; and tell me later what you'd have me do."
Zeil nodded and said, "Yes, that's wise. Chakthi would not speak
so openly."
Racharran said, harsher than he intended, "I am not Chakthi."
Zeil said, "No, and I thank you again for accepting me into your
clan. You've news of our daughter?"
"No." Racharran shook his head. "Only what you
know—that she was taken and Rannach went after her. You shall
know as soon as I when news comes."
"Thank you." Zeil ducked his head.
Racharran sighed and looked to where Lhyn busied herself with the
fire. The day aged now, the descending sun hurling red light against
the slopes of the Maker's Mountain. Eastward, the moon rose into a
swath of gentian blue, like a teardrop on a blanket. Crows roostered
loud and heavy-winged herons flapped homeward. The Meeting Ground was
hung over with the smoke of cookfires, the air redolent of roasting
meat, loud with the sound of the People. All of it as it should be,
and always had been, save that …
Save that he sat with Grannach, who brought alarming news.
Save that the wakanishas still sat up there in their Dream Lodge.
Save that his son was gone, likely to slay Vachyr and deliver the
Commacht to war.
Save that his wife ignored him …
He rose and went to where Lhyn sat by the fire, motioning that Colun
remain. Let the Grannach answer awkward questions for a while.
"I ask your forgiveness," he said, and—warily—set
a hand on her shoulder. "I'd not … He shrugged, unsure what he
should say, what she might answer. "I'd not see our son hurt,
but … "
Lhyn said, "I know," and turned toward him. "I was
angry. That Rannach suffer … "
"He might still," Racharran said.
"Yes." She turned farther, so that she moved into the
compass of his arm, leaning her head against his chest. "But you
are akaman of the Commacht, and must think of all the clan. I thought
only of our son."
Racharran said softly, "Yes. I wish it were not so."
"But it is," Lhyn said, and smiled for the first time that
day. "Now go do your duty, eh?"
Racharran brushed his lips against her cheek and thanked the Maker
for so understanding a wife, then went back to speak with his people.
It was impossible to reach agreement. Each wakanisha had shared the
dream, and none doubted it was a true dream, but as to its
interpretation, what it portended for the People, there was only
discord.
Hadduth insisted the invaders must remain beyond the mountains, that
the fate of the Whaztaye was none of the People's affair, that likely
the western folk had somehow offended the Maker and suffered
consequent punishment. To believe these creatures might broach the
gate was, he suggested with a veiled glance at Morrhyn, an insult to
the Maker, whose wards must surely hold the People free from harm.
Better, he claimed, to set their trust in the Maker and do nothing.
Isten supported him. It was a subtle argument, and the Naiche Dreamer
was naturally cautious.
Morrhyn disavowed the suggestion of blasphemy and struggled to
conceal his contempt of Hadduth. The Grannach had brought this news,
he pointed out, and had fought the invaders, and surely none would
question the integrity of the Stone Folk. Did these strangelings come
against Ket-Ta-Witko, he said, then would their presence not be an
affront to the Maker? Would it not be the duty of all the People to
deny them?
Kahteney voiced his agreement, adding his suggestion that any
prevarication might well be considered dereliction of the Matawaye's
duty to the Maker, and surely a betrayal of their Grannach friends.
Morrhyn looked to Hazhe, who had not yet spoken, but only listened.
The Aparhaso Dreamer nodded gravely and declared that the dream had
provided much food for thought, but no obvious answers. They needed,
he said, more time to ponder the import of the vision.
It was the only agreement the Dreamers could reach.
Full dark had fallen by the time they emerged from the wa'tenhya and
walked down the mountainside to their respective clans, and Morrhyn
felt a weariness upon him that was sour with his certainty that the
future must find the People unprepared.
11—Homecoming and Accusal
It was dusk before Rannach found all his comrades again.
Hadustan was the first, his face a mirror of Zhy's and Bakaan's when
they saw Arrhyna and the body slung across the bay gelding, their
words neither so different: "Sister, it is good to see you
safe," and "You slew him, then, brother," and "I
wish I'd seen that fight." Carefully, not one of them commented
on Arrhyna's bruises other than to ask was she well, or wondered
aloud on the time she had spent with Vachyr. It was as if they all
recognized a step had been taken that must likelynaffect all their
futures, and left it to Rannach to say where the trail might lead
them.
They made camp close to the edgewood, Vachyr's body left wrapped a
Little distance off. None spoke of the morrow, but only ate and
slept, and wondered at the Council's reaction.
The horses were wearied from the chase and Rannach set an easy pace
on the return. None, anyway, were overly eager to face the Chiefs'
Council. The strictures of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko had been broken and,
no matter the cause, some punishment would surely be assigned them.
His comrades unaware, Rannach had made himself a promise that he
would take full responsibility: he, after all, was the one who had
slain Vachyr. He thought none could blame Arrhyna, but Bakaan and the
others would surely earn Chakthi's anger, and the Tachyn akaman seek
to encompass them in his demands for retribution. When they came
before the Council, Rannach had decided, he would endeavor to deflect
that vengeful temper, draw it to himself alone. He glanced back to
where the chestnut gelding bore its carrion bundle and thanked the
Maker the season was not so warm the flies came out. Vachyr had been
obnoxious enough alive; even dead he caused trouble.
The New Grass Moon was full when they came in sight of the Meeting
Ground, and close to its apex. It shone serene from a cloudless sky,
bathing the flanks of the Maker's Mountain in light the color of
bone, washing over the lodges that spread like sleeping buffalo
across the grass. The camp was oddly silent, the central fires
sending up a glow that spoke of long debate, attended by all the
Matawaye. Talk of Colun's news, Rannach thought, and what conclusions
the Dream Council had reached, the People's response. He wondered how
his arrival would affect the debate.
They halted on the edge of the Commacht camp and Rannach saw that
they waited on his word.
"I'd have this done," he said. "Do we see to our
horses and then … " He looked to where the fireglow lit the
sky. "Do you meet me at my lodge?"
Bakaan nodded, unspeaking, and walked his mount away, followed by
Hadustan and Zhy. Rannach and Arrhyna went to their tent. The entry
flap was laced shut, and when they looked inside they saw the
interior restored to order, even the fire low-banked in anticipation
of their return.
Sotly, Arrhyna said, "Lhyn's work."
Rannach nodded and said, "You need not witness this. You could
stay here."
Arrhyna shook her head. "I am part of it, no? And I am your
wife. What is done to you is done to me."
Rannach said, "There will be hard words spoken. It shall likely
be ugly."
Arrhyna shrugged.
He asked, "Do you wish to change? To tidy yourself?"
"No." She looked him in the eye. "Let the People see
what Vachyr did."
He said, "As you wish," and picketed their horses.
He shed his weapons, and they waited awhile until the others came.
All looked grave now, the laughter and the boasting of their return
forgotten in face of the imminent future.
"So." Rannach took up the halter of Vachyr's horse. "Do
we go?"
Arrhyna fell into step at his side, and they made their way through
the Commacht tents, watched silently by the old ones who remained to
tend sleeping children. They crossed the stream and paced the
gauntlet of the Tachyn lodges, to where the Council sat.
Folk parted at their approach and a buzzing murmur went through the
crowd so that before they reached the inner circle all knew they
came, and none could doubt the burden the chestnut gelding carried.
Rannach heard a shout and guessed the news reached Chakthi. He saw
his mother standing with Nemeth and Zeil, all wide-eyed. Lhyn raised
a hand as if she'd touch him but did not quite dare. He smiled at her
and ducked his head in greeting. Arrhyna said, "Thank you for
tending our lodge." And to her parents: "I am well; be
calm." Lhyn essayed a faint smile and made a helpless gesture;
Zeil put an arm about his wife's shoulders.
The senior warriors parted, ushering them through, and as they
entered the circle a tremendous silence fell.
Rannach offered the assembled akamans and wakanishas formal greeting
and into the silence said, "I ask forgiveness for this
interruption, but I deemed it best I came immediately. I have slain
Vachyr."
Yazte of the Lakanti sat closest to where he stood, and he thought he
heard the akaman murmur, "No bad news," but he could not be
sure because a second shriek from Chakthi split the night.
The Tachyn was on his feet, staring at the gelding and what it
carried. Hadduth stood close behind, his expression unreadable.
Morrhyn said, "Oh, Maker, help us now."
Rannach looked to his father and said, "I had no choice; he left
me none."
He saw Racharran's stern features cloud and stiffen, eyes a moment
closed, then staring at his son as if he looked on a stranger, or
past him to some dread future that he had sooner not envision.
Chakthi cried, "My son is killed! Blood is shed in Matakwa—I
demand vengeance."
Rannach led the horse across the circle. It shied at the fires and
Chakthi's shouts, but he held its halter tight and thrust the rein at
the Tachyn akaman.
"This is your son's horse. It bears his body. He was fairly
slain."
Chakthi stared at the proffered rein; at the blanket-wrapped bundle
across the saddle. His lips peeled back so far and wide his gums
showed pink, and from between his gritted teeth erupted a snarl akin
to a wolverine's. He sprang at Rannach with upraised hands.
Rannach stood his ground as Chakthi's fingers fastened on his throat,
and made no attempt to defend himself. Arrhyna screamed. Then Yazte
was there, and Tahdase, dragging the enraged Tachyn back, shouting
for his warriors to hold him. Rannach coughed and massaged his neck.
He wondered why Racharran sat so still.
Old Juh, his wrinkled face sear with shock, rose to his feet and
spread his arms wide. "Hold, I tell you. Hold!" His voice
was harsh from speaking and creaky with age, but still it carried.
"Let there be no more violence. Not here! Already there is
enough."
Yazte and Tahdase handed Chakthi to his liegemen, who held him
nervously as Hadduth spoke urgently in his ear. The Lakanti and the
Naiche stood waiting, until Chakthi was calmed somewhat. He loosed
the fastenings on the blanket and stared at his son's dead face,
touched it, then handed the rein to a warrior who led the horse away.
Yazte and Tahdase resumed their places; Chakthi was slower to sit.
His eyes burned like coals in the night of his face, locked firm on
Rannach.
Juh said, "I think we must set aside all other matters for now,
and speak of … " He hesitated, distaste etched into his frown.
"Of this other matter. It is a very grave thing, this."
Chakthi said, "It is a breaking of the law, of the Will!"
His voice was harsh. "My son is murdered in Matakwa. His blood
is shed—and blood calls for blood!"
Racharran spoke for the first time: "Not murdered." He
stared stone-faced at the Tachyn akaman, then glanced at Rannach.
"Slain fairly, my son says."
"Your son!" Chakthi made the words an insult. "Vachyr
is murdered;
your son lives."
Racharran's mouth tightened. Morrhyn touched his elbow and spoke too
softly for Rannach to hear. The Commacht akaman turned to Juh, to
Tahdase and Yazte. "Do we hear from all those concerned, that
all this picture be drawn clear?"
Yazte said swiftly and loudly, "Yes! We need hear all of it."
Tahdase ducked his head, his eyes darting about like those of a man
frightened by his responsibilities and seeking guidance.
Juh said, "I agree. Chakthi, my brother, I mourn your loss; but
we must hear the full tale before any judgment is delivered."
He waited for the Tachyn's sullen nod, then turned to the four,
standing nervously now, the eyes of all the People on them. "Who
speaks first?"
Rannach said, "Vachyr stole my bride. She is innocent of any
crime; neither did my brothers have any part in Vachyr's death. I
alone slew him."
Bakaan said, "No! We are as one in this."
Juh raised a hand to silence them. "Then speak one by one."
He looked at Rannach. "Your bride was stolen?"
Rannach said, "Yes."
"Then," Juh said, "let her speak first."
Arrhyna found Rannach's hand—comfort in his firm grip—and
said, "He invited Vachyr to surrender, but Vachyr … " She
shook her head, hiding her face behind the curtain of her hair.
"Vachyr boasted of … "
Rannach drew her close, silencing her. "Vachyr would not
surrender," he said. "He … lied to me. He offered such
insults as I could not take. I lost my temper and charged him."
"Only after … " Once again Arrhyna found herself tugged
close to her husband. This time she fought free, refusing to be
silenced. "No, Rannach, let it be said clear, that all the
People understand." She held her head high, meeting the eyes of
each akaman. "I swear in the name of the Maker that what I say
is true—Vachyr took me by force from our lodge and, though I
fought him, I could not prevent him. He beat me; then and again, and
when I woke the second time he … "
She shuddered, and Rannach said, "You need not speak of this."
Arrhyna sniffed and said, "I must. The … the second time he
was on me, I fought him as best I could, but he is—was—strong,
and I was dizzy from his blows … "
When she was done, she could hear her mother weeping.
Juh leveled a finger at Rannach, who told of finding Arrhyna gone and
his determination to rescue her. Bakaan, Hadustan, and Zhy, he said,
had come only to aid him in tracking the kidnapper—their
intention to bring him back alive. He spoke of finding the trail
obscured, and locating it again, of the final meeting.
When he was finished, Juh looked to Chakthi. "This thing of the
tracks, of aid in the kidnap," he asked, "was this known to
you?"
Chakthi shook his head. "Neither that or aught of any kidnap."
He spat the words. "I say this Commacht slew my son in spite
alone."
Juh frowned. "In spite alone? Forgive me, brother, but that
makes no sense. Why should Rannach slay your son in spite? Certainly,
they vied for the woman's hand, but that was given to Rannach. Why
should he be spiteful?"
Chakthi shrugged and sneered at Arrhyna. "Perhaps this wanton
looked to share her blanket with more than one. Perhaps she seduced
my son and her husband found them together."
Arrhyna clung to Rannach's hand as he lunged forward. Racharran
shouted, "No!"
From out of the crowd Zeil bellowed, "He lies! I know my
daughter."
Almost, Arrhyna was dragged off her feet. She locked a second hand on
Rannach's hair, snatching at a braid so that his head was hauled back
and turned toward her.
"No!" she cried. "Do you not see what he attempts?"
Strong hands fell hard on Rannach's arms, and into his ear he heard
his father say, "Your wife speaks sense; heed her."
He struggled awhile, enraged, the more for Chakthi's smile, which
seemed to him triumphant. Racharran set an arm around his neck,
another on his wrist. Hoarse, he said, "Do you insult my wife
again, I'll slay you as I slew your misbegotten son."
Chakthi said loud, "Now he threatens me. He's a madman. What
would he not do?"
Yazte joined Racharran and Morrhyn, and together they fought Rannach
down.
"Boy," Racharran said as he struggled, "you do your
cause no good with this. Now calm yourself!"
Into his father's face Rannach snarled, "Would you allow my
mother insulted so?"
Racharran's face was an instant stone, then he shook his head.
Rannach was too furious to see the misting of his eyes.
"Then why," Rannach grunted, "do you grant Chakthi
such privilege?"
Racharran sighed. "There's more afoot than you understand. Trust
me."
"Trust you?" Rannach glared into his father's eyes, and for
a moment Racharran thought his son would spit in his face. "You
hear out that whoreson's insults and ask me to trust your silence?"
Pain aged the akaman at that, and he looked to Morrhyn, who said,
"Rannach! This goes past insults. All the People stand in
jeopardy, and Chakthi has some part in that pattern. Do you love the
People—do you love the Commacht and Arrhyna—then rein in
your anger and trust your father!"
Rannach still fought their hold. "Not save beside me!" His
voice was harsh as steel on stone. "Not save he stand up and
name that whoreson a liar!"
Morrhyn set a hand against his mouth: Rannach bit him.
Then a deep voice said, "Would you continue this discussion of
yours, give him to me. We'll hold him."
The Grannach were scarce half the height of a Commacht, but when one
took his arms, and Colun sat upon his legs, Rannach knew truly how
strong they were. A third squatted at his back, a hand upon his
shoulder, ready to gag him. He fought them awhile, but it was as
useless as if stone encased him. He was grateful that Arrhyna came
solicitous to sit beside him; he hated his father then, and Morrhyn
for taking his father's side. He wished he had not come back but gone
wild and renegade into the hills, anywhere there was honesty without
the seduction of whatever politics went on here. He would give his
life for the People, for his clan; but here, now, there was only
indignity and embarrassment.
Still he must listen, and did he raise his voice in protest or
argument, a grainy hand clamped hard over his mouth and he could only
gasp for breath and lie still under the imponderable weight of the
Grannach. Thus he lay and heard Bakaan speak of the pursuit, and then
Hadustan, and after him Zhy. Then he heard Chakthi deny all
involvement and suggest again that Vachyr was unfairly slain, likely
murdered by all four Commacht, that likely Arrhyna shared her favors
with all four. It was a sour tirade, and as he heard it, Rannach
vowed that someday he would slay Chakthi.
When the Tachyn was done the akamans sat awhile in silence, each
beckoning their Dreamers close. Then the younger men waited on Juh,
whose seniority gave him precedence in such matters. He studied
Arrhyna, who sat resolute beside her husband, and slowly shook his
head. "I think grief trips my brother's tongue." He spoke
carefully. "That is understandable, but not"—he
shrugged, his old eyes troubled—"hardly fair to this
woman. Were she so wanton, would Vachyr have sought to wed her? Are
there any here will attest to such promiscuity?"
From amongst the Commacht, Zeil shouted, "Only to her virtue!"
Juh motioned that Arrhyna rise and come forward. When she stood at
the center of the circle, he said, "Forgive me, I would not
question your chastity, but this must be settled clear, that there be
no misunderstanding."
Arrhyna nodded and Juh waved Hazhe forward.
The Aparhaso Dreamer rose stiffly to his feet and paced to where
Arrhyna stood. He pointed to the holy mountain and said, "We
stand in the gaze of the Maker. This is a holy place, where any who
lie must surely bring down his wrath. Do you then swear that you are
chaste?"
Arrhyna said without hesitation, "In the Maker's name, I do. I
am … Before my husband, I knew no man. Since I was wed I have known
only him. Save … " Tears rolled slowly down her cheeks;
Rannach struggled with the Grannach to go to her. "Vachyr took
me by force, and beat me until … " She looked from the
wakanisha to Chakthi. "Do you go look at his face and see the
marks I put there, fighting him'"
Hazhe declared, "I find her true."
Chakthi shouted, "I am not satisfied. She lies! This is some
Commacht device, that my son's murder go unpunished!"
There was a loudening murmur ran through the crowd then, as if bait
were tossed over water and the fish rose. Then Juh spoke again.
"This is no easy thing," he said. "There can be no
doubt a crime has been committed; indeed, two. Shall my brothers hear
my thoughts on this and then we decide what measures be taken?"
He waited until all voiced agreement, then rose and walked to the
circle's center. Firelight and moonglow cast his face like worked
stone. "First," he said, "it is my belief that Vachyr
was maddened by loss of the woman he'd have for his wife. I believe
he stole Arrhyna, the which was ill done and a heinous crime."
Chakthi's cry of "No!" went ignored, as was Yazte's
enthusiastic "Yes!"
"But wrong cannot justify wrong." For an instant, the
ancient eyes fell on Rannach. "And it cannot be argued that the
shedding of blood in Matakwa is also a crime. This is the second:
that Rannach slew Vachyr even as the Matakwa truce bound him to
peace. He scorned the Ahsa-tye-Patiko in that."
"And must die for it," Chakthi shouted.
Juh ignored this as he had ignored the other. "Two crimes,"
he said. "The one punished; the second … We must speak of
this."
He returned to his blanket, seating himself as Racharran called to be
heard.
The Commacht akaman took the speaker's place, his head a moment
lowered. Then he looked up, eyes moving slowly about the circle.
"Rannach is my son," he said, "and I do not argue that
he is headstrong, but this I swear in the name of the Maker—that
before we came to this Matakwa, where I knew he would seek Arrhyna's
hand, I had from him a promise that he would accept whatever judgment
the Council delivered in that matter, nor raise his hand against
Vachyr."
"So much for Commacht promises," Chakthi snarled.
"I trust his word," Racharran continued, "and I tell
you that what he has done he did because he had no other choice.
Would any here"—he turned around slowly, his eyes
encompassing the assembled akamans and all the crowd—"would
any here, finding their wife stolen, not go after her kidnapper?
Would any here, finding her beaten, not look to slay her taker?"
"The Ahsa-tye-Patiko!" Chakthi bellowed. "Shall we
overlook the Will? Does the law no longer matter?"
"Your son stole Arrhyna. His was the crime. Rannach did only
what any other warrior would do, in honor." Racharran let his
eyes move out over the crowd again. "Is that not true?"
Yazte was the first to answer. "Yes!" he cried, and his
shout was taken up by others until all the Meeting Ground rang loud
and roosting birds shifted nervous in the trees.
When there was silence again, Racharran said, "Then I ask that
the Council look lenient on my son. Had Vachyr not stolen Arrhyna,
there would be no crime. Let the blame be Vachyr's!"
Chakthi rose to speak, but Hadduth clutched his arm and whispered in
his ear and the Tachyn akaman fell back silent as Yazte asked to
speak.
"I am with my brother Racharran in this," the plump Lakanti
said. "That Chakthi has lost a son is a sad thing. But the crime
was Vachyr's—Rannach did no more than would I, or any
other man. I say we should not punish him."
Chakthi said, "My son is dead."
"Then let there be a blood-price agreed," said Yazte. "Let
that be settled and put aside. We've other matters to discuss."
Chakthi said, "My son's death is of no account?"
Doggedly, Yazte said, "Let the Council decide a blood-price."
"No!"
Yazte shrugged, spread his hands in exasperation, and looked to Juh,
who turned to Tahdase and asked, "Do you speak, brother?"
The young Naiche akaman whispered with Isten and then rose nervously
to his feet. "I agree that Vachyr was wrong." He glanced
swiftly around, his eyes flickering from face to face. "It
was
a crime to steal Rannach's bride, but I think it is as my brother
Juh says—wrong cannot justify wrong. And as my brother Chakthi
says—blood has been shed in Matakwa and reparation must be
made."
Chakthi said, "I call for Rannach's execution."
Racharran said, "Let the Council decide a blood-price and it
shall be paid. But how can any call for my son's death?"
Tahdase looked helplessly to Juh.
The old akaman said, "This is not a thing we may decide easily,
or swiftly. Do my brothers agree, I suggest that we speak on this.
Save … " He ducked his head at Racharran, at Chakthi. "Save
that two fathers are involved, and their loyalties are consequently
divided. I say that neither Chakthi nor Racharran have say in this,
but only we who have no part."
Tahdase nodded his agreement abruptly; Yazte glanced at Racharran
before he ducked his head.
Racharran said carefully, "So be it."
Chakthi whispered again with Hadduth, then allowed it be so.
Juh said, "Then we three shall speak on this and deliver our
decision."
Chakthi asked, "When?"
Juh sighed and said, "This Council is already long, and we've
much yet to discuss. Do we sleep tonight, and Yazte and Tahdase come
to my lodge on the morrow? The People shall know our thoughts this
next night."
Chakthi grunted his agreement, then demanded: "And the while?
Shall the murderer be guarded, or shall his father set him free?"
Racharran tensed at that slur, but held his temper checked and said
nothing.
Juh's face expressed disapproval; he looked to Racharran. "Your
word is good, brother. Shall you ward your son, that he attend our
judgment tomorrow?"
Racharran said, "I shall."
Juh said, "That's good enough for me."
Chakthi looked to argue, but again Hadduth restrained him, and he
lowered his head in curt agreement.
"Then," Juh said, "when the sun sets tomorrow, let us
all attend and this thing be settled."
The Grannach released Rannach on his father's nod. He rose and set an
arm about Arrhyna's shoulders; he felt very confused and a little
afraid. He felt he tottered on the brink of a precipice, flailing for
balance, and he was unsure whether the chasm was his death or the
love and hate—both inextricably mingled—he felt for his
father.
Racharran said, "Shall you remain?"
"Is my word still good, yes."
"Your word was always good. But you are like an unbroken horse:
it's hard to know who you'll kick next."
Warriors moved about them, shielding them, and they began to walk
toward the Commacht lodges.
Rannach said, "I thought you betrayed me. But then you spoke and
I … "
Racharran sighed and looked to the westering moon, then back to where
the pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain stood bone-white and bleak
against the sky, and said, "Do you not think I love you?"
Rannach was taken aback: he shrugged.
Racharran said, "You are my blood, my son. And you are a warrior
of the Commacht, and the clan is my blood. I need consider both: the
burden of any akaman."
Rannach frowned and said, "I slew him fair."
"I know; I never doubted that. Nor, likely, would I have done
different."
Rannach said, "Then why … ?"
Wearily, Racharran said, "Because I am akaman of the Commacht
and I must think of the clan and all the People, and things come
toward us that frighten me."
Rannach had never heard his father speak before of fear, and it
frightened him. He looked at his father's face and began to ask a
question, but Racharran raised a hand to silence him. "Not now.
Do you come home and we shall eat and drink tiswin, and then I'll
tell you."
Rannach nodded and drew Arrhyna closer, letting his father lead the
way. At least he remembered, as he saw Morrhyn sucking on his bitten
hand, to ask the wakanisha's pardon for that injury.
"No matter." Morrhyn shrugged, and Rannach thought his face
looked haunted. "It will heal. Though, by the Maker, you've
powerful teeth."
Rannach smiled at that, but could not quite summon a laugh.
Racharran's lodge was crowded. Lhyn met her son with a smile,
embracing him and Arrhyna, then the two women busied themselves at
the fire as Colun reached for the tiswin and began to pour. Racharran
turned to Morrhyn and asked that the wakanisha speak of the Dream
Council.
"You need to know this," he said to Rannach, "that you
understand why we must have peace."
His tone boded no good, and Rannach nodded and sat silent as Morrhyn
spoke. When the Dreamer was done, Racharran told of the akamans'
debate, interrupted by Rannach's return, and of his fear—and
Morrhyn's—that save the clans swear binding oaths of peace, the
People would likely fall in disarray before the invaders.
"But is this so," Rannach said when the ominous tale was
told, "then Hadduth agreed the truce, and Chakthi. How could
they do that, knowing of Vachyr's crime—likely privy to his
escape?"
"Now you show sense," Racharran said, and ruefully, "if
somewhat late in the day."
Rannach bristled. "What else should I have done? What else could
I have done? My wife was stolen!"
"Brought the matter to the Council," Racharran answered,
"that Vachyr's crime be known from the start. Had the Council
sent out riders, perhaps Vachyr might have been taken alive, and
Chakthi have no chance to accuse you."
Rannach met his father's eyes awhile and then lowered his head. "I
did not think," he said slowly. "I knew only that Arrhyna
was taken and I must go after her."
"And now," Racharran said, "there's a price must be
paid."
Morrhyn said, "I suspect it was a well-thought trap. I wonder if
Chakthi did not gamble on Vachyr escaping—which should likely
have led to war. And if Vachyr was taken? Why, Chakthi could deny all
knowledge. And was Vachyr slain? Then, again, an end to peace—without
blame attaching to Chakthi."
Rannach studied the wakanisha in amazement. "You say that
Chakthi gambled his own son's life?"
"I believe he did." Morrhyn sighed, his brow creased in a
frown. "I suspect all this was hatched by Chakthi and Hadduth,
in spite and hatred of the Commacht."
"But … " Rannach spread his hands, indicating bafflement.
"Are your worst fears aright, Chakthi plays into the hands of
these invaders."
Morrhyn nodded.
Rannach said, "How could he? Is he crazed?"
"Perhaps." Morrhyn shrugged. "That he bears us
Commacht no love is common knowledge. Then at this Matakwa he saw his
son's desires thwarted, and Zeil and Nemeth taken into our clan.
Perhaps that was more than he could bear."
"But to gamble his own son's life?" Rannach shook his head.
"And when all the People are likely threatened?"
Mildly, Morrhyn asked, "Did you think of all the People when you
aimed your lance at Vachyr?"
Shamefaced, Rannach shook his head.
Morrhyn said, "I think there's a poison in Chakthi, and in
Hadduth. It addles them. Perhaps—" He hesitated, eyes a
moment closed, his face a moment haggard. "Perhaps it's to do
with these strangeling invaders."
Lhyn gasped at that and clutched her husband's shoulder. Arrhyna drew
closer to Rannach, as if the chill, dread breath of nightmare invaded
the lodge, a black and ominous mist.
"Be that as it may," Racharran said heavily, "there
are more immediate problems. A judgment shall be delivered tomorrow,
and I must accept it."
"No!" Lhyn's fingers drove hard into the muscle of his
shoulder. "Rannach acted honorably!"
"But still broke the law," Racharran said. "Still shed
blood in Matakwa."
"Had he not," Arrhyna said, "I should be with Vachyr
now, likely brought to the Tachyn grazing. What then?"
"War with the Tachyn." Racharran spoke hollow-voiced.
"Chakthi's wish still granted."
"Shall Juh and the others not see that?" Lhyn asked. "Not
see Chakthi for what he is?"
"Perhaps." Her husband ducked his head as if it sat heavy
on his neck. "But without proof they can know only that Vachyr
was slain and Rannach admits the deed. That the Ahsa-tye-Patiko
was
ignored."
Rannach squared his shoulders and asked,.calmly as he was able, "What
shall their judgment be? My death?"
He ignored Arrhyna's horrified cry; Racharran ignored Lhyn's. The
akaman said, "Perhaps they will consider the circumstances.
Perhaps Yazte can convince Juh and Tahdase. Perhaps they will
consider my plea and their judgment be clement."
"And is it not?" Rannach asked.
Racharran faced his son. "I am akaman of the Commacht. I must
abide by their judgment, no matter what it cost me."
12&mdashJudgement
The moon stood aloof over the Meeting Ground, this night veiled in
fast-blown streamers of dark cloud so that patterns of shadow and
light pursued a dance across the encampment. From the center, where
the Council fires burned, sparks rose to join the dance. From all the
People gathered there to hear the judgment of the akamans there rose
not a sound; it was as if the Matawaye held their breath, waiting,
knowing these events momentous.
They had talked enough that day, all the men and women, debating
amongst themselves what their decision might be were they seated with
Juh and Tahdase and Yazte in the Aparhaso chieftain's lodge.
It was a day unlike any other in the memory of the People. The
Matakwa's usually festive air was dulled and glum. Racharran asked of
his warriors that they hold close to the Commacht lodges and not
venture where their paths might cross those of the Tachyn. Chakthi
stalked amongst his folk with the white clay of mourning a rigid mask
over his lupine face. He vowed his son would lie within his lodge
until judgment be delivered, and only then, avenged, be given burial.
None were sure where: no man had before died by violence during
Matakwa, and none could say for sure whether or not the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko allowed that the trees of the Meeting Ground might
take such a body. The Tachyn thought perhaps Chakthi would take
Vachyr back, to lay him in the ancestral burial wood, but Chakthi
would not say—only cry for vengeance and spill ashes on his
loosened hair. Hadduth, his own face streaked white, trailed on
Chakthi's heels like a skulking dog. Rannach, in deference to his
father and his own promise, remained mostly in his lodge. When he
bathed or went to tend his horse and Arrhyna's, an escort of senior
warriors went with him. He kept a brave face. Arrhyna endeavored to
conceal her fear, to stem the tears that threatened when her parents
came or Lhyn sat with her outside the lodge.
As if his eyes were opened in a moment, Rannach understood what it
was to be an akaman. He saw the barely hidden dread in his mother's
eyes and the unmasked pain in his father's, and knew that Lhyn's fear
was entirely for him, her son, whilst Racharran must fear for him,
for the Commacht, and for all the People. It seemed to him a terrible
burden.
As the time approached when his future should be decided, he said to
his father, "I am sorry."
Racharran smiled: a thin stretching of his lips. "As am I."
"Whatever judgment comes," Rannach said carefully, "I
shall accept."
Racharran nodded and turned his face toward the Maker's Mountain. The
pinnacle was bathed in the light of the westering sun, its flanks and
peak reddened as if wounded. "I know you are brave," he
said. "I would also have you understand."
Rannach said, "I think I do."
"Were this another time, another place," Racharran said,
"it should be different. Had Colun not brought his news, had
Morrhyn not dreamed his dreams."
"I know. I'm sorry," Rannach said again.
Racharran smiled again, warmer now: the heat of pride there. "You've
courage," he said, and took Rannach's right hand between his
own. "You were always brave and I have always been proud of you,
but I must think past you. Do you understand that?"
"Now," Rannach said.
His father said, "I cannot argue the judgment."
It sounded like a farewell. From behind him, where Arrhyna sat
sewing, Rannach heard a gasp. He said, "I know. I'd not ask that
you do."
"What I can do," Racharran said, "I shall. But the
People cannot be in disarray are Morrhyn's worst fears aright."
"No." Rannach held his father's hands tighter. "I
understand."
The clay masked Chakthi, his face unreadable. Only the dark eyes
showed his hatred as he studied Rannach, his unbound hair falling
matted and ash-smeared about his shoulders, as if he were some
vengeful ghost unleashed by the Maker to take his toll on the quick.
And if he were a spirit, Rannach thought, then Hadduth was his
familiar, crouched whispering at his master's side, his own features
all distorted by clay and ash, as if Vachyr had been his own son and
Chakthi's loss his. But Rannach stifled his contempt: he had made his
father a promise and would not break it, for Racharran's sake and his
own honor.
His father sat across the circle from the Tachyn, Morrhyn close by,
and Lhyn with Zeil and Nemeth, the two mothers with their arms about
Arrhyna. Colun squatted surrounded by his Grannach, a cluster of
living rocks, their bearded faces grave as stone. Behind them,
allowed such precedence for their part in this drama, stood Bakaan
and Zhy and Hadustan. Juh sat with Tahdase and Yazte, their Dreamers
in a group beside. And all around there was silence as the People
waited.
Juh rose and walked to the circle's center, where Rannach stood. He
must raise his head to look the younger man in the face, and when he
did, Rannach could not interpret his expression. He adjusted his
blanket about his shoulders and turned slowly around, speaking loud
that all hear.
"As was agreed, I have spoken long with Tahdase of the Naiche
and Yazte of the Lakanti, and we have reached a decision. Shall our
judgment be accepted by all?"
Rannach was the first to answer yes, Racharran the second. Chakthi
said, slower and enigmatic, "Be it fair."
Juh turned hooded eyes on the Tachyn and said, "It was agreed by
you, brother. Will you argue now?"
Chakthi's lips worked, the clay splitting in myriad lines that
distorted his features even further. Hadduth touched his elbow and
spoke in his ear, and Chakthi lowered his head so that his ashy hair
curtained his face. From behind that camouflage he said, "I will
hear your judgment."
Juh took this for assent and turned to Rannach.
"This is our judgment; it was not easily reached. There are many
arguments, both for you and against you. That you broke the law
cannot be denied … "
From Chakthi's mask, like a ghostly moan, came: "The law is
clear—his death."
Juh ignored him. " … But neither can it be denied that Vachyr
transgressed when he stole your wife, and we believe her testimony.
Therefore, the first crime was undoubtedly Vachyr's."
Rannach stood stock-still. Like the sparks lofting from the fires, he
felt an ember of hope rise.
"So," Juh continued, "there is a balance here. It is
our belief that had Vachyr not gone against the Will, you would not
have broken it. But"—he raised a hand from under his
blanket as if to quench the disagreement none had voiced—"still
it is as I have said: that wrong cannot be justified by wrong."
Rannach felt the ember die.
Juh said, "Our brother Chakthi has called for your life. Your
father has offered blood-payment. Chakthi has refused that and would
see you slain. What say you?"
Rannach was startled. He had anticipated judgment—readied
himself for death—assuming the verdict already decided: the one
way or the other. He had not thought to be asked his opinion.
He looked at Juh and saw no dissemblance in the ancient eyes, only
patience and sorrow. He fought the impulse to turn toward his father.
He said carefully, "I slew Vachyr in fair fight. I told him I
would take him back to face judgment of his crime, but he taunted me
and my temper rose—I took up my lance and slew him."
"And these taunts? What were they?"
Rannach said, "Insults," and glanced swiftly at Arrhyna.
"I'd not speak of them."
Arrhyna broke from her mother's arm, and Lhyn's, and rose to shout,
"Vachyr boasted of raping me!"
Softly, that only Rannach hear him, Juh said, "There's honor in
you." Then louder: "Our judgment is this: that Rannach of
the Commacht had just cause to slay Vachyr of the Tachyn, and so we
would not take his life. But that he shed blood at the time of
Matakwa was wrong, and therefore we have decided that Rannach be
banished from the lodges of the People. Let him go away and live
lonely. Let none succor him, neither his own clan nor any other. And
should he come again onto the grass of the People, then his life is
forfeit. This is our judgment: let it be done."
Rannach bowed his head, accepting.
Chakthi sprang to his feet, shrieking, "No! I'll see him dead. I
do not accept this!"
Hadduth clutched at his shirt, but the Tachyn akaman would not be
silenced. He slapped the wakanisha's hand away and strode to where
Rannach stood, and Juh, looking furious from one to the other. Juh
set himself before Rannach even as Racharran and Yazte rose, moving
forward. Even shy Tahdase was on his feet.
"He must be executed!" Where the clay split around his
mouth, Chakthi's lips spat foam. His eyes burned fierce as flames.
"He slew my son and I'll have his death!"
Undaunted, Juh said, "Judgment is delivered, brother."
Chakthi raised a hand. Warriors of the Tachyn and the Commacht surged
forward. The men of the Lakanti came to Yazte, those of the Naiche to
Tahdase, the Aparhaso to Juh. Like the fires' sparks, voices rose
bellowing against the night. Men roared and women screamed; dogs set
to barking, and from the corrals the horses shrilled.
It was a Council like no other.
Only Rannach was still in the midst of the turmoil. He wondered if
death was not preferable to banishment. He saw Chakthi's enraged
face, the clay all split and broken now like a shed concealment,
glowering at him, and old Juh shielding him. Then his father and
Yazte and Tahdase were there, confronting the Tachyn akaman, their
warriors facing Chakthi's men. He saw Chakthi's fisted hand come down
against Juh's face, and the old man stagger. He caught him and held
him turned from the attack, feeling blows land hard against his head
and shoulders before the maddened Chakthi was fought back.
Juh said, "My thanks. Now let me go."
Rannach nodded and released him to his men. The warriors of the clans
stood faced against one another. Juh touched his bruised cheek and
pulled his blanket about his shoulders as if he felt a chill wind
blowing, then moved to stand between the angry factions.
"Is it come to this?" His voice rang out vigorous for all
his years. "Is all the Will forgotten? Are we become squabbling
dogs?"
Slowly, driven by his outrage, the warriors drew back. Hadduth took
hold of Chakthi's shirt and tugged hard, wary as if he clutched a
rabid hound. Racharran took his son's arm and pulled Rannach back.
Yazte and his Lakanti formed a defensive line between the Commacht
and the Tachyn.
"Judgment is delivered," Juh shouted. "It is as was
agreed, and it is binding. Rannach shall quit this place by the
setting of tomorrow's sun, and not again come to the grass of the
People, else his life be forfeit."
Small amongst the bodies of his Aparhaso warriors he looked to where
Chakthi stood. "And any who deny this or defy it breach the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko. Let Rannach be gone by tomorrow's sunset. Let none
hunt him or seek to delay him. Until this Matakwa is ended, it is
so."
Chakthi looked him back, and in no less a voice said, "This
Matakwa is ended now. There is no peace now. There is only war."
Juh gasped and raised a hand as if to touch Chakthi. "What do
you say, brother? Your grief speaks wild and I ask you to think
again. We've much to discuss yet, for the good of all the People."
Chakthi glared hot-eyed at the older, smaller man. His lips curled in
an expression that was sneer and snarl together, the clay fragmenting
further. "I say there is no justice here." A hand swept a
dismissive arc. "I say that I am not your brother—save you
give me Rannach."
Doggedly, Juh said, "Judgment is delivered on that, brother, and
in the name of the Maker I ask you accept it."
"No!" Chakthi howled his answer.
To Racharran, Yazte said urgently, "Do you go? Take your son
away and swift, before this comes to blows!"
Racharran hesitated, then nodded and motioned for his people to quit
the fire circle. Behind them the night echoed with angry cries.
It was a Matakwa like no other.
Arrhyna wept, clinging to Rannach as they were hurried away. Tears
rolled down Lhyn's cheeks; Racharran's face was held in rigid
composure. Morrhyn stared back at the tumult they left, his belly
knotted and cold with dread. Nemeth and Zeil went pale-faced and
troubled, Colun and his Grannach trotting to hold pace with the
longer-legged Commacht.
As they reached the akaman's lodge, the Tachyn were already quitting
the Council fires, led by Chakthi and Hadduth, storming shouting
through their camp. Children began to wail; dogs barked furiously.
Racharran paused, issuing brisk orders that warriors align themselves
along the stream for fear Chakthi's rage engender an attack. Yazte
and some thirty or forty warriors of the Lakanti, the Aparhaso, and
the Naiche came running, skirting the edge of the Tachyn lodges to
join the Commacht men.
"Ho, brother!" The Lakanti akaman was flushed, waving a
large hand to halt Racharran. "Old Juh suggests we play
guardian."
Racharran frowned and said, "We need no guardians, brother. We
can defend ourselves."
"Juh is a cautious man." Yazte was panting, more accustomed
to riding than running. "But in this I agree with him, Chakthi
is crazed, and should his clan share his madness, it were better they
face us than your warriors, that there be no further claim of insult
or injury. He thinks—and I think him right—that Chakthi
will not dare attack all the clans."
Racharran's eyes narrowed and Morrhyn said, "This is wise. The
Maker knows, we've trouble enough without there be more bloodshed."
Racharran looked toward the Tachyn lodges and grunted his assent. "So
be it. Now I'd speak with my son, and … " Like the clouds
scudding across the moon, a shadow darkened his face. "See him
on his way."
"Soon and safely, eh?" Yazte nodded toward the shouting
Tachyn. "Likely Chakthi will have riders seeking him ere long."
Morrhyn said, "The judgment was that none pursue him or raise
hand against him until this Matakwa ends."
Yazte grinned sourly and said, "This Matakwa
is ended.
Chakthi takes his clan away."
"He cannot!" Morrhyn stared aghast at the Lakanti. "What
of the invaders? What of the truce?"
Yazte shrugged, grimacing. "Kahteney shall explain—I'd
best attend here. Ho, Kahteney! Where are you?"
The Lakanti wakanisha came hurrying out of the crowd. He took
Morrhyn's arm, leading him aside as Racharran and the others went on.
"Chakthi quits the Matakwa," he said. "The Tachyn
strike camp this night, and none can dissuade him. He swears
vengeance on Rannach and all the Commacht."
"Oh, Maker!" Morrhyn turned toward the great white peak of
the holy mountain. Its pinnacle was dark with windblown cloud, as if
it hid its face. The play of moonlight and shadow across its flanks
suggested falling tears. "What madness is this?"
Kahteney said, "Tachyn madness; Chakthi's madness. Listen—after
you quit the fires he called again for Rannach's death, and had men
not stood between him and Juh, I think he'd have struck the old one
again. Juh and Tahdase and Yazte tried to reason with him, but there
no placating a wounded lion, eh? He'll quit the Meeting Ground
tonight, and he declares the Matakwa therefore ended and Rannach fair
game. Also, he promises war with the Commacht soon as he's buried
Vachyr."
Morrhyn began to speak, but the Lakanti Dreamer hushed him. "You'll
need tell this to Rannach, and advise Racharran also. Tell them the
Lakanti stand with them, but no other. Tell them to ride wary, for
Chakthi is crazed and I think he'll stop at nothing."
"But the truce?" Morrhyn cried. "The invaders?"
"The one forgotten," Kahteney replied, "and the other?
Chakthi and Hadduth deny the danger; Juh and Tahdase prevaricate."
He barked a sour laugh. "Are our fears fleshed, my friend, the
People are in terrible danger."
Morrhyn looked again toward the mountain, but its apex was still
hidden. Worse comes to worst, he thought, like nightmare taking form.
He took Kahteney's hand. "As you say, I must inform Racharran.
My thanks, friend."
Kahteney nodded, mouth stretching in an unhappy smile. "We
Lakanti stand with you. Now go."
"Yes." Morrhyn turned and ran after his akaman.
Behind him, from across the stream, warriors of the Tachyn bellowed
insults and challenges. He prayed none cross that fragile barrier;
there was already enough broken this night.
"Would he dare?"
Morrhyn looked at Lhyn's teared face and wished he might offer her
better comfort. But that was not his place, nor now within his
capability, and so he ducked his head and said, "Kahteney
believes he would; I believe he would."
Racharran looked to Rannach and said, "Then you must go tonight.
Now!"
Rannach said, "I am not afraid of Chakthi. I'd not run like a
frightened dog from that whoreson."
Racharran inhaled a deep breath and let it out slow, holding back the
anger and the disappointment that threatened to edge his response.
His son, he thought, was like some youngling buffalo bull newcome to
his prime: all bristling and audacious and aware only of his strength
and desire and pride. "Were it Chakthi alone," he said,
"I'd back you in the fight. But it would not be Chakthi alone.
He'll hunt in a pack like the dog he is, and not even you can defeat
all the Tachyn."
Rannach said, "Then send warriors with me. Or"—he
looked about the fire, at the kindred and friends who sat there—"let
me come back to the Commacht grass."
Racharran shook his head, avoiding his wife's eye. "I cannot.
You heard the judgment."
"Chakthi defies it," Rannach said. "Is it then still
binding?"
Racharran said, "I thought you understood. You said you
understood."
"That was then. This is now."
Racharran sighed and said, "You did not understand. Those are
the arguments of youth, without forethought. Honor is honor; my honor
is mine, Chakthi's his."
"Chakthi," Rannach said, "has no honor."
"No." Racharran shook his head in agreement. "But I
do,
and you do. And so we are bound by promises that men like
Chakthi ignore. Judgment was delivered, and it binds us, else we
forfeit our honor."
Rannach frowned, pondering this. At his side, Arrhyna stifled tears,
a hand across her mouth.
Morrhyn said, "There's more to think on. The Tachyn strike camp:
the Matakwa is ended. Chakthi promises war: shall he find us on the
trail? Better were the clan on our own grass before the Tachyn come
against us. As your father says, Rannach, you must go quickly, and
alone. The Ahsa-tye-Patiko is already broken, and does your father
defy the judgment of the Council, then surely we further offend the
Maker. I think we shall need his goodwill in the times to come."
As he spoke, he kept his eyes firm on the young man's face that he
not see Lhyn's expression; but he could not block his ears to her
moan, and it cut him deep.
Colun spoke then, his voice startling them, as if a boulder ground
against its moorings overhead. "We Grannach are not bound by
this judgment," he rumbled. "Juh spoke only of the People,
that none of the Matawaye succor him. Is that not so, Dreamer?"
Morrhyn said, surprised, "I suppose … Yes. What do you say?"
Colun shrugged, succeeding in spilling tiswin down his shirt. "That
he come with us. The Matakwa is ended; those fools blind themselves
to what threatens Ket-Ta-Witko and there's no reason for us to linger
here, so we go. Let Rannach come with us. We'll ward him, should
Chakthi attempt anything." His beard opened to expose teeth
parted in a wolfish grin. "Let him try attacking Grannach
warriors."
Racharran asked, "You'd take him into your tunnels?"
"Perhaps not that, but into the hills, into the wild places
where you do not go. Nor could Chakthi come against him."
"It should need be this night," Racharran said. And looked
to Rannach. "Would you agree to this?"
"Have I another choice?"
His father answered, "Death is your other choice."
For a while their eyes locked, then Rannach lowered his head. Lhyn
loosed a cry that was part anguish, part relief. Arrhyna said, "I
come with you."
Rannach said, "It will not be easy. You would fare better with
the clan."
She said, "I am your wife; you are my husband."
He said, "Yes," and took her hand and smiled. "So be
it."
Racharran said, "There's another thing, do you agree."
"What?" Rannach frowned. "Have I not agreed enough?"
Racharran shrugged and glanced at Morrhyn. "You might be our
sentry. Do these invaders breach the mountains, you might bring
word."
"And defy the judgment?" Rannach mocked his father with his
pantomimed outrage. "Come forbidden back to the grass?"
Racharran refused the bait. Gravely, he ducked his head and said, "Do
these invaders come, then the judgment will surely be forgotten. To
have word early would surely absolve the crime."
He looked to Morrhyn for confirmation. The wakanisha pursed his lips.
"These are strange times," he said. "The
Ahsa-tye-Patiko offers no guidance in this. But … Yes, I think it
must be so. It should be for all the People, no?"
"Even," Rannach said, "for Chakthi and his Tachyn?"
Morrhyn asked, "Would you give even them up to what I fear
comes?"
Rannach thought a moment, then grinned and said, "I'd sooner
slay Chakthi myself."
"Then your answer is yes?"
Rannach nodded. His father smiled sadly and said, "Then do we
strike your lodge and see you equipped?"
"As," Rannach replied, "my akaman commands."
Arrhyna said, "Might I bid my parents farewell?"
Rannach told her, "Of course. But swift, eh?"
She nodded and rose to embrace Lhyn, then hurried from the tent.
Rannach held his mother close and whispered, "I shall see you
again. I thought to die this night, but now I think the Maker smiles
on me and I shall live."
Lhyn took his face in both her hands and said, "I pray it be so,
my son. I pray we meet again in better times."
She touched her lips to his cheek and let him go. Morrhyn could see
the tears she held in check. Almost, he wept himself: it seemed all
order was disrupted and he could not know what blame to apportion to
Rannach, what to Chakthi, nor what to himself or even—he made
the sign of warding—to the Maker. He rose and took Rannach's
hands.
"For what worth it has, you go with my blessing. The Maker guard
you and see you safely home again."
"Thank you." Rannach turned to Colun. "So, do we go?"
The Grannach grunted and emptied his cup. "Strike your lodge and
fetch your animals," he said. "We'll be ready."
Rannach nodded and took his father's hand. They did not speak, but
there was again some kind of understanding between them, and Rannach
quit the tent.
Bakaan and Hadustan and Zhy waited for him, and when he told them he
departed, they announced they'd accompany him.
"No." Rannach shook his head. "You heard the
judgment—no succor. I'll not see you condemned for my crime."
They argued, but he remained unbending and they contented themselves
with helping him prepare for departure.
It was soon enough done. The lodge was struck, its hides and all its
contents stowed on two horses, the bay stallion and Arrhyna's piebald
saddled, then Rannach took up his weapons. Lhyn came with food, and
Nemeth and Zeil came sad with their daughter. To them Rannach said,
"I ask your forgiveness that I take your child away so soon."
"Not you," Zeil returned, scowling as he looked toward the
Tachyn camp. "This is Chakthi's doing. Go with my blessing."
"And come back safe," Nemeth added.
Rannach bowed his head. "No harm shall come to Arrhyna while I
live," he promised. "This I swear."
Then Colun and his Grannach, all bearing weapons, came shuffling up.
Racharran set hands upon his son's shoulders. "Go now, and the
Maker with you. We'll confuse your trail somewhat, and delay Chakthi
as long as we can."
Rannach could not resist it: "But without bloodshed, eh?"
Before Racharran had chance to reply, he embraced his father, then
his mother, and swung astride the stallion. Arrhyna mounted the
piebald and took the lead reins Bakaan offered.
"So." Colun raised a hand. "My thanks for your
hospitality. What further news we get, I'll send you somehow.
Farewell."
He lifted his ax, and his Grannach shaped a phalanx before the
horses, Colun at the head. He broke into a trot that surprised
Rannach with its speed. The young Commacht looked once at his wife,
once at his parents and people, then urged the bay forward after the
speeding Stone Folk.
They went swift away, toward the hills where the Maker's Mountain
stood still hidden behind the veil of cloud.
13—Wild Places
It was an arduous trail the Grannach took, and by the day's ending
they were in a place only the wakanishas had visited. Colun left men
behind to watch their backtrail and set guards on their camp, which
was in a corrie where the rocky walls hid their fire and a single man
might watch down the mountain for sign of pursuit. Rannach noticed
that Colun had another watch the high slopes also, as if the Grannach
feared not only Chakthi's pursuit but also what might come from
above: more than words, that impressed on him the gravity of Colun's
warning.
They rose with the dawn and continued upward, on narrow trails that
rose steep enough it was often necessary to dismount and lead the
horses, which—accustomed to the plains of Ket-Ta-Witko—liked
this climbing not at all. Without them the Grannach should have gone
much faster, for they moved like mountain goats, surefooted and fleet
where the horses stumbled and balked.
When they halted at noon, Colun said, "You'd do better to leave
those beasts behind. Let them find their way back to your clan herds
and you go on afoot."
Rannach looked at the bay stallion, cropping grass beside Arrhyna's
mare, and shook his head. "I hunted that horse a full moon
before I got my rope on him; and it was another moon before he'd
accept the saddle. I'll not give him up so easy."
"They slow us," Colun said.
"And should Chakthi find them coming down the mountain?"
Rannach gestured downslope. "Then he'll know where we go."
"Chakthi!" Colun turned his head to spit. "He's not
coming after us."
"How can you know?" asked Rannach.
"These are our mountains." Colun gestured at the encircling
peaks, steeper and craggy now, dominated by the massive bulk of the
Maker's Mountain. "We Grannach know who comes and goes here.
Besides … " His knobby face creased in a mischievous grin. "My
watchers came back last night whilst you flatlanders slept, with
news."
"News?" Rannach could not conceal his urgency: the
circumlocution of the Grannach was sometimes frustrating.
Colun nodded and chewed deliberately on a piece of meat. Rannach must
contain himself and accept that Colun would speak in his own good
time, and only then; and that all depended on the goodwill of the
Stone Folk, for without them survival should be perilous. Still, it
was no easy lesson to learn.
Eventually, Colun swallowed and said, "Ach, but I miss the
tiswin your people make. However … Yes, my watchers came back and
told me your father and Yazte thought to mark the ending of the
Matakwa with horse races, which took place about the foothills. The
Naiche and the Aparhaso joined in, and"—he reached for the
meat, selecting a cut—"and so, when Tachyn warriors came
riding up, they found their path quite blocked. Now Chakthi takes his
people away."
"He might still send scouts," Rannach said.
"On a cold, old trail?" Colun shook his head, chuckling.
"And one, the Maker knows, that does not favor horses."
Rannach nodded and thought a moment. "Still, I'd keep the
horses," he said. "Should these invaders come, I'll need a
mount to carry word. But can they live up there?" In his turn,
he gestured at the high slopes.
Colun shrugged. "The getting there will be hard, but can they
climb, they'll live. We've animals of our own, you know."
"I didn't." Rannach smiled an apology. "I thought you
Grannach lived entirely in your tunnels."
Colun laughed hugely. "Like moles, eh? Or rats?" He opened
his eyes wide in semblance of some subterranean creature, his hands
groping blindly at the empty air. "Wandering about in the dark,
down in the deep stone?"
Somewhat embarrassed, Rannach nodded.
"We've more than our tunnels," Colun said. "You'll
see."
Then, before Rannach could question him further, he sprang upright
and shouted that they go on.
The way grew steeper still, until it was quite impossible to ride and
they must go on foot, with ropes on the animals and the Grannach
shouldering the beasts from behind. Rannach thought it would be no
easy descent, but he no longer feared pursuit. He felt instead
another fear, and wished he had spoken at greater length with
Morrhyn. He and Arrhyna were now in a place none of the People had
visited. The afternoon sun shone bright on the pinnacle of the
Maker's Mountain, and he thought on the stories of the People and the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko, and that he now trod sacred ground. It was not
forbidden, but the People acceded this land to the Grannach, deeming
them the guardians of the passes and the gate, and none of the
Matawaye came here. He had shed blood in Matakwa, broken the Will,
and albeit he believed he could not have changed that slaying, still
he wondered how the Maker might regard his presence here.
He raised his eyes to the Mountain and shaped a sign of warding. Am I
bloody and sinful, he thought, then punish me, but not my wife.
Arrhyna is innocent, and surely cannot be condemned.
But the Mountain gave back no obvious answer, though he saw an eagle
ride the sky and a flight of ravens winging black across the azure
and wondered if he observed some sign that only a wakanisha could
interpret. He felt breathless and oddly dazed. The light seemed
brighter here and the landscape startlingly clear, as if the slopes
and trees and boulders bruised his eyes. The lore of the People had
it that the First Folk had come to Ket-Ta-Witko from that mountain,
brought to the land through the gate. Most had gone down onto the
grass of the plains to become the clans of the Matawaye, those who
elected to remain amongst the peaks becoming the Grannach. He had not
thought much on that—it was a thing of the Dreamers, not for
warriors—and in the hinder part of his mind he had always
entertained a doubt, thinking it strange a people who loved the grass
so well should come from mountains. But now, as he came ever closer
to the Mountain—closer than any of his kind in living memory
had come—he wondered. It was so vast a hill: a gigantic column
that seemed to support the sky, majestic in its sheer enormity, and
he less than an ant on even these lesser slopes he climbed.
He had not realized he halted until a Grannach shouted for him to go
on, save he wished to pick up his cumbersome horse and carry the
beast himself. The hoarse voice rang in his ears and he shook his
head, but the terrain still shimmered around him, impaling him on the
vision of the pinnacle, and he thought he must remain immobile, like
a votary statue staring forever at the Mountain. Then Colun's hand
came down to clasp his face and shake him, and he heard the Grannach
say, "Flatlanders! Ho, Rannach, do you move, or shall you stand
all goggle-eyed until you starve?"
He said, "I … " And aimed a trembling finger at the peak.
Colun said, "Yes, I know. Now move!"
It seemed impossible. He looked back and saw Arrhyna brought up
between two Grannach, her horse in care of others, still more with
the laden packhorses. Her eyes were wide as his, and on her face an
expression of rapture.
Pain then: he realized that Colun had slapped him, and the Grannach
was very strong. His eyes watered and his head spun a moment, but
then he grunted and took up the rein and continued on.
That night was cold, their camp made in a cleft where a thin column
of white water spilled out from black rock to pool amidst dressed
stones before trickling away downslope. Moss grew on the rock, and
little stunted bushes like clutching hands. Arrhyna slept soon as she
had eaten, but Rannach must force himself to the effort of grooming
the animals and seeing them blanketed against the chill. He was
grateful for the warmth of his wife's body as the thinning moon
looked down impassive.
In the morning, mist draped the cleft and the fire sputtered and
spat, affording little heat. Rannach was miserable, and Arrhyna
seemed dulled by the cold; moisture sparkled on the horses' manes,
and they fretted. The Grannach were themselves: cheerful as ever,
speaking eagerly of homecoming. Rannach looked up and saw only a
narrow band of gray that did no more than hint at the possibility of
sunlight, and thought that they must face days of such traveling
before they could hope to reach the high slopes where the tunnels
began. He wondered if they had not done better to remain on the grass
and take their chances with the Tachyn.
And then he saw his first example of the Grannach's wondrous work.
They left the cleft behind and toiled up a sweeping traverse overhung
with looming cliffs and stubby, wind-twisted pines. The trail looked
to turn back on itself to the east, near vertical, and Rannach could
not see how the horses should manage the ascent. Ahead, Colun halted,
awaiting his little column. He was beaming as Rannach and Arrhyna
labored up to join him, as if anticipating some great joke.
"See?" He stabbed a finger at the blank rockface.
Rannach stared wearily at the stone and shrugged.
"What do you see?" Colun asked.
Rannach glanced at Arrhyna and said, "Stone. I see stone."
Colun nodded and said, "You've not the eyes of a Grannach. Watch
and you'll see what none of your people have ever seen."
He set both hands flat against the rock and muttered, too low and
guttural for either Matawaye to make out the words. They only stared
in amazement as the stone trembled, like water rippled by a flung
pebble, and became an opening. Rannach gasped and clutched at the
stallion's rein as the horse skittered, backing from the impossible
ingress. He dragged the plunging head down and blinked, scarce able
to believe his eyes. Where smooth gray stone had been, there was now
a semicircular opening large enough to accept a horse. The arch was
carved with intricate symbols, and within was light, bright as the
sun, shining from nowhere to reveal a smooth floor running back into
the mountain.
"Moles, eh?" Colun's grin spread wider. "Rats, eh?
Enter and see for yourselves." He stepped through the arch,
bowing elaborately like some genial host delighted with his guests'
surprise.
It was the promise of hope and hospitality, but still Rannach felt a
strange reluctance to enter. He was accustomed to open places, to the
sky's wide space and the spread of the plains. He looked at Arrhyna
and saw her similarly disinclined. But they had nowhere else to go,
so he took in a deep breath, took her hand, and walked into the
tunnel.
The horses balked at first, but then allowed themselves to be led in,
urged on by the Grannach. Colun stood by the arch and, when all had
entered, spoke again and again touched the stone. The blue sky
wavered and darkened as if a mist blew up, and was replaced with
solid rock.
Rannach stared about. The air was warmer than was right, and smelled
dry. He could not tell where the light came from: it surely could not
come from the stone itself, alone. He felt threatened by the
imponderable weight of the mountain, and was grateful for the soft
touch of Arrhyna's hand.
"Come." Colun beckoned them and, without waiting to see if
they obeyed, struck out along the tunnel.
The air was still and silent, flinty in their nostrils. It was very
quiet, so that the clatter of the horses' hooves dinned loud, like
raucous voices raised lewdly in some holy place. Rannach hurried
after the Grannach, who now speeded ahead, and all the while looked
around in abashed wonder at the legendary way he walked.
In time they came to a wider place and Colun announced it night, and
that they should halt. Numbed, Rannach and Arrhyna obeyed and looked
to the animals. They were in a vaulted cavern they could not tell was
carved by the Grannach or nature, or perhaps both working in union.
Ribs of blue stone curved upward out of walls that were more gold
than white, conjoining in a sunburst circle overhead. At the center
of the smooth floor was a walled pool of dark water, and about its
circumference stood benches of dressed blue stone, darker than the
arcing ribs above.
"We've no more food than we carry," Colun said as if this
were the most ordinary place, needless of explanation. "But come
tomorrow—"
He beamed and would not be further drawn out: they fed the horses
from the packs and themselves ate cold food, the jerky and fruits
Lhyn and the others had given them.
"Did you make all this?" Rannach asked.
"Over the ages." Colun lounged on a bench. "I myself
did not, but this is all Grannach work. Ours and the Maker's."
He shaped a sign Rannach did not understand. "You can sleep
peaceful here."
That was said easier than it was done. It was strange to lie down
aware that a mountain's weight lay overhead, where the light dimmed
on a spoken word and only a pale glow from th sunburst ceiling shone,
no moon or stars, nor the lodgefire's glow. Neither could they lie
together, but each on their stone pedestal, like ambitious godlings
or corpses laid to rest. Rannach was thankful for the waxing of the
light and the bustle of the Grannach as they readied a cold
breakfast; nor any less Arrhyna, who tasked herself with the horses
and the dressing of her hair as if she'd soon as not be gone swift on
their way.
On through a longer length of tunnel, the Grannach padding fleet, the
two Matawaye uneasy followers after their rescuer hosts, the horses
trotting clattery loud behind, fretful at their strange surroundings.
All day they moved, halting only once to eat and rest, and throughout
all the tunnel showed no change, as if they traversed an eternal day
governed by Grannach magic—a day that might, Rannach thought,
go on forever, deeper and deeper into the mountains until there be no
emerging but only everlasting travel. He began to wonder if he was
being punished for slaying Vachyr.
Then the tunnel ended in another blank wall, and again Colun set his
hands against the rock and spoke his oddly syllabled words, and the
stone evaporated. Rannach was a moment blinded, his mind no less
bedazzled than his eyes. He heard Arrhyna gasp and knew her
dumbfounded as himself; he heard Colun chuckling. When his sight
cleared he could not speak, only grunt out his amazement.
Beyond the carved arch of the tunnel's egress was a balustraded shelf
that overlooked a valley embosomed within the mountains. The peaks
rose guardian above, marching away into misty distances from which,
like an impossibly vast sentry, rose the Maker's Mountain. About the
valley the slopes fell gentler, as if smoothed by the Maker's hand or
centuries of Grannach labor, and across them ran planted terraces,
and down them little streams and stands of luxuriant timber. All down
the valley's bowl there was grass that ran green and thick as any on
the plains, and the streams that sparkled down the slopes fed into a
wider brook that meandered away into the distance, disappearing into
haze. Copses and larger hursts rose dark from the floor, and Rannach
saw bighorn sheep grazing, and deer. It seemed to him as if a piece
of his familiar grasslands was lifted up and brought to the
mountains.
"Not all tunnels, eh?" Colun's hand fell heavy on his back,
laughter bubbling in the Grannach's throat. "Not all grim stone
and groping, eh?"
Rannach could only shake his head and mumble, "No." He
stared, marveling, at the incredible vista. It was a fine, wide
place, and the farthest limits stood beyond his sight.
Beside him, Arrhyna said, "Do your folk live here, Colun?"
"Not live," the Grannach answered. He walked to the
balustrade, which reached to his waist, and swept out an arm. "We've
such valleys all through the hills. We grow our crops here, and raise
what meat animals we need. We hunt here, and come simply to see the
sky and the grass, the woods, when the need's on us. Our dwellings
are inside the stone."
He turned, beckoning them closer, and they joined him, wary of the
low balustrade. It was a long drop to the valley floor.
"You, though, shall make your home here. You've water and grass,
the crops on the terraces, and game for the taking. You'll be
comfortable here, I think."
There was the hint of a farewell in his words, and Rannach asked,
"Where shall you be?"
"I must go to my people." The dense-bearded face darkened,
his smile fading. "I must tell them what happened below, at the
Matakwa. I must tell them what your Council decided concerning the
invaders. Or, rather, what your people could not decide."
"The Commacht are with you," Rannach said. "And the
Lakanti."
Colun snorted dismissive laughter. "They
would be—save
likely your clan shall be fighting Chakthi's Tachyn. Perhaps with the
aid of the Lakanti, but nonetheless engaged in petty war, whilst …
Ach!' His fist pounded the balustrade's rim. "Do they look to
come out of the Whaztaye country through our hills, we'll fight them.
Perhaps they'll not attempt that passage; perhaps Chakthi shall be
slain and your folk make peace. It's in the Maker's hands now."
Rannach nodded, reminded of his role in that confusion. "Do they
come," he said awkwardly, "I'll take word to my father.
You'll have allies then—surely the Commacht, likely the
Lakanti."
Colun grunted, his eyes fixed on the valley below. "Perhaps;
save they're too busy fighting amongst themselves. But timely? Do
those creatures breach our defenses, I think we shall none of us have
too much time. Ach, I wonder if I shouldn't have challenged Chakthi
myself, put my ax in his skull and let in a little sense."
"That should be my battle," Rannach said. And softer, "I
was the one fired his rage."
"No." Colun turned from his observation of the valley to
look up at the young Commacht. "Chakthi's rage is all of his own
making. Had Vachyr not"—he glanced at Arrhyna and
shrugged—"he left you no honorable choice save what you
did. And Chakthi was a part of that—he knew of his son's plans
and approved them. His, the sin. I only wish your folk saw it
clearer, that your Council had condemned
Chakthi to
banishment, not you."
Rannach smiled thanks for that support and said, "You'd sooner
have Chakthi for a neighbor?"
Colun's laughter belled across the sky. "As soon I'd bring a
wolf pack to this place! I've no love for Chakthi. Do you not know
the story?"
"Only that my father names you true friend." Rannach shook
his head. "And that you come always to our lodges."
"You Commacht," Colun said, "make the best tiswin. But
there's more to it; perhaps I'll tell you later. Now, however, do we
go down?"
He moved from the balustrade, waving his followers to him, and they
began the descent to the valley floor.
It was a wide way and smoothly carved, but vertiginous for all its
width and easy surface. Rannach brought the horses down wary, aided
by Arrhyna, and it was a relief to tread the floor, to be once more
on grass.
The sun that had lit the strath so bright touched the peaks now, and
shadow fell down the walls even as the sky remained bright. Stars
showed, and the shaved round of the New Grass Moon. Rannach thought
on how the Matakwa should be continuing until that disc was at least
half waned, and felt a melancholy that he could not know how his clan
fared, or be with his people when Chakthi attacked. He thought it
would be good to face the Tachyn akaman down the length of a lance,
and better still to see the head go into Chakthi's belly.
He shaped a furtive sign of warding, reminding himself it had been
anger delivered him to this place, his clan to war, and vowed that
when he and his bride were settled here, he would perform rites of
absolvement, express to the Maker his contrition. But first he would
see Arrhyna safe and settled: he owed her that for her courage and
all she'd suffered. She was his first concern. He looked to where she
led her piebald mare alongside and smiled. She smiled back, and he
thought how brave she was and how lucky—no matter what—that
she had chosen him.
They went on awhile until they reached the stream and Colun called a
halt.
"We'll camp here this night," the Grannach said, "and
in the morning leave you."
Rannach asked, "Shall you come back?"
"In time." Colun nodded toward the valley's farther end.
"As I say, I must speak with my folk. How long that shall take,
I cannot tell, but I'll bring back word or come avisiting. Now,
what's to eat?"
A fire was soon built and the packs ransacked for the makings of a
farewell feast. Rannach insisted his supplies be used, assuring his
Grannach hosts that he could easily hunt food in so hospitable a
place. None argued, save that Colun mourned the absence of tiswin.
When their bellies were filled and they lounged on the grass about
the fire, Rannach asked Colun what was the story he had earlier
mentioned.
"Well … " Colun chuckled, the sound like the rumbling of
a bear's belly. "Perhaps it's not my place."
For all he liked this squat man, Rannach thought then of taking him
and shaking him, save that the Grannach was too strong, and would
likely embarrass him with that blunt power. So he smiled and said,
"I'd hear it, save you are forbidden to tell it … "
"Not forbidden." Colun smiled a reminiscent smile, staring
at the fire. "It was agreed we'd not spread the tale wide, for
fear of … upsetting … those concerned. Your father's a tactful
man, Rannach, and thinks beyond his own pride."
Rannach ducked his head. "I know. But still I'd hear this tale."
"Perhaps." Colun glanced around at his fellows. "How
say you?"
Like befurred rocks, the Grannach faces grinned. "Tell it, why
not? It's a fine story."
Arrhyna said, "Please, Colun. I'd know this tale."
"And your smile," Colun said gallantly, "is hard to
refuse. So, listen … It was my first Matakwa. I was but newly named
a creddan—which is somewhat like the title of akaman amongst
your folk—and you, Rannach, were but a mewling babe, carried by
your mother. Racharran was not long akaman of the Commacht, and I
knew him not at all then, save from a distance.
"So, I came down to the Meeting Ground all prideful in my
newfound status and drank your fine tiswin and, I am ashamed to say,
took more than I could then manage." He paused as his comrades
laughed, waiting for their merriment to die before he continued. "The
next day I found my head akin to that rattle you shook in those days,
and my belly not very easy. I thought to go off alone awhile and
gather my senses. And what did I find?"
He broke off again, grinning. "What I found was a sizable bear,
not long woke from his winter's sleep. The bear and a certain Tachyn
warrior, whose name I did not then know. We came together in a wood
some distance from the Meeting Ground, in a clearing there—me,
the bear, and this Tachyn. He was ahorse, but his beast took fright
and threw him, and he fell down on the ground. When he rose, he saw
what I saw—that the bear was not in the best of humors and
intent on eating one of us. Save he could not decide whether to chase
the horse, the Tachyn, or me.
"Well, the horse made up its own mind and fled—wise
animal!—which left the bear with but the two choices. I thought
of following after the wise horse, but then that the bear would
likely overtake me. Nor did I think it manly to leave the Tachyn
warrior to face the beast alone. I had no weapons; the Tachyn had
been hunting and carried a bow. I thought he'd use it, but he looked
at the bear and took to his heels instead. The bear took after him and
I picked up a fallen branch and threw it. I should not have done that:
I should have let the bear take the coward. But I am Grannach and we
know no fear, so I threw my stick and the bear turned about and came
after me.
"At this point—as I wondered how fast I might climb a
tree, and whether or not the bear should climb it swifter—your
father came riding up. He was concerned for my health, he told me
later, and had come looking for me. Praise the Maker that he did!
However, he also carried a bow, and he put arrows into the bear
faster than any man I've seen. He feathered the beast! It turned from
me and went after him, and he led it away across the clearing and
through the trees.
"Well, I ran after him and saw him slay the bear. Later we
skinned it and ate its meat, and he gave me the hide which your
mother had prepared." Colun beamed, stroking the skin that
draped his shoulders. "This is that same animal, and that is why
I am your father's friend and yours."
The fire crackled, sending sparks into the night. Rannach said, "And
the Tachyn?"
"Why, he was Chakthi, of course." Colun grinned wickedly.
"The bear slain, your father took me up on his horse—which
I liked not at all!—and we returned to the clearing. We found
Chakthi there. His bow lay on the ground and he was high in a tree.
By the Maker, but he clung to his branch like a possum, and took a
long time coming down, even though your father assured him the bear
was dead. I watched him descend, and I do believe his breeches were
wet!"
Laughter echoed into the night. The Grannach rolled about, holding
their sides. Rannach said, "What then?"
Colun said, "Diplomat that your father is, he assured Chakthi no
word would be spoken of what transpired. Then he bound me to silence,
telling me that it were better I not say anything, lest I make an
enemy of the Tachyn akaman. Then he caught Chakthi's horse and
brought it back, and we rode away to drink tiswin."
Rannach said, "Then Chakthi should be grateful to my father."
Colun's smile went away. "
Should
be," he said. "But
is not. Chakthi is such a man as regards gratitude as a hateful
debt."
"So," Rannach asked, "is that why Chakthi bears us
Commacht such enmity?"
"In part, I think." Colun nodded, grave now, and stared
serious at Rannach and Arrhyna. "Neither has he much liking for
me, or any Grannach, for like your father I was witness to his
cowardice."
Arrhyna frowned and said, "But Racharran told him no tales would
be told, and surely he must know that word stands good … "
Colun shrugged. "I think that matters less to Chakthi than that
we
know, that we saw him up that tree all pale with fright,
his bow forgotten on the ground. I think that such a man as Chakthi
is broods on such matters, and they become like a festered wound that
he cannot forget." He nodded as if in confirmation of his own
assessment and fixed them both again with solemn eyes. "You two
are the only others who know of this. Morrhyn does not, neither your
mother. You see? Your father holds to his promised word."
Rannach said, "Had a man saved my life, I'd announce the debt.
I'd feast him and name him blood-friend."
"You are not Chakthi," Colun replied. "His head
follows a different trail, some other poison enters him."
"The invaders?" Rannach followed the direction of the
Grannach's gaze. The mountains looked to him impassable, all cold and
crenellate, looming moonwashed as snarling fangs. "How could
that be?"
"How could I know?" Colun poked at the fire, encouraging
brighter flames. "I am a creddan, not a golan or a wakanisha. I
cannot interpret signs or dreams. But … " His bulky shoulders
rose and fell as he sighed. "There's surely a madness come to
the borders of this land, and it seems to me a madness enters your
people. Ach! The world knows a Grannach's word is good—but who
listened to my warning?"
"My father," Rannach said, "and Morrhyn. Also Yazte
and Kahteney."
"Whilst Chakthi and that hangdog Dreamer of his ignored it."
Colun tossed a stick at the fire, sending sparks flurrying. "And
old Juh and his wakanisha prevaricate; and Tahdase and his dither and
look to Juh for guidance like puppies to the leader of their pack.
And all the while … " He looked again at the hills. "Is
that not madness? When a true friend warns of danger the wise man
listens and readies, no? But your Council only dithered and blocked
its ears, like children who close their eyes tight to deny what's
before them."
At Rannach's side, Arrhyna shivered and drew closer to her husband.
Colun saw her shifting and essayed a smile. "You'll be safe
here. Do they come, you'll have warning enough to get yourselves back
down the mountains." He fetched the kettle from the flames and
filled their cups, sipped the tea, and sighed mournfully. "Ach,
but I wish this were tiswin."
One of his fellows chuckled and said, "There'll be beer when we
reach home."
"It's not the same." Colun shook his head, grinning at the
two Matawaye. "Of all the things you flatlanders make, it's my
conviction tiswin is your greatest achievement."
"Perhaps I can brew it here," Arrhyna said.
Colun's face lit up. "You think that possible? Might you teach
my wife?"
"I don't know." Arrhyna smiled. "I must explore this
place, see if the right ingredients grow here. But can I, yes: I'll
teach your wife."
Rannach said, "I didn't know you were wed."
"Since your father took his first step," Colun replied, and
beamed a huge grin. "I married late, but wisely—Marjia is
the most beautiful woman in all these hills. Or any others."
Rannach wondered how old the Grannach was. He knew the Stone Folk
lived slow, long lives, but Colun's innate vitality seemed that of a
young man: he had thought the Grannach no more than his own father's
age, perhaps less, but Colun's words suggested a far greater length
of years. It was not the custom of the People to speak much of age,
and so he assayed a different question. It seemed to him he should
learn all he might of his hosts.
"What's a … golan, you said?"
"One gifted by the Maker."
"The wakanishas are gifted by the Maker," Rannach said. "Do
your golans dream, then?"
"No." Colun drank his tea and shook the cup clean. "Their
gift is that magic that allows us to shape the stone. They read its
pathways, its flow and ebb, and use their gift to follow those ways.
To open them to our tools. You flatlanders think stone is dead, but
it's not—it lives. Slow, I agree; and hard of comprehension
save to the golans."
This seemed to Rannach quite incomprehensible, and he said, "They
use their magic to cut the tunnels? Like that one we used?"
"To open the ways," Colun answered. "To persuade the
stone to let us through. Then we ordinary folk come with our tools
and refine the work. The entrances, they're all golan work. I can
explain it no better."
"I'd like to meet one of these golans," Rannach said.
Colun said, "Perhaps you shall. They've little to do with any
others, but who knows? These are strange times. Two flatlanders come
to live in our hills, and a darkness stirs across the world. So who
knows what meetings might come about?"
Rannach said, "Yes," and would have spoken further of the
Grannach ways and all the world beyond these mountains, but Colun
yawned massively and announced it time to sleep and Rannach knew he
was done with talking.
He left the horses hobbled, cropping on the rich grass, and spread
his blanket beside Arrhyna. It seemed wrong to pitch their lodge
while their hosts slept open on the ground. He touched his bride's
cheek and composed himself for sleep. The last thing he saw was the
pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain shining like bleached bone under the
moon.
He woke to shadow, realizing that dawn came late to this valley, and
lay awhile listening to the morning. Birds rose chorusing, and from
afar he heard the belling of a stag. He thought the hunting should be
good here, and felt a sudden and tremendous excitement that he trod
grass none of the People had before trod—as if he and Arrhyna
were reborn as First Man and First Woman, raised by the Maker from
the clay to walk this new land. He rose, draping his blanket about
his shoulders, and fed the fire. Across the sky ran a great wide beam
of golden light that fell upon the flanks of the Maker's Mountain and
lit the peak so that it shone all silvery white, no longer like
bleached bone but bright and radiant as newfound hope. He bowed his
head and made a gesture of obeisance, promising the Maker that he
would from now serve him as best he could, following the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko and warding his wife and people even to the giving of
his life.
Then he started, embarrassed, as the others woke and gathered about
the fire. Arrhyna went to the stream, and after her ablutions were
performed, came back and set to preparing breakfast.
When they'd eaten, Colun declared it time to part. Rannach asked
where they went, and when the Grannach indicated the valley's
invisible farther end, offered to ride with them.
"Stay here for now," Colun said. "Pitch your tent and
see your wife comfortable. Hunt; explore. Learn the valley and find a
place to live. When I can, I'll come back. Perhaps with Marjia"—he
looked to Arrhyna—"that you fulfill your promise."
Arrhyna said, "I shall, is it possible."
"Ach, tiswin!" Colun chuckled. "I shall offer prayers
that it is."
Arrhyna smiled; Rannach said, "Shall I not ride with you at
least a little way?"
Colun beckoned him off then, out of earshot, and said, "Make
your camp here a few days before you wander farther. And when you do,
go no higher than that." He thrust a finger at the pines
standing above the topmost terrace, "Let that be the limit of
your exploration, eh?"
Rannach ducked his head and said, "As you will. But why?"
Colun sniffed noisily. "I am but one creddan, as your father is
but one akaman. My clan claims this valley, and it was my decision to
bring you here. It might be that … " He grinned somewhat
shamefaced. "That not all agree with my decision, especially
when 1 tell my people of your Council's indecision. It would be wiser
that you stay safe here, not risk offense. None shall harm you here,
but some might take affront did you go wandering about our hills."
Rannach nodded and again said, "As you will." He no longer
felt quite so secure.
Seeing this, Colun said, "No harm shall come to you here. I'd
have said this earlier, save I'd not frighten Arrhyna. She's had
frights enough of late, no?"
Rannach said, "Yes," and took the Grannach's horny hand
between his own, "My thanks for all you've done, Colun, I deem
it an honor to name you friend."
"And I," Colun said. "You're your father's son."
"Save I lack his wisdom."
"That shall likely come." Colun held Rannach's hands hard:
it was as if stone ground his bones. "Time makes some men wise,
if they live long enough. I think you'll learn it."
Rannach said, "I hope I may."
"The Maker stand with you," Colun said, and turned away.
In a while the Grannach were gone, trotting up the valley to where
the stream turned around a stand of juniper and was lost.
Arrhyna said, "I think I might make tiswin from those berries."
And then: "What did Colun say to you?"
Rannach shrugged and said, "Farewell," and for a moment
thought to hide from her what else. But they were together now and
alone, and he'd not hold any secrets from her. So he told her.
When he was done she said, "But we are safe here, no?"
"Colun said that."
She took his hand and smiled. "Then all is well. Do we pitch our
lodge and begin this new life?"
Rannach said, "In a while," and took her in his arms.
14—Departure
Militiamen with bayonets fixed threateningly to their muskets lined
the wharf from warehouse to waterside, a red-coated corridor from the
land the prisoners were leaving forever to the ship that would take
them into the unknown future. She was a schooner—the
Pride
of the Lord—and the sailors hanging from her rigging
greeted the exiles with jeers and whistles as the column shuffled
miserably toward her. Their catcalls joined the mewing of the
swooping gulls in a chorus of derision, but Flysse paid them no
heed—she was too concerned for Davyd, whose fear of water
threatened to overcome his fear of the Militiamen's anger. The
soldiers brooked no delay, nor hesitated to use musket butt or
bayonet to urge on the tardy, as if the exiles were no more than
cattle driven to slaughter. Ahead of Flysse, a weeping man turned
back, and was forced on at bayonet point, his sobs becoming a shriek
of pain as steel pricked his buttocks, decorating his breeches with
bloody patches. The perpetrators laughed as if it were a great joke;
Flysse felt Davyd's hand seek hers and grip hard. She looked at his
face and saw his lips drawn tight over clenched teeth as he stared
fixedly ahead. She thought he looked very young, and very afraid.
Glancing around, she saw Arcole Blayke behind her, his expression
disdainful as he eyed the chuckling soldiers. He seemed unaware of
Davyd's terror. The line moved slowly on, across the cobbles to the
gangplank. At the head of that gently undulating ramp stood a
captain. He held a heavy key with which he unlocked the prisoners'
handcuffs, tossing them to a pile on the deck. More Militiamen stood
there, alert as the exiles were freed and herded to the hold. Flysse
felt Davyd shudder as he stepped on board. He looked around,
wild-eyed, as his manacles were removed, eyes roving over deck and
swaying masts to the gunwales, to the sea beyond. He made no move,
but for a moment she feared he would attempt to flee, though she
could not imagine where.
The officer favored the boy with a contemptuous look and was about to
speak, when Arcole forestalled him.
"Go on, lad. Don't give these bullies the pleasure."
Flysse turned, smiling gratefully as Davyd moaned and allowed her to
lead him toward the hold, but Arcole was staring at the captain and
she realized his words were intended less for Davyd than in challenge
of the Militiaman.
The captain only sneered and loosed Arcole's manacles, motioning for
him to follow the others. Arcole made a show of adjusting his shirt
cuffs, bowed to the officer in a manner that succeeded in being
insulting, and strolled leisurely to the ladder descending into the
bowels of the ship. Flysse thought him very brave, and very foolish.
For her own part, she was terrified. Perhaps not so much as
Davyd—whose fear seemed to rob him of volition, rendering his
legs rubbery, his movements disjointed as a poleaxed steer—but
still more afraid than she had ever been. She was grateful for the
boy's presence, for his helplessness that enabled her to ignore her
own terror to some extent. She concentrated on helping him down the
ladder—she thought that he must fall without her hands to guide
him.
But when she reached the bottom and saw her charge safely down, she
found herself abruptly confused. She had never set foot on board a
ship before, and she was immediately disorientated. The hold was a
long, dim area divided by stacked ranks of narrow bunks that left
barely enough space for passage between. Many of the bunks were
already occupied, and Flysse peered around, wondering where she
should lead Davyd. He had guided her in the warehouse, but now he
only stood blank-eyed and shuddering like a mindless babe. She
started as a hand touched her elbow.
"What's wrong with him?" Arcole asked, indicating the
trembling boy.
"He's afraid of water," she replied.
"As are too many here." Arcole looked around, his nostrils
flaring, and Flysse realized that the hold did, indeed, bear an odor
of unwashed bodies. "Still, do you follow me?"
As he moved past her, she blushed and took a firm grip on Davyd's
hand, leading him unprotesting after the tall man.
Arcole made his way between the bunks to a section overlooked by a
hatch. The metal grille let in sufficient light, it was easier to
see, and the air here was a little fresher. He halted, indicating the
tiers.
"Save you object to the observation of the sailors, Mistress
Cobal, I suggest you take the topmost. It shall be the airier."
He extended a hand to help her up. "I'll see the boy settled."
"Thank you." Flysse allowed him to aid her climb. She
noticed that his hand was very smooth.
She settled herself on the bunk and watched as Davyd took the middle
level, and Arcole the lowest place. Each bunk had a straw pallet and
a thin gray blanket. They were barely wide enough to accommodate the
occupants, and surrounded by raised planks that formed low walls.
Looking up through the hatch, Flysse could see a mast and the spars
outlined against a blue sky. It occurred to her that it was the sky
above Evander and that this should be the last time she would ever
see it. She closed her eyes and told herself she would not cry.
"I must confess," she heard Arcole declare in his Levan
drawl, "that I've known better quarters."
She wondered if he sought to cheer her, and then how Davyd fared. At
that, she dismissed her own trepidation and hung her head over the
bunk's edge to study the boy. He lay curled on his pallet, a blanket
spread over him—had Arcole draped him thus?—so that only
his head and the tight-clasped hands he pressed against his mouth
were visible. She said his name but he gave no reply, nor offered any
sign he heard her. She sighed and directed her gaze along the hold.
From her vantage point atop the tier, she could see the bunks were
filling up. She thought there must be a hundred or more. Some exiles
carried small bundles that they clutched close, afraid of losing
whatever pitiful valuables they had managed to bring with them.
Flysse wished she had been able to bring something—a comb would
not go amiss, nor a change of clothing. She had no sure idea how long
the voyage would last, and the notion of spending weeks at sea in
garments not laundered since her arrest was unpleasant. No less that
of spending the entire voyage in this dim, malodorous hold.
"Sieur Blayke?" she ventured. And when Arcole's face
appeared below her: "Shall we spend all our time here, or shall
they let us out? Shall we be allowed to wash? What shall we do when
… "
She fell silent, embarrassed by the flood of questions. She was
suddenly afraid he would find them insulting; how should a gentleman
be familiar with the procedures of an exile ship?
His smile, albeit faint, put her better at her ease. "I've
really no idea," he said. "This is as new an experience for
me as it is for you."
Flysse blushed—she seemed to spend much of her time in his
presence blushing—and said, "Of course. I'm sorry; forgive
me. I just … I thought … Forgive me, please."
She was babbling again. She set a hand against her mouth to dam the
spate, and bit on a knuckle as she fought the renewed threat of
tears.
"Mistress Cobal," she heard him say, "there's nothing
to forgive, I assure you. I think we are none of us much at our ease
here. Our circumstances are unusual to us all. But … She heard his
voice come closer and opened her eyes to find his face looking over
the rim of her bunk. "I believe they place some value on our
lives—as indentured folk, at least—and so shall likely
provide us with the basic amenities. Even the Evanderans tend their
animals, no?"
Flysse nodded, taking no offense at his slighting reference to
Evanderans. She did not feel she belonged to any particular nation,
save that exile was, in itself, a kind of community. She essayed a
smile, realizing he sought to comfort her.
"I imagine they'll see us fed and watered," he continued.
"And I trust they'll allow us to wash. God knows, we shall have
an ocean at our disposal, eh?"
He smiled then, and Flysse could not, despite all her fear, help
thinking how handsome he was. She wiped at her eyes, thinking she
must look a sight. A comb—a hairbrush—would be most
welcome. Unconsciously, she touched her hair, smoothing the errant
curls. "What should we do?" she asked. "For now, I
mean."
Arcole shrugged. "Wait, I suppose. There seems little we
can
do, no? I imagine they'll issue instructions betimes. Meanwhile,
I think it wise we remain here, to stake our claim." He gestured
at the filling hold, smiling sardonically. "Should we quit these
desirable quarters, we'd likely find them taken on our return."
Flysse nodded sadly. She thought things came to a sorry pass were
folk prepared to squabble over such miserable beds, but still could
see the sense of Arcole's advice. These bunks would be infinitely
preferable to those situated away from the ventilation of the
hatches, around the edges of the hull, where the light was dimmest
and the air thick. She saw him smile and nod, and then his face was
gone as he took his own place.
She settled back, watching the hold fill up as the enormity of her
situation sank in. There were other women present, but the majority
of the human cargo was male and she saw more than one pair of eyes
turned her way, some merely curious, others openly speculative. She
knew such looks from the taproom of the Flying Horse, but at least
there she had been able to deflect the attentions of admirers. Here,
she was not sure any rules
could govern, save those the
strongest saw fit to impose. She saw the massive black-bearded fellow
who had entered the warehouse with Arcole watching her and turned
away, not wishing to give him any encouragement. She remembered
Arcole's reference to animals and wondered why men and women were not
separated. The answer came with the memory of an overheard
conversation between Master Banlyn and a sea captain, and with it a
horrid quickening of fear.
The mariner had captained such a ship as this, and Master Banlyn had
asked him, winking lewdly, what provision was made for the quartering
of women and men. The captain had chuckled and reminded him that such
folk as the exile ships carried were all indentured, and did they
breed during the voyage, why, their children were born indentured and
thus to lifelong service in Salvation.
Flysse felt her mouth go dry. She knew she lacked the strength to
repel such attentions as might be forced on her. She could
fight—would fight—but did some man look to rape her, she
knew in her heart she should be helpless. Davyd might try to defend
her, but he was only a boy. And Arcole? Would he protect her honor?
She was nothing to him save a chance companion in hardship. Had he
laid eyes on her in the Flying Horse, he'd likely not have noticed
her at all, save perhaps as another tavern wench, beneath his
dignity. She felt a lump grow in her throat and her eyes water. She
squeezed them tight shut, telling herself she must be strong: she
must not cry, show weakness. She could not help a stifled sob.
"What ails you now?"
There was a faint hint of irritation in Arcole's voice that added to
Flysse's desolation. She swallowed and rubbed at her eyes. "I'm
afraid," she said, and when Arcole sighed: "I'm sorry."
His tone sounded mollified somewhat. "What is it you fear? The
Sea of Sorrows, monsters of the deep?"
Flysse stared at him in horror. Those dangers had been farthest from
her mind, and she had rather he not remind her of them. She shook her
head, annoyed now that she could not entirely stem the tears. "No,"
she said, and waved a hand at the hold in general. "It's this.
All of it. These people."
Arcole turned, surveying the hold as if he looked over some unsavory
gaming room. "Not, I'll admit, the company I'd choose." He
gave her an ironic grin. "But still … comrades in adversity,
no?"
"No," said Flysse. "You don't understand."
"Then tell me," he said.
Flysse thought he spoke out of politeness and nothing more. He seemed
indifferent to her upset, even slightly bored, as if he saw her as
inferior, or tiresome. She shook her head, afraid her tone was
querulous as she said, "No; it's nothing."
When he sighed and she saw his brows rise a fraction, she scowled and
turned her back, revising her opinion of him. Handsome he might be,
but also arrogant, and she would not show him weakness. All around,
she heard the sounds of her fellow exiles: their low-voiced
conversations, some weeping, some chanting prayers, the shifting of
bodies, the creaking of the bunks. There were unfamiliar noises, too,
that came from the timbers of the ship and the sea beyond its hull,
the sailors overhead. She heard the tramp of toots and the faint
shout of orders, and then a growing silence that prompted her to open
her eyes and sit up.
Descending the ladder granting access to the hold, she saw a man. An
officer in the God's Militia by his uniform, but not one she
recognized. He did not wear the familiar scarlet, but a jacket of
dark blue, crossed by white straps that supported a sword and a
holstered pistol. He held a tricorn hat with a cockade of scarlet and
white beneath one arm, one hand rested on the butt of the pistol. It
was difficult to make out his face clearly, but she saw that his hair
was fair and his features regular. He halted a few steps from the
bottom and surveyed the hold as the silence spread.
When all was quiet he said, "I am Tomas Var, Captain of Marines
in the God's Militia. I command fifty men, whose duty is to defend
this vessel against all harm—be it from without or within."
He paused, allowing the significance of his words to sink in. Flysse
heard Arcole murmur, "Our guards, by God."
Var let his gaze wander across the watching faces, then went on: "Do
you give offense, do any of you think to foment mutiny or any kind of
trouble, know that my men will shoot you down. You will obey such
orders as I or any of my men give you, or those issued by Captain
Bennan, who is master of this ship. Do you refuse, you will be
flogged. Do you raise a hand against any soldier or sailor, you will
be executed. Do you raise hand against one another, you will be
flogged. Neither will I tolerate rape. Any who offend will be flogged
within an inch of their life.
"Do you follow these rules, this voyage shall not be overly
unpleasant. But remember always—you are the outcasts of decent
society. You are exiles and you have no rights, only such charity as
we elect to grant you.
"You will be fed twice a day, and, does the weather allow, come
in groups on deck to exercise and bathe … "
He proceeded to outline those routines by which they must live.
Flysse listened intently, seeking to persuade herself that the
regime, and the presence of the marines, would impose order and a
degree of safety. She thought this captain, this Tomas Var, seemed a
decent man, whose care of his charges extended to delivering them
whole and undamaged to Salvation. Or so she hoped …
Arcole listened to the clipped Evanderan voice with a cynical
half-smile. Fifty marines should certainly be sufficient to maintain
order and discipline amongst the exiles, nor did he doubt that Var
would make good his promises of executions and floggings. He knew
something of the Autarchy's marines. They had been the spearhead of
the Evanderan armies, and a sharp, swift spear at that. They were
undoubtedly fine soldiers, and likely no less efficient as warders.
He did not share Flysse's optimism: to him Var's men represented the
same authority that defiled his land and sent him into unjust exile.
He waited until Var was finished speaking and had gone back up the
ladder, then stretched—as best his height allowed—on the
bunk, staring morosely at the slats a few scant inches above. He
anticipated a long and boring voyage. He wondered how many of the
prisoners would survive unscathed. He could not believe all there
would adhere to Var's rules. Indeed, were his companions on the
journey to Bantar typical of his fellow exiles, he shared this
miserable hold with a crew of ruffians. Save perhaps the young woman,
Flysse, though even she represented something of an unwelcome
problem.
He had acted instinctively when he helped her with the young thief,
and she appeared to have taken that as some kind of commitment. He
hoped she would not seek to attach herself to him: it would be an
embarrassment. She was, he must admit, pretty enough, but a tavern
wench—even one who had struck an officer of the God's
Militia—was beneath his dignity. His friends would scorn him
were he to dally there.
He chuckled then. Dom was his only real friend, and all those others
who called themselves his friends should soon be left far behind. He
would never see them again, so why should their opinion matter? It
did not, he decided, save insofar as it reflected and echoed his own,
and that did not permit attachments to tavern wenches, no matter how
appealing. He was Arcole Blayke, gentleman, and must hold on to that
concept of himself, else he descend to the level of the common folk
around him. Besides, the girl was obviously vulnerable, and did he
allow her to perceive him as her champion, it could only lead to her
ultimate disappointment. He did not seek emotional attachments, but
to survive this tedious voyage and make the best of his unwelcome
fate.
He did not think that should prove too difficult once landed in
Salvation. The place must surely be a wilderness—the God knew, it
lay on the far side of the world—and there must surely be
opportunities there for a gentleman, even one branded and indentured.
He could read and write, which he doubted were attributes owned by
many of his companions. He was a master swordsman, though he wondered
if the Evanderans would trust him in reach of a blade. He could read
music and play the harpsichord, and his singing voice was considered
melodious. He was an able pugilist. His work with sketchpad and
watercolors was more than efficient. And, of course, he was most
handy with the cards. Was there a town of some kind, and inland
farms, he supposed there must be some kind of society. There was, he
believed, a governor, and he supposed that authority would entertain
some kind of court. Therefore—surely—there would be a
place for a gentleman of Arcole's talents. Perhaps as a tutor,
something of that ilk. Surely even the uncouth Evanderans could not
ignore his skills, but put them to use at something other than rough
manual labor.
He nodded to himself, confirming his own logic. He need only survive
the tiresome voyage, then make the best life he could in Salvation.
It must be under the Evanderan thumb, without hope of return to his
beloved Levan, but so be it. And perhaps …
He turned his head from side to side, studying the folk spread around
the hold. God knew, there were enough of them: more sent before and
no doubt more to come. Perhaps someday there might be even more
exiles than Evanderans—more indentured servants than masters.
So perhaps one day … The thought excited him. It was beguiling,
almost terrifying in its promise … Perhaps one day the exiles might
rise up and overthrow the masters, take Salvation for their own.
He pushed the notion away, afraid of the hope it offered. The
Evanderans commanded magic and stamped out that faculty in all
others. Doubtless they'd have practitioners in Salvation, perhaps
even Inquisitors, whilst the exiles would have none. Certainly there
would be a strong garrison. Better that such ideas be set aside until
he gained a clearer picture of the life awaiting him on the farther
side of the world. Learn all he could, and then decide. It was not
dissimilar to a duel: one might have some knowledge of one's
opponent, of his reputation, but until the first tentative moves were
made, the engage, the parry and riposte, one could not be sure. So
one approached cautiously, learning, probing, until the counters, the
skill of the enemy, were perceived. Only then did one strike.
That must be his course, and until he had gleaned all the information
he might of his opponent, he would play the part of prisoner,
submissive. It would not be easy—in all of this, one thing
remained firm: his hatred of the Evanderans and their Autarchy—but
he would do his best. And to do that he did not need a dewy-eyed girl
clinging to his coattails, even less a stripling thief. Did they
continue to attach themselves to him, he would rebuff them.
His mind made up, Arcole did his best to relax.
It was not easy. The bunk was too short, and scarcely more
comfortable than his prison cell. The hold was filling up with the
smell of unwashed humanity and the noises it made: he was not
accustomed to mingling with such people. He wished he had a book to
read, a pomander to protect his nostrils. He wished he might take a
leisurely bath, or stroll about the deck. He touched his branded
cheek, reminding himself that such basic amenities were denied him:
he was an exile.
He heard unfamiliar sounds—shouts from the deck above and the
creak of timbers—and felt the schooner shift. He was not much
familiar with the ways of oceangoing craft, but he guessed the ship
was towed from its moorings, out from Bantar's docks to the open sea
beyond. He did his best to block out the cries of alarm that rose up
to accompany the movement, and the scorn he felt at such
caterwauling. There was no point to complaint—exile was
inevitable. All that remained was to make the best of it. He hoped he
would not be seasick.
He listened carefully awhile, then rose to stand beside the bunks,
looking up. Through the grille of the hatch he could see a mast, and
sailors clambering like squirrels about the rigging. Then, with a
sound like massive sheets shaken by a giant, the sails unfurled and
the deck lurched beneath his feet. He clutched unthinking at the rim
of the topmost bunk, and felt a hand cover his as Flysse gasped. He
turned and found her eyes huge and blue, staring at him as if in
search of answers or reassurances.
"We must be under way," he said, and retrieved his hand.
'We depart the harbor."
Flysse swallowed and nodded, feeling her cheeks grow warm at the cool
indifference of his tone. She had hoped … But no. Whatever kindness
he had shown her was no more than gentlemanly politeness. She had no
right to expect more, nor would she. She directed her eyes upward,
marveling at the vast billows of white canvas that filled the sky
above, then looked downward as Davyd moaned and stirred, writhing on
his bunk as if in nightmare's grip.
Forgetting her own discomfort and ignoring Arcole, she clambered down
to perch beside the restive boy. His hand clutched hers, and his eyes
opened.
"We're out to sea," he groaned. "Oh, God protect us."
Over her shoulder, Arcole said, "We quit the harbor, no more
than that."
"For the sea!" Davyd cried. "We'll all drown! There
are monsters there, waiting for us."
"Sailors' stories," Arcole said.
"They're true," said Davyd mournfully. "I know!"
Flysse squeezed his hand. "We're safe, Davyd," she said.
"Why, we must be still in sight of Evander, and everyone knows
there are no monsters in these waters. Besides, there are marines on
board, all with muskets and swords. They'll surely protect us from
any monsters. Did you not hear the captain?"
Davyd shook his head, but Flysse could not tell whether he denied her
or told her he had not heard. She feared that he must sicken did he
continue stricken by such terror. Barely knowing what she did, she
turned to Arcole, her eyes imploring.
Arcole had rather not meet her gaze. It asked that he involve
himself; it asked for his help—though for the boy alone, and
that prompted his grudging admiration. He thought that this Flysse
Cobal was perhaps made of better stuff than the common folk, of
sterner mettle. He did not want to admire her; he wanted to ignore
her. But he was, after all, a gentleman, and no gentleman could
ignore a lady in distress, no matter what her station. He sighed and
bent toward Davyd.
"As Mistress Cobal says, there are marines on board, and I saw a
cannon. Likely those alone would fend off any monsters." He
could not help a slight smile: sea monsters, indeed! "But did
you not see the hexes painted about the ship?"
Davyd shook his head or shuddered, Arcole could not tell which.
"Well, they are there, and no doubt are designed to protect all
on board. I'd say that should be enough, no?"
Davyd grunted something that might have been a negative. Flysse put
an arm about his narrow shoulders, cradling him as she might have
done a baby. "Do you hear, Davyd?" she asked gently. "Sieur
Blayke tells you we're safe, and he should know, eh?"
Arcole wondered how that should be. The Levan was landlocked, and the
only waters he had ever crossed were rivers or lakes, and those by
bridge or ferryboat. Horses he knew about, and cities, but the open
sea was totally unfamiliar. He wished Flysse would not look at him so
gratefully, but the boy had stopped shaking now and stared at him as
if he were the fount of all knowledge. He sighed again and went on.
"We're valuable cargo, no? Exiled and indentured—property
of some worth to the Autarchy, which guards its possessions
jealously. I doubt me they'd risk losing us, or this ship. No, boy,
you'll be safe."
Now two pairs of eyes studied him as if his words were the
cornerstones of their lives. It occurred to him that Flysse was near
as frightened as the boy but hid her fear for his sake. She rose
higher in his estimation—which irritated him somewhat. He
forced a smile and said, confidently as he was able, "Trust me,
eh? You're safe."
Very soft, less to Arcole or Flysse than to himself, Davyd murmured,
"But I dreamed , ..
"
"Dreamed what?" asked Flysse.
Davyd caught himself and shook his head. "Nothing. It was just a
dream. Only that."
His face—already pale—grew ashen, as if some fear greater
even than his terror of water leeched the blood from his cheeks.
Arcole saw the muscles of his jaw lock tight around clenched teeth
and his head drop, eyes averted. Arcole was a gambler and a duelist,
skilled in the reading of faces—of those small, unbidden signs
that give a man away: he sensed something was hidden. He wondered
what greater terror possessed the boy than his fear of the sea.
Flysse said, "Fear makes us dream sometimes, Davyd," and
the boy nodded without looking up and said, "I'm thirsty."
Arcole thought he deflected further talk of his dreams. Almost, he
pursued the matter, but Flysse looked to him and asked, "Would
you be kind enough, 'sieur Blayke?"
He frowned, at first not sure what she asked of him—he was not
accustomed to fetching and carrying. But then he nodded brusquely and
rose, walking to the hatchway ladder, where he recalled a water butt
was located.
The deck shifted more steeply under his feet now, and he must adjust
his step, balancing the tin cup carefully as he returned. He noticed
that several of the human cargo were already sick, and wondered how
long it would be before the hold stank of vomit. But he brought the
cup back and handed it to Flysse. She smiled thanks and lifted the
mug to Davyd's mouth.
When the boy had done drinking, he licked his lips and said huskily,
"My thanks, 'sieur Blayke."
Arcole waved a dismissive hand and took the empty cup, returning it.
When he reached their bunks again, Davyd seemed a little calmer. Or
in greater control of his fear. He no longer trembled, but he still
clutched Flysse's hand as if it were a rock, anchoring him in a
stormy sea.
Flysse said, "You are very kind, 'sieur Blayke."
Arcole grunted. It seemed an attachment grew, whether he liked it or
not. And he could not shake the feeling that Davyd hid something,
something about his dreaming. He thought it must be a long voyage. He
looked at the young woman and at the boy awhile, and then he said,
"We are to be companions on this journey, no? So, do we dispense
with formalities? My name is Arcole."
And against his will, he could not help but feel pleased by Flysse's
smile.
15—For a Lady's Honor
Routines became established as the
Pride of the Lord sailed
steadily westward.
The exiles were each issued a bowl, a spoon, and a cup, and soon
after dawn each day they were fed. Sailors escorted by armed marines
lowered tubs of porridge into the hold and the prisoners formed into
lines to partake of the frugal meal. It was thick, unpalatable stuff,
but after a few complainers had suffered beatings, there were no more
objections. Throughout the day, in groups of twenty, they were
allowed on deck to bathe and exercise as best they might in the small
space allowed. Tomas Var ordered an arrangement of canvas sheets that
afforded a degree of privacy for their ablutions, though sailors
leered from the rigging as the women took their turn; and when Arcole
pursued those exercises learned in the gymnasiums of the Levan, he
attracted the catcalls of mariners and prisoners alike. He ignored
them: such common folk could hardly be expected to understand the
activities of a gentleman. Around sunset, thick soup and hard bread
were issued. If the exiles were lucky, the soup contained pieces of
meat. Inevitably, the larger part of each day was spent below decks.
And there hierarchies began to form.
The strongest, or the most vicious, of the prisoners attracted
coteries of sycophants, and those groups carved out tiny kingdoms
within the hold's small world. Had they not already claimed the most
propitious areas for themselves, they set about the conquest. Those
too weak to oppose them were banished to the less favorable sections:
around the perimeter of the hull, where the air circulated slower and
thicker and the journey to water butt or soup tub was longer. Some
were required to pay a toll for the journey, in food or physical
favors.
Arcole had not looked to establish himself as a leader—he had
far rather been left alone—but early in the voyage a ruffian
with broad shoulders and a wide chest, one of Karyl Oster's group,
suggested he vacate his position beneath the airy hatch, taking the
boy with him. The woman he could leave.
Arcole told him, "No. Why should I?"
The man—Arcole never bothered to learn his name—said
"Because I want it."
Arcole digested this and smiled. It was, on a level beneath his
dignity, akin to the challenge of a duelist. He thought that he must
adjust his attitudes in this new environment. Still smiling, he drove
his fist into the man's stomach, and then, as the fellow doubled
over, struck him twice—very precisely, just as he had been
taught by Smiling Jacques, the prizefighter—about the head. The
man fell down and did not get up. Arcole suggested to his minions
that they carry him away, which they did instantly and nervously.
After that, none others attempted to take over that section of the
bunks, and Arcole found himself something of a hero.
Certainly Flysse saw him as such, and Davyd; and consequently he
found himself further entangled with them, the which he found
irritating and flattering in equal measure. The boy had calmed
somewhat, but was still clearly troubled. He ate and drank
automatically, as if from habit rather than desire, but when he slept
he tossed and turned and cried out about sea monsters and destruction
and then, on waking, denied memory of the dreams with averted eyes
and new-paled face. He looked to Flysse for comfort and Arcole for
protection, and when he walked on deck it was always with anxious
looks toward the sea.
Arcole's curiosity about this went some way to fixing their
relationship. He felt that Davyd possessed some knowledge he kept
hid, and as much to escape the inevitable boredom of the journey as
for any other reason, he determined to unlock the boy's secrets.
Flysse was another matter entirely.
He could not deny her beauty, but neither the differences between
them. He respected her courage—especially that bravery that had
prompted her to strike an officer in the God's Militia—and he
admired the way she concealed her own fears in support of Davyd, but
he could not forget that she had been a tavern wench. For all she
spoke well, and possessed manners unusual for a serving
woman—imitating the gentlefolk in whose mansion she'd once
worked, he supposed—he could not help but think of her as
beneath his station. Nor did he seek such entanglements as must
surely hamper his advancement in Salvation. He looked on them both as
curiosities: common folk come somehow under his protection, not
properly understood, like inherited servants. And yet, when he saw
the scar decorating Davyd's cheek exactly like his own, and the brand
on Flysse's arm, he must remember that they were all of them exiles
and in the eyes of the Autarchy no different.
For all he had told himself he must accept the situation and make the
best of it, it was not easy to consider himself one with the other
inmates of the hold, one with the human cargo of the
Pride of the
Lord. In too many ways he felt a greater kinship with the marines
who watched him as he exercised and understood better than his fellow
exiles what he did and why. He had sooner dined with Tomas Var—for
all the man was an officer of the Autarchy, and an Evanderan—than
take his bowl and eat on his bunk with folk who spoke in common
accents and smelled of sweat and vomit. And yet he was consigned with
them to exile: he wore the brand, and faced only a life of slavery,
indentured. And those secret hopes he held—well, perhaps it did
not hurt to make friends amongst his fellows.
And—a constant, growing curiosity—there were Davyd's
dreams.
He knew of Dreamers. The Autarchy destroyed them mercilessly: they
possessed some measure of that magic power that won Evander its wars.
It was a strength greater than muskets or blades, and jealously
guarded. He had not lied when he told Davyd of the hexes that warded
the
Pride of the Lord—they were strong, likely set there
by Evanderan Inquisitors who were the strongest of all the magically
gifted. Those sigils could hold a man back from jumping ship, or an
exile from electing to drown rather than become a servant in
Salvation. They would—did sea serpents exist—hold off
those monsters. They were the truest strength of the Autarchy.
But there were other strengths, other magicks, and the dreaming was
one. It prophesied, which was why the Autarchy sought out and burned
all those outside its ranks who owned the gift.
Arcole was uncertain whether or not Davyd owned that gift. He knew
only that the boy had spoken of dreams and exhibited unreasonable
fear at mention of them. Was he a Dreamer, then his aversion to
discussion was understandable; were he revealed, he would be
executed. But if it was so—if Davyd
was a Dreamer—then
he was a potential ally, surely a useful tool.
He did not think Flysse entertained any suspicion of Davyd's
potential ability, but the boy looked to Flysse for support, so
Arcole could not overlook or dismiss the woman. He recognized, with a
gambler's instinct, that the one card must depend upon the other, and
if he were to succeed in his duel with the Autarchy, he might need
them both.
So he allowed them to look to him for protection, and it was, he had
to admit, not altogether unpleasant.
Flysse could not make up her mind about Arcole. As he had suggested,
she called him by his first-name now, and he addressed her by hers,
and that would usually have confirmed their friendship. But she was
not sure she could genuinely call him her friend—he remained
somehow aloof. Oh, he was unfailingly polite and she was grateful for
his guardianship, but there remained something about him that denied
real intimacy. It was as though he erected an invisible barrier
around himself, and often when they spoke—which was more
usually on her or Davyd's instigation than Arcole's—she felt he
talked down to her. That irritated her, for while she regarded him as
a gentleman, she considered herself respectable and felt he might
well treat her on a more equal footing. But her irritation was
balanced by gratitude and the knowledge that without his protection,
her situation on board the
Pride of the Lord would surely be
far worse.
Not that it was what she would call pleasant. The lack of privacy
offended her, and the food was none too good. When she bathed, the
leering faces that observed her from the rigging frightened her; and
when she washed her clothes, she blushed at the catcalls and lewd
whistles that prompted her to dress again, quickly, and suffer the
dampness and the scratching of the saltwater. Almost, she wished she
were as unashamed as some of the other women, who flaunted their
nudity at the sailors. But perhaps worst were the nights, when the
hold echoed to the sounds of copulation, and sometimes then she could
not resist wondering what she would do were Arcole to approach her.
These thoughts she kept secret, though, and her unhappiness, for she
must consider Davyd.
Although the terror that had possessed him on boarding was gone, she
knew he was still very frightened. He did his best to hide it, but by
day he was never far from her side or Arcole's, as if their presence
firmed and calmed him, and by night he could not conceal his dreams.
At first she tried to persuade him to speak of them and saw that
Arcole did the same, but Davyd remained resolute, denying that he
could remember what had set him to screaming in the night save it be
his innate fear of the sea.
That seemed to Flysse a reasonable explanation, and it was soon
obvious that Davyd was uncomfortable enough speaking of his oneiric
experiences that she accepted his reasons and said no more. But she
noticed that Arcole still pressed the boy with questions until Davyd
would moan and hold his head, and look to Flysse to rescue him from
interrogation, and she wished he would desist for Davyd's sake.
One day, on deck, she spoke to him of her concern.
He had completed his exercises and washed. She held his shirt, unable
to resist studying his muscular torso as he performed his routine.
Davyd was a little distance away, staring dully at the sea, as if
awaiting the arrival of a monster so inevitable that fear became
pointless. She passed him his shirt and said, "Arcole, I'd speak
with you of Davyd." She kept her voice low, that the boy not
hear. "Why do you question him so about his dreams? It serves
only to upset him."
She wondered if she saw interest flicker in his eyes. Surely there
was a momentary tightening of his jaw. But then he shrugged and said,
"Do you not think it better a man face his fears?"
"Davyd's hardly a man," she answered. "He's but a
frightened boy, and you frighten him the more with your
interrogations."
Arcole looked a moment thoughtful, then asked her, "Do you not
think he might exorcise his fears through confession?"
Flysse's brow wrinkled. Arcole noticed that she grew tanned, her hair
become pale gold. For a moment he wondered how she would look in a
decent gown, how she would sound without that harsh Evanderan accent.
Then she shook her head and told him, "No. I think his fears are
locked too deep, and shall remain until he sets foot on land again."
"Perhaps," Arcole said. "So you believe his dreams
shall end when we reach Salvation?"
"Surely they will. It's the sea that frightens him, no?"
Again Arcole said, "Perhaps."
"How mean you, perhaps?" Flysse asked. "If it the sea
that frightens him, then surely dry land must comfort him."
For a third time Arcole said, "Perhaps."
Flysse found him enigmatic, and somewhat irritating. "Why are
you so interested?" she demanded.
Arcole frowned, then hid that look behind a smile. "I've never
spent time with anyone like Davyd," he said honestly. "The
boy intrigues me; I'd learn what makes him dream so."
That sounded to Flysse as if Arcole relegated Davyd to the position
of a specimen, some curious creature worthy of study for its oddity.
She glared at him and said, "Is Davyd only some
thing you
observe?"
Arcole was taken aback by her vehemence. He felt a moment
embarrassed, for there was a measure of truth in her accusation. Also
he found himself disturbed that she grew so vexed, that he found
himself concerned by her anger. He told himself he must assuage her
for fear he lose a potential ally, that it was not personal. He bowed
and said, "I ask your forgiveness, Flysse. I see that I've been
clumsy in my attempt to aid the boy. Do you truly believe my
questions worsen his condition, I'll put them up. My word on it."
He offered her a tentative smile. By God, what did it matter that he
anger her? Save that he'd not; and he must admit, against his will,
that he wished that less in fear of losing an ally than for the
simple reason he'd sooner see her smile than glower at him. The
admission troubled him, and he pushed it aside, to some hinder part
of his mind.
Flysse hesitated an instant, then let herself smile back. "I
think it should be for the best," she said. "For Davyd's
sake."
"Then as I say." Arcole set a hand over his heart. "I
shall desist."
"Thank you," Flysse said.
Then they started as Davyd cried out and sprang away from the rail.
So vigorous was his jump that he flung himself some distance back,
sprawling full length on the deck. Flysse and Arcole hurried to him,
clutching him as he crabbed backward over the boards.
"Monsters!" His voice was hoarse and his eyes rolled, the
whites exposed. "Sea monsters!"
Arcole left him in Flysse's care and went to the rail where now a
small crowd was gathered, pointing and shouting, sharing Davyd's
panic. He stared at the sea. The swell was a deep blue-gray, and from
it emerged darting shapes of a similar color that raced alongside the
schooner, sometimes flinging themselves high into the air like living
missiles. For a moment Arcole felt his heart lurch, his skin crawl
cold. Beside him a woman screamed.
Then, on his left, a marine lowered his musket and laughed.
"Dolphins," he said. "Only dolphins, and no harm in
them at all."
Arcole went back to Davyd and told him what the marine had said.
"Harmless dolphins," he assured the trembling boy. "They're
a kind of fish, I think. Certainly they're not sea monsters."
Davyd's hand gripped Arcole's wrist with a strength that belied his
scrawny frame. "They'll come," he muttered. "I know
they'll come. I dreamed it."
There was such awful certitude in his voice, Arcole wished he had not
made Flysse that promise. He watched as she smoothed the frightened
boy's hair, murmuring gently, and thought that he must find some
subtle way to question Davyd further.
There was no immediate opportunity, however, for when Davyd's
prostration caught the attention of the marines on watch, several
came to stare at the boy. He saw them, and Arcole saw his terror
arise again, now prompted by the soldiers. Some laughed, and Davyd
forced himself to join them, hiding his fear behind a rueful smile
and a shaking of his head. He allowed Arcole and Flysse to help him
to his feet and took a drink of water, pretending calm. Arcole saw
that his shirt was heavy with fear sweat, but said no more, only
played the part of concerned friend. It would not be easy, but he
determined to unlock the secret of the boy's dreams.
They approached the Sea of Sorrows now, and the days grew steadily
warmer, no less the nights. Folk shed clothes like molting beasts,
all modesty forgotten as the mounting heat pervaded the hold. The
more brazen of the women went about in only their shifts, and
emotions matched the rising temperatures. Arcole was gratified to see
that Flysse did not demonstrate such abandon, though he could not
properly define why.
Then, one stifling night, all became changed.
Arcole slept fitfully, bare-chested and awash with sweat. He could
hear Davyd moaning in the bunk above, the grunts and cries of
copulation loud amidst the snoring of those exiles fortunate enough
to find sound sleep. He drifted in a limbo closer to wakefulness than
slumber, and consequently was aware of stealthy footfalls moving
toward him. He opened his eyes and began to raise his head, when a
hand closed over his mouth, others clamping over his wrists, and
abruptly he was hauled from the bunk.
In the light descending through the hatch, he saw that he was held by
the man he had beaten and another of his coterie. A third held the
wriggling Davyd. Flysse slept on, oblivious. Then Karyl Oster's
bearded face drew close. His breath was redolent of decayed teeth.
"We've decided, 'sieur Blayke"—he made the title an
insult—"that we'll wait no longer. We've had enough of
your highfalutin ways, an' since you don't take the woman, we will.
Me first, an' then my mates. An' you can watch. How'd you like that,
eh?"
The one holding Davyd said, "An' the boy for me."
Arcole struggled as Oster turned away, but the two holding him were
strong. He saw faces watching from the surrounding bunks, but none
came to his aid or raised any outcry. He supposed they were more
afraid of the immediate retribution of Oster's bullies than the
threat of Tomas Var.
Oster clapped a hand over Flysse's mouth and snatched her from her
bunk in a single movement. Sleeping, she wore only a shift. It rose
to expose shapely legs as Oster deposited her on the deck, still
gagging her with his hairy hand. She fought him, her eyes wide with
terror and outrage. He leered and told her, "Play easy, girl,
an' this'll pleasure you. Fight me, an' … " He raised a fisted
hand in threat.
Flysse went on struggling, and Oster struck her.
Something snapped in Arcole then. It was a strange sensation. He had
killed men in duels of honor, but always with a cold precision; this
was different—a hot, red rage seemed to loan him an unnatural
strength. Barely aware of what he did, he stamped the heel of one
bare foot down hard on the toes of one captor, feeling bones break.
The man yelped, and his hold loosened enough that Arcole was able to
tear an arm free and fling himself backward, driving the other
would-be rapist against the bunk behind. He drove an elbow into the
fellow's rib cage, and the hand across his mouth came loose. Still
held by one arm, he kicked out, his foot sinking deep between the
first man's legs. There was a shriek of pain and the man collapsed
onto Oster. His grip on Flysse was broken and she took the
opportunity to rake nails down Oster's cheek. He snarled and shoved
his acolyte away, striking Flysse again.
The rage that consumed Arcole was fueled fiercer at that. He turned,
wrenching clutching hands from his arm, not now in emulation of
Smiling Jacques's lessons but in blind fury, seeking only to damage,
to inflict pain. The man gasped as Arcole's fists landed against his
ribs and face, and he raised his arms helplessly. Arcole batted them
aside, clutched the bloodied face, and slammed the man's skull
against the edge of the bunk. As he fell, Arcole spun round, seeking
Oster, the architect of this outrage.
The giant was clambering to his feet, beating at the hands Flysse set
about one wrist. Beyond them, Arcole saw Davyd fight loose of his
captor and drop to the deck. The man who had held him gaped, then
turned and scuttled into the shadows. Davyd flung himself at Oster
and was hurled away.
Arcole said, "Flysse, let him go. Leave him to me."
Oster grinned and wiped a hand across the scratches running down his
cheek. "Aye, girl, you do that. An' when I've done for the
popinjay, I'll be back for you. I'll … "
The sentence ended as Arcole's fist smashed teeth. Oster spat blood
and lumbered forward. He stood a good head taller than Arcole and his
build was massive, apelike. In a gymnasium, with room to maneuver and
employ well-learnt techniques, Arcole would have held the advantage,
but here he had none. The spaces between the tiered bunks were
narrow, denying movement, and Oster was clearly the stronger man. But
Arcole remained possessed by rage, and what he gave away in weight
and reach was more than balanced by sheer fury.
As the leering giant advanced, Arcole set his hands upon the topmost
bunks to either side and swung himself up, thrusting both legs
forward. His feet slammed against Oster's chest, and the giant's
advance was halted on a gust of fetid breath. Before he could
recover, Arcole dropped to the deck and sprang forward, driving
clenched fists rhythmically into Oster's abdomen. The blows were
low—deliberately; Smiling Jacques would have called a foul—and
Oster squealed, exhaling blood and spittle. His arms flailed, landing
blows that Arcole scarcely noticed as he kicked Oster between the
legs. The giant's eyes sprang wide, his head dropping as he curled
instinctively around the pain. Arcole stepped forward to snatch
handfuls of black hair and bring the man's head lower, down to meet
his rising knee.
He felt no pain as broken teeth cut his flesh, only a savage
satisfaction as he raised the head again, and again brought it down
to smash against his knee. Cartilage broke in Oster's nose, and he
snorted crimson froth. Still holding him by the hair, Arcole dragged
him forward, tumbling him off balance so that the larger man pitched
onto his knees. He swung the head then, a fleshly metronome that
ended each arc against the solid wood of a bunk. Oster no longer
resisted, but Arcole went on pounding the yielding skull.
He was dimly aware of Flysse's voice, entreating him to stop, but he
ignored it until she grasped his arm, her weight slowing him.
"Arcole! For God's sake, Arcole, you've killed him!"
He blinked and let loose Oster's head. It fell to the deck and he saw
the ruined temple, the blood—slick and black in the
moonlight—that matted the hair and oozed from the ear. Flysse
pressed against him, holding him back from further violence, and
without thinking he put his arms around her, wondering vaguely why
she wept.
"Arcole! Oh, God, Arcole, what have you done? What will they do
to you? You know the rules."
He thought that for slaying such vermin as Oster he perhaps deserved
applause, but then the import of Flysse's words sank in. He recalled
Var's promise, exactly:
Do you raise hand against one another, you
will be flogged.
Surely not, when he had acted only in her defense. And Davyd's, he
remembered, looking past Flysse's tearful face to where the boy stood
wide-eyed with admiration. But then he thought that these were the
strictures of the Autarchy, of Evander, and therefore it was likely
to be so. He was not sure he could accept the indignity of a
whipping—that was such punishment as was meted out to common
criminals. And then he could only chuckle at his own foolishness, for
in the eyes of the Autarchy he
was a common criminal, an
exile, branded and indentured. And now likely to be flogged, his
objections of no more consequence to the Evanderan marines than his
dignity.
Well, was it to be, he would act the man. He held Flysse at arm's
length, making his smile careless. "Mistress," he declared,
"am I to be punished, why, that it be for sake of your rescue
shall make it worthwhile."
For a long moment she stared at him as if she thought him deranged,
then she came close and, somewhat to his surprise, kissed him on the
lips. No less surprising was the comfort he took from her gesture. He
stared at her, and she blushed and drew back, tugging her shift
closer about her as if only then aware of her immodest dress.
"I'll tell them what happened," she promised.
"And I," said Davyd. "They'll not flog you when they
know."
"Perhaps not." Arcole felt a wetness against his bare sole
and moved aside as he realized he stood in Oster's blood. "Perhaps
there's some honor left in these Evanderans yet."
At his back someone said, "You'll find out soon enough,"
and he turned to see the companionway hatch flung back, lanterns
flaring there as marines with cocked muskets descended the ladder.
A voice he recognized as belonging to Tomas Var said, "What goes
on here?"
It was not, for Tomas Var, an easy decision. He supposed that were he
made of sterner stuff, of such temper as so many of his fellow
officers, then it should have presented no problems. The regulations
covering the transport of exiles were very clear. One prisoner had
slain another; he had also broken a man's head and another's foot.
Two indentured servants would arrive in Salvation crippled, a third
not arrive at all. Var could, therefore, order Arcole Blayke's
execution; he was, undoubtedly, required to administer at least a
flogging. Captain Bennan recommended the full fifty lashes. Var had
doubts: he could not help but think he would have acted in similar
fashion, had he been in Blayke's place.
He had listened to the pleas offered by Blayke's companions—the
potential victims—and accepted that the dead man and his
bullies had been intent on rape. Indeed, when the two hurt men named
their missing accomplice and he had been dragged from his hiding
place, all three had confessed, pleading for mercy and claiming they
had acted solely in fear of Oster. Var had entertained no hesitation
in ordering they each receive thirty lashes—in the case of the
worst hurt, to be delivered when the ship's surgeon pronounced them
fit enough to survive.
But Arcole Blayke was a problem. Var knew he must order punishment of
some kind lest his authority over all the prisoners be weakened, but
he was loath to accept Bennan's recommendation. He could not help but
grant Blayke a grudging respect, and indeed, were he honest with
himself, he felt that in other times, in other circumstances, they
might even have been friends. He had checked the records of all
involved, and found the thwarted rapists to be no more than he
suspected—common criminals, footpads, and murderers. Davyd
Furth was a thief: Var dismissed him. But the woman, Flysse Cobal, he
thought honest, and—a notion he swiftly dismissed as
traitorous—cruelly condemned to exile. And Arcole Blayke; well,
he was a curiosity.
He was a gentleman. Of that, Var held no doubt at all: it was obvious
from his speech and bearing, even had the records not revealed it.
Nor had he acted from malice, but in defense of the woman. Had he not
worn the brand upon his cheek, such action must have been considered
honorable.
But he
did wear the brand: he
was an exile. And
therefore Var must punish him.
He studied the man standing before him on the quarterdeck. Blayke was
dressed now, in clothes of fashionable cut, but crumpled and somewhat
soiled by the voyage. He wore a growing beard—the exiles were
forbidden blades of any kind—but still he managed an air of
elegance. He was flanked by two burly marines, ten more at attention
to either side. He showed no remorse, nor any fear. Var thought of
him exercising and knew that he was likely one of the few fit enough
to take fifty lashes and survive. He did not want to give Blayke
fifty lashes, but neither could he renege his duty or allow his
authority to be questioned.
"You confess to the slaying of Karyl Oster," Var said.
Arcole nodded. "I killed him, yes."
"And grievously wounded Petyr Rayne."
"Which one was that?"
"You cracked his skull."
"Ah, him. Yes."
"And also wounded Matrym Greene. You broke his foot and … ah,
unmanned him."
"I did. Had I my blade, I'd have slain them all. Swifter and
cleaner."
Var wished the man were less defiant, and admired him for it. "You
exhibit no remorse, Blayke," he said. "These men are—in
Oster's case,
was—the property of the Autarchy. As are
you. Rayne and Greene shall likely be cripples now, and thus of
lessened value. Oster is now quite worthless."
"Oster was worthless before I slew him," Arcole said. And
hung Var from the crux of his dilemma: "Would you have done
less?"
Var was not sure whether he wanted to smile or curse the man for his
arrogance. He knew the answer to Blayke's question—and he could
not admit it. He said, "Such theorizing is irrelevant. Have you
aught to say in your defense?"
"Is it worth my speaking?" Arcole touched the brand on his
cheek. "I've witnessed Evanderan justice."
Var's face darkened. Damn the man! He pushed too hard. And yet …
Var must sympathize with him. He paused, reining his temper. "I
have heard the woman, Flysse Cobal, and Davyd Furth plead on your
behalf. They say those men were bent on rape and you acted only in
defense of them both. Was that so?"
"I could hardly stand by," said Arcole, "and call
myself a man. Much less a gentleman."
"Then you did act to protect the woman and the youth?"
Arcole wondered why the captain did not simply pronounce his
Evanderan version of justice and be done with it. Could it be that he
sought some loophole? Could an Evanderan officer be so honorable?
"Well?" Var prompted.
"Well, then, yes," Arcole said. "Oster and his bullies
intended to rape Flysse and Davyd, both. No gentleman could fail to
defend them and retain his honor."
Mostly to himself, Var murmured, "No."
At his side, Bennan snorted scornfully. Var ignored him, studying
Blayke's face. Finally he said, "My orders are clear. You have
damaged property of the Autarchy—raised hand against other
exiles, for which the punishment is a flogging."
He heard Bennan vent an anticipatory chuckle and decided he did not
much like the captain. "But," he continued, "I find
such extenuating circumstances exist as persuade me to relax that
punishment somewhat. So I hereby order that all the exiles be paraded
on deck to witness administration of your punishment. Which shall be
twelve lashes; to be delivered immediately."
16—Across tbe Sea of Sorrows
The full complement of marines lined the bulwarks as the exiles were
summoned up from the hold. It was a little past noonday, and the sun
glinted on the bayonets and polished buckles of the soldiers who
stood at rigid attention. The exiles milled nervously, not sure what
they should anticipate. All they knew for certain was that Karyl
Oster was dead, his corpse already delivered to the sea, and that
four of their number were taken by the marines. Flysse and Davyd had
no better idea of Arcole's fate than any others—they had been
questioned by Tomas Var and immediately returned to their quarters.
Flysse smiled as she caught sight of Arcole, standing erect between
two blue-coated marines, and scowled at the other prisoner,
recognizing him as the man who had threatened Davyd.
For his part, Davyd was nervous. He had far less faith in—and
far more experience of—the Autarchy's justice than Flysse, and
when she whispered, "Arcole is
well,
no? Surely they'll not punish him?" he could only shrug
and hope she spoke aright.
When sailors were ordered forward to raise a hatch and lash the
grille upright, his doubts grew.
Then Tomas Var stepped out before the assembly. He wore full-dress
uniform, tricorn set straight on his fair hair, left hand on the hilt
of his sword. He climbed partway up the quarterdeck ladder and
halted, surveying the crowd awhile before he spoke, his voice pitched
to carry to them all.
"You see before you two men sentenced for crimes against the
Autarchy. Let their punishments be an example to you all! Do any of
you think to perpetrate such crimes as these are guilty of, let their
fate dissuade you."
He paused as a nervous murmur ran through the crowd. Davyd felt
Flysse take his hand.
"First," Var continued when silence fell again, "know
that none escape. For their part in the attempted rape, Petyr Rayne
and Matrym Greene are sentenced to thirty lashes apiece, which shall
be delivered immediately the ship's surgeon declares them
sufficiently recovered. Meanwhile, for his part in that heinous
crime, Anton Gryme shall now receive thirty lashes."
He nodded toward Gryme, and the marines flanking the man motioned him
forward toward the raised hatch. A sergeant, his tunic removed and
his shirtsleeves rolled back, let fall the coils of a heavy whip.
Gryme licked his lips. Davyd saw the sweat that trickled down his
face, and experienced a savage satisfaction at the impending
flogging.
Gryme took an unsteady step in the direction of the hatch, then shook
his head as if denying the reality of his situation. A marine pushed
him on, and suddenly Gryme let out a wailing cry and spun around. He
ducked beneath the soldiers' outflung arms and ran screaming down the
deck. For a moment Davyd wondered why the musketeers lining the rail
failed to shoot, then saw the reason as Gryme flung himself wildly up
the ladder to the foredeck and vaulted the rail there.
It was as though he struck a solid wall, save it was invisible: a
wall of magic, set there by the hexes inlaid along the bulwarks.
Gryme's leap halted in midair, his body bouncing back to crash onto
the boards of the deck. He yelled anew and sprang to his feet,
crossing to the farther side. This time he did not jump, but set his
hands upon the rail and swung a leg upward, over the metal. He
brought up his other leg—and was once more flung back. Moaning
in frustration, he clambered to his feet, eyes darting madly, like an
animal trapped by circumstances beyond its comprehension. Twice more
he attempted to find the sea, and twice more was denied escape as the
two men of his escort marched briskly toward him.
As they brought him back, Var said, "Another lesson. You shall
none of you find that release—the hexes warding such escape are
too strong. Now, sergeant, do you administer punishment."
For all Davyd bore Gryme no love, he winced as the lash cut stripes
over the man's pale flesh. Screams dinned against his ears and he
glanced at Arcole, who stood grim-faced; Davyd thought of his friend
cut by that savage whip, and smiled his sympathy.
Before it was done, Gryme had passed out. He hung limp from the hatch
as a seaman doused his bloodied back, and was still unconscious as
two marines dragged him away.
"Now, the case of Arcole Blayke," Var declared. His voice
rang loud in the hushed silence. "In that this man acted on
behalf of others, I will not inflict such punishment as might be his.
However, in that he damaged property of the Autarchy, I sentence him
to twelve lashes."
Davyd heard Flysse cry, "No! That's not fair!"
He felt her grip tighten on his hand and said, "Arcole's strong,
and twelve lashes are not so bad."
Flysse shook her head and moaned, "No!" again. Tears ran
down her cheeks, but she did not take her eyes from Arcole's face.
Arcole did not flinch when his escort motioned him forward, but
stepped out as if taking a promenade about the deck. When he stood
before the hatch, he removed his frock coat and held the jacket out
to a marine as if the man were his second. The soldier stared at the
garment, perplexed, not quite sure what to do.
Var called out, "Someone take it, eh?"
Before any other had chance to move, Davyd tugged his hand loose from
Flysse's grip and darted to Arcole. A marine moved to halt him, but
Var said, "No, leave the boy be," and Davyd took the coat.
"My thanks." Arcole ducked his head, smiling at Davyd. "And
be so kind as to take my shirt too? I'd not see it needlessly
soiled."
Davyd nodded, quite unable to speak in the face of such magnificent
courage. He waited as the shirt was removed, then carefully folded
the linen and retreated backward to where Flysse stood, his eyes
intent on Arcole all the way.
Arcole stretched leisurely and favored the sergeant with a quizzical
smile. "I trust your efforts do not fatigue your arm, sergeant?"
The marine grunted and shook his head. Someone in the crowd laughed
nervously, another heartily. In the rigging overhead, a sailor
called, "Bravely said!" From his station on the quarterdeck
ladder, Tomas Var could not help smiling—though he swiftly hid
the expression.
"So, gentlemen." Arcole stepped to the hatch and rested his
weight against the metal frame, his arms upraised. "Shall we
commence?"
The two men of his escort secured his wrists. One set a wad of
leather between his teeth, murmuring, "Bite hard on this. It'll
ease the pain somewhat."
They stepped clear and the sergeant uncoiled his whip. Davyd felt
Flysse's hand clutch his shoulder as the plaited leather swung back.
As it fell on Arcole's shoulders, her fingers dug deep, and she
gasped as if she shared the pain. Davyd remained silent, only
grimacing in sympathy each time the lash descended. It left long,
angry stripes of red across the skin, and at each blow Arcole's body
jerked. He did not cry out as Gryme had, but Davyd could hear the
stifled grunts the pain elicited.
Tomas Var watched with an impassive face. He was pleased to see his
sergeant follow the instructions given—that he place his blows
with care, not overlay them but deliver each stripe separately. That
would make it easier on the victim, and Blayke recover swifter. It
was as much as he could do for the man and still do his duty by the
Autarchy.
Down the length of the schooner he saw Captain Bennan watching from
the poop deck and noted the look of disapproval on the man's face. He
wondered if the shipmaster would find occasion to set his
disagreement in the log or make report on his return to Evander. Var
thought it likely: Bennan was something of a martinet.
Well, no matter, he decided. The punishment of the exiles was his
territory, as was their care; and should his superiors in the God's
Militia find cause to question his judgment, then he would justify
his lenience with the explanation that he'd not see valuable property
needlessly damaged. That he felt a sympathy for Blayke need not be
known. That he felt—almost—a kinship with the man, he
dared not admit even to himself. He was an officer in the God's
Militia, a captain of marines with hope of advancement to come and a
sincere belief in the Autarchy. Arcole Blayke was an exile, a
criminal—it was not for Tomas Var to question that sentence.
Neither to wonder if they might, ever, have been friends.
And so the captain of marines and his men watched in stolid silence,
and the exiles nervously, and none there knew they shared a common
emotion: admiration for Arcole.
But Arcole knew only pain, and anger that an honorable act be
punished with the indignity of a flogging. He bit on the gag,
determined to show no sign of weakness to the Evanderans, and it was
easier than the branding, for he was sustained by his anger. When the
final blow was given and the flogging ended, he still braced himself
against the hatch, not knowing it was over.
That awareness came with the saltwater that splashed against his
back, a sudden, sharper pain on the fiery throbbing of his ravaged
skin. He had not known tears clouded his vision until then, when he
gasped and blinked, and grew aware that his wrists were freed. He
spat out the gag and forced himself to stand upright, unaided as he
moved back from the hatch.
The sergeant was coiling the whip, his face fixed and rigid as a
statue's, but as he carefully wound his loops of leather, he
murmured, "The saltwater helps. It hurts, but have someone bathe
the wounds each day."
Arcole looked toward him, but it was as though the man had not
spoken, even when—barely moving his lips—he added softly,
"You were lucky. The captain ordered I flog you easy."
Arcole would have asked him why—would know why an Evanderan
officer should show mercy to a Levanite exile—but his mouth was
too dry to shape words, and the sergeant's blocky figure was suddenly
vague, the masts and watching faces beyond him suddenly revolving in
a slow and stately whirligig. So he only nodded his head and took a
weak-kneed step forward toward where he thought Flysse and Davyd
stood. And then he must concentrate on the next movement of his foot,
and the one after, for he would not show weakness.
He reached the two and halted. Davyd still held his coat and shirt,
but when the boy extended the garments he shook his head and mumbled,
"Not yet. I'd not spoil a good shirt. When I'm healed … Now,
water, if you would."
Davyd ran instantly to the nearest water butt. Arcole looked at
Flysse's horrified face and forced his lips to stretch in semblance
of a smile. "Might I borrow your shoulder a moment, Flysse? Else
I think I shall fall down."
She came close, taking one arm and setting it gently about her
shoulders. He leant on her, surprised by her strength, and waited
until Davyd brought him the water. It was tepid: he thought he had
never enjoyed a drink so much.
When the taste of leather was washed from his mouth, he said, "I
think I should like to retire now, do none object."
Davyd came to his other side and, leaning on them both, Arcole made
his unsteady way toward the hold. The crowd parted before the trio,
none speaking, only watching in silence. Arcole's legs felt
simultaneously lead-weighted and insubstantial. Each step was an
effort, as if he wore impossibly heavy boots; and yet his knees were
rubbery: had Flysse and Davyd not supported him, he should have
fallen. He knew he lacked the strength to crawl, and that increased
his anger. He forced his head upright and saw Tomas Var watching him.
The captain's expression was unreadable. Arcole essayed a brief smile
and ducked his head as if bidding the man farewell. He was surprised
when Var returned the gesture.
Then he must concentrate on the ladder, which was now becoming a
serious obstacle. Flysse went down before him, Davyd behind, and
together they got him to the foot, where he must rest a moment before
finding his bunk. He was glad it was the bottommost—he did not
think he could find the strength to climb.
Gritting his teeth against the pain each movement brought, he eased
onto the pallet, stretching out facedown. That was a little better:
the fire lit on his flesh became a single throbbing ache. He wondered
how Gryme felt, and supposed—a small consolation—that the
man experienced far worse.
"Is there anything we can do?"
He turned his head to find Flysse crouched beside him. Her eyes were
large with concern, reddened by weeping, and moist with tears.
"I think not." He found it difficult to construct his
thoughts in coherent fashion: he had much rather close his eyes and
drift away. "The sergeant said the wounds should be bathed each
day in saltwater. But otherwise … "
He realized he had closed his eyes only when he heard her voice
again.
"Arcole? Arcole, the ship's surgeon attends you."
He focused on the breeches standing before his bunk. They stretched
tight over an ample belly. It was too much effort to raise his head,
so he did not see the man's face, but he thought the fellow's boots
would benefit from polish. He grunted.
The surgeon grunted back and Arcole saw a bulky valise set down on
the planks, opened by chubby pink hands that extracted a small pot.
"I've seen worse." The voice was genial, coming from a
point above and behind Arcole. "The other fellow, for instance.
Now … "
Arcole felt his back massaged. He supposed the surgeon applied a
salve; certainly the throbbing pain abated.
"That'll help the healing. Tomorrow, wash him with seawater; do
that every day until he's mended. Best he doesn't move until then."
The chubby hands returned the pot to the valise, snapped the bag
shut, and lifted it out of sight. Flysse's face came back into view,
Davyd close behind her. Arcole tried to speak, but his mouth was dry
and his eyes very heavy. Shaping words was too much effort, so he
only smiled and retreated into sleep.
When he woke, the hold was dark and filled with night sounds. He
could hear Davyd grunting overhead. He was thirsty beyond endurance.
He lay still, trying hard to ignore the thirst, but he could not. His
mouth was arid and he attempted to rise. Pain lashed his back anew
and he groaned. He did not think the sound loud enough to carry
through the multitude of other noises, but on the instant he saw a
shapely leg descend and moonlight fall silvery over Flysse's hair.
She drew a shawl about her shoulders as she knelt beside him. Lit by
the moon, he thought she resembled an angel.
"What is it?" she asked softly. "Do you hurt?"
Through gummy lips he said, "Water."
Flysse nodded and was gone. He thought to call her back—he
feared for her, wandering the nighttime hold alone and he helpless to
protect her—but it was too late and he could only lie there,
cursing his weakness. He hoped the lesson of the floggings was taken
by the bullies.
Then she was back, bringing a brimming pannikin to his lips.
It was not easy, drinking prone, endeavoring to lift only his head,
for any other movement inflamed him. He must sip when he would have
gulped, but Flysse was patient—more than he—and knelt
holding the cup until it was emptied.
"Enough?" she asked. "Or shall I fetch you more?"
"No," he murmured. "Thank you."
She smiled and stroked his hair. He remembered she had stroked
Davyd's hair, and wondered if the touch had comforted the boy as
much. When she clambered back up to her own bunk, he felt a pang of
guilt as he watched her ankles. They were very trim, and he recalled
the touch of her body when he had held her.
In the days that followed, the order that had become established was
reversed. Flysse and Davyd nursed the helpless Arcole. They brought
him food and water, and once daily carried a bucket from the deck,
bathing his wounds. One or the other was always with him, talking
when he wished, silent as he slept, but always there when he woke. He
came to take it for granted and would have missed their presence had
they been less attentive.
He was, if anything, more in Davyd's company than in Flysse's, for
the boy seemed loath to risk the deck without Arcole, as if the man
had become a kind of talisman. It afforded him the chance to speak
somewhat of Davyd's dreams—cautiously, for he remembered his
promise to Flysse, and felt newly guilty that he broke it. He told
himself it was for all their good—that if Davyd was a Dreamer,
then that talent might benefit them all. But he was careful to make
his inquiries casual, so that it should seem, almost, that Davyd
spoke of his own free will, not through inducement.
"How do you sleep now?" he asked as if he did not lie
listening to the boy's nocturnal cries. And when Davyd shook his head
and lowered his eyes, "The nightmares still?"
Davyd nodded and Arcole laughed and said, "You saw Gryme try to
jump the rail? You saw the magic that halted him? Strong magic, no?"
It was a slow process, but Arcole had little else to occupy his time
as the
Pride of the Lord entered the Sea of Sorrows and the
easterly winds died away. Indeed, as the schooner ventured deeper
into those latitudes, it was often necessary to put the ship's
longboats over the side and have them tow the larger vessel. On those
occasions the boats were crewed by exiles, marines stationed at
tiller and bow. Arcole and Davyd were excused this exercise—the
one because he was still weak, the other because he was too scrawny,
too young. Then the hold was emptied, and Arcole might easier draw
Davyd out.
"We've come to no harm yet," he said. "Surely you
cannot still think we're in danger."
Davyd shrugged, and softly, looking not at Arcole but at the deck
beneath his feet, said, "It will come. I know."
"Then best I mend," Arcole declared, "so that I can
protect you."
Davyd smiled at that: a forlorn expression that denied solace, as if
he knew better than to question the warnings of his dreams. "What
comes comes," he said.
"How," asked Arcole, "can you be so sure?"
"Because I've dreamed it," Davyd whispered.
"And your dreams are true?" Arcole said. "Always?"
Davyd ducked his head as if he would sooner it were not so, and said,
"Always."
He gasped then, aware that he had made such admission as could bring
him to the flames. He swallowed and licked his lips, staring with
tormented eyes at Arcole.
The man said, "I wondered. But … are they always true, how
were you caught? Did they not warn you then?"
Wordlessly, Davyd lowered his head. The movement seemed to Arcole as
much surrender to implacable fate as gesture of agreement. He felt
momentarily ashamed that he forced the boy to this. He said, "I'll
speak of this to no one. No one, Davyd! On that you've my solemn
word."
Not looking up, Davyd said, "I dreamed of danger—I knew I
shouldn't try to crack that crib. But I was short of coin, so I took
the chance—and was caught."
Arcole said, "And now you dream of perils from the ocean."
Davyd nodded. Slowly, as if he lifted a great weight, he raised his
head, facing Arcole at last. His eyes were haunted. He said, "Aunt
Dory warned me not to tell anyone. They burn people like me."
"Only if they find out," Arcole declared, and reached out
to take the boy's hand. "Do you trust me, Davyd?"
"Of course." There was such simple faith in the statement,
Arcole felt embarrassment. "You saved me, no? And Flysse too.
Without you those bastards would have … "
He shuddered, lip curling in distaste. Arcole said, "Then trust
me now when I tell you your secret's safe with me. I swear on my
honor as a gentleman."
Davyd said, "I do trust you, Arcole."
"Then no one shall have this from me. Not even Flysse."
"I don't suppose it really matters now," Davyd said. "I
dream of sea serpents, so sea serpents will come. And then … "
He sighed. Or perhaps he sobbed: Arcole was not sure, only that this
hardened thief seemed at the moment no more than a frightened boy
whose odd gift condemned him to secrecy and terror. He squeezed
Davyd's hand, smiling with a confidence he no longer felt.
"And then they must face the hexes that guard this ship. And the
cannon, and the marines. I think we can withstand even sea serpents,
Davyd."
"Truly?"
There was a plea in the question: Arcole ducked his head solemnly.
"Truly."
"And you'll not tell anyone else?" Davyd hesitated a
moment. "Not even Flysse?"
"Not even Flysse," Arcole promised. And affected an
expression of hurt dignity. "Do you doubt my word?"
Davyd shook his head, his face set in such earnest lines, Arcole had
to chuckle. "It shall be our secret," he promised. "Ours
alone."
"Thank you." Davyd smiled then, as if somehow this sharing
of his secret lessened its weight.
Flysse found them like that, the boy settled beside the man with such
a look on his face as she'd not seen before. She thought she'd not
seen him so calm, so cheerful, since first they'd met. And Arcole …
She could not properly interpret his expression: it seemed somehow
both content and embarrassed, as if he had recently performed some
act of kindness he had sooner be kept hid. They looked, she thought,
almost like father and son, and she felt, almost, that she intruded.
The
Pride of the Lord progressed slowly over the Sea of
Sorrows. There were no more disturbances. Apart from the obvious
threat of flogging, the exiles were so wearied by their labors that
none had the energy to foment trouble. They ate and slept only when
they were not rowing; and, slow it seemed as the schooner's progress,
Arcole healed.
He had suffered wounds before—at swordpoint and, twice, by
pistol ball—but then he had been attended by surgeons of renown
and had convalesced in luxurious surroundings. Faithful Dom had been
there to fetch and carry, and acquaintances had visited. Yet even
then, in such comfort, he was always impatient to recover; now, in
the schooner's heat-baked hold, he grew frustrated beyond endurance.
As soon as he was able to rise and walk unaided, he went on deck.
Flysse urged him to wait, but he ignored her as he ignored the
tugging of his healing wounds and made his way topside with her and
Davyd fussing about him as if he were an invalid quite incapable of
looking after himself. Which, of course, he was, though he refused to
admit it, transforming grimaces of pain into careless smiles. He
doubted either Flysse or Davyd believed him when he assured them he
felt no pain, but they pretended and for that he was grateful. It was
the truth when he told them he felt better for the sun on his back,
and that he must surely go mad did he remain in the hold.
And he would study the ocean: awaiting confirmation of Davyd's
ability.
They had spoken no more of that talent, and Flysse had no idea they
had spoken at all. It was their secret, shared and exclusive, and did
Flysse observe a change in their relationship, she assumed only that
Arcole mellowed, accepting the young thief.
Arcole did, indeed, mellow. He acknowledged a debt of gratitude to
them both, and found that he no longer looked down on them but
regarded them as equals in adversity. He realized that he had not
known such loyal friends since parting with Dom; he realized that
this voyage changed him. He came—to his surprise—to hope
they should not be parted when they reached Salvation.
And daily he watched the sea.
It was a featureless expanse, here. There was no swell, no waves,
only a bland blue that spread remorseless to all the points of the
compass. The sails hung usually limp, and when a breeze arose, it was
weak and warm, doing nothing to aid their progress. The longboats
scarcely disturbed the surface, and the
Pride of the Lord seemed
scarcely to move but rather hang suspended in timeless limbo. Food
and water were rationed, and for the first time it occurred to Arcole
that they might starve or die of thirst. He began to think that the
proving of Davyd's dream might be a welcome interruption of such
monotony.
Meanwhile, he slowly gathered back his strength. His back healed, and
though it would be always scarred, the wounds no longer pained him.
He recommenced his exercising, at first carefully but then with
steadily increasing vigor. Davyd joined him, initially in those
practices that put muscle on his narrow frame but then pleading that
Arcole teach him the meaning of the apparently pointless movements
that followed. As the days passed, Davyd learnt to box and the
rudiments of the fencer's art—though that was difficult without
swords.
Once, Tomas Var came by as they worked and stood awhile watching
them. When they halted, he said, "Your back is healed, eh?"
Arcole nodded and returned him, "Yes," not sure of the
officer's interest.
Var said, "Good," and then: "You teach the boy to
fight."
Again Arcole said only, "Yes," wondering if he should feel
grateful to this Evanderan.
"Who taught you?" Var asked, and when Arcole replied that
he had trained with Smiling Jacques, he nodded as if he appreciated
what that meant, saying, "He taught you well, I think."
Arcole gave him another, "Yes," and Var smiled faintly and
strolled on.
When he was gone, Davyd said, "Who's Smiling Jacques?"
"A prizefighter," Arcole replied. "A famous pugilist."
"I thought you were a duelist," Davyd said, "and a
gambler."
With mock solemnity Arcole said, "I was a gentleman. I gambled
and fought some duels, yes; but a gentleman commands various
accomplishments, don't you know?"
"I don't know much about gentlefolk," Davyd said, grinning.
"Except they usually carry fat purses."
Some weeks earlier Arcole would not have found that statement so
amusing—now he laughed. And Flysse, who watched them from
beneath the shade of a limply drooping sail, smiled and thought that
they seemed, almost, a family. It seemed to her the best of times.
Oh, she had sooner have more to eat and be able to drink when she
wished, to wash in private and have a change of clothes, but she was
uplifted by the friendship arisen. Arcole had changed—he no
longer irritated her—and she sometimes, secretly, thought that
did he approach her bed, she would find it impossible to refuse him.
As man and boy returned to their exercising, she moved to the rail,
looking out across the empty sea. Save it was no longer empty: in the
heat-hazy distance lay a darkness that had not been there before. For
an instant she thought to cry out, but then she thought of Davyd's
nocturnal terrors, and feared to frighten the boy anew. Of late—since
Arcole had accepted him—he had seemed calmer, as if come to
terms with his horror of the sea. She'd not afright him and so she
remained silent: the darkness did not seem to offer any threat.
Then a sailor shouted from the masthead and she caught his words:
"Weed! Weed!"
The activity the shout produced alarmed Flysse. She turned to
Arcole—beside her now, an arm around Davyd's shoulders—as
sailors ran to their stations and marines primed the cannon.
"What is it?" she asked.
Arcole shook his head helplessly: it seemed to him only that—seaweed,
albeit in vast quantity. He felt Davyd shudder and gave the boy a
grin, holding him tighter.
The schooner drew gradually closer to the weed, and by nightfall it
was clear that it was far more than some solitary floating mass. It
stretched across the horizon, exuding a sulphurous odor that
permeated the ship, foul as a midden. When darkness fell it lit the
night with an eerie green phosphorescence. It was dense—the
oarsmen in the longboats must labor hard to carve a way through, and
when they were relieved they came back on board stinking of the
stuff. Nor did the night bring any relief, for Captain Bennan feared
entrapment and demanded the longboats stay out to maintain their slow
passage westward.
The next day the ship lay deep within a sea of green that seemed so
thick, a man might walk across it. Crabs scuttled over the weed—great
misshapen things with ugly pincers, pursuing a kind of worm that
writhed and oozed when taken. On board, folk wound cloths about their
mouths and nostrils to fend off the stench and none bathed, for none
cared to sample the water here. Men with boathooks were stationed in
the longboats, to cut a passage clear.
Worst—for they boded ill for all on board—were the hulks
that now became apparent.
They seemed exhibits preserved in a macabre oceanic museum: ships
from yesteryear, and others of more recent design, lay becalmed
amidst the weed. Their rigging hung empty from masts unpleasantly
reminiscent of bones, and weed clung to their hulls, grew up over the
bulwarks so that some appeared less wooden constructions of man's
making than organic things, creations of this strange sea. On some,
human remains rested amidst the weed, skulls and rib cages wound all
round like horrid ornaments. Others were of fresher vintage and stood
still proud of the engulfing weed, as if halted only recently—but
empty, their crews gone, presumably in a final desperate attempt to
escape by boat.
The
Pride of the Lord moved with an agonizing languor, inch by
slow inch. The longboat crews were soon exhausted and must be
replaced sooner. Even the marines took their turn, and Arcole was
deemed sufficiently recovered that he found himself ordered to the
oars.
This alarmed Davyd, for he was convinced his dreams should soon come
true, and he feared for Arcole's safety—the open boats were
very vulnerable. Flysse must encourage him as best she could for all
the time Arcole labored in the boats, and when he
returned—sweat-drenched and reeking of the weed—Davyd
would smile as if he came back alive from a dreadful war. She was
herself by no means at ease—none were, for this horrid
weed-strewn sea momentarily threatened to hold them in its embrace
forever.
Tension gripped the schooner, not least because the cannon remained
always manned and the sailors were issued cutlasses, as if some
danger greater even than the weed were expected.
Had Arcole not come back on board exhausted, wishing only to eat and
sleep until he must go out again, he might have questioned Davyd,
asked after the boy's dreams. But he did not; and Davyd did not tell
him that the dreams returned manifold. Neither did Tomas Var see fit
to speak to the prisoners, save to issue the orders that sent them
out to the boats. They were, after all, only exiles.
17—From the Depths
The weed continued thick for several days, closing astern of the
Pride of the Lord as if to obliterate all sign of her passage,
while ahead it stretched dense, seemingly to the ends of the world.
The entrapped hulks dwindled as the schooner labored on, until
finally there were none; only the green, crab-infested wrack. Then,
when it seemed it must be their fate to forever sail this horrid sea,
the strange vegetation began to thin. That should have been a relief,
but Arcole noticed that Var's marines and Bennao's sailors grew more
tense. Cannoneers stood ready by their weapons and the seamen watched
the ocean with increased vigilance. Bennan stationed extra lookouts
on the mastheads, and the officers wore both swords and pistols, as
if they readied against ambuscade.
Arcole observed all this with a strange fascination. He said nothing
to either Flysse or Davyd, but he saw that the schooner prepared for
danger and could not help wondering if Davyd's gloomy predictions
should soon be proven true. It seemed to him that such monsters as
the boy dreamed of would more likely infest the depths of the
weed-sea than this perimeter, where the open ocean should likely soon
appear, but still he wondered. Almost, he hoped for the
materialization of Davyd's nightmares, for that would irrevocably
prove the boy's ability, and he still believed that talent might
somehow benefit him in the days to come.
Then one day, as the weed continued to thin out and the ship began to
move swifter, Davyd beckoned him aside. He pulled down the cloth
covering his nose and mouth that he might be heard. On his face
Arcole saw a warning.
"I think," Davyd whispered, glancing around to be sure none
might overhear him, "that it shall come soon."
"Your sea serpent?" Arcole frowned. "You're sure?"
"Not when exactly." Davyd shrugged helplessly. "The
dreams don't tell me that. Only that … something … approaches."
All the while he spoke, his eyes roamed over the sea. Arcole felt his
nervousness as a cold prickling down his own back, as if the scars of
his whipping tingled in anticipation. Like Davyd, he studied the weed
shimmering green under the relentless sun. It shifted now, undulating
slightly. That meant, he thought, a current, a swell beginning, and
that must surely mean the weed would soon end.
"Can you not say it clearer?" He did not mean to speak so
sharp: it was a product of Davyd's nervousness, the tension of the
crew and the marines. He smiled to soften the words. "What shall
this beast do?"
"I don't know," Davyd answered. "I know only that
we're in danger."
Arcole set a hand on the boy's shoulder. "Then best stand
ready," he said. "But I tell you again, we've much
protection on this vessel."
"I hope it's enough," Davyd said.
Then Flysse approached and Arcole forced a smile, saying, "Put
on a cheerful face, eh? We'd not want Flysse alarmed."
Davyd tried a smile: it looked to Arcole more like a grimace of pain.
Flysse said, "What ails you, Davyd?"
He drew the protective cloth closer about his face and from behind
that camouflage said, "This stink. It sickens me."
He was, Arcole thought, a good liar.
"It afflicts us all," Flysse said. "But surely it
shall soon be gone? Folk say the weed must end soon."
"I think it shall. See?" Arcole pointed to where the
vegetation shifted. "The sea moves it now, it grows less thick.
We'll soon enough leave it behind, I think."
They all three studied the wrack-laden ocean. And so were amongst the
first to see the creature that rose from the depths.
At first it was only a greater undulation of the weed, as if a wave
moved toward the ship. Then—even as a sailor bellowed warning
from the masthead—it gathered speed, and a head appeared.
Flysse screamed. Davyd groaned as if all his worst nightmares were
come true. Arcole gasped and took hold of Flysse and Davyd both,
backing away from the rail. He was not sure any part of the schooner
could be safe from such a monster, but instinct urged him back, to
set as much distance as the deck allowed between them and it.
The head was not unlike a horse's, but vastly enlarged, with dead
yellow eyes set under ridges of bone, a long jaw all lined with
serrated fangs that sprouted from a scarlet mouth wide enough to
swallow a man whole. From its lips, clusters of oily-looking tendrils
dangled, like an obscene beard, and running from its skull to its
broad back there was a scaly crest of a livid green that contrasted
with the duller blue-gray of the serpentine neck. Abruptly, the
monstrous beast hurled itself toward the ship.
A cannon roared, the smoke of its discharge momentarily obscuring the
creature, then Arcole saw the shot splash weed high behind the
rushing monster. A second boomed, and missed.
Arcole shouted, "Get below!" And pushed Flysse and Davyd in
the direction of the hold. They resisted, as if his presence could
protect them, and he shoved them forcibly toward the ladder. "Flysse,
for God's sake, get below! It must be safer there!"
He saw them reach the ladder, two amongst a screaming, panic-stricken
crowd. He hoped they would find safety there: he thought there could
be none on deck, and did not know why he remained. He looked again
toward the sea as muskets volleyed, and briefly glimpsed the creature
as it dove under the schooner.
The
Pride of the Lord shuddered as the beast swum beneath her
keel. For an instant a tail edged with jagged fins lashed the surface
on the port side, and Arcole gasped in naked wonder as he saw the
creature's head appear above the starboard rail. The snakelike body
appeared long enough to wind itself around the schooner. He saw the
head loom high, jaws gaping as a cannon boomed. A ball struck the
monster a glancing blow that gouged a line of red along its rising
flank, but it appeared unhurt, only enraged by the wound. Swift as a
striking snake, the massive head darted forward and a cannoneer was
lifted screaming between the jaws, another sent tumbling as the beast
shook its prey as a terrier shakes a taken rat. The man's screams
ended abruptly as the sea serpent writhed back and gulped the body
down. Then it struck again, even as marines emptied their muskets at
a range so short no ball missed its target. But none even dented the
scaly hide, only bounced uselessly off, like pebbles thrown at a
charging bull. Three more marines were struck down and the morning
was filled with the roar of the cannon, the rattle of musket fire,
and the shouts of prisoners, sailors, and marines.
Arcole crouched by the midmast. It occurred to him that the hexes
supposed to protect the ship had no effect on this weirdling beast.
It seemed immune to magic; certainly it attacked at will, undeterred
by hexes, muskets, or cannon.
Then it was gone, and for a while an eerie silence fell.
Then the men in the longboats began to scream. They were turning back
toward the schooner when the great head came sweeping up and the
monster's jaws closed around one boat. The fragile craft was lifted
high in the air, men flinging themselves desperately clear as timbers
cracked and broke easily as the bones the serpent snapped. Up and up
it rose, the longboat splintering and dividing, falling away in two
riven pieces as the beast came down across the second. That was sunk
on the instant, carried down beneath the thinning weed by the
creature's weight. A handful from the first boat attempted to swim to
the
Pride of the Lord, but they were hampered by the clinging
weed, and the monster rose amongst them like some awful diner
selecting tidbits at a ghastly feast.
A few succeeded in reaching the lines still hanging from the
schooner's prow, and Arcole darted to the bows to aid them. He hauled
one to uncertain safety, but then the serpent rose up before him, so
close he smelled the salty, fetid odor of its breath, and for an
instant he stared into an unwinking yellow eye. Then the jaws snapped
shut and he fell back, clutching hand, a length of arm severed at the
elbow. He flung the grisly relic away and crabbed backward over the
planks, thinking that surely the beast must strike again.
Instead it disappeared, only to strike at the schooner's port side.
The ship rocked with the impact as the great head drove forward like
a battering ram, tearing at the bulwarks and threatening to stove in
the deck.
Arcole risked the bow, but there were no more survivors, only ravaged
bodies that floated amidst the disturbed weed and the pieces of a
longboat. He retreated down the deck as the cannon fired again at
point-blank range. It seemed this time that the creature was hurt,
for it emitted a shrill, squealing sound and writhed, lifting
monstrous coils in furious convulsions that sent reeking seaweed
spraying over the ship. It submerged, and the schooner rocked wildly
as the sea serpent swam under the keel and rose anew.
It reared higher now, snapping at spars that broke and splintered
between its jaws easily as a man might snap a toothpick. At the head
of the mainmast, a lookout cowered behind the useless shelter of the
crow's nest and was snatched up. The monster let him fall and then
itself came crashing down across the deck. Men were crushed under its
bulk and others suffered hurt as the taloned flukes scrabbled over
the planks, the serpent crawling now like some gigantic worm until
all its body draped the schooner and its tail came lashing after. The
Pride of the Lord threatened to capsize as the beast completed
its journey, tumbling back under the seaweed, leaving behind a trail
of slime and carnage.
Arcole saw a musket at his feet, dropped by a marine who moaned as he
clutched a broken arm. He snatched the weapon up, then relieved the
wounded soldier of powder horn and pouch of shot. The musket seemed
entirely inadequate against such a monster, but it afforded him some
small comfort, and he held it firm as he stared around, wondering
from which direction the serpent would next attack.
Along the deck, Tomas Var was bellowing orders, gathering his marines
about him, and Arcole ran to join them.
Var saw the musket in his hand and nodded approvingly. That he was an
officer of the God's Militia and Arcole an exile—forbidden by
law to carry such a weapon—seemed not to matter now, when they
faced death together.
"Fire in volleys," he commanded. "This God-cursed
thing looks armored, but perhaps … "
"Musket fire doesn't hurt it!" Arcole spoke, unthinking.
"Use the cannon."
"How?" Var ignored the presumption. "Save my gunners
have clear aim, the damn thing moves too fast."
"What if it boards again?" Arcole ventured. "Were the
cannon directed inward?"
Var shook his head. "Does it board again, it shall likely sink
us. Besides," He might have been about to add "We've no
time," but there was none, for the sea serpent chose that moment
to resurface and attack again.
Var led his force to the bulwarks. The rail was broken where the
beast had crashed through, the deck scoured and splintery, a cannon
torn from its trunnion and the gunners dead. The marines grouped
tight, aiming at the beast that now rushed furiously toward the ship,
seemingly intent on ramming the schooner again. Arcole found himself
next to Var and raised the borrowed musket to his shoulder, hoping it
aimed true even though it would do no good.
Var shouted, "Aim for the head. Ready … Fire!"
The muskets rattled. The sea serpent slid swift beneath the weed and,
was it hurt, it gave no sign. Arcole thought it likely possessed some
primal intelligence, or had attacked ships before: it dove as the
guns discharged, as if it knew them dangerous. Var ordered his men to
the farther rail, anticipating the beast should press its attack from
that quarter. Arcole moved to obey, then hesitated as he saw a rope
spilled loose from its neat coil, close to the damaged cannon, and an
idea took shape. It was likely impossible and undoubtedly perilous;
yet did it fail, the ship must be sunk and all on board drown or be
swallowed by the monster. He thought of Flysse and Davyd, and that
they deserved a better fate.
He dropped his musket and took up the rope. It was a line such as
raised and lowered the sails, and he hoped it was strong enough. He
secured the line firmly about the wrecked cannon and ran out the
other end, fashioning a noose. Musket fire and cannon's booming
brought his head around in time to see the serpent rearing up beyond
the starboard rail and the jaws close over the head and shoulders of
a marine. Var sprang forward, sword raised, and was sent tumbling
back as the creature swung its head. Arcole hefted the rope, glancing
round. The line was heavy—too weighty that he might accomplish
his stratagem alone. As the beast fell back into the sea, he crossed
to Var.
The captain was disheveled, his tricorn lost and his shirt soiled. An
ugly bruise decorated one side of his face, but he seemed more angry
than afraid. Arcole touched his shoulder and explained his plan.
Var looked a moment amazed, but then he said, "Why not? We've
naught to lose."
"I can't do it alone," Arcole said. "I need at least
one other man."
Var said, "You've got him," and beckoned his sergeant.
Arcole assumed the captain would order the noncommissioned officer to
assist him, but Var surprised him by bidding the sergeant take
command of the musketeers. He turned to Arcole, motioning him on. The
schooner rocked again as the sea serpent grated against her keel.
A dinghy lay between the main and foremasts, and Var shouted for
sailors to help launch the little boat. The seamen gaped as if he had
lost his mind, and he must bully them into action. Arcole drew one
aside, needing his help to spill loose the rope and drop a length
into the dinghy. Then, with Var at his shoulder, he climbed on board.
The dinghy shipped weed and water as it hit the ocean, rocking
wildly. Arcole took up the noose and Var the oars, and they moved a
little distance from the schooner.
"God be with us," Var gasped as he rowed.
Arcole was not a religious man, but he echoed the prayer, thinking
they needed all the luck any power might bestow. Even then he
scarcely dared hope they should succeed.
"There!" he yelled as the serpent's wide-mouthed head
appeared. "Stand ready!"
Var let the oars drop and snatched at the noose. Each clutching the
rope, they moved apart to bow and stem.
The monster's blank-eyed face was not expressive, but Arcole thought
it smiled rapaciously as the head went under. The finned back showed
as great lengths of the body slid down. Arcole hoped it would attack
as it had before.
It seemed slow minutes passed in silence. Var's face was pale, his
eyes darting hither and yon over the weed. Arcole saw his knuckles
white on the rope; his own hands felt sweat-slickened.
The dinghy trembled as the water under its keel was disturbed. Then
it was hurtling upward, propelled high even as the clinkered sides
stove in between the serpent's jaws. The massive head rose—through
the noose.
Arcole let go the rope as fangs longer than a saber's blade clashed
viciously before his face. The creature's breath overwhelmed even the
reek of the seaweed, and he gagged as he tumbled helplessly through
the air. Then he was choking as weed and water engulfed him, and for
a while his world was a place of darkness and confusion, filled with
the dreadful anticipation of those jaws closing about him.
Then blue sky shone bright above and he spat, tugging layers of wrack
from his face. The monster still rose, the noose drawing tight about
its throat. Arcole saw the
Pride of the Lord
off to his right, and Var's weed-littered head appeared.
Pieces of the dinghy fell in a wooden rain. The sea serpent seemed to
climb the sky, and when it dropped, Arcole was pushed toward the
schooner by the wave it made. The ship seemed horribly far away, and
he feared he would not reach it before the monster took him. He began
to swim, awkwardly for the obstruction of the weed.
He saw Var was ahead of him, pausing at the foot of the rope
ladder flung down by his marines to assist Arcole. They climbed
together, propelled by desperation.
Overhead, the line ran taut. A soldier shouted warning and they both
flattened against the schooner's side as marines and sailors threw
their weight against the cannon, sending it after the tightening
rope. It hit with a great splash and sank.
Arcole and Var reached the deck and turned panting to observe the
serpent. The beast thrashed furiously, caught like some gigantic fish
on the line, its movements hampered by the weight of the sinking
cannon. It was not enough to drag the creature down but sufficient
for Arcole's purpose—or so he hoped.
Var coughed, unable to speak as yet, and motioned that the sergeant
order the cannoneers to fire.
Two pieces remained intact on the port side, and now the gunners had
an easier target. They sighted carefully as the monster coiled and
splashed and struggled against the rope. One gun roared, its charge
hitting true, carving a bloody wound in the serpent's flank. The
second boomed and a fresh gash spread blood over the turbulent wrack.
The serpent shrilled in pain; on the ship a cheer went up. Again and
again the cannon blasted, and though they sometimes missed as the
monster writhed, still they scored enough hits that the creature's
thrashing slowed, its blue-gray hide becoming speckled with red
wounds. In time its struggles ceased and it floated atop the weed,
fixing the schooner with a sullen stare. The cannon fired three more
shots, and then the serpent opened its vast mouth a final time and
sank.
Arcole stared long at the bloodied weed, waiting for the beast to
surface. It seemed impossible that it should be at last slain. But
nothing appeared save the lesser worms that wriggled up to feed on
the blood and chunks of riven flesh.
He felt a hand on his shoulder and turned to find Tomas Var grinning
at him. "By God, I thought us dead then. That was a wild
venture."
"But it worked," Arcole replied.
"Indeed it did." Var clapped him vigorously on the back.
"By God, 'sieur Blayke, you saved us all."
For the moment there were no differences between them, only the
comradeship of shared peril: they were only two men who had faced
death together and survived. Arcole answered Var's grin with his own,
and when the officer extended a hand, he took it. Then there was a
crowd about them, soldiers and sailors all shouting their approval.
Even Captain Bennan came to add his voice to the congratulations.
Arcole felt a blanket draped about his shoulders and turned to find
Var's sergeant at his back, that impassive face split by a huge
smile.
"This calls for celebration," Var declared. "Sergeant,
issue a tot to all present."
The sergeant saluted; his eyes shifted to Arcole, a brow raised in
silent question. Var nodded and said,
"Everyone, sergeant."
The exiles began to emerge from the hold, and when they saw the
serpent was gone they, too, began to cheer. Flysse and Davyd came
forward, hesitating as they saw the company about Arcole. He caught
sight of them and beckoned them on, and the marines cleared a way
until they stood beside him. He put his arms about them both.
"It's gone?" Davyd asked.
Arcole nodded, grinning at the boy. Flysse, her eyes bright with
tears of joy that he survived, clung close. Then she sniffed and made
a moue of distaste. Arcole realized that he stood soaked, draped with
seaweed, and stinking. He laughed, and Tomas Var laughed with him.
Then the sergeant approached, carrying a keg. Rum was issued, but as
Var raised his cup in toast, Bennan said, "Captain, this is
hardly fitting." He frowned at Arcole.
"Even so"—Var held out his cup in Arcole's
direction—"I drink his health. Exile or no, he saved us
all."
Bennan's frown became a scowl, and he shook his head. "I cannot
join in such a toast."
He turned away, passing his cup to a soldier, and strode back to his
position at the helm, from where he watched the proceedings in open
disapproval. Var ignored him, holding hi: cup high. "To 'sieur
Blayke," he cried, the toast echoed by his marines and not a few
of the sailors.
Arcole drank deep. The rum was strong, but it seemed only to warm
him, and no sooner was his cup emptied than the sergeant refilled it.
He raised it, saying, "To Captain Tomas Var."
At that moment it seemed not at all odd that prisoner and guard
should toast one another.
But when that was done the mood shifted subtly. There came an
awkwardness, for the moment of danger was passed and now they must
look to the future. The marine cleared his throat. "I must
change," he said, "and I imagine you would welcome dry
clothes."
Arcole shrugged. "Unfortunately, I was not able to bring my
wardrobe on board."
"Of course." Var smiled, somewhat shamefaced. "Forgive
me, I was not thinking." Then he frowned, as if wrestling with a
difficult decision. "But I cannot see you remain in those
stinking garments, sieur Blayke. Do you come with me to my cabin, and
I'll see you outfitted."
Such generosity surprised Arcole, and he bowed, murmuring thanks. Var
gestured awkwardly and motioned that Arcole accompany him.
His cabin was small and spartan, but from a sea chest he produced
shirt and breeches, clean undergarments. Two soldiers brought in a
tub of seawater, boiled clean and now cool. It was a luxury Arcole
had not anticipated, and he eagerly washed the stink of the weed from
his body.
"This is difficult," Var said. "I'd sooner we had met
under different circumstances."
"The cards fall as they will," Arcole replied. "It's
up to us how we play them."
Var nodded, his expression unhappy. "I've little choice in the
matter." As if to emphasize the point, he buttoned on a clean
tunic.
Arcole said, "No, I suppose not."
"Your actions, though … Var's face grew thoughtful. "They
shall not be forgotten. When we reach Salvation, I shall inform the
governor of your bravery."
"My thanks." Arcole ducked his head in formal salute, then
grinned: "And I suspect Captain Bennan will speak of your
actions."
Var snorted. "Bennan's a stiff-necked fellow, for sure."
"And how," asked Arcole, "shall your masters take it,
that you entertain an exile in your cabin? That you toast him and
clothe him?"
Var looked a moment doubtful, then shrugged. "They must take it
as they will," he declared. "And surely take into account
that you saved them a ship."
Arcole felt less confident of the Autarchy's sense of justice, but he
held his tongue. Var appeared disposed to talk and there was
information to be gleaned that might be useful. Casually, Arcole
said, "The hexes did nothing to deter that beast."
"No." Var drew a cloth over his sword. "Such magicks
as are set on these transport vessels are designed to hold their
prisoners, not to deter the monsters of the deep."
"We're not so valuable, then." Arcole made his voice
careless. "I'd thought us prized cargo."
"Oh, Salvation needs its servants." Arcole wondered if it
was bitterness he heard in Var's tone. "But exiles are
plentiful, and the hexing that would protect a craft of this size is
hard to work. What matter if some find a watery grave?"
"And the crews and your marines?" Arcole asked.
Var snorted a sour laugh. "We take our chances with you, no? And
the serpents are not so often found."
"That seems"—Arcole hesitated, not sure how far he
could draw Var out—"somewhat careless of your welfare."
"We do our duty." Var drove his sword home into the
scabbard and faced Arcole. "And I fear I perhaps say too much.
Forgive me, but I've matters to attend, and you—"
He broke off, embarrassed again. Arcole finished the sentence for
him: "Are an exile."
"Yes." Var fidgeted with his sabretache, clearly torn
between the refuge of formality and the odd relationship that began
to form. "You understand? I cannot … "He shrugged. "I'd
have it different, but I must return you to the hold. But you've my
word I shall not forget what you've done."
Arcole bowed. He had expected no less, had perhaps gotten more than
he had hoped. He went to the door and strode across the deck to where
Flysse and Davyd stood.
Repairs were already begun. Exiles were set to work on the broken
railings and damaged planks; the dead were drawn into neat lines,
hidden beneath tarpaulins. Var came up and with Bennan at his side,
commenced a brief funeral service, after which the corpses were
pitched overboard. All the while they watched, Flysse and Davyd stood
close by Arcole, as if they would reassure themselves he lived. Had
he thought about it himself, he might have felt the same surprised
relief. But he was thinking on what Var had let slip, that the
Pride
of the Lord and, therefore, he presumed, all the transports, were
not hexed against external attack. And that Tomas Var, for all he did
his duty, seemed not entirely happy with the task. There was food for
future thought in that.
And further, Arcole now knew Davyd dreamed true. He was not yet sure
how he might fit together such tidbits of knowledge, but like the
gambler he was, he felt instinctively that such cards should be held
close, against their future use.
As soon as he was able to speak privately to the boy, he asked that
Davyd tell him of any future dreams. Davyd promised; now more than
ever, Arcole was a hero in his eyes.
Nor less in Flysse's. She had seen little of the battle, and only
after it was done learnt of Arcole's reckless venture, but she had
known he remained on deck while she was below. She had believed they
all might die and realized with a shock that her fear was less for
herself, less for Davyd even, than for Arcole. She had not known she
cared so much until she came out on deck and saw him safe. Then she
had felt her heart pound wildly, and must hold herself back lest she
fling herself into his arms and hold him tight. When he hugged her,
she had struggled not to blurt out her feelings, afraid she presumed
too much and that such declaration embarrass him and drive him from
her. To tell him she loved him was too blatant, but to herself she
admitted it was true: she loved Arcole.
Davyd's nightmares ended with the destruction of the sea serpent. The
ocean still disturbed him: it seemed unnatural to float atop those
unknowable depths, but he was able to come to terms with that. The
absence of warning dreams assured him no further perils threatened,
and had he a fear left, it was that Arcole might let slip some
careless word that should condemn him to the Inquisitors fires. But
that was a very small fear—he trusted Arcole as he had trusted
no one save Aunt Dory.
Indeed, had he thought about it, he would have realized that the
place Aunt Dory had occupied in his life, the place that had been
empty since her demise, was now filled by Arcole and Flysse. They
were like newfound parents, or elder brother and sister. He had been
alone so long, living on his wits and the deftness of his fingers
without true friends that it was a joy to know them. He refused to
think about their impending landfall, when fate might well separate
them.
When such glum prospect did intrude on his happiness, he dismissed
it, telling himself that Grostheim could not be so large a place they
be parted. Sometimes he allowed himself to imagine them together
there, that Arcole would take Flysse to wife and they would adopt
him. Even did that not happen, he would surely see them often enough.
Arcole would surely arrange it so.
Davyd had absolute faith in Arcole: he thought there could be nothing
Arcole could not do. By God, he had slain the sea serpent! He had
saved Flysse from rape, and even the marines—stern agents of
the God's Militia—had hailed him hero. Now even Captain Var
treated him with respect and had promised to speak out on his behalf
when they reached their destination. He hoped Arcole would arrange it
that they three remain together. It did not occur to him, dazzled by
his admiration, that Arcole might entertain other plans.
And the
Pride of the Lord continued on across the Sea of
Sorrows, laboring slowly through the final limits of the weed sea,
then swifter as the clinging wrack gave up its hold and freshened
breezes filled the sails. No more serpents attacked, though three
were sighted and the remaining cannon primed and aimed. Had Davyd
dared speak out, he would have told Tomas Var there was no danger,
but Arcole was the only one to share his knowledge and so he only
watched, pretending a trepidation he no longer felt.
Then one day, when the sky spread bright above and the sea blue all
around, three gulls came swooping overhead, their mewing answered by
the sailors who shouted that landfall was nigh. The next day a line
of darkness lay across the western horizon, and on the day after that
the schooner came in sight of Salvation's coast.
18—The Long Night Falls
The New Grass Moon was flattened like a shield dented in battle as
the Commacht returned home. The clan had ridden a distance with the
mass of the People and then, when the Aparhaso and the Naiche went
their ways, somewhat farther with Yazte's Lakanti. But that trail
parted in a few days and the doubled strength of the two clans was
split. Consequently, the Commacht akaman rode wary, knowing Chakthi's
promise and the man's temper. He set his warriors about the
defenseless ones as the column wove homeward, with scouts and
outriders and a rearguard about the main body of the clan. It was,
for all Yazte's promises of support, a sadder journey than was usual,
and Racharran looked constantly for sign of ambush and all the time
hoped Chakthi might see sense.
Forlorn hope, he knew, but still could not resist.
They came down a grassy avenue banded by tall oaks, sloping toward a
river with the sun lowering, shedding red light over the treetops,
all the clan spread out in long defile with the scouts ahead and the
outriders pressed in close by the timber, the rearguard watchful
behind. Racharran thought to camp that night beside the water.
Then horsemen came out from the trees. Their shields carried the
buffalo-head emblems of the Tachyn and their faces were war-painted:
all bands of black and red, with daubs of white on the cheeks. They
came screaming their battle cries and firing bows that took three of
the outriders from their saddles on the first pass, arrows driven
deep into their ribs and chests, and then were gone still howling
back into the wood. The Commacht warriors slew two of them, but then
a second wave came from ahead, cutting in behind the scouts to send
shafts like savage rain onto the column before turning back to the
safety of the timber.
Racharran rallied his clan, calling in his warriors tight about the
column, and urged them to a gallop for the river. He shouted down the
younger men who would go after the ambushers and bade them hold the
flanks. By the time they reached the water, the Tachyn were gone.
Four Commacht were dead, and more wounded. A dog snapped, howling, at
the black and red Tachyn shaft driven through its ribs until a
warrior ended its misery with an ax. All looked to Racharran for
guidance.
He could do no more than bid them camp in tight formation beside the
river, which should protect their backs, and set his warriors
guardian about the camp, more ringing the horse herd. The young men
and not a few of the older warriors were for riding out in search of
the enemy. They pointed out—and rightly—that to attack a
clan homebound from Matakwa was open breach of the Will, and had
Chakthi himself not, by his action, set himself beyond the Will?
Racharran could tell them only yes, and no—that did Chakthi
elect to ignore the Ahsa-tye-Patiko, that was his choice, but that
the Commacht would not thus soil their hands. And when they asked him
must they then ride all the way home in fear of Tachyn raids, he
could only say yes, and bid them fight only defensive, adding, "On
our own grass, the Will no longer ties our hands, and are we
attacked, it shall be war."
This pleased them, for the treacherous raid heated tempers that might
be cooled only in blood, and many set to speaking of the numbers they
would slay and the punishments they would inflict on the Tachyn.
Racharran left them to it. His spirit was sunk low, for he saw the
hoped-for peace was all lost, wisdom burned away in the flames of
Chakthi's rage, and he foresaw chaos descending when the People stood
in great need of common sense and common purpose. He walked a
distance off alone, to where the waning moon painted the green grass
all silvery and the river ran quick between its banks, babbling as it
conversed with itself and the night. He looked to where the sentries
patrolled, and past them to the trees, and then beyond toward the
mountains, distant now and dark, the Maker's Mountain a pale pillar
upholding the sky. He wondered how Rannach fared, and Arrhyna, and
what newborn terrors Colun might find on his return home.
He spun, his Grannach blade in hand, as soft footsteps came up.
"Ho, it's me." Morrhyn raised hands in gesture of calming.
"Think you a Tachyn might come so close?"
Racharran shook his head, returning the blade to its sheath. "This
talk of war troubles me," he said. And beckoned the wakanisha to
his side. "Shall we walk aways?"
Morrhyn fell into step beside his friend. "I should have dreamed
of this," he murmured.
Racharran's laugh was a souring of the night. "We'd no need of
your gift to foretell it." He glanced sidelong at the Dreamer.
"That Chakthi's crazed enough to break the Will? I
knew that;
but still men died."
"That was not your fault," Morrhyn said. "You did all
you could."
Racharran said, "I hoped too strong. I set too much faith in
men. I hoped Chakthi yet retained some honor."
Morrhyn said, "Because you are a good man; an honorable man. Men
like you see the best in others; you seek to see it, and overlook
their weaknesses."
"And so my people die." Racharran stooped to lift a pebble
from the river's shore, flung it out over the water. It splashed and
was gone. "Do such 'good men' make good akamans?"
Firmly, Morrhyn answered, "Yes. You hold to the Will and seek
only the good of all the clan, of all the People. That must be our
hope, for I think that every breaking of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko now must
be an offense against the Maker, and we shall need his goodwill in
the times to come."
Racharran grunted, folding his blanket tight around his shoulders as
if a chill wind blew, though the night was warm as the New Grass Moon
faded toward its rebirth as the Moon of Dancing Foals. "And what
shall come?" he asked. "More attacks? More die along the
way? Until the young men fret and perhaps rebel? And then? War with
the Tachyn? When we should all of us think on what Colun told us, and
prepare for the worst."
Answers were hard to find: Morrhyn sighed and said slowly, "Perhaps;
likely. There's a blind madness come to Ket-Ta-Witko, I think. It's
as if"—he hesitated, looking toward the distant bulk of
the Maker's Mountain—"as if some dark wind blows through
the mountains to soil our minds and make us mad. You see the danger,
and Yazte. But the others are like children hiding under their
blankets, waiting for the night to go away."
"Shall it be a long night?" Racharran asked. "And
shall it go away?"
Morrhyn closed his eyes a moment. He thought it might be no bad thing
to find his own blankets and draw them firm over his head and play
the child. But he could not: he was wakanisha of the Commacht, as
Racharran was akaman, and they could neither of them forsake their
duties. He said, "I think it shall likely be a very long night,
and I cannot say if it will go away."
Racharran halted. The river folded here, a steep bank sliding down to
a sandy bench. He lowered himself to the ground, legs dangling, and
motioned Morrhyn to sit beside him. "What does your dreaming say
of this long night?"
"Nothing." Morrhyn spread helpless hands wide. "Since
I sat in the wa'tenhya, I've not dreamed at all."
Racharran turned to study his face. The akaman's was lit stark and
hard-planed by the moon. Morrhyn found it hard to meet his eyes: they
held no accusation, but still he felt accused. He said, "Since
then I've slept like a child—either sound or waking frightened
through the night. But what wakes me, I cannot say. There's nothing
here." He tapped his head as if to dislodge some clogging
hindrance. "No dreams, no warnings—only fear."
Racharran nodded, unspeaking. He stared at the river, running
oblivious of their presence or their concerns, like passing time that
flows and changes and is the same and always different.
Morrhyn said, "I'm afraid. I feel unarmed—as if I were a
warrior hunting a man-eating lion in a thick, dark wood without
weapons. I know the beast is there … somewhere … but I cannot see
it or smell it or hear it. Only know that it watches me. And waits to
pounce."
He felt Racharran's hand upon his shoulder then, squeezing. The
akaman said, "Perhaps when we come home?"
"Perhaps." Morrhyn smiled sadly. "But meanwhile, what
use am I? A Dreamer bereft of dreams? Useful as a blind horse."
Racharran's hand squeezed harder. "A blind horse can still carry
a load, my friend."
"Save," Morrhyn said, "it's not much use in battle,
eh?"
"You wakanishas do not fight," Racharran said. "Yours
is the harder part."
"I am afraid." Morrhyn paused so that Racharran could not
decide whether he stated a simple fact or voiced a wider fear. "I
am afraid that in the days to come we shall all of us be called to
fight. Against men or … something else. And my weapons are my
dreams. Are they lost, then I am … what? Truly useless."
"No!" Racharran shook his friend as he might a despondent
child. "You are what you are—wakanisha of the Commacht!
Not only our Dreamer, but also arbiter of the Will. You interpret the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko, and in that I think I shall need your help in the
days to come."
"The Ahsa-tye-Patiko?" Morrhyn found a turf loose between
his knees and worried it up and tossed it into the edge-water. It
fell soggy and bobbed awhile, then took the current and was borne
away. He could not look at Racharran's face as he said, "I
wonder if the People do not all forget the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. Surely
Chakthi disregards it; Vachyr did. Rannach was driven to that … "
He bit his tongue. "Forgive me, old friend."
"No." Racharran shook his head. "For what you say is
true. Rannach
did … what you say."
"With cause," Morrhyn said.
"Yes." Racharran nodded. "But still, to no good
effect. And did Chakthi plan it all, or only Vachyr, then the end's
the same, no? The Matakwa ended in chaos and we all go our separate
ways when we need harmony. But still we need the Will. Let the Tachyn
forget it; we Commacht shall not."
"You see things straight," Morrhyn said. "True as an
arrow."
"Because I see them simpler," Racharran gave him back. "To
draw the bow and sight the shaft? That's easy—any warrior can
do that. But you? Your task is the hard one, brother. You're the one
communes with the Maker and must translate his Will for us;"
"Save part of that is the dreaming," Morrhyn said. He tried
to find the turf along the river's length and could not. He wondered
if it floated on or sank.
Racharran said, "A part, yes. But another is the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko, and that part you can still carry."
"Like," Morrhyn asked, "the blind horse with its
load?"
"If you will," Racharran answered. "It's a load needs
bearing. I think that I shall need your strength when the warriors
grow restless."
Morrhyn said, "You shall have it—for what it's worth."
Racharran said, "It's worth much. Now, do we go check the picket
lines and then find ourselves food? I think Lhyn's a flask of tiswin
yet unopened. Save Colun found it."
Morrhyn smiled and nodded his assent, and they rose from their
melancholy contemplation and returned to where the clan built the
fires and wondered what the morrow held.
They crossed the river with a vanguard established on the farther
bank and warriors watchful on the near. There was no attack, and by
midmorning all were safely over, even the slain whom they carried
with them that they might be set to rest in the trees of their own
country. They went swiftly as a clan might, which was not very fast
with old folk and children to tend, horses to herd, laden pack
animals and travois to haul. Racharran took to halting early did some
readily defensible place appear, and each night the camp was guarded.
But still they moved inexorably toward their own country, and that
was their beacon and their hope.
They came to a place where the land ahead was open, spreading wide
between far ridges topped with birch and tamarack. The sky was oyster
blue and laced with drifts of high cloud that strung out like the
tails of racing horses on the sweet-scented wind. Off to the south a
small herd of buffalo grazed, the bulls ringing the cows and calves
as they scented the passing clan. Racharran led the column, his
shield firm on his left arm, Grannach-bladed lance tall in his right.
Bow and shafts lay quivered across his back. That morning, as Lhyn
readied food, he had honed his knife. It was not the way he would
usually have come home, and it seemed a weight upon his shoulders and
his soul. He wished it might be different, yet knew it was not and
could not be, and that he must accept it as he had urged Morrhyn to
accept the weight of the wakanisha's burden.
He saw the Tachyn as his people reached the end parts of the ridges
and the full width of the plain beyond spread out, sloping down to a
deep and fast-running stream that marked the boundary of the Commacht
grass. There were twenty men by his count, riding their animals slow
along the ridgetop to his right, and when he looked to the left he
saw twenty more, pacing their horses to match the column. They made
no move to attack, only rode in insulting escort, as if daring the
Commacht to charge them. Forty warriors were scarce enough to halt or
defeat the clan, but they could inflict a damage Racharran had sooner
avoid. He wondered what they planned, and if more men waited in
hiding ahead, behind the last slopes of the ridges. He thought of the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko, which forbade him to make the first move, and that
the water ahead should be a barrier, his people penned by river and
ridges.
His own warriors danced their horses around him, urging him to
attack, telling him they could easily sweep these upstarts from the
slopes.
He said, "No! We are yet bound by the Will. Find Morrhyn and
bring him."
A man raced back along the nervous column to where Morrhyn rode with
Lhyn and brought the wakanisha to Racharran.
The akaman pointed his lance at the Tachyn and then at the river.
"Twenty and twenty to either side," he said, "and
likely as many hidden ahead. I'd not fight them if I can avoid it,
but they may not grant us that choice. What are your thoughts?"
Morrhyn nodded, recognizing the true purpose of Racharran's question,
of the summons: to emphasize the wakanisha's position, establish his
authority. These last nights, there had been mutterings amongst the
impatient warriors—that their Dreamer lost his power, could no
longer warn of hazards to come. Even now he saw faces turned dark and
doubting toward him, waiting on him.
"The Ahsa-tye-Patiko is clear on this," he said. "Each
clan is granted safe passage home, and to deny that is to deny the
Will, to risk the Maker's anger."
From amongst the warriors came a voice he recognized as Bakaan's:
"Chakthi denies the Will at his pleasure! Are we to die at his
whim?"
Racharran's voice cracked through the morning. "We are Commacht!
Would you forget the Will, then go join the Tachyn."
Morrhyn saw Bakaan frown and lower his face. He said, "They do
not attack yet."
"Not yet." Racharran looked again toward the river. "But
when we reach the ford?"
Maker guide me, Morrhyn thought. Have I offended you, punish me, not
all the clan. "That would surely be the place," he said.
"But why reveal themselves? I wonder if Chakthi has some other
design in mind."
"What else could it be?" Racharran asked.
Morrhyn turned in his saddle to study the watching Tachyn, the river
ahead. "Perhaps … "He gathered his thoughts, not knowing
if the Maker granted him insight or if it was his own intuition.
"Perhaps Chakthi seeks to share his sin. None saw him when they
attacked before." He looked around: men shook their heads.
"Perhaps this is like the kidnap—that Chakthi would draw
us into a trap and claim his hands clean, that these warriors act
unknown to him. Perhaps he'd lure us into a breaking of the Will."
A man barked laughter and shouted, "What matter? Are we attacked
now or at the ford, the defenseless ones shall suffer. Why do we not
charge them?"
Morrhyn thought that Racharran would answer, but the akaman sat
silent, leaving the response to him. He said, "It is as
Racharran says—we are Commacht: we hold to the Will. Let
Chakthi bloody his hands, not ours."
The same man demanded: "And so we go like dew-eyed deer to the
slaughter?"
Racharran was about to speak, but Morrhyn reached out to touch his
wrist and silence him—the akaman had passed him this burden:
now he would carry it as best he could. "I think they may not
attack," he said. "I think perhaps they look to draw us
into a charge, and after claim it was
we made the first move."
"I would," the man declared. "Make the first move."
His cry was answered with shouts of agreement and approval, and all
the while the column moved slowly on toward the ford and Morrhyn knew
he must do something to hold his people to the Will, that the angry
warriors not defile the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. He looked again at the
Tachyn: they waved their lances in challenge, and the breeze carried
their jeers.
He said, "No! The first move is mine."
His voice was loud and firm: it stilled the warriors. Racharran
stared at him, eyes framing a question. He said, "I shall go to
them and ask them what they do."
He felt afraid. He thought the Tachyn should likely slay him, and
then was ashamed of his fear, thinking that did he fail to act, the
Commacht should likely charge and the Will be further broken. He
heeled his horse forward.
Racharran moved to halt him, said: "Not alone."
"Yes, alone." Morrhyn forced a smile and lied. "I
think not even Chakthi's warriors would slay a wakanisha."
And do they, he thought, then what shall it matter? If I can no
longer dream, what use am I? No matter what Racharran says. And if I
succeed, then perhaps I shall strengthen the Will, perhaps persuade
the hotheads to observance. He fixed Racharran with his eyes and
turned his horse past the akaman's and drove his heels against the
flanks, lifting the animal to a canter, shouting back in as firm a
voice as he could manage: "Wait here!"
The day was warm: he felt chilled as he rode away from his people and
his belly felt hollow. He let his eyes wander sidelong, seeing the
Tachyn riders match his pace. As he passed the ridges' ends and came
toward the river and the narrow ford, they descended and swung toward
him. He could see none others hidden and reined in a little way from
the water. The Tachyn closed on him, and he gentled his mount as the
animal scented his fear and began to prance. His throat was dry and
still he felt a great desire to spit, which he resisted, endeavoring
to sit calm as he anticipated an arrow driving into his back, his
ribs, his chest, or the sudden charge that would plant the lance's
point in his belly and lift him from the saddle.
Instead, the Tachyn warriors wheeled their horses in a circle about
him, round and round, as he sat holding his own in check. They called
out, jeering, telling him the Commacht were cowards and afraid of the
mighty Tachyn that they send a Dreamer in place of warriors. Some
came in close to strike him and he swayed in the saddle, wincing at
the blows, waiting for them to tire of the ritual.
When they did and slowed their circling to ring him, waiting, he
said, "Why do you do this?"
They seemed a moment taken aback, then a warrior he did not recognize
answered, "Because you are a Commacht and a coward."
He said, "I am Morrhyn, wakanisha of the Commacht. Who are you?"
The man hesitated, then said, "I am Dohnse."
Morrhyn nodded and asked, "Are you Chakthi's man, Dohnse?"
The Tachyn frowned, confused, and said, "Of course."
Morrhyn assumed him the leader and stared at him. It was very hard to
ignore the men milling about, the weapons they brandished. He asked,
"And where is Chakthi?"
Dohnse said, "He takes our people home. He takes Vachyr's body
home."
Morrhyn said, "And Hadduth? Where is the wakanisha of the
Tachyn?"
Dohnse's frown grew deeper, the bands of color decorating his face
twisting. He said, "Hadduth rides with the clan."
"He should be with you," Morrhyn said. "That he might
interpret the Ahsa-tye-Patiko for you."
Dohnse drew his rein tight, prompting his mount to dance. He looked
uncomfortable, hid it behind a scowl. "What of the Will,
Commacht?"
"We are homebound from Matakwa." Morrhyn angled his head
back, indicating his own waiting clan, not taking his eyes from
Dohnse's face. "And the Will is clear on that—to attack is
to defy the Maker."
Under the paint, the scowl, it was hard to read the Tachyn's face,
but he thought Dohnse looked an instant ashamed. He watched as the
man shook his lance and then his head.
"Rannach broke the Ahsa-tye-Patiko when he slew Vachyr."
Morrhyn said, "Yes; but Vachyr broke it first when he stole
Arrhyna. And the Council decided Rannach's punishment. Even now he
lives in the wild places, alone." He stabbed a hand toward the
west, toward the distant shadow-shapes of the mountains and the
faint, shining bulk of the Maker's Mountain. "It is for the
Maker to decide whether he lives or dies now. As it is for the Maker
to decide the right and wrong of defying the Will. Shall you accept
that, Dohnse? Shall you accept the Maker's wrath?"
Dohnse looked in turn toward the mountains and shaped a sign of
warning. "Chakthi has declared war," he said, less
confident now. "Why should I not kill you?"
Morrhyn said, "Because you would then break the Ahsa-tye-Patiko,
Dohnse, and would surely earn the Maker's displeasure. I am a
wakanisha, and I tell you it would be so. Must be so! The Will is
clear on this, and do you break it
you must suffer his anger.
You and all others who defy him. Shall you accept that anger alone?
Or shall you go back and ask Hadduth, Chakthi, to take a share?"
Dohnse chewed awhile on his lower lip, his horse curveting, then
grunted and said, "Why should I listen to you, Morrhyn of the
Commacht?"
Morrhyn said, "Perhaps because I came to you alone, that I might
speak with you of the Will and find a way whereby you can avoid the
Maker's anger. Perhaps because I'd not see further bloodshed in
defiance of the Will."
Dohnse said, "Our clans are at war, Dreamer. How can there not
be further bloodshed?"
Morrhyn would have sighed, save that must be interpreted as a sign of
weakness, and he thought that if he showed any sign of weakness now
he would die, and then the Commacht ride down on these misguided men
and the Will be all shattered. So he steeled himself and said,
"Perhaps there cannot. Save do you take lives now, you condemn
yourselves in the eyes of the Maker and I'd not see you suffer that
fate. Neither you nor my clan."
"You weave clever words." Dohnse shook his lance in
frustration and fury, but Morrhyn thought he saw a measure of doubt
in the man's eyes. "I am Chakthi's man. I obey my akaman."
"Who is not here," Morrhyn said. "And thus able to
claim his hands were clean, does this all come to killing. Neither
him nor Hadduth, eh? Only you and your men—who shall suffer
alone the Maker's judgment."
He saw the doubt grow larger. "Listen," he said, "there
is a way past this. A way that leaves you with honor, nor condemned
before the Maker."
Reluctantly, Dohnse asked, "How? What way is this?"
Morrhyn pointed at the river. "The boundary of our grass, that.
Leave us cross—let the defenseless ones go over unharmed—and
then the strictures of the Will are obeyed. Once over, we are on
Commacht grass and this war Chakthi brings us shall no longer defy
the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. Grant us that crossing and you shall not be
condemned. I tell you this as a wakanisha."
Dohnse pondered awhile, then said, "I must speak of this with my
people."
Morrhyn nodded. He sat his fretful horse as the Tachyn spoke amongst
themselves. Before him the river burbled unconcerned, and above the
sky stretched blue and hard in the spring sun, the mare's tails all
strung out on the wind. He saw a hawk riding the aerial currents,
hovering still as the cold, chilled center of his being as he waited
for the Tachyns' decision. It seemed to him a frozen moment in which
he could hear the nervous pounding of his own heart, and he thought
that if the Tachyn decided in favor of his suggestion, then perhaps
there was still some little hope, some honor left. He saw the hawk
stoop as Dohnse spoke again.
"It shall be as you say." The Tachyn thrust his lance in
the direction of the ford. He seemed torn, between, Morrhyn thought,
fear of the Maker and fear of Chakthi. "Let your defenseless
ones cross, and all your coward warriors. We shall not attack."
"My thanks." Morrhyn ducked his head. "It is good to
find honor yet exists amongst Chakthi's people."
Dohnse frowned and spat onto the trampled grass. "Do not try my
patience, Dreamer." He flourished his lance. "Go tell your
people they cross with my permission."
Morrhyn waited no longer, but turned his horse and heeled the animal
back. The Tachyn parted for him, watching him with sullen, angry
eyes, and all the way he felt an unpleasant prickling between his
shoulders, resisting the urge to gallop or to look back.
"They say we can cross unharmed," he told Racharran.
A warrior—Bakaan again, he thought—snorted and said,
"They say? We could ride them down."
Racharran asked, "Are there more? Could it be a trap?"
"I think not." Morrhyn shook his head. "I saw no
others. I spoke to them of honor and the Will."
Racharran nodded and said, loud, "That was a brave thing you
did. So … " He raised his lance, waving the clan onward. "We
cross in peace. Let no man break the Will."
He urged his horse forward and the Commacht came down between the
ridges in an eager human tide. It was ever good to reach home again,
but now the sweeter for what lay behind them; and if war lay ahead,
then at least it should be fought on their grass, where the bones and
blood of the ancestors nurtured them and made them strong. They came
cautious to the river, the warriors yet alert along the flanks and to
the rear, then forming defensive as the women and children and old
folk made the crossing. The Tachyn disappeared back into the copses
and Dohnse kept his word, so that all came over unscathed.
As Morrhyn waited, watching the horse herd and the dogs go splashing
over, Lhyn came up beside. She rode a paint pony, leading a roan that
dragged a travois on which was loaded hers and Racharran's lodge, and
all they had brought with them to Matakwa. The sun shone bright on
her hair, so that the strands of silver glittered, enhancing the
gold, and for all her face still reflected the loss of her son, she
was smiling.
She said, "That was bravely done. I was afraid for you."
Morrhyn said, "I told Racharran they'd not dare harm a
wakanisha," even as he felt a flush of pleasure that she had
been concerned for him.
"They might have," she said. "They are Chakthi's
people."
He shrugged, wishing he might reach out to touch her. It was as if
those moments of danger heightened his senses and in their passing
left him restless and needful of contact. He wished he might hold
her; that it was his lodge loaded on the travois, and his blankets
she'd come to that night. He thought that at that moment he had never
desired her more.
"I was afraid," he said, and smiled sheepishly. "I
feared they'd kill me. But … " He shrugged again.
"But what?" Lhyn asked, and reached out to touch his hand.
He shivered at her touch; it seemed he could feel the pulsing of her
blood. He felt sure she must know this, and what his eyes surely said
to her. He stretched his smile wider in camouflage and said, "Some
of them yet honor the Will."
"Then we've hope," she said. "Are there such warriors
amongst the Tachyn still. And such men as you with us."
He said, "Perhaps," and wished they not have this
conversation and she go on to leave him lonely with his thoughts: it
was hard to love another's wife.
Then Racharran came splashing back across the river and the moment
was—thankfully for Morrhyn—ended as the akaman saw to
Lhyn's crossing, and after that the last of the clan went over, and
then the rearguard and all the Commacht came again onto their own
grass.
The Tachyn struck thrice more as they moved toward the summer
grazing. The New Grass Moon waned and the nights were lit only by
stars as the Moon of Dancing Foals gathered strength and the attacks
were fought off with no Commacht slain and only minor casualties, but
still they were savage reminder of Chakthi's vengeance-bent rage.
And still Morrhyn did not dream. He could not, it seemed: as if a
darkening veil fell over him when he found his blankets. He slept—as
he had told Racharran—like a babe: either dreamlessly sound or
always waking unaware of what roused him, other than unknown terror.
Once on the relative safety of the summer grass he raised himself a
sweat lodge and passed long nights there seeking communion with the
Maker and that oneiric world that foretold—or should have—the
events of the mundane, but nothing came save sweat and blank, dark
night. He ate the pahe root and still did not dream: he came to fear
the Maker had taken away the gift and he become useless to his clan
and all the People. He wondered if he had failed his duty, or if
Colun's invaders stole his ability, and could not decide. He knew
only that he no longer dreamed, and could no longer forewarn or guide
his clan. He felt then that the fear he had known when he faced
Dohnse was just a small thing, and not at all to be compared with
this.
And as his inner darkness grew, so did the war, as if the one thing
were somehow linked to the other, or both controlled by some greater
darkness that spread like malign twilight across Ket-Ta-Witko.
Racharran took his clan deep into the Commacht territory, far from
the boundaries where usually they would be safe. Then, when no
attacks came for a while and the Commacht were somewhat lulled into a
sense of security, the clan divided, as was customary, into lesser
family groups that drifted to their preferred grazing. It was not the
way of the People to fight great battles, but rather skirmishes, fast
raids, and ambuscades, small bands of warriors striking into a clan's
territory to hit and run. Usually when they fought, it was over
horses or disputed grazing, hunting rights. That Chakthi sent his
people into battle envenomed purely with his own malice was a strange
thing that the Commacht found hard to understand. But send them he
did, and himself at the head, his face painted with the colors of war
and vengeance, his shield daubed all black in mourning for Vachyr. He
wore his hair still loose and foul with ashes and dirt, so that those
who saw him and lived said that he wore the look of a ghost or a
demon. Neither did his belligerence follow any pattern familiar to
the clan. He brought his warriors in large bands, deep into the
Commacht grazing, and after striking did not return to his own
territory but pressed on, like a prairie fire blazing unchecked
across the grass. Nor did he spare those considered by custom and the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko inviolate: women and children, old men—the
defenseless ones—died. He poisoned springs with corpses and
damned streams with the rotting bodies of slain horses; where food
was grown he trampled and befouled; and when no Commacht were
available, he slew game, leaving the meat to rot. It was a war such
as the Commacht had never known: it filled them with both fear and
hatred. And still Morrhyn could not dream, but only give what advice
he could.
He suggested to Racharran that the akaman bring in the scattered
groups, that the clan band all together in such size as might daunt
the Tachyn. It was an unknown thing, but they fought an unknown war,
so Racharran sent out riders and all the Commacht drew together in
one great defensive mass.
This in itself created problems, for with so large a band the grazing
was soon worn out and they must often move nomadic, and the presence
of so many people in one place frightened off the game so that
hunters must travel farther afield after the buffalo and the deer,
which left them vulnerable to the raging Tachyn. It was as if
Chakthi's madness infected his clan, and Morrhyn wondered what
insanity must grip Hadduth, that the Tachyn wakanisha raised no
objection. But that, in light of his own problems, was a small
consideration.
Despite Racharran's oft-voiced support, his standing amongst the
Commacht diminished like water dribbling through gravel. He could not
dream: he could not warn of attacks or fouled waterholes, buffalo
herds or deer slaughtered or driven away. The clan began to mutter;
the hotheaded young men first, but before too long also the older
warriors.
"The Maker takes away his gift," he heard them say; and,
"What use a Dreamer who cannot dream?" and, "He's
named no one to succeed him." When they knew he heard them they
looked shamefaced and turned away, but the soft-spoken words rang
condemnatory in his ears and he was ashamed: he thought he failed his
people.
When the young men, and more than a few of the older warriors, spoke
of raiding into the Tachyn lands to strike the enemy's camps as
Chakthi did theirs, he argued with them, speaking urgently of the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko and the importance of its continued observance. He
said to them what Racharran had said—that they were Commacht
and should not stoop to the Tachyn's low ways for fear of earning the
Maker's displeasure. And they gave him back that it seemed to them
they already suffered, and that surely what Chakthi did must justify
any measures they took; and he could only answer that wrong could not
justify wrong, which satisfied them not at all. Some even dared
question him outright, asking if he could still, dreamless, properly
interpret the Will. It was Racharran who intervened then, exercising
his authority to forbid such counterattacks, and though he supported
Morrhyn, still that intervention eroded the wakanisha's own standing.
He felt he became shadowy, ever more insubstantial, as the clan's
belief in him slipped away. He felt his belief in himself shrink, as
if he drifted powerless on a tide he could neither control nor
properly comprehend. He grew morose.
He spent long days alone in the sweat lodge, praying to the Maker for
guidance, for enlightenment, and knew only the unanswering darkness.
He ate the pahe root until Racharran and Lhyn came to him, together
and separately, and begged him to cease for fear the narcotic leach
out all his senses and leave him mindless. To which he answered: "And
what matter? Undreaming, I
am senseless: I am useless."
And laughed bitterly and said, "That blind horse we spoke of? I
am less use than that. I am become nothing."
"You are our wakanisha," Racharran said as Lhyn wiped sweat
from his fevered face, his chest.
That touch would, not long ago, have excited him, but now he felt
only a terrible weariness, an aching and unnamable void that left him
despondent and weak so that he only lay beside the fire and knew
vaguely she wiped him dry and brought broth to his mouth. He would
not have eaten had she not forced him. He said, "I am a Dreamer
without dreams. They talk about me when they think I shall not hear."
Racharran said, "I'll speak to them of that."
"No." Morrhyn shook his head. "They speak only the
truth. Why should they not? I betray them."
Lhyn said fiercely, "No! You do what you can."
He laughed at that, feebly, and raised himself up. "What I can
do is not much, eh?"
It seemed to him the darkness invaded his soul, and even when he
sought the light he could not find it, as if it were dimmed or taken
far away from him. He took the bowl from her hands and drained it and
gave it back; she filled it from the pot she had brought and passed
it to him. He looked at it and felt no appetite and shook his head.
She said, "That would be betrayal, Morrhyn—to let yourself
grow weak when we need your strength. Eat!"
He looked at her and wondered how she could care so much for him when
he was useless and she had lost her son. He looked at Racharran, who
sat cross-legged and unhappy, his eyes narrowed in concern. He took
the bowl.
Racharran said, "I've sent riders to the Lakanti, to ask for
Yazte's help."
Morrhyn felt his belly grow warmer as the broth filled him. He felt
weak and sick. He was not sure how long he had lain in the sweat
lodge, nor how long since last he ate. He said, "Surely we need
it. But what shall it mean? That this war is fought the fiercer? That
more die?"
Racharran said, "I hope it shall mean we defeat Chakthi."
"Or slip deeper into this chaos?" Morrhyn let Lhyn drape a
blanket about his shoulders. "I feel a long night coming."
"What do you say?" Racharran asked.
Morrhyn sipped the broth. It strengthened him; or perhaps it was the
concern of these true friends. It did not matter: he felt his spirit
climb a little way up from the darkness. It was as if he lay in a
deep pit, but now a glimmer illuminated handholds, showed how he
might ascend into the light again. He said carefully, "That this
war blinds us to the other. That we fight the Tachyn, and does Yazte
lend us men, then three clans fight. Shall Chakthi seek alliance with
the Naiche or Tuh's Aparhaso?"
Racharran said, "I think he'd not find it, nor we. I think both
Juh and Tahdase would sooner stay clear of this."
Morrhyn shook his head and felt it spin. He closed his eyes awhile,
gathering his confused and random thoughts. "I think it makes no
difference," he said at last. "Colun brought us warning of
that war the Whaztaye lost. He told us the impossible had become
real, and of the Grannach's fears—that the invaders breach
the mountains and come to Ket-Ta-Witko.
And we ignored him! We
had our own concerns, no? That Vachyr stole Arrhyna and Rannach slew
him for that sin."
"And was punished for it," Racharran said, his face gone
tight.
"And was punished for it," Morrhyn agreed. "And did we
not then wonder what part Chakthi had in that, and Hadduth? What
darkness had entered them that they played so dangerous a game? That
Chakthi had likely chanced his own son's life to strike at us?"
Racharran said, "I do not understand."
Lhyn sat silent, her gaze fixed firm on Morrhyn's face, as if she
sought the answers he was not sure he owned behind his eyes.
He said, "I wondered then if some greater darkness entered
Chakthi. Think on how that Matakwa ended—in chaos and rage. Now
we fight a war such as we've never known—the Ahsa-tye-Patiko is
forgotten by the Tachyn, and our own young men speak of ignoring the
Will. I think there's chaos abroad—and what better time to
invade a land?"
He licked his lips as Lhyn flinched. He saw Racharran's hands tighten
into fists. He wondered if the Maker guided his tongue, or only his
own worst fears. He said, "I eat the pahe root and still cannot
dream. My head is all clouded and dark. The Tachyn ignore the Will
and every custom: chaos. We are divided. And should Colun's warning
prove true?"
He saw Racharran's hands close tight again, this time the right
folding about the Grannach knife he wore. Lhyn reached out to touch
his wrist, her other hand nervous at her throat. Like her husband
before her, she asked, "What do you say?"
He answered: "That a madness is on us. And I fear worse to
come."
Her hand clenched tight. He dropped the bowl he held, the broth
spilling unnoticed between his legs.
Racharran said, "Wakanisha, if this is your true belief, what
must we do?"
Almost, he shrugged and answered, "I am a wakanisha who cannot
any longer dream—why do you ask me?" But he could not
shrug off that duty: he
was wakanisha of the Commacht, and if
he was to fulfil that duty, then he must accept it wholely or else be
nothing—fail his clan and all the People. He wished the burden
were not his—that he might turn from it and pass it to another;
but there was—as the whispers about the camp had said—none
other to whom he could hand it. And so, he thought, I must shoulder
it like that blind horse, and trust to those instincts left me to
carry it safely on. But to where, and to what end?
The entry flap of the sweat lodge faced west, looking toward the
invisible mountains. It was closed now, but it was for a moment as if
his sight grew vital enough that he saw through the hide and across
the grass beyond the woods and the hills and the valleys and the
rivers to where the Maker's Mountain loomed. It was as if he saw that
peak standing bright into the sky, as if it came to him and stood
above him and called him. He felt afraid and at the same time
excited. For an instant he remembered the time Gahyth had named him a
Dreamer and revealed to him those mysteries that belonged to the
wakanishas alone.
He heard Lhyn say, "Morrhyn?"
And Racharran, "What ails you?"
He smiled then, a thin and narrow spreading of his lips, and answered
them both: "I must go away."
It seemed not his lungs that pumped the air that vitalized the words,
nor his throat that drummed the cords, nor his lips that shaped their
forming, but some other's. Perhaps the Maker's. He thought that
likely presumption, but still the words came clear, and he knew as he
spoke them that there was no retraction possible, nor any turning
back. He was compelled by a force he did not understand, nor wanted
to: it was too strong. It was if he climbed those handholds he had
envisioned, clambering from the pit toward the hope of light, driven
by hope and fear together to ignore the pain and grip where no grip
was possible, only the frail strength of himself and his own hope,
which was no less fear. There was now only forward to …
He could not name it. Only know that it must be, else he be less than
nothing.
He said, "I must go to the Maker's Mountain."
Racharran said, "No! Not now. We need you."
He laughed again and rose. The blanket fell from his shoulders as he
went to the entry flap and flung it aside. It was dusk. The Moon of
Dancing Foals waned; the sky was full of stars. The cookfires and the
watchfires lit the encampment, and he heard the voices of his clan
raised like sparks into the night. There was laughter and the sound
of children, of dogs and the horses, and he felt a great love
encompass him, and a terrible dread that he might never see this
again. He stepped outside and felt a hand upon his bare shoulder and
turned to look into Racharran's eyes. Lhyn stood beside her husband,
her face all filled with such emotions as he'd not seen since her son
was banished. He smiled at them.
"I must go the Maker's Mountain," he said again. "I am
no use here. But there … "
He looked again toward where the mountain stood. It was no longer as
in that brief vision, but its memory stood proud and he knew he had
no other choice.
"I think I might find answers there."
19—Sanctuary
The Moon of Hairy Horses hung low above the valley, filling the
strath with yellow light. The timber cascading down the terraces
whispered a gentle song as the summer breeze caressed the leaves, and
the' stream murmured in counterpoint. The breeze was warm;
nightingales trilled and were answered by the soft hooting of owls.
It was a fine and perfect night: Rannach felt at ease.
He raised his head from where he lounged on the moon-washed grass to
look to where Arrhyna sat. The fire emphasized the perfect lines of
her face, and the moon dusted her hair with dancing silver. She
caught his eyes and smiled.
"What are you thinking?" she asked.
"That I am very lucky," he replied. "That the Maker is
kind to me."
She said, "To us," gravely, and looked toward the great
stark peak that dominated all the hills, and then lowered her eyes
and looked at the fire.
He saw thoughts hidden and asked her in turn, "What are
you
thinking?"
She raised her face from contemplation of the flames and said, "That
we are lucky, but—" She paused, her teeth a moment on her
lip as if she were not certain she should speak. He motioned that she
continue. " … That perhaps our people are not so blessed. I
wonder how they fare."
He sat up, crossing his legs and resting his elbows on his knees. He
shrugged. "You are my clan now," he said. "My father
agreed to my banishment, so I am no longer truly of the Commacht."
She frowned. "He is still your father. And what of your mother?
What of my parents?"
His features darkened a moment. Sometimes, Arrhyna thought, his moods
shifted so swift, he frightened her. He was like an untamed horse, a
stallion not yet broken to the saddle and as like to stamp and bite
as allow itself ridden. Was there a constant, it was his love for
her, which she could not deny. She knew he loved his mother; nor any
less his father, although that love was all caught up in troubled
emotions as if—she thought again of stallions—Racharran
were the old horse and Rannach the young: new blooded, prideful and
… She was not sure. Envious? Ambitious? Or only young? She could
not define it: he was too quixotic.
He said, "Likely they're safe. The clan will be on the summer
grass now, and that's a long ride for the Tachyn. Likely Chakthi
rants and does nothing. And if there's worse, what can I do? I am
banished, fair game should I go back."
"No!" She shook her head, hair spilling so that moonlight
danced there, suddenly afraid he might decide to go. "I do not
say that you should go back. I only wonder how they fare."
He shrugged again and laughed. "I'll not go back. Why should I?"
He swept out a hand in indication of the valley, of her. "I've
all I want here. I've you and good hunting—this is a fine
place."
She nodded and asked, "But what of Colun's news?"
The Grannach had not visited them often since delivering them to the
valley. He had gone away with his people, and they had spent weeks
exploring the confines of the place before deciding on a permanent
campsite. It was a valley large enough that an entire clan might have
lived there and not gone hungry: it was as if they two were delivered
alone into a newborn world, separate and distinct from the wider
country that was Ket-Ta-Witko. They had erected their lodge where the
stream bent round in an oxbow, lush grass bordering the water, osiers
behind. Rannach had hunted and she had planted: they were happy. The
moons had faded, one dying to birth its successor, and it had been a
good time, free of those concerns that had driven them from the
People. Rannach accepted his banishment with a stoic indifference
that she knew concealed his hurt, but that had waned as he settled
and grew content, and she had wanted only to be with him, thinking
there could be no true life for her without him. It had seemed to
them both perfection, and were it not for the world beyond their
idyllic confines, it might have been, had they been able to forget
the larger world beyond the hills.
But then Colun had come back when the Fat Moon waned, telling them of
the invaders beyond the mountains who, he said, massed about the
foothills, now seemingly masters of all the Whaztaye country.
"And of what beyond that?" he asked rhetorically. "Where
did they come from? What are they?"
Rannach shrugged then and said, "I've never seen them and cannot
say. Can your golans not tell?"
"The golans speak with the stone, not dreams," Colun
replied. "And no, they cannot tell. But I have seen what I have
seen."
His tone, his face, was grim, and Arrhyna asked, "Shall they
breach your defenses?"
The Grannach shrugged then, and said, "Not yet. And a hard fight
if they attempt it. But they are so many. They camp in the foothills
as if they'd settle there, or wait for something. They herd their
beasts on the plains below and, the Maker knows, but such creatures
as they ride are past my imagining."
Rannach asked, "Do they not ride horses?"
Colun shook his head and answered, "What they ride are I more
lion than horse. I told you they had slain the Whaztaye, no? I was
wrong—their animals feed on the Whaztaye!"
He shuddered then, and Arrhyna felt a cold dread invade her, her
world. Rannach frowned as if he found this impossible to consider and
asked, "They ride lions?"
"Not lions," Colun replied, "but things like lions, as
if lions and horses and lizards had combined. They roam the plains to
hunt the Whaztaye sheep—and anything else that lives and has
blood in its veins. And their riders hold those of the Whaztaye who
still live in pens and feed them to these animals—still quick.
They are like some sickness come into the world. By the] Maker, they
make Chakthi look benign!"
Arrhyna asked, "What are they?"
But Colun could only shake his head and shrug and tell them he did
not know, nor any of his people, and Rannach asked, "How do you
know all this?"
"We watch," Colun said. "From the hills where our
golans have cut new tunnels so that we may observe them." And he
shook his head and added, "It is not a pleasant observation."
"Is that not dangerous?" Rannach asked. "Might they
not find such tunnels?"
"Perhaps." Colun shrugged then, and looked uneasy. "But
better we know what they do, eh? And if they find those openings, we
can bring the stone down on them."
"Shall they?" Arrhyna said. "Find the tunnels?"
"Not save they've Grannach eyes," Colun told her. "Nor
the high passes, which are well guarded now. All well"—he
looked toward the holy mountain and shaped an obeisance—"the
Maker shall see us safe."
"All well," Rannach said, "then, yes. But if not?"
"Then we fight a bloody war," Colun replied. "But not
for a while. And you'll have warning enough. Now … " He
dismissed concern, staring intently at Arrhyna. "What news of
tiswin?"
It had been hard to shake off the fear his news induced, but she had
essayed a smile and told him, "I believe I can make you tiswin
when the junipers grow ripe."
"When shall that be?" he asked eagerly.
"In the Moon of Ripe Berries," she answered, and for all
her fear could not resist smiling at his expression as she added,
"And then the winter to ferment."
"Ach!" He grimaced at that. "So long?"
"I thought," she said, laughing at his exaggerated
unhappiness, "that you Grannach were patient."
"We are," he said. "But patience is patience, and
tiswin is tiswin. And I had hoped that bringing you flatlanders here
meant I should have my own supply."
"So you shall," she promised, and thought, If the Maker
grants us the time.
It had been a souring of their idyll they had worked to forget—which
was not difficult because they were in love and alone in a new world,
and could do nothing to change events beyond the valley. So they had
settled to their new life and built for themselves a happiness that,
by consent, precluded overmuch discussion of that dark, black wind
that seemed to blow against the mountains from the west and perhaps
found a way through the hills to pervade the plains of Ket-Ta-Witko.
But still it was there, like the breath of the Breaking Trees Moon
skirling about the entry of their lodge, seeking to intrude, and
though they did not speak of it, still it chilled them in those
hinder parts of their minds that yet looked past the valley. It was
as if a shadow hung behind them, just out of eye's range, so that
when they turned to seek it, it was gone, darting round to another
quarter, where it lurked hidden but yet present, like a skulking
wolverine invisible in the night but
there—unseen and
unscented, unheard, only
present.
But there was also lightness, an easy forgetting of the dark and what
it held, or might. Marjia was such a beacon. Colun brought her to
them when the Moon of Dancing Foals was old in the sky. Rannach
thought she looked not unlike the moon in its fullness: all round and
beaming, like a gold-haired boulder dressed in lavishly embroidered
shirt and swaying skirt, her hair coiled and pinned with bright
silver fixings about a plump face from which cheerful blue eyes
sparkled and a rosebud mouth seemed fixed in an everlasting smile.
She bustled, bee-busy and happy as those honey-gatherers, into their
camp, kissing first Arrhyna and then him—they both must stoop
to accept her embrace—firmly on both cheeks, then cheerfully
ordering Colun to unload their gifts. There were needles for Arrhyna,
a metal comb, a mirror of polished metal ornate in its design, and a
thin knife edged fine to trim hide. For Rannach there was a knife and
a small ax, both sharper and stronger than any he owned, a supply of
arrowheads, and a new tip for his lance.
"There was not much trading this year," she said, "and
so we've much to give."
Rannach was embarrassed. "We've nothing to compare," he
said. "You shame me."
"Ach!" Marjia waved a cheerfully dismissive hand and with
her other poked Colun in the ribs. "You promised my husband
tiswin, no? And me the knowledge of its making. That's gift enough.
The Maker knows, but have I that art, I'll make my husband happy—and
have something to trade that drunkards like him will beg for."
"I am not," Colun said as dignified as he could as he
laughed, "a drunkard."
"But fond of tiswin, no?" his wife returned, and before he
had chance to reply said to Arrhyna: "Shall we look to our
dinner and leave these men to manly talk?"
Arrhyna would sooner have heard whatever fresh news Colun brought,
but it was clearly Marjia's purpose to lighten the day, and she knew
Rannach would advise her of what was said, so she allowed the tiny
woman to take her off and regale her with casual conversation as they
prepared the food.
Marjia had never met with a flatlander before—only the Grannach
men attended the Matakwas—and she found it hard to accept that
Arrhyna could be happy with no company save Rannach's. Her own people
lived close, in subterranean enclaves that sounded to Arrhyna quite
horrible. The villages were lit, Marjia assured her, but the very
idea of dwelling beneath that unimaginable weight of stone, families
all crowded together with room piled on room, house atop house,
prompted Arrhyna to shudder. But then, it was no less odd to Marjia
that the People dwelt as they did, in lodges under the open sky.
"The sky," she said gravely as her blunt fingers worked
with deft efficiency on the vegetables Arrhyna had gathered, "is
all very well. Indeed, once in a while, it's good to venture out. But
… " She glanced up at the wide panoply of stars and moon and
shuddered herself. "I'd not want to be out here all the time.
It's so … open."
Arrhyna could only nod and agree that their two peoples were
different in their attitudes.
"But what does that matter?" Marjia beamed. "We are
all the Maker's children, no? And did he see fit to make you to
wander the open places and we to dwell within our hills, then that's
as it should be."
Arrhyna smiled and voiced heartfelt agreement: she liked this woman
on the instant. She could not help, looking at her, thinking of those
stones the old folk heated in the lodgefire to warm their sleeping
furs of a winter's night: Marjia was as round and solid, and as
comforting.
And when, the next day, the Grannach woman departed, Arrhyna found
she missed her. It had been a comfortable time, that first visit, and
there was a small vacuum came with her going. For a while Arrhyna
thought nostalgically on the companionship of the clans, of neighbors
and shared duties, of all the things the women of the Matawaye did
together. But she had Rannach, and before long the little sadness
went away.
She asked her husband what news Colun had brought, and Rannach had
shrugged and told her little that was new—the invaders still
massed about the foothills, the Grannach still watching them; no
more. They both of them wondered what purpose drove the strangelings
and if they would attempt the crossing of the mountains, but that was
only speculation and idle in light of their isolation. They prayed
that the Maker deny the invaders passage, which was all they could
do, and returned to their solitary life.
Nor did the subsequent visits of Colun and Marjia shed further light.
They came again when the Moon of Cherries Ripening sat high and plump
over the peaks, and in the Moon of Ripe Berries, but with nothing new
to tell. It was as if all the world hung in stasis, or the Maker's
wards defeated the invaders: hope in that, but still the ugly
suspicion of
something impending, still that sense of the
wolverine lurking rapacious outside the fire's glow.
But it was ever easier to set that nagging doubt aside: the invaders
made no move and there was nothing they could do, so they worked to
set aside the doubts and turned their conversation to more cheerful
matters.
Chief amongst these was the manufacture of the promised tiswin. Colun
had brought kettles and pots at Arrhyna's request, and he and Marjia
joined in the harvesting of the juniper berries and those other herbs
required. She had versed Marjia in the quantities and the method of
preparation. It seemed at first strange to instruct a woman likely
old enough to be her grandmother or more in a thing she had learned
at her mother's side, but Marjia was so enthusiastic a pupil—and
urged on by her anticipatory husband—that Arrhyna soon forgot
that difference and only enjoyed the Grannach woman's company.
Together they set the brew to ferment, laughing at Colun's downcast
face when Arrhyna told him the tiswin should not be ready until at
least the Frozen Grass Moon, or even later.
"Ach, so long!" He sighed dramatically, his craggy face a
pantomime of disappointment. Then brightened, asking, "There's
no chance I might have a taste now?"
"Not save you want a sour belly," Arrhyna told him. "It
would taste foul now, and make you sick."
He slumped like a disconsolate stone and murmured, "Then I
suppose I must make do with our beer."
"Which is no bad thing," Rannach said.
There were kegs of the Grannach ale stored in a lean-to, barrels of
worked wood banded with staves of metal, strange to the two Matawaye
who used no such storage: Arrhyna thought such constructions would be
a fine way to keep meat. Colun had brought them on a handcart he and
Marjia hauled like two sturdy ponies, the cart itself of as much
interest to the Matawaye as the beer. The idea of carving wood into
discs and fixing those discs to axles fixed in turn to a walled
platform was unknown to the People. Their portage was done all on
horseback, or on travois, and the notion of utilizing wheels was as
novel to them as was the idea of riding to the Grannach.
"This," Rannach declared, touching the cart's round wheels
as if they were holy objects, "would make traveling easier. A
horse could be set in front to pull, and it all move faster than a
travois."
"Likely," Colun agreed, without much interest. "But
now, do we open a keg?"
Rannach had acquired a taste for the beer, and insisted that their
hosts accept deerskins and meat in return. It was a time of learning
for them all, marred only by that lingering, unspoken presentiment
and one other thing.
Arrhyna had been the first to broach it. "We are your guests,
and you are always welcome in our lodge," she said. Nervously,
for she feared she might offend. Indeed, had Marjia not beamed at
her, she might have fallen silent then; but the Grannach woman sat
all agog and her smile was invitation to continue. "But only you
come. Why do no others?"
There was a moment of hesitation, Colun glancing at his wife and
Marjia at him as if they shared some silent, somewhat embarrassed
communication. Then Colun said bluntly, "Not all welcome you
here. There are some claim I was wrong to bring you, that you should
be sent back to the lowlands. Some say I defy the Order—that
which you name the Ahsa-tye-Patiko—in giving you this valley.
They say your presence offends the Maker and weakens our defenses."
He shrugged apologetically while Marjia laughed and said, "They
are fools! Should friends not aid friends in time of trouble? How can
that offend the Maker?"
"Still," Colun said, "some claim that."
"Should we go?" Rannach asked. "I'd not see you suffer
on our behalf."
"Ach, no!" Colun flung a dismissive hand at the sky. "This
valley belongs to the Javitz, and I am creddan of the Javitz. It is
other families—envious families—who make these claims."
"But no other … Javitz? … come," Arrhyna said.
Colun smiled sheepishly and told her, "I'd not give offense,
save I must. The right and wrong of my decision is still debated and
no conclusion reached, but meanwhile … "
He shrugged and found his mug. Marjia continued: "My brave
husband would see you safe—and does. But he must also consider
the welfare of our family, and so would hold all claims of wrongdoing
to himself alone. Should the debate decide against him, then he'd not
see any other Javitz blamed, but only him."
"And you?" Arrhyna suggested.
Marjia chuckled then, her round form shaking as if a boulder
trembled. "I've no doubt that what he did was right," she
said. "And am I condemned for that, then so be it."
"What shall happen," Rannach asked, "if the decision
goes against you?"
"Who knows?" Colun replied, and grinned. "No
flatlander has ever come here before—it's no easy decision."
"And so," Marjia added cheerfully, "will take a long
time to decide. The elders will argue back and forth, and you two
likely grow old before any minds are made up."
"Still," Rannach said, "I'd not bring you to harm.
Were it better we go, then we shall."
Marjia then said, "Hush. We'll not hear such talk. Eh, husband?"
"No. You are our friends: you are guests of the Javitz. I should
… " He drew himself up: a stone bristling like an offended
dog. "I should take that as insult. Indeed … " He assumed
as haughty a mien as might a stone. " … I forbid it; and any
further talk of departure."
Save, Arrhyna thought even as she smiled her thanks—letting her
eyes wander briefly to where the Maker's Mountain loomed high under
the afternoon sun—that we and you are all forced to depart,
fleeing like the Whaztaye before whatever menace lurks beyond these
ringing hills.
But she hid that unpleasant thought behind her smile, which was
entirely genuine, for she thought she'd never known such staunch
friends.
So it went, idyll and menace, the days blending one into another as
the moons waxed and waned and waxed again, time turning seemingly
unconcerned with the events of men. Sometimes Arrhyna thought of the
valley as a refuge, an island in a wide river, buffeted by hard
floods but yet impregnable, safe. At others she thought of it as a
beautiful prison in which she lay happily trapped, able to ignore the
world outside.
And Rannach, she wondered as she studied her husband's face in the
light of the Moon of Hairy Horses, what does he feel? What does he
not tell me?
She asked again, "What of Colun's news?"
He shrugged and said, "The Maker's wards hold yet, no? So the
invaders probe, but the Grannach defenses still hold them back."
"Colun told us," she said, "that they move deeper into
the hills, that Grannach have died fighting them in the passes and
the tunnels."
"And I," he returned, "have said I'd fight with the
Grannach. And Colun tells me no, that his folk can hold the tunnels
and the passes and have no need of me."
"But," she said, "what if … ?"
Rannach reached out to take her hand, raising it toward the shape of
the holy mountain, now luminous under the moon. "It is in the
hands of the Maker," he said. "His wards shall hold or not.
Do they, then such talk as this is pointless. Do they not, then I
shall fight."
"And what," she asked, "of the People? What of the
Grannach?"
"I shall fight," he said. "I shall do what I can do.
But for now I can do nothing save wait. It is in the Maker's hands."
20—Quest
Morrhyn lay across his horse's neck, a hand clamped over the muzzle,
and listened to the hoof-beats drumming through the sun-heated earth.
The slope rose gently before him and he prayed to the Maker that the
hollow hide him from the Tachyn he had seen, and they had not spotted
him.
A band of fifteen or twenty by his swift count, riding hard from the
north, their faces all painted for war. He had sighted them as he
climbed the slope—too far from the woods behind to risk retreat
and nowhere to run save this shallow depression that might, were the
Maker kind, conceal him. If not, if they found him, then all was
lost, for they would surely slay him, wakanisha or not.
Or fool, he thought not for the first time. Perhaps only a fool on a
fool's errand. Perhaps only a dreamless Dreamer riding to his death,
one way or the other. Why am I doing this? Why have I left my people
behind to go seeking … what?
It was not a thing he could properly explain to himself, and
therefore quite impossible to define to others. No dream had summoned
him to this quest, he had perceived no sign: there was only that
inward certainty. He
knew he must go; but when that was the
only reason he found to give and got back sound arguments for his
remaining, he could not help but feel doubt. The Maker sent him no
guiding dreams—he could not claim that imperative—and he
sometimes wondered, even as he prepared to leave, if some other
agency lured him away, or even if he lost his mind. And, the Maker
knew, there were sound enough reasons to stay.
"Chakthi runs loose," Racharran told him, "and I've
not the warriors to spare to bring you safe to the hills."
Morrhyn had shaken his head at that and smiled sadly. "I'd not
ask for an escort, old friend."
"I doubt," Racharran had said, "that the Tachyn will
respect even a wakanisha now. If they find you, they'll likely kill
you."
And Morrhyn had shrugged and asked, "Shall that matter?"
"Yes!" Racharran had replied, staring fiercely at his
friend. "To me and all the clan. We need you."
"Blind horses travel slow," Morrhyn had returned, "and
need much care. As I am now, I am of no use. Do I go the mountain …
"
"If you get to the mountain," Racharran had said.
"If," Morrhyn had agreed.
"Then what?" Racharran had turned to gesture westward, a
hand sweeping wide in indication of the distance to be traveled. "If
you get safely past the Tachyn and climb the mountain. Then what?"
"I don't know." Morrhyn had looked then to where the hills
stood, too far off they might be seen. The Fat Moon was yet young, a
slender crescent decorating a sky so serene, it belied the turmoil
below. It shone over the massed lodges of the Commacht and the
woodland to the south of the camp. There were more bodies scaffolded
in the trees now, and amongst the tents women keened in mourning: the
fighting had been fierce. He said, "I know only that I must go."
"And leave us," Racharran had said.
"I am not a warrior." It had been hard to look Racharran in
the eye. "I am a wakanisha robbed of his dreams. Perhaps … do
I go to the mountain … "
"Perhaps!" Racharran had said, irritation a moment exposed,
like a knife part-drawn, then again sheathed. "Perhaps and
perhaps and perhaps. Can you offer no better reason?"
Morrhyn had said, "No," and decided then he had best leave
quickly.
"How will you find us again?" Racharran had asked, resigned
now. "When you come back?" The way he said it made the
"when" a lingering doubt.
"All well," Morrhyn had replied, "I'll find my dreams
again and they'll guide me."
It was a measure of Racharran's trust that he nodded then and only
asked, "When shall you leave?"
"With the sun," Morrhyn had said.
He had left the next day, mounted on his favorite paint horse with
what few supplies he carried lashed behind his saddle. He took no
weapons save a knife and a bow, a quiver of arrows tipped for
hunting, not war—he felt no desire to fight, and hoped no
Tachyn impede his progress: he wanted only to reach the Maker's
Mountain and find what answers lay there, if any did. He could not
help that nagging whisper of doubt that murmured its traitorous
pessimism in his ear.
He felt alone, even as he rode with Racharran and two hands of
warriors to the farther perimeter of the clan's temporary grazing.
Dreamless, it was as if a part of his being had been taken away, a
function so vital he no longer felt whole. He thought of men who had
lost limbs or sight or hearing, and it seemed to him like that: that
some vital and integral part of him had been cut off, leaving him
less than he wished to be. He felt like a hunter whose left hand was
gone, denying grip on a bow: useless. And so he must cling to that
single hope, that the certainty he had felt
was a promise of
enlightenment and optimism. That in the mountains he should find his
dreams again, find again that communing with the Maker that made him
wakanisha.
But it was hard. The doubts dinned always in his ear and he wondered
if he clutched at phantasms, or if somehow the strangeling invaders
sent malign influences into Ket-Ta-Witko to lure and twist and
weaken. He could only hold hard to that vision of the holy mountain,
trust in the Maker, and commit to his chosen path.
He heard the hoofbeats fade and wondered how long he had held his
breath. He was not much used to fear, not this kind, and he licked
his lips and wiped a hand across his brow as the paint horse rose
grumbling to its feet. He walked the beast up the slope, halting
awhile below the ridgetop until he was certain the Tachyn riders had
gone. Then he mounted and continued westward.
There was dust to the south where the riders had gone, and he
wondered if the Tachyn rode against his own clan or the Lakanti:
Yazte had answered Racharran's call with war bands that struck into
the Tachyn grazing. But not enough: the Lakanti had their own affairs
to tend, the summer hunting, the planting, and must also ward their
borders against Chakthi's madness. Morrhyn wished he might have
spoken with Kahteney, but that had not been possible, as if, somehow,
fate turned and twisted to deny sensible dealing and turn the world
all to chaos.
And the others, he thought as he heeled the paint down the ridge's
farther side toward a stream flanked with sun-washed alders, choose
not to see or know, but rather ignore the madness. Juh holds his
Aparhaso aloof, and Hazhe offers no help; neither Tahdase nor Isten,
who follow Juh's lead and wander to the farthest reaches of their
grazing, as if this war has no concern for them. If they came to us,
to stand against Chakthi's insanity, then perhaps it might be ended
and the People stand together.
Against what? doubt whispered in his ear.
Against those dreams I had, he answered himself.
But those were only vague and you've none now. You're dreamless.
Colun's warning, he told the speechless sky. The invaders who have
conquered and slain the Whaztaye.
Who are beyond the mountains, held back by the Maker's promise. Do
you now question that? Do you question the Ahsa-tye-Patiko? Do you
set yourself above the Maker?
No, he moaned into his horse's mane. But I question men, and Chakthi,
and what comes to this land.
He saw the country ahead blur, and realized that tears filled his
eyes. He wiped them away, telling himself he must be strong and go
on, because there was no other way. He thought then of that vision of
the Maker's Mountain and for a moment felt its strength again, and
that spurred him so that he went onward, knowing he had no other
choice.
He crossed the stream and rode up through the alders to a wide plain
where buffalo grazed. The herds migrated southward now, and in better
times the clans would have drifted with them, the People and the
beasts joined in natural union: the Maker's providing. Now there were
only the buffalo, the Commacht living slim, the warriors without time
to cull the herds for want of fighting Chakthi. It would be a hard
winter without their meat.
He marveled at the size of the herd and turned the paint horse around
its farther edge as the guardian bulls lifted up their bulky heads
and snorted challenge. He skirted the herd and went on across the
plain. Low hills marked the far skyline, and he thought he would find
those heights by dusk and make camp, setting out traps. If he could
not eat buffalo meat, then perhaps he might snare a rabbit or a
partridge.
Or perhaps go hungry: his life seemed all "perhapses" now.
As it was—a sign? He could not decide—his snares took two
fat rabbits and he ate well, and in the morning woke to find magpies
chattering in the trees. A flock swooped overhead and clustered
around in noisy observance, which he decided was a favorable sign.
But then, as he quit the timber for the wide swath of open grass
beyond—all rolling down off the ridgetop to a sweeping valley
that stretched across westward to another bundle of low hills that
lay like a shadow across the horizon—he saw a flight of crows.
They swooped down toward him and cawed loud and spun circles in the
sky above so that he ducked in his saddle and thought it must be a
sign countering the good fortune of the magpies.
He reined in and studied the expanse of grass ahead. It was very
wide—likely a full day's riding to cross—and flat, devoid
of timber. He thought that if Tachyn found him there, he should have
nowhere to run, nowhere to hide, and should die.
And does that matter? he asked himself. He made obesiance to the
Maker and urged the paint horse forward.
The Tachyn came from the east: five horsemen riding hard to intercept
him.
They came up from a dry wash with whoops, and lances raised, and he
heeled the paint to a gallop even as he knew they must overtake him
and prick him from the saddle, his quest undone and wasted. He
thought a moment of the bow he carried and then as quickly discarded
the thought: he might take one or two—he was not so bad a
bowman—but still he'd die, and nothing be solved or resolved.
So he left the bow wrapped in its quiver behind his saddle and reined
in his horse, waiting for them.
"I am in your hands now," he said to the blue, unyielding
sky.
White cloud streamed there, and the wind that blew it rustled the
grass and set his unbound hair to fluttering about his face. That was
the only thing marked him wakanisha, but he doubted Chakthi's men
would care even did they notice. As Racharran had warned, they'd
likely kill him easy as they slew the defenseless ones.
His horse fretted, snorting and stamping, and he reined it tight,
forcing it to stand even as his heart set to pounding and he felt the
breeze chill the hot sweat beading his forehead.
The Tachyn drew closer, slowing when he made no attempt to escape or
use his bow. One man came out in front, his face and bare chest all
banded with war paint, and raised his lance high and sideways so that
the others slowed further until their horses walked, spreading in a
wide circle around Morrhyn.
The leader came forward, the sun sparking brilliant off the Grannach
brooches that fastened his plaits. He couched his lance and came on
until the sharp-edged head touched Morrhyn's chest.
He said, "You are very brave. Or mad."
Morrhyn said, "I am very afraid, Dohnse. I do not know if I am
mad, but perhaps I am."
Under the paint, Dohnse's eyes narrowed. "I gave you life once,"
he said. "Did you believe that was a lifetime's promise?"
"No." Morrhyn smiled tightly. "Neither did I think
we'd meet again."
Dohnse leaned a little way forward in his saddle so that the lance
point pricked through Morrhyn's shirt. The wakanisha held himself
rigid. He felt a small trickling down his chest and belly and
wondered if it was blood or sweat.
"I do not understand you," Dohnse said.
Morrhyn resisted the temptation to look down, to see what damage the
lance had done; instead, he held the Tachyn's gaze. "I scarce
understand myself," he said.
Dohnse frowned. "You
are mad. Our clans are at war, and
yet you ride alone? Why did you halt?" He waved his lance at the
quivered bow behind Morrhyn's saddle. "Why do you not fight?"
"There's enough bloodshed already. I'd not deepen that pool."
Dohnse scowled and asked, "Are you a coward?"
Morrhyn only shrugged in answer.
Dohnse said, "When you came to us at the ford I thought you were
brave."
Morrhyn said, "I was concerned for my clan. I am still: for the
Commacht and all the clans."
"Ach! You speak in riddles." Dohnse spun his horse in a
tight circle, lance indicating the warriors ringing Morrhyn, waiting.
When he halted again, his lance stood poised. "You are concerned
for the Tachyn?"
"For all the People," Morrhyn said. "For the Tachyn
and the Aparhaso and the Naiche and the Lakanti and the Commacht. For
the Grannach too. I fear a thing comes to Ket-Ta-Witko that shall
destroy us all, save we face it together."
The lance point drooped a fraction and he felt a small flush of hope.
Dohnse said, "You speak of the Grannach's warning? Of the
dreams?"
Morrhyn said, "Yes."
Dohnse said, "Hadduth has explained that to us, that those
dreams were dreams of
this war."
"And Colun's warning?" Morrhyn asked.
"Of no account," Dohnse returned him. "The Grannach
spoke of events beyond our borders. We place our trust in the Maker,
in the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. We believe the Maker shall hold back these
invaders—if they truly exist."
"Hadduth says this?" Morrhyn asked. And when Dohnse nodded:
"Think you the Ahsa-tye-Patiko is not already broken? Perhaps
that weakens our defenses."
"Rannach was the one defied the Will," Dohnse said.
"And Vachyr," Morrhyn said.
Dohnse looked a moment troubled. "Vachyr paid with his life.
Rannach yet lives."
Morrhyn said, "In exile, banished. His life forfeit if he
returns."
"But Vachyr lies in the trees," Dohnse said. "The
ravens eat his flesh."
Morrhyn nodded. "And many more feed the ravens; it shall be a
hard winter. And is the Will all forgotten, then perhaps these
invaders
shall come through the mountains. And what then?"
"We fight them. But first, we'll take blood-payment of you
Commacht."
"There's blood already paid," Morrhyn said. "Ours and
yours. Women weep in the lodges of my clan; children mourn their
fathers, and husbands their wives. Is that all our future, Dohnse? To
fight one another until your clan or mine is all destroyed? And do
these invaders come—shall we fight them together or clan by
clan?"
"I … " Dohnse lowered his lance somewhat, shaking his
head. "I do not know. These are matters for the wakanishas and
the akamans. I am only a warrior: I do Chakthi's bidding."
"I think that you are more than just Chakthi's liegeman. I think
you are a man of honor. I thought that when you granted us the
crossing of the ford."
"Ach!" Dohnse danced his horse. "I paid for that! It
did not please Chakthi."
"But was still," Morrhyn said, "the honorable thing."
"Perhaps." Dohnse brought his horse to rest, and the lance
back to Morrhyn's chest. "But it served me ill."
Morrhyn said, "But perhaps the Maker well."
"You weave words." The lance rose, pricking again. "You
look to escape. Why should I not kill you? I should stand high in
Chakthi's eyes did I bring him your head."
"Likely you would." Morrhyn wondered how he managed to
speak so clear when his throat felt so dry and his tongue so thick
with fear. He felt his body awash with sweat, but he was chilled and
must fight the temptation to shiver. "Chakthi would likely take
some pleasure in that."
Dohnse said, "Much pleasure. The head of the Commacht wakanisha?
Chakthi would feast me for that, I think."
Morrhyn was surprised to hear himself laughing. Perhaps, he thought,
I am mad. Aloud, he said, "A poor prize, my head. Empty of
dreams: useless as a holed bucket."
Dohnse said, "You lie."
"No." Morrhyn shook the head in question. "I cannot
dream. That's why I am here."
"Best you speak fast," Dohnse said, "because I tire of
this word-weaving. I think I shall kill you soon."
"I've no dreams," Morrhyn said wearily. He wondered if it
was not better that this Tachyn slay him: it should be an ending, a
resolution of a kind. "Only darkness. I come here because I'd go
to the Maker's Mountain. I had … a vision … The mountain called
me. I left my clan to go there; I hope that the Maker will give me
back my dreams. Perhaps give me answers to this madness."
"What madness?" Dohnse asked. "We fight in Vachyr's
name, for Tachyn honor."
"Tachyn honor?" Morrhyn said. He felt a great weariness, as
if he carried a tremendous weight that bore him down and set all his
body to aching and numbness. All these words—those spoken by
Dohnse now and those voiced by his own clan—they all seemed a
wordy fog that swirled and turned and cried out meaninglessly,
speaking of small things when larger events loomed, and none to see
them clear or ward against them. For a moment he thought it should be
a great relief to let it go: that Dohnse drive that point into his
chest and take his head back to Chakthi. But he could not forget his
duty, his responsibilities, and so he said, "And the Commacht
fight for honor. And the defenseless ones die; and Ket-Ta-Witko
stands like a blinded deer awaiting the invaders' arrows."
He sat back in his saddle, thinking that the blow must come now,
wondering how it should feel to die. But the lance dropped and Dohnse
said, "You speak all the time of these invaders, but say you
cannot dream. How can you know?"
"What does Hadduth say?" Morrhyn asked. And saw Dohnse's
eyes narrow again, and cloud. And heard doubt in the Tachyn's answer.
"What I've told you—that the dreams were of our war."
"
Were?"
Morrhyn looked at Dohnse's face, seeking to read
it through the paint. "Those are old dreams, Matakwa dreams.
What of now?"
Dohnse shook his head, braids flying, brooches glittering bright as
the lance's point. He gave no answer.
Morrhyn's lips stretched in an unwilled smile that was less
triumphant than resigned. "None, eh? Hadduth's blind as I?"
Dohnse said nothing, which was answer enough.
Morrhyn said, "Listen to me, Dohnse! Hear me out and then decide
if you'll slay me. But in the Maker's name, hear me first."
Dohnse hesitated awhile, then nodded and Morrhyn felt a little spark
of hope rekindled. Which was, he thought, like a sprig of dry moss
lit in the teeth of a blizzard. But it was all he had, so he said,
"I've lost my dreams, and from your silence I believe Hadduth's
lost his. Am I wrong, then slay me—but first tell me that
Hadduth still dreams. This I ask you, in the name of the Maker!"
Dohnse turned his face away. Morrhyn saw him swallow, then spit, and
knew—horrid confirmation!—that he was right.
"So, the wakanishas of the Commacht and the Tachyn both no
longer dream. Strange, eh? As if some black cloud blows over
Ket-Ta-Witko, leaching out our gift. Perhaps from over the mountains,
eh? Think on it, Dohnse! Is it not strange that the dreams are gone,
and so soon after Colun's warning? And did Colun speak the truth—Have
you ever known a Grannach to lie, Dohnse?—then they threaten
the Grannach passes and might come against us. Not against only the
Commacht, or the Tachyn, but against all the People! And what do we
do? We fight—Tachyn against Commacht and Lakanti—and the
Aparhaso and the Naiche go away, pretending this is none of their
affair. The People stand in disarray, Dohnse! Like a deer herd
scattered by wolves, all easy for the taking."
"Words," Dohnse said, but unconfidently. "Clever words
to justify Vachyr's slaying. And to save your life."
"My life?" Morrhyn threw back his head and laughed. "My
life is nothing! Take it if you will; it should be a weight off my
shoulders. And Vachyr's slaying? I do not justify that, save to tell
you Rannach's punishment was decided by the Council, in Matakwa, by
all the akamans. Even his own father!"
A slow moment, then, as Dohnse sat his horse and a flight of summer
geese winged overhead, the calling loud in the heavy silence. The
grass rustled in the breeze and clouds stretched out like passing
time above and the sun sat heavy and indifferent in the sky.
Then Dohnse nodded and said, "That was so."
He looked directly at Morrhyn, and the wakanisha saw a question in
his eyes.
"I have no easy answers," he said. "Nor any promises
or pleas. Only that I felt called to the Maker's Mountain and that is
why I am here, alone. And if you must kill me, then do it."
Dohnse leaned sideways from his saddle to spit again. "You truly
think this?" he asked. "That these invaders the Grannach
warned of send their magicks to steal the wakanishas' dreams?"
Morrhyn said, "I think it may be so. I cannot say for sure."
"And you would go to the holy mountain to find out? To get back
your dreams?"
Morrhyn nodded.
Dohnse said, "I think you are mad."
"Perhaps I am. How could I know?"
"It should be a sin against the Will to slay a madman. And I
think you are mad."
Morrhyn shrugged.
Dohnse said, "This shall serve me ill when Chakthi hears of it,
but I'll not take a madman's head."
Morrhyn thought: Maker, thank you.
Dohnse said, "Go! Ride hard and pray for me."
"I will," Morrhyn promised, and turned the paint horse past
Dohnse's gray as the warrior shouted for the Tachyn to let him go,
calling out that he was a crazy man and must surely earn them the
Maker's displeasure were he slain.
There was yet some honor left, he thought, and therefore also hope.
The Fat Moon filled up and waned as he went on, replaced by the Moon
of Cherries Ripening, and he wondered how much time was left or if it
was all eaten up by Chakthi's hunger. He wondered how his clan fared,
and if he rode into the arms of the invaders. That, he thought,
should be a great joke: to come so far in search of answers only to
die at the hands of the problem.
But he dismissed that thought: there remained in the hinder part of
his mind the certainty he had known before Matakwa, confirmed by
Colun and his Grannach—that terrible danger came against
Ket-Ta-Witko. It was a certainty that nagged at him like an unhealing
wound, and nightly he prayed the Maker give him back his dreams that
he might know for sure and know how best to advise the clan and the
People. But still no dreams came, only empty-minded sleep, so that he
came almost to fear it, for it was like going down into blindness,
and had his body and his horse not required the rest, he would have
pressed on. He felt the attaining of the holy mountain was his only
hope.
And so on he went, hiding whenever riders showed in stands of timber
where he stood with hand across his horse's muzzle and his own breath
loud in his ears, or crouched in washes and ravines as hoofbeats and
shouts announced the passage of enemies he looked to save. He crossed
rivers and passed by or through herds of buffalo. Often he went
hungry: he relied on his snares for food and what he could forage
from the land, and never looked to hunt the deer or wild pigs he saw.
It was as if, dreamless, nightmare creatures bayed at his heels,
propelling him forward, running desperately to a safety he could only
hope existed.
He came up from the plains into the redrock country, where the land
broke into barrens and all the comforting timber and grass gave way
to wind-washed pines and dry bare stone that supported only moss and
sorry grass that his horse complained to eat, and the streams ran
rusty with the color of the soil. He pushed the animal and himself
onward, both of them thinned, lean with travel, and passed through
the redrock to the edge of the Meeting Ground.
Kinder country, in a way; and in another unkind, for it reminded him
of all that had gone wrong at that Matakwa. He let his horse graze
there, where the grass grew lush under the day's sun and the thin
light of the fading moon painted the stream silver. He could see
where the Council fires had scorched the earth and the lodges of the
People had stood, all of them together, and wondered if he had seen
the last Gathering. He prayed it not be, but that the Maker grant him
insight and the People come back to the Ahsa-tye-Patiko and live
again in harmony.
He got no answer and wondered if he was only vain in his quest.
"And if I am," he said, prompting the paint horse to glance
up a moment from its grazing, "then I suppose I shall pay the
price. I suppose I shall go up there and die."
He looked to where the Maker's Mountain loomed amongst the lesser
peaks and could not decide whether it was promise of fulfillment or
death. It seemed larger without the company of the People around him,
a vast, stark pinnacle that stabbed the sky and dared him to climb
its flanks. It would be hard going: he knew he could not take the
horse much farther and must ascend that height alone and afoot. He
might tumble down into a ravine, or fall beneath a rockslide.
"Or starve," he told himself aloud. "Or freeze, must I
wait so long. But … "He made obeisance to the Maker. "Wait
I shall, for the one thing or the other."
He felt no other choice.
Five days he waited on the edge of the lonely Meeting Ground. The
horse fattened and he had deer meat and rabbits to sustain him. Then
he mounted the horse and rode it as far as it could climb into the
foothills. He thought the Grannach likely knew easier trails, but he
lacked their help and must find his own way, up where none of the
People—save, perhaps, Rannach and Arrhyna—had gone
before. Then, where rock tumbled down like frozen stone water, and
precipitous slopes of treacherous shale spilled loose from cliffs
fragmented by time, he took the saddle off the horse, and the bridle,
and turned the animal loose.
He felt sorry to part with the beast, and hoped it find its way back
down to the good grazing. He shouldered it round to face the
downslope and slapped its rump. The horse snorted in surprise and
kicked a little, then swung its head to study him. The dark eyes
seemed to accuse him.
He said, "I am sorry. You've served me faithfully, and I wish
you well; but now I must go where you cannot. So … "
He slapped its rump again. The horse squealed and danced some few
steps away, then halted again, looking at him. He took a shard of
rock from amongst the shale and threw it.
The horse snickered and shook its head, then trotted off.
Morrhyn watched it go, a second piece of stone ready in his hand, but
the horse appeared to have accepted its freedom and did not look back
again. It went on down the narrow trail until it disappeared around a
curving wall of reddish sunlit rock.
He felt very alone then. It seemed the breeze blew louder, whistling
amongst the cliffs and crags, taunting him. He studied the heights
above, and they seemed to radiate back a challenge. He felt small and
afraid, and picked up those things he thought he could carry: a
bearskin and his blanket, a weight of meat, a lariat; not much else.
The saddle was useless now, and he left it, together with the bow and
the quiver of arrows. Then he slung his makeshift pack across his
back, secured it in place, and he began to climb.
Dusk caught him like a fly on a sheer rockface and he felt a terrible
dread that he must lose his grip and fall, but he thought he had seen
a cleft above and he willed himself to reach it, promising himself it
be there.
It was, and that night he lay uncomfortable between narrow cliffs
listening to the nightwind sing its sad song. He chewed on meat not
quite properly cured and drank a little water. He wondered if he had
slept when the sun touched his face, and crawled deeper into the
cleft, seeking a path upward. He heard ravens calling overhead and
wondered if they spoke to one another of the fool who dared the
mountains alone, whose flesh they would soon pick. He found a place
where stone had cracked and afforded him handholds, and climbed out
onto a flank of the mountains where the sun warmed him and the wind
blew out his hair and he looked out across a place where crag rose
above crag and the Maker's Mountain lofted over all. He bowed to that
monument and made obeisance to the Maker and then fixed his gaze on
the pinnacle and went on.
He clambered like some atavistic thing that knew only its progress
toward its goal, like a blind crawling creature seeking the source of
heat, or a newborn pup mewling and struggling toward the bitch's
teat, aware only of hunger's imperative. His hands grew bloodied, but
he ignored the pain as he ignored the aching of his muscles and the
nails that broke, or the sharp stones that stabbed him. He climbed:
up cliffs and down slopes that set his head to spinning. He stumbled
across ravines and over slides of shale that moved and shifted loose
as the water of the streams he waded, too numb to know their chill.
He fell and was bruised, and paid the aches no heed. He saw
desolations of ravens swoop overhead, and lofty eagles spin circles
in the sky. Sometimes he saw bighorn sheep watching him, their
progress far surer than his across the rock. He slept by fires when
he could find wood and cold when he could not. He became aware his
supply of meat dwindled, and that the Moon of Cherries Ripening gave
way to the Moon of Ripe Berries. His shirt and breeches grew tattered
as his skin. Only resolution remained: the Maker's Mountain stood
before him and he would reach it.
Almost, he forgot why; but always that peak stood proud against the
sky and he went on, cold and hungry and blindly, until he had
conquered the lesser obstacles and stood on the downslopes of his
goal.
He looked up then and thought he must, truly, be mad.
The mountain rose majestic. Pristine, it touched the sky, and from
where he rested he could not see its topmost heights, which were all
lost in union with the heavens. He could only wince, his eyes dazzled
by the great sweeping flanks of snow-clad rock that shone and
glittered under the sun.
He crouched, shivering and small, awed by the mountain and what he
thought to dare. No man could brave that: vanity and pride had driven
him to this lost quest. Dreamless, he had sunk into insanity,
attempting what no man had any right to attempt. He was less than an
insect under that height: he was a presumption, insulting the Maker
with his sorry presence.
But he was there, he had come thus far; so he began to climb again.
And on the second day, when he felt no longer any pain or the
absolute chill that pervaded his bones down to the marrow and he
thought his teeth must break and shard for the drum-rattle chattering
of his jaw, he found a cave.
He could scarce believe it, even as he crawled inside. It was a deep
hole running back smooth-walled into the mountain. Moss grew on the
walls and glowed as the sun went down and twilight overtook the
slopes. It was warmed by a spring that bubbled up from a natural
well, the water hot and pungent to the taste. He drank and thanked
the Maker for the refuge, then spread his blanket and drew his
bearskin over him and settled to sleep.
And that night he dreamed.
21—Terrible, Swift Sword
Colun rested his weight on the ax's haft as Baran chanted the wyrd.
He felt mightily tired, as much in his soul as in his bones, and the
golan's droning song sounded almost a lullaby. It would be a fine
thing, he thought, to lie down and close his eyes, to sleep awhile.
But there was likely no time for that, save he sleep forever. The
strangeling invaders pressed too hard, and for all the golans'
labors, there would be fresh battles ere long. Baran might close this
tunnel, but it was not the only passage, and there were passes,
clefts, and ravines the invaders would surely find and look to cross.
Already they penetrated deeper into the Grannach fastnesses than any
had believed possible, and did they reach the heartland … He
grunted, rejecting that horrid contemplation. They must not! It was
simple as that. It should be a turning of the world on its head, all
topsy-turvy, and the Maker, surely, would not allow that.
Save … Was the natural order not already become disorder? Was the
balance of the world not already thrown awry? These creatures had
appeared from nowhere to conquer the Whaztaye, and now they broached
the Grannach fastnesses, the sacred hills, like floodwater gushing
into every cavity and channel of the mountains, seeping ever deeper,
relentless as passing time or the grinding of stone. Could anything
halt them?
He knew they could die—his bloody, blunted ax was proof of
that—but hard, and they were so many; and the forces they
wielded, the strangeling creatures they commanded … He spat rock
dust at the memory and pushed it away. They
could be slain:
that was the important thing. And the Grannach were chosen by the
Maker to keep the hills, and would not abandon that trust.
He shook his head, denying fatigue, and raised himself, lifting his
ax to study the blade. The edge was dented, the clean metal fouled
with the blood of beasts and men—if these invaders were men—and
he took a cloth and spat and began to wipe away the foulness before
taking out a whetstone and honing back a killing edge.
He achieved a satisfactory sharpness before he realized Baran's chant
had ceased and rose quickly as the golan came running back. A wave of
sound trailed the Stone Shaper, and Colun shook his head as pressure
throbbed against his ears. Baran went past him and he began to trot
after the Shaper, unable to resist a swift backward glance. There was
a terrible rumbling, a wash of dust from which emerged a brief tongue
of darting fire, then more solid, sharper fragments of the mountain
hurled down the tunnel and the air was thick and filled with roiling
darkness as the passage filled with all the mountain's terrible
weight of stone.
The two Grannach crouched in the lee of a turn, their backs to the
dusty, missile-filled gust, both deaf awhile as the mountain fell on
the invaders. When the air was a little cleared they ventured out,
and behind them stood a wall of solid rock. From it, like a questing
hand, thrust a clawed, scaled paw all set with knifelike talons.
"Ha!" Baran grinned, wiping dirt from his beard, spitting
dust and fragments of rock. "Some few died there, eh? That'll
teach them!"
"Them perhaps," Colun allowed. "But the rest?"
Baran grunted, slapping at his tunic so that more dust rose. "The
Maker knows." He shrugged. "I do what I can. Like you."
Colun spat dirt from his mouth. "Some say I delivered this."
Curious, he walked back to the rockfall to study the scaled paw.
"That bringing Rannach and Arrhyna to the mountains was defiance
of the Order."
"I know, and I say—sheepshit!" Baran spoke thickly, a
finger inserted in his mouth to scrub out the dirt of his rockfall.
"No Javitz says such a thing, and the rest are fools. Whatever
these creatures are, they came against us before that. And what
difference can two flatlanders make?"
Colun shrugged, answerless.
"These creatures"—Baran leant closer to study the paw
extending from the rockfall—"looked to our hills before
you brought our guests. What they are, I've no idea—nor any
other golan—but I tell you, you're not to blame for their
coming. Those two in the valley are refugees. What difference can
they make save we renege our duty to the Maker by refusing them
sanctuary?"
"I don't know."
Baran wiped his hand against his tunic as if contact with the massive
paw might have befouled him, and clapped Colun on the shoulder. "The
world turns strange, my friend; and when that happens, folk look for
easy answers. Blame this one, they say; blame that one. If Colun had
not brought the flatlanders to our mountains, we'd be safe. Pah!
Perhaps if Kratz had not lured Danske's daughter away, we'd be safe.
Perhaps if Ogen had not fought Kyr, we'd be safe. Perhaps if the
Maker had not put us down here, we'd be safe. Forget them and their
foolish talk! What is is; and we must deal with what comes against us
sooner than look for folk to blame."
Colun smiled. "But still some speak of sending the flatlanders
back," he said. "And that should mean Rannach's death. I'd
not see that: he's Racharran's son, and I've a certain fondness for
him."
"No Javitz speaks so," Baran said. "And they live in a
Javitz valley, no?"
"Yes," Colun said, and glanced back, toward the rockfall.
"But how long shall they be safe there?"
"So long as we are safe in our mountains," Baran replied,
and chuckled. "Hopefully long enough they can brew this tis-win
you speak of. I'd taste that brew."
"You shall," Colun promised. And then, softer: "If
there's time for its brewing."
Baran nodded, not speaking, and they went back along the quick-hewn
tunnel to where it emerged on a face of precipitous stone, the egress
so low only a Grannach might pass easily through. Beyond was a narrow
shelf without a wall, rounded and sloped about its edges, the drop so
deep it should hopefully break and destroy even the invaders'
weirdling beasts; and if not, then the base was all set with jagged
boulders.
The golans had worked hard since first the invaders entered the
secret ways. All the Grannach had worked hard: they were the
defenders, the wardens of the boundaries the Maker set about the
world.
Below was a ravine walled tall at either end with tumbled stone, high
shelves above all piled with boulders that might be pushed down on
any strangelings trapped in the gulch. It was bright now, the sun
directly overhead, spilling mellow light down the rockfaces so that
they shone all warm as winter blankets.
Save, Colun thought, that they were blankets layered over sharp teeth
that would bite and snag the unwary.
He followed Baran down the precipitous stairway that wound leftward
of the shelf: more of the golans' hurried work and none too smooth,
but surely too narrow for the invaders' beasts to find a footing
there. It ran steep awhile, then curved beneath a ledge and ended on
a tunnel. They went inside.
Like all the golans' workings, the passage was lit by the stone
magic, the rock itself glowing, curving, and turning with spurs like
jagged daggers thrusting out so that even the two Grannach must duck
and weave to avoid the serrated nubs and thrusts of the mountains'
intestines. Colun could not imagine how any of the invaders' great
beasts might pass such a maze, but neither could he resist thinking
of the high passes and the lofty valleys, the wider tunnels. He felt
a terrible dread that somehow none of these defenses should prove
enough, and the strangelings come through the hills like floodwater
remorselessly seeking out all the small and indefensible crannies and
cracks until it spills through and drowns all before it.
He shook off the feeling as the passage turned upward and curved and
then ran down and curved again, emerging on a ledge above the Javitz
home-cavern. The shelf there was walled, and warded. Young Grannach
stood guardians about the entrance, armored and armed with axes,
hook-billed pikes, and long spears, proud in their shining new armor.
Not one had yet seen an invader, and all were eager to fight. Colun
felt a terrible pride and a terrible sadness as he answered their
salutes.
"They're young," Baran whispered as they went down the
winding stairway, "and you're their creddan. They'd join you in
battle, in honor. The young are like that—all brave and
bloodthirsty. Were you not the same when you were young?"
"Ach!" Colun shook Ms head, sighing. "Was I? I cannot
remember."
"You fought hard enough against the Kraj," Baran said. "At
least, as best I remember. When Janzi brought his men against us …
"
Colun silenced his friend with a weary hand. "That was then and,
yes, I was young: I thought battle was glorious and honorable. Now I
know better. And I know we face no such enemy as Janzi, but something
worse. Far worse." He halted, resting his hands on the parapet
of the descending stairway so that he might look out across the vast
cavern below. "Look; what do you see?"
Baran said, "Home. The Javitz caves. Brave folk, worth
defending."
"Yes." Colun nodded, then reached up to unlatch his helm.
He dropped it at his feet and ran weary hands through his thatched
and sweaty hair. "Brave folk:
my folk, and yours. I am
their creddan; they follow me. Sometimes I think they follow me like
sheep, and perhaps even to the slaughter."
Baran frowned and asked, "What do you say?"
Colun shook his head. "I'm not sure. I know that these
strangelings come against us and I am vowed to fight them. But the
Kraj say that I bring the invaders on us because I side with the
flatlanders. The Genji agree and the rest stand aloof."
"The Kraj would claim that," Baran said, "and the
Genji? They are like mating worms, all wound together. But they still
fight the invaders. As do the rest."
"Because the invaders trespass on our mountains." Colun's
arm swept wide, indicating the vast cavern below, the mountains
above. "But if they went by? If they passed through our lands
into Ket-Ta-Witko and left us alone? I think some would allow that."
"No!" Baran shook his head, vigorous enough dust flew loose
in a cloud, and chips of stone. "Perhaps the Kraj, the Genji,
because of the old memories, but surely not the Basanga or the
Katjen."
"Perhaps not." Colun set his elbows on the parapet and
rested his chin on his hands, staring morosely at the cavern, at the
serried ranks of houses that climbed the walls like honeycombs to
where the topmost curvature of the vast cave swung over like some
rocky sky to meet the rising houses on the farther side, the roadways
between climbing up the walls and dangling in the moss-lit air
between like spiderweb ladders. And down the middle, where the cave
flattened, a stream there all boundaried with chuckling children and
women washing. "But I thought that of the flatlanders. I thought
that when I brought them news of the invaders they'd surely rally,
but what: happened? They fell to fighting amongst themselves!"
"You told me that," Baran said carefully. "But that
was surely this matter of the maiden Arrhyna and the killing
of—Vachyr, was that his name?"
"Yes." Colun nodded. "But do you not see?"
Baran said, "No. Those are flatlander affairs, and I do not
understand them."
Colun sighed. "It seems plain enough to me. In some ways, at
least; in others … " He shrugged. "I brought warning of
the invaders to the flatlanders and they ignored it when they fell to
squabbling amongst themselves. Racharran heeded me, and Yazte … But
the rest." He shrugged again. "They'd sooner not know. They
quote their Ahsa-tye-Patiko like a warding charm and believe that by
ignoring the danger they dismiss it."
"They're flatlanders," Baran said. "They believe
themselves safe behind our mountains."
"Yes." Colun ducked his head, slowly as a wearied horse.
"And we Grannach, are we any better? We fight the invaders, but
still argue that the fight is only for our own lands. That we are the
Guardians of the mountains and nothing more. And the Kraj and the
Genji argue one way, and the Basanga and the Katjen another, which is
so much like the flatlanders, it frightens me."
"What do you say?" Baran asked.
"That there is a kind of horrid pattern in all this," Colun
said, and sighed. "That invaders come against us and will
doubtless move against Ket-Ta-Witko if we are defeated, and that our
people and theirs seem equally divided. As if some fell wind blows
over us all, to baffle us and confuse us, so that we dither and argue
while all the time the enemy gains ground."
Baran turned his head to study Colun, frowning at the expression he
saw. It seemed to him fatalistic, as if the creddan already accepted
inevitable defeat. "We've always argued," he said. "It's
our nature; but our arguments now are not about the invaders. All the
families fight them."
"True." Colun smiled grimly. "But
how do we
fight?"
Baran wondered if the question was rhetorical and hesitated to
respond. Then, when Colun said no more, he answered, "As we've
always fought, family by family."
"Exactly." Colun nodded. "Each family to its own
territory. As Javitz and Kraj and Genji and Basatiga and Katjen; not
as
Grannach."
"We are all Grannach," Baran said, confused.
"Which comes first," Colun asked, "Grannach or
family?"
"Surely," Baran said, "they are the same thing."
"Are they?" Colun drew dusty fingers through his beard. "I
am not so sure."
Baran said, "I do not understand."
"Suppose," Colun murmured, "that the invaders
succeeded in breaching our tunnels, suppose they entered the Javitz
cavern. Would the Kraj or the Genji come to our aid? Or would they
leave us to our fate? Would they say the Javitz fall because I
brought flatlanders into the mountains and the Javitz suffer for my
sin and so our fate is none of their affair?"
Baran paused before replying. Then he said, "Surely they'd aid
us … " But his voice lacked conviction.
"We'd aid them," Colun said. "But were it the other
way around, I wonder."
Baran said, "Surely … " And let the sentence die
unspoken, aware he had no sound answer nor any sound conviction.
"That's what I mean," Colun said, "about the
pattern—about an evil wind. Listen. The flatlanders are bound
by what they name the Ahsa-tye-Patiko, which is like the Order. But
that all fell apart at their Matakwa; and for all I brought them
warning, still they fell to squabbling amongst themselves and paid no
heed to the larger danger. It was as if they could not see straight,
but only see petty envies. And I fear the same might apply to us."
"Do you say the invaders ensorcel us?" Baran asked. "That
they send some magic against us?"
Colun sighed and shrugged. "I do not know; I can only wonder.
But I tell you this, my friend—I believe we must stand
together, that save we fight as
Grannach—as a people
undivided—we shall likely fall. And also that"—he
barked a harsh and humorless laugh—"the other families
would dismiss that fear. Or bring it to debate so long the invaders
come before any resolution be reached."
"We hold the tunnels still," Baran said defensively, not
liking the turn of this conversation.
"We hold the tunnels," Colun agreed. "But for how
long? The invaders are deep into the mountains now, deeper than any
have ever penetrated, and they are so many."
"I don't know what to say." Baran shook his head. "You
frighten me with this talk."
Colun said, "I frighten myself.
Ach, perhaps I'm wrong.
Perhaps I've dealt too much with flatlanders. So!" He pushed
away from the parapet, grunting as he straightened his back, and
clapped the golan on the shoulder. "Do we go find some beer to
wash the dust from our mouths?"
Baran nodded eagerly: it was far easier to fight than contemplate his
creddan's abstruse and frightening philosophies.
They descended the great stairway to the cavern's floor and followed
the paved way beside the stream until they came to a curving road
that lifted up past the honeycomb terraces to a vaulting bridge
spanning a crack in the mountain's belly, then along another walled
roadway to Colun's dwelling.
Marjia met them on the balcony with a smile that grew wider as she
saw her husband was unharmed.
"It went well?"
Colun said, "They died. Baran brought the tunnel down on them.
It was thirsty work."
Marjia laughed and bussed his cheek. "It always is. Come, I've a
keg ready. And hot water."
She beckoned them inside, past the low-arched doorway to an
antechamber where a steaming bowl rested on a shelf of rock, soap and
cloths beside.
"You'll wash first," she warned. "Then slake your
thirst."
Dutifully, they obeyed. Colun set his helmet and ax aside and they
went through the inner door to a wide room that shone all gently
golden save where a fire burned cheerfully in the hearth, lending
flickering overtones of red to the light emanating from the rock.
Bright rugs covered the floor and two deep and amply cushioned chairs
stood before the fire, a wooden table between. Colun ushered Baran to
one and crossed to where the keg sat inside a niche. He filled two
mugs and looked inquiringly at Marjia. She shook her head and told
him she'd business below, did he want his dinner, so he brought the
mugs to the table and set them down, then sank into the empty chair.
Both Grannach drank deep, and neither spoke until the mugs were
emptied. Colun refilled them and Baran ventured an opinion.
"These … fears … you have. Should you not voice them?"
Colun wiped foam from his lips. "I did," he said. "When
I got back from Ket-Ta-Witko I sent word to all the creddans,
speaking of my thoughts. The answer was they'd contemplate my words
and give their answers in due course. Ach, Baran, old friend! You
know what 'in due course' is to us."
Baran nodded. "We Grannach were ever a slow-moving folk."
"But now," Colun declared, "time moves fast. Perhaps
too fast! I suspect we've not enough for lengthy contemplation."
"You sound," Baran said, "like a flatlander—all
swift and hurrying."
Colun chuckled. "So Janzi claims. He says I'm tainted by contact
with the Matawaye."
Baran shrugged: how to argue against time-honored tradition? The
Grannach lived long, slow lives and were not given to swift
decisions. That was the province of the flatlanders, all brief and
hurried because they lacked the time to ponder things. They were
fast-running water to the Grannach's stone. He wondered if Colun's
stone had been worn down by the flatlanders' water.
"What do you think?"
Colun's question surprised him and he hid awhile behind his mug.
Then, carefully: "I think we must fight as best we can."
"And does that mean breaking with tradition?"
Baran felt pinned by Colun's eyes; guilty for his doubts. He drained
his mug and said to Colun's back as the creddan rose to fill both
their tankards, "I think that these invaders are such a threat
as we've not known before. I'd not see our mountains fall to them."
Colun sighed and was about to speak, when a clarion rang, belling
loud through the outer cavern, softer in the chamber but nonetheless
imperative. Both men sprang to their feet. Baran groaned. "Again?
So soon?"
Colun said, "Things change apace, my friend. And do we not
change as swift … "
He left the sentence dangling as he snatched up his helm and his ax
and they both ran to the bridge, across that to the roadway and the
battle awaiting them.
The tunnel was wide, a transport route between the different family
caverns. It was not roofed so high the invaders' war beasts could
fully raise their heads, and so they could not fight to fullest
advantage. But still their slashing claws and darting, many-fanged
jaws wrought terrible slaughter on the Grannach. And they came apace,
slithering and scurrying so swift the golans had not enough time to
bring down the rock but must fall back as they chanted their spells.
And behind them, unhindered by the tunnel's roof, came the
strangelings in their rainbow armor, like a bright flood intent on
drowning all before it.
Colun swung his ax, sinking the blade deep into the paw that quested
for his chest, and laughed as the beast screamed and snatched back
the lusting claws. It limped on three legs then, and he saw his brave
Javitz warriors run in to hack at the creature. He saw one taken by
the fangs, and raised his ax high, swinging the blade down into the
scaly snout, the jaws burst open by the blow so that the warrior was
tossed loose. But he was still dead, his armor all pierced by the
pressure of those dreadful teeth. Colun twisted his ax loose and
struck again even as noisome breath gusted foul against his face. He
felt the force of his blow in his arms and shoulders, as if he struck
steel against stone. Then the ax was wrenched from his hand, the
beast tossing its pierced head and screaming shrill as it writhed. He
sprang back, but not quite fast enough to avoid the paw that caught
him and flung him down—luckily, the Maker be praised, back
clear of the creature's death throes.
He was hauled to his feet and dragged back down the tunnel. He
struggled free of the helping hands and snatched up a dead man's ax.
His head spun and his vision wavered, and in his ears he heard the
Stone Shapers' chanting all mingled in with the roaring of the living
beasts and the screaming of the dying creatures. He saw the one he'd
struck fall down, hind legs kicking, front scrabbling for purchase,
even as the next came clambering over the body, and moved toward it.
But hands clutched him and impelled him away, and then the roaring of
the beasts was joined by the roaring of the mountain as the roof
collapsed under the weight of the golans' chant and dust blew in a
stormy cloud down all the remaining length of safe tunnel.
" … little way. Likely not enough to halt them for long."
He shook his head, yawning to unblock the stoppage of his ears, and
blinked until he saw Baran's mouth moving.
"What?" His own voice sounded distant.
Baran leaned close and said, "We could drop the tunnel only a
little way! The Maker help us, but it was built too strong. They'll
likely clear it before long."
"Then we fall back." Colun narrowed his eyes, forcing them
into focus. Rubble spilled like a ramp from the bulk of stone
plugging the tunnel, all hazy in the roiling dust. "Drop the
rest while they dig that out."
Baran nodded and beckoned his fellow golans to him.
As they began their chant, Colun called up his warriors.
"We drop the tunnel." He saw their eyes all wide with
disbelief and horror and mouthed a curse. "Fall back!"
They retreated down the tunnel, leaving the golans to their work as a
youngling came running up.
"Creddan! Colun! They're coming in all over!"
"What?" Colun felt chill fill his belly. "What do you
mean?"
The youngster said, "They're entering the cavern."
For an instant Colun rejected the news: it was too large to
comprehend, too impossible. The caverns were inviolate, no matter
what he'd said: surely the Maker would not allow it,
could not
allow it. Then he looked at the youngling's stricken face and knew it
was so.
The world
was turned on its head, all topsy-turvy.
He shouldered his borrowed ax and began to run, his fighting men on
his heels.
And all the way he thought: Marjia, be alive. Maker, let her be
alive.
He found chaos.
Rainbow-armored invaders spilled from the tunnels, pouring down the
stairways like floodwater, all pushing one against the other in their
haste so that some were pitched off to fall and crash onto the stone
below. They seemed uncaring of their dead and wounded, for when one
fell, none went to his aid but only passed, often treading on the
fallen so that the wounded were crushed under the weight of their
fellows. Some halted on balconies and bridges, nocking long shafts to
great bows and sending arrows down like rain on the Grannach below.
And from several of the wider thoroughfares came the beasts, all
snarling and slavering, their belling joining the battle cries of the
Javitz and the howling of hurt folk and the screaming of women and
children.
Colun halted his men where a wide, walled ledge afforded clear view
of the cave, assessing the situation. He could not see Marjia, nor
had the time to seek her, for a cluster of the invaders came charging
at his position and he raised his ax to meet them.
They were tall as the flatlanders, these strangelings, and
hard-armored. But height is not always an advantage and armor has
weak spots: Colun need only duck his head to avoid the long sword
that swung above him and then send his ax slicing against the
invader's knee, all his Grannach strength in the blow.
The man—he supposed it was a man, but could not tell for
sure—loosed a shrill cry and fell down as if kneeling before
the creddan. Colun reversed his stroke and sent a scarlet helmet
rolling away across the shelf, the head it protected still inside.
Then he must spring back as the serrated blade of a pike stabbed at
his chest. He turned, catching the pole between his left arm and
ribs, and smashed his ax against it. The Grannach steel severed the
pole and its user was pitched off balance. Before he had opportunity
to draw the long knife he carried, Colun sank his ax into the bright
yellow breastplate and roared in triumph as red blood spilled out. He
shouldered the dying man aside and went in search of another victim.
There were none left: bodies littered the shelf, both invaders and
Grannach, but where all the strangelings were dead, the Grannach had
wounded they carried limping with them.
Colun ordered off the least hurt, leaving them to tend the worst, and
led his remaining warriors at a run for the closest bridge, where
invading archers stood. The Grannach swept them away, as many tossed
down into the depths of the cavern as were slain by steel.
A pause then as he surveyed the cavern. There were not so many
invaders as he had first thought. It was as if their shining armor,
all so bright and light-reflecting, tricked the eye into a
multiplication of their numbers. That, and perhaps the sheer fact
that they were in the ancestral cave. Certainly no more emerged from
the tunnels, and the Javitz drove those on the bridges back, or over,
and all down the walks along the stream there were glittering bodies
like poisonous beetles.
Some yet lived, fighting in tight groups along the terraces,
surrounded by massing rings of Grannach. Colun thought they must soon
fall, for they were heavily outnumbered by the Javitz.
He looked down and saw three of the dreadful beasts still living, and
then a cry burst from his throat and he was running for the nearest
descending road.
Marjia stood by the stream, a house at her back and a pike in her
hands, a group of women with her, all armed with poles and swords
taken from the fallen, presenting a steely wall to the creature that
spat and snarled and pawed at them as if it were some monstrous
nightmare cat confronting a hedgehog whose spikes were sharp steel.
From the doorway and the windows of the house, children stared
wide-eyed at the beast, and even as he raced toward his wife, Colun
saw the invader lurking behind the creature and surmised something of
their nature.
It was a kind of symbiosis, he realized, the monstrous beast
controlled in some fashion by the man, as if it were a fighting dog
and the invader its handler, urging it on. His armor was not of the
brilliant hues that marked his fellows, but only black, with bright
crimson sigils on chest and back. He carried a tall pole that ended
in a long spike from which protruded a recurved hook, and for all the
beast needed no prompting in its bloodlust, still he poked at the
hindquarters as if the carnage it wrought was insufficient to satisfy
him.
Colun saw bodies littering the floor, some male but most women, slain
in defense of the sanctuary, of the children hiding there. He saw
Marjia thrust her pike at the beast and propelled himself desperately
forward, his soul filled with a terrible dread.
He found the cavern's floor and charged the dark-armored invader. His
ax rose and sank into the armored back. The invader jerked and
stiffened, arms flung wide, the goad dropping from his hand. Colun
swung the ax again, this time striking deep between the joindure of
breastplate and tasset. He saw the man's head fling back and hooked
it down as if he gaffed a fish. The armored figure was tugged onto
its back and Colun sank his ax into the frontage of the jet helmet.
The beast roared then, and slowed as if it were struck, and turned
from its attack to face the Grannach. It seemed confused and, as it
roared and lashed its scaly tail, Colun darted past the wide-mouthed
head to spring onto a shoulder as if it were a ladder and sink his ax
into the backbone.
He was flung clear as the thing reared up, but his men were with him
and attacked from all sides, hacking and cutting until the beast lay
bloody and dead. He rose, wincing as bruised limbs protested, and
said, "Marjia?"
"I'm here." She came to his side and put her arms around
him, which hurt his ribs somewhat, but he said nothing. "That
was brave."
He said, "You're safe."
"Yes." She nodded and he saw her eyes wander frightened
about the cavern. "But how many are dead?"
He said, "I don't know; wait," and called up his men that
he might tell them what he had guessed—that the beasts were
each controlled by a single man and that they should seek the
invaders in the dark armor and slay them, and after them their
beasts. And then he said to his wife, "Stay here, eh?" and
went back to the battle.
It was no easy thing to slay either the remaining creatures or the
remaining invaders, but it was done and the Javitz looked to their
hurt. There were too many, and Colun wondered how well they could
withstand further attacks—and how the strangelings had
succeeded in coming so far through the tunnels.
That was readily explained when scouts came back with wounded who
told of a sudden massed attack, pressed home by so many invaders,
they'd had no chance to send warning but could only fight and die
where they stood.
"Then where are they?" Colun asked a Grannach whose face
was forever scarred and whose left arm would never again bend
readily. "Were there so many, where have they gone?"
That question, too, was answered as they licked their wounds and
messengers hurried to the other family caverns to pass on and bring
back news. Colun flinched when he heard it.
All the caves were assaulted, but that, for all the loss of life,
seemed only a diversion designed to concentrate the families each
within their own cavern, to draw them in from the high passes.
There, so word came, the invaders poured through, deep into the
mountains, in such numbers as the Grannach could never hope to
oppose.
"O Maker, stand with us now." Colun closed his eyes as he
heard the news. Then opened them wide: "We must speak of this,
all the families."
"You need rest." Marjia set a hand on his shoulder. "You've
broken ribs and more bruises than I can count."
Colun patted her hand, though the movement cost him pain. "There's
no time for rest," he said. "Save that last one the Maker
gives us all, and I'm not ready for that yet."
"We Shapers can seal the tunnels," Baran said. "All of
them, needs be. Lock the Javitz in safe."
"Ach, did we not speak of this?" Colun shook his head, and
groaned. "Family by family, or as one people?"
"We'd be safe." Baran shrugged. "The Javitz would
survive."
"And the world outside?" Colun began to move his head,
thought better of it. "Shall we leave that go? Shall we Grannach
all become moles—each family to its own sealed cavern? Shall we
let these strangelings pass us by to conquer Ket-Ta-Witko?"
"What other choice have we?" Baran asked.
"To do what's right," Colun said. "To fight them as an
army."
The creddans of the other families were of a different opinion.
All had suffered losses, not all were convinced the attacks were
merely diversions.
"We fought them off," Janzi said. "We can do it
again."
"Whilst they go through the passes?" Colun asked. "Into
Ket-Ta-Witko?"
"Perhaps we're not so much in love with the flatlanders as you,"
said Gort. "Why should we fight their battles?"
"Is it not our duty to guard these hills?" Colun asked.
"We do," Janzi said. "We shall."
"Only that?" Colun looked from one creddan to the other.
"I'd thought our duty extended farther."
"We guard the mountains," Gort said. "We do our duty
by the Maker."
"The western tunnels are sealed, no?" Daryk said. "So
they surely cannot attack again."
"Save they cross the mountains and turn back," Colun said,
"from the east."
"Ach!" Janzi made a gesture of irritated dismissal. "How
shall they pass through the hills? They'll die up there."
"How did they enter our tunnels?" asked Colun.
"We were not ready," Janzi said. "Now we are."
"Not ready?" Colun frowned. "We've been fighting them
long enough, no?"
Janzi at least had the grace to look a moment ashamed. Then he said,
"We were not ready for such numbers."
"Perhaps if we sealed all the tunnels?" Menas ventured. "Of
east and west both?"
"And starve?" asked Colun. "Our meat come from the
valleys, no? And our crops. Would you lock those off?"
Menas shrugged.
"What do you suggest?" Daryk asked.
"That we forgo our differences," Colun said. "That we
fight as an army, all unified."
"And doubtless with you as our commander," Janzi and spat.
"No." This time Colun remembered not to shake his head. "I
say only that we need act as one, are we to defeat these
strangelings."
"We have," said Gort. "There are none left alive in
the caverns."
"Ach, for now," Colun said. "But do they cross the
mountains, think you they'll let us be? I tell you they'll come back
against us."
"And I tell you that our caves are safe for now," Daryk
said, "and it must surely take these strange folk time to cross
the hills, if they can. So we've time to think on all this."
"We've no time at all!" Colun said.
"I think Daryk is right," said Menas. "I think we
should ponder this."
"By the Maker!" Colun fisted an angry gesture. "What's
to ponder? We are attacked! Invaders cross our mountains! What's left
to ponder?"
"Much," said Daryk.
"Yes," said Gort. "I'm with Daryk. I say we think on
all of this and not rush to decisions."
Menas nodded his agreement. "And the while, look to our family
caverns."
Colun sighed and muttered a curse: he saw dark and bloody times
ahead.
And so it went, in the Grannach way, slow as stone and as inexorable.
And as they pondered, the invaders drove ever deeper into the
mountains and into the high passes, moving relentlessly toward
Ket-Ta-Witko. The Grannach fought them—not as Colun would have
it, as a single unified army, but in the old way, family by
family—and though many died, there seemed always more, the
horde careless of its losses so that even when the Shapers sent
avalanches down to bury the columns, or warriors tumbled boulders on
them, still when the dust had cleared the horde pressed on,
clambering over stone and corpses alike. The invaders seemed
impervious to the cold of the high peaks and the rain that fell as
the year aged, as if they were some mindless gestalt unlimited by
physical considerations or any kind of sentiment save bloodlust.
Colun thought it could be only a matter of time before the enemy held
the hills and the Grannach hid like rabbits in a sealed warren,
awaiting their executioners. And then, he thought, the weirdlings
would likely flood down into Ket-Ta-Witko to strike against the
Matawaye, and the Grannach have no allies left in all the world. He
thought he could not allow that, but neither was he sure what to do,
what he
could do.
22—Each in His Own Place
Morrhyn could not, during those brief interludes when he woke and
understood where he was, understand how he lived. He had no food, and
for all the hot spring warmed the cave a little, it was scarce enough
to fend off the cold outside. Snow fell there—when he opened
his eyes, he could see its drifting white curtain like a veil across
the cave mouth—but he lacked the strength, or perhaps the will,
to crawl so far as the entrance to see how deep it lay on the slopes
or which moon stood in the sky, and so he only dragged himself to the
well to sip the thick metallic water and then huddle again in the
folds of bearskin and blanket and return to the dreaming. It was all
he had. He hoped his horse survived; he doubted he should live, and
could not care. His life was of no importance—one small spark
amongst many, already sputtering as cold and hunger took their
toll—and it seemed to him the Maker kept him alive only to
dream, which he could not decide was punishment or reward.
It was strange to find his talent returned to him only to reveal such
horror. He supposed the Maker granted him final revelation, and that
he would die in the cave when the last mystery was uncovered. He
could not imagine climbing back down the mountain to speak of what he
learned—did any still live below to hear it—for he was
very weak and could not imagine making that descent. He thought that
likely his bones would rest here forever, time stripping off the
flesh with none to bring them home, for surely none other would be
crazed enough to come here.
He wished he might bring back to the People word of what he dreamed,
what he learned, but that was an old desire from another life: one
he'd known before he came there, which was gone. His life now was the
cave and the dreaming, nothing else, and his quest now seemed
prideful and vain, the boasting of a dreamless Dreamer seeking some
personal validation. It seemed to him a magnificent irony that his
pride be answered with revelation, and that he then die alone with
all that knowledge.
He drew the bearskin over his head and closed his eyes again,
slipping on the instant back into the dream.
This must be how the Maker saw his creation, as if he looked out
through his eyes, aware of all in all places, without time's barrier,
but all contiguous. Save he was not the Maker, but only a man, and
what he saw was so vast, he could not properly comprehend it or order
it. It was larger and infinitely more complex than his poor mind
might encompass, so that it seemed as if images of knowledge raced
through his head too swift he could grasp it all, but see only parts.
But those parts!
He saw the folk who named themselves the Breakers cross the salt
desert that boundaried the country of the Whaztaye. He saw their
beastmasters drive their awful charges against the People Beyond the
Hills, and the warrior horde come after. He saw the Whaztaye slain,
and fleeing; and the Grannach succor them in the foothills.
Uselessly, for he saw what the Breakers did (and stirred, horrified
by the vision) knowing that should be the fate of the Matawaye, of
his own People, as the Breakers came into the mountains and fought
their way into the Grannach tunnels, and the high passes …
Where he saw Grannach slain by beasts and Breakers, and Colun fight
them and argue for unity and be ignored so that he came to a decision
even as the Grannach argued amongst themselves just as his own People
had argued at Matakwa, and went each their own way, ignorant—or
wilfully blind—to the larger danger …
Which set Tachyn and Commacht to fighting, which he saw as if he
stood invisible in the midst of battle, watching Racharran charge a
band of Chakthi's warriors alone, his men all spread about behind in
defense of the helpless ones …
And Rannach in a valley with Arrhyna, where alders grew beside a
river and Arrhyna swelled with child, and he knew that Rannach did
not know, for Arrhyna was afraid as yet to tell him, fearing he'd
bring her back to the lodges of the Commacht and die there …
Save that was already too late, for the Breakers crossed the
mountains and would soon come against the Commacht, and all the
People, and destroy them. Save …
There was a thing he did not understand, which floated on more water
than he'd ever seen, swallowing wind in great squares of white like
flattened tents, and spat flame from metal pipes against creatures
such as the Breakers used, and on the floating thing …
There was a Dreamer who …
Came to an unknown land, frightened of his talent (which Morrhyn
could not understand) and denied it …
Because his world contained Breakers of a different kind, who …
Fire then: he woke drenched in sweat, and instantly shivered in the
cave's chill, and drew the bearskin and the blanket tighter around
his wasted body and dove back down into the dream …
Which showed the Breakers passing the mountains because …
The Ahsa-tye-Patiko was ignored when Vachyr stole Arrhyna with his
father's blessing, and Chakthi was eaten by the black wind from the
mountains …
And Rannach slew Vachyr when he might have taken the kidnapper alive,
but did not because Arrhyna urged him to slay her abductor and he
knew only hatred and pride …
Which drove Chakthi to what he did …
And Hadduth—worst of all—was tainted by the black wind
and knew not what he did, save he was blinded as all the other
Dreamers. But still …
The Tachyn would waste and destroy the Commacht even as the Breakers
came down against all the People. Unless …
… It was as if that same black wind stirred cloudy over Morrhyn's
dreaming, so that he wondered in his sleep if the Breakers were
stronger than the Maker …
And saw them drive the People, all the Matawaye, all the Commacht and
Tachyn, the Lakanti, the Naiche and the Aparhaso, before them as they
had driven the Whaztaye …
And the floating thing find a harbor and folk come off the thing to a
camp of wooden lodges …
And some of them shine like torches calling a lost rider home …
And flee from …
He was not sure what … The Breakers or the People? There seemed no
difference in the malign intent he sensed.
Only that those three shone like beacons in the darkness of his
dreaming, and that …
He must find them, even as a rider lost in night and fog looks for
the lights of home and asks the Maker his horse tread sure and not
fall into hole or mire, but only come safe back …
But he could not understand how, for they were—he did not
understand how he knew this, only that he did—not of his world,
but of one of those contiguous with his, as if all the worlds spun
around one another and nothing existed alone but all in perpetual
coexistence so that all moved together and crossed and were the same
and at the same time different …
And that, somehow, in a manner he could not understand, his world and
theirs must come together to defeat the Breakers …
And that it was his task to make it so: and therefore to live …
… Which he could not understand at all, for he could not conceive
of living: Surely he was destined to die here, in this cave.
Surely that was his fate … To dream these dreams that opened worlds
to him and showed him past and future as if that were the Maker's
last gift to him before he died …
But he had not seen it all; did not know it all.
He knew somewhat of things past and somewhat of things to come; but
so much was yet veiled in mystery …
… Who were the Breakers? Where did they come from?
Why were
they so malign, so intent on destruction?
… And those strangers who shone so bright: who were they?
It seemed then that a light shone and he looked into its brightness
and it spoke in words of flame that had no sound but what he heard
inside the channels of his mind and the marrow of his bones and the
core of his waning life: it said,
When the dream is done, go tell
them. Go find them. Go do what you must, if you've the strength.
That, or die with all your People.
And he could not deny it, so he rose and hugged his bearskin to him
and crawled to the cave mouth and looked out to where the snow fell
over crags and peaks and far steep-walled valleys where lights moved
that he knew were the lights of the Breakers as they wound their way
to Ket-Ta-Witko, which they would conquer and leave waste after all
the People were slain unless he obeyed the voice of the flame.
So he crawled back to the spring and drank and felt very afraid, for
he still did not think he could survive the downward climb and that
even if he somehow did, then still surely the Breakers must find him
and slay him, and even did they not, then how could he, afoot, find
his clan or any of the People in time to warn them?
You survived the journey here, the flame inside his eyes said.
You will survive the journey back, have you the courage.
I am afraid, he answered. I am very afraid. And what good shall it
do? Shall I tell them they are to die?"
No, said the flame.
Sleep and understand.
So he slept, and dreamed again. Of an answer.
"Does he live?" Lhyn asked her husband. And then: "Be
still, I must bind this."
Racharran sighed and held his wounded arm rigid as she wound a
moss-filled bandage around the cut. "I don't know," he
said. "How could I? He went away when we need him most. I'm not
a Dreamer, that I can answer such questions."
"No." Lhyn tied off the bandage. "You're akaman of the
Commacht."
"What does that mean?"
Lhyn set the remaining moss back in its pouch and faced him square.
"We lose too many," she said. "First our son, and then
Morrhyn. How many more?"
"This war is none of my making," he said. "It's all
Chakthi's doing. I've looked to avoid it, but he sends his warriors
all the time against us. What else can I do but fight?"
"You might have kept Morrhyn with us," she answered.
"How?" Racharran flexed his arm. The arrow had gone deep,
but he thought he would not lose mobility; it was not the first cut
he'd taken. "I did my best to dissuade him, but he'd have none
of it. The Maker summoned him, he said—'I think I might find
answers there,' he said—and would not be dissuaded."
"You could have held him," she replied. "Bade him
remain."
"What is this?" Racharran asked. "You seem more
concerned for Morrhyn than for Rannach."
"Rannach you sent off with Colun," she returned, "knowing
he and Arrhyna would be safe with the Grannach. Morrhyn went alone,
when Tachyn ride against us and he'd go where none have gone before."
"I could not stop him," he said. "How could I?"
"I don't know," she said. "Only that I am afraid for
him."
"As am I," he said.
Lhyn said, "I know; I'm sorry. But … "
Racharran opened his arms and she came into them and he held her
close, thankful for the comfort of her body. The year's events
frightened him, disturbed all his notions and concepts of the world
so that it seemed nothing was any more fixed or permanent but all
blown about in disorder as if a vast and unfelt storm raged—but
Lhyn's presence was an anchor in that gale.
"These are strange times," he said.
"I do not understand them," she said, and felt a pang of
guilt that she felt greater fear for Morrhyn than for her son. It was
as if his going had opened a hole in her, revealed only by his
departure, his absence. She had not known it was there before, and
she told herself that it was only because Morrhyn went into the
unknown whilst Rannach went escorted by Colun's Grannach and must
surely be safe with them. Whereas Morrhyn …
She hugged her husband tighter and said against his chest, "I am
afraid."
"We are all afraid." He stroked her hair, watching the
play, of firelight on the gold all threaded through with silver, and
for a while pretended all was well: that they rested comfortable in
their lodge and there was no war, nor any hunger, nor so many burial
scaffolds in the trees, nor winter coming on.
But he was akaman of the Commacht, and such pretendings were not a
luxury in which he could indulge. There were too many scaffolds in
the trees and too many widows weeping in the lodges. The Falling Leaf
Moon stood over the camp and soon the White Grass Moon would rise,
and there were too few supplies stored up against the cold moons, for
there had been no time for hunting with Chakthi's Tachyn always
prowling.
He resisted the urge to sigh, looking past Lhyn's head to the fire,
wishing Morrhyn were there. Even bereft of his dreams, the wakanisha
had been a rock on which he might lean. But Morrhyn was gone away,
and Racharran could not know if he was slain by the Tachyn as Lhyn
feared, or lived, or starved, or … It was, Racharran thought, as if
all the world had gone mad, all turned upside down and shaken by
forces he did not understand. Chakthi pressed his war long past the
time of fighting—no one fought after the Moon of Ripe Berries
was gone—and surely the Tachyn must be as poorly set for winter
as his own Commacht. Ach, even Yazte had called back his Lakanti
warriors to cull the buffalo herds as they migrated, that his people
have hides and meat and rich marrow to see out the winter. He had
apologized, and Racharran could not argue. How could he ask the
Lakanti to go hungry when the wolf winds blew and the grass was all
hard and white, and the herds went away to the south? He could not;
he could only accept Yazte's promise of charity, that whatever excess
the Lakanti took would be gifted to the Commacht.
As if my clan is become a widow, he thought bitterly, dependent on
charity.
And Juh and Tahdase, for all he had sent messengers entreating their
aid, had done nothing. Save take their people far from the fighting,
as if it were none of their affair but only a squabble between the
Commacht and the Tachyn, which Racharran, even without Morrhyn's
advice, sensed it was not. He thought then of what Morrhyn had said
of a dark wind blowing over Ket-Ta-Witko, and shivered.
"What?" Lhyn asked, and he drew the furs up closer and held
her and said in answer, "Nothing. Only a chill."
And thought, Such a chill as I've never known, as if the Frozen Grass
Moon rises and sets its cold claws in my bones.
He closed his eyes and thought of what folk said of Morrhyn: that the
wakanisha betrayed his clan; that he was gone mad; that the Maker
turned his face from the Dreamer. None of it to Racharran's face, but
he heard the whispers and could do little to prevent them, for
Morrhyn
was gone away and even Racharran must wonder if that
was wise. He must fight anger then, for he wanted the wakanisha with
him, even dreamless. Morrhyn could at least interpret the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko, which seemed to Racharran all sundered and
forgotten, and help him hold the young men in check.
They chafed at his decision that the clan avoid conflict as best it
could, arguing that it were better they fight fire with fire and
attack Chakthi's folk as the Tachyn attacked them. Some had ventured
to attempt that, and had ridden onto the Tachyn grass. Not many had
come back. Rannach's comrades—Zhy and Hadustan—had been
amongst them, and now their bones lay unhonored in the Tachyn country
and Bakaan limped from a wound in his thigh where a lance had pierced
him, and cursed and muttered that Rannach would make a better leader
than his father.
It was hard to keep them controlled: they were like young buffalo
bulls eager to test their mettle. But the Maker knew, there was
surely fighting enough. It seemed that no matter where the Commacht
went, even to the farthest reaches of the clan's territory, still
Chakthi sent his warriors against them. It was as if grief made him
mad, blind to the needs of his own people, consumed by a dreadful
hatred that lusted entirely for destruction.
Racharran could not understand that. How Chakthi could ignore
impending winter, when surely his folk must suffer, in pursuit of
vengeance? He prayed that the rising of the White Grass Moon see an
end to the fighting, but doubted, even as he prayed, that it should.
Then he thought of Rannach and Arrhyna and prayed they be safe, and
Morrhyn, and into his mind came oozing doubt and accusation. Had
Rannach only heeded his pleas and not sought Arrhyna for his bride,
none of this would have happened. And then that had Rannach only come
to him when he found Arrhyna stolen, Vachyr might still live and
Chakthi have no cause to fight. He felt anger then, at his son's
pride and wilfullness, and then guilt—for had Rannach not come
back and honestly presented himself to the Council and accepted his
punishment? Save Chakthi saw it not as punishment but salvation, and
ignored his own son's sins and looked for blood.
The sigh that Racharran had earlier stifled burst forth. His wounded
arm throbbed and a weight sat in his soul that so many suffered and
died and he had no answers save to run.
"What is it?" Lhyn rose on an elbow. "Does your arm
hurt you?"
"A little," he said. "It's nothing. I think we must
strike camp tomorrow."
"Again?" She checked his bandaged arm as she spoke. "So
soon?"
"We must make winter camp soon." He shifted as she examined
his arm. He did not, at that moment, want her to see his eyes, the
worry there. "We can't keep running."
"Surely Chakthi'll not fight through the winter," she said.
He said, "I hope not. But … When the snows come, we shall need
a good place."
"The Wintering Ground?" she asked.
He shook his head. "Chakthi likely knows of that. Or has some
notion of where it is. No: we need another place this year."
"We always go there," she said. "Every year."
"This," he said, "is not a year like any other."
Lhyn said, "No," and touched his face. "You carry a
heavy burden, my husband."
"I'm akaman of the Commacht," he said. "What other
choice have I?" Save, he thought even as he regretted it, that I
run away like Morrhyn.
"Where shall we go?" she asked.
"I was thinking," he replied, "that there's that
valley to the south, where the river bends. Sometimes buffalo winter
there."
Lhyn nodded. "That would be a good place, I think."
"But not straight away," he said. "Well move about
awhile, in case. Then when the White Grass Moon rises, we'll go
there. We should be safe there, the Maker willing."
"The Maker willing," Lhyn agreed, and pushed him down. "Now
shall you sleep?"
Racharran said, "In a while. But not yet," and turned
toward his wife.
Lhyn said, "Your arm … "
"Is not hurting," he lied, and moved under the furs as she
opened her arms to him.
Perhaps for a little while longer he
could pretend.
It was an answer Morrhyn did not properly understand, so perhaps it
was not an answer at all but rather a possibility, dependent on him
and those others who would heed his words. He could not be sure, and
supposed that was the Maker's way—not to define certainly, but
to open gates to possible paths for those willing to follow him, to
follow his way, which was the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. Morrhyn wondered how
many would listen; and then how he might reach them. He thought again
that he could not, that he was too weak to attempt the climb, and
that even did he survive, he must still cross the wide breadth of
Ket-Ta-Witko to bring the word. And Ket-Ta-Witko was surely full of
enemies now, both those born of the People and those born of that
other race, the Breakers.
He shuddered as he thought of what the dreaming had revealed, of what
they were and did and why. It was an evil so vast, he could barely
fold his mind around it, and so vile he had sooner not contemplate it
but only act.
Which seemed impossible. Surely better to seek the dream again, and
in it find a surer answer: he bathed his face and drank and wrapped
the furs around his skinny body and looked to sleep. But sleep was
refused him. It would not come and so he could not dream, but only
lie restless, his head all abuzz with horrid knowledge until it
seemed the easier thing to rise and go out from the cave. And if he
died attempting this great task set on him, then that at least should
be surcease from the awful knowledge he now owned. So he rose on
trembling legs and stumbled to the cave mouth and stared out on a
world gone all wintry white, with little prospect in it of survival.
Icicles depended from the arch of the cave, and where the spring
spilled out across the ledge before, the warm water carved a narrow
channel through snow for a little way and then became iced and
glittery in the sun, which shone so bright against the snow, its
light was blinding, a stab of pain against his eyes. He drew back,
thinking that he must build a fire and paint his face with charcoal
in defense against snowblindness; and then that he had no fire, nor
the wood for its making.
And then it came to him that it was entirely impossible he could have
survived his sojourn in the cave without a fire, without food. He
should be dead—not on the climb down, but
now. Indeed,
long days past, for no man could survive these heights, this cold,
without food and warmth. But he
was alive. He did not believe
he was become a ghost, for he could feel the heat of the spring and
taste its mineral-laden water, and he shivered in the chill of the
ledge. He could feel the wind on his face, and when he pricked his
knife to his wrist—a final test—he felt the sting and saw
blood come red from the wound. Surely ghosts did not feel such pain,
or bleed. So he was not a ghost, but lived—and if he could not
understand how that should be, then it was surely the Maker's doing:
there existed a reason he survived.
A duty, he decided, albeit somewhat reluctantly. The Maker has kept
me alive so that I might bring word to the People. Or, at least,
granted me the chance to bring them word of salvation. So the rest is
up to me and them. It seemed a vast and terrible duty, and likely
impossible of achieving. But had he not come to this place in search
of answers? And they were given him—so should he now renege
that duty?
He could not: that should be a betrayal of the Maker and himself and
all the People.
So he wrapped himself against the awful cold and made obeisance, and
then began the impossible climb down.
23—Landfall
Had the exiles not been confined to the hold as the
Pride of the
Lord approached Salvation, they would have seen a coastline of
humped yellow dunes sweeping away to north and south, the sand
breaking against pine-clad ridges. Below decks, however, they could
only wonder as the schooner heeled, Captain Bennan aligning her bows
on the opening of Deliverance Bay, knowing they should soon
disembark, delivered to their final destination. They would have seen
the headlands that embraced the cove, affording the bay calm
anchorage, and the ominous bulk of Grostheim's wooden walls beside
the mouth of the Restitution River. But all they knew was that the
motion of the ship altered, and that above decks the sailors shouted
cheerfully, happy to at last find safe landing. It was no easy thing
to wait confined in semi-darkness as their future loomed unseen, the
place of their banishment no longer a distant prospect but now
immediate, waiting invisible as they listened and wondered.
Peering up through the hatch, Arcole saw sails furled, and felt the
schooner slow, drifting of her own impetus awhile. Then there were
shouts and lines were tossed to unseen boats, the
Pride of the
Lord taken in tow until finally she lurched, her timbers groaning
as they struck what he guessed must be a dock.
More noise then, and activity, as the ship was moored and the
gangplank run out. The
Pride of the Lord sighed and creaked,
settling as if thankful her journey was done; and all the exiles
could do was wait still.
Arcole smiled at Davyd and Flysse, essaying a confidence he did not
entirely feel. "So, our future beckons, eh? It shall feel odd to
tread dry land again."
Neither answered him, but smiled nervously, their eyes shifting from
him to the hatch above. At last that hatch was thrown back and they
were summoned to the deck, Militiamen shouting that they form orderly
there.
The sun was bright after the gloom of the hold, and the wind that
blew a welcome refreshment. Arcole looked about, seeing a gentle
landscape: woods bosky in the distance, a wide river that ran all
silvery inland, and, beside it, Grostheim. He had not known what to
expect of this wilderness settlement—not a town such as graced
the Levan, but surely not this fortress. It was a construction of
wood, high walls daubed with hex signs and topped with watchtowers,
the mouths of cannon there, and the glint of sunlight on bayonets
where soldiers patrolled the ramparts. Whatever buildings
accommodated the inhabitants were hidden behind the walls, those
broken by heavy gates from which a timbered road ran down to the
dock. There, he saw the red coats of the regular Militia mingling
with the blue of Var's marines, a line of roughly clad men, each one
wearing the brand of exile on his cheek, trudging back toward the
fort. It was hard to think of that place as a town. He wondered why
such fortification was necessary, if Salvation was indeed the empty
land of popular supposition, but perhaps it was simply the Evanderars
way.
On the dockside he saw Tomas Var and Captain Bennan conversing with
two strangers. One wore the scarlet tunic of the Militia, its
epaulets and braid announcing him a major, and Arcole guessed him to
be the garrison commander. The other—presumably the
governor—occupied a sedan chair, attended by four uniformed
servants. As Arcole watched, all four glanced toward the schooner and
he saw Var gesture, but what they said he could not hear, nor
interpret their expressions.
Then Var returned on board to order the newcome exiles disembark. He
met Arcole's eye but said nothing, only took his place at the head of
the column alongside the red-coated officer and strode briskly toward
the gates.
It was, indeed, odd to tread dry land again. It was immobile under
Arcole's feet, and for a moment he staggered, become more accustomed
to the constant shift of the deck. He felt Flysse clutch his arm and
took her elbow, Davyd on her other side as they went unsteadily
toward their fate.
Past the gates he saw walkways spanning the upper levels of the
walls, connecting the watchtowers, and all around cannon and swivel
guns as if Grostheim prepared for war or siege. Then there were
buildings—all wood, the only stone used in construction of
chimneys. He supposed timber must be more plentiful here, and thought
this settlement a strange place, quite unlike any town he had seen.
It was impossible to tell which structures were commercial and which
domestic, for they all had the same rough-hewn uniformity, as if
Grostheim were all one enormous barracks.
He turned his attention to the folk they passed. Those men indentured
were easy to identify: all wore the brand upon their cheeks. Those
who did not, nor were dressed in uniform, he assumed to be officials
of the Autarchy or such adventurers as looked to make their fortunes
colonizing this new world. The few women he saw appeared to fall into
two distinct categories: there were some better dressed, who looked
on the procession with a mixture of curiosity and distaste; others
were poorer clad and watched incuriously, or with expressions of
pity. He guessed that those were marked upon their arms, like Flysse.
He thought he had much to learn of this place.
They reached a square flanked on one side by a church—that
edifice recognizable—the pastor studying them dispassionately,
and were herded by, into a street that ended at a large building with
the look of a warehouse or storage barn. Hex signs were painted
across its frontage. At the head of the column, the major flung up an
arm, halting them as he climbed the three steps up to the building's
porch.
"I am Major Alyx Spelt," he announced. Arcole wondered why
the officers of the Autarchy found it always necessary to declare
their names. "I command the God's Militia in Grostheim, and for
now you are in my care. This"—he gestured at the building
behind him—"will be your home awhile. In time you will be
assigned your owners, but until then you remain here. You will be fed
and watered; there are blankets inside."
He proceeded to outline conditions of behavior. Arcole listened with
half an ear, studying the man.
Spelt was in his middle years, gray already streaking his temples.
His face was deeply tanned and deeper lined, gray eyes peering from
beneath craggy brows. He looked, Arcole thought, to be carved from
the same timber as Grostheim itself, weathered and harsh. He wore a
saber and a brace of pistols, and all the while he spoke, his fingers
drummed against the silver-chased butts. Arcole noticed that his
fingers were stained dark with tobacco, the nails chewed down and
ragged. He formed the impression that this Major Alyx Spelt hid
tension behind a screen of discipline.
When the man was done speaking, two soldiers swung the doors open.
24—Indenture
Like cattle herded to a byre, the newcomers were marched inside. It
was not unlike that warehouse that had been their last resting place
in Evander, as if they were not human folk but only living cargo to
be stored until dispensed. The floor was hard-packed earth, its only
covering the blankets strewn carelessly about. Along two walls there
were windows cut, glassless and set high, allowing just enough light
the occupants might see one another. At the farther end stood a
wooden partition separating the main area from what were, by the sour
odor, open latrines. Two water butts flanked the doors, beside them
stacks of earthenware platters and crude-fashioned mugs, none too
clean.
Arcole led Flysse and Davyd to a place close by the doors. By dint of
the reputation earned aboard the
Pride of the Lord, none
argued, and they gathered blankets for their beds. Arcole wondered
how cold the night might be, and how long they would remain before
they were—What had Spelt said?—"assigned your
owners"? He hoped Var's promised intercession would favorably
influence the governor. All well, he might find some comfortable
position, learn about this place, and then … No, best not allow his
hopes too free a rein. That should be too much akin to assuming a
round of petanoye won on the first deal; wiser to be patient, learn
all he might, and then decide how to play the hand.
Tomas Var accepted the glass the servant proffered, waiting in
dutiful silence as the governor ostentatiously tamped his pipe. They
sat in what Wyme described as his "sanctum"—for sake
of privacy, Var assumed. Captain Bennan waited in an outer room,
entertained by the governor's lady, Celinda, and Major, Spelt
concluded his duties in the town. Wyme had expressed a desire to hear
a summary of Var's report before they ate, so now Var sat in an
overstuffed chair facing a massive desk, both items—like every
other piece of furniture in the mansion—imported from Evander.
He could not help but wonder at the cost of shipment, and think that
it should surely have been easier to obtain pieces made locally. But
that was not, he thought, Wyme's style.
He had met Andru Wyme only once before, and not much liked the man
then, nor, as yet, found reason to change his mind. He supposed he
was at fault in that, for Wyme was well regarded by the Autarchy. His
appointment here was evidence of that, for only the most trusted of
the Autarchy's officers were granted such position, effectively
rulers of this western continent—but still he could not help
thinking the man pompous. He thought now that Wyme made him wait
deliberately, looking to emphasize his elevation over a mere captain
of marines. And the way he dressed his servants—all brocaded
waistcoats and silver-buckled shoes that seemed an odd contrast to
the brands upon their cheeks—seemed to Var an affectation.
While Wyme might love his duty, Var thought, he loved his comfort
more. He smiled as an errant thought crossed his mind—Arcole
Blayke would feel quite at home here.
"Something amuses you?"
Wyme touched a lucifer to his pipe and inhaled deeply as Var said, "I
thought of an exile, a most remarkable man." He gestured at the
room. "One I suspect is more accustomed to such quarters than
the hold of a transport ship. I'd discuss him with you, by your
leave."
"Later." Wyme shook the lucifer, the smell of sulphur a
moment pungent, and tossed the spent match away. The waiting servant
stooped to retrieve the stick. "First, your report."
Var nodded obediently: Arcole Blayke must, inevitably, play a large
part in that.
When he was done speaking, Wyme grunted, thick brows arching over
heavy-lidded eyes. "He impressed you, eh?" His tone was
noncommittal.
"He saved the ship," Var said. "Were it not for his
wits and courage, why, I believe the serpent must have sunk us.
Surely far more lives would have been lost."
Wyme motioned for the servant to fill their glasses before he spoke
again. "And yet he killed a man and damaged two others—all
property of the Autarchy. That cannot be forgotten."
"He fought in defense of others," Var replied carefully,
"who are also property of the Autarchy. And he was punished for
that."
"Twelve lashes?" Wyme turned his glass between thick
fingers, savoring the bouquet. "Hardly fitting for what he did."
"I deemed it adequate. I felt he acted honorably."
"Honorably?" Wyme's brows rose high at that, and he
chuckled scornfully. "My dear Var, the man's an
exile. Do
you suggest these people possess notions of honor now?"
His tone, his expression, denied such a notion was acceptable. Not
taking his eyes from the governor's face, Var watched the servant.
The man's features remained immobile, his ears deaf to the insult.
"I'd say Blayke does. Certainly he's no common criminal. I
understand that in the Levan he was regarded as a gentleman, even
moved in aristocratic circles."
"In the Levan, perhaps." Wyme's hand described a dismissive
arc. "But this is Salvation, and this fellow—Blayke, you
name him?—comes here with the brand on his face like any other.
Ergo, he
is a criminal."
"Even so." Var hesitated, torn between fulfilling his
promise to Arcole and fear of angering Wyme by pressing too hard.
"That he saved the ship must count in his favor, no?"
"Perhaps," Wyme allowed. "But it would not do to give
these people airs. God knows, they're the sweepings of humanity."
He snorted disdainfully, oblivious of the branded man standing at his
elbow. "You say he's some gentlemanly qualities?"
Var said, "Indeed, he has."
"Then I'll consider him for a manservant." Wyme raised his
glass. "What think you of this wine?"
"Excellent." Var accepted the change of subject: he had
fulfilled his promise and could do no more. "The vineyards
flourish?"
"Largely." Wyme scowled, thick lips pursing. "We'll
speak of them and other matters at dinner. Now, however, do you
apprise me of events at home?"
Var wondered what occasioned the shadow he saw darken the governor's
fleshy face. He began to speak of Evander and its subject lands, and
by the time he was done, a gong belled, announcing the evening meal.
The governor's dining room was opulent, graced with crystal
chandeliers and lace curtains, silverware on the long table and
plates of fine imported china. Servants waited attentive behind each
chair. Var found himself seated beside Celinda; Alyx Spelt and
Captain Bennan faced him across the damask cloth, and Wyme took the
head.
Their conversation was at first a disappointment to the marine. There
was, he sensed, a topic that went undiscussed as they exchanged news,
Celinda demanding he and Bennan tell her of Evander's latest fashions
and what gossip circulated—both subjects of little interest to
the two visitors. Spelt and Wyme made contribution, but all the while
Var remembered the expression on the governor's face and wondered
when it should be explained.
His curiosity remained unsatisfied until Celinda withdrew, leaving
the men to their pipes and the port shipped over on the
Pride of
the Lord. The table was cleared of all but the decanter and the
servants were dismissed before Wyme spoke, and even then softly, as
if he feared eavesdroppers.
"We've alarming news," he declared. "It would seem we
are not the only inhabitants of Salvation."
Across the table Bennan gulped in surprise, choking on port. Var
gasped, setting down his pipe. "But I thought … " He
gathered his wits, scattered by this unexpected announcement. "It's
surely common knowledge none others lay claim to this land."
"That's surely the common
belief." Spelt's voice was
dry, and even though he spoke no louder than Wyme, it seemed his
words rattled loud as musket fire. "But it would appear
incorrect. We've evidence of others."
"Bloody evidence," Wyme said. "We share this land with
savages."
Like cattle herded to market, the exiles were driven through the
streets to an open enclosure, where they were penned under the
watchful gaze of Militiamen. The sun was hot and there was no shade.
Folk gathered along the fence, studying the newcomers with
calculating eyes, and to one side a pavilion afforded shadow to those
Arcole assumed to be the aristocracy of Salvation. He saw Tomas Var
there, with the major and the man he thought must be the governor;
several others, as many women as men. All save the officers, whose
uniforms were unchanging, were dressed in outmoded fashion. He
wondered if Var had made good his promise, and what good it might do
him. At his side, Davyd looked nervously about; Flysse fidgeted with
her shawl, her eyes downcast. Almost, Arcole took her hand, for she
looked so forlorn.
For those outside the fence—the free folk—this seemed a
festive occasion. Their voices were loud as they discussed the likely
merits of the exiles. Arcole was reminded of horse auctions he had
attended, save now he was in the position of the beast. He liked the
feeling not at all. Then the governor raised a hand and silence fell.
He spoke a moment with Spelt, and the major barked an order that
brought soldiers forward, urging the exiles to a circumnavigation of
the pen. Like shuffling animals they were paraded before the
onlookers: Arcole must curb his resentment, struggling to assume a
docile expression.
As he passed the pavilion he saw Var lean toward the governor and the
man nod, waving an indolent hand in his direction. A Militiaman
tapped his shoulder, indicating he quit the circle. He heard Davyd's
sudden intake of breath and the small cry Flysse gave. He found it
difficult to meet their eyes as he followed the soldier to the side
of the pen.
"You're in luck," the Militiaman murmured. "Governor's
chosen you, an' that's an easy life."
Arcole said nothing in reply, only stood silent as the fates of his
fellow exiles were decided.
It appeared the governor and his companions took first pick of the
newcomers, for as the circle continued its round, soldiers removed
several more to stand with Arcole. He was surprised to find himself
so pleased that Flysse was selected, and when she came to his side he
could not help returning her smile. Neither when Davyd joined them:
he wondered if destiny kept them together.
Then it was the turn of Salvation's lesser citizens, who must bid for
their servants.
Gradually the circle thinned, until finally all were accounted for
and the ritual of indenture ended. The newcome exiles followed their
masters into the streets. Arcole wondered if the governor had
selected Flysse and Davyd too.
But then a tall, thin man emerged from the pavilion to beckon Davyd
away.
The boy hesitated, taking Flysse and Arcole both by the hand. "I'll
see you again," he said.
It was as much a question as a statement, and Arcole nodded, forcing
a smile. "No doubt. This seems not so large a place, eh?"
Flysse said, "Take care, Davyd," in a tremulous voice.
"Well, lad?" The thin man beckoned again, though he seemed
not overly impatient. "Do you say your farewells and follow me."
"Go on," Arcole urged. "Best not anger your new …
employer." He could not bring himself to say "owner."
Davyd nodded and swallowed, then released their hands and turned
toward the thin man, who said, "I am Rupyrt Gahame. You will
address me as 'Master' or 'Sieur Gahame.' Your name?"
"Davyd Furth," came the answer, " 'sieur Gahame."
Gahame nodded as if satisfied, and walked away. He did not look back,
as if he assumed Davyd must follow like, Arcole thought, a trained
hound. The boy cast a last, lingering glance back, then squared his
shoulders and trotted after the man. Arcole watched him go, quite
unaware that Flysse now held his hand. It seemed curiously natural
that she should.
He turned to survey the pavilion. The governor still sat in
conversation with Spelt and Var, a red-haired woman in a gown
fashionable some years past at his side. It was she waved a man
forward, clearly issuing instructions, for the fellow bowed and came
immediately to the pen.
His cheek marked him as indentured, his outfit as a servant of some
kind. Over a shirt of coarse cotton he wore a garish red waistcoat,
all brocade and frogging; his breeches ended at the calf, fastened
over white stockings that descended to pewter-buckled shoes: Arcole
surveyed the uniform with distaste.
"You're to come with me." He halted before Arcole and
Flysse. "I'm Nathanial. How're you called?"
Arcole said, "I am Arcole Blayke, and this is Mistress Flysse
Cobal."
Nathanial chuckled. "Not here you're not, my friend. You're
plain Arcole and she's plain Flysse. For all she's not"—he
studied Flysse with a lewd eye—"what you call plain."
He saw Arcole's face darken and his smile disappeared. "No
offense, friend Arcole—if she's with you, so be it. But folk
like us don't own second names. Just those the masters allow us. Now,
come on, before madame sees you dawdling. No good to upsetting her
your first day."
He led the way out of the enclosure and they fell into step beside
him, down streets lined with wooden houses, none more than two
stories tall. Grostheim was, Arcole thought, a decidedly rustic
place. "The governor chose us?" he asked.
"He picked you. You come recommended by that marine captain.
Said you saved the ship, he did. Like to hear about that later, I
would." Nathanial glanced speculatively at Arcole, then turned
to wink at Flysse. "Flysse here, madame took a fancy to. Reckons
she's got the makings of a maid, she does."
So Var had kept his promise: Arcole decided the man was honorable,
for all he was an Evanderan. "What am I to be?" he asked.
Nathanial shrugged. "I don't rightly know yet. Most likely a
manservant, unless Wyme sets you to working the stables or some
such."
"Wyme?" Arcole said.
"Governor Andru Wyme," Nathanial replied. "By God's
grace, leader of this colony. That and a little help from his
friends—he's a brother who's some sort of high-ranking officer
in the Autarchy. Still, it's an easier life in his mansion than many
another place. Save you upset him or madame, that is."
"Do you know a man called Rupyrt Gahame?"
Flysse's question surprised Arcole: he was for the moment more
interested in discovering what he might of Wyme and his household.
"He's a trader," Nathanial said. "Got the license to
supply weapons and such to the inland settlers. Why?"
Flysse said, "He took a friend."
"That carrot-topped lad?" Nathanial nodded. "Then he's
lucky. There're worse masters than 'sieur Gahame."
Arcole frowned. Flysse's concern prompted a small pang of guilt that
he had not thought more of the boy. "Gahame's an enterprise
here?"
"Got a warehouse and an office in Grostheim," Nathanial
agreed, "but he travels a good deal inland."
Arcole nodded, hiding his disappointment. It occurred to him that if
Gahame took his indentured servants with him when he traveled inland,
there might well be opportunity to escape—it might well have
served him better had Gahame selected him rather than Davyd. "What
lies inland?" he asked.
"Farms and vineyards, some mills. Then the wilderness."
"And what's there?" Arcole made the question deliberately
casual.
"What's there?" Nathanial scratched a mop of dark brown
hair. "I'd not rightly know. Forest, mostly, so I hear; wild
beasts, folks' claim. I've never seen it, nor want to. Only been past
the walls once."
Arcole glanced up. The walls were clearly visible above the
buildings, and on them the red coats of the God's Militia. They
seemed suddenly the walls of a prison. "You don't go beyond the
walls?" he asked.
"What for?" Nathanial favored him with a puzzled look. "I'd
not want to work on a farm nor tend the grapes. No, not me. Born in
Avanache, I was, and no wish to see the countryside."
"How long have you been here?"
"Close on eight years."
"And only once stepped past the walls?" Arcole was
horrified.
"Not counting the jaunt to the dock, yes." Nathanial nodded
cheerfully. "I'm happy enough here; I know when I'm well off.
You'll learn that in time, my friend. You'll learn to make the best
of it."
Arcole thought not; at least, not in the way Nathanial meant. The
fellow appeared to have accepted indenture without thought of
rebellion. He would not—by God, he would not! He smiled grimly
and turned to Nathanial again.
"I saw the hexes on the walls. Are they to keep us in?"
"No point to that," Nathanial said. "No one escapes."
"None try?"
"No point," came the answer again. "There's nowhere to
go, save the wilderness. And only a crazy man'd go there. Get eaten
by the wild animals, likely, or starve. There've been a few, but
Major Spelt and his redcoats brought them back and they were flogged,
then set to hard labor."
"Then why hex the walls?" Arcole demanded.
"Habit, I suppose." Nathanial shrugged. "When they
built Grostheim, they didn't know Salvation was empty, so they put
the magic marks up there in case. But now, why, there's not even an
Inquisitor here to renew the hexes. They've never been tested. For
all I know, they don't even work."
"How do you know the wilderness is empty?" Arcole asked.
"Stands to reason, no?" said Nathanial. "They've been
cutting back the forest since Grost's time, and there's been no sign
of anyone else. The farmers and the wine growers never seen anyone;
there's hunters go after game back in there, and they've never seen
anyone. No, there's nothing out there save trees and wild beasts."
"No one explores?"
Arcole feared he perhaps plied Nathanial with too many questions,
that the man should become suspicious, but he appeared not to notice,
or not to mind. Perhaps, Arcole thought, he assumed the newcomers
afraid and looked to comfort them, or such questions were usual from
those just arrived.
"What for?" Nathanial gave him back. "The land already
cleared provides us with all we need, so there's no reason..
Leastways, not until more settlers come out." He chuckled with
careless cynicism and touched the brand on his cheek. "Or
Evander sends more of us folk to clear the forests."
Arcole laughed in response, unamused but seeking to encourage
Nathanial. "And the farms and such?" he asked. "They
employ indentured folk?"
"Who else'd do the work?" Nathanial favored Arcole with a
pitying glance. "Like I say—you've landed easy."
"Don't they ever attempt escape?" Arcole wondered.
Nathanial laughed again. "Don't you listen, friend?
There's
nowhere to go. God, even if a man did flee—even if the
redcoats, didn't catch him, and he got away—there's nothing but
God-knows-how-many leagues of wilderness beyond the farms. And then
there're Wyme's hexes."
Sharp, Arcole said, "Wyme's hexes?"
"Aye, Wyme's hexes," Nathanial confirmed. "The
governor's got the hexing gift. Not like an Inquisitor, mind you, but
enough he can spell a man, or"—with a sidelong glance at
Flysse—"a woman. Any of us go past the walls, the governor
sets a hex on them. Then the major can hunt them down real easy."
Arcole felt Flysse's hand clench tight on his, and blessed her for
asking the question that sprang to his lips: "Shall Davyd be
hexed, then?"
"Does 'sieur Gahame choose to take him out, yes," Nathanial
answered, mistaking her tone for selfish fear. "But you needn't
worry—it's only them who go beyond the walls that Wyme hexes.
It tires him, I suppose."
This knowledge Arcole filed away for future reference: that Davyd
might be hexed could affect his inchoate plans. He mulled the notion,
falling silent as they continued through the streets.
Was Nathanial aware of his sudden quiet, the man gave no sign, but
kept on talking, speaking of life in Grostheim and the benefits of
indenture to Wyme's service as if he would deliver all the
information at his disposal in the single lengthy address. There
were, he explained, those amongst the governor's servants of higher
rank than others, to whom the lesser servants must submit—to
wit, the majordomo Benjamyn, the housekeeper Chryselle, the cook
Dido, and the head groom Fredrik. He named assorted others, but
Arcole paid scant attention: Nathanial's litany forced home the
knowledge that he was become such a creature as he had always taken
for granted—a servant, faceless. He rubbed at the scar
decorating his cheek, anger welling anew so that he must struggle to
maintain a bland expression, bite back the retort that he was no
man's menial. Here he was exactly that, and did he claim difference
he must suffer for his presumption. It sat ill, and in silence he
swore that he would accept the indignity no longer than he must.
Then Nathanial halted before a chest-high fence trailed with roses;
past the barrier lay lawns and flowerbeds, and a wide drive leading
to a portico extending from the frontage of a sizable house. It was
constructed in the style of an Evanderan country mansion, but all of
wood, so that it looked to Arcole like a grandiose hunting lodge, a
folly such as a rich man might order built in the forests.
Nathanial said, "The governor's mansion." And when Arcole
moved toward the open gates, "No, no," hastily. "We're
not allowed the front entrance. There's a servants' gate out back."
It seemed to Arcole strange to enter a house from the rear, but he
steeled himself and followed Nathanial around the fence to a humbler
gate that opened into a yard. Wash was hung there to dry, and three
women, their rolled sleeves exposing the brands on their arms,
labored over steaming tubs. They looked up as Nathanial led Arcole
and Flysse across the yard, but did not speak or halt their work.
Nathanial brought the newcomers to a servants' hall, where more
indentured folk busied themselves with the sundry tasks that fall to
menials. Arcole had never before set foot in this part of a house;
never before paused to wonder at a servant's lot. He gazed about,
noticing that the men all wore outfits similar to his guide's, and
that the women were dressed in uniform dirndls, the skirts white
beneath green bodices.
At the farther end of the hall a white-haired man rose to his feet,
an expression of inquiry on his lined face. He wore waistcoat and
breeches like the others, but his shirt was of finer material,
fastened at the neck with a silk foulard, and his shoes were buckled
with polished silver.
"Benjamyn," Nathanial said, head bobbing, "these are
the two the master's chosen. Flysse and Arcole, they're called."
Benjamyn nodded and waved Nathanial away. He looked to Arcole to be
in his latter years, but his eyes were bright as they studied the
newcomers, and he held himself rigidly erect. The brand on his cheek
was so ancient it was barely visible. He took his time examining
them, all the while making a little clucking sound, as if he ticked
off mental points.
Finally he spoke: "I am Benjamyn, majordomo of this household.
Nathanial has explained arrangements here?"
Arcole nodded. "Yes, he has." Then he frowned as he saw
Flysse drop a curtsy. Old habits, he supposed, died hard; likely hard
as the acquiring of new.
"Then you understand that after the master and his lady,"
Benjamyn continued, "you answer to me. Be always obedient,
perform your duties, and you shall find this a comfortable home. What
are your skills?"
Arcole hesitated. He had anticipated conversation with Wyme, the
chance to outline his various abilities in a manner that would
convince the governor he be placed in some suitable position—he
was unsure how to answer this servant. He was not accustomed to
speaking with servants beyond the issuing of requests that were, in
reality, orders. He was grateful Flysse spoke up.
"I was a serving girl in a tavern," she said. "Before
that I worked as a lady's maid, and on my parents' farm."
Benjamyn nodded, tongue clicking vigorously. "Then perhaps
you've the makings of a maid," he said. "But I think we'll
start you in the kitchens, does Dido agree."
Bright black eyes turned to Arcole, brows raised questioningly. "And
you, Arcole?"
"I … " Arcole. shrugged helplessly: of a sudden his
catalogue of accomplishments seemed of poor advantage. "I am
accounted a fair cardsman; I play the harpsichord and the spinet; I
can sketch and paint; I box quite well; and I can use a sword or
pistol."
Arcole heard someone chuckle. Amongst the wrinkles furrowing
Benjamyn's forehead, two or three grew deeper. It was impossible to
tell whether he smiled or frowned. "All very well," he
said, "were you a gentleman. But what
useful talents have
you?"
Almost, Arcole said that he
was a gentleman, but he bit back
the claim—it was meaningless now, and he thought it could serve
only to damage him in this strange new situation. Instead, he said,
"I can ride. In the Levan I was considered a good horseman."
Benjamyn's tongue clicked louder. "Then I think," he said
slowly, "that you shall begin your service in the stables.
Nathanial, do you take him to Fredrik. Flysse, follow me."
He turned away. Flysse looked to Arcole with something akin to sorrow
in her eyes. Arcole stood dumbstruck. A stableman? He was to be a
stableman? He moved after Benjamyn, a protest forming—and was
halted by Nathanial's hand on his arm.
"Don't argue," whispered the brown-haired man. "Else
old Benjamyn'll make your life truly miserable."
Arcole could think of few things more miserable than working in the
stables, but heeded the warning. Surely in time he must be elevated
to some more suitable position, and it would not do to rebel so
early. He told himself that access to riding animals might well prove
useful and, smarting beneath an expression of assumed docility, he
allowed Nathanial to lead him from the hall.
They crossed the yard to another, redolent of the animals penned in
the stables that stood against one wall. Two men in leather
waistcoats sat on a bench polishing tackle; at Nathanial's shout, a
third emerged from the stables.
"Fredrik, this is Arcole. Benjamyn sends him."
Fredrik eyed Arcole much as had the majordomo. He was some years
younger, his face dark as old leather, a small, bow-legged man, his
graying hair drawn back in a tail fastened with a blue bow.
"So." The bowing of his legs gave him a waddling gait.
"You
; know horses, eh?" His accent belonged to
the Levan.
Arcole nodded and said, "I've some skill."
Fredrik cocked his head. "You're Levanite?"
"I am," said Arcole, thinking to have found a friend.
The head groom dashed his hopes. "Don't look for favors on that
account, eh? The Levan counts for naught here. We're all exiles, eh?"
He tapped his scarred cheek in emphasis. "Show me your hands."
Arcole offered his palms for examination. Fredrik studied them and
chuckled. "Ever groomed a horse?"
Arcole answered with a nod.
"Ever cleaned your own tack?"
Arcole shook his head.
Fredrik said, "You'll learn," and turned to the watching
grooms. "Wyllem, do you see him kitted out, then put him to
work."
Wyllem uncoiled a lanky frame from the bench and beckoned Arcole. "So
what were you," he asked, "before you got sent here?"
Arcole said, "A gentleman."
"Well, you're no gentleman here, my friend," Wyllem
chuckled. "What'd you do to earn your brand?"
"I killed a man in a duel," Arcole replied.
Wyllem appeared unimpressed. "I stole a pig," he said, and
chuckled. "Then I killed it and ate it."
He seemed not much put out that his theft had delivered him to
Salvation. Arcole wondered if all exiles accepted their fate so
readily. He felt stunned, events moved with a numbing swiftness after
the slow days aboard the schooner, and he followed Wyllem in silence
as the groom brought him to an outhouse.
"We sleep in here." He pushed the door open, revealing a
bare, dirt-floored shed containing four bunks, stabbing a finger at a
section at the farther end that was walled off. "Those are
Fredrik's quarters. Now, I reckon Bertran's gear'll fit you."
From a chest beside one bunk he produced breeches and a waistcoat the
like of his own. Arcole asked, "What happened to Bertran?"
"He died," said Wyllem, grinning at Arcole's expression.
"Of old age, be you afeared of fever."
Arcole hoped the clothing had been washed. At least he was allowed to
keep his own shirt and boots; at least he need not wear the demeaning
uniform of the house servants.
"Right," Wyllem declared when he was done, "now let's
get to work."
They returned to the bench, where Wyllem introduced his fellow
stableman, a taciturn Evanderan named Gylbert, whose only greeting
was a grunt, after which he said nothing more.
As he scrubbed leather and polished harness, Arcole learnt that Wyme
owned a stable of four horses and an equipage that was seldom used
save when occasion demanded the ceremony of a carriage, or the
governor made a trip inland.
"Then," Wyllem explained, "Fredrik handles the reins
and we all get dressed up to play coachmen."
"He's no riding animals?" Arcole inquired.
"What for?" Wyllem shook his head, frowning, then chuckled.
"Of course, you wouldn't know—the master's crippled, can't
barely use his legs. He hobbles about on crutches in the house, and
he's a chair and four big fellows to carry it when he goes about the
town. Mistress, she's got another. Only sedan chairs in Grostheim,
they are, shipped in from Evander."
He seemed proud of that monopoly, which seemed to Arcole very
strange. It was as though the stableman felt himself somehow elevated
by his master's prominence, and Arcole wondered if all servants felt
the same reflected glory. The enormity of his situation sank in,
perhaps for the first time: untold leagues separated him from his
home, and he entered a world new in more than only geographic terms.
He came close then to cursing Dom for that act supposed kind that had
saved him from execution only to bring him here. But here he was, and
now must make the best of it, even be he a stranger in a strange new
world. He had, he recognized, much to learn—that what lessons
he had accrued from contact with Flysse and Davyd were only a
beginning.
"And does he hex you … us … when he travels abroad?" he
asked.
"Nathanial told you about the master's gift, eh?" Wyllem
smiled. "No, not us. Likely because he never goes past the walls
without a squadron of Major Spelt's Militiamen along. No point to
using his hex power when a musket ball can stop you from running, eh?
Anyway, there's nowhere to go. Didn't Nathanial tell you that?"
"Yes," Arcole replied, "he did. He said there's only
empty wilderness out there."
"Well then," said Wyllem, "there you are."
"Yes." Arcole sighed. "Here I am."
"You sleep here." Gahame indicated a corner of the
warehouse, screened by crates, a mattress, and blankets on the floor.
"There's a pump in the yard for washing, and you'll eat with the
others. Those are your only clothes?"
"Yes, 'sieur Gahame." Davyd nodded, surveying his quarters.
He hoped there were no rats; at least there was a window looking onto
the yard outside.
"Well, we'll have to see what we can find you," Gahame
said. "I'll not have my indentured folk in stinking rags."
Davyd did not think his clothes stank, nor were they unduly ragged,
but he said dutifully, "No, 'sieur Gahame."
"As to your duties." Gahame paused. "Why were you
exiled?"
Davyd hesitated. "I was caught trying to steal, 'sieur Gahame
… "
The thin man nodded thoughtfully. "Best not try such tricks with
me, eh?" His tone was mild, but Davyd heard the threat beneath
and shook his head vigorously.
"Oh, no, 'sieur Gahame, I'd not do that. It was only that I was
starving."
"Could you not find honest work?"
Gahame eyed him speculatively and Davyd shook his head, dissembling.
"Work's hard to find in Bantar, 'sieur. Leastways when you're
like me, and an orphan." He assumed what he hoped was a suitably
crestfallen expression and added an element of truth, "I
might've begged, but I didn't like to do that."
"A point in your favor," Gahame said. "But tell me:
were you orphaned, why were you not placed in a workhouse?"
"I don't know, 'sieur," Davyd said, which was more or less
the truth. "But I wasn't, and I had no money, and, well … "
He shrugged expressively.
"To steal is to sin," Gahame declared. "Are you a
believer, Davyd?"
Davyd nodded enthusiastically, omitting to say just what he believed
in.
"Then," said Gahame, "you will be pleased to know that
I allow my servants to attend church. In fact, I insist on it."
"Oh," said Davyd, "good. I shall enjoy that, 'sieur
Gahame."
Which was an absolute lie, for the idea filled him with renewed
terror that he found difficult to conceal. In Bantar he had avoided
churches as he avoided the Inquisitors and the Militia, for fear the
priests owned the ability to sniff out his dreaming. Perhaps it was
different here, but still the notion filled him with dread. It was a
dilemma—he'd gain this man's goodwill, and could hardly refuse
if Gahame insisted he attend services; did he protest, then it might
be Gahame would suspect him and he be found out anyway. He wished
Arcole were present to counsel him, but Arcole was gone and he must
rely on his own wits.
"What's amiss?" he heard Gahame ask. "You're gone all
pale, lad."
Davyd forced his mouth to parody a weak smile and mumbled, "You're
too kind, 'sieur. I'd not expected such kindness."
"I do no more than any God-fearing man," Gahame said,
though he appeared pleased with Davyd's response. "Now, tell me,
have you any especial skills that might be useful in my enterprise?"
Not save you need locks picked, Davyd thought, or purses cut, but he
shook his head and said, "I don't think so, 'sieur. What is the
nature of your enterprise?"
"Of course, you'd not know." Gahame smiled, a benefactor
proud of his success. "I've the governor's license to supply the
folk of Salvation with arms, also general hardware. Anyone in all
this land requiring a musket, ball, or powder, also tools—ax
heads, plowshares, and the like—must come to me. Or I go to
them."
"You travel beyond Grostheim's walls?" That seemed to Davyd
a somewhat unpleasant notion: he was familiar with cities, not the
countryside, which struck him as a vaguely dangerous place. He had
sooner remain safe behind the walls of this small city, even must he
risk priestly discovery. It was an afterthought to add, "Master."
The trader seemed not to notice the lapse, though he was aware of
Davyd's discomfort and chuckled encouragingly.
"There's no danger in Salvation," he said confidently.
"Save the odd wild beast come awandering out of the forest, and
those we can easily shoot. No, lad, have no fear on that account—my
weapons are used for hunting only. Besides, I'd not take you along
yet. Until you're better seasoned, I'll find you work about these
premises; you'll not be idle, I promise you."
Dutifully, Davyd nodded.
"Well, then," Gahame said, "follow me and I'll
introduce you to your fellows." He strode away, Davyd at his
heels.
Davyd thought this Rupyrt Gahame seemed a decent enough master. Save
for this disturbing business of the church, he thought he'd landed on
his feet. He wondered how Flysse and Arcole fared, and when he might
see them again.
Flysse followed Dido, wondering how the woman could be so thin.
Mistress Banlyn had ruled the cookhouse of the Flying Horse, and she
had been, to put it kindly, an ample woman. But Dido, for all she was
undoubted mistress of the mansion's kitchen, was gaunt. She looked to
Flysse as if she hardly ate, her pale skin stretched tight over
prominent bones so that she appeared all hollows and sharp angles
that gave her a forbidding appearance. Her narrow face suggested
asperity, but as yet she had shown Flysse only kindness.
Flysse had felt nervous when Benjamyn brought her to the cook—much
as she had felt when first she approached the patroness of the Hying
Horse—so she had curtsied and stood silent as the majordomo
introduced her. But then he had left and Dido had given warm
greeting, escorting her personally to the room she was to share with
the three other scullions and the five housemaids. It had looked to
Flysse neither worse nor better than her quarters in the tavern, and
the underclothes and dirndl she must wear afforded her no
embarrassment—it seemed to her quite natural that servants
should be uniformed. She thought that Arcole must find it far harder,
for he was quite unaccustomed to that lowly station; she thought that
in this respect she was likely better suited to her newfound station.
It was, after all, not so different from what she had known in
Evander.
She listened obediently as Dido outlined her duties, and told her
something of the mansion's arrangement. She was to heed the cook in
all matters, save when Benjamyn or Chryselle gave direct
instruction—which, Dido explained, was unlikely, Flysse being
at present the lowest of the low and therefore beneath their notice.
She was to bathe regularly—Dido would not tolerate unwashed
kitchen maids—and keep her clothes clean. She was forbidden the
main part of the house, but might move freely in the kitchen and the
yards behind. She was to be modest—there were six footmen and,
now, three stablemen, and they would likely seek her favors, she
being, Dido must admit, a pretty little thing. She was to ignore
their blandishments, and did any invite her to their quarters, she
was to refuse them and report their lewdness to Dido or Benjamyn.
She had asked then, "Does Arcole sleep there, by the stables?"
And Dido had studied her with a shrewd eye and asked in turn, "He's
your sweetheart?"
Which had prompted Flysse to blush furiously and explain to the cook
all that had transpired on board the
Pride of the Lord; except,
that was, for the fact that she now believed herself firmly in love.
Dido had nodded then, as if she understood, and said, "He
appears a remarkable man. A gentleman, you say? Well, my girl, don't
allow your heart to rule your head. It was the attentions of a
gentleman"—she
gave the word offensive connotations—"that got me sent
here."
"Arcole's not like that," Flysse protested.
But Dido ignored her denial. "Men are men," she declared,
"and your Arcole's just another. Nor's he a gentleman any
longer, not here. Here he's just another exile, and whether he's
better or worse than the rest remains to be seen. You'll not seek him
out, d'you understand?"
"Yes." Flysse had nodded, blushing anew at the suggestion,
but quite unable to resist asking, "But shall I see him
sometimes?"
"Like as not," Dido had allowed, "for you'll be
scrubbing pots out in the yard often enough, and we eat together. And
then there's church."
"Church?" Flysse had asked.
"Indeed, church," Dido had replied. "This is a
God-fearing household, and the master allows us to attend the early
morning service each Sunday. You'll see him then. But there'll be no
dawdling or such foolery, you hear me?"
"No," Flysse had promised. And then was struck by another
thoughts "Shall Davyd be there?"
"The lad from the ship?" Dido had ducked her gaunt gray
head in agreement. "Master Gahame's a God-fearing man, so he'll
be attending. Your young friend was lucky to find such a master."
That had pleased Flysse, and Dido's manner had seemed so kindly that
she had ventured to ask if they might meet on other occasions. She
thought it should be pleasant to find Davyd again.
"Other occasions?" Dido had seemed to find the question
hard of understanding. "What other occasions?"
"I wondered … " Flysse had hesitated: the cook's seeming
incomprehension disturbed her. "I wondered if I might not see
him about the town."
"About the town?" Dido had echoed, and then laughed. "God
knows, missy, you won't be going about the town for a long time.
That's a privilege, don't you know? It'll be a few years before you
earn that."
Flysse felt her heart sink. Was this mansion to be all her world for
years to come? Abruptly timid, she said, "But Nathanial … "
"Is a manservant," Dido concluded, "and been with the
master years now. Nathanial's earned the master's trust, so sometimes
he's allowed out, like Benjamyn or me. But you? No, young Flysse, you
won't be setting foot outside until you've earned the privilege. You
just work hard and prove yourself, and then"—she smiled
benignly, as if granting a gift—"why, in a few years' time
perhaps you'll be allowed the odd trip to market or suchlike."
Flysse had swallowed, fighting sudden tears. This apparently kindly
woman obviously saw nothing untoward or odd in such confinement.
Indeed, she clearly considered the promise of a tiny measure of
freedom a prize worthy of the striving. Flysse supposed that was the
cost of exile, of indenture: it seemed a dreadful price. She
endeavored to console herself with the thought that she shared this
mansion prison with Arcole, and somehow—even be it at risk of
punishment—she would contrive to see him, to spend what time
she could with him.
She had wiped away her tears then and put on the dirndl, and followed
Dido to the kitchen and the first day of her new life.
25—Events Unexpected
Autumn gave way to winter and the first snow fell on Grostheim. For
Arcole it was welcome relief from the tedium of indentured life: as
streets of hard-packed dirt were churned to clinging mud, Governor
Wyme gave up his sedan chair in favor of his carriage. No longer was
Arcole condemned to the endless round of stable duties, and if he
must wear a uniform he found entirely ridiculous, at least he wore it
outside the confines of the mansion. With Fredrik and his fellow
grooms, he was required to accompany Wyme or the governor's wife on
journeys about the town. He thought this likely saved his sanity.
The months had passed slowly for Arcole. He had given up immediate
hope of finding himself promoted—he supposed that was the
correct word—to a position within the house where he might
catch Wyme's eye, and instead felt himself condemned to life as a
stablehand. This he accepted with stoic resignation, employing all
his wit and charm to befriend his fellow servants. He had come to
realize a hierarchy existed amongst servants as rigid as the rankings
of society, and he stood at the foot of the ladder. It was a hard
lesson. He consoled himself—and was surprised he should—with
the thought that he still saw Flysse. They met at mealtimes, when all
the servants ate together, and often when she was given some menial
task that brought her outside to the yards. They spoke then, and
often as they might they contrived to sit together in church. Arcole
found her company lifted his spirits, and with her his smile was
genuine. Sometimes they managed a brief word or two with Davyd, but
none too often and never at length. Arcole gathered the boy was
content enough with his master and that his nimble fingers had been
turned to the repairing of tools and weapons, which information he
filed away for future reference. He no longer thought of finding
like-minded folk amongst his fellow exiles, and had given up his
vague dream of fomenting rebellion. The indentured folk seemed to him
inured to their lot, as likely to rise against their oppressors as
sheep against the shepherd. He thought now only of escape, albeit he
could not yet envisage how. Still, did Davyd have access to weapons
… Arcole wished he might find a means to speak at greater length
with the boy.
Then, when snow blanketed the rooftops of Grostheim and the wind came
howling chill out of the north, things changed. It seemed to Arcole
as if he were dealt cards blind, to find on turning them that he held
the Imperator and the Monarch and need only gain the Queen and the
Duchess to obtain a winning hand—unlikely, but not impossible.
First came an influenza epidemic. It struck sudden and savage as the
wind, and the servants of Wyme's household were not spared.
Housemaids and manservants were confined feverish to their beds,
those immune to the disease called upon to work the harder, their
duties often as not doubled. Arcole was glad that Flysse did not
succumb: more that Benjamyn summoned him from the stables.
"You've some social graces, no?" The majordomo sat with
hands cupped around a mug of beef broth, a necklace of protective
garlic bulging his starched shirt. "You understand the niceties
of society?"
"I believe so," Arcole replied. "In the Levan, I moved
in society." That seemed a lifetime away now.
Benjamyn's tongue clicked against his teeth. "You know the
difference between a fish fork and a meat fork, eh?"
Sharp eyes studied Arcole, who said, "Of course."
"There's no 'of course' about it." Benjamyn gestured at a
box of cutlery on the table before him. "Set those out for one."
Curious, Arcole did as he was bade. When he was finished, Benjamyn
clicked his tongue in what might have been approval. "Now
glasses," he ordered.
Arcole set out the glasses, and Benjamyn nodded. "You'll do, I
think."
"For what?" asked Arcole.
Benjamyn said, "The house. We've too many sick and a need of
manservants. Fetch your belongings from the stables, eh? From now on
you'll sleep here."
Arcole suppressed a smile and hurried to the shed he shared with the
other grooms. Freddie grimaced when told of this sudden elevation,
but offered no further comment as Arcole gathered up his meager
possessions and returned to the mansion.
He was kitted out with the waistcoat and shoes of his new position,
which irked him no less than his groom's clothing, and shown his new
quarters. They were more comfortable—surely far warmer and
spacious, the sick having been quarantined in separate rooms. That
night he attended Governor Wyme and his wife; and though it sat ill
to stand silent as they ate, springing to obey whenever summoned to
refill a glass or remove a plate, he told himself this change could
serve only to further his inchoate plans. He was, at least, closer to
Wyme. And later, when master and mistress had eaten and the servants
were allowed to take their dinner, he learned that Flysse, too, rose
through the ranks of the indentured.
"I'm to attend the mistress," she told him. "Lynda
fell sick and I'm to be a chambermaid."
"An honor," Dido advised them, "for all it must leave
me shorthanded."
"I only hope she'll do,"' said Chryselle. "If you let
me down, missy … "
Arcole saw Flysse turn toward the housekeeper, her expression a
mixture of submission and eagerness. He wished she did not look so
servile, so eager to please. Almost, he spoke out on her behalf, but
to his surprise Dido came to her defense.
"She's a good girl, is young Flysse," said the cook, "and
does she work so hard for you as she has for me, then you'll have no
cause for complaint, Chryselle."
The housekeeper said, "Well see, eh? God knows, we've all our
extra share of work with this cursed epidemic."
So it was they both found themselves raised swifter than would
ordinarily have been the case, and Arcole found himself in a position
to turn another card to his advantage.
He attended Wyme in the governor's study. The shutters were closed
against the wind and heavy curtains drawn. A fire blazed in the
hearth and Arcole stood awaiting his master's summons—to pour a
glass of wine, or remove a spent lucifer. Such humble duty would have
chafed the harder had he not been able to read the documents Wyme
perused: it seemed not to have occurred to the man that Arcole could
read and write. Arcole supposed that few, perhaps even none, of his
fellow servants commanded those attributes; nor, he had come to
learn, did indentured servants possess faces. To their masters, they
were merely useful, anonymous creatures whose presence was taken for
granted. He now felt a pang of guilt that he had once treated
servants in like manner. But never would again, he promised himself
as he let his eyes slant down to read the papers spread across Wyme's
desk.
They dealt mostly with routine affairs—tables of figures
concerning crops and vineyards, production reports, requests from
inland farms for more indentured hands—but set to one side was
a map of the known territory. Grostheim was marked, and the location
of the inland holdings, the rivers that boundaried the cleared land,
the wilderness beyond. Arcole determined that he must obtain a copy,
did the opportunity arise. He thought that Wyme would not miss a page
or two of paper, and could he only find the chance and the time to
transcribe the map, he should own a useful tool.
Once, his musings were interrupted by the arrival of Major Spelt and
a young lieutenant, whose name Benjaymn announced as Rogyr Stantin.
The lieutenant looked to have ridden hard, and on his face Arcole saw
writ alarm. Spelt appeared grim.
"There's ill news," he said, and favored Arcole with a
scowl.
Wyme took the hint and said, "Arcole, do you bring us two
glasses and then leave us."
Arcole brought the glasses, and thought to add a humidor. He bowed as
Wyme waved a dismissive hand, and retreated to the kitchen. Bells
hung there, to summon servants, each one marked with the location of
a room. Arcole waited, wondering what ill news the Militiamen
brought. He supposed it was most likely further word of the epidemic,
or a request for labor to clear blocked roads. But were that the
case, he mused, then why had Spelt indicated he be dismissed? He
wondered what the major and the lieutenant had to say that need be
kept from servants' ears. When the bell rang, he returned to the
study.
Spelt and Stantin were gone, and Wyme sat grave-faced, a glass
forgotten at his elbow. Three cold pipes lay on the desk and the room
was thick with smoke. Wyme said, "Help me up," and Arcole
bent to lift his bulk from the chair, passing the governor the
crutches he must use to walk. He escorted the man to a sitting room
and saw him settled in an armchair by the hearth.
"Wine," the governor ordered. "Then ask my wife attend
me."
Arcole obeyed, setting a decanter and two glasses on a table. Before
leaving he asked meekly, the thoughtful manservant, "Shall I
tidy your study, 'sieur? Perhaps air the room?"
Wyme nodded absently. He appeared preoccupied, and Arcole sensed that
news of grave import had been delivered. He hurried to find the
governor's wife, conveying to her the message, and made his way back
to the study. It was the work of only moments to gather up the
glasses and pipes, which he set aside by the door, crossing to the
desk. He began to rummage through the clutter there, seeking clean
paper on which he might transcribe the map, when he noticed that the
original was altered. Around a holding marked
Thirsk Farm, Wyme
had drawn a circle in red ink, and the figure 3. Sand still littered
the inscription, and Arcole assumed it must be connected to the visit
of the Militiamen. Curious, he bent to peruse the map closer. There
were two similar notations—older, and ringed and numbered in
like manner, marked
Defraney Mill and
Clawson Farm. Arcole
wondered what the red rings and the numbers meant. He saw a sheet
lying beside the map, that, too, sprinkled with sand, the ink not yet
quite dry. He guessed the paper represented notes taken during the
interview with Spelt and the lieutenant, and that were it known he
could read, Wyme would never have allowed him in this room.
He forgot his original purpose as he began to read.
At the head, in a hand embellished with grandiose flourishes, was
written the word
Attacks. Beneath, Wyme had employed a
personal code. It was easy to decipher—Arcole frowned, his
heart quickening as he studied the governor's notes.
Beside the figure 1 Wyme had written
Clwsn Fm; Summer.
Dstryd: all sh lost. No sign. Beneath that entry was the
figure 2 and the equally cryptic comments:
DefrnyMill; Summer.
Burnd: no survrs. No sign. A line was drawn across the page then,
and under it the words:
Ptrls fnd no sign. Wilderness? Spelt
suggsts svges. Then a second line, below which was the figure
3
and the coded remarks,
ThrskFarm, Autumn. Burnd: no survrs. No
sign. Then Wyme had inscribed a large question mark and the
words:
What are they? Spelt suggsts Mil. expdtn. The notes
were then ended with a second outsize question mark.
Intrigued, not sure what he had discovered, Arcole set the papers in
order. As best he could surmise, Wyme's notes indicated that three
inland holdings had been attacked and destroyed, with all there
slain. He looked to the map and saw that the three ringed locations
stood close to the forest edge. It seemed that Major Spelt believed
the attacks were the work of savages, and had suggested a military
expedition be sent out. Were he right, Arcole thought, then Salvation
was not the empty land folk supposed. Somewhere—likely in the
wilderness forests—there were others, hostile to the Autarchy's
colonists.
The idea was startling. Salvation was assumed to be Evander's
foothold in this new world, the stepping-stone from which the
Autarchy would eventually conquer all the wilderness. But if there
were already inhabitants, and they opposed to the newcomers. Arcole
whistled softly as myriad ideas ran wild through his head.
Were there folk in the wilderness, might they not welcome refugees?
Perceive escaped exiles as allies in their struggle against Evander?
Arcole moved from the desk, aware his absence might soon be noted.
Playing his role of obedient servant, he drew the curtains open and
threw the shutters wide. Cold air intruded, shocking as his
discovery. He returned to the desk. There was no time now to copy the
map, but that could be done later; now his head was abuzz with the
implications of these attacks. They were, obviously, kept secret,
likely for fear of panic. But how long should that secret be kept,
did Spelt mount an expedition? Or were there further attacks? What
effect might such news have on the citizens of Grostheim:'
He tended the fire, wondering how he might use this knowledge.
Of itself, it seemed worthless, save that he became privy to
information he was confident Wyme preferred be kept secret. Which
would likely prove dangerous, were his knowledge made known—unless
he could somehow contact these mysterious savages. Of a sudden all
his suppressed resentment of Evander, of the Autarchy, came flooding
back. He drove the poker hard into the hearth, raising a cloud of
sparks. He thought of burning cabins, of Grostheim itself in flames.
He was not alone! Even were his fellow exiles become docile, there
were some in this new land who did not accept the authority of
Evander. Surely he might find common cause with them. Save, he
wondered, how? How might he contact them? And were they savages, how
might he survive contact? He set the poker aside and went to close
the shutters, draw the curtains, his mind racing.
He thought of Davyd. The boy was employed by Rupyrt Gahame, whose
warehouse, by Davyd's account, was full of weapons. What if guns
could be stolen? Surely weapons would make such a gift as must
guarantee friendship. And knowledge of Grostheim—-gleaned as a
groom—could help, did these mysterious potential allies invade
the citadel itself.
He took a deep breath, forcing his thoughts to slow. He ran ahead of
himself, allowed that hatred of Evander he had believed controlled to
flare up too fierce again. He counseled himself to patience: he had
knowledge now, and knowledge was a weapon, did he but find the
opportunity to use it. He must wait—God knew, servitude taught
him how to do that—and amass more knowledge. And first he must
find some means by which to speak at length with Davyd.
He collected the dirty glasses and the pipes and returned to his
duties, once more the patient servant.
"Are you well?" Flysse studied him with solicitous eyes.
"You're not ailing?"
"No." Arcole shook his head, dismissing her concern with a
smile. "I was only thinking."
"Of what?" she asked.
They sat alone in the kitchen, the hour well past midnight. The
mansion slept—soundly, Arcole hoped, for it was currently his
duty and Flysse's to attend the governor and his wife, should they
wake and require some service. It was an odious task, did Wyme demand
his chamber pot, nor much better when he fretfully demanded mulled
wine or hot chocolate. But so far neither bell had rung, and the
thought had entered Arcole's head that this would be an ideal time to
transcribe Wyme's map. As best he knew no hexes were laid on the
study or its contents. What point, when the papers therein were only
meaningless scribbles to the servants?
The idea had taken hold and grown, and almost he had gone. Then
thought of Flysse had delayed him. He'd not announce his intention to
her: in part for fear that were he discovered, she be punished as an
accomplice; in part for fear that she seek to dissuade him or
inadvertently blurt out what he did. He pondered what reason or
excuse he could give her, and then that
did Wyme summon him,
she might come tell him and thus save awkward explanation of his
absence.
He found himself caught in a dilemma: unwilling to subject Flysse to
risk, unable, quite, to trust her, and yet likely needing her help.
"So shall you tell me," he heard her ask, "or are they
secrets, your thoughts?"
"No," he lied; and then dissembled, "I thought only
how cozy this is, we two alone and all the household sleeping. As if
this were our kitchen, and we some old wed couple."
He gestured at the dim-lit room, warmed by the great kitchen range.
It was, indeed, a cozy scene. He occupied the armed chair that was
customarily Benjamyn's preserve, a mug of chocolate steaming at his
elbow. Flysse sat close by, where usually Chryselle would take her
place. They might have been a married couple, enjoying the comfort of
their own kitchen before retiring. He was not certain—it was
perhaps only the stove's red glow—but he thought Flysse
blushed.
She said, "Yes," in a small, soft voice, and he saw her
lashes fall over lowered eyes.
She seemed suddenly nervous, as if his words and her response carried
them to a place that was, if not dangerous, then somehow threatening,
where she must tread carefully. He waited for her to say more, but
she remained silent, busying herself with the repair of a skirt's
hem, and would not meet his eye.
She continued her needlework, not looking up, and only shook her
head.
"Have I offended you?" he asked.
She answered, "No," in the same small voice, and he leant a
little way across the table, enough that he saw moisture shining on
her cheeks.
It was a moment before he realized she wept, and then he acted
without thinking. He rose from his chair and settled on the table at
her side. He cupped her chin, to raise her face. For a while she
resisted, but then let her head tilt back, and he saw the tears that
trickled slowly down her cheeks. He moved to brush them away, but as
his fingers touched her cheek she shuddered and drew back.
"What's wrong?" he asked. "Is my touch so offensive?"
She shook her head violently and sniffed, and said helplessly, "No,
Arcole. Never that."
"Then what?" He set a hand against her cheek and this time
she did not resist or move away, but only made a soft, inarticulate
sound.
The skirt, part mended, fell to the floor as Flysse looked into his
eyes. She could not help herself, but neither would she tell him
clear what anguish his casual words, his touch, produced. That was
for him to discover, for him to say the first words. She could not,
for fear he dismiss her, that her declaration drive him away: that
she could not bear.
Arcole stared at her. She was lovely in her grief. She was, it came
to him, always beautiful. Did he not still think of himself as a
gentleman, of her as a—what did he think her? Surely not a
common servant, for Flysse was most uncommon. And was she a servant,
then so was he in this place, and therefore they equal. Were she
dressed in the finery of a lady, how would he perceive her? Save she
lacked the affectations of the gentlewomen he had known, she was
their equal; more, for she was courageous and kind, gentle,
compassionate.
He realized he listed her attributes, and that she compared favorably
with any woman he had known in the Levan.
He looked into her eyes and for the first time saw the truth, as if
her tearful gaze drew back the curtains of his blindness.
He said, "Oh, Flysse," and could not help himself as he
bent toward her.
Which was altogether far more than Flysse could resist. She closed
her eyes as his face came closer, and then her arms, of their own
volition it seemed, were around his neck. His breath was an instant
warm on her mouth, and then lost there.
Arcole held her, for the moment oblivious of all save the pleasure of
the kiss, of her body against his. It had been a long time since he
held a woman; longer since he held one who loved him. And that Flysse
loved him, he could no longer ignore. In some hinder part of his mind
he recalled the signs—the looks, the words, her smiles—that
should have told him earlier of her feelings. They had been there—on
the
Pride of the Lord, here in Wyme's mansion—and he had
ignored them, been too preoccupied with his own fate, his plans, to
read the signs aright. He was too used to the coquettish ways of the
Levan's gentlewomen: Flysse was entirely honest, without artifice or
devices. He was unused to such behavior.
When they moved a little way apart, he studied her face anew. The
tears were gone, in their place a glorious smile. She said, "Arcole,"
and he could not help but draw her close again.
He had not quite known that his hands moved to the lacings of her
bodice until she pushed them away. He was heated now: he wanted her,
with no thought for the future, but only for the moment. Had they
been in the Levan, were she kindred to the women he had known there,
they would by now be undressing one another. But they were not and
she was not; she was—it struck him with dazzling bemusement—too
respectable.
As she said, "Arcole, no," he said, "Flysse, I'm
sorry."
They laughed together, and though he still lusted for her, he knew he
must wait.
For what? asked a seditious voice that belonged to that part of him
that was still the gambler, the duelist, whose rakehell reputation
had seduced grand ladies in another world. He knew the answer:
marriage. That came from that part of him exile had changed,
association with Flysse had changed. Flysse was respectable, she was
not a woman of Levanite society whose favors were bestowed at whim,
to whom a casual bedding meant no more than the saddling of a new
horse. She was … unique. He drew her close again—careful now
with his hands—as he accepted that he should have her only in
the marriage bed, honestly;
respectably.
Almost, he laughed at the notion. Arcole Blayke, swordsman and
gambler, considering marriage to an exiled serving girl? That would
surely afford his friends amusement. Then he thought: What friends?
None save Dom risked taint when I was taken, but looked to their own
skins. Laughter dissipated: Flysse saw him only as … what? Himself,
he supposed: a man who wore exile's brand on his cheek. He thought
Dom would approve of this woman. And marriage … Had the idea not
crossed his mind? Should it be so bad? He pondered the alternatives,
which appeared quite straightforward: he could have Flysse or not; he
could wed her or not.
There came into his mind then a feeling of horrid loneliness. It
surprised him: that it should be hard to bear, did he reject her now.
To live so close, to see her daily, but never again hold her or kiss
her? He thought he must find that intolerable now. She might turn to
another. There were enough fellow servants present already cast
lustful glances her way, had so far stayed their advances only
because she dismissed them. Because—it dawned on him sudden as
anything this revelatory night—it was understood she was bound
to him. Only he had failed to see it: he could not help laughing
then.
"What is it?" Flysse asked against his cheek. "Do I
amuse you?"
"No," he told her, quite honest now. "I laugh at
myself. At my blindness, that I could not see what was before my
eyes."
"That I love you?" she murmured.
He answered, "Yes," knowing her question asked another,
asked for an answer he was not yet—quite—sure he could
honestly give.
Did she notice that hesitation, she gave no sign, but said, "At
first I thought you haughty," and when he frowned: "I
thought you too much the gentleman to notice me."
Guilty, he whispered, "I was."
"I thought," she said, "that you believed yourself too
grand. That you considered me beneath your dignity."
He said, entirely honest now, "Oh, Flysse, you're not beneath my
dignity, nor anyone's. You're fine as any lady. God knows, you're
better than most I've met."
"I think," she said, smiling at the compliment, "that
you did not always believe that."
"No," he admitted. "But you taught me better. You
opened my eyes."
"It was when you befriended Davyd," she said, "that I
saw you different. With him, and when you came to our defense."
And that delivered another pang of guilt, for had he not concealed
his motives in befriending the boy? He thought that did he tell her
that, then he must tell her everything—tell her of Davyd's
dreaming and his unformed plans to escape, all of it. And then? He
had dismissed the notion of taking her with him when—
if—his
plans came to fruition.
Another seditious thought then: married servants were granted their
own room. Had he such privacy, it should be easier to study Wynne's
map, to keep secret such papers and documents as he might need copy.
But then he must surely tell her everything. And did she know, how
would she react? Might she insist she go with him, perhaps under
threat of revelation? Or insist, on the same terms, that he remain?
She was brave—that he knew beyond doubting. But to ask she face
the wilderness with him, to risk her life on a venture he must
admit—should it even prove feasible—must be mightily
dangerous, certainly arduous—did he want that?
He could not properly conceal his thoughts. He wondered if under her
influence he lost his skills of dissemblance, of prevarication, when
she said, "You're troubled again, my love."
He said, "Yes," and cursed himself and the unfair justice
of the Autarchy that put him in this position, that he not deal
honestly with her. She deserved honesty, but he could not yet bring
himself to tell her what he planned. He told himself it was too soon;
that it were better did he wait and come to know her better, and knew
that for procrastination. He found himself once more caught on
dilemma's horns.
"What is it?" she asked.
His answer was not entirely dishonest: he said, "I wonder what
we do now."
Her response was entirely artless. She stiffened somewhat in his arms
and her face lost a little of its radiance. She said quietly, "Is
that not for you to say?"
"How do you mean?" he asked, afraid he flung himself
headlong into a choice he had sooner not yet make.
Flysse pulled farther back, until he must hold her by the elbows else
she withdraw entirely. He did not want that; neither did he want to
choose.
"I know not how your society ladies do such things," she
said. "I am only a plain woman … "
"Never plain," he told her, seeking to shift her direction,
wondering how that should trouble him so. Wondering was this love, to
feel so guilty that he deceived her? He wished she would not put him
to the test: he doubted now he could hurt her. It seemed she
commanded a power over him, in ways he could not properly comprehend.
Surely he could not understand how it could come so sudden, that he
feared to hurt her or dash her hopes. He wondered if somehow, without
his knowing it, he
had come to love her. He felt abruptly
afraid: love was not a thing he was used to.
"No." She disengaged his hands, stepping a pace back. Her
expression was both firm and frightened, and when he moved toward
her, she raised a hand, silently bidding him keep his distance. "No
soft, sweet words, Arcole. Please? Those are for your society ladies;
I'd have only the truth of you."
He said, "Flysse," sensing where this conversation went,
knowing he'd not venture there yet. Save neither would he lose her
now: that should be too painful.
"No, please hear me out." She moved back farther, to where
shadow touched her face and he could not properly read her
expression. "I tell you—I am a plain woman, and decently
raised. I've naught to my name, save I hold my honor, which brought
me here. Because I refused the blandishments of a man … "
"Armnory Schweiz?" He spoke the name in genuine outrage.
"Do you compare me with that animal?"
"No," she said, "and—forgive me—yes. He
wanted but the one thing of me. Do you want different?"
"I am not Armnory Schweiz," he said angrily. "You
insult me with that."
"I'd not," she said. "Save your intentions be no
different."
"They are!" he protested. "They are not the same at
all."
"What would you ask of me, then?" she demanded.
Were he quite honest, he would have told her, "I'd bed you. I'd
have you now, and tomorrow, and for so long as I remain here, and not
think of that decision I must one day make." But that, he knew,
must surely lose her; and he knew with sudden clarity that he'd not
lose her. It was as if he sat at a gaming table, his fortune to be
lost or won on the turn of an unseen card. Well, he was a gambler,
no? Perhaps even a man in love.
He said, "Flysse, I'd ask that you wed me." He was
surprised the sentence came out so clear, so definite. He was not
quite sure from where it came.
She said, "Arcole, I will," and stepped forward, out of the
shadow that hid her face so that he could see her smile, which was
bright with happiness and solemn in equal measure.
He moved toward her and this time she did not bid him back, but
raised her arms to embrace him. He thought he had never been kissed
like that before. Certainly he had never been in this situation
before, and even as a part of him wondered what he did and where it
should lead, another told him this was what he wanted.
The card was turned now, but he knew the stakes were changed. It was
strange, how happy he felt.
Into her hair he murmured, "So, what
do we do now?"
Adding quickly, "I'd not besmirch your honor, but how do we go
about this?"
The card turned, the step taken, he'd delay no longer than he must.
Her kisses were sweet and full of promise—more, almost, than he
could bear—and could he have her only in wedlock, then he'd
turn that key soon as was possible.
She said, "We must go to Benjamyn, ask him. He then approaches
the master for permission. Is that granted, a priest comes here to
perform the ceremony."
"You've ascertained all this, eh?" He could not help but
chuckle. "Were you so confident, then?"
She leaned back against his arms to look him in the eye and blushed
prettily. "Not confident," she said, and smiled. "But
hopeful."
"God, woman," he laughed, "you surely do speak plain."
"Would you have me otherwise?" she asked.
Arcole shook his head and said, "No, Flysse, I'd not. I'd have
you just as you are." Which was the truth, and quite
unexpectedly prompted him to answer that unspoken question he had
earlier avoided: "I love you—just as you are."
It was, he realized, an honest declaration; or, at least, as honest
as he was capable of. He was not sure precisely what love was, but if
it meant such feelings as he entertained at the thought of losing her
to another, or seeing her each day knowing he could not have her,
then, yes, he loved her. If it meant this exhilaration he felt
holding her, at the thought of their being together nightly, then,
yes, he loved her. But if it meant staying with her, both their lives
lived out as servants of Andru Wyme, indentured until death freed
them, then—he must admit—he was not sure. He could not
forsake his dream of escape. He could not tell her that, nor yet feel
confident of sharing his dream. The guilt he felt at that surprised
him, and if such guilt was a part of love, then again yes, he loved
her.
Perhaps he would tell her. Likely, when they shared a room, it would
be impossible to hide it from her. He decided he would wait, like any
canny gambler, and see how the cards fell.
For now, with Flysse in his arms, he felt too happy to entertain such
troubling thoughts for long.
26—A Messenger Cursed
Winter came early to the mountains. The valley lay under a mantle of
snow that shone bright in the light of a sun that granted no warmth.
The stream froze and Arrhyna must hack through the ice to obtain
fresh water. Rannach had constructed a shelter for the horses and
kept a fire burning close by their enclosure, lest the wolf winds
that came howling out of the mountains freeze them where they stood.
What hunting he did now was done afoot, trekking laboriously through
deep drifts to set traps for snowhares and whatever other creatures
ventured out under the White Grass Moon, or huddling cold amongst the
trees to put an arrow in an unwary deer come foraging down from the
high slopes. At least it was fresh meat to augment the supplies he'd
built up against the cold moons, but he could not help thinking that
buffalo meat should be better, taken in the warm moons and stored
ready for the cold. He could taste it, when he thought about it: the
rich, fatty taste of ribs and haunches roasted over the embers of the
campfire, the lodges of the Commacht all around, secure in the
Wintering Ground. The men would be working on bridles and arrows,
lances and shields; the women weaving blankets or softening the hides
of buffalo and deer for tentcloth and clothing, sewing beads. He
remembered the last winter in the lodges of his clan, when he had
talked with Bakaan and the others of the spring's Matakwa and how he
would claim Arrhyna for his bride.
Now he had his wish—Arrhyna
was his wife—but he
had never thought it should be like this, the two of them all alone
in the white wilderness of the valley. He worried about her: that she
missed her parents, the company of other women, her moods. She seemed
mostly content, but there were times when she grew sharp, her tongue
cutting, and he did not understand those. Neither did he understand
why Colun and Marjia no longer visited. Save … He dismissed that
thought. Surely they could not be slain; surely the Grannach could
not be defeated by the invaders. Surely the Maker would not allow
that. For if he did, then Arrhyna was in terrible danger, and Rannach
hated such ominous brooding. He pushed it aside and took the hare
from the trap.
Three in one morning—a good catch. Enough that he felt
justified in returning to Arrhyna; so he slung the carcass with the
others on his belt and turned back toward their lodge, less needfully
than only to see her and touch her and know her safe. He had done all
he could, banished as he was, to make her life comfortable. Their
lodge was warm and he had an ample supply of wood set by, no less
sufficient meat. There were deer hides and the pelts of rabbits for
winter clothing. They had furred boots and hardy garments to see them
through the cold moons, and the stream still held sluggish fish for
the hooking. But yet there was something about his wife that troubled
him, as if sometimes she was about to speak of some momentous thing
but then held back and kept it from him. He did not properly
understand that, nor her appetite, which was large.
He supposed he did not much understand women; and they were, anyway,
in strange circumstances. But he would have welcomed conversation
with his mother, or with Marjia, that he might know better how to
please and satisfy his wife. But his mother was far distant and
forbidden him on pain of death, and Marjia … Marjia was not there,
nor any sign of her coming.
The snowshoes he'd made crunched against the frozen crust. Lonely
ravens clustered on the branches behind, optimistic that he left some
tidbit. Overhead, the sky burned steely, like metal in flame save it
was only cold, and when he looked to where the Maker's Mountain
stood, the peak glittered, a blinding white pinnacle defiant of
observation.
He was banished from Ket-Ta-Witko, promised death did he return to
the lodges of his clan: this valley was all his world now, and
Arrhyna, and he must be content with that. Which, mostly, he was;
only sometimes he wondered how the Commacht fared, and missed
Bakaan's jokes and Hadustan's laughter and Zhy's solemn comments.
Even his father's stern face.
But he had Arrhyna: he smiled as he saw her.
She sat beneath the raised entry flaps of the lodge. The outside fire
burned bright before her, and her hands moved deft over a hide, one
of the needles Marjia had gifted her sparkling as she wove beads into
the skin.
"What are you making?" he asked, even as she looked up and
said, "Three hares, eh? Good hunting, husband."
He dropped the hares and bent to kiss her. She said, "A shirt.
For you to wear when the New Grass Moon rises."
"Not until then?" he asked.
"It's deerhide," she said. "Until then, it will not be
warm enough."
He smiled and sat beside her; set to gutting the hares. "Shall I
wear it to the Matakwa?" he laughed, then stopped. "What's
that?"
"What?" Arrhyna glanced up from her needlework.
"That sound." He looked from the open flaps of the lodge
along the valley. "Like distant thunder."
The sky was all steely, neither quite blue nor gray, but colored at
some midpoint between. There was no sign of any storm, neither clouds
building nor lightning flashing, but when Arrhyna cocked her head and
concentrated, she heard it—a faraway rumbling as if rocks
moved, or some great force wended through the mountains.
She said, "I don't know."
It seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere. It was like the sound
of the migrating herds, when the buffalo ran in all their glory and
the earth shook under their hooves. But there were no buffalo here.
"Perhaps the Grannach move the mountains," Rannach joked.
Arrhyna thought it a poor jest. She looked to where the Maker's
Mountain loomed, but that great peak stood silent and immobile.
"Or an avalanche," he said.
Arrhyna wondered if he entertained the same doubt, the same fear, she
felt—that the sound was of no natural making but something
else. But if he did, he kept the thought from her. Nor was she
prepared to voice it, as if the saying of it might flesh out the
fear, so they both held silent and only listened to the distant
rumbling.
He could still not understand how he lived: he ate nothing, he drank
only the snow that melted in his mouth. He had fallen down over rocks
that should have shattered him, and into snowdrifts that buried him
and should have held him frozen until the spring thaw, and dug his
way out and found handholds where none existed with hands that no
longer contained any feeling. He could only assume the Maker wished
him to live and so kept him alive.
And so he went on, unthinking—driven by that memory of the
flame-voice that burned inside him and somehow sustained him—down
the cliffs and the precipices, across the deep-drifted ravines and
the fragile ice bridges, down to where the People were, knowing now
that all were the People—the clans of Ket-Ta-Witko and the
Grannach and the poor, lost Whaztaye, and all the other folk of all
the other parceled worlds that were the Maker's creation, and all as
important as each other and all threatened by the Breakers who would
rend and destroy that fine fabric of coexistence, even those strange
ones from the other world or time that he had glimpsed in his
revelatory dreaming. And he was the only one in all the worlds to
know, which was a terrible duty and a burden he labored under and
would have cast off, save if he did, then all the Maker's creations
must come unraveled and be destroyed, and he be as guilty as the
Breakers for that undoing.
So he fought his way through snow-filled valleys, where the white
powder caked his face and sometimes overtopped his head so that he
must tunnel like some snow mole, and he walked over the ice that
encased rivers, and through it when it lay too thin to support his
weight. And he felt neither the cold nor any hunger, but burned with
purpose, intent only on bringing that dread word which he could not
be sure any would heed or believe. He did not sleep: it was as if the
Maker shifted his limbs and drove him on, a container of purpose or a
messenger, cursed.
And he came down from the holy mountain to where the Grannach lived
and they found him there, moving like a blind horse through the
wastes, driving only onward so that they must hold him and pin him
down as they looked to minister to him, not knowing how any man so
wasted could be alive.
"
Is he alive?"
Colun stared disbelievingly at the emaciated' body. The Morrhyn he
remembered was a hale man, tall and sturdy, with a head
of thick, dark hair. This poor fellow was gaunt as a desiccated
corpse, all jutting bones and sharp angles, his hair the color of
snow. Was he truly Morrhyn, then he looked as the wakanisha surely
would after he had been dead some little time. "Where did he
come from?"
"We found him out on the snow," Nylj said. "He cried
out and collapsed when we approached. I think he's blind."
Marjia knelt close, then glanced up. "He lives, though the Maker
alone knows how. Look at him! He's starved."
"I do not understand this." Colun scratched a leathery
cheek. "He looks like Morrhyn, but surely Morrhyn is with his
clan."
"Be he Morrhyn or some other unfortunate, he still needs care."
Marjia rose, bustling past the curious menfolk to call the women to
her. "See he's wrapped in warm blankets and build up that fire.
Prepare broth."
Colun grunted, still intent on the skeletal figure. It was Morrhyn,
he decided—the angle of those sunken cheeks, that ax-blade
nose, those were Morrhyn's. But what in the Maker's name was the
Commacht Dreamer doing here, and where had he come from? It was a
mystery he supposed would be answered if the man lived—which,
were he frank, seemed unlikely—and one he could have done
without. The Maker knew, there were mysteries and troubles enough in
these dark days.
He tugged at his beard as the women brought heated blankets and
Marjia set to stirring the broth. There was little enough food and,
despite their losses, too many Grannach to eat it. He let his eyes
wander over the cavern, thinking they already had wounded enough to
tend, and felt the darkness cloud his soul. It was no consolation to
know his fears proven true, to know he had been right and the others
wrong. The outcome was too dismal.
His people had debated as the invaders continued their advance, and
long before any conclusion was reached, the strangelings had come
deep into the mountains. They had swarmed into the high passes like
some vast ant army, pushing remorselessly forward to sweep the
defending Grannach from their path as a storm wind blows away chaff.
The only unity the Grannach had reached was the agreement that the
western tunnels be all sealed, but by then it was too late, for the
invaders came in by the lesser entrances and the high, secret ways,
and the Grannach were sealed up as he had prophesied, like frightened
rabbits in their warrens.
Too many had died, and too many more acted foolishly. Janzi and Gort
had sealed their families in the ancestral caves, and for all Colun
knew, they remained there, likely to starve. Daryk had died fighting
the invaders as they came into the Basanga caverns, and scarce a
hundred of his family had survived to flee to the Javitz: sad
refugees in their own mountains. Menas, at least, had shown some
sense at last and come with all his Katjen to join Colun's folk, but
too late. Menas had been wounded, his side pierced by a lance, and
was dead now. His last words had been a plea that his family accept
Colun's leadership, and that Colun protect them as his own.
Colun had, of course, agreed, though he doubted he could protect
anyone against the terror that stalked the hills. But he did his
best, for all it cost him dear. When the invaders had come into the
Javitz caverns, the Grannach were ready, and when it became obvious
the strangelings came in numbers too great to defeat, Colun had made
a terrible decision. He had planned it in advance, as a suicide plans
his demise—in precise and horrid detail. The Javitz had been
forewarned, and were ready with food and clothing, whatever they
might carry easily. The refugees had less to carry, for all the
Javitz shared with them what they had—and Colun had spoken long
and forcefully on this, telling them they were no longer Javitz and
Basanga and Katjen but only Grannach now, and did any argue, then
they were free to return to their family caves. None did argue, but
only obeyed him, hailing him as creddan of all the Stone Folk. It was
an honor that sat sour as he called his people back from the
advancing invaders and gave the word to the golans to do what they
had reluctantly agreed upon.
It was a Pyrrhic victory: vast numbers of the invaders and their
beasts had died as the Javitz cavern came tumbling down on them,
burying them forever under such a weight of stone as must forever
entomb them, and Colun had wept with his people to see the ancestral
home cave destroyed—as if their past were taken from them,
leaving only a bleak and homeless future. He felt an emptiness come
into his soul as he fled, the tunnels all filled with the awful
thunder of destruction, and he thought that wound should never heal.
He had led the decimated Grannach away to an uncertain future in the
lesser caves and the high, hidden valleys, where they grubbed out a
poor living as best they could and hid like nervous deer from the
invaders' wolf packs that scoured the hills. But they did, at least,
live, and Colun supposed that was something. And was he not sure how
long they might survive or what dread fate descended on the world,
then he could console himself with the knowledge that he had saved as
many as he could and that there remained a remnant of the Grannach
alive in the world who would otherwise have been dead. But that was
small consolation, must they exist like rats, nibbling warily about
the fringes of a world filled with only enemies. Sometimes he
wondered if it had not been better to die fighting, but then he would
look at the children and the women and the old ones and know that it
was better to cling to life and hope, to ask the Maker to set right
this awful imbalance.
He sometimes thought, in more cheerful moments, that perhaps the
Matawaye would defeat the invaders, and then would feel that little
optimism slip away as he thought of the awful fury of the
strangelings and their numbers. He
knew that the flatlanders
were divided as his own folk had been, and would most likely fall
like the Grannach before the incomers. And now Morrhyn was come, more
dead than alive, and that was a very strange thing—that the
Dreamer be here where he should not be, as if he were a corpse risen
from the grave.
"I'd speak with him," he said. "When he wakes."
"No doubt." Marjia did not turn: she was too intent on
spilling broth between Morrhyn's cracked and blistered lips "But
when that might be, I cannot say."
Colun turned to Nylj. "You found him in the valley, you say.
Were there tracks?"
Nylj ducked his shaggy head. "The Maker knows how he came so
far, but yes—his tracks came from the direction of the
Mountain."
Colun frowned. Morrhyn had come from the Maker's Mountain? The
mystery deepened.
"You're sure?" he asked.
Nylj looked a moment offended and Colun smiled an apology. "It
seems impossible he could be there," he explained. "I
cannot understand it."
"Nor I." Nylj allowed himself placated. "But there he
was, like a snow-blinded hare struggling through the drifts."
"Did he say anything?" Colun asked.
"Only cried out. Were there words in it, I could not understand
them."
Colun nodded and walked to the cave mouth. The snow had ceased
falling a little after dawn and the valley lay silent and still,
palisaded round by jagged peaks. The Maker's Mountain stood distant
and aloof, and the winter sun outlined the tracks of Nyli's party
like shadows on the snow. Colun could not understand it: Morrhyn had
no right to be here, and still less to be alive. It was a further
impossibility in a world become all impossible.
He went back inside the cave. Morrhyn slept now. Colun studied the
wasted features and looked to his wife.
Marjia read the question in his eyes and said, "I don't know.
He's no right to be alive, so perhaps he'll live. It's in the Maker's
hands now."
Colun nodded and returned to his brooding. He thought he no longer
understood his world; it seemed all turned on its head.
When he woke he was buried and began to tunnel from under the weight
of snow, thinking all the while that it was oddly warm and that it
should be far easier to sink down beneath that comfortable blanket
and let it take him away to endless sleep. But he had a duty he must
discharge, and so he chided himself and called on the Maker, and
fought to reach the light. Then he felt himself clutched and fought
the hands that held him and cried out, cursing, until he was forced
down and knew himself lost. He was dead, or dying, and cursed spirits
sought to drag him down, that he not dispense his charge, but all the
world be given over to malignity and he be damned with them, a
companion in despair.
Fire's glow then, and torches that revealed faces all craggy and
bearded, and others that were hairless and smooth if no less craggy:
he recognized them, dimly, from some distant place, another time.
One, he thought he knew, but could not properly remember. Perhaps
death played him a final trick, fooling his eyes and wandering mind.
If so, he must fight it. He was not yet ready to die, not until his
duty was done. And so he fought and cried out, looking for the light
of the sky, that he might see the stars and take a bearing from them
and go on.
"Morrhyn! Morrhyn, for the Maker's sake, don't you know me?"
He knew his eyes were open, but not that they saw, or what: he
thought perhaps the spirits looked to trick him. The sky was black
and starless and the only light came from flames which hurt his eyes.
He sat up and wondered why he felt no cold but only warmth, as if he
rested beside a fire. And indeed, when he squinted, he thought he saw
a fire burning, and torches beyond, as if he rested within a cave
whose walls reflected back the flames' glow, and in them saw squat
shapes that were like the Grannach he remembered, who lived in the
hills and were the Stone Guardians. Or tricksy spirits sent by the
Breakers to lure him and lull him into failure.
He said, "Who are you? I charge you, in the name of the Maker,
to speak true."
"I am Colun of the Grannach," said the closest shape. "Do
you not know me?"
He looked at it and then away, at his body which he saw was all
swathed in furs, and at the fire that burned close by, and the
huddled shapes beyond. Then up to where only darkness was, shadows
darting there, thrown by the fire and the torches. Then down again,
to find a nervous, smiling face hung round with plaits of flaxen
hair, holding out a bowl that steamed and gave off a most savory and
appetizing aroma.
"This is Marjia, my wife," said the Colun-shape. "She's
broth for you to drink."
He closed his eyes and voiced a silent prayer, and when he opened
them again, shapes and shadows resolved into tangible reality and he
knew he lay within a cave, surrounded by Gran-nach, and that it was
not a spirit that spoke to him, but Colun, whom he knew.
He said, "Colun?"
And Colun answered, "Yes?"
"Where am I?"
"In a cave, deep in the mountains. Where the invaders are not
yet come."
He said, "The Breakers. They are the destroyers of worlds."
"They surely look to destroy ours," Colun said.
And he said, "Yes. I must go on," and sought to rise. But
he was too weak, and so must fall back as Colun said, "First
eat. Build your strength, eh? Then we'll speak of what's to be done."
"There's no time. They'll be in Ket-Ta-Witko soon."
"Likely, they're there already," Colun said in a bitter
voice. "They've crossed the mountains, and by now must be near
the plains."
"I must tell the People. I
know about the Breakers."
"Morrhyn, you're near to death. You cannot go on yet. You must
rest and gather your strength, and then we'll go on together."
He said, "No! There's not the time. I have to go on."
"To die? That should be useless, no? Listen to me. You'll rest
here and regain your strength, and then I'll take you on."
He frowned. The light hurt his eyes and he supposed he must have
suffered the snowblindness, but now could see—praise the
Maker!—which meant he had lain some time. "How long have I
been here?" he asked.
"Seven days," Colun answered.
"Too long!" he cried, and sought to rise again.
Colun pushed him back, and he was too weak to resist. Marjia hung a
blanket about his shoulders and held out the bowl.
"Drink this," she urged. "You're very weak and need
food."
He studied her round face awhile, and then his hands. They seemed to
him like sticks, the skin drawn taut and thin over the linkages of
bone. They trembled, and when he attempted to take the bowl he could
not, for his hands shook and the effort of closing his fingers was
more than he could manage.
Marjia said, "Let me." And to Colun, "Do you support
him?"
Colun nodded and set a thick arm around Morrhyn's shoulders, holding
him up as Marjia spooned broth into his mouth. Some spilled down his
chin, and inside him doubt laughed mockingly. He was the savior of
his people, a man too weak to hold a bowl of broth who must be fed
like a baby? He drank the first bowl and then another, and then sleep
took him away again and he dreamed.
It was no clear dream, with no clear answers in it, but like those
others a thing of possibilities: all pessimism and hope,
intermingled, as if he saw all the multiple threads of myriad lives
and myriad deeds spun out to conclusions that might or not be real,
action and interaction confused, outcomes multiplied. He saw the
remnants of the Grannach in their caves, and the Breakers' great army
flooding down through the foothills onto the plains of Ket-Ta-Witko.
He saw battles fought and the People die, slaughtered like the
Whaztaye, and the Breakers claim all of Ket-Ta-Witko for their own.
And come back into the mountains to hunt down the last of the
Grannach, for they would leave none alive where they went, save it be
for food or sport. And he saw them go on, beyond Ket-Ta-Witko into
the other worlds, spreading destruction and death, conquering folk
whose ways were strange and incomprehensible, and knew that if they
were not halted, then they would take all the worlds for their and
all the Maker's creation be undone and only darkness rule.
He saw Rannach and Arrhyna, snowbound in their lonely valley, and the
horses they tended, and the new life swelling in Arrhyna's belly. And
he saw himself, speaking with them, and Colun, and then himself
mounted and riding with Rannach across a landscape all wintry and
warring, bringing word of what he knew and what the People must do.
And he saw himself ignored and heeded both, and the strands divide as
complicated as a spider's web.
He saw the strange ones of his other dreams, afloat on a great river
that he did not know, hunted. And warriors strangely dressed, with
weapons he did not understand that spat fire and killed at distances
greater than any arrow might attain. And in that was again hope and
despair, the division of possibilities, so that he felt as must a
leaf caught and tossed all about in a great wind, and all he knew was
that somehow the three were the hope of the People, though why or how
he could not comprehend.
And then, alternate to the destruction of all he knew and held dear,
he saw again the answer—which was so enormous and frightening,
it woke him.
He lurched up from his bed, crying out; and Marjia was there, and
Colun, holding him, confused as he wept for the enormity of what he
knew and the impossibility of its achievement. And the knowledge that
he must attempt it, though it cost him his life.
"Soft, soft, eh? All's well." Marjia stroked his brow as
she might stroke the brow of a child frightened by nightmare.
"You're safe here," Colun said. "The invaders go by
and know nothing of this cave."
"Safe?" He heard his own voice croaking. Marjia fed him
more broth and he added, "None are safe. I must go."
Colun said, "Morrhyn, you'd not last a night out there. The
Maker alone knows how you survived this far."
He said, "The Maker keeps me alive, that I do his bidding."
Had he not been so intent on supping the broth, he would have seen
Colun look to his wife with brows raised in question of his sanity.
He heard Colun ask, "Where did you come from? Where have you
been?"
He emptied the bowl before he spoke, and then between sips of a
second told the Grannach of his quest: that all the wakanishas of the
Matawaye were dreamless and that he had climbed the holy mountain and
got back his dreams. They gaped and looked at each other in amazement
and wonder, and at him as if he were a prophet, and he told them
again that he must now go bring the word to the People.
Colun frowned. "It will not be easy. The mountains are all
winter-bound now, and these Breakers are surely into Ket-Ta-Witko."
"Even so." Morrhyn smiled his thanks as Marjia brought
another bowl of broth. "I must attempt it."
"Not yet." Colun pointed a stubby finger at the invalid.
"You're too weak yet. You must regain your strength."
Morrhyn said, "There's not enough time. I must go."
"Ach!" Colun waved frustrated hands. "I can bring you
down the mountain. Drag you on a sled if needs be! But what then?"
"Rannach's horses, no?" Morrhyn returned.
Colun barked harsh laughter. "Think you you can sit a horse?
Ride it across Ket-Ta-Witko with all the invaders—and the
Tachyn—in your way? You'll die, man! Likely when you fall off
and break your addled head."
"Rannach will ward me," he said.
"Rannach's banished," Colun gave him back. "His life
forfeit if he ventures onto the plains."
Morrhyn said, "Bring me to him, eh? Only that."
Colun dug fingers through his beard and shook his head. He was about
to speak again, but Marjia forestalled him.
"My husband speaks somewhat of the truth," she said,
ignoring Colun's grunt. "Surely you are too weak yet to travel.
You need to rest and flesh yourself, else you
shall die along
the way. What good that, eh? Shall you defeat yourself with manly
pride, thinking you can do what you're too weak to attempt?
Listen—are you bound on the Maker's journey, then you'd best
equip yourself, no? Else you fail him."
"You believe me?" Morrhyn asked.
Marjia and Colun both nodded.
Colun said, "You're the wakanisha of the Commacht, old friend.
How can I doubt you after what you've told us? I like it not, but …
Is it the Maker's will, then so be it."
Marjia said, "It's promise of a new world, free of these
Breakers. I'd welcome that. But do you die, the promise dies with
you, so you had best equip yourself to make the journey—which
means you must rest awhile, to gain the strength for what you must
do."
"But time passes," Morrhyn moaned. "And all the while,
the Breakers advance. I must go."
Colun began to speak, but Marjia waved him silent and said,, "Then
go. Stand up and go."
He smiled thanks for her support and slid the blanket from his
shoulders, pushed back the furs that covered him. He was naked, but
that was no embarrassment in face of what must come did he fail. He
drew up his legs and began to rise and saw the cave spin around and
felt a great trembling weakness pervade his limbs so that he fell
backward and would have struck his head against the rocky floor had
Colun not caught him.
"You see?" Marjia asked, the spike of her question blunted
by her soft tone. "You cannot stand. How can you ride a horse?"
He said, tortured, "I
must go."
"Yes," she said. "Surely you must, when you are fit to
make the journey."
He said, helplessly,
"Now. I must go
now."
"And die along the way?" she asked again, still mild.
"Shall that serve the Maker well? That you die with all that
knowledge you own—his gift—to be lost with you?"
He said lowly, "No."
"Then rest," she said, sterner now. "Get back your
strength and go out with some hope of survival. Colun will bring you
to the valley where Rannach and Arrhyna are, and you can speak with
them of horses and travel when you've the strength."
He nodded, knowing she was right for all the thought of delay filled
him with terrible dread, and sank back into the furs and blankets,
cursing his weakness even as his eyes closed and sleep took him and
the dreams came back: hope and damnation all mingled.
27—Winterfire
The river swept broad and shallow around the bluffs, and in years
past had left between them an oxbow lake like a defensive moat, its
shores all thick with timber. The high ground ran back like the
spread fingers of a giant's hand, gradually closing the canyon in
which oak and birch stood winter-bare and sparkly with rime. It was a
long, wide canyon, easily large enough to contain both the Commacht
and the small herd of buffalo that, like the clan, looked to live out
the winter in this haven. There were fewer buffalo now, and the
Commacht lived better: even the rebellious young men agreed that
Racharran had chosen wisely in bringing them to this place.
As yet Chakthi's Tachyn had not found them, or had gone to their own
Wintering Ground as the White Grass Moon grew
large in the
sky. Surely that was Racharran's hope, that there be no fighting
during the cold moons that his people have a breathing space. It was
a most strange year, the Commacht akaman thought as he stood before
his lodge, his breath a whitened mist before him. First there had
been Morrhyn's dreams, then the chaos of the Matakwa, Colun's warning
and Rannach's banishment, and then the war. Now winter fisted the
plains in a hard white grip that saw too much snow come too early,
the grass lost under its weight and the sky always either the dull
yellow that presaged further falls or a pale gray unyielding as a
Grannach blade, the sun a weak and watery eye that barely pierced the
dullness. He set out watchers still, along the rim-rock of the bluffs
and amongst the limber surrounding the lake, but that was as much to
give the young men something to do as for fear of attack. He did not,
truly, think that even crazed Chakthi would press his war in such
hard weather.
But those Colun had spoken of … They were another matter.
He drew his blanket tighter about his shoulders as he wandered, idly,
it seemed, about the new Wintering Ground.
The lodges of the clan sprawled back from the canyon's entrance, the
horse herds penned to the rear. He had seen to it that the lodges of
the younger warriors were pitched around the perimeter, interspersed
with those of older men, the defenseless ones toward the center. The
canyon walls were high enough protection, and he thought that did
attack come, then it must arrive from the mouth, where raiders must
first ford the river and then swing around the lake. They would be
seen, he thought, and easily fought off. But he prayed it not come to
that: his people needed time to recover from the ravages of that
bloody summer.
Nor less, he thought, needed their Dreamer. Morrhyn, where are you? I
do what I can, but I need you still.
He felt a pang of guilt at that. It seemed not so long ago that he
had accused Lhyn of thinking first of Morrhyn, their son only second.
Now he did the same.
Save surely it's different, he thought. Rannach is safe in Colun's
care whilst Morrhyn is the Maker alone knows where, is he still
alive. And had we ever need of a wakanisha, then it has been these
last moons and now.
He smiled as folk called greetings, showing them a face that
exhibited only confidence and reassurance even as the doubts whirled
like windblown snow about his mind. These were
his people, his
charge; it was his duty as akaman to protect and guide them, and for
that he needed his Dreamer. Almost he cursed Morrhyn for that
departure, and wondered yet again at the wakanisha's warning, and
Colun's.
He spoke cheerfully as he wound his way about the camp, but all the
time his mind tossed fears and doubts and hopes around like a dog
pack squabbling over a juicy bone. It was hard to be akaman, harder
still without the advice of Morrhyn.
"I've tea brewing."
He smiled with genuine pleasure as he came back to his own lodge and
saw Lhyn by the fireside, the kettle hung there, and nodded and
settled onto the fur she had spread, leaning back against the frame
she'd hung with a thick bearskin.
"That should be good," he said. "Then I think I'll
ride out and check the scouts."
"Do you need to?" She poured the tea as she spoke.
"It will encourage them. They're young and they grow restless.
It does them good that their akaman comes to take a part in their
watch."
Lhyn shrugged. "You look tired," she said.
"I am." He sipped his tea and smiled. "I'm tired of
fighting and hiding and wondering what tomorrow shall bring. I wish
things had not changed so, and that we might pass this winter like
all the others."
"It's not so bad." She gestured at the wide confines of the
canyon. "This is a good place you brought us to and there've
been no attacks since the moon rose."
"No," he agreed. "But … "
"But?" she asked.
"I cannot help thinking of what Morrhyn dreamed and Colun told
us," he said.
At mention of Morrhyn's name her face clouded a moment. Then she
nodded and said, "We'd best be ready."
"Yes," he said. And then, "I wish he'd come back."
Lhyn nodded, unspeaking, and Racharran emptied his cup and set it
down, saying, "I'll go check the scouts."
Like all the fighting men, he kept his favorite horse tethered by the
lodge. He pulled the horse blanket away and set his saddle in place.
The roan stamped and snorted, eager to run as he set his quiver in
place and picked up his lance. He loosed the picket string and swung
astride, fighting the anxious horse to a sedate walk as he went out
through the tents, and only when he was clear of the circle, did he
let it run.
It was good to be mounted and galloping, with the wind in his hair,
and for the little while it took him to reach the canyon's mouth he
gave himself over to freedom, to carelessness: it was a rare luxury.
He checked the watchers along the lake's shore, and then rode round
to where the others sat about the feet of the bluffs. All gave back
the same word: nothing moved on the plain beyond save snow, and all
they watched was windblown white, wolves that dared not enter the
canyon for the smell of men, and flights of hungry crows. They were
bored; they'd go out ascouting: let them at least see what
was out
there.
Racharran listened to them and finally agreed. He feared that if he
refused, they'd go out anyway—alone and of their own
deciding—which must erode his authority at a time he felt he
must hold that command secure. So he sent off a scouting party—a
group of seven young men with Bakaan as their leader, in compensation
for his wound—and gave strict instructions that they go no more
than five days' ride beyond the canyon and come back swift with
whatever news they had. They cheered his decision and galloped back
to their lodges to collect food for the journey, and Racharran hoped
they should return without news, only hungry and tired.
He was disappointed.
It was Bakaan who brought him the news.
He was the only one left alive, and the horse he rode was close to
dying from the wounds it bore, as if some giant lion had scored its
flanks with lethal claws. Nor was the rider much better.
They came back, both man and horse, all bloody and wearied from the
fighting and the ride, and neither had the strength to ford the
river, but the horse must be led across and Bakaan carried. And on
the far bank, the horse stumbled and could go no farther so that a
warrior took out his Grannach knife and slit its throat, which was a
mercy, and shouted for women to come butcher the carcass for the
camp's dogs.
They brought the man to Racharran, and when the akaman saw him, he
had them bring him inside his own lodge and lay him down on soft furs
beside the fire. He called Lhyn and other women to tend his wounds as
all the clan gathered around, waiting to hear what word he brought
back.
"I fought them," Bakaan said, the words slurred thick
because his lips were divided by the cut that ran down his face from
where his hair began to where his chin ended, and he spat out blood.
"We all fought them."
"Yes, and doubtless bravely." Racharran knelt close as Lhyn
bathed Bakaan's bloody face and glanced frightened at the hole in his
belly that pulsed out blood in a thick and steady welling. "The
Tachyn, were they?"
"No." Bakaan shook his head, his teeth rattling like the
snakes on the summer prairie. "Not Tachyn: worse. They were
demons! They ride creatures big as buffalo, but like lions, or
lizards—all clawed and
furry and scaled, together. And their masters! Oh, Maker defend us,
they're armored like rainbows and trick your eyes so that you can't
see them right. They were terrible … "
His voice faltered. A woman pressed a cloth to the hole in his belly.
Lhyn called for another to bring moss to staunch the wound. Racharran
did not think it could be enough: Bakaan was dying. Before
that final ending came, though, he needed to know what the young
warrior had fought, or who. He feared he knew, but still he must ask,
even to drawing out Bakaan's last breaths. It was his duty as akaman
of the Commacht.
"How far did you go?" he asked.
"Full five days' ride," Bakaan answered slowly through
gasps of bloody spittle. "To where the oak woods begin, past
that big river where the catfish are in summer. We thought to camp
awhile there and scout around. Ach!" He closed his eyes and
clenched his teeth as Lhyn set the compress to his wound.
She looked at her husband, and in her eyes he saw the plea he leave
Bakaan to rest. He shrugged: he could not grant that luxury, not
until he had all the information the young warrior brought.
"How many of them?" he said.
Bakaan's voice came fainter now, rising and falling like the wind.
"Five, there were. Scouts, I think, but not such scouts as I've
ever seen. Maker! They came on us so swift—those beasts they
ride are faster than our horses in the snow, and killers, like their
masters. They came on us as we rode out. We fought them as best we
could, and ran when we saw we could not defeat them. They came after
us … "
"How far?" Racharran asked, suddenly afraid Bakaan led the
strangelings home.
"They halted at the river. By then, only three of us lived. Debo
and Manus died along the way of their wounds, and I killed their
horses, riding them back." He turned his ravaged face to
Racharran and smiled: it was a ghastly expression as his severed lips
parted. "But I did not come straight back—I looked to
confuse our trail. I rode toward the Tachyn grass."
He attempted a laugh that coughed out blood. "Better they find
Chakthi, eh?"
"Yes, you did well," Racharran said. "You were brave."
"Brave?" Bakaan grimaced. "I was very afraid. I think
we all were when we saw them. But we looked to heed you—we
tried to come back with word, but they chased us down. Oh, Maker, we
were like hunted deer to them, and they the wolves."
"And you saw only these scouts?" Racharran asked. "None
others?"
"No." Bakaan's teeth began to chatter. "Only those
five. I … "
His voice choked off. The light went out in his eyes and his lips
hung slackly open, dribbling blood that slowly stopped.
Lhyn said, "He's dead." The women with her began to chant
the deathsong.
Racharran nodded grimly and reached out to shutter Bakaan's lids over
the lifeless, staring eyes. "Prepare him for burial with all
honor. He was a brave man."
Lhyn said softly, "Shall we all die bravely, like him?"
Racharran looked at his wife and answered, "The Maker willing,
no." And to himself silently: Save the Maker turns his face from
us and leaves us to this scourge.
"Are they what Colun warned of?" Lhyn asked. "What
Morrhyn dreamed of?"
Racharran said, "I think they must be. What else can they be?"
"Then … "
"Yes." Racharran finished the sentence for her. "They've
come through the mountains and are into Ket-Ta-Witko. And we had best
prepare for such war as shall make this summer seem nothing."
She said, "O Maker, defend us! What of Rannach, Arrhyna? What of
Morrhyn?"
Racharran had no ready answer, and a problem of far more immediate
concern—that these strangeling invaders approached dangerously
close to the wintering clan. He pondered awhile in silence, staring
at Bakaan's ravaged face, then said, "I must see them for
myself."
Lhyn gasped and shook her head in mute denial.
Racharran sighed. "The People must be warned," he said. "I
must see these invaders with my own eyes, and send word to the other
clans."
"Not you." Lhyn reached for his hand. "Why must you
go?"
"I must know for myself," he said. "Can you not
understand that?"
"I can understand that I've lost my son and Morrhyn," Lhyn
returned. "And now, perhaps, shall lose my husband."
"How else can I tell them?" Racharran asked. "Do I go
to Juh and the others with only the word of a dead young warrior,
think you they'll believe me?"
"Why not?" she gave him back. "Shall they name Bakaan
a liar? His dying words all untruths?"
"The way they've been, yes!" he said. "They'd likely
tell me Bakaan fell to the Tachyn and only looked to glorify his
defeat."
"Then they'd be fools."
"Yes!" he said. "Just as they've been fools this
bloody summer. Think you they'll not look to turn their eyes the
other way on this as on all else?"
Lhyn knew he spoke the truth. But even so … Must she now lose her
husband as she'd lost her son and Morrhyn, about whom her feelings
were all confused and mixed since his departure. She shook her head
and sighed.
Racharran said, "I must! It's the only way I can be sure."
She said, not yet ready to admit defeat, "Sure? Are you not sure
now?"
"Yes, but I am akaman of the Commacht," he said. "Shall
I ask others to do what I will not? Besides, it must be my eyes see
them and my word to the rest; else none shall believe it."
"Then let them not," she said.
Racharran smiled sadly and squeezed her hand. "And the People
all go down before these strangelings? Save we fight together, I
think we shall not survive—any of us. Did Morrhyn not say as
much? Are we not united, then these invaders shall likely eat us up.
I
must go."
"And die alone?"
He shook his head. "I've no intention of dying. I intend only to
see. To scout and bring back word."
"Like Bakaan?"
"Bakaan did not expect them. He had no warning. I do, and so
shall be very careful."
Her fingers played in his, clutching tight as if she'd not leave him
go, not chance another loss. She would not look at him, not meet his
gaze for fear he see the tears brimming there.
"I shall be very cautious," he said, and squeezed her hand
harder. "I've too much to lose, else."
"Ach, go!" She pulled her hand free so that she might cup
his face with both, and draw him close and kiss him. "Go and be
brave! But also careful, eh? I'd not lose you too."
Hadduth studied his akaman from under hooded lids, Chakthi's hair
hung all unbound and tangled, dull with the ashes that he still daily
scattered over his head; and would, Hadduth knew, until his lust for
vengeance was assuaged. Which meant until Rannach was slain, or all
the Commacht. The Tachyn Dreamer was no longer sure one death would
satisfy Chakthi.
Carefully, he said, "We cannot pursue them in such weather.
We're not even sure where they winter."
Chakthi looked up from his contemplation of the flames. His eyes were
dark and cruel in the midst of the mourning paint he still wore. "We
can find them."
"Not easily," Hadduth said. "Perhaps not at all."
"Dream of their Wintering Ground," Chakthi demanded. "Tell
me where it is, where they hide."
Hadduth paused an instant, choosing the words of his reply. "I
cannot command the dreams," he said slowly. "Only interpret
what the Maker sends me."
Chakthi smiled, which made Hadduth distinctly uneasy, and for long
moments fixed the wakanisha with his burning gaze. Then he asked,
"What use are you, then?"
Hadduth swallowed, forcing himself to face Chakthi's accusing glare.
"I am wakanisha of the Tachyn," he said. "I speak the
Will."
"The Ahsa-tye-Patiko?" Chakthi spat into the fire. "What
does that mean to me? Vachyr is dead, slain by the whoreson Commacht
in defiance of the Will. And Rannach's punishment? To live, when the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko demands his death. I've no more use for the Will."
"It was," Hadduth said very carefully, "a judgment I
consider wrong. But even so, it
was the judgment of the
Chiefs' Council."
"The Council?" Chakthi said it like a curse. "I've
less use for those toothless old women than I have for the Will."
Hadduth frowned, his eyes wandering about the lodge. Surreptitiously,
he shaped a sign of warding: Chakthi voiced blasphemy now. "Perhaps
he's dead," he suggested. "It cannot be easy to survive in
the high mountains in winter."
"The Grannach aid him!" Chakthi snarled. "Colun was
ever Racharran's friend, and he'll be friend to Racharran's son.
Could I, I'd take the war to the Stone Folk."
Again, Hadduth made a gesture of warding: the Stone Folk were
inviolate under the Will. Save, he thought, nothing was inviolate to
Chakthi's lust, neither the Stone Folk nor the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. He
licked his lips and said, "When the Moon of the Turning Year
rises, we can go back to war. The Maker knows, we've fought hard this
past year, but the clan is hungry. They've … "
"I know." Chakthi's hand chopped air, silencing the
Dreamer. "They'd fill their bellies sooner than avenge my son."
"Hungry men make poor warriors," Hadduth said. "Let
them rest awhile. Let them hunt."
"Hunt what?" snapped Chakthi. "Where's the game? There
are no deer, nor buffalo. Save what they find dead."
Hadduth said, "Even so … " And fell silent as Chakthi's
hand snaked to seize his wrist.
The grip was hard and he must fight not to struggle, not to show his
discomfort. "Listen," Chakthi said, his voice hot and
heavy. 'Til see Rannach and his whoreson father dead for what they've
done. I'll have Racharran's wife for my pleasure, and Rannach's
traitorous bride too. And when I tire of them, I'll give them to my
favored men. I'll have my revenge, and I care nothing for what the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko says or what people think of me. And who is not with
me is against me. Do you understand?"
Hadduth nodded, frightened. Vaguely, in that part of his mind that
stood aloof from Chakthi's fury and observed dispassionately what
they said, he wondered if he did not fear his akaman more than the
Maker. Surely Chakthi's anger was the more immediate: he saw vividly
the punishments Chakthi had ordered for those who argued with him or
disobeyed him. He thought of Dohnse, stripped of all he owned and
banished to the farther edges of the Wintering Ground for allowing
Morrhyn to ride free. Dohnse's life was hard now: Hadduth would not
see himself consigned to such ignominy. He said, "I understand,
and I am with you."
He wondered if in that moment he forsook the Maker. But Chakthi
loosed his wrist, and as he massaged his numbed hand, he knew he
feared the instancy of Chakthi's rage at least as much as he feared
the disapprobation of the Maker. Later, he thought, he could make
apology.
Chakthi said, "Good," and
smiled. "I'd have my wakanisha with me, and have him
dream for me."
"I can try," Hadduth said.
"You can do better," Chakthi returned. "You've pahe
root?"
Hadduth nodded.
"Then go build a sweat lodge and eat your pahe and dream for me.
I'll not see your face again until you've answers."
Hadduth nodded again. "As my akaman commands."
Chakthi flicked dismissive fingers and the Dreamer quit the lodge. He
tugged his wolfskin cloak tight about his shoulders as he emerged
from the warmth into the cold outside. Great soft flakes of snow fell
out of a dark and starless sky. The White Grass Moon was hidden
behind the overcast that delivered the snow, and the lodges of the
Tachyn huddled like some great crop of mushrooms over the Wintering
Ground. A dog barked and was challenged by others. Hadduth thought
the sound mocking, perhaps even condemnatory, as if the Maker spoke
through the throats of the dogs. He
had made a choice, he
realized: he had chosen Chakthi's service over that of his calling,
and for a moment he contemplated turning back, telling his akaman
that he could no longer dream and the pahe root would make no
difference because the Maker turned his face from the Tachyn for
their betrayal of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko.
Then he saw Dohnse, out toward the farthest edge of the Wintering
Ground. The warrior shuffled across the snow, hunting for wood, and
when others saw him, they presented him their backs or flung balled
handfuls of snow at him. None spoke to him; some urged dogs to attack
him, children pointed and jeered. Hadduth thought he could not endure
that: he found his own warm lodge and the pahe root and set about
Chakthi's business.
28—Endings and Beginnings
Rannach saw them first. He was out on his snow-shoes with a deer
slung across his shoulders. He let the carcass drop and nocked an
arrow to his bowstring before he recognized them against the glare of
sun on snow. When he did, he set arrow and bow back in the quiver and
began to shuffle his way over the hardpack toward them, wondering why
so many Grannach came when before only Colun and Marjia had ventured
into the valley.
He saw those two at the head of the little column, four more behind,
and wondered what it was the others dragged on that sled.
When he saw the fur-swathed burden, he gasped, scarce able to believe
his eyes.
"Morrhyn?"
"Rannach." The wakanisha was hard to recognize, he was so
thin, his skin burned dark as old leather in stark contrast to the
white of his hair, but his eyes burned bright as if lit by some inner
fire. "Is Arrhyna well?"
"Yes." Rannach nodded dumbly, gaping at the Dreamer. "You?"
His voice begged a question filled with doubt. Morrhyn smiled and
said, "My friends would not let me walk, for all I'm quite
capable."
"He's weak," Marjia said disapprovingly. "Perhaps weak
as he's obstinate."
"You see?" Morrhyn raised a hand to gesture at the Grannach
woman. Rannach saw how the skin clung taut to the bones. "I told
them I could walk, but there's no arguing with this one."
"Hush, you," Marjia said. "Save your strength. You'll
need it, are you to do what you insist you must."
"She's a tyrant," Morrhyn said, his fond tone belying the
words. "Nor her husband much better."
"We'd have kept him longer," Colun said. "But he
insisted—"
"And he is obstinate as all men," Marjia interrupted, "and
as foolish, so we bring him. Now, shall we see him warm in your
lodge?"
"And tell you all that's happened," Colun said.
"And what must happen now," Morrhyn added.
Rannach frowned, confused, then nodded and fell into shuffling step
alongside the Grannach' as they strode onward, hauling the sled.
Like her husband before her, Arrhyna was surprised to see so many
Grannach, and wondered what it was they dragged with them on the
sled. But she set aside the trout she cleaned and washed her fishy
hands with snow, then rose to greet them as they came up.
"I bring guests."
Rannach smiled as he called to her, as if this were all quite normal,
but behind his cheerful humor Arrhyna saw concern. She called back,
"And most welcome," but still she felt the ugly prickling
of presentiment. And when she saw Morrhyn, she could not help but
gasp at his appearance.
"I've changed somewhat, eh?" The Dreamer thrust aside the
furs covering him and clambered from the sled. "But you've not.
You're lovely as ever. Even lovelier."
He waved back the Grannach, who looked to support him and stepped
toward her. She thought him vastly changed yet somehow the same, as
if he were transformed. She thought his eyes burned, and when they
fell toward her belly she knew, even though she did not yet swell,
that he was aware of the life she carried there.
She said, "You flatter me," and wondered what he did here,
where he had come from. And what his arrival presaged. She felt
suddenly frightened.
He said, "No, I speak only the truth," and put his arms
around her in a friendly embrace that succeeded in bringing his mouth
close enough to her ear that he might whisper, "Does Rannach
know?"
"Not yet," she said, not needing amplification.
"Perhaps you should tell him," he murmured. "You've
both decisions to make."
Arrhyna felt her smile freeze. For an instant she felt an unwelcome
future rush upon her, then Morrhyn let her go and she looked to the
others. "I bid you welcome, and enter our lodge in friendship."
She sought stability in the formal greeting.
Marjia said, "It shall be crowded."
"No matter." Rannach stepped out of his snowshoes and hung
the deer on the gutting frame. "Friends can never overcrowd a
lodge."
Even so, there was little clear space when all entered and settled
around the fire. The Grannach were short but bulky, and seemed to
take up more space than the three Matawaye. Arrhyna thought that
Morrhyn, thin as he was, took up less than any other. She could not
help but study him even as she set a kettle to boiling and prepared
tea. She anticipated Colun asking after his promised tiswin, but the
creddan made no mention of the brew and that disturbed her further.
She waited for someone to speak, aware they brought news she doubted
would be good.
All, it seemed, waited for Morrhyn, whilst he appeared only to
luxuriate in the lodge's warmth.
He beamed, stretching his hands toward the fire, and said, "Ach,
but it's good to sit in a lodge again. Not"—with an
apologetic glance at the Grannach—"that it was not fine in
the caves. But this is somewhat like coming home."
Rannach said, "This
is home."
"Yes." Morrhyn looked around. "And a fine place you've
made of it. You prosper here."
Arrhyna lifted the kettle from the fire and realized she lacked cups
enough for all. Marjia saw her discomfort and went bustling outside
to return with cups that she held as Arrhyna filled them and then
passed around.
When all were served, Colun said bluntly, "Do we get down to it?
Or shall we sit around talking small, while … "
"Hush, you." Marjia dug an elbow into his ribs. "This
is for Morrhyn to say, no?"
Colun granted and ducked his head and looked to the snow-haired
wakanisha. Arrhyna felt her mouth dry. It seemed a draft found a way
through the lodge's hides, dancing cold fingers down the length of
her spine. She touched Rannach's hand, staring at Morrhyn.
He sighed, no longer smiling, and said, "I've news, and not much
of it good. Ket-Ta-Witko stands in danger, and all the People;
terrible danger … "
He spoke then of the war Chakthi pressed, and the attacks the
Commacht had suffered, the indifference of all save Yazte's Lakanti.
He told of his quest, of. finding the cave and surviving there, and
the dreams that came to him. From time to time he broke off, allowing
Colun to describe the ravages suffered by the Grannach, and how the
invaders came through the mountains, and the Stone Folk were slain
and now become a single people with him their leader. Arrhyna
listened and felt her heart grow chill. Her fingers entwined with
Rannach's and held them hard.
"They've not come here," Rannach said when the awful
telling was done.
"Not yet," Colun returned him. "This valley is out of
their way; they go to your plains. But when they're done there … "
"Are they successful," Rannach said. "Are they not
defeated."
"The People stand no chance against them." Morrhyn's voice
was a cold wind blowing down the night, unwelcome as it was
unavoidable. "This I have dreamed, and I tell you it is true.
The clans are all divided, and save they unite … Even if they do
unite … "
He shook his head helplessly, hopelessly. Rannach said, "Then
the Maker delivers the People to these … Breakers, you name them?
He turns his face from us?"
Morrhyn looked awhile into the fire and then shrugged. "Surely
the People are tested," he said lowly. "Surely they have
erred, and—I believe—earned his displeasure."
"What's that to do with me?" Rannach asked, and glanced
sidelong at Arrhyna. "With us?"
Morrhyn raised his head to face the younger man. Arrhyna thought she
saw pain writ there. "Nothing," he said, "and
everything. Do you not see it?"
Arrhyna believed she did, and liked it not at all; but she kept
silent, waiting for her husband to speak.
Rannach frowned. "I am banished," he said at last.
"Accounted no longer of the People, but an outcast."
Colun snorted then, irritably, and asked, "Think you these
Breakers shall make such fine distinctions when they come back to
scour these hills? What shall you do then? Go to them crying, 'I am
not of the People. Leave me be?' I think they'll not care much who or
what you are, but only slay you and your bride. I'd thought
Racharran's son made of better stuff."
Rannach scowled and Arrhyna tightened her grip on his hand, fearing
he'd take such offense as to strike at the Grannach.
"Soft, soft." Morrhyn spoke again, his narrowed hands
gesturing placation. "Shall we friends fall to quarreling and
disagreement like all the rest? Are we no better than Chakthi, or
those others who pretend there's naught amiss?"
He looked from one to another, his eyes lit with such inner fire as
to still them all. Arrhyna thought she saw the Maker looking out from
those orbs—how else could Morrhyn know she was pregnant, save
all his dreams were true? And if they were ajl true … Again she
felt those chill fingers trail her spine, tingle over her heart..
Rannach met Morrhyn's gaze awhile, then lowered his eyes. "Tell
me what it is I should see," he said, his voice gruff with
confused emotions. "I am only a plain man, a simple warrior. I
do not see these things so clear."
"The Ahsa-tye-Patiko is more than just a set of rules,"
Morrhyn said, his voice soft but yet seeming to ring loud as any
clarion. "It is our covenant with the Maker, the thing that
binds us to him and him to us. And it stands broken, forgotten or
ignored by many. Thus are those wards he set about our land weakened,
and the Breakers able to come through."
Rannach frowned. "You say the sins of men deliver this scourge?"
"Yes." Morrhyn nodded solemnly. "The Maker forgives
much, but when men forsake the covenant of the Will … Why should he
remember us when we forget him? Listen—
Chakthi's was the first sin, that he was akaman of the Tachyn but
still agreed to Arrhyna's kidnap. No less Hadduth's, for he was
wakanisha and should have dissuaded Chakthi from that course … "
"Ach, dissuade Chakthi?" Rannach waved a scornful hand.
"He's as likely to try dissuading Chakthi as attempt to milk a
bull buffalo."
"And so perhaps his sin is the greater," Morrhyn said. "For
it was Hadduth's charge to define and interpret the Will, and he did
not. Like Chakthi, he turned his face from the Maker in pursuit of
only human profit: that was the second sin. And then—the
third—Vachyr took Arrhyna, which was a sure breaking of the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko."
"And I slew Vachyr." Rannach's voice was defiant, his eyes
no less so. "I slew him within the aegis of the Meeting Ground."
Morrhyn said, "Yes," looking directly at Rannach. "That
was the fifth sin."
Rannach said, "The fifth? Surely the fourth, if it
was a
sin—he gave me no other choice."
Morrhyn said, "Did he not? Truly?"
Rannach hesitated. Arrhyna drew in a deep and frightened breath,
clutching his hand hard. Morrhyn knew all that had transpired: she
saw it in his eyes, all fiery with the dreams the Maker had sent him.
She summoned up her courage and said, "I urged Rannach to kill
him. I told him what Vachyr had done and told Rannach to slay him for
it. So is there sin to be apportioned here, then I must take my
share."
Rannach said, "No! What sin there is is mine alone. I chose to
slay Vachyr; I was mad with rage. Leave Arrhyna out of this."
Morrhyn said, "I cannot. She's of the People, as are you. You
are both the Maker's children, parts of his creation and so bound by
his Will. Arrhyna's was the fourth sin, that she urged you to the
fifth."
"Then are we guilty as Chakthi?" Rannach asked defiantly.
"Guilty as Vachyr and Hadduth?"
"No." Morrhyn shook his head and stretched out his lips in
a wan smile. "Your sins were those of reaction, not commission.
And you suffered banishment, by agreement of all the Council."
"Then what is all this about?" Rannach demanded.
"Atonement. And the saving of the People. Forgiveness;
salvation, all well."
"I do not understand."
"I must go back to Ket-Ta-Witko," Morrhyn said.
Soft, somehow knowing what should come next, Arrhyna gasped, "No!"
Morrhyn smiled at her—gently, apologetically—and said,
"This is a hard duty, but I've no other way, no other choice."
"Rannach cannot go back," she said. "On pain of death,
he cannot! They'll execute him, does he go back."
"Why should I?" Rannach asked.
"Because I must," Morrhyn answered. "And because you
love the People. Because you are a brave, good man. Because I need
you."
Arrhyna said again louder, "No!"
"I'll willingly gift you a horse; two," Rannach said. "But
go back? That's my death. Even my father would command it."
"Not with the word I bring," Morrhyn said. "The word I
must bring, else all the People fall to the Breakers. And the
last of the Grannach, and all the worlds beyond, unending until
nothing is left save destruction and ruin and chaos, and all the
Maker's works brought down and only sad, dark night left ruling."
Rannach sat open-mouthed, his eyes haunted. "So bad? Truly?"
"Truly."
Arrhyna, all cold now, said, "Must it be Rannach? Why not … "
She looked, ashamed, at Colun.
Morrhyn smiled sadly and said, "The Stone Folk saved me when I
might have died in the snow, and they've fought battles enough with
the Breakers and have their own wounds to tend. They've done their
share, with more to come. Now I need someone who can ride hard and
bring me safe to the People. The Grannach do not ride—I've no
other choice but to ask Rannach." His sad smile went away, only
remorse left behind. "Could it be otherwise … "
Arrhyna closed her eyes tight against the tears that threatened, and
in that self-willed darkness heard Morrhyn add, "But there's a
thing he should know before he chooses. Shall you tell him, or I?"
She opened her eyes to face that future she had sensed approached
since first Morrhyn embraced her, and she knew he saw her as only a
wakanisha could. Almost, she hated him for that knowledge, but not
quite. How could she, when in his burning eyes she saw only
unwelcomed truths and the pain that seared him for what he knew, and
knew he must do?
She heard Rannach say, "Tell me what?" and turned her face
to her husband.
"I carry your child," she said.
Rannach's jaw dropped. His expression was comical enough that Arrhyna
almost laughed: would have, had other and weightier matters not
pressed her lips tight together. Then Marjia said, "Why are men
always so surprised?" And she could not help but chuckle.
Rannach asked, "A boy or a girl?"
Which seemed to Arrhyna so foolish, she began to giggle, and say,
"How can I tell?"
But Morrhyn said, "A boy. A fine and healthy boy."
And all the laughter ceased as they looked to the Dreamer, who
essayed an almost shamefaced smile and shrugged, saying, "I saw
it in my dreams. It's a boy, who—"
He broke off, his smile disappearing.
Arrhyna said, "What? Tell me, Morrhyn."
The wakanisha licked his lips nervously, and ran a hand over his
gaunt face and said, "There are threads to dreams, like all the
threads that weave out a blanket. Some go one way, some another;
others are broken … "
Arrhyna felt the fingers again, dancing chilly down her spine as if
all the possible futures plucked at her. She reached slowly for the
kettle, filling her own cup and then passing the receptacle on. Bad
manners, she knew, but knew she had no time now for manners, only the
terrible dread urgency that filled her. She voiced a question even as
she felt convinced she knew the answer, as if she owned the powers of
a Dreamer.
"Does Rannach not go?"
Morrhyn took a cup and sipped, then he looked her sadly in the eye
and said, "It must be his choice. I cannot say."
She drank tea and felt an emptiness open inside her. She said,
"That's no choice, is it?"
He shrugged. "There are always choices."
"Poor choices sometimes," she said. "And sometimes no
choice at all."
Rannach looked from one to the other, confused, and asked, "What
do you say?"
Arrhyna tore her eyes from Morrhyn's solemn gaze and turned to face
her husband. "The horses are healthy, no?"
Rannach nodded.
"And there's a deer to butcher?"
Rannach said, "Yes, you saw it."
She nodded. "You'll need meat, are you to travel fast."
"I've not agreed to go yet," Rannach began.
"If you do not, then our child will die. Likely I shall too. And
you, and all the People. Is that not right, Morrhyn?"
Morrhyn nodded. "That's one trail the future takes."
Arrhyna could not understand how she was able to speak so firm, so
clear. "Rannach, do you go ready that deer. You'd best leave
soon."
He said, "And leave you alone? With child?"
Marjia said, "She'll not be alone. She'll be with us."
Rannach hesitated.
Arrhyna said, "Go, husband. I'll be safe with our friends. Safer
than if you remain."
Rannach frowned, staring at her, and she took hold of both his hands
and smiled as best and warmly as she could and said, "There's no
other choice. I wish there were, but there's not. So go and do as
Morrhyn bids you, then come back safe."
For a while he only stared at her, reading the truth in her eyes.
Then he swallowed hard and ducked his head and kissed her, and went
out from the tent to butcher the deer.
Racharran took only five of his most reliable warriors with him, men
proven in battle who would not panic or run at the sight of what he
feared they'd encounter. All well, he hoped they would spot the
strangelings only at a distance—locate the placement of their
forces and assess their strength that he have some clearer idea what
the People faced—then come back safe with such information.
That was what he hoped, and what he told Lhyn would happen as she
held him tight and fought back tears, but they both knew that hope
was one thing and reality another.
He was no Dreamer that he could foresee the future, but he could not
forget Bakaan's wounds or the dying warrior's words, which seemed
clear portent of things to come. He wished Morrhyn were there to
advise him—he felt he became akaman and wakanisha both, and
that was a terrible weight to carry. But he put on a brave face and
led his little party out from the canyon across the snow fields, in
the direction of the catfish river Bakaan had described.
The snow was hard frozen and relatively easy to travel. The White
Grass Moon waned, and with its going the snowfalls ceased, replaced
by only bitter cold and winds that cut to the bone. Icicles hung
glittering in the watery sunlight from trees that thrust out naked
branches like the clutching fingers of nightmares. Rivers and streams
were locked beneath thick crusts of ice, their water black as night
and cold as death's kiss beneath. There was little game: deer sought
the shelter of the woodlands, and the few buffalo herds they saw
huddled disconsolate in close-packed, defensive groups where trees or
terrain afforded some shelter. It was not a time to travel. That, at
least, was some consolation, for Racharran thought not even crazed
Chakthi could persuade his warriors out from their Wintering Ground
in such harsh weather.
He led his men on. All wore furs—bear, buffalo, and wolf—with
more for the horses, and blankets and skins for shelter at night when
men and animals both might freeze to death. They each carried a lance
and a bow, spare strings and quivers filled with arrows tipped with
sharp Grannach steel; also knives and tinder and packs of dried meat,
and fodder for the horses—the equipment of a raiding party.
They wore no paint, but each man daubed his eyes with black against
the snowblindness; and all rode cautious, as if they
were out
raiding.
They came to the catfish river and walked their mounts over the ice
to the oakwood beyond. So far they had seen no sign of the invaders.
They camped inside the wood and chanced a fire. Racharran calculated
the timber should hide the smoke, and without that heat they might
well die. Before the light went, he checked the forest trails for
spoor, but found only trunks scratched deep and high, as if lions had
tested their claws against the wood. The score marks were level with
his head as he sat his horse, and he guessed them made by the beasts
Bakaan had described. He marveled at their size, and wondered if such
creatures might be slain.
The forest was a day and half's ride across. It would likely have
been swifter to skirt around, but the trees afforded shelter from the
relentless wind and cover from unwelcome observation. It ended on the
rim of a wide and shallow valley edged on its farther side with
broken hills, drumlins that scattered in a hundred directions, the
gulches between all wide and deep enough to hide a raiding party.
On the far side of those breaks, where the land flattened again to a
broad plain dotted with stands of winter-bared trees, they saw their
quarry.
Bylas was out ahead, and came cantering back with his lance held up
horizontal in sign of warning. Racharran halted the rest in the
shelter of a low ridge.
"The Maker blind me if I lie," Bylas said even as he
dragged his horse to a panting stop, "but I've never seen such
creatures. They're all Bakaan described and worse." He shaped a
sign of warding.
Racharran asked, "How far away?"
"Just out of bowshot," Bylas said. "Out on the flat
where the stream turns past a wood. They're hunting buffalo. No!"
He shook his head and spat onto the frozen snow. "Not
hunting—slaughtering. Ach, I've not seen the like of it."
His eyes were wide and his face drawn. Racharran knew him for a
phlegmatic man, not given to excitement or fear: now he looked
horrified.
"Wait here." Racharran passed his rein to Bylas and swung
to the ground. "You others, come with me. Bylas has seen
them—I'd have us all witnesses."
Bylas said, "Carefully, eh?"
Racharran nodded and drove his lance into the ground, then took up
his bow and looked to his companions. "We only watch, you
understand? Not fight, save they attack."
Bylas muttered, "The Maker grant they don't."
"The wind's in our favor," Racharran said more confidently
than he felt.
"What if … ?" asked Bishi, and had no need to end the
sentence,
"We run," Racharran said. "We are watchers now. We
need only to know their strength and what they are, and bring that
word back to the clan and all the People."
"But if they see us or scent us," Zhonne asked, "and
attack?"
Again Racharran said, "We run. This is not war with the
Tachyn—brothers though we be, we do not go back for any fallen.
We ran, that some, at least, live to take back the word."
"That is not our way," said Lonah. "To leave a fallen
brother?"
"I think," Racharran said, "that these are not such
enemies as we've ever faced. I believe it our duty to warn all of the
People, and to do that we must survive."
"And if you fall?" asked Motsos. "Are we to leave
you?"
Racharran said, "Yes," and stabbed a finger at each of them
in turn. "I charge you with this duty—that no matter what
happens here, you will endeavor to go back. Not look to save a fallen
brother or boast your prowess, but only take back word of what these
creatures are, and the threat they are, to the Commacht and all of
the People. Do you swear to this?"
They liked this not at all, but one by one, under the ferocity of his
gaze, they agreed.
"Then let us go," Racharran said, more cheerfully than he
felt, "and see what Bylas has seen."
"You'll not enjoy it," Bylas said, nor did they. The
buffalo were in a small draw—a herd of thirty or so, half that
number already dead, their blood-smell panicking the rest so that
they milled about and charged uselessly up the ridges or toward the
entrance. Racharran could not decide which he found the more
disgusting—the creatures that attacked or the creatures that
paced the rims and the entrance. The latter he supposed men: they
wore the shapes of men, the heads and arms and legs all encased in
bright armor that shone and glittered and tricked the eye so that it
was just as Bakaan had told him. They were hard to see, to define,
and they carried swords and lances that seemed possessed of their own
power, so that when only a single strangeling sprang out before the
terrified buffalo brandishing his weapon, the beasts snorted and
turned away, driven back toward the other predators.
And those were no less horrifying than Bakaan had said—each big
as a buffalo bull, but not such creatures as Racharran had ever seen.
They ran on wide and padded feet that sprouted claws large as
daggers, and their bodies were fur and scales combined, with lashing
tails like those of rats. They had massive shoulders and heavy heads,
sharp-eared and longly jawed, with savage fangs and hot red eyes.
They seemed to Racharran abominations, as if different and unrelated
creatures were joined in horrid amalgamation. And their appearance
was matched, even surpassed, by their bloodlust—Racharran must
hold himself back from crying out at what they did to the buffalo.
The People hunted the buffalo. Like the Matawaye, they were part of
life's circle, creations of the Maker, set down in Ket-Ta-Witko that
they might multiply and grant their bounty to the People. Their skins
made robes and tents, their bones implements and glue, the sinews
cords. All was designated within the Ahsa-tye-Patiko, and the People
took no more from the herds than met their needs: that was the
Maker's Will.
This was not. This was wanton slaughter, neither for meat nor shelter
but only for lust of killing, of destruction. The strangeling beasts
clawed and bit and roared as the buffalo bellowed in terror and pain,
and stumbled in the tanglings of their own entrails. Racharran saw a
cow brought down and gutted and left kicking behind; a bull tossing
helpless horns and running as two of the beasts mounted its back and
chewed away its spine, and then left it to course and gut another. A
yearling died at a single bite.
It was all he could do not to flight arrows against them. But he
fought that impulse and made himself still and watched, even as bile
rose in his throat and he felt such hatred as he had never felt, not
even against Chakthi. He heard a sound and turned to see Lonah
spitting vomit. At his side, Bishi thrust a finger between his teeth
and bit down, that he not cry out in disgust. Zhonne and Motsos lay
white-faced as the snow under them.
The buffalo died, all of them, and their slayers gorged on some and
left the rest all bloody and ruined and pointlessly slain. Then the
man-things came down and carved off steaks and ribs and set to eating
the meat raw.
They were easier to define against the dark shapes of the buffalo
carcasses, and Racharran saw that there were no more than seven of
them, and seven of the creatures. For a moment he thought of
rescinding his own orders and attacking, but he knew—for all
his outrage prompted him to believe otherwise—that such
monstrosities as these could not be defeated by six Commacht. They
were too terrible, too given to wanton slaughter: what they did had
nothing in it of humanity, but only …
otherness, such
strangeness as spoke of generation outside the Maker's creation. He
felt he looked on blasphemy incarnate, as if all the darkness and
ugliness of the very worst of sins were released into the world and
become rapacious flesh.
He watched aghast, scarce daring to breathe for fear these things
sense it and slay him before he had chance to tell the People what he
had seen. He watched them end their feast, and the man-things call up
the beasts and set saddles on them, then mount and ride away. He was
ashamed he felt so glad when they went away from where he lay.
"What now?" Zhonne asked, his voice harsh with disgust.
Racharran thought a moment. Then: "I think those must be
scouts." He did not want to say what he knew he must, but he was
akaman of the Commacht—he had a duty. So he said, "We must
go after them and see where they go. Likely they join a larger band.
We need to know how large, and where it is."
"Likely we go to our deaths," Motsos said.
Racharran said, "Perhaps. Would you turn back?"
Motsos glanced sidelong at Zhonne and Bishi, then shook his head.
"But a long way behind them, eh?" Lonah said. "And
very wary."
"Yes," Racharran said, and forced his mouth to smile. "But
look you, they go toward the Tachyn grass. Shall we dare that?"
It was a poor jest, but it elicited smiles, albeit grim.
"I think," Lonah said, "that after what I've seen this
day I am not much afraid of Chakthi's wrath."
"Then we go," Racharran said. "And see what worse
things lie ahead."
The strangelings' stranger mounts ran swift and sinuous, their wide
paws better equipped for traversing the snow than the smaller hooves
of the Commacht horses. Racharran held his men back—those paws
left a clear trail, and he'd not risk battle with such beasts. At
least, not yet, for in his soul he knew that fight must sooner or
later come. But not yet, he prayed. Not until all the People
understand and join together to face this threat. So he waited as the
invaders disappeared into the snowy distance and only then took his
men out.
They crossed the flat and, as the light began to fade, came to a band
of low hills bearded with windblown pines. The tracks went into a
gully that shone with harlequin patterns of shadow and starlight.
Racharran halted at the entrance. He did not know if these creatures
traveled by night or would make camp, but he was loath to stumble on
them. He bade his men wait and himself went forward on foot. He saw,
as he tracked them, that his own feet were easily encompassed by the
massive paw marks: he clutched his bow tighter and willed his
pounding heart slow down. Then, where the gully turned, he saw the
reflection of fireglow on the snow and heard the rumbling growls of
the beasts interspersed with guttural voices. He tested the wind. It
was tricksy amongst the hills and dividing channels, but came mostly
from ahead: he decided to chance it, and crept closer.
Hugging shadow as if it were Lhyn's body, he moved into the angle of
the gully and saw ahead a widening, a shallow bowl where the
strangelings made their camp.
The riders sat about a fire, still armored save for their helmets,
and he saw they were not, in the generalities of their shaping, so
very different from men. He was surprised to see that three were
female. This he assumed from the angling of cheekbones and lips, for
all of them were of similar physiognomy and length of hair. He was
even more surprised that they were so … the only word he could
think of was
beautiful. Their hair was long and fair, falling
in soft, smooth folds about faces that, even planed and shadowed by
the fire's light, were lovely, as if physical beauty were cynically
contrasted with horrid nature. Their brows were wide and smooth above
large, gently slanted eyes, their noses straight, their mouths
generous, their teeth broad and white, tearing at raw chunks of
buffalo meat that dribbled blood down their chins so that they wiped
and licked it from their fingers, laughing.
Racharran stared at them awhile, fascinated and horrified, and then
to where their monstrous mounts lay on the snow. They were not
tethered, and from time to time one rose and paced and growled before
lying down again. He thought them all weird and horrible, and thanked
the Maker the wind blew as it did and that they set out no guards. He
supposed them too confident for that.
He crept away with held breath and returned to his men.
That night none of the
Commacht slept nor lit a fire, but only
sat huddled with their horses close at hand, praying the wind not
change direction or the animals betray them with a snicker. When cold
dawn came up, Racharran once more ventured into the gully. The
invaders' fire was only embers, their trail leading out. He called up
his men, and they continued their wary pursuit.
Beyond the hills lay open plain, then forest, and they must hang back
for fear their quarry sight them. But the tracks ran clear, as if the
invaders had learned what they would and now returned to report.
It took them three days to traverse the forest, and when they reached
the edgewoods they could see the pinnacle of the Maker's Mountain far
off in the distance, shining brilliant under the winter sun. Save for
brief obeisance, they paid the peak scant attention, for their eyes
were entirely occupied with what lay between the woodland and the
mountains.
An army such as Ket-Ta-Witko had never seen camped there, spread
bright and brilliant across the snow. Racharran stared in horrified
wonder. These invaders did not put up such lodges as the People used,
but rather great pavilions that might hold whole families and were
all rainbow-striped and hung with gaudy banners that bristled and
crackled in the wind. And amongst them, down the wide avenues
between, went folk armored in colors to match the kaleidoscopes of
the pavilions, so that the vast area covered seemed to shimmer and
glitter with a myriad of hues that hurt the observing eye. Fires
burned there, but seemingly only for their heat. Those invaders who
ate consumed meat taken raw from the buffalo that stood penned and
terrified to one side of the camp. On the other side were the riding
beasts, not penned but watched by folk in black armor who wandered
the perimeter of the unmarked enclosure with long goads like
strange-bladed lances.
Racharran watched from the shelter of the trees and endeavored to
calculate their numbers. He thought they must amount to more than
three full clans.
"So do the People unite," Motsos said, "we shall
outnumber them."
"
If the People
unite," Racharran answered in a whisper. "And do not forget
those beasts."
"Do they fight as they slaughter buffalo," Zhonne said,
"then they must at least double the numbers."
Racharran said, "Yes." And then: "We go back. We must
warn the clan."
"And the others?" asked Lonah.
"We must warn all the People," Racharran said, and sighed.
"Save we unite, I think we are all lost. I think the worst is
come upon us all."
They moved back into the timber and mounted their horses, and then
rode hard away.
29—Dark Dreams, Dark Promises
If it was strange to dream again after so long without such
revelation, the dreams that came to Hadduth were stranger still.
It was as though a hand other than the Maker's shaped the images. He
could not say whose, but knew only that they were not, after a while,
such dreams as he had ever known; and behind them, like fleeting
movement caught in the eye's corner, was such power as terrified and
intrigued him both. At first, when he began his vigil, he thought he
suffered them as he would suffer nightmares; then he reveled in them,
for they held out such promise as he had never known.
Seven days and seven nights he lay within the sweat tent before he
was ready to confront Chakthi with what he had learned, or thought he
learned.
He dreamed first—as had all the wakanishas of the People before
that last, fateful Matakwa—of strange riders mounted on
stranger steeds, whose paws left prints of fire across the grass,
whose mouths gaped wicked fangs, and whose eyes burned as they drove
the People before them like buffalo driven crazy by a prairie fire.
He woke frightened then, crying out into the darkness of the sweat
tent, and would have gone out and warned Chakthi that such danger as
neither he nor the akaman could imagine came upon them and would
destroy them, but he knew that was not what Chakthi wanted to hear
and so forced himself to a semblance of calm and set more stones on
the fire and ate more pahe root and returned to the oneiric world.
Then he dreamed that he stood before the awful riders and crouched in
terror as they came down on him, save they did not trample him but
turned their mounts around him in a circle and dipped their lances in
recognition. Then from out of the circle came a figure mounted on the
strangest horse Hadduth had ever seen, horns curling from its head,
its coat the color of midnight, its eyes blazing as if fires burned
within the sockets. On its back, straddling a great ornate saddle,
sat a figure clad in armor that shone like the sun, who leveled a
gauntleted finger at the cowering Dreamer and beckoned to him.
Hadduth whimpered in terror, and the figure laughed and rode away. As
Hadduth rose and watched them go, he wondered how he lived and why
they spared him, because between him and them stood a wall of fire
that ate up the grass as if it would devour all of Ket-Ta-Witko,
leaving nothing behind save he.
The next time he dreamed, the rider halted and beckoned Hadduth to
join him again, and when the wakanisha at first demurred, the figure
laughed and set his awful horse to prancing so that Hadduth cowered
and cried out and woke.
That dream came again and again, until he was afraid to resist and
instead bowed his head and asked where the rider would take him.
The armored figure did not answer, but only beckoned him to ride with
them, and he—afraid of what refusal might bring—agreed.
And then he dreamed the Tachyn rode with them and they moved against
the Commacht, and he saw Racharran taken and slain, and Racharran's
wife brought to Chakthi, who hailed his wakanisha as a brother and a
great Dreamer, and vaunted him above all others in the clan.
From that dream he woke filled with pride, and after he had eaten the
food brought him and drunk a little water, he took more pahe and
returned more eagerly to the dreaming, which now showed him Rannach
brought before Chakthi and slain, and the woman Arrhyna delivered to
Chakthi, who thanked him and heaped praise on him, and gifts, so that
he became greater than the greatest of the favored Tachyn warriors.
And then he dreamed he stood upon a hill and looked out over all the
land that was Ket-Ta-Witko, and at his side was the warrior armored
as if with the sun, all bright and glittering, who swept out a hand
in which was held a great and burning blade and spoke. And though
Hadduth could not understand the words, he knew they were of conquest
and the elevation of the Tachyn over all others. He saw Chakthi
climbing the hill, laboring, and looked to the shining warrior, who
nodded his agreement that Hadduth reach out to aid Chakthi and bring
him onto the hill to stand with them.
And Hadduth realized the hill was the Maker's Mountain and that he
stood higher than any man had stood before, and that Chakthi stood
with him only by his leave. And the sun-bright figure gestured all
around, at all of Ket-Ta-Witko and all that existed beyond, down the
passages of time and dreaming at worlds beyond, and worlds that might
be, and told Hadduth all should be his, all ruled by the Tachyn, if
he would but heed the import of the dream and do that which should
raise up his clan in conquest of all its enemies. None should stand
before him, or higher than he, but bow and hail and fear him.
Hadduth woke, tempted and afraid. Such pride, such promises, flew in
the face of the Maker and was contrary to all the Ahsa-tye-Patiko
meant. But still, even so …
It was a heady seduction.
Were it possible, it must surely please Chakthi. He remembered
vividly those other dreams, of Chakthi's praise, his own elevation,
the aggrandizement …
He ate more pahe and slipped once more into the dreaming.
When at last he emerged from the sweat tent he was gaunt and
hollow-eyed, but he had Chakthi's answer now: he told the akaman what
Chakthi wanted to hear, and Chakthi was pleased, and feasted his
wakanisha; and together, secretly, they prepared.
Racharran and his men came back to the Wintering Ground weary and
alarmed. It was no pleasure to find his worst fears confirmed, and
still less to see the faces of his people as he told them the
disturbing news. When he was done, a long, deep silence filled the
camp, and all the Commacht stared at him as if he were diseased and
threatened to infect them with his plague. He waited for comment, but
it seemed his news was of such moment, none could find their tongue.
"It's as Morrhyn warned," he said, and instantly regretted
mentioning the absent wakanisha, for out of the crowd a man called,
"Morrhyn? What's Morrhyn to do with this? Morrhyn deserted us."
"No!" Racharran answered. "Morrhyn lost his
dreams—likely under the influence of these strange folk—and
looks to get them back, that he might aid us. He risks his life for
that."
"But still he's not with us,"said another.
All Racharran could do was shrug, for that was true.
"Even so," he said, "this horde has come through the
mountains. These are the people Colun warned us of, and if they're on
the grass of Ket-Ta-Witko, then I fear the Grannach are defeated."
"Come the year's turning," a warrior called, "we'll
defeat them."
"I think we cannot." Racharran shook his head slowly and
sadly. "Surely not alone. They are many—far more than us
Commacht—and the beasts they ride are ferocious as blood-mad
lions. I wonder if they'll even wait for the Moon of the Turning
Year."
"No one fights before," the man said. "Not even
Chakthi."
"These are strangeling folk," Racharran replied, "and
not like us. I think they may not wait."
Behind him, the chosen five nodded grim heads in agreement.
"Then what shall we do? You are akaman of the Commacht. Tell us
what we should do."
He recognized Lhyn's voice and struggled not to smile his thanks for
that support. Instead, he waited awhile as others took her cue and
voiced the same question.
"We must prepare for war," he said. "Even be it under
the eye of the Breaking Trees Moon or the Rain Moon, we must be
ready. Also, we must seek the support of all the clans. We must—"
A voice interrupted him. "The support of the Tachyn? Ach, that's
not so likely, eh?"
Racharran shrugged. "What comes is enemy to all the People, to
the Tachyn no less than us. I'd ask Chakthi to set aside his …
differences"—that elicited laughter, albeit cynical—"but
first I'd send messengers to the Lakanti and the Aparhaso and the
Naiche, to tell them what we saw and what we fear, and ask that they
join with us. That might persuade Chakthi. I'd send out messengers
with tomorrow's dawn."
He saw Lhyn's face tense at that. She knew he must be one, albeit he
was not yet a day returned. He held his own features still as voices
buzzed, warriors speaking one with another, husbands with wives. A
child cried and was hushed to silence; dogs paced fretful about the
edges of the throng, as if they sensed the import of this meeting. In
the sky, the sun observed them with a pale and indifferent gaze.
Faint from the farther depths of the canyon came the belling of a
bull buffalo, and overhead a flight of nine crows swooped low and
unusually silent. Racharran wondered if that was a sign. Morrhyn
could likely interpret it, he thought, but Morrhyn is not here.
Perhaps Morrhyn is dead. He caught Lhyn's eye and silently thanked
her for her smile.
Then, slowly, the hum of conversation ceased and the clan looked
again to their akaman.
"What is your decision?" he asked.
There was a silence that hammered on his ears. Then a man said, "You
are our akaman and we cannot doubt your word. Tell us what you'd do."
Other voices rose in agreement. The crows began to caw and wheel in
circles above.
"I'd go to Juh," Racharran said, "with Bylas. I'd send
Zhonne and Lonah to speak with Tahdase; and Motsos and Bishi to
Yazte. We have all seen these strangelings and can say what they
do—and what we fear they shall do."
"And Chakthi?" a man asked.
"Yes, Chakthi. He might not take my word, eh?" Racharran
smiled, encouraging their support; encouraged himself by their
laughter. "I'd first look to convince the Aparhaso and the
Naiche and the Lakanti, then ask them, each of them, to send
messengers to the Tachyn. Do you agree?"
His answer came snouted: "Yes! You are akaman of the Commacht
and we follow you!"
He felt proud of his clan then; he hoped their trust was not
misplaced and that he did the right thing. Surely he could not think
of another course.
He wished Morrhyn was not gone away.
"You'll go to Juh?"
Lhyn stirred the pot suspended over the lodgefire, her eyes downcast.
The flames set red lights in her hair, and Racharran thought she
looked beautiful and young. He felt old and tired.
He wished he need not go; he wished there was no horde massing below
the mountains. He shook his head, dismissing futile wishes: what was
was, and he must face it.
He said, "Yes. Can I convince Juh, then Tahdase will likely
follow. Yazte will believe Motsos and Bishi, do they go with my
tokens of authority."
"And you'll ride out again?" she said.
"What other choice have I?" he asked.
Lhyn sighed and said, "None. I only wish … " She shook
her head and fell silent.
He asked, "What do you wish?"
She looked up then and met his eyes, saying, "These are not such
times as allow us wishes, eh? Only duty."
He said, "Yes," and reached for the flask of tiswin she'd
set beside him.
"Will they agree?" she asked.
He filled a cup and drank before he answered: "I don't know. The
Maker willing, yes; but … "
"It should be better were Morrhyn here," she said, staring
at the pot.
Racharran said, "Yes, but he is not. And so … "
"You must do what you can," she finished for him.
"What I can think of," he said. "And hope it's
enough."
Lhyn said, "Yes. I'll pray it is."
The Aparhaso wintered in a thick-timbered valley, wooded down all its
length with beech and birch and hemlock. No buffalo sheltered there,
but Juh's clan had no need of such provision, for they had fought no
war that year and had enjoyed the time to hunt and stock themselves
well against the cold moons. They had a well-fed look, all plump and
content, which contrasted with the two thin Commacht who rode in on
horses not much fatter than their owners.
Juh was surprised to see them; Hazhe no less. Racharran saw alarm on
both their faces as he reined in his horse before Juh's lodge and
waited on the Aparhaso akaman's invitation to dismount.
It came slower than it might, for Juh seemed not quite able to
believe his brother chieftain had come avisiting in the Moon of
Breaking Trees, but then he beckoned them down and offered formal
greeting. He looked a moment at the crowd that had followed them,
then bade them enter his tent and called for men to tend their
horses. Inside, he gestured them to settle on the spread furs and
offered tiswin as Hazhe closed the lodge-flap.
The wakanisha piled more dung on the fire and took his place beside
his akaman. Both studied the two Commacht with sympathetic eyes.
Racharran sipped the tiswin, thinking that he had rather been offered
food and tea, but Juh's wife appeared to have gone off somewhere, and
the silver-haired akaman gave him no other choice.
There was a lengthy and cautious silence as they drank. Then Juh
said, "It is my pleasure that you visit us, but it is …
unusual. In such weather?"
Racharran set down his cup and said, "These are unusual times,
my brother. I've such news as cannot wait the year's turning, but
must be decided now."
Juh motioned that he continue, and Racharran told of his scouting and
what he had seen—what he believed it meant for the People.
When he was done, Juh looked to Bylas, who ducked his head and said,
"It is all as Racharran has told you."
Juh looked then at Hazhe. The Dreamer frowned and asked, "What
does Morrhyn make of this?"
Racharran said, "Morrhyn is not with us. He went away to the
mountains to get back his dreams."
The two Aparhaso exchanged a glance, and Juh said, "Then this is
all your thinking?"
"What else can I think?" Racharran asked. "I have seen
what I have seen. What do you think?"
Juh drank tiswin and said, "That no one fights in winter."
"Not the People," Racharran said, echoes of his own folk's
response ringing in his head. He had hoped—prayed!—that
Juh think deeper and wider. "But these strangelings are not like
us."
"No," Juh agreed. "But even so—to attack when
the Moon of Breaking Trees rides the sky? Surely none do that."
"They are not like us," Racharran said again, and looked to
Hazhe. "What do you dream, wakanisha?"
Hazhe's face gave him all the answer he needed, and before the
Dreamer had a chance to answer, he said: "Like Morrhyn, eh? No
dreams at all?"
Hazhe shrugged shamefaced, glanced sidelong at Juh, and shook his
head.
"It's as Morrhyn said," Racharran declared. "There's a
dark wind blows across Ket-Ta-Witko to cloud the minds of the
wakanishas and confuse us all."
"But Morrhyn is gone away," said Hazhe. "In such dark
times, should he have not stayed with his clan?"
"He did what he thought best," Racharran said, aware he
sounded defiant, "what he believed he must. He will come back."
If he can, he thought. If he's not already dead.
"Be he with you or not," Juh said, "still you ask much
of us."
"I ask you to defend Ket-Ta-Witko," Racharran said. "I
ask you to face this enemy that shall surely destroy us do we not
unite."
Juh raised a hand mottled with age and said, "Slowly, slowly, my
brother. I do not doubt what you tell us you have seen; I do not
doubt some great horde has crossed the Grannach mountains, perhaps
even defeated the Stone Folk. I do not doubt they are
terrible—remember that I heard Colun speak at Matakwa and I
know the Grannach speak true. But … "
"What?" Racharran ignored all protocol: he heard
prevarication in Juh's voice—all
but and
but—and
feared his warning should go ignored. "But what?"
Juh sighed and raised his silvered head to the lodge's smokehole.
"That the Moon of Breaking Trees is up," he said, "and
my people are content in their Wintering Ground. That none fight
across the snow, and it should be hard to persuade my warriors to
leave their warm lodges and their wives. Not until the Moon of the
Turning Year, at least."
"That is the Will," Hazhe said. "The Ahsa-tye-Patiko."
Racharran ground his teeth, biting back his rising temper: was he to
persuade them, he must not lose it, not show the anger their
complacency roused. They seemed to him as men who looked on building
storm clouds and told themselves the sky was clear and no rain would
fall. He took up his cup, afraid his hand should break it, and sipped
tiswin and said, "Morrhyn suggested the Ahsa-tye-Patiko is
broken, by all that happened at this last Matakwa and after."
Hazhe looked at Juh, who said, "That is a matter between you and
Chakthi. What bearing has it on what you ask?"
Hazhe said, "That argument were better explained by Morrhyn. Had
he not gone away."
Racharran said, "But he has, and so you've only my word."
"Which we do not doubt," Juh said. "Only your estimate
of the time."
Racharran fought his face and voice to calm. "I think that do we
not band together, then these invaders shall come upon us like a
storm wind and blow us down like dead trees. All of us!"
"That is your opinion," Juh said, nodding solemnly. "And
I respect it. I shall think on it and speak of it, and give you my
decision."
Harshly, Racharran asked, "When?"
Mildly, Juh replied, "When I've thought it over and discussed it
with Hazhe and my people."
Racharran said, reining his frustration as he would an unbroken
horse, "How long shall that take?"
"As long," Juh answered, "as it does. Until then, you
are my guests, and welcome here."
Racharran nodded, knowing he could get no better answer, fearing what
it should be. He looked at Hazhe, praying the Dreamer came to his
side, and got back only an impassive gaze that offered him neither
answer nor hope.
"They're blind!" he said, his voice harsh with anger. "They
choose it, like children tugging the blankets over their heads to
fend off the night fears. They'll not listen! They close their eyes
and hope the night stalkers will go away."
"You're angry," Lhyn said. "Because they'd not heed
you."
"Yes!" Racharran leaned forward to take up the flask and
pour more tiswin. "I'm angry because they ignore the threat, and
because they'll die for it. Because we all might die for it."
"You've done what you can," Lhyn said. "What more can
you do?"
He said, "I don't know. The Maker help me, but I don't know."
Lhyn came to rest beside him and filled his cup. "Perhaps
Morrhyn will come back with answers," she said.
"Perhaps." Racharran gusted bitter laughter. "And
perhaps the Maker will burn up the strangelings. Perhaps he'll wipe
them off the grass before they slay us all. Or perhaps we shall all
die under their blades, and the Maker turn his face away and condemn
us for our stupidity."
The news had not been good: no better from the others than what he
had brought back from Juh's Aparhaso.
Zhonne and Lonah had returned from the Naiche's Wintering Ground with
word that Tahdase would follow Juh's lead—which meant that the
Naiche would not consider fighting until Juh gave the word, until the
snows were gone.
Most surprising had been Yazte's response.
Motsos and Bishi had told Racharran of warm welcome and promises of
food and support for the Commacht—but no promise of warriors
until the Moon of the Turning Year rose. They said that Yazte had
lost men to the Tachyn for his support of the Commacht during the
summer's war and would not lose more, nor go out bellicose before
winter's end. Not until his clan was fat-fed and rested, he said. But
then, did Racharran call him to war with the Tachyn or any others, he
would come with all his warriors and drive either Chakthi's people or
any others from off the grass of Ket-Ta-Witko.
That hurt Racharran the most: he had believed that Yazte, of all the
akamans, would see the awful truth and come to unity. Without at
least the Lakanti, he doubted any of the People could survive what he
was convinced must soon come against them. Without any agreement, any
unity, he thought the Matawaye must soon fall to the invaders, and
his heart turned sour at the ignorance of his brothers.
"I must send scouts out," he told Lhyn. "To watch for
what comes."
"Yes," she said, doing her best to hide her own fear,
wanting to lend him strength. "What you think is best."
He said, "I'm not sure what that is anymore."
"You'll do what's right," she said. "You always do."
"Do I?" he asked.
She said again, "Yes. You lead the Commacht."
"It used to be," he said, "with Morrhyn's guidance."
"It used to be." Her eyes closed a moment. "But not
now. Now only you lead us."
"I wish," he said, and closed his own eyes as she touched
his face, "that I had his guidance now."
She said, "Yes, but he's gone."
"I wish," he said as she touched him and her hands moved
from his face to his chest, "that he were not. I wish he were
here."
Rannach draped a blanket over the stallion's head and passed the rein
to Morrhyn. Arrhyna's paint mare, which she had given the wakanisha
to ride, was already masked. Either animal might panic at the sight
or scent of what lay ahead, and that must surely bring their
desperate journey to a swift ending.
"Be careful, eh?" Morrhyn asked.
Rannach nodded without speaking and slipped away through the trees,
to the edge of the copse, where he could better see the obstacle
across their path.
Colun had brought them out of the valley, through the Grannach's
secret ways, to the very edge of the Meeting Ground. There he had
left them, reiterating promises that Arrhyna should be safe with his
people who would await Morrhyn's return—if he survived—in
readiness for what the Dreamer hoped to achieve. None of them was
sure it could be accomplished. It was, as Morrhyn explained, one
possible path amongst the multiple branchings of all the possible
futures, the reality of its success dependent on frail men making the
right choices.
And were they to have any hope at all, then Morrhyn and Rannach must
survive the journey.
They had ridden swift as weather and terrain allowed from the Meeting
Ground, and struck out directly for the Commacht grazing. Rannach
would have taken a more circuitous path—it occurred to Morrhyn
that the young warrior matured and grew more cautious with the
knowledge that Arrhyna carried his child—but the wakanisha had
pressed him to speed. It was a gamble. Rannach's preferred way would
have skirted well clear of the Tachyn lands, which should surely be
the safer trail, but longer, more consumptive of time, which Morrhyn
knew they lacked. Did they not come timely to the Commacht, then they
might as well fall to Chakthi's men; it would make no difference.
Death was death, no matter which the hand that dealt it.
So they chanced the Tachyn and rode hard across the snow, pushing
their horses to the limits of their endurance, comforted by their one
advantage: Morrhyn had back his dreams.
It was Rannach who chose the details of their path and Morrhyn who
set the general direction, warning when they need slow and when they
need hide, when to skirt around and when to wait. He dreamed each
night now, and daily thanked the Maker for the return of his talent.
It was as if a strong, clean wind blew through his dreams, sweeping
away the obfuscating darkness. The last night had told him they
should go cautious through this hurst, for danger lay ahead.
Now he held the blanket-blinded horses and waited for Rannach's
return. The trees stood bare-branched and draped with icicles that
shone in the morning sun. Small birds darted scavenging about, and
through the latticework of naked boughs he could see the sky all cold
and wintry blue. It prompted thoughts of objective eyes, that studied
him judgmental and indifferent. His breath came out in steaming
clouds, and even through the furs he wore he could feel the terrible
cold. He drew the two horses closer, seeking their warmth. He could
not remember so harsh a winter, and wondered if that were somehow
connected to the coming of the Breakers into Ket-Ta-Witko. Surely
they commanded powerful magicks: perhaps they brought bad weather
with them. But if they did, he thought, then surely the Maker fought
them, for the sun shone and the snow was frozen hard enough that it
did little to slow the animals. It should be worse were there
blizzards, or the ground all muddy. And then he thought that the
Breakers must be no less able to travel fast over the frozen
landscape, and smiled unhappily: what favored him and Rannach must
also favor their enemies—it seemed all balanced on a knife's
edge, the outcome yet to be determined. He shivered, leaning against
the paint mare's neck, wondering.
Then Rannach came back. Under the hood of the furry cape he wore, his
eyes were wide with wonder and horror, and it seemed a measure of
blood had drained from his dark skin. He held his bow with an arrow
nocked, as if he needed the comfort of the weapon.
"The Maker alone knows," his voice was hushed and harsh,
"I've not seen such things, such creatures!"
Morrhyn said, "I know."
"How?" Rannach asked, then shook his head. "Of course!
In your dreams."
Morrhyn nodded.
"There was a column," Rannach said. "Thirty of them,
all riding …
things."
Again Morrhyn nodded, and said, "Like giant lions, lizards, and
rats, all together, eh?"
"Yes." Rannach stared at the Dreamer. "And the riders
were all armored. They looked like bright beetles. I think it should
be hard to fight them. Those creatures they ride would likely terrify
our horses."
"Likely," Morrhyn agreed. "But the Maker willing,
we'll not fight them. Only escape."
Rannach lowered his eyes to the bow he still held, as if he'd
forgotten it. He eased the string down and set the shaft back in his
quiver, then looked again at Morrhyn.
"Is that the only way? To give up Ket-Ta-Witko?"
Morrhyn shrugged, the movement lost under the furs he wore. "That
or die."
"None other?"
Morrhyn shook his head. It was a hard answer, but all he had to give.
The dreams had shown him that.
Rannach looked awhile at the bleak and sun-bright sky, and then shook
his head and sighed. "It shall be no easy task to persuade the
People. The Commacht shall surely take it hard; the rest … "
"Shall listen or not," Morrhyn said. "The world turns,
like"—he smiled cynically—"like a stone that
exposes the dark, grubbing things beneath. Save we cannot turn the
stone back, only go away from it."
"Or fight them," Rannach said. It was hard to know whether
he made a statement or asked a question.
"You've seen some few of them," Morrhyn said, "and
know they must be hard to fight. You've heard Colun speak of them,
and know what they do. It's too late even to try turning the stone
back. They are here now, in Ket-Ta-Witko, and they'll overrun it all
save we can convince the People of the Maker's promise."
Rannach drew a hand across his mouth. His eyes were haunted as they
found Morrhyn's. "Is this my doing?" he asked, low-voiced.
"The reward of my sin?"
Morrhyn wished he need not answer, but truth was truth, and it was a
time for such honesty else all be lost. So he said, "It's as I
told you back in the valley, an accretion of sins. Yours was one."
"Then am I damned?"
"The Maker's kinder than that," Morrhyn said. "He
offers redemption, forgiveness. You atone for your sin by what you do
now in bringing me back. Bringing the promise of salvation."
"And Arrhyna?" asked Rannach. "What of her? You said
she'd sinned also."
"In small measure, I think," Morrhyn replied. "And was
it not Arrhyna who persuaded you to guide me? Had she not spoken up,
would you have quit the valley?"
"No." Rannach shook his head. "Not save she told me to
go."
"Then I think she also atones."
"And Chakthi?" Rannach asked.
Morrhyn hesitated. He'd known no dreams of the Tachyn. He'd seen in
sleep the Commacht and the Lakanti, the Aparhaso and the Naiche, find
that salvation the Maker offered—would they but listen and
heed—but nothing of Chakthi's clan. Remnants of the dark wind's
fog still hung about them, as if the Breakers' magic clung stronger
there. He said, "We must bring the word to Chakthi also. What he
does after … "
He shrugged, and Rannach barked a sour laugh and said, "I'd
never thought to save Chakthi."
"But you'll try, no?" Morrhyn asked urgently. He could not
say it clear—that should be too great a revelation, such as
might upset all his hopes—but he willed Rannach to agreement.
The younger man looked into his eyes and nodded. "I must try,
no? I must atone for what I've done, else … " He shuddered.
"I've the feeling that do I fail you, Arrhyna and our child must
die; and the Grannach and the Commacht, and all the People. It's as
you taught us the Ahsa-tye-Patiko says, no? All's balanced, and is
that balance disturbed, then compensation must be made, else the
scales swing wild and all suffer."
Morrhyn felt his heart lift. Not far, for far too much still hung
upon those scales, but did the headstrong Rannach recognize his debt
and show willingness to compensate, then there
was hope. He
smiled and said, "You grow up. You show your father's wisdom."
Rannach's face clouded a moment at mention of Racharran but then he
essayed a tight-lipped smile and said, "I dealt my father
unfair, eh? I was angry with him for my banishment; I thought he
should have supported me better. But now I think I see that what he
did was all he could do, to keep the balance."
Morrhyn said, "Yes. It was as he told you—he is akaman of
the Commacht, with a duty to his clan and all the People, and he
could not do else. You could learn much from Racharran."
His face clouded as he said it, remembering a dream that showed one
of the many paths—one he had sooner not take. Save he wondered
if it was not one forced upon him.
"What's amiss?" Rannach asked. "You've the look of a
man troubled."
Morrhyn shook off the memory. His way was clear and must it lead to
that—to what he'd sooner not think of—then still he had
no choice were the People to have any hope. Racharran would not turn
away, he thought.
He forced a smile and said, "Should I not be? I worry that we'll
not reach the People in time. So, tell me what you saw."
"Thirty Breakers," Rannach answered, "moving across
our path from south to north. They're gone now."
"Then we proceed," Morrhyn said. "No?"
Rannach took his horse's rein and lifted the blanket from th
stallion's head, swinging lithely astride the big horse. Morrhyn took
the blanket slower from the mare's head and mounted stiffly. He felt
frail, and as they rode out from the hurst he could feel the mare's
spine thud hard against his withered buttocks even through his
fur-lined breeches and the padding on his saddle. It was a sorry
thing, he thought, to lose so much flesh that riding became so
arduous a task. But then again, it was as he had told Rannach. All
was balanced by the Maker and had he lost flesh, still he had gained
much else in compensation.
He had hope now, where none had been before; and promised answers to
the awful threat of the Breakers. So he turned his face to the sky
and offered the Maker his thanks—and his heartfelt wish the
People listen to him—and followed Rannach out across the snow,
refusing to heed the doubt that came as they crossed the tracks the
Breakers had made.
30—The Wind Blows Cold
Bylas saw them first: a column of twenty, weirdly mounted on those
strange beasts, all armed with bows and blades and great hook-headed
lances, their eye-bedazzling armor sparkling and shimmering like
twenty different rainbows in the hard light of the winter sun. They
came in single file down the draw, the creatures they rode padding
swift and sure over the snow. He saw the beasts were not reined like
horses, but only saddled, and guided by the rider's knees and shouts.
He remembered the wounds Bakaan and his horse had worn, and tested
the wind. It blew from off the invaders, carrying a faint stench of
meat and blood, as if they breathed out the memories of their
carnage. He held his breath and slithered down from off the ridgetop.
Racharran had given clear orders that he was only to watch—no
more—and bring back word of what came against the People.
He found his horse and looked to his fellow scouts, motioning them to
hold silent as he murmured what he had seen.
Motsos whispered back, "So do we return? Or do we trail them?"
Bylas thought a moment and then said, "I think we'd best follow
them and see where they go."
"And do they go toward the Wintering Ground?" Motsos asked.
"Then we ride ahead," Bylas answered, "and warn the
clan."
"Can we outrun them." Motsos stroked his horse's neck.
"We've seen them move, eh? Should they find us on open ground
… "
Bylas grinned sourly and said, "Yes. But even so, we must try.
Do they find the Wintering Ground … "
He left the sentence unfinished and Motsos nodded. They both knew
there was little chance of outrunning those strangeling beasts over
the snow, nor much better of defeating them; not five scouts against
twenty.
"So we ride." Bylas turned his horse's head to parallel the
draw. "And carefully, eh? Lest they hear or see us."
The snow was hard enough that their hooves made little sound, and in
a while Bylas lifted his mount to a canter that he might reach the
timber beyond the draw and use that cover to see where the invaders
went. He looked at the bleak sky and wondered if this was his day to
die.
Like all the warriors of the Commacht—like all the warriors of
the People—he was prepared to give his life in defense of the
helpless ones, in defense of Ket-Ta-Witko. That was a man's honor,
his understood duty. But he had seen the invaders before and could
not help but doubt his chances against them. If it came to it, then
he would fight, but he could not help but think it should be a
useless battle that must leave him dead and the invaders go on to
overrun the canyon and the clan, and leave nothing living.
He prayed it not come to that, and heeled his horse to a faster pace,
eager to reach the trees and see where the twenty strangelings went
before they saw or scented his scouts. He hoped the Maker would
forgive him for hoping they turned toward the Tachyn grazing. Even
with what he felt for Chakthi, he could not, honestly, wish such fate
on the Tachyn, save it were better visited on them than his own clan.
"Can you go on?" Rannach studied Morrhyn with worried eyes.
"We can rest awhile longer if you need."
"No." Against the protests of his body, Morrhyn forced
himself upright. "We go on."
O Maker, he thought. You gave me back my dreams and showed me what I
have to do, and for that I thank you. But could you not also have
given me back my strength? I feel weak as a babe.
But he got no answer, only the dull, numb aching that possessed his
knees and sent pain stabbing down the length of his spine as he rose
from his blankets and straightened his back. He felt old, and
wondered if that was the payment demanded for the visions, for the
knowledge of the many paths and the one true hope.
If so, he thought, then so be it. I will pay it. I will pay my life
if need be. Only let me bring the word to the Commacht and all the
People, and they survive. If I must die for that, then I shall,
willingly. Only let we who believe in you live and not be destroyed.
He watched as Rannach shoveled snow over the embers of their fire,
tugging his furs closer about his shivering body. Maker, how could he
feel so cold? It sank into his bones and set his ears to drumming
with the ache of it, his teeth to chattering hard enough he feared
they might splinter. His scalp, even under the fur-lined hood, felt
as if needles dug into his brain. He supposed it was because he had
lost so much flesh, living in the cave and then on the descent, but
…
If that was the price …
He willed his legs, his feet, to walk, one step after another until
he had reached his borrowed horse and could lean against the mare's
warm strength. Set a hand on her neck and find the rein, swing up
onto the saddle Rannach had already—young and strong and not at
all exhausted—placed there.
He fell down.
Rannach lifted him from the snow, setting him tottery upright,
leaning against the paint mare who snorted and shifted, threatening
to spill him down again.
"By the Maker, you cannot even mount a horse! We must wait and
rest."
"No!" He shook his head. "We've not the time. Help me
up."
"You're too weak." Rannach looked at him, eyes wide even as
he frowned. Doubt was writ there in his gaze. "We'll wait and
eat. Gain strength, eh? I can hunt us food."
"Help me up," Morrhyn said. "We've no time."
"But you'll die. You're skin and bones."
"I can still ride: I must. Help me up and I'll ride. I'll eat
along the way."
"Eat what?" Rannach asked. "We're safe here. I can
hunt here."
Morrhyn held tight to the saddle, hoping the mare not move else he'd
fall down again. He said, "And wait for the Breakers to find us?
No! We must find the clan and tell them. Now help me up. We've meat
enough to keep us going."
"You need a winter's eating," Rannach said. "Just to
put the flesh back on your bones."
"I'll eat my fill when we're safe. Now shall you help me mount,
or shall I leave you here?"
"Ach!" Rannach picked him up and threw him astride
Arrhyna's horse. "I should know better than to argue with a
wakanisha."
Morrhyn gritted his teeth against the pain of unfleshed buttocks
meeting horse's spine, and smiled. "Yes, you should. Now let's
go on. The valley ahead is safe. But after … "
"There were fifteen men," Perico said, "after a herd
of wintering buffalo. It should have been a good hunting—extra
meat, and winter-thick hides. Only … "
"Only?" Juh asked.
"None came back," Perico said.
Juh looked at Hazhe: "What do you think?"
The Aparhaso Dreamer looked at Perico and asked, "What did you
see?"
Perico said, "A herd of buffalo slaughtered, and our hunters
with them. Tracks in the snow, amongst the blood, as if great lions
had fallen on them all."
Hazhe looked at Juh, not saying anything.
Juh said speculatively, "Was Racharran speaking the truth?"
Hazhe shrugged. "Perhaps. I'd not doubt his word, save … "
He turned toward Perico. "Those tracks. Like lions, you said?"
"Like giant lions." Perico nodded urgently. "Tracks
larger than any horse's hoof. And"—he looked from
wakanisha to akaman—"there was so much blood. It was not a
hunting, it was a slaughter. The buffalo were all torn apart, and our
hunters with them. I saw horses with their bellies ripped out, and
men without heads. As if … " He shook his head, the telling
too enormous to comprehend.
"As if Racharran spoke only the truth," Hazhe said. "The
Maker help us."
"The Maker help us," Juh echoed. "I should have
listened to him better."
"We could not know," Hazhe said. "Not then."
"But now?" Juh asked.
Perico looked from one to the other. He was only a warrior, and they
the guardians of his clan: he assumed they spoke of matters beyond
his ken, and trusted them to decide favorably for the benefit of all.
Save he'd heard, like all the Aparhaso, of Racharran's visit and what
the Commacht akaman had said to his own chieftain of strangeling
invaders such as the Grannach had warned of at Matakwa. He cleared
his throat and spoke.
"We must fight them," he said.
Juh and Hazhe turned toward him.
He swallowed breath and summoned up his courage. "I saw our
people slain," he said. "And buffalo slaughtered not for
meat or hides, but only, it seemed, for sport. If it's as the
Commacht akaman said, then I think we must ready for war."
He feared he had earned Juh's displeasure, but the white-haired
akaman smiled—albeit sadly—and said, "Yes. I was
wrong to disregard Racharran. You see it out of younger eyes. So—you
will take my promise to him: that the Aparhaso will listen to what he
has to say, and fight these invaders with him."
Perico said, "Me?"
Juh nodded and said, "You. You will go out tomorrow to the
Commacht Wintering Ground and tell Racharran that I shall listen to
all he has to say of how we fight these invaders. Bring him back if
he'll come. If not, bring back his word of what he'd have us do."
Perico nodded, thinking he'd bought himself an unwanted duty—it
was a long, cold ride to the Commacht's new Wintering Ground. But
even so … He thought of the animals and the men he'd seen
slaughtered. Might that journey defeat the invaders …
"Before the sun rises," he said, "I'll be on my way."
The column seemed in no hurry. Bylas supposed that was because they
scouted ahead of the main force, and then wondered how far behind
that great army was. Did it follow after these twenty strangelings,
or did it remain below the hills, awaiting the scouts' reports? He
stroked his horse's winter-shaggy muzzle, murmuring softly, that the
animal not give away his position. He thought the invaders' own eyes
magically gifted if they could see him through the trees, but perhaps
they were. How could he know? How could anyone? Such folk had never
before ridden the plains of Ket-Ta-Witko.
He saw they came toward the wood, and made a swift decision.
"We pull back. We'll put the wood between us and them, and seek
the shelter of the ridges."
"And do they come to the ridges?" Motsos asked.
"Then we pull back farther. The canyon's what, three days'
riding?"
Motsos said, "For us. But for them … ?"
"Save they see us and chase us," Bylas said, "I think
they'll ride slow. But listen, all of you. Does it come to a chase,
we do not go back. You understand? We must not lead them to the
canyon, but away." He thought a moment. "You've the fastest
horse here, Motsos. So, are we spotted, we run and look to confuse
our tracks. When you safely can, break off and take word home. Warn
Racharran."
"Leave you?" Motsos looked offended.
Bylas said, "Yes! That the clan know is the important thing."
He set a hand on his friend's shoulder. "And your horse is
swift, eh?"
Motsos nodded reluctantly. "As you say."
Bylas smiled. "As I say. Now, let's mount and ride while we've
the time."
They swung astride their horses and rode fast as snow and low-hung
branches allowed. None were cowards, but all felt mightily wary of
being found on open ground by what came after them.
Tahdase's lodge was warm, the fire merry as his young wife took the
kettle from the flames and filled her husband's and Isten's cups.
That duty done, she retreated demurely and set to decorating a shirt
with brightly colored designs of summer flowers. Tahdase glanced at
her and smiled fondly, wondering if he'd have the opportunity to wear
the shirt or she have the time to finish it. He turned his face
toward his wakanisha and motioned that Isten speak.
The Dreamer looked aged. Crescents of shadow hung beneath his eyes,
and those had a haunted look. He sipped his tea and voiced polite
thanks before he spoke of what brought them together.
"They say strange riders have been sighted. Such folk as
Racharran's men spoke of. They say there are buffalo slaughtered and
left to rot." He smiled a twisted smile and snorted sad
laughter. "If anything
can rot in such a winter."
Tahdase said, "I know this; I have heard what they say. What I
need to know is who these strangelings are, and what they do here."
Isten stared at his akaman as if Tahdase were a child who should know
better. "They are who Racharran's men told us they are, I think.
They are the folk Colun spoke of at Matakwa."
His tone prompted a brief narrowing of Tahdase's eyes, a flash of
anger that was instantly replaced with embarrassment as the young
chieftain ducked his head and said, "Yes, all I've heard is as
Racharran's men told us. But … " He raised his head so that
Isten saw the plea his gaze expressed. "What are we to do about
them?"
"Are they scouts," the wakanisha said, "then they are
the vanguard of that horde Racharran saw. Likely they seek the
Wintering Grounds."
"And if they find them," Tahdase said softly, "and
they are all Colun and Racharran said they are, then we are in
terrible danger."
At the rear of the lodge his wife gasped and pierced her thumb with
the needle. Tahdase glanced briefly in her direction and returned his
gaze to Isten.
The wakanisha nodded gravely and said, "Yes."
"So what shall we do?" Tahdase asked.
Isten met his gaze, thinking he seemed very young and frightened. The
wakanisha felt very old. He said, "Had I my dreams … "
"But you don't," Tahdase said sharply. "The Maker
turns his face from you." He saw the hurt in Isten's eyes and
added softer, "He turns his face from us all, no?"
Isten nodded. "It would seem so. It would seem what happened at
Matakwa blights us."
"Then it's the fault of the Commacht and the Tachyn?"
Tahdase sprang on hope like a starving dog on a carcass.
"Perhaps." Isten gestured helplessly. "Surely the
wards are broken, can these folk cross the mountains. Perhaps the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko is broken."
"Not by us," Tahdase said.
Isten said, "I wonder," in a slow and thoughtful voice. "I
wonder if it matters any longer who owns the blame. Is the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko broken, then it is broken, and I think that who broke
it matters little in the Maker's eyes."
Tahdase frowned. "How can that be? Was it broken by the Tachyn
and Commacht, then surely these newcomers must descend on them."
"Our people die," Isten said. "And have these strange
folk come through the mountains, then surely the Grannach also die.
Are they guilty? Were the Whaztaye guilty?"
"I know nothing of the Whaztaye," Tahdase said—defensively,
Isten thought. "Nor much of the Grannach. My father knew them,
but I … " He shrugged.
"The Grannach do not lie," Isten said. "They are the
guardians of the hills, and they do not lie. But they did warn us …
"
"Yes, yes." Tahdase nodded. "And have these invaders
come through the Grannach's passes, then no doubt Grannach
have
died. And Naiche die, and likely other clans suffer. But what are
we to do?"
"I think," Isten said, "that perhaps we should send
riders to the Commacht and ask what Racharran does."
"Perhaps." Tahdase stared awhile at the fire, rolling his
cup between his hands. He seemed not to notice the hot tea that
spilled out. "But first let's send riders to the Aparhaso and
ask what Juh does."
"Why not send them to both?" Isten asked.
"No." Tahdase shook his head. "First to Juh. Then,
when we've word of what he thinks, to the Commacht."
"Are you sure?" Isten asked.
"This is my decision," Tahdase said.
Isten nodded. "You are akaman of the Naiche: it shall be as you
wish."
They crossed the valley and topped the wall beyond. From there,
looking out from behind the screen of pines that hid them, they could
see the broken country stretching away to the width of the icebound
river that curved slow and lazy across the flat. The river was too
broad that ice had locked it yet, and the farther bank devolved onto
a wide beach that ran smooth to the stands of hemlock, beech, and
maple that scratched at the cold sky with naked branches.
Rannach turned to Morrhyn and pursed his lips. The wakanisha looked,
if anything, worse than that first day in the valley. Strands of
white hair straggled from the hood of his cape, and his cheeks were
sunk in, the bones prominent as a dead man's. His lips were thinned
and cracked by the cold, moving as his teeth chattered. Had he not
known better, Rannach might have thought him a ghost, a revenant
spirit come back to haunt him for his sins. In all of Morrhyn's face,
only his eyes seemed alive, and they burned with such awful
determination, Rannach could not look long at them for fear they'd
suck out his soul and bind him forever to the Dreamer's purpose.
Save, he thought, he was already bound.
The Maker knew, but he felt no choice but to deliver Morrhyn safe to
his father, who—being the man he was—might likely execute
the sentence agreed by the Council should his son return from
banishment. "Just" was a word people applied to Racharran;
"hard" was what came to Rannach's mind. He thought it not
impossible his father thank him for bringing Morrhyn back and then
order his execution: justly.
But he had given Morrhyn his promise and he would not renege on that,
no matter the cost.
"I see no danger," he said. "There's neither smoke nor
any other sign. Nothing moves out there."
"Even so." Morrhyn leant against a pine, an arm around the
trunk as if without that prop he must fall down.
"Even so?" Rannach queried.
"It's there," Morrhyn said, the syllables distorted by his
jangling teeth. "Small, but even so … "
"We can follow this ridge," Rannach offered. "It shall
delay us—the next ford is three days distant—but if you
say we must … "
"Three days?" Morrhyn frowned, which contorted his face
horribly. "And after?"
Rannach stabbed a finger in the direction of the river. "Do we
cross here, then we're in line for the Wintering Ground. Five more
days?"
"And that way?" Morrhyn waved a glove at the ridgetop.
Rannach said, "Three days to the ford, then a stretch of river
breaks that shall likely take us three more. After that, perhaps nine
or ten. The horses are wearying, remember."
Morrhyn nodded. Rannach thought, And also you. Can you last so long?
Can you even last five days?
"There's not the time." Morrhyn spoke into the gnarled bark
of the tree. "O Maker, there's not the time." He pushed
away from the tree, shuffling across the snow to where the paint mare
waited. "We must risk it. But listen, eh?"
Rannach nodded as he heaved the Dreamer astride the mare. He no
longer asked if Morrhyn needed help: it was too obvious, and he only
gave it.
"There's danger down there." Morrhyn raised a hand to point
in the direction of the breaks. "No great force, but …
something. I cannot dream it clearer."
"And if we ride around this danger?" Rannach asked.
"Then we shall come too late," Morrhyn said. "Oh,
Rannach! The Maker forgive me, but I lead you into peril."
Rannach smiled. "My life's forfeit, no? Every step I take into
Ket-Ta-Witko I'm in peril. So what more is this?"
Morrhyn smiled back. "You've courage," he said. "And
you grow wiser. But listen, I think that what we face cannot be met
with honest lance. Your bow should be the better weapon."
"Then I'll ready my bow." Rannach mounted his stallion and
heeled his lance in the saddle sheath, drew his bow from the quiver
and nocked a shaft. "Do we go on?"
"Yes." Morrhyn nodded. "But carefully, eh?"
Bylas heeled his horse to speed for all the animal was already
running fast as it could. He could hear the baying of the lion
creatures behind him. They sounded close, but he had sooner not look
back: better to fasten his eyes on the broken country ahead, where he
might lose them. Better not to see them at all.
He turned his face in Motsos's direction and shouted, "When we
reach the gulleys, you turn off and ride for the canyon."
Motsos waved a hand in acknowledgment. Bylas breathed a hasty prayer
to the Maker that they all survive. He doubted they would. But Maker,
he asked, let Motsos at least live to take word back.
They came in amongst the ridges and galloped hard along the widest
draw. Then, deliberately, waving Motsos on, Bylas slowed his horse
and motioned the others up around him. In a group they followed after
Motsos until he turned away in the direction of the canyon. They
followed awhile, until Motsos split off and the snow lay all churned
behind him so that pursuit must surely be difficult.
Then Bylas shouted over the pounding of the desperate hooves and the
roaring of the lion-things behind, "We fight! For the Commacht,
eh? And all the People!"
"We should have wintered with the Commacht." Yazte loosed a
string of curses that elicited a reproachful glance from his wife.
"Together, we might be strong enough."
" 'Might' is a loose bridle," Kahteney said. "And from
all Motsos and Bishi told us, two clans alone should not be enough."
"No." Yazte shook his head, reaching for the tiswin. "But
had we listened, looked to persuade the others—"
"We did not and they did not," Kahteney interrupted. "And
now it's too late."
"I know." Yazte grunted, like some hibernating bear
disturbed out of winter slumber. "I know all the things we
should have done and did not; what I want to know now is what we
should do now."
Kahteney looked him in the eye and gave bleak answer: "I don't
know."
"Ach, you're my wakanisha," Yazte grumbled. "You're
supposed to advise me."
Kahteney chuckled softly, the sound as grim as his worried face.
"I've no dreams to guide me," he murmured, "nor much
advice to offer. Save what hindsight grants."
"Hindsight!" Yazte gestured irritably, splashing tiswin
unnoticed over his breeches. "Hindsight's no use to me. I've a
clan looking to me for guidance—I must look ahead."
Kahteney nodded. "Those we've sighted are surely scouts. Scouts
go ahead of a war band—"
Now it was Yazte who interrupted: "And therefore that horde
Racharran sent warning of comes into Ket-Ta-Witko! Yes! I know this,
and that even the scouts are formidable. I know that if they find our
Wintering Ground and bring that horde against us, we've little
chance. Oh, by the Maker, I know this! But what am I to do?"
Did he expect a response, he got none. He continued: "Shall I
tell my Lakanti we must strike our lodges and quit the Wintering
Ground? To go where? To the Commacht? Would they welcome a whole clan
in that canyon? What should we all eat? And if these strangeling
invaders find the canyon? In the Maker's name, Kahteney, I tell you I
don't see any answers. Not save we wait here and pray; and likely
die."
Softly, Kahteney said, "Perhaps that's the Maker's wish."
Yazte said bitterly, "Then he's unkind."
"Or just," Kahteney said no louder, "and delivers the
People to punishment for the breaking of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko."
"All of us?" Yazte drained his cup, refilled the vessel.
"That's a hard judgment, no? Should he not limit his ire to
those closer concerned?"
Kahteney shrugged, offering no answer.
"I'd not," Yazte said sullenly, "just sit here and
wait for death. But the Maker help me, I cannot think of what else to
do."
"Perhaps … " Kahteney hesitated. "Perhaps you should
send a messenger to Racharran."
"To what end?" asked Yazte. "If anything, the Commacht
are worse off than we. Morrhyn's gone away, no? And the Commacht
suffered all summer from Chakthi's raids."
Kahteney shrugged again. "I can offer no better advice."
"Ach!" Yazte emptied another cup. "He's hard, our
Maker."
"But just," Kahteney said. "Perhaps he'll offer us a
chance to survive. I cannot believe he'd destroy all of the People
for the sins of the few."
"Think you so?" Yazte sighed hugely. "I see little
chance for any of us. I think perhaps we are all doomed."
"Perhaps we should pray," Kahteney suggested.
"You've not already?" Yazte pantomimed surprise.
Kahteney knew his akaman too well to take offense, so he only nodded
and said, "I have. But perhaps we should hold a Prayer
Ceremony."
Yazte sniffed. "If you think it might do some good. But
meanwhile I think I'll take your other advice."
"Which?" Kahteney asked.
"The messenger," Yazte answered. "I shall send a rider
to the Commacht to find out what Racharran does."
They came down off the ridgetop cautious as wolves with man-scent on
the wind. Rannach took the lead, guiding the stallion with knees
alone, his hands on bow and shaft, his eyes alert for sign of
promised danger. Morrhyn followed behind, one hand holding the mare's
rein, the other locked in her mane. He feared he'd otherwise fall,
and cursed his weakness. A bow and arrows hung quivered on his
saddle, but he doubted he had the strength to flight a shaft. If what
he dreaded did wait below, then it should be Rannach's fight alone,
and he like some invalid, one of the helpless ones. He prayed his
dream was wrong and knew it could not be. Had he any power now, it
was oneiric, prophetic.
Something awaited them.
He clung to the mare as she plunged through the snow drifted amongst
the breaks. Perhaps, he thought, the danger lay in the river. Even
with the ford, that must be perilous to cross. Frozen along its
banks, the water was snow-gorged, running cold and swift, with
sizable chunks of ice racing on the flood. It should be easy for a
horse to lose footing there, or panic at the onrush of floes. He
shuddered at the thought of finding himself unhorsed in midstream,
doubting he could hold his seat if the mare bucked; sure that he must
die if he fell into the icy water.
He turned a head that ached with the cold toward the walls of the
break they descended. Snow glittered there, under a hard blue sky,
the sun watery above. Ahead, its rays layered veins of gold on the
black water of the river, the floating ice all gemlike—silver
and blue. Ahead, Rannach's stallion snorted and began to plunge
against the rein.
Rannach came out of the saddle in a single fluid movement, leaving
the stallion to wade back to Morrhyn.
"He scents something." As he spoke, his eyes moved across
the terrain below. "Hold him and wait here. Keep them both quiet
if you can."
Morrhyn nodded and urged the mare closer to the nervous stallion. "Be
careful, eh?" He took the stallion's rein. The horse snapped
yellow teeth and he wondered if he
could hold both animals:
the mare sensed her companion's unease and began herself to shift
under him. He wound both reins in his left hand and promised himself
that if he should be unseated, he would lie in the snow and hold them
until Rannach came back.
If Rannach came back.
The younger man was already scrambling up the side of the break, his
head bared now so that the warrior's braids flung loose. Pale
sunlight shone on the fastening brooches. Morrhyn remembered they
were Arrhyna's gifts, and how proud Rannach was to wear them.
Then Rannach was gone, cresting the break's wall to find cover behind
a snow-clad boulder. It was a vantage point that afforded him a large
view across the surrounding network of ravines and washes. They
angled down like the scratchings of some gigantic beast to the river,
all dips and hollows that radiated from off the ridge. He tested the
wind—it blew from off the river to his right, but when he
chanced rising enough that he could scan the banks for some distance
in both directions, he saw nothing.
So, whatever scent the stallion had caught came from the right, but
not along the river. Therefore, from one of the dips and gulches in
that direction. He eased his bowstring down and began to crawl on his
belly across the crest.
The depression on the farther side was empty: he slithered down and
worked his way on cautious feet to the riverside end, then slunk
along the descending slope to the next break.
Fox-wary, he eased around the wall, and saw what had frightened his
horse.
It frightened him.
He had seen the Breakers at a distance, from a safe position, but now
he looked close on one, and on the creature the Breaker rode. He knew
he must kill them both, for they must surely sight him and Morrhyn at
the ford and come after them. And he knew they could not outrun that
great
thing, with its massive, clawed paws and hugely muscled
legs, not even were his stallion unweary. And Morrhyn would likely
fall off Arrhyna's mare, or both horses panic. And there was the
river to ford, and Morrhyn said there was no time to waste.
So …
He drew his bowstring tight and sighted down the shaft, trying hard
not to think of Arrhyna or the child she carried, for such thoughts
urged him to turn and flee, go back to them and leave Ket-Ta-Witko
and the People to their fate. But he had made a promise: he could not
flee. He swallowed a breath that would be released with his shaft,
and hesitated as the beast coughed out a sullen grumble and raised
one great paw, licking at the pads for all the world like some
enormous cat worrying at a splinter or a cut.
So that was why the Breaker and his beast were alone: the creature
was hurt. Rannach might have smiled had he truly believed that
afforded him some advantage, but he did not think it did. Even
wounded, that thing could slay him. And did he slay the beast, then
he must surely face the other, whose armor shone rose-pink as a
summer flower and seemed to shift and shimmer so that his eyes could
not properly follow its outlines.
But he had made a promise, and he was a warrior. He drew the
bowstring until fletchings brushed his cheek, and stepped around the
break's concealing wall to loose his shaft.
The lion-thing roared loud enough to wake the dead as the arrow
pierced its eye. Its head lurched back, jaws spread wide so that
Rannach saw all the dreadful panoply of its fangs even as he drew a
second arrow and nocked it to the string. He bent the bow and let fly
again.
The shaft drove into the throat and over the furred scales there,
blood darkening the pale flesh. The creature dropped its hurt paw and
fell as it clawed at the missiles embedded in its eye and neck.
Rannach drew and fired three more shafts as the awful howling filled
up the break and echoed off the walls. He had always been good with a
bow, and each arrow struck where he aimed: one drove into the belly,
another lanced the remaining eye, the third went in between the jaws.
Then he dropped the bow as the Breaker closed on him.
The invader came fast across the snow, leaving him no time to use
that weapon again, so that he let the curved bone drop and snatched
hatchet and knife from their scabbards.
Good Grannach steel, those blades, the ax mounted on a pole of
fire-tempered hickory wrapped round with soaked leather that had
hardened like a second skin. Nor less the knife, its haft secure in
his left hand, the blade half an arm's length of pointed metal honed
sharp on both its sides.
He ducked under the longer blade the Breaker swung and took the
reversing stroke with the hatchet, turning to drive the knife against
his opponent's ribs. Had he fought one of the People, his counter
would have driven the blade deep through hide and flesh, and hurt and
weakened enough he might turn his hatchet and stove in the skull. But
the Breaker was armored, and he felt his arm jarred by the impact, a
hard metallic elbow slammed against his cheek. He staggered,
retreating as the sword reversed and came threatening toward his
chest.
He danced back, hampered by the snow, grateful it was not drifted and
deep but stamped down by the paws of the screaming beast he prayed
was dying, else he was surely lost.
The Breaker's blade glittered, darting in sweeping arcs at his head
and chest. It was not such a combat as he was accustomed to, and he
sprang farther back, wary as he gauged the reach of his enemy. The
sword was twice the length and more of his knife, and he saw the
Breaker held it in a double-handed grip and knew that one blow must
cut him down, or take off his head.
And then he saw that each sweep turned the Breaker a little to the
side. Not long, for the man was very fast and the sword came hurling
back even before he exposed his armored ribs—but there
was a
moment. No more than an instant, an eye's blink of time, but perhaps
enough.
Rannach wondered how far away were the Breaker's companions. He
thought this solitary beastrider must be one of some scouting party,
separated from the rest when the lion-thing went lame. He wondered
how far those agonized screams carried, how long before the rest
heard them and came back.
"No time," Morrhyn had said: he could not delay.
Once, he had slain a Tachyn raider with a thrown hatchet. He doubted
even Grannach steel, thrown, would pierce the armor the Breaker wore.
But close, could he get past that scything blade …
He feigned a stumble, feinted under a vicious, sweeping cut, and dove
forward, rolling headlong over the trampled snow to rise inside the
Breaker's reach, his hatchet rising and falling even as his knife
drove up.
The hatchet hammered against the Breaker's concealing helm; the knife
found flesh between the helmet and the armor's collar. Rannach turned
the knife, twisting the blade even as he thrust it deeper, even as he
smashed the hatchet against the helm.
He felt warmth on his knife hand and knew it was the heat of blood
spilling out. He felt the Breaker's arms close around him and the
man's weight fold against him, dragging him down onto his knees.
Still he pounded the helmet with his ax, and saw the helm buckle and
split. For an instant, through the concealing faceplate, he saw blue
eyes staring at him in naked surprise. Then the light went out of
them and the Breaker gusted a sigh that sounded weary, and was only
deadweight.
Rannach pushed the body away and looked toward the dead man's mount.
The lion-thing still moved, but its cries were softer now—pained
mewlings rather than roars. He climbed to his feet and walked toward
it.
It was no pleasanter to observe close up than at a distance. It
seemed to him an abomination, neither one true creature or another
but some horrid amalgamation, as if some malign creator had taken the
parts of several animals and worked them together in obscene parody
of what was true. But it was a beast of some kind, and for all that
he had wounded it unto death, still he felt a kind of sorrow for its
suffering and thought of it as a horse hurt in battle. He lifted his
hatchet and brought it down against the rolling skull.
The thing coughed blood and ceased its mewling. Rannach went back to
the fallen Breaker.
The man lay on his back on the snow. Blood oozed from under the
helmet, dark in contrast with the rose-colored armor. Rannach
wondered how a Breaker's face should look. Evil, he supposed, as
weirdly distorted as the beasts they rode. He kicked the fallen
figure, tapped the lolling head with his hatchet.
It did not move, save to roll and flop in that manner that only the
dead possess, so he reached down to find the fastenings and pull the
helmet loose.
He started back at what he saw, gasping, for he had revealed the face
of a beautiful woman, her eyes wide as they stared sightlessly into
the oblivion of the sky. Her hair was long and the color of honey,
tumbling loose about perfect features, the bones delicate, the flesh
smooth and soft and tan.
Rannach stared at her awhile, then spat and wiped a hand over his
face. He rose and found his bow, then went back to where Morrhyn
waited.
The Dreamer said, "Praise the Maker, I feared you were slain. I
heard screaming … "
"Her mount," Rannach said. "I killed it."
"
Her mount?"
"Did your visions not tell you that?" Rannach said. "She
was a woman!" He took his horse's rein and shook his head. "I
slew a woman, Morrhyn. A woman! What does that make me? Am I now a
woman-killer? Am I now like Vachyr?"
Morrhyn looked out from under the hood of his cape and fixed Rannach
with the heat of his burning eyes. "She was a Breaker," he
said.
"She was a woman!"
Morrhyn nodded. "And did she plead with you? Did she ask your
help? Ask you to aid her as you would a woman of the People?"
Rannach shook his head and said, "No, she attacked me. She'd
have taken my head were I not swifter."
"Then she was your enemy," Morrhyn said. "Do you think
women are weaker than men? I tell you, no. Listen! Would Arrhyna not
fight were she called? Do you think your mother would not take up a
blade to defend your father? Do the women of the People not take up
arms to defend the clans?"
Rannach nodded. "But not like that. Not all warlike."
"She was a Breaker," Morrhyn said. "And they are not
like us." Save they be our other side, he thought. Was that not
a part of my dreams? That the Breakers
are that other side,
like shadow to sunlight?
"Even so." Rannach swung astride the stallion. "I
cannot enjoy killing a woman."
"Likely she'll not be the last." Morrhyn pointed a finger
toward the river. "They'd take Ket-Ta-Witko and lay it waste,
feed the People to their beasts—those who survive. So, do we go
on? Or shall you mourn her and give her honorable burial, and we wait
here until her comrades come for us?"
Rannach looked at him out of troubled eyes. "Are you become so
hard?" he asked.
Morrhyn looked him back and answered, "Yes. Now take me to the
Wintering Ground, else your conscience destroy the People."
They forded the river and nighted in the timber on the flatland
beyond, then traversed the plain and rode toward the Commacht's
ancestral Wintering Ground. Morrhyn's dreams spoke of no further
danger along their way, but troubled him nonetheless, for they seemed
to promise a homecoming that was somehow not there.
He could not understand that, only advise Rannach that they continue
onward. He wondered if the Breakers now owned larger magicks that
clouded even the dreams the Maker sent him, or if the Maker himself
denied that final promise.
When they came to the Wintering Ground and found it empty, he felt
very lost and very afraid.
31—Until Death
It was a simple ceremony, held in the church in the presence of those
few servants Wyme granted leave from their duties. Benjamyn attended
with Chryselle, and Dido looked on beaming as if it were her daughter
who stood before the pastor. Flysse was radiant, and did she wear
only her customary dirndl, still her smile and obvious happiness
seemed to Arcole to clothe her in brilliance. He took her hand when
the pastor nodded and set the plain brass ring—Dido's gift—on
her finger, repeating the vows. She answered in a firm, clear voice
and with a slight shock he realized he was wed. It was a curious
sensation, both exciting and somewhat alarming, and he hoped he did
the right thing. Then Benjamyn declared they'd best return, and they
went back through the snowbound streets, Flysse clutching Arcole's
arm all the way. Surprises awaited them in the mansion: Dido had
prepared a small wedding cake and Wyme had decreed that the servants
might each enjoy a mug of ale to toast the married couple. Flysse's
fellow maids teased her, and the male servants offered Arcole their
congratulations. Then, to his amazement, Benjamyn announced they were
spared all duties until the following morning and to a chorus of good
wishes, and not a few lewd comments, the majordomo brought them to a
room that was now theirs alone. Fleetingly, Arcole thought that this
was in part why he had married Flysse. But as the door closed and she
turned toward him, he forgot that reason and the pang of guilt the
memory induced, aware only of her happiness and his own. Whatever
motivations had once moved him, he knew now that he loved this woman,
and that he truly wanted her for his wife. He opened his arms and she
came into them, and this time when he began to unlace her bodice she
offered no resistance but laughed and kissed him, and then, blushing
somewhat, led him to the bed.
Later, as they lay together, their arms entwined, Arcole knew that he
had never been so happy. "I love you," he murmured into her
hair. "I love you."
Flysse turned so that her mouth was against his and, as he began to
kiss her again, said, "And I love you."
Davyd was elated at the news. Indeed, had it not betrayed his thief's
freedom, he would have shouted it at the sky as he sat atop Rupyrt's
Gahame's roof. But that should have curtailed his clandestine lease
on Grostheim's night-dark streets and earned him punishment, so he
stilled his eager tongue and only sat chortling at the thought of
Arcole and Flysse wed. It was almost as much happiness as he could
imagine. He threw back his head and laughed—softly—into
the darkness.
It was a wide night here, wider than any he'd seen in Evander, as if
the sky were scraped clear of human grime so that all the stars shone
through like promises. He could sit up here and imagine the country
beyond the walls: it would be wide as the sky, and white with snow,
the Restitution River glittering with ice-pack, and in the distance
the forest edge, mysterious and—he frowned as he realized
it—strangely enticing. That was most odd: he was a child of the
city, a denizen of the streets and alleyways, accustomed to high
walls and close rooftops, not that unknown country 'sieur Gahame
named the wilderness. God knew, Grostheim was curious enough, with
its buildings all of wood and its streets either split timber or
plain dirt, not at all like Bantar; not at all like the world he had
known, far away across the sea. Yet it seemed almost he felt … He
could not put it properly in words; Arcole would know how, but Davyd
had not had the time to discuss it with his friend and could only
struggle to comprehend his inexplicable feelings. It was as if the
wilderness called him. The notion of it, of a land all trees and
hills with not a building around, no streets or roofs but only such
countryside as he'd not the experience to imagine even, was
terrifying. And simultaneously … he shook his head, frowning as the
word took shape … appealing. Yes, that was it: appealing. As if he
were a child again, lonely, longing for the warmth of Aunt Dory's
embrace—save in his head, Aunt Dory was replaced by that
strange country beyond Salvation's boundaries. Sometimes he dreamed
of it, of sunlit trees and plashing streams all filled with fish,
high hills and grassy plains—which was most odd, for he'd no
knowledge of that place, nor any love of things bucolic. When Flysse
had spoken of her childhood in Cudham he'd thought it curious she
loved the land so well. Yet now … He drew his borrowed furs closer
as he pondered the mystery.
At first he'd thought not at all of the land beyond Grostheim's
walls, perfectly content to remain within the city. Indeed, he'd not
been unhappy to remain confined within 'sieur Gahame's enclave. The
master was not unkind, and Davyd had, if anything, a greater degree
of security than he'd ever known. He had listened to the older
men—who'd accompanied the master on journeys inland—speak
of the wilderness. They had seen the forests only at a distance,
usually from the yard of a farm or the deck of a barge, but they
spoke of it as a place of menace, of wild beasts and trackless ways,
and Davyd had shivered with them and agreed that was no place for
decent folk. He was grateful for Grostheim's solid walls: they held
out the unknown.
Then, as the year progressed, he had grown more confident and more
curious. Then, he had soon enough discovered, those skills that had
earned him a living in Bantar could be put to use here.
It was not difficult for a thief and a lockpick to find a way out of
the warehouse.
He had his corner; the four other indentured men occupied a shed in
the yard. Sieur Gahame lived in a cottage built against the wall
surrounding his property, which consisted of the warehouse and the
yard, the buildings and the palisade wall. Davyd was the only one in
the warehouse: and the fastenings of the windows and doors were easy
to pick.
He thought the inhabitants of Grostheim—the unbranded
inhabitants, at least—assumed the rest too cowed to risk such
venture, and that they were likely right. Surely his fellows in
'sieur Gahame's enterprise were a docile lot, content with bed and
board and those small luxuries the master allowed. Certainly, they
made no complaint; rather, sang the master's praises for the good
food they got and the pint of ale come a Saturday night. Laurens and
Godfry were even grateful for church of a Sunday. (Davyd was, to some
extent, equally grateful for that devotional duty: he had realized
the priest owned no magical talent and could not guess his own
ability, and the visits afforded him his only chance to speak with
Arcole and Flysse.) He supposed 'sieur Gahame was a good master. He
supposed that was why no hexes were set about the property—that
absence allowing his freedom—for why should contented slaves
object to decent food and warm beds? And did they, where could they
go? Grostheim was locked tight as any prison, and past its walls was
only the larger prison that was Salvation.
He was not sure why he objected, save the dreams woke something in
him. Sieur Gahame treated him well enough: he was fed and clothed,
slept dry and warm, and his future was surely more certain than it
had been in Evander. He need only serve the master and earn his
trust, and in time he would be allowed out past the walls of the
Gahame property, even be allowed to accompany 'sieur Gahame on
journeys inland—he was not sure he wanted that, but it should
be a greater degree of freedom than most branded folk got. But he was
not happy with his lot. He thought perhaps Arcole had sown some seed
in him, unrecognized, that taught him better to object to the scar
marking his cheek and the limitations of exile.
That and, perhaps, the dreams.
They had come more frequently since his discovery of the roof's
freedom, and stronger. Not all were benign. Indeed, there were some
terrifying as those he'd known on board the
Pride of the Lord; he
huddled inside his furs as he thought of those.
The dreams had begun this winter, as if in company to the influenza
epidemic. He could not interpret them clearly, not decide whether
they warned or promised. He was only sure that they alarmed him in
ways he could not understand. Had his brief meetings with Arcole
allowed the time, he would have discussed them, but the few short
minutes stolen from church services did not allow, and Flysse was
always there, close to Arcole, and she did not know, so he had only
his own interpretation.
And that was hard.
Sometimes he dreamed of carnage, as if he floated in the sky, an
unseen observer of the awful slaughter below. They were all bloody,
human folk slain by faceless, formless beings, less shaped than
shadows. In those it seemed the wilderness forest folk had told him
of spewed-out monsters that came in the night to slay
whatever—whoever—claimed the land. In those, he dreamed
of fire and swords and insensate massacre. He saw women clubbed, or
burned; men shot with arrows, or pricked all bloody with knives and
lances.
And were those horrid images not enough, the dreams were permeated
with such a sense of naked hatred, of a palpable intention to murder
and destroy, he was thankful when he woke that he slept alone in his
warehouse corner, for he woke all sweaty and often as not screaming,
and thought that had he been observed, then surely he must be guessed
for a dreamer.
In some the forest was ominous: all dread and terror.
In others it was benign.
In some it called to him, as if the trees he had never seen beckoned,
promising him hope and freedom, a life he had not known or imagined.
Then it was as if a mother opened her arms to a lost son, and when he
went into that embrace he woke smiling, comforted, and reassured. He
dreamed of mountains, then; all tree-topped and craggy, and a place
beyond where the sun shone on grass and rivers that ran blue, save
where fat fish that he knew should be good to eat burst silver
ripples across the surface. It was a landscape that filled him with a
delight he could not, waking or asleep, comprehend.
He had lived all his life in the close gray city of Bantar and knew
nothing of blue rivers or grass: he could not understand the dream,
nor much better the other in which Grostheim rang loud with screams
and howling shadows paced the streets in wanton slaughter, and he
could not know if he was a shadow or a victim, only that he was very
afraid.
He knew in the marrow of his bones, born of his talent's certainty,
that
something was going to happen. But he could not say when,
or what. He wanted to discuss it with Arcole and could not. It
curdled his joy that his friends were wed, and tainted that pleasure
with threat. And yet, as he huddled closer inside his borrowed furs,
he could not help smiling still. Arcole and Flysse were wed: they
were man and wife, and shared—so they had whispered this last
Sunday—a room now. Small, they had said, but theirs alone; with
a door they might lock and a window that afforded them a view of the
stableyard: Governor Wyme was a God-fearing man and allowed his
married servants a degree of privacy.
Davyd thought of how much he should like to see his friends.
He turned his eyes from the sky to the streets below. They were
empty, churned mud and dirtied snow lit by infrequent lanterns and
the random gleam of unshuttered windows, none abroad so late save
prowling cats hunting the rats that belonged to every city.
He thought of how he would like to speak with Arcole about his
dreams. And if Arcole had married Flysse, then surely she must be
privy to her husband's knowledge, no?"
He surveyed the streets, an idea forming.
"What are you doing?"
Arcole said, "Nothing. I stole some paper and ink, eh? I'd not
forget my penmanship. Shall you tell Wyme, or Benjamyn?"
Flysse said, "No, of course I'd not," sharply. "But
you're not writing."
Arcole said, "Then what?"
Flysse drew her shawl closer around her and went to where her husband
sat. They had a chair, of which she was proud, and Arcole had begged
a barrel that served for a table. Those, and the trunk Dido had given
them for their few clothes, were all the furniture they possessed
apart from the bed. But though sparsely furnished and barely larger
than a closet, the room was
theirs.
"I can write my name," she said. "And some other
letters."
Arcole turned from his "penmanship" and kissed her cheek.
"Shall I teach you more?" he asked.
Flysse said, "One day, perhaps. But now—what's that?"
He shrugged and said again, "Nothing."
Their single candle painted his face with shadow, and Flysse could
not see his expression, but his evasive tone, the set of his
shoulders as he hunched over his work—those she could
interpret. It saddened her that he kept secrets.
In all other respects he was an ideal husband, and these past weeks
had been amongst the happiest Flysse could remember. She supposed
that was a small happiness, to be content with a tiny room in
another's home, shared with the man she loved, who—of this
Flysse was confident—loved her. She supposed it was a meager
existence to one such as Arcole, whose tales of salons and ballrooms,
of grand hotels and lavish parties, had amazed and delighted her. To
him, she supposed, this room was not much more than a cell, the
mansion a prison. She knew it grated on him, his indenture, and that
he did his best to hide his resentment. With others he succeeded, but
she was his wife and loved him—she knew him better. So when he
scowled and only grunted in response to her voice, she told herself
he would come eventually to acceptance and make the best of his lot,
and did her best to cheer him. Usually she succeeded, for it seemed
he took honest pleasure in her company. But sometimes … She frowned
and stroked his hair.
He had begun to steal, which most of the branded folk did in small
ways such as Benjamyn and Chryselle and Dido chose to overlook. There
was a scullion she knew sucked eggs and claimed them broken or
addled; Nathanial was wont to sample the wine he served; most took
their little tithe of food—one of the benefits of indenture to
the governor. But Arcole stole the most unlikely things. Hidden
beneath the boards of their room was paper, an inkpot, two pens with
metal nibs he had labored to repair, and when Flysse asked him why,
he answered only vaguely—that he'd not forget his penmanship,
or that he intended to sketch her. But he never had, and while Flysse
could write little more than her name, she knew what words looked
like. She knew that the lines he drew were not words, save where he
set his tiny squiggles down against a mark, and the sheet he labored
over surely bore no resemblance to her. It hurt that he seemed not to
trust her in this, whatever it was.
He arched his head back against her hand and turned toward her,
smiling. She noticed that first he carefully set down his pen, and
when he put his hands upon her hips she decided she would not, this
time, be circumvented.
"What is it?" she asked, and before he could dissemble with
words or his lips, "Arcole, I am your wife. Shall you lie to
me?"
He looked an instant shamefaced, then shook his head. "Not to
you, Flysse."
"So?"
"I'd not lie to you," he said with a terrible sincerity.
"So better I say nothing."
Flysse stood awhile silent, shocked. The room was chill, but when she
shivered it was not from the cold, save what curdled in her belly.
"What do you say?" she asked at last. "I don't
understand."
Arcole took her hands and kissed them. "Is it not enough I love
you?"
"But keep secrets from me?" It hurt to say that, so stern.
"Is it so in the Levan that husbands and wives hold secrets from
one another?"
He chuckled then, which confused her. "As it happens, yes,"
he said. "But we're not in the Levan, eh? And even were we, I'd
not. There'd be no cause."
She guessed he spoke of such matters as he had described to her,
which seemed most scandalous—that married men kept mistresses,
and wives entertained lovers as if the marriage vows meant nothing.
Was that how society behaved, she'd have none of it. "No,"
she said, "we are not in the Levan."
"Were we," he responded, "there'd be no cause."
Flysse felt confusion grow. Did he say he'd not give her cause to
doubt him, but be a faithful husband no matter where they be? Or did
he say that were they in the Levan, there should be no cause for any
secrets? She was a plain woman, and preferred plain speech: she said,
"Arcole, do you speak honestly to me?"
He sighed and said again, "It were better I say nothing, Flysse.
Better you not know what I do."
Anger grew, or was it fear? She faced him square and said," "I
am your wife, our lives are as one now. You should not hold secrets
from me."
He said, "No," and sighed again.
"So?" she prompted.
"So," he said, "I have stolen paper and pen and ink
from Wyme's study, and am I found out shall be punished. I'd not see
you suffer for what I've done."
Flysse sensed there was truth in that, but that it was not all the
truth. She withdrew her hands from his grasp and stepped past him to
stare at the sheet of paper. From the corner of her eye she saw him
move, and wondered an instant if he would block her or remove the
mysterious document. She was pleased when he did neither but only
stood watching. Still, she could not understand what it was she
studied.
"I know what you've taken," she said, "and where you
hide it. And that you often work on this … whatever it is. Were it
discovered, think you the master would not assume my knowledge and
punish me?"
Arcole said softly, "Perhaps you should report me." Then he
gasped as Flysse's hand struck hard against his cheek, stinging
across the brand there.
"How dare you!" There was genuine anger in her voice. "Have
you so low an opinion of me?"
"No." He shook his head, smiling as he rubbed gingerly
where her blow had landed. "No, Flysse, I've not. God knows,
I've only the highest opinion of you,"
His smile was genuine, his tone apologetic. Flysse felt outrage
dissolve, regret form in its place, and again confusion. She said,
"Arcole, forgive me."
"No." He took a pace toward her, hand rising to touch her
lips, silencing her apology. "I deserved that reminder I wed an
honest woman. What
I said
was unwarranted, unforgivable. Flysse … "He took her hands
again, his expression solemn, "Do you forgive me?"
She said, "Yes, of course." And then, "But I still
fail to understand what it is you do."
He had known he could not keep it secret, and with his gambler's
instinct decided to chance whatever transpired.
Sleeping in a room shared with Nathanial and the other single men
allowed no opportunity to work on the chart. One or the other would
inevitably have seen what he did, and even had they not recognized
it, they would surely have known he could read and write. He could
not risk their telling, either by a tongue's casual slip or
deliberate malice. He knew there were some who resented his elevation
and would likely seize the opportunity to advise Benjamyn of his
project. Then doubtless Benjamyn would investigate and inform Wyme,
and all his hopes be dashed.
Sharing this tiny chamber with Flysse had given him the privacy he
needed to hide his stolen materials and work unseen—save by
her—on the chart. It was impossible to believe she would not
sooner or later learn what he did, but—cowardly, he supposed—he
had avoided this inescapable confrontation as long as possible. He
knew Flysse would not betray him; he had no idea how she would take
the truth.
He said, "It's a map."
"A map? A map of what?"
Arcole found her tone difficult of interpretation. He was suddenly
very afraid: he loved this woman, and knew himself ashamed he had
thought to deceive her. He said, "Of Salvation."
She stepped by him, leaning over their barrel-table to study the
hard-won chart. "Do you explain?"
He ventured to set an arm around her and was relieved she did not
shake it off as he indicated his work.
"This is the coastline; Grostheim's here, this line is the
Restitution River. These are inland holdings. It's not done yet."
"How can you know all this?" she asked, her gaze still
fixed on the sheet.
Arcole wished he might see her eyes. He said, "Wyme keeps maps
in his study. When I have the chance, I study them; memorize them."
"You're very clever," she said.
Her voice was carefully modulated, the warmth that had been there
earlier cooled. Arcole said, "Not really. I make mistakes,
working solely from memory. Often I must start again."
Flysse said, "This looks complete. What's this?"
She touched the line indicating the forest edge, and Arcole told her,
"The beginning of the wilderness."
"And these?" Now she dabbed a finger's tip at the crosses
he had drawn.
"Holdings that have been destroyed," he said.
She turned from the map at that, and her face was grave. "Destroyed?"
He nodded. "There were three when first I saw the map. There
have been six more marked since then. And the Militia patrols the
boundaries—I think there shall be more when they return."
"How do you know?" she asked. "That there's patrols, I
mean?"
"Wyme talks," he said, and shrugged, grinning. "He
thinks we branded folk have no ears. He's careful—I think some
great event unfolds—but still he lets things slip. And he
leaves papers about: I think he forgets I can read and write. If he
ever knew."
Flysse heard the bitterness in his voice and nodded thoughtfully.
"Destroyed, you say. By what?"
Arcole shrugged again. "I don't know for sure. I think no one
knows; only that farms have been found burned, and all the folk there
slain. Wyme'd not have such news get out."
"No wonder you'd keep this secret," she said. "Did any
learn you know … "
She shivered, and Arcole drew her close, but she set a hand against
his chest and pushed him back a little. "They'll not have it
from me." It was a promise he accepted with confidence. "But
still—Arcole, what is this for?"
He said, "Something is happening in this land that Wyme does not
understand. Something is killing the farmers. Or
someone. I
think there may be folk living in the wilderness. See?" He
touched the map swiftly, counting the crosses there. "The
attacks began close on the forest edge, on the most isolated
holdings; but they move closer to Grostheim. I think Wyme is
afraid—surely, he keeps this news from all but the Militia."
"It frightens me," she said.
"You've no need to fear." He hoped she spoke of the map,
not of all it portended. "I doubt whatever is out there would
dare attack this place. There are too many soldiers … "
"No." Flysse shook her head. Her eyes were suddenly lonely.
"It's not that I fear."
"Then what?" he asked.
Almost, Flysse could wish she had not begun this: it led toward a
destination that did, indeed, frighten her. But she was on the path
now and could not turn back—her innate honesty would not allow
her. Suspicion grew: of what the map meant, not only in immediate
conclusion but also in terms of her marriage. A horrid question
shaped in her mind, and for all its possible answer terrified her,
she knew it must be asked. So she squared her shoulders and looked
her husband in the eye and voiced her fear. "You contemplate
escape, no?"
His expression was all the answer she needed, but still he ducked his
head and said, "Yes," in the tone of a man caught out in
some misdemeanor.
He began to amplify, but Flysse waved him silent. The room's cold
seemed now to permeate her and she folded her arms, hugging her shawl
close. Her throat was abruptly dry and she must force out the words
she had no choice but to speak. "Alone? Or did you intend to
take me?"
"Flysse," he said, his voice hollow, "I love you."
"But?" She studied his face. Was it the shadowplay of the
candle, or did she see anguish there?
"As yet I see no way I might escape," he said in the same
dull tone. "Even could I, it should surely be perilous."
"You evade my question, 'sieur." The cold inside her seemed
to gather, focusing on a point deep in her belly, and there grew hot:
she felt anger kindle afresh. She had believed she knew this man,
believed he loved her. Suddenly she was no longer certain. "I
ask you: is it your intention to desert me, or have I a place in
these designs of yours?"
Arcole said, "Flysse," helplessly, and shook his head.
"You do not answer, sieur," she said coldly.
"Flysse," he said again, and moved toward her.
She stepped back. "Is your silence my answer?"
He swallowed, ran frustrated hands through his hair, and met her icy
gaze. "This"—he gestured at the map—"is no
more than a vague dream as yet. I learn what I can, against a
possibility likely hopeless. It may well come to naught … "
"But does it not?" she pressed. "Have I a place in
this dream of yours?"
"I'd not bring you into peril," he said. "I'd not see
you harmed. I love you too much."
"I had thought love required honesty," she said. "I
had thought love meant sharing; being together."
"We are together," he said, "and I do tell you
honestly what I do."
"We are together, yes." Flysse laughed: a short, sharp
snort, devoid of humor. "I had believed we were together because
you wanted that. Now I must wonder if it was only the privacy
marriage affords you, this room that allows you to weave your plans.
And your honesty? It seems that must be drawn out of you, no?"
"I'm sorry."
"Now, doubtless." Flysse smiled, the curving of her lips no
warmer than her laugh. "But had I not discovered your intent?"
Arcole could only shrug. It was difficult to meet her eye. Her gaze
was so cold now, and he knew he hurt her. He wished he had not; of a
sudden, he wished he had told her everything from the start. Had any
doubt lingered that he loved her, it was gone now. He had not
realized she might hurt him so much, not realized her pain could cut
him so deep. He wondered how he might heal the wound. He knew he
would not lose her; and feared she was already gone.
"Well?" she prompted.
He sighed and rallied his thoughts. "I know not where this
leads," he said, indicating the map again. "I stumbled on
this knowledge and found some hope there. I'd not be a damned servant
all my life, Flysse! I was unjustly charged, unjustly branded!
Evander sent me to this godforsaken place, and I'd not die a servant
of Evander. I … "
He fell silent as her eyes blazed like blue ice. "And I was
fairly condemned?" Her voice was low, throbbing with barely
contained fury. "Did I deserve exile? Am I only a 'damned
servant.''"
"No!" he said fervently. "Oh, God, Flysse, you're my
wife because I wanted that.
Wanted it! I tell you honestly—I
love you; and I'd live out my life with you, proud you name me
husband."
"Save," she said, "the opportunity comes to escape."
"No." He shook his head. "I hadn't thought so far.
Once, perhaps, but no longer! Never since that night. I'd not thought
past the making of the map."
"And now you must." She wondered she did not weep. Surely
she felt tears threaten, but also the heat of anger still, the
outrage his betrayal delivered. "Think carefully, Arcole."
He nodded. "It may not be possible," he said slowly,
choosing his words with infinite care. "To flee this house, get
past the walls. Wyme should surely send soldiers after"—he
almost said "me," caught himself—"us. And then
we'd need to cross Salvation. We'd need supplies; weapons. I'm not
sure where we'd go. Into the wilderness, perhaps. Or … "
He hesitated and Flysse urged him on with a tilt of her chin.
"Or go to the savages Wyme writes of," he said. "Seek
sanctuary with them."
"Who slay farmers and branded folk alike?" she said. "Who
burn farms and leave none living? Think you they'd welcome us
open-armed?"
"I said it should be dangerous." God, this woman cut to the
meat of it! He supposed it was one reason he loved her. He wondered
how he could have contemplated leaving her. And how he could not.
"I think that should be rank foolishness," she said. "To
think to find common cause with this unknown folk who burn and kill?
Shall you go to them and they wait while you explain your purpose ere
they slay you?"
He grinned shamefaced and shook his head, shrugging. "I told you
it is, as yet, no more than a vague dream. Think you it should be
better to run for the wilderness?"
"Were escape possible," she said, "yes. It should not
be easy, but I suspect the forests are kinder than these mysterious
savage folk."
"Likely you're right," he said. "But even then—to
make a life in the wilderness? That should be no easy thing."
"No," she agreed. "And likely harder for you than for
me."
"Eh?" he gasped. "What do you say?"
"That all your life has been lived in cities," she replied.
"That did you flee to some metropolis you'd easily find your way
around its streets, its salons. But the country? I was born in I the
country, Arcole."
"The wilderness," he said, "is hardly the
country."
"But more akin than city streets," she gave him back. "Can
you find food in a wood, Arcole? Can you recognize those mushrooms
good to eat or tell which are toadstools that will poison you? I can.
Can you dress a deer, or has your venison always come on a plate, out
of the kitchen? Can you cook, or has some 'damned servant' performed
that duty for you? I suspect I am likely equipped better for the
wilderness than you,
husband."
He stared at her, his jaw dropping. Flysse felt her anger cool a
trifle: his expression was so dumbfounded she might have laughed had
the circumstances been different. Obviously he had not considered
such matters: she began to think he told the truth when he said he
had not thought past the making of his map. But even so … He had
clearly considered the possibility—the likelihood, even—of
leaving her behind. She could not, yet, forgive that. She was no
longer even sure she could trust him, and that was a sad notion.
"I suppose … " he muttered. "No—I've not the
least idea how to dress a deer. And mushrooms?" He grinned.
"Mushrooms come sauteed, no? Or in a sauce, from the kitchen."
Flysse refused to be mollified, although her anger shifted direction
somewhat. It seemed he set his plans afoot without sufficient
thought, as if desire for escape overcame his reason. That was
foolishness, and such lack of common sense irritated her. "Best
to consider such matters, no?" she asked. "There shall be
no restaurants in the wilderness. No 'damned servants' to wait on
you."
Arcole wished he'd not used those words. They had come careless: he
did not think of Flysse as a servant. He said, "I'm sorry."
Flysse shrugged dismissively, not yet ready to be placated. "And
the supplies you mention," she said, "the weapons. Where
shall they come from?"
His expression changed, the hopeful grin disappearing behind a veil
of uncertainty. Flysse saw on the instant there was more he held
back, and her anger flared anew.
"No more secrets, eh?" she demanded.
He said, "Flysse, I made a promise."
She said, "As you made promises to me,
husband?"
"No," he said, torn, and, "yes. I gave my word I'd not
speak of it."
Arcole winced as she snorted that awful laugh again. "Your word,
eh? Who's had your word now?" Realization then: "Davyd?"
Arcole nodded helplessly.
"Of course! Davyd is indentured to 'sieur Gahame, who's a
warehouse full of weapons. In God's name, Arcole, did you plan to
take the boy with you?"
His face answered her, and she must struggle not to strike him again.
"You planned to take Davyd with you, but leave me? You'd see me
safe, eh, but carry the lad into danger?"
"Flysse," he said, "you don't understand."
"Then make me." She was not sure whether she demanded or
pleaded. It seemed her world was turned upside down, nothing any
longer fixed or sure. "Tell me."
"I cannot," he moaned. "I gave my word."
"On what?" she snapped. "You admit you'd enlist his
aid. Because he was a thief? Because he's access to Gahame's stores?
Because Gahame has other maps?"
"In part." Arcole wished she did not guess so much, so
acutely; wished, too, he could explain that promise given Davyd. But
that must break his word and impugn his honor: he could not.
"Only in part?" Her voice was scornful. "Then what
else,
husband? What
more do you hold back?"
He said, "God knows, Flysse, I'd tell you had I not made a
promise.
But I did! I
gave my word, and I'll not break that."
She said, "No, of course not," and he winced at the
contempt he heard. "You'll lie to me, but your word to
Davyd—that's sacred, eh?"
"It's not the same," he protested. "I made a promise
on board the ship, when Davyd … told me what he told me."
Flysse stood a moment silent, perplexed. Arcole seemed genuinely
ashamed of his deception, but nonetheless determined in this matter
of his promise to Davyd. For all she no longer felt she knew him so
well as she had believed, still she believed she knew him well enough
to know him obstinate in matters of honor. And even though it irked
her, she must grudgingly respect him in this: a promise, after all,
was a promise.
At last she said, "So then, I'll ask Davyd what this promise is
when next I've the chance. Does he not tell me, well … so be it.
But understand this, Arcole—you'll not bring the boy to harm.
You'll not endanger him, or—" She shook her head. "Fear
not I'll betray you; you've
my word on that. But you'll not
harm Davyd!"
"No," he promised. "I give you my word."
She looked at him awhile. Then: "And does escape prove possible,
you'll take me with you."
"Flysse," he said.
"You'll take me with you," she repeated.
Her tone brooked no dissent: Arcole ducked his head. "We go
together," he agreed.
"I'll have your word on that," she said. "Your solemn
promise before God. Your word of honor, Arcole."
He was surprised she should accept it still; and pleased: it left him
room for hope not all was lost between them. He bowed his head and
faced her. "My word on it. Before God, and as I love you."
Flysse nodded. "And henceforth you'll make me privy to your
plans, eh? There shall be no more deception, no more secrecy. I'll
have your word on that also."
"You have it," he said.
"Then we've a bargain." She turned away. "And I'll to
bed for what's left of this night."
Arcole said once more, "Flysse, I'm sorry," but got back no
reply.
He watched her climb beneath the quilt. He no longer had any stomach
for his cartographic efforts and, after ensuring the ink was dry,
stowed the map and his few tools in their hiding place and pinched
out the candle. He yawned: the night, indeed, had aged and he felt
drained, as if their argument leached out his energy. He shucked off
his jacket and clambered into their bed. Flysse presented him her
back, and when he put a hand upon her shoulder, she shrugged it off
without a word. He lay lonely beside her, contemplating his errors.
32—Preparations
Those services attended by the branded folk of Grostheim took place
soon after dawn, that the indentured be allowed their devotions
without disruption of their duties or discomfort to their masters.
Not all attended—cooks must prepare breakfasts and the lowest
of the low lay fires and clean stoves—but from Wyme's mansion
each Sunday Benjamyn and Chryselle led a shivering procession through
the ice-rimed streets to the wooden building grandiosely described as
a cathedral. Few free citizens were abroad so early on a winter's
morning, and none shared the church—they'd not stoop to worship
with common exiles. It afforded the branded folk a rare opportunity
to exchange news, albeit in whispers as the priest intoned the
prayers and led the ragged chorus of hymns.
Davyd knew something was amiss as soon as he set eyes on his friends.
Flysse's cheeks were red with cold, and he thought she had been
weeping though her pursed lips suggested contained anger. Arcole
looked wretched, and Davyd saw that whilst he stood close beside his
wife, they did not, as usual, hold hands. For all their proximity, he
sensed a distance between them, and inched through the worshippers to
find his usual place beside them, asking softly, "What's wrong?"
It was Flysse who replied, and her response startled him: "What
was Arcole's promise, Davyd?"
Her voice was pitched low that only he might hear, but still was
edged with pain and anger. He frowned, confused, and looked past her
to Arcole, who shrugged and sighed.
"Arcole made you a promise on board the ship," Flysse
whispered. "He keeps his word; he'll not tell me its nature, so
I ask you. What did he promise, Davyd?"
He did not immediately respond, save to gasp and glance with nervous
eyes toward the priest. The vicar was reading from a book of prayer,
his voice a drone, his gaze intent on the page. He appeared
disinterested in his flock, least of all in Davyd.
"How do you know?" asked the boy.
"I discovered … certain things about my husband." Flysse
cast a sidelong glance at Arcole. Davyd thought the man flinched. "He
had no choice but to admit a promise was given. I'd know what it
was."
Davyd swallowed the lump that seemed to abruptly clog his throat and
licked his lips nervously. He felt Flysse's hand close around his
wrist, squeezing. The urgency of her grip was matched by the urgency
in her eyes.
"I'd not pry out your secrets," she murmured, "but
this affects us all, I think. I'd not see you come to harm, Davyd;
and I fear you may. So I ask you, as a friend—what was the
promise?" '
He looked from her face back toward the priest, then warily around
the church. There was no Inquisitor present to sniff out his secret,
nor had the priest such power, but even so … He felt very afraid.
Might not the voicing of it in this place somehow reveal him? He
shuddered, his eyes darting about as might a rabbit's when a
predator's wings shadow the ground.
"Shall you tell me?" Flysse asked. "I swear it shall
go no farther, only—" She shook her head and Davyd saw a
tear moisten her cheek. "We've a difference, Arcole and I, that
needs be settled."
There was such anguish in her voice that Davyd momentarily forgot his
own fears. He looked at her and saw pain in her eyes; past her,
Arcole stood miserable. Davyd wondered what had gone on that they
seemed so sad. Wondered, too, how that promise Arcole had given him
could so affect them. Was he somehow responsible for their distress?
He could not understand how that might be, surely hoped it was not.
He thought of all the kindnesses Flysse had showed him: surely he
could trust her with his secret. Indeed, had he not wished he could
discuss his more recent dreams with Arcole, so why not also with
Flysse? But not here, not in this place.
Low, he said, "It's important you know?"
Flysse said, "It is," and then: "Do you not trust me,
Davyd?"
He nodded. "Yes, of course. But … " His eyes roamed the
church. "I'd not speak of it here. Please?"
"Then where?" she asked. "Where else might we speak?"
Decision then, sudden, prompted by her obvious distress. He said,
"Your room, it's on the mansion's yard, no?"
"Yes." Flysse nodded, confused now. "But how … ?"
Davyd hushed her. "You've a window? Tell me where it is,
exactly."
She did, and then he asked: "Describe the yard, and whatever
walls there are. Does the governor have dogs?"
As she told him, he felt a mounting excitement. It should be an
adventure, and did it heal the rift between his friends, then it
should be worth the risk. He had already, after all, contemplated the
enterprise: now it assumed a far greater importance.
Flysse said, "I don't understand. How can this help?"
Davyd smiled and told her, "Trust me, eh?"
The day was chill. Spring approached, but winter was reluctant to
give up its hold on the city. The sky was a steely blue, the sun
denying warmth, a cold wind skirling the streets, where icicles hung
from eaves and braziers were set out on porches, smoldering charcoal
scenting the frosty air. Arcole considered the day far warmer than
his wife.
Flysse had said little to him since that night—indeed, no more
than she must, and the other servants cast curious glances their way.
Nathanial whispered about lovebirds falling out until Arcole
threatened to box his ears, thereby earning himself a reprimand from
Benjamyn. She refused to tell him what Davyd had said, only that the
boy had agreed to reveal the content of the promise. He could not
understand how, and when he asked, Flysse favored him only with cold
looks and bade him wait.
It was worse for the need to perform those duties assigned him. That
he had sooner taken Flysse aside and pleaded with her, seek to
reconcile their differences, was of no account to Benjamyn, or to
Governor Wyme or his wife. In this household Arcole was but another
servant; his problems were of no relevance to those concerned with
its smooth function. He had never thought before how servants were
expected to go about their business regardless of their personal
circumstances. Save some illness afflict them, their masters took
their presence for granted. Wyme had no interest in his indentured
folk save they fail in their duty—and below-stairs Benjamyn was
the governor's representative, and no kinder. So Arcole must hide his
feelings and play out his role as if naught were amiss. It fueled his
resentment.
Nor were the nights any easier than the days. Flysse remained
taciturn, watching in silence when he brought out his cache to add
some new detail to the map. When she did speak, it was usually to
demand he explain just what he did, and when he attempted
blandishments, they were met with cool disinterest. It was, if
anything, worse in bed. There, Flysse turned from him so that to his
catalogue of woes was added frustration. He knew that he had offended
her deeply, hurt her badly, but he thought himself punished enough
and he wondered when she might decide to end his suffering. And then
if she ever should, or if that happiness they had known was forever
lost. That thought chilled him to the marrow of his bones: he came to
realize how deeply he loved her and how selfish he had been. But when
he tried to tell her, she only faced him with stony indifference or
turned her back.
Arcole was not at all accustomed to such treatment, or to such misery
as it delivered. It was an object lesson: he was better accustomed to
success with women, and on those few occasions he had been spurned,
there had always been another to whom he could turn. Here, there was
only Flysse—nor would he have it otherwise. But still he cursed
himself for his mistakes and wished he might undo the past, for all
he knew that country was locked and he must look to the future
instead. Yet it was not easy to hope when he lay sleepless, Flysse
cold as a statue beside him.
Then one night when a waning moon hung like a crescent of ice over
Grostheim, there came a tapping on their window.
Arcole was instantly alert, Flysse not much slower to wake. He
shivered as he rose, clad only in his nightshirt. The yard outside
was dark, and he thought for a moment gusting wind had rattled the
frame or an icicle fallen, but then the tapping came again and he set
his face to the glass. Frost rimed the edges of the pane, and at
first he did not see the shape, but then darkness coalesced out of
shadow and a pale face was revealed. Arcole started back, shocked a
moment before he recognized Davyd. Then he slipped the catch and
swung the window open. Davyd clambered in on a draft of chill air;
Arcole closed the window, gaping.
The boy looked like a savage, or some weird shaggy beast. Furs
swathed his body, tied with cords. One spread across his shoulders,
the boneless legs wrapped about his throat, the head, still sprouting
snarling fangs, surmounting his tousled red hair. His legs, too, were
wrapped, and on his feet were hairy boots more like the paws of some
wild creature than any footwear Arcole had seen.
"I told you I'd come, eh?"
Davyd addressed them both, grinning hugely. He seemed immensely
pleased with himself, but his smile faltered as Arcole shook his head
in bewilderment.
Davyd turned to Flysse: "You didn't tell him?"
Flysse shook her head, her expression confusing the boy. "No,
Davyd. But is this safe?" Her expression changed to one of
concern. "None saw you, eh? How shall you get back?"
Davyd's grin returned. "It was easy to get out; the return
should be no harder. Remember, I was a thief."
"Even so," she said. "I didn't expect … " She
gestured at his furs, at the window.
"How else?" he asked. "We've not time in church. Nor
would I speak of it there. In case … "
Now Flysse grew confused, and Arcole smiled. Davyd settled on the
bed; Flysse drew the quilt about her. Arcole donned a coat and took
the solitary chair.
"Best we not delay," Davyd said, loosening his furs. "Sieur
Gahame has us wake early, and I'd not chance the streets come light."
"This is dangerous," Flysse said.
"Yes." Davyd could not help but preen a little at his own
daring. "But I'm used to danger, no? And you asked me to speak
of Arcole's promise."
Flysse nodded. "We've much to speak of, all of us."
Davyd wondered at the glance she gave her husband then, but she
waited for him and so he said without preamble, "I'm a Dreamer,
Flysse." He paused as she gasped, a hand flying to her mouth.
"You know what that means, eh? That was why I begged Arcole he
hold it secret—I'd not be burned at the stake."
"No!" Her eyes were huge with wonder.
"Arcole guessed it," Davyd continued, "when I dreamed
of the sea serpent on board the ship. And when it came, he saw my
secret."
He looked from her to Arcole, aware still of distance between them,
sensing it was, somehow, to do with him. So he added, "I swore
him to secrecy, Flysse, even to keeping it from you. Do you forgive
me?"
She said softly, "Yes. Yes, of course I do. God, what a thing!
How have you survived?"
"By telling no one," he said. "Save Arcole, and now
you. Before this, only Aunt Dory knew."
Flysse reached out to take his hand where it emerged from the
swathing pelts. He liked that. Pretending an insouciance he had
learned from Arcole, he said, "I've been dreaming again."
Arcole leant forward. "Of what?"
Davyd shrugged. "The forests, sometimes, as if the wilderness
calls me." He pushed back the skull grinning atop his head and
frowned. "Sometimes it's as if the forests want me to go there,
as if they promise … I'm not sure … safety, perhaps. But
sometimes they seem to threaten me." He shuddered. "I see
things … shadows … that kill folk. They come out of the forests
and slay. I've dreamed of them coming here, to Grostheim. They roam
the streets like … like monsters."
Flysse said, "What does that mean?"
Davyd shrugged again. "I don't know. The dreams aren't … "
Arcole supplied the word: "Specific?"
"Yes." Davyd nodded. "Before—in Evander—they'd
warn me of danger. If I planned a robbery and I dreamed of danger,
I'd call it off. Save that last time." He grinned ruefully. "I
dreamed of danger then, but I was short of coin and took the
chance—and got caught. On the
Pride of the Lord, I
dreamed of danger from the sea."
"And the sea serpent attacked," Flysse murmured. "So
what of these new dreams?"
Davyd said, "I don't know. Only that there's danger here, and
likely in the forests too."
"Save you spoke of the wilderness calling you," Arcole
said.
"Yes." Davyd saw Flysse and Arcole exchange a look he could
not interpret. "As if … as if they are dangerous, but also
safe. I don't understand."
"Coming here was dangerous," Flysse said. "Might it
not be that?"
"I don't think so." Davyd's face was pale and small inside
his furs. "Those dreams are of the … the shadows that come out
of the trees, only they roam the streets."
"God!" Arcole stared at the youth. "I wonder …
Davyd, when you dream of these monsters, do you see aught else?"
"Killing," Davyd said. "Sometimes here in the city,
some-, times … other places. Like farms."
Arcole said, "The attacks Wyme's noted."
Davyd looked at him uncomprehending. Flysse said, "We've things
to tell you too, Davyd."
She gestured that Arcole speak, and he told Davyd all he'd learned—of
the map and the governor's coded comments, and what he believed they
meant.
When he was done, Davyd studied him awhile through narrowed eyes.
Then, astutely: "You plan to escape, no?"
"I … " Arcole hesitated, glancing at Flysse. "I hope
it might be possible."
"You'll take me with you?" Davyd looked from one to the
other, eyes urgent as his words. "I can help you, I know I can."
Flysse said, "I'd not see you come to harm, Davyd."
Arcole said, "It's only a vague hope as yet."
Davyd heard reluctance in both their voices. He could not believe
they planned escape without him; could not believe they'd leave him
behind, alone. They were his
friends! They were as family to
him! Mustering his thoughts, he said, "If I've dreamed of these
creatures roaming the streets like … like wild animals, then
Grostheim's dangerous. And I can steal from 'sieur Gahame's
warehouse. And in the wilderness, my dreams must be useful, no? I'll
know when danger threatens, so we'll have warning. You can't leave me
behind, you
need me!" He stabbed a thumb into his furs,
his voice urgent. "I can get clothes; muskets, even. I can get
you a sword, Arcole. I can steal powder and shot. I've heard 'sieur
Gahame speaking of Salvation—I know something of the land. I
can be useful."
He thought that Arcole, alone, would have agreed, but Arcole looked
to Flysse, as if she held the yea or the nay of it. He said, "Please,
Flysse," and when he saw her hesitate, he pressed on: "I'll
not be safe in Grostheim. My dreams warn of that. I'll be safer with
you."
Flysse offered no immediate response, and Arcole appeared still to
await her decision. At last Arcole said slowly—cautiously,
Davyd thought—"Are the dreams true, then likely he's
right. Surely he could be in no more danger."
"Save there are soldiers in Grostheim," Flysse said, "who
can likely beat any savages, or monsters, or whatever they are. Save
we might all starve in the wilderness, or freeze. Or be caught by the
Militia. Or be captured by these creatures. Arcole, he's but a boy."
"I'm nigh sixteen," Davyd lied. "And you'll need my
help."
Arcole's face was impassive. It seemed to him that Flysse used the
same arguments against Davyd's going as he had set regarding her
accompanying him, but he'd not risk pointing that out. Davyd looked
from one to the other, sensing that Arcole subjected himself to
Flysse. When she remained silent, he said, "If you don't take me
with you, I'll go alone. I swear it! I'll escape on my own!"
He heard his voice rise and was abruptly afraid he sounded only
petulant. He had claimed years he did not own: he must act them, else
he be left behind. He thought he could not bear that. Gentler, he
said: "Please, Flysse. Take me with you."
Still she refused a straight answer, but instead asked, "You
truly believe there's danger in Grostheim?"
He nodded. "Truly," he said, and saw her glance again at
Arcole, who ducked his head and said, "I've heard of Dreamers.
The Autarchy fears them because they've that power—to know
something of the future. Davyd foresaw the sea serpent. If he's
dreamed of Grostheim under attack, then I believe it shall come."
"And he should be useful, eh?"
Flysse's tone was bitter: Arcole winced.
Davyd said, "I shall be safer with you than alone."
Flysse looked him in the eye then. "You'd truly attempt to
escape alone?"
He nodded solemnly.
Flysse sighed. She studied Arcole with eyes that seemed to Davyd like
blue ice. Then she said: "God knows, Arcole, but you've much to
answer for," and turned to the boy. When it fell on him, her
gaze was not much warmer. "So be it, then. Davyd, you shall come
with us, does the opportunity present itself.
If it's
possible."
Davyd beamed: he had no doubt but that it must be possible. Had not
Arcole planned it? Happier, he asked, "What do we do?"
Flysse shrugged beneath the quilt and indicated her husband with
tilted chin. "He's the mastermind of this venture," she
said.
Davyd saw Arcole wince again, as if Flysse's tone cut him deep, but
his excitement burned too hot for him to spend much time pondering
what troubled them: He waited for Arcole, impatient.
"I draft this map." Arcole tapped the sheet he held. "So
far, it indicates the attacks are from the northwest. See? He
indicated the sites of the burned holdings. "All have been north
of the Restitution. So do we run due west, perhaps south of the
river, then we may avoid these mysterious raiders. I'd thought to
make alliance with them, but … " He glanced at Flysse as if
seeking her approval; it was denied. " … But Flysse told me
better, and I agree it should not be safe. So best we head west."
"Along the river!" Davyd could not contain himself.
"Listen, 'sieur Gahame trades all over Salvation, and when he
travels farthest afield he takes barges. The river's swifter than a
horse, he says."
"Indeed." Arcole nodded approvingly. "Can we steal a
boat of some kind … Davyd, what do you know of the Restitution?"
"It's a river." Davyd shrugged, searching his memory.
"Sieur Gahame calls it a waterway—Salvation's heartline,
he names it. He hires barges for his longer trips."
"Yes, yes." Arcole waved the boy to crestfallen silence.
"But I it feeds into Deliverance Bay,
so it's a tidal
river—the ebb and flow of the ocean govern its currents. Do you
understand?"
Davyd shook his head and Arcole reached out to touch his hand in
apology. "Forgive me. How should you? It means that the river
currents are governed by the sea's tides. Did we take a boat on the
ebb, we'd find ourselves fighting the current running east. Hard
work, eh? We need the incoming flow to speed us on our way, and there
you can help."
Mollified, Davyd smiled and asked, "How?"
"Likely Gahame owns charts," Arcole said. "Tables that
detail the shifting of the Restitution's flow. Could you obtain them,
or copies of them?"
"I can't read, Arcole."
"Dammit! Of course not." Arcole struck his own forehead,
grinning that Davyd not feel embarrassed. "I'm a fool. So—do
you but keep your ears open and learn what you can of the river.
Without"—he glanced warily at Flysse—"making
obvious what you do."
"That I can." Davyd nodded solemnly. "Some of my best
scores were won by listening."
"No more than that," Flysse admonished. "And only
carefully."
Davyd nodded again. "What else?"
Arcole looked first to Flysse, then said, "How easy is it to
obtain those supplies you spoke of?"
"I sleep in the warehouse," Davyd replied, "and there
are neither guards nor hexes. It would not be hard to steal, am I
careful. Take only a little at a time. How much time do we have?"
Arcole shrugged. "I cannot say. God knows, I cannot even say if
this shall prove possible. It's no more than a dream as yet."
"The forests call me in my dreams," Davyd said, "so I
think it
shall be done. What should we need?"
Arcole thought a moment. "At least one musket," he said,
"and better three. Also pistols, and powder and shot for all.
Can you get me a sword, then good."
"I can do that," Davyd said. "What else? Furs?
Knives?"
"Knives, yes," said Arcole. "And hatchets. Not furs,
I think. I'd not risk the snow, but wait for spring."
"Would the snow not slow pursuit?" Flysse asked.
"And us," Arcole returned. "Besides, this shall all
take time, I think. We shall not likely be ready ere winter ends.
Even were we, then we'd need furs and tents and food—more than
Davyd might safely steal, eh?"
Now Flysse looked embarrassed: Davyd thought he saw Arcole conceal a
furtive smile.
"No," Arcole continued, "we'd best travel light. Save
the weapons, we'll take Only a little food and—" He
paused, thinking. "Does Gahame's enterprise run to clothing,
Davyd?"
Davyd nodded.
"I've boots," Arcole said, "and those clothes I came
here in. But were it possible, I'd prefer sturdier gear. And Flysse
can hardly travel in skirts and such."
"I can get us all gear," Davyd said confidently. "Breeches
and jackets; boots. Shall we need topcoats?"
"Blankets shall serve as well," Arcole said. "But
sturdy boots for Flysse and yourself; also breeches, a shirt."
He looked to Flysse. "You and Davyd are of a size, no?"
She ducked her head. Davyd thought some of the ice had left her eyes
when she looked at her husband.
"Then such gear as Flysse shall need," Arcole said. "And
you. For me, only a good jacket; and those other things."
Davyd nodded vigorously.
"But all of it," Arcole said as Flysse opened her mouth
preparatory to speaking, "carefully. Is there risk involved, or
the chance you be found out, then leave it. You'll not put yourself
in jeopardy, eh? I'll have your word on that, Davyd. You do these
things only safely."
Davyd gave his word. He felt a tremendous excitement now, and
absolutely confident that all should be as Arcole planned. He would,
bit by bit, accumulate what they needed. He would plumb Laurens and
Godfry and the others for knowledge of the river—even 'sieur
Gahame, who was not averse to speaking of his ventures—and
prove himself worthy of Arcole's trust. And then, when Arcole deemed
the time right, they would go away together. Arcole and Flysse and
he, like a family, to freedom. His talent should be no longer a
burden to be concealed but a gift to be vaunted, used for their
protection. It was an exhilarating notion.
"So then, carefully, eh?" Arcole's voice cut through his
thoughts. "And slowly, so none suspect."
Davyd grinned. Then straightened his mouth when Flysse asked, "Shall
it truly be so easy?"
He wondered if she asked it only in argument. He felt the question
was addressed to Arcole, but still, afloat on optimism and
excitement, he said, "Yes. I can do all that."
Arcole said, "No," bringing him somewhat down to earth, "it
shall not. It shall be hard waiting, and harder doing. Perhaps even
impossible. But what else shall we do? Live out our lives as slaves
to the Autarchy? Run hither and yon like trained dogs on our masters'
bidding? Die old and weary in servitude? No, Flysse, it shall not be
easy. It will be dangerous—for which reason I hesitated to
involve you; because I'd not see you come to harm. Neither you nor
Davyd; but I tell you this—I'll not die a servant of Evander."
"Nor," said Davyd, mightily enthused, "shall I."
Flysse said nothing. Only tugged the quilt tighter about her, as if a
colder wind blew through the little room.
"So," Arcole declared, "for now we've plans enough.
Best you return, eh, Davyd? We'd not want you caught out."
"No." Davyd turned instinctively toward the window,
assessing the hour. Dawn was not now far off and he gathered his furs
about him. "Shall I come back?"
"Best wait a while." Arcole glanced again at Flysse. "We'll
meet in church come Sunday, no? Tell us then how your part goes, eh?"
Davyd nodded, busying himself with the cords that held the furs about
his body. There was something here he did not understand, but neither
was he sure he wanted to examine it. That differences stood betwixt
Arcole and Flysse troubled him, and he'd not now entertain troubles,
only hope. He supposed they argued as he understood wed people
sometimes did: he had no experience of such matters and trusted that
their love should iron out the differences. He settled the bear's
skull—should he have told them the forests contained such
creatures?—over his head, and turned to the window.
"Be careful," Arcole said; and Flysse: "God ward you,
Davyd."
Then he was gone into the windblown night, thinking he must not be so
different to those things he had dreamed of as he scurried across the
yard and jumped the fence to run shadowy and all befurred through the
streets.
"Is there anyone you'll not use?"
"What do you mean?" he asked.
"To use Davyd." She hugged the quilt about her body; Arcole
still occupied the single chair. "Since learning he was a
Dreamer, no?"
Arcole gestured: he felt helpless under her implacable gaze. "God,
Flysse," he said, "I didn't love you then. I guessed what
Davyd was, and then he swore me to keep his secret. I
thought—yes—that his talent might be useful if … "
He shrugged and wiped a hand across his mouth. "If the
opportunity to escape ever presented itself. I didn't know if it
would, but … God! I never planned to fall in love with you. But I
did!
And I am! What
can I say?"
She offered no reprieve from his misery, only stared at the frosty
window.
"I told you true," he said wearily, "when I said I'd
not see you come to harm. I thought at first I might escape; and I'd
not then deliver you into such peril. Now … " He set a hand
against his chest as does a man taking a vow. "Now I'd not leave
you, ever. Those vows we swore hold strong. You're my wife, Flysse. I
love you. Does this dream come true, then I'd have you with me
always. Can you say different?"
Flysse studied the patterns the ice made across the window. Beyond,
the yard stood white with frost. The sky spread lightless above, the
moon and stars hidden beneath the gloom preceding dawn. And that, she
thought, cold and cheerless as the chagrin of her soul. She could not
say different: she loved this man. But could she trust him any
longer?
Once—no doubt of it—she'd have put her life in his hands.
Her life and all her hope.
Had, she told herself, done just
that. Was that not what marriage meant? To trust, to believe in
someone, placing your fate in their hands, confident it be well
tended? But Arcole had held things back he should have told her. He
had kept secrets from her—thought even of leaving her. She was
not sure she could forgive that—even knowing she loved him—and
it drove a knife into her heart that she could not say the words she
knew he wanted to hear, that she wanted to say. It would be so easy
to turn toward him and open her arms, knowing he should come into
them with gratitude—with love—but she could not. There
was, to her surprise, a cold, hard part of her that required more.
Commitment, she supposed; that absolute bonding she had assumed was
naturally a part of marriage—that coherence of purpose and
resolution she had seen in her parents, that she gave herself. She
was no longer sure—could no longer be certain—that it was
there in Arcole. He loved her, yes. But did the chance to escape
present itself, would he take her with him, save she force him to it,
or would he—be it easier, or more opportune—leave her
behind? She could no longer know, not for sure, and that pained her.
She wished she had his way with words—that she might trick out
honest answers from him—but she did not, and could rely only on
her own judgment.
She sighed and closed her eyes that he not see the doubt and hurt
there.
Arcole said, "Flysse? Hear me, Flysse."
She opened her eyes and turned toward him.
"I've hurt you," he said, "and for that I'm shamed.
Now I tell you honestly—do you forbid me, I'll forget all
this—all my thoughts of escape. Do you tell me it must be so,
I'll be a servant all my life. Only so long as I live it out with
you."
"Truly?" she asked, not yet ready to believe but wanting
to.
He ducked his head. "This map?" He tossed the paper to her.
It landed by her feet. "Tear it up. Come Sunday we'll tell Davyd
to forget it all. I'll forget it all. Only that I not lose you."
Flysse took the chart from where it had fallen and held it a moment.
"Truly?" she asked again.
Arcole nodded again: "Truly. You're more important than freedom.
God, you own my freedom! I'd not care to live without you."
She held out the map and said, "Keep it."
He took it and asked, "Are we reconciled, then?"
"Not yet, Arcole."
And he must be satisfied with that, as she must be. And they both
wonder what the future holds.
33—Events Pertaining
Captain of Militia Danyael Corm had never expected to find himself
leading an armed column into Salvation's hinterland under such
circumstances. When he had applied for posting to Grostheim, he had
thought the transfer an astute career move. In Evander and the lands
conquered in the War of Restitution, advancement depended overmuch on
connections and social ties. He had few connections and no social
ties, and consequently believed he might look forward to a slow—and
likely limited—rise through the ranks. The new world offered
opportunity to climb higher—without, he had thought, much risk.
But now he rode through the mud of early spring at the head of fifty
mounted infantry, with two mule-drawn supply carts and the distinctly
unpleasant belief he might well die. Had he been able, he would have
left this duty to another officer: he had much rather remain in
Grostheim, behind the city walls and cannons. But Major Spelt had
left him little choice, and had he looked to evade the commission, he
knew he must consign himself to remaining a captain until he died.
Which, he could not help thinking, might now not be long off.
He had known there were what Spelt referred to as "problems."
All the officers had known that since last summer; there was talk in
the mess—muted, but nonetheless fervent—and it was
impossible to avoid speculation. It went no farther—the, major
had made clear that loose tongues would earn his displeasure—but
amongst the higher ranks it had been a topic of excited discussion.
Farms were burned out and all the inhabitants slain. Animals had been
slaughtered or driven off, crops wasted, vineyards torched. Like most
of his fellows, Corm had arrived in Salvation confident the land was
empty—a vast fallow field for the Autarchy to plow with
indentured labor. Now it seemed all that was wrong: Evander was not
alone in staking claim—there were others. But neither Spelt nor
Governor Wyme could say whom, or what. Only that folk died, and that
the attacks be kept secret.
And Captain Corm was elected to a most unpleasant duty.
He must make a patrol of all the holdings north of the Restitution,
to where the river disappeared into the wilderness timber, then north
along the forest edge to the Glory River as far as the coast, and
southwest from there back to Grostheim. It would take—assuming
untroubled passage—the better part of two months. Was there
what Major Spelt named "difficulties," the duration could
not be locked to any chronology.
In plainer words, Corm thought bitterly, they—or more
particularly
he—might never return.
The thought chilled him, and he shrugged his coat closer about him.
It was a good bearskin, purchased from Rupyrt Gahame—warmer
than this softening spring weather required, but he took comfort from
its bulk. It held him warm, and he thought it might well be thick
enough to slow an arrow's progress. Rogyr Stantin had told him they
used arrows—whoever, or whatever,
they were.
The lieutenant had found the wreckage of the Thirsk farm—the
first to fall—and he had said there were stone-tipped
arrowheads in the charred timbers. Captain Corm wondered what manner
of savages would head their weapons with stone, and why the
lieutenant did not lead this column. He was surely better suited to
the task: he seemed quite unafraid.
Corm turned in his saddle and waved Stantin alongside.
"So, Rogyr, shall we find these monsters of yours soon?"
It was easy to make his question brave: far worse to admit his fears.
Stantin shrugged. "Who can say, Danyael? I know only that I
found a farm slaughtered. But … " He turned his face toward
the forest's edge. "I think they came from there. God, I'd
sooner the major sent us into the woods to find them and punish them.
A major expedition, eh?"
"Yes!" Corm returned with feigned enthusiasm. "Go in
and teach them a lesson! A full column—with cannon in
support—should learn them."
Stantin nodded, his polished tricorn glancing sparks of sunlight.
"Still," Conn said, not quite able to contain his
uneasiness, "I wonder what they are."
Stantin shrugged again. "Who knows? Does it matter?"
"I'd think," said Corm, "that it might be good we know
our enemies."
"Godless creatures," Stantin replied. "Wilderness
things out of the forests. Not born of God, and therefore to be
destroyed. No?"
"Yes," said Corm dutifully, glancing back along the column.
It spread in a regimented line behind him. Horsemen two by two, the
wagons at the rear, warded by ten riders. All armed with muskets and
sabers. Shot and powder and food and tents on board the wagons. They
had checked nine holdings so far, and none with report of attack.
But they drew close to the forest now, and he could not help shifting
in his saddle as his gut stirred uncomfortable.
"Are you well?" asked Stantin.
Corm said, "Yes, of course," and hid his hatred of the
younger man's senseless courage.
They bivouacked along the Restitution's bank that night, in a meadow
damp with spring rain and ripe with snowdrops, and the next day found
the Defraney holding burned down.
It was not as Stantin had described the Thirsk farm. It was far
worse: Corm spewed when he saw the skulls—the farmer and his
wife mounted on poles alongside pigs and cows and dogs, the
indentured folk beside.
In two more days they came on the Cateham mill. It was only charred
rubble, save for the waterwheel: Anton Cateham and his wife were
pinned to that and spun on the river's turning. Fish nibbled at their
flesh and Captain Corm threw up again.
They found nine more ravaged holdings as they traversed the
wilderness rim, all burned; all destroyed as if something emerged
from the woods to deny Evander's supremacy, and then went back,
hiding until the time to strike came again.
There was no sign of where they came from, or where they went after,
only what they left behind.
Corm felt his life draw close to ending, as if a malign shadow fell
dark across his future: he felt the wilderness waited to strike him
down. He decided he had better resign himself to remaining a captain
and stay in Evander, but he was an officer and could neither discuss
nor show that fear. He must act out his role, feigning a grim
resolution he fortified with furtive sips from his hip flask. He must
join Stantin in condemnation of the demons, blustering about bloody
revenge, God's will, and each day go on as Major Spelt had ordered
him.
He took his column north to where the Glory River fed the forests,
and turned east. By then even Lieutenant Stantin was nervous. He rode
with musket primed across his knees, his finger on the trigger; all
did. And all the time they watched the land around, anticipating.
Along the banks of the Glory they found seven more burned holdings,
all of them mounted with ghastly totems—as if the demons Corm
no longer doubted existed threatened Salvation and vaunted their
defiance of Evander's rule. Captain Corm wished wholeheartedly he had
never left Evander: ignominy should be better than this.
And then …
The sun stood high in a sky of pure azure, like a burning eye
surveying the earth beneath; indifferent. Spring came apace, driven
on the fresh wind that billowed clouds across the blue. Buttercups
and daisies sprouted eager from the meadows bordering the river, and
the Glory ran urgent with spring flood, bubbling and burbling between
the wide grassy banks. It was a day such as the poets of the Levan
described in their sonnets, or the minstrels of Tarrabon sang of.
And Captain Danyael Corm and his troop were caught between the river
and what came out of the wilderness.
There was no warning. The last ravaged holding lay some nineteen days
behind. Three back they had passed the night comfortably at the
Payton farm, and since then the land had spread empty. Corm began to
relax, thinking the worst was over, never guessing it awaited them.
He called a halt when the sun still stood a hand's span above the
western horizon. The river stood to their left, grass stretching
beyond it to the ominous line of the forest edge, blue-gray at the
day's ending. He ordered the horses grazed and picketed, saw their
tents pitched in orderly rows. He felt almost safe—the Glory
was a reliable defense and in better than two weeks there had been no
sign of the demons—but still he kept his watch doubled and
longed for the day he should see Grostheim's strong walls; preferably
at his back, with gates closed and barred.
He sighed as he found the refuge of his tent, settling on the camp
bed to bring his flask from his tunic and sip eagerly. Payton had
refilled it with brandy, and he smacked his lips gratefully as he
drank. Then he swiftly hid the flask as Stantin came in.
"All's well." The lieutenant gave no sign that he smelled
the spirit on Corm's breath. "The cooks have fires started, and
I've stood down those not on watch."
"Excellent." Corm stood up, straightening his tunic. He
glanced at his musket and decided to leave the gun: he wore his sword
and a brace of pistols. "Think you we've seen the worst?"
Stantin shrugged. "God only knows, Danyael. Or the devil."
He crossed his fingers and spat delicately. "We deal with demons
out here, and they defy all reason."
"Even so." Corm frowned, not wanting to be reminded of what
he could not forget. "We've seen no sign of attack since the
Jaymes farm. I think we've left them behind."
He settled his tricorn squarely on his head, afraid he showed Stantin
his fear; afraid the junior officer might report it to Spelt. He
nodded sagely and said, "We've much to report, eh?"
"Indeed." Stantin smoothed his hair. "It's my thinking
these demons grow braver. I'd see a major expedition mounted against
them."
"Major Spelt shall doubtless hear your thoughts," Corm
said. "But have we the forces?"
"We should send word home," Stantin gave him back. "Ask
Evander for more men."
Corm ducked his head. "My thoughts precisely," he declared.
"I shall communicate all this to the major on our return. But
now—do we find our dinner?"
They quit the tent for an evening painted glorious by the setting
sun. It seemed that fire lit the sky, as if the wilderness woods
blazed above and smoked blue below. The slender crescent of a new
moon stood to the east and a few brave stars vaunted the dusk.
Swallows darted overhead, and in the grass pipits sang shrill. The
Glory ran like molten metal, and the air was appetizing with the
smell of roasting venison. Corm looked around: surely they were safe
now?
They ate, as was customary on such patrol duty, with the
noncommissioned officers. The two sergeants and five corporals were
cheerful: Corm thought they lacked his imagination.
When they were done, he benevolently suggested that Stantin take the
first watch and he relieve the lieutenant at midnight. That, he
thought, should give him a while alone with his flask. He returned to
his tent with the sun gone all the way down behind the trees and the
sky stretched like blue velvet studded with silver above. He took off
his belts and his tunic, his boots, and laid himself down with his
pistols close to hand, his flask closer. He was not sure when he fell
asleep, nor when he woke, only that it was a scream that roused him.
It seemed to hang on the air, palpable as the earlier smell of
roasting meat. He sat up, quite unaware of the flask that fell and
dribbled across his legs.
He swallowed the horrible dryness that clogged his throat and
snatched up both pistols. Those first, his boots after, then his belt
that held his saber. He buckled it on, all the time aware that his
heart beat wild against his ribs and all his worst fears came to meet
him. He heard more screams. He thrust the pistols into their holsters
and took up his musket.
"God," he asked as he left the tent, not knowing he spoke
aloud, "please let it be nothing. Please, let it be nothing."
It was not: it was his nightmare fleshed.
He saw shapes moving amongst the tents. They were like shadows,
indistinct and fleeting, and when he fired his musket at one he could
not see whether it fell or only blended back into the night. He felt
a terrible temptation to dart back to the useless refuge of his tent,
to find his flask and drain it, but he saw flames and had no wish to
die by fire. He cursed as he flung the musket away and drew both
pistols.
A shadow presented itself before him and he saw the gleam of white
teeth snarling, eyes that seemed to burn with unholy fire. He
discharged both pistols and the thing—the demon—fell.
Moaning, he took his powder horn and dribbled a charge into a muzzle,
wadded cloth and rammed it in, added a ball, more cloth, knowing all
the time that something was coming out of the night to kill him. He
cocked the pistol and stared around. The bivouac was lit bright now,
tents were burning. He heard the horses shrilling terrified, and the
shouts of dying men. He holstered his loaded pistol and drew his
sword, thrust it into the ground, and reloaded the second pistol.
Then—his terror suddenly so deep he no longer felt afraid—he
took up his saber in his right hand and a pistol in his left and ran
for the camp's center.
Stantin was there. An arrow jutted from his left shoulder, decorating
his scarlet tunic with a darker color. Like Corm, he held sword and
pistol. Then a figure erupted—Corm could think of no other way
to put it—out of the burning shadows, and sunk a hatchet into
Stantin's skull. The lieutenant voiced no cry as he died: only gaped
as if in surprise, and fell down with his face all curtained with
blood. It was not possible through the shouting and the rattle of
discharged muskets, the screaming of horses and men, the angry
creaking of the burning tents, that Corm could hear the sound of the
hatchet striking Stantin, but he did and it galvanized him.
He screamed himself and pounded forward, saber lifted high. He fired
his pistol at the shadow as it stooped to lever its ax from the
lieutenant's skull. The lead ball struck the shadow in the shoulder
and spun it away from Stantin. It made a sound and rolled onto its
belly, struggling to rise. Corm swung his saber down and laughed as
the steel blade cut deep across the ribs, then hacked again, against
the shoulders. The shadow squealed and flattened: Corm drove his
sword down straight, as if he pinned an insect.
The shadow grunted and was still. God! Dear God, thank you, he
thought. They can be slain. Corm dragged his blade loose and
holstered his empty gun, drew the other.
"Rally to me, men! Hold hard and fight!"
He looked around. He was not sure how many men he had left—he
was, it seemed, inside a ring of fire. He could hear men dying beyond
the flames, and some in them, their screams the worst. About him were
no more than twenty of all his troop. He saw a sergeant and shouted,
"Brystol, report!"
He had no time left to wonder why his fear was gone: only whether he
survive this.
Sergeant Brystol came up. "Demons, sir! Just like the lieutenant
said. Never saw them coming, sir; couldn't tell they was here until
… " He ducked an arrow that sang out of the flames. "Devil's
spawn, sir. Horrible shadowy beasts come from the night."
"They can be killed," Corm yelled. "Demons or no, they
can be killed."
"God's on our side, sir," said Brystol, "so that's not
surprisin'. Only it seems there's an awful lot o' them."
"Yes, God's on our side," Corm answered. "Praise be,
and form a square."
He had not fought in the War of Restitution but he had studied the
manuals, had attended the academy classes. He knew the correct
procedures by rote.
Dear God, please let those procedures be right, he prayed. Please let
them work against the devil's minions.
He reloaded as his men formed around him.
They were a solid square. He checked them—five or so to each
side, kneeling with muskets cocked and aimed.
"They've shot and powder, sergeant?"
He was aware of arrows whistling by: they seemed somehow faraway.
"They do, sir," said Brystol.
"Then volley," Corm said.
"On my order, lads!" Brystol yelled. "Fire!"
From around the square, black powder smoke billowed. From past the
flames there came screams, then arrows. Corm saw a trooper fall back,
a shaft embedded in his throat; another swore volubly as he tugged at
the pole driven into his side.
"Again! Fire at will!"
Corm spent his pistol into the flames. He could see the targets no
better than his men. They all of them fired at shadows—at
demons—that came out of the nighttime wilderness and faded back
into that flamelit gloom. He wondered if their dead rose up. He
glanced at the one he had killed and was thankful it still lay there.
Perhaps they were mortal, if demons could be so described.
More arrows fell: more Militiamen died.
The square was down to fifteen men.
Then ten.
Corm saw Sergeant Brystol fall to his knees, an arrow in his chest,
another in his belly. Then a third sprout from his throat.
Sergeant Brystol lay dead and Captain Danyael Corm was suddenly aware
he stood with only five men.
He watched them die, and was alone.
A shape came out from the flames, whooping. Corm dropped his empty
pistols and raised his saber. He was ready to die now. Dying was
preferable to wondering, to waiting. The demon swung a hatchet at his
head and he met the blow, turned it with his sword and delivered a
cut that opened the devil's belly. He laughed and took the hand from
the wrist of the next attacker. Spun and sliced flesh as the thing
went past him, then split its skull.
As you slew Rogyr Stantin, he thought.
"I'm God's man," he shouted, hardly knowing he did. "I'm
Danyael Corm, and I'm a captain of the God's Militia. I defy you to
kill me! God's on my side and I renounce your black master!"
He swung his blade at the next attacker, and was confused. The demon
ducked lithe under his stroke and only touched him with the short
lance it held.
He saw another coming and pointed his blade at the thing's belly, but
that, too, evaded his saber and struck him as it ran past.
The blow was hard and he twisted, anticipating the return, but the
demon was gone into the surrounding flames and he faced a third.
That, like the others, hit him and darted by.
Then more, until his head swam and his sword arm grew tired. A blow
struck his back and he staggered. Another took his knees from under
him and he fell down. He waved his saber and felt it struck from his
grasp.
I am going to die, he thought. Now they'll kill me.
He tried to climb upright, but could not: too many blows landed on
him. Blood ran into his eyes and he could not find his sword. He
tasted dirt in his mouth and waited for death. He felt too weary to
pray.
Then hands were on him, turning him roughly onto his back so that he
flung up both arms, protective about his face, anticipating the
hatchet he knew must descend. He felt his wrists gripped, and weight
upon his ankles, as if the demons stood on him and pinned him down.
He waited for the final blow, vaguely surprised he was not screaming.
He thought he no longer cared, that death was preferable to wondering
at its arrival.
Powerful fingers clasped his jaw then, digging deep, and he opened
his eyes. The sky was red and silent save for the sounds of burning.
Sparks rose in whirling flood, climbing up to falter against the
stars, and Danyael Corm saw the demon clearly. It knelt beside him,
its left arm extended, its hand a vise about his face, compelling
attention. No less the eyes that studied him. They were dark,
reflecting flame so that they appeared lit by fire. They sat beneath
a craggy brow, divided by a broad, hooked nose. Across the eyes and
nose ran a band of black, dark as the braided hair that framed the
awful visage. The mouth was wide and full-lipped, and Corm could not
tell whether it snarled hatred or beamed triumph; perhaps both.
He did not, at first, realize the demon spoke. It seemed only to
snarl and grunt, but then he recognized words amongst the grumbling.
"I let you live, redcoat, so that you go back and tell your
people to go. We are coming against your walls to kill you all. Tell
them that! Stay, and none shall live. The heads of your men shall
stand on poles for the crows to pick, and your women shall weep as we
take them. This is our land and you have no place here. Go away or
die."
Corm stared aghast as the creature rose. It wore leather and furs,
and he smelled it—an earthy, musky odor. It seemed a thing of
the land, of the wilderness. That it spoke in words he could
understand seemed inexplicable—save it was a demon and so
could, presumably, speak in tongues. He saw that it held a short
lance that appeared to be decorated with hair: not knowing how, he
knew the hair was human. He saw a hatchet tucked beneath its belt,
and a knife. He felt a foot drive hard against his ribs and gasped.
"Stand up. You are not a man, but stand like one."
Corm rose slowly to his feet, groaning as his bruised back protested.
Warily, he looked around. He stood surrounded by demons. They seemed
to him all alike: skin-clad and horrible, with the band of black
across all their faces. He could not yet accept they gave him back
his life. He was not sure he wanted it: he could see his command dead
beyond the creatures. Some already lacked heads, and he must swallow
bile as he saw a demon slice off Sergeant Brystol's scalp and lash
the bloody scrap to its lance.
"Come."
The demon chief—he supposed this must be the leader—took
his arm and thrust him toward a horse another brought out of the
flames.
"Get up."
Corm tried hard to mount, but he was shuddering now and the horse
pranced, scenting his fear. Now that it seemed he might live, he felt
once again terrified. The demons laughed; one struck him hard across
the buttocks. God, dear God, he prayed, only let me live. Grant me my
life, please. That and my dignity. Grant me the strength to set my
foot in the stirrup and ride away as befits an officer in your
Militia.
Shaking, he took the stirrup and raised his leg. The horse snickered,
eyes rolling, ears flattened. Corm lost the stirrup, stumbling
helplessly back. He wept bitter tears as he was picked up and flung
into the saddle, clutching desperately at the reins as the animal
bucked and the demons whooped and laughed, capering in mimicry of his
helplessness.
"Remember my words." The demon chief locked a steely hand
about Corm's knee. "This is our land and we share it with no
one. Go away or we shall kill you all."
One of the creatures must have prodded the horse then—Corm did
not see it, knew only that the horse shrilled and began to gallop,
maddened, away from the fires.
Away from the demons—and that was enough for Danyael Corm. He
stretched along the beast's neck and let it run, wanting only to be
gone.
34—Grim Future
Rannach stared at the empty valley with eyes bleak as the land
itself. When he turned them to Morrhyn they grew no warmer, save with
the cold fire of accusation.
"Where are they?" His voice was hoarse and harsh. "Have
we come so far for nothing?"
Morrhyn, in his turn, stared at the Wintering Ground. Snow lay deep
along all its length, the stream that spilled from one wall frozen in
a bright downward-curving arc, the pool it formed iced thick, the
runoff only an indentation in the pure white blanket. There were no
tracks: the snow lay pristine. Where lodges should have stood there
was emptiness; the sky hung blue and chill above, not at all sullied
by the smoke that should have risen from the lodgefires. Silence
reigned, as if even the wind held its breath. He shook his head
helplessly, blinking against the tears that threatened to cloud his
eyes and freeze upon his cheeks. He thought that in this awful moment
of utter disappointment he could easily give up his life. Simply drop
from the paint mare and crawl away into the snow to die; to close his
eyes and willingly enter the cold's embrace. It was too much: he had
endured too much, come too far, to find his goal deserted and empty
as lost hope.
"Well?" Rannach's angry voice cut through his misery, sharp
as a knife. "You're the Dreamer: where are they?"
So low he must repeat himself at Rannach's irritated request, Morrhyn
said, "I don't know."
"Ach!" Rannach sawed his rein, prompting the stallion to
curvet, snorting its irritation. "Was it all for nothing, then?
Did I leave Arrhyna for this?" He gestured at the empty
landscape. "What do we do now?"
Morrhyn slumped even lower in his saddle. It seemed his hope seeped
out like blood from a wound. Was it all presumption, his daring hope
that he might save the People? Did the Maker punish him for such
ambition, such vanity? Was all his quest only a mockery?
He wiped a glove across his mouth and stared silently at the sky as
Rannach waited impatiently for answers. The sun westered, and soon it
would be dark. He had no ready answers: he had, now, no answers at
all.
He sighed and said, "Do we make camp here this night? Perhaps
I'll dream."
"You'd best," Rannach said curtly. "Else we shall
likely die."
"So you dream again," Chakthi said, and filled Hadduth's
cup with tiswin, "that's good. But do you dream true?"
"I dream of the Tachyn," Hadduth answered, then corrected
himself: "I dream of you conquering your enemies. That is only
just, so surely it must also be true."
"Yes." Chakthi nodded, old ashes falling from his lank
hair. "What is just must surely be true. But tell me again."
Hadduth told him, and the akaman thought on it, then smiled, the
curving of his lips no more than a baring of teeth, like a
wolverine's snarl. "I must play Racharran at his own game, no?"
"Yes," Hadduth told him, "if you—if
we—are
to have our just revenge."
"And that I'd surely have. So I must play the diplomat, eh?"
Chakthi's mouth spread wider. Hadduth could not tell whether he
smiled or grimaced. "That shall not be easy."
"But you can do it," Hadduth said.
"Oh, yes! I can do it," Chakthi agreed. "To see
Racharran and his whoreson child destroyed, I'd pledge my soul."
Hadduth saw no reason to tell him that he likely did; his own, he
thought, was perhaps already bought. But by what power! The Maker was
as nothing to the masters of his newfound dreams. The Maker sent him
none; he turned his face away from his People and gave them over to
the strong. Surely that must mean his new masters outreached the
Maker, and who stood early with them must surely be vaunted and
enlarged over all others; and it gave him the means to please
Chakthi.
"It shall not be easy," he said. "Racharran can bear
us Tachyn little love after this year."
"But can it be done?" said Chakthi. "Tell me it can be
done."
"It can," Hadduth promised. "So long as we are
careful, and play the role of penitents."
"Promise me what I want," Chakthi said, "and I'll take
any part you say."
Hadduth nodded. "Then best," he said, "that you wash
your hair and bind up your braids; take off the mourning clay."
"Vachyr's not yet avenged. I swore a vow.
"Which to honor requires that you play your part. Or … "
"I'll do it." Chakthi ran fingers through his filthy hair.
"Vachyr would understand, no?"
"He would," promised Hadduth. "Shall I help you?"
Chakthi nodded, and the wakanisha set water to heating on the fire,
that his akaman might cleanse his hair and take the clay from his
face, and deliver the Commacht to his masters.
"Well?" Rannach asked again. "Where do we go? What
have you dreamed? Or do we sit here and wait for death?"
Morrhyn leant closer to the fire. It seemed not to warm him. He sat
swathed in furs, a blanket around him, food—albeit only the
last of the dried meat the Grannach had provided—in his belly,
but still felt the cold pervade his bones—and no less his soul.
He felt alone, bereft as that other, awful time when he had
recognized that his dreams were taken. He wondered if that was come
again, and the Breakers' dark wind blew so strong over Ket-Ta-Witko
that it held off the Maker's benefit.
But how? he wondered. He had dreamed all down the long road from the
Grannach's valley. The dreams had been strong, enough that they had
evaded the Breakers' scouts, come safe to where the clan should be.
But now …
This last night he had not dreamed at all, but found only
sleep—dreamless and sound—under the shelter Rannach had
constructed. And he had woken to chagrin and Rannach's accusatory
eyes.
For a moment he thought of lying to his companion, then dismissed the
thought: Rannach deserved better than that. He had risked his life to
bring Morrhyn to the clan, to the People. He had left his wife
behind, where he might have remained safe, and had given himself
wholeheartedly to the quest, to the hope Morrhyn had promised.
No, Morrhyn thought, I cannot lie to him. I owe him better. Even if
all of this has been futile.
"I did not dream," he said. And before Rannach had a chance
to voice the anger that flashed in his eyes: "I know not why,
only that I did not. Perhaps the Breakers command magicks that defeat
even the Maker."
Rannach's eyes grew wide at that, and he closed his mouth on his
accusations and anger and only said, in a hushed voice, "Can
that be?"
"Perhaps." Morrhyn shrugged his thin shoulders. "They
are surely powerful."
"But they die," Rannach said, the statement reaching for
hope. "I slew one."
"Yes," Morrhyn said. "And bravely as any warrior of
the Commacht. Racharran would be proud of you."
And found in that a straw at which he might clutch.
"Listen! You're your father's son—had Racharran his way,
you'd be the next akaman of the Commacht … "
Rannach's bitter laughter echoed off the valley's snow-clad walls.
Morrhyn ignored it, motioning the younger man to silence. "Heed
me, eh? Can I not dream, then we must rely upon other senses. Were
you akaman of the Commacht and had fought all year against an enemy
whose anger ignores the Ahsa-tye-Patiko—and would likely seek
you out even in winter, even to your Wintering Ground, which he'd
know of—where would you go?"
Rannach's frown deepened. "You speak of Chakthi and his Tachyn,
no?" he said. "So did I wish to hide the clan, I'd not come
here. Morrhyn!" His face brightened. "That's why, eh?
That's why the clan's not here! My father took them to some safer
place, where Chakthi should not find them."
"I think it must be so," Morrhyn said. "But where?"
The frown came back. Rannach tugged awhile on a braid he movement
setting the brooch Arrhyna had given him to sparkling as it caught
the early morning sun. Morrhyn thought of Arrhyna and felt sorrow for
all that he forced on her and her husband, save there were far
greater issues at stake than only their happiness. But still, even
so, he could not help that pang of guilt.
"There's a canyon," Rannach said, and paused.
"Think!" Morrhyn urged him.
"South of here," Rannach said. "Sometimes buffalo
winter there. There's a river—shallow—across the mouth.
But that would slow raiders; and there's timber. My father showed it
me once, and said it might be a good Wintering Ground—did we
not already own the finest."
Morrhyn sighed again, this time with relief, or expectation of
hope—it was all he had now. "Let's go there," he
said.
"It's only a memory," Rannach said.
"Even so."
"And if they're not there?"
"Then we look elsewhere," Morrhyn said. "No?"
Rannach said, "Yes," and smiled, and set to piling snow
over the fire, all budding optimism again. "And if they're not,
then we can go ask Yazte and his Lakanti. They'll surely know, eh?"
He chuckled. "I doubt Yazte shall order my execution."
Morrhyn shook his head and wished he felt as much cheered; but
darkness and doubt tugged like claws on his mind, holding him back
from such effervescent optimism. He could not forget his dreamless
sleep, or his wonder that the Breakers owned far worse magicks than
he feared. He told himself there
was an answer, there was
still promise of salvation for the People. But when he looked out
onto the empty valley, he could not still the doubt that filled him,
chill as the cold that numbed his bones.
The Frozen Grass Moon saw Motsos home, unyielding as the snow under
his horse's weary hooves. He leaned along the animal's neck as the
crusting ice that spanned the river before the canyon broke, and dark
water trammeled around the creature's fetlocks. Warriors watched him
with nocked bows so that he must lift up and shout his name before
they slew him.
That should be ironic—to be slain by his own brothers as he
brought them warning. He laughed at the thought, then leaned down
again along the horse's neck. The Maker knew it was warm, and he was
so very tired.
But he was still a warrior of the Commacht, so he rubbed his eyes and
forced himself upright as the watchers helped him from the saddle and
promised his horse be groomed and fed, then led him, all tottery as a
child, to Racharran's lodge, where the akaman stood ready to meet
him, alerted by the scouts along the river.
He squatted on warm furs, leaning toward the fire as Lhyn set a cup
of warm tiswin in his hand, and smiled as Racharran himself draped a
blanket around his shoulders and asked what news.
"There were twenty of them," he said. "Scouts, Bylas
supposed; and I agree with him. I'd have stayed to fight, but he told
me to bring word. I'd the fastest horse."
"Yes." Racharran nodded. "That horse of yours can
outrun the wind. My favorite is slow, beside."
Motsos beamed at such praise, then frowned. "I'd have fought
them," he said, "had Bylas not asked that I come back."
"It's for the best," Racharran said, "that we know
where the enemy is. So—tell me what you saw."
"A column of twenty," Motsos said. "All on those
things they ride, those …
creatures. We could smell their
stink and hear their howling, coming arrow-true across the plains. I
think their horde cannot be far behind."
"No," Racharran agreed. "But where?"
"You know that river where the breaks are?" Motsos said.
"All flat before, and then a wood? And then the jumbles?"
Racharran nodded.
"They chased us to the gulleys." Motsos drank the hot
tiswin as if it were some elixir. "I left them there. That's
only three days' ride in good weather, but those beasts they ride."
He sipped more tiswin, his homely features thoughtful. "I think
they'd travel faster than any horse."
Racharran nodded, his face grim. "And were they the outriders of
the horde … "
He left the sentence unfinished. Motsos said, "Our scouts ride
five days ahead, even seven."
"Yes.
Our scouts." Racharran smiled darkly. "But
these people are not like us."
"Even so." Motsos shrugged. "That great horde we
saw—surely it cannot travel so fast."
"Perhaps." Racharran found a twig and broke it. The
snapping rang loud in the silence. "Say they travel faster than
we can, say those you saw could reach this canyon in three days. Say
they ride—what?—five days before the rest. Then it might
take them no more than eleven days to take word back." He
paused, calculating; when he spoke again, his voice was low and grim.
"Their entire force could be on us as the Rain Moon rises."
Motsos raised his cup to his lips and found it empty. Lhyn reached to
fill it and he downed the liquor in a single gulp, so alarmed he
forgot to even thank her. When he remembered and murmured the words,
she shook her head. Her eyes were fixed firm on her husband, and in
them Motsos thought he saw a fear that must surely mirror his own. He
stared at Racharran, waiting.
The twig Racharran held was in splinters now. He threw the pieces
into the fire. "We must prepare to fight," he decided.
"Perhaps they'll not find us." Lhyn's voice was soft, as if
she feared to say it aloud lest she betray them.
"The Maker willing, no," Racharran said. "But I think
we'd best prepare. Surely they look for us. Likely they look for all
the clans."
"Can they fight all the People?" Lhyn's eyes were large
with wondering horror.
"Were there enough of them." His mouth curved in parody of
a smile. "Eh, Motsos?"
Motsos nodded, wishing he might find argument; knowing he could not.
"Could we not move on? Flee them?" Lhyn asked.
Racharran barked laughter like an angry dog. "And go where?
Here, we've at least the canyon's walls at our back. I'd sooner not
fight, but we may have no choice; and I'd sooner not wait to find out
but be ready. So … " He threw back his head a moment, as if he
shook off doubt, and when he looked again at Lhyn and Motsos, his
face was all stern purpose. "We prepare to fight. Meanwhile, I'd
see how Bylas fares. And"—this softer—"how
close these invaders are."
"I'll take you back," Motsos said.
"There's no need." Racharran shook his head. "I can
find the place you described."
Motsos said, "I'd also know how Bylas fares."
Racharran smiled more warmly then and ducked his head. "So be
it. But rest this night, eh? We'll go out at dawn."
Perico wished he were not charged with Juh's message: it was an honor
he could easily have done without.
The Frozen Grass Moon was no time for traveling, and worse in this
unusually harsh winter. He had sooner spend his time warm in his
lodge with his young wife than out on the open snow with the air so
cold that each breath struck his lungs like a lance and dusted his
horse's mane with ice; so cold it was a danger to touch metal for
fear he leave skin behind.
And worse for all he saw along the way.
He scarce dared build a fire for the fear it betray his position, and
had it not been a surety that he freeze in the night, he would have
slept without. But that was surely death, and so he sought out hidden
places, where trees or rocks should hide the light and smoke, and
even then slept restless, waking through the nights in fear of
invaders.
He had seen them.
Oh, by the Maker, he had seen them! And they filled him with such
dread as stirred his bowels and urged him go back save that should
earn him Juh's punishment and mark him a coward. So he went on,
frightened, and by day and night prayed to the Maker that he come
safe through to the Commacht, and that they send him back with an
escort. Preferably a hundred or so warriors, for he doubted he could
face those creatures with less.
They were such things as nightmare, spawned, and he wished Juh had
listened earlier to Racharran and heeded the Commacht akaman, who
was, he decided, a wise and fore-sighted man.
Had Juh only listened, then he would not be here alone, hiding from
creatures that surely blasphemed the Maker with their very existence.
"You're sure Juh said that?"
Kanseah nodded, concealing the affront he felt. Surely it was hard
enough that Tahdase sent him out in such foul weather without the
Naiche akaman questioning the word he brought back. He let his eyes
wander sidelong to Isten's face, and found it set in a frown that
matched Tahdase's.
"He told me—himself!—that he sends a rider to the
Commacht to ask what Racharran does."
"And?" Tahdase asked.
"That was all," Kanseah said. "He sends a rider. I
think … "
He hesitated, not wishing to put words in the mouth of an akaman.
"What do you think?" Isten asked, his voice soft so that
Kanseah felt a little mollified. "I'd hear what you think Juh
will do."
"I think," Kanseah said, "that Juh will listen to
Racharran's words and likely heed them." Almost, he added, "This
time," but he held that thought back and said only, "That
was my feeling."
Isten looked at Tahdase and said, "I think the time has come to
do the same."
Tahdase studied the fire awhile, then ducked his head. "Yes. We
shall send a rider to the Commacht."
Silently, Kanseah asked the Maker fervently that it not be he.
"They slew one, at least."
Racharran angled his lance in the direction of the horrid body
sprawled frozen in the snow. It was pin-pricked with arrows and its
blood was a shadow over the white. A broken lance protruded from the
chest. Not far beyond lay an invader, arrows in the bright armor and
the marks of hatchet blows on the helm. Farther down the break lay a
Commacht, his left arm near sundered from the shoulder, his furs
divided by a sword's cut. Farther still lay his horse, dead from its
wounds.
Motsos said, "Bylas took them away from the Wintering Ground, as
he said he would."
"Yes, he was brave." Racharran nodded. "Now let's find
him, eh?"
It was not difficult: the winding pathways of the breaks were all
marked with blood and bodies. Horses lay clawed and gutted and the
Commacht warriors were cold in the snow, their weapons clutched in
frozen ringers and the armored corpses of the invaders strewn around
them. Their courage made Racharran proud, but even so … For all the
Commacht dead, there were only three invaders slain, and two beasts.
Bylas was the last.
His horse lay under the body of an invader's mount, whose jaws were
closed around the lance driven deep into its throat. Some way beyond,
where the break twisted back on itself in a direction opposite to the
Commacht's Wintering Ground, Bylas lay locked in the embrace of a
figure armored in sunny yellow. His hatchet was buried in the
invader's helm, his knife between the joindure of breastplate and
tasset.
Racharran said, "He died well."
Motsos grunted sorry agreement and asked, "Shall we gather them
for burial?"
"No. There were twenty of them, you said, no? Three are slain,
so the rest go running back. I'd know where; and where the horde is
now."
"They deserve honorable burial," Motsos said.
"Surely they do," Racharran agreed. "But we've not the
time, are we to defend the clan."
For a while Motsos stared at him as if he'd argue, but then he
shrugged and said, "Yes, I suppose it must be. But the Maker
knows, I do not like this—to leave brave men unburied?"
"Think you I do?" Racharran answered.
He waited until Motsos shook his head then said, "So we go on;
and see what danger comes against the clans."
Hadduth said, "We must play this careful. Racharran will be slow
to trust your word, I think."
"Yes." Chakthi nodded, his newly wound braids falling about
a face scrubbed clean of mourning white but dark with contained
anger, and ugly anticipation.
"You cannot go," Hadduth said, "nor I."
"No." Chakthi smiled, which was like the snarl of a
cornered beast. "But who shall we send?"
"Who might they trust?" Hadduth mused. "Amongst all
our people, who would they believe?"
Chakthi thought a moment, and his feral smile stretched wider.
"There's one," he said, "who's aided them in the past.
They'd trust him, no?"
"Dohnse?" Hadduth matched his akaman's smile with his own.
"Twice now he's met the Commacht wakanisha and let him go,"
Chakthi said. "Surely they'd trust him."
"Yes!" Hadduth chuckled. "Let it be Dohnse."
"Is it much farther?" Morrhyn studied the bleak white plain
ahead. Nothing moved there save skirling snow, tossed by the wind: it
was as if they were the only living things in all Ket-Ta-Witko. Had
he not known better, he might have believed the Breakers were already
come and gone, and the People left slaughtered behind. But that
surely could not be. The Maker could not be so unkind and no army had
passed them, nor had they come on scenes of battle—he did not
count the sad corpses they'd found where warriors had skirmished and
died. Had the true slaughter begun, there would have been more, far
more: he shivered at the thought and turned toward Rannach.
The younger man shrugged. "It was long ago—I was a boy.
But … " Like Morrhyn, he stared at the empty plain. "I
think it cannot be far."
"I pray not," Morrhyn said, and drew his furs tighter, his
face lost under the shadow of the hood. And silently, for he'd not
let Rannach hear his doubts, I pray we be in time.
He turned his face toward the sky. Its blue was like ice on a river,
the sun a watery eye that sank too rapidly westward. The Frozen Grass
Moon rose in the east, narrowed almost to disappearing. Soon the Rain
Moon would be up, but he doubted it should deliver its promise. This
awful winter had too strong a hold,
as if it locked white fingers on the land and would not let
go.
"So, onward." Rannach heeled the stallion out from the
trees. Morrhyn followed, staring glumly at the horse ahead. It was
mightily thinned, ribs visible and head bowed down. Arrhyna's mare
was in no better condition, and he added to his prayers the hope the
animals lasted. Without them there was no hope at all.
"Should we become separated, it is as before." Racharran
fixed each man with a commanding stare. "We leave the fallen."
He waited until they had all given reluctant agreement. They liked
the order not at all, nor he any better—but the word they
carried outweighed the importance of any one life.
"One of us at least must get back," he said, "and tell
the clan what we've seen."
"And then?" Motsos asked. "And what if you are … ?"
He paused, unwilling to speak his fear. Racharran voiced it for him.
"If I am slain," he said, "then as many of you as can
must get back, to warn the clan. We'll need brave warriors, if … "
Like Motsos, he let his voice trail off, eyes shifting to the
sheltering timber, his mind carrying his sight past the trees to the
horde encamped on the snow beyond the forest. Even did that great
mass advance slowly, still it must come down on the Commacht soon
after the Rain Moon rose. Did it move swift—he pushed the
thought away. Surely it could not: surely so vast a horde must come
slow, seeking food along the way. They were not such warriors as he
knew, but still they must eat—as must their horrid beasts—and
the need to provide for such an army must surely govern its pace …
surely?
He forced a smile. "Do they find the Wintering Ground, we must
be ready."
Motsos said, "Perhaps they'll not." But his voice was low
and his face expressed no belief in his own words.
Racharran said, "The Maker willing. But best we prepare, eh?"
Motsos nodded and showed his teeth in an answering smile that was
patently false.
"So let's ride." Racharran stood. "I'd be home fast as
we can."
Though what good speed should do them, he did not know; save they get
back to die amongst their loved ones. Even did that horde divide to
attack the clans one by one, there were still enough to overwhelm the
Commacht and the clan die like animals cornered in their lair. He
spoke of defending the canyon, but that could be only a brief defense
against such numbers, against the savagery of the invaders. The
canyon was as much trap as refuge, but he could think of no other
course—this snow was no battleground for the warriors of the
People, who fought from horseback, running and raiding. This
snow—this Maker-cursed winter—favored only the invaders.
He wished Morrhyn were there to advise him; he wished his fellow
akamans had listened to his wakanisha. But wishes were no more
tangible than the wind and he must face the grim reality that before
long he should likely see his people all slain, and the best he dared
hope was that they give a good account of themselves and take no few
of the invaders with them into the spirit world. It seemed a sorry
hope, and he could not dismiss the anger he felt that Juh and the
rest had chosen to ignore his warnings and had sat back complacent as
the invaders came through the mountains into Ket-Ta-Witko.
But that, like ephemeral wishes, was pointless: they
bad, and
now it seemed they would pay the price. He wondered if the Maker
truly turned his face from the People, for all that had happened that
last year. Did he consign his creations to destruction for the
breaking of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko? Were Morrhyn there, he might explain
it; but he was not, and Racharran could not. All he could do was lead
his people in such war as he knew they could not survive.
His heart sat heavy as he mounted and led his men away, back toward
the canyon.
None spoke as they rode, and he thought likely they shared his own
gloomy vision of the future. It would be, he thought, a sorry
homecoming.
They were two days out from the canyon when they saw the riders.
There had been no sign of the invaders' scouts—as if they'd
learnt all they needed and drew back to the horde—and what
slowly crossed the snow ahead were two figures on horses whose gait
told of near exhaustion. Racharran saw no need to halt, nor need of
caution, but rather felt a great curiosity. Perhaps the other clans
had learned of the horde and sent messengers. Surely too late, but
even so … He urged his mount to a faster pace, closing on the
riders.
They turned to face the oncomers as if readying for fight, and as
they did, Racharran gasped and shouted, "I know that horse! By
the Maker, that's Rannach's stallion!"
"And that pretty mare he gave Arrhyna," Motsos called back.
"Do they come home?"
For an instant, Racharran wondered if he would welcome that, or if he
rather preferred they remain in the mountains. He supposed this meant
they at least lived—albeit surely for only a while longer.
He closed the distance and saw his son raise a lance in greeting.
Then the second figure threw back the hood of its cape and he
wondered who rode with Rannach.
When Morrhyn said, "Greetings, Racharran. Do you not know me?"
he could only shake his head and gape.
35—Messengers and Doubts
Lhyn came to meet them as they rode in from the canyon mouth, her
eyes bright as she saw Racharran come safe home, then starting wide
in unalloyed amazement as she recognized her son. Unthinking,
careless of dignity, she broke into a run. She was not alone—most
of the clan came with her, eager to hear their akaman's news, no less
surprised than she to see Rannach with him.
And Arrhyna? Surely that was the paint mare Arrhyna rode, but could
it be Arrhyna slumped there, all swathed in concealing furs? A
measure of trepidation tainted Lhyn's joy, for that second figure sat
the horse like one at the limits of exhaustion. She glanced back and
saw Nemeth and Zeil hurrying forward.
Then she gasped as the figure pushed back the concealing hood and she
saw the snow-white hair framing a face that even so emaciated she
knew. Her steps faltered as eyes that seemed to burn from out of the
dark and skeletal features fixed on her, and the thinned mouth
stretched out in a smile.
"Morrhyn?" She came on slow, looking from one to the other.
"Rannach?"
Around her the Commacht fell silent, staring fixedly at the men they
had likely thought dead, surely never to be seen again. Racharran
halted his horse and slid from the saddle.
"We've unexpected guests," he said. "And much news."
It was hard to tear her eyes from her son, from Morrhyn, and she
glanced sidelong at her husband. "Good or bad?"
Racharran said, "Both. But we'll speak of that later."
She nodded and went to the two men, still mounted. Morrhyn, she
thought, because he needed help to climb down, Rannach because he
seemed unsure of his welcome. She had no thought of the Council's
decree then: only that her son was come home. She raised her arms and
he came off the weary stallion into them. His embrace was strong, but
she thought him very thin, even gaunt.
He said, "Mother, it's good to see you."
She only shook her head, lost for words, and held him, her cheek
against his, her hands touching his face as if she'd reassure herself
he lived and was real, and not some phantom come to taunt her. When
she was satisfied, she let him go and looked to Morrhyn.
The wakanisha was dismounted now. He looked smaller, sunk in on
himself, yet somehow larger. That, she decided, was his eyes—they
blazed with such purpose as she'd not before seen, as if their light
alone animated his wasted body. She embraced him as she had embraced
her son, and against his chest said, "Morrhyn, I am happy to see
you back. I am happy you live."
He smiled—she could not help but think of a corpse's grin—and
said, "As am I."
Then Racharran was there, and Nemeth and was asking of Arrhyna; and
the wives of the dead scouts, inquiring of their husbands.
Racharran spoke to them, and to Arrhyna's parents Rannach said,
"Arrhyna is safe—or was the last I saw her. I left her in
care of Colun's Grannach, in a valley where no Breakers have come.
Also … " He hesitated, grinning, proud and embarrassed both.
"Also she carries a child, a son."
They laughed and beamed their pleasure even as the widows of the dead
began to keen. Lhyn wondered if she had not sooner known her son
remained safe there, and then …
"How can you know it's a boy?" she asked.
Rannach said, "Morrhyn told me," as if that were the most
natural thing in all the world.
She looked again at Morrhyn then. He stood tottery as an old man. Had
Racharran not supported him, she thought he must fall down in the
trampled snow. She looked again at his burning eyes and saw the truth
there.
"You dream again," she said.
He nodded. "I've much to tell you; to tell all the clan. And
not. much time for the speaking. We've none of us much time; none of
the People."
It was as if a wolfwind blew icy through the warmth of a lodgefire,
and Lhyn shivered. Racharran said, "I've the gist of it, but we
must talk in clan Council."
Lhyn stared at him and was afraid of what she read in his eyes. She
looked at Rannach and Morrhyn and said firmly, "Tonight. These
two needing feeding first."
Morrhyn said, "It should be better now."
"No." She shook her head. "First, warmth and food.
Tonight you can address the clan."
For a moment she thought he'd argue, but then Racharran nodded and
turned toward the encircling crowd and raised his arms for
silence—which was scarce necessary for they all hung on every
word—and said, "Our wakanisha is come back with much news.
But he is weary and hungry, and would rest awhile. So—build up
the fires, and when the moon rises we shall speak of the future and
what we must do."
Lhyn noticed that Morrhyn raised his face to the sky then, as if he'd
check which moon might rise and the time before its coming; and felt
again afraid.
The lodge was warm, which was an unfamiliar sensation, and his belly
was full, which was no more familiar. Had his body its way, he'd have
slept—just closed his eyes and rested back against the luxury
of the furs and drifted off into sleep: it should be so easy.
And so hard: the clan waited on him and he owed a duty to the
Commacht and to all the People, entrusted him by the Maker. Enough
had fallen to the Breakers—Racharran had told of Bakaan's
death, and Bylas's, and all the others—and he'd lose no more.
He wished his body were not so frail and waved off Lhyn's offer of
tiswin for all he thought it might vitalize him. He took tea instead,
and summoned up his thoughts and said, "It's as I told Racharran
along the way—save the People leave, we shall all be
destroyed."
Lhyn asked, knowing she need not but still compelled: "You're
sure? It's much the Maker demands of us."
Morrhyn said, "Yes: I am sure. Save we do this, we are all lost.
The Commacht and all the People."
Racharran said, "Leave? It's surely hazardous here; but even so
… "
Rannach said, "They defeated the Grannach. They came through the
mountains."
"I've seen them," Racharran said. "But … "
Sharply, Rannach said, "What?"
His father shrugged and answered, "I've looked to band the
clans—after Matakwa; after the first killings by these …
Breakers, you name them?"
"They name themselves so," Morrhyn said, "because they
break worlds, because they break the Maker's Will."
Racharran nodded, turning to his son. "Even so. I believe
you—trust you!—but still you were banished by the full
Council. Shall the other clans trust you? Or call for your life, for
breaking that edict?"
Rannach threw back his head and laughed. "My
life, father? I've chanced that coming here. Not against warriors of
the People, but against the Breakers! I left my wife in the
mountains! I—"
Morrhyn clutched his angry, outflung arm, silencing him. "I
asked Rannach to bring me back," he said. "And Arrhyna
urged him go, because it was the only way. He chanced his life for
the People."
Racharran ducked his head. When it lifted, he said, "Forgive me,
my son. I am proud of you: I welcome you back, and shall fight any
who seek to execute that sentence."
"Save," Rannach said, "it shall likely be the Breakers
who slay me, do you not listen."
"I listen," Racharran said. "It's the others I fear
are deaf."
Morrhyn sighed and said, "Are they, then so be it. But the
Commacht can survive! If … "
Racharran waved him silent. "I know. But to leave …
everything? That's a hard departure, no?"
Morrhyn said, "It's the only way, else we all die. Do the rest
listen, then good. But if they refuse—the Commacht, at least,
might live."
Racharran nodded. "Yes, so be it. But I'd make this offer to the
rest."
"If there's time," Morrhyn said.
It had not been easy to convince the Commacht that flight was the
clan's only hope. There were no few who still saw Morrhyn's departure
as betrayal, and those who could scarce envisage the journey west in
such bleak weather; others claimed that journey could only leave them
easy prey to the Breakers, and more could not believe the promise.
The talking had gone on well into the night before the cold had
driven them to their lodges, and had resumed the next day. Morrhyn
had spoken as eloquently as he could, and his fierce words and
penetrating eyes had persuaded many. Then Rannach had spoken, of his
sojourn in the valley and the sad news the Grannach brought.
Racharran had told of his own encounters with the Breakers, and had
summoned those warriors who had seen the enemy and lived to speak.
Another night and another day were spent debating it, but finally, as
the sun fell behind the canyon walls, the last doubters allowed
themselves convinced and it was agreed.
And then the messengers began to arrive.
Perico came very slowly across the river with his right hand lifted
up and the fingers spread wide in sign of peace, or the Commacht he
knew watched from the slim moonshadows of the trees might slay him
else. He thought few might be welcomed here, in so well-armed a
camp—which, he thought, was unusually abustle. Indeed, almost
as if the Commacht prepared to move.
Save no clan moved from its Wintering Ground in such weather; not
with the Frozen Grass Moon barely faded and the Rain Moon yet to
come.
Unless …
He heeled his mount faster through the ice-strewn water and shouted,
"I am Perico of the Aparhaso! I come with word from Juh, for the
akaman of the Commacht."
And to himself and his horse: "And I am very cold and afraid,
and I think I shall not like taking Racharran's word back to my
akaman."
Kanseah wondered if it was a sin against the Ahsa-tye-Patiko to
resent the duty his akaman and his wakanisha set on him.
An honor, they had told him, but he found scant honor in riding alone
through the bone-cold night, wondering if strange creatures might
pounce upon him and slay him and leave his body unburied; or worse.
He had seen the remains of past battles strewn along his path: bared
bones of men and horses, all stripped and shattered. He would have
howled—had he not feared the sound bring down those … things
… upon him—and urged his horse to a swifter pace: the
Commacht Wintering Ground offered safety.
He preferred to think no farther than that: it was all too large for
a simple warrior who'd sooner lay warm with his wife than carry
messages that might shift the shape of the world.
Jach thought it should be good to see the Commacht again; and was it
on such a mission as Yazte had said, then he must surely be acclaimed
a hero on his return.
He had been surprised when his akaman had summoned him and invited
him to sit beside Kahteney, and the chieftain's wife had poured him
tea, and both had praised the speed of his favorite horse and his
equestrian skill, and he had listened carefully to what they told him
to say and felt only pride that he was entrusted with the message for
Racharran.
Yazte's own words, emphasized by Kahteney so that each one was burned
clear on Jach's memory: The Lakanti will follow you now. Give us word
by this messenger, who can be trusted, and we go with you.
It was a great mission—a matter of great honor—and it
almost warmed Jach's heart enough that he no longer felt the cold.
Dohnse came in wary as a cur dog.
The Commacht had poor reason to welcome any Tachyn, and he doubted
many might recognize him as the man who'd let the clan cross the
river unattacked, or any as the one who'd let Morrhyn ride free.
Indeed, he could not properly understand why Chakthi had sent him
with a message he could not entirely understand or believe.
He had seen the Tachyn akaman scrubbed clean of mourning's white clay
with his hair bound up again, and surely Chakthi had smiled and said
his rage was gone and such threat came against all the People that
old sorrows need be set aside and all band together against the
newcome enemy. He had sounded sincere; and Hadduth had been with him,
and lent his voice to Chakthi's, and both had given Dohnse the
message.
But even so …
Chakthi was not such a man as to readily give up his anger, no matter
what else threatened. And there was something about Hadduth …
But even so: it was better to ride free than skulk foraging about the
Tachyn Wintering Ground like some homeless hound, so Dohnse
approached the Commacht with his hands raised high so that they see
he carried no weapons, his shield reversed and his lance slung
point-down in sign of friendship, and was unsure whether it be his
alone or also Chakthi's.
He would deliver his message, he thought, and afterward decide.
When the lookouts brought him to Racharran, he was mightily surprised
to find Perico of the Aparhaso, and Kanseah of the Lakanti, and young
Jach of the Naiche come there before him; no less to see the banished
Rannach at his father's side.
But it was sight of Morrhyn that surprised him most.
The Commacht Dreamer greeted him as a friend, which set him a little
more at ease as he nervously faced the suspicious eyes that studied
him as if he were a scout for a raiding party. That he could
understand, but there was something more, something in all their
eyes, on all their faces, that he could not quite define. They seemed
to share some secret knowledge. And the camp he had just crossed had
looked to him as one readying for travel.
"I am sent in peace," he said when the formal greetings
were done. "By Chakthi; with his word of friendship."
Rannach frowned at that, mistrust cold in his eyes. Nor did Racharran
look much better convinced.
It was Morrhyn who beckoned him to sit and said, "I know this
man. Dohnse, is it not? It was he agreed our fording of the river,
and again when I went away he let me pass unharmed."
Softly, Dohnse murmured, "And paid for that."
Racharran said, "And now Chakthi sends you with his word of
friendship?"
Dohnse nodded.
Rannach said, "Why you?"
Dohnse shrugged, forcing himself to look at the younger man, not into
Morrhyn's bright and burning eyes. Rannach seemed older, less
headstrong. "Because of what I did, I suppose," he said.
"Because of all the Tachyn, you might trust me."
Rannach said, "Trust Chakthi? That's much to ask."
"Still Dohnse comes in peace." Racharran frowned at his
son's bluntness. "And we shall hear him out."
Dohnse bowed his head and said, "My thanks. You've little enough
reason to trust any Tachyn, but this I tell you—I bear you no
ill will, nor do I seek to trick you."
"And Chakthi?" Rannach demanded, ignoring his father's
angry grunt.
Dohnse hesitated. Things went on here that he did not understand but
sensed were momentous. Rannach was come back from exile, and Morrhyn
returned looking as if he'd seen the face of the Maker. All the clans
were represented, and he supposed Perico and the others came like
him, as messengers, with words from their leaders concerning the
invaders. Likely their messages were much as his. But still—there
was that about Chakthi and Hadduth that sat ill with him. Did they
seek to play him as a pawn in some secret game, he would not lose his
honor: he had little enough else. He decided to speak only the truth.
"Chakthi and Hadduth bade me come," he said, "and tell
you that they believe such danger comes against all the People as to
make Chakthi forget his anger. He says that it is set aside, and
revenge forgotten. He says he would know what the Commacht intend, as
it was Morrhyn and Racharran who spoke most strongly in Matakwa, when
he had better listened than allowed his grief such rein. He says that
surely the akaman of the Commacht must understand what it is to lose
a son, and know that pain; and that his grief made him mad. For this
he apologizes and asks forgiveness. He says he will pay whatever
blood-price Racharran asks in compensation for this past summer's
war."
That, all of it, was exactly what Chakthi had told him, and he fell
silent, awaiting Racharran's answer.
The Commacht akaman looked at Morrhyn and raised his brows in silent
question.
Morrhyn said, "Do you believe this, Dohnse?"
Again Dohnse shrugged. "He has washed the white from his face,
and braided up his hair again. He smiles now, and says he waits for
Racharran's word."
Rannach spat into the fire. Morrhyn repeated: "Do you believe
this, Dohnse?"
"I tell you," Dohnse said, uncomfortable, "what my
akaman bade me say."
"What Chakthi says," Rannach muttered, "is not always
what he means."
Dohnse shifted on the furs. The lodge felt very warm and he knew he
trod a thin line that hung above a gulf of dishonor. "I tell you
what I was told to say." He looked at Rannach, at Racharran;
then into Morrhyn's eyes. They made him think of ice pits, could fire
burn blue in ice.
Those eyes locked hard on his and he could not look away. Suddenly
the others faded—the fire gone, and the shadows it cast across
the lodge. There remained only Morrhyn's eyes, which seemed to look
deep into him, into his soul, and demand the truth, absolute. It was
as if the Maker himself stared at him.
From out of that blue burning he heard a voice say, "I believe
you are an honorable man, Dohnse. I believe you have told us what
Chakthi says, each word true as he said it. But … what do
you
believe?"
"I?" He stared into the blue fire. His mouth went dry, and
at the same time he felt a great desire to spit. It seemed a lump
lodged in his throat and he wondered, under that penetrating gaze, if
it was potential dishonor he coughed out as he said, "I do not
believe him. I do not believe Hadduth. The Maker forgive me, but I
believe they intend to betray you." He could not help himself:
those eyes drew out the truth like fish guts. Perhaps the carcass
left behind would be clean, and he be only honorable, not stinking of
treachery and lies. "I believe they would know what you do and
use that against you. I know not how, but that is what I believe, the
Maker help me."
Morrhyn said, "He shall, my friend," and the lodge came
back in focus and Dohnse shook his head, swaying where he sat.
Morrhyn set a hand on his shoulder, steadying him, and passed him a
cup that he gulped down, not knowing what he drank, save it was hot
and wet his parched throat.
"Have I betrayed my clan?" he asked.
"No!" Morrhyn shook his head, more vigorously than a man so
frail had right to do. "You uphold the honor of your clan, and
your own."
Dohnse smiled gratefully, and said, "Thank you."
Morrhyn nodded, pausing awhile, as if measuring the Tachyn. Then he
said: "The Commacht go to the Meeting Ground. The Maker promises
us another land. A place free of the Breakers, where we can live
peaceful."
Dohnse gasped. This was not at all what he had expected to hear: no
wonder those others wore such thoughtful faces. But there was no
doubting the confidence in Morrhyn's voice. Slowly, he said, "That's
a long trek in such snow. And with these … Breakers … across the
way?"
Morrhyn said, "It shall not be easy. But still, it's the Maker's
promise. Otherwise, all the People shall die."
Dohnse hesitated, glancing from one to another. On the faces of the
Commacht he saw only certainty and resolution; on those of the other
messengers, a mixture of wonder and doubt. He cleared his throat and
asked, "How shall this be? How
can this be?"
Morrhyn said, "When you let me pass, I went to the Makers
Mountain and the Maker sent me visions—promises. The
Ahsa-tye-Patiko has been broken, and so the People are denied
Ket-Ta-Witko, which shall fall to the Breakers. Do the People remain,
then they, too, shall fall to the invaders.
"But the Maker does not entirely forsake his people. He offers
us the chance of salvation. He offers us another land, do we but heed
him. There, we may start anew."
Dohnse looked into the Commacht wakanisha's eyes and wondered why he
could not see such truth in Hadduth's: there was no room left for
doubt in Morrhyn's and so he nodded, accepting. But even so, the
enormity of what Morrhyn said spun his mind around as if he rode an
unbroken horse.
"How?" was all he could think to ask.
"The
how of it I do not know," Morrhyn replied,
"only that it must be so. Are the People to live, they must go
to the Meeting Ground. The Grannach who survive shall join us there,
and the Maker deliver us safe to a new land."
Dohnse licked his lips. He could not doubt Morrhyn's words, but still
it was as if the wakanisha told him to reach into the fire and take
out a burning log. and that his flesh should not be seared. He looked
again around the circle and saw that same mixture of conviction and
doubt reflected in all their faces.
"The Commacht ready now," Racharran said. "We go
before the Rain Moon comes up."
Morrhyn said, "The Breakers cross the plains even now, and in
the season of the Rain Moon shall come against all who remain; but
those who come with us to the Meeting Ground shall find the new land.
This is what the Maker told me—that those who believe and
accept his redemption shall be saved."
"Even," Dohnse asked, "my clan? After I've told you
… " He paused. It was one thing to hear Morrhyn assure him he
retained his honor, another to accept it. " … That I believe
Chakthi would betray you?"
Morrhyn said, "All the People. Do the Tachyn come honestly, then
they shall find the new land too."
Dohnse said, "I … " and glanced around again. "I do
not know how Chakthi shall take this. Or Hadduth."
"They will take it as they take it. Like all the akamans, like
all the other clans." Morrhyn looked at each messenger then,
fiercely. "Take that word back to your akamans—that the
Commacht go to the Meeting Ground to find a new land, free of the
Breakers. Tell them we leave soon, and they had best join us."
Dohnse watched as Perico nodded. The Aparhaso, he thought, believed.
Kanseah frowned as if he were unsure; or uncertain how Tahdase should
take this news. Jach looked dumbfounded. And likely, Dohnse thought,
his own face reflected that same startlement.
"You might remain with us, do you wish." Racharran's voice
brought the Tachyn's eyes to the Commacht's face. "You need not
go back."
Dohnse frowned and shook his head. "We've spoken here of honor,"
he said, "and though I thank you for that offer, I refuse it. Is
all that Morrhyn's said true—which I believe it is—then
how could I keep my honor did I stay? No, I must go back to my clan
with this promise. Do Chakthi and Hadduth listen is their affair; but
I shall bring this word to the Tachyn. I must, else I am entirely
without honor."
"Well said." Racharran nodded, smiling approval.
"Take back the word, Dohnse," Morrhyn said. "Tell
Chakthi and Hadduth; and do they not tell your clan, then
you
advise the Tachyn of the Maker's promise."
Dohnse nodded and said, "I shall." Then frowned again and
added, "But there's little time."
"The Maker willing, there shall be enough," Morrhyn
returned. "Do we act swift."
He gestured that Racharran speak, and the Commacht akaman said, "We
prepare to leave now. All well, the Breakers shall find this canyon
empty when they come. All others should strike camp and join us along
the way. In such weather it shall likely take us all the Rain Moon to
find the Meeting Ground, but … "
He turned to Morrhyn, who said, "The Moon of the Turning Year
should be a fitting time to find a new land, no?"
"All well." Rannach's voice was edged. "But is there
not a thing we should consider?"
"What?" his father asked.
Rannach gestured at Dohnse. "That this Tachyn owns honor I would
not dispute. But he's warned us he mistrusts Chakthi and Hadduth—that
he believes they intend to betray us. Is this not true?"
His face, planed hawkish and fierce by deprivation and fireglow,
swung toward Dohnse, who could only nod agreement and say forlornly,
"Yes."
"Then do we send him back with word of all we intend,"
Rannach said, "might Chakthi not attack us along the way? Or
even at the Meeting Ground?"
Racharran's stern face expressed no emotion as he looked from his son
to Dohnse and said, "There's that, yes."
"And if Chakthi uses this? And halts us on the way? How many
shall die? Shall we ever reach the Meeting Ground, or shall we be
destroyed by Chakthi and the Breakers?"
Morrhyn's answer was calm. "It is a chance we must take."
Rannach opened his mouth to reply, then closed it and nodded his
comprehension.
Racharran said, "It is decided." His voice was firm.
One by one the messengers nodded their agreement and went to find
their horses, beginning the journey back to their Wintering Grounds
with the promise of salvation or destruction—none sure how
their akamans might take it, or even if the People should die under
the beasts and blades of the Breakers before they could find their
redemption.
36—Flight
The Commacht wasted no further time: the camp was struck and the clan
moved out. Scouts ranged ahead and warriors flanked the defenseless
ones. Youths with their hair not yet braided herded the horses, and a
band of the older men rode in rearguard. Racharran headed the column,
Morrhyn and Rannach alongside, but in truth it was the wakanisha who
guided them all.
He hoped the clement day was a sign of the Maker's favor. Surely, it
seemed the sun shone a little warmer, sparkling bright on the snow
that crunched under the many hooves, the poles of the travois gliding
smooth and easy. And the crows that had circled the Wintering Ground
with the rising of the sun had not followed them, but descended on
the empty camp to pick over the leavings like the dark shadows of
nightmares left behind. The camp dogs ran eager beside the plodding
horses, and children laughed to be off on a great—albeit not
understood—adventure. Even those who had argued against going
now wore smiles or, at least, determined expressions, as if, once
committed, they would make the best of things.
Morrhyn prayed fervently that it
was the best of things they
did: the road ahead was long and hard, and undoubtedly dangerous. And
though he did not doubt it was the only way, still he could not
entirely dismiss the creeping tendrils of unease that curled
insertive into his mind.
The journey alone should surely claim some. The oldest and the
weakest should likely die before they reached the Meeting Ground, for
food was sure to run short with scant time for hunting, even if game
was to be found, and the supplies they carried with them were barely
enough to see them through. The nights would be cold: fireless, as
they must hide from enemies; nor would the days be much better.
And did the Breakers find them …
That thought he preferred to set aside, for he could imagine only
tragedy if that happened.
It was a desperate race, run slow as the slowest of them all—for
neither he nor Racharran would abandon any one of the clan. That
should be a forsaking of all, and without honor.
Honor—that was the thought which prompted him to contemplate
Dohnse and the Tachyn, a thing both marvelous and sad. Dohnse, as he
had said, seemed to him an honorable man who had spoken only the
truth as he saw it. But was he right, then Chakthi and Hadduth
harbored some fell design against the Commacht. Would they attack the
clan along the way? And what, did that happen, would Dohnse do?
He felt a responsibility toward the Tachyn warrior, as if Dohnse's
sparing of his life somehow bound them together. And with that came a
kind of sadness, that he had laid such a burden on Dohnse's shoulders
as the bringing of the promise to the Tachyn. He wondered how Chakthi
would take it—and thought that in the telling he had advised
Chakthi of the Commacht's route—and what Hadduth would make of
it. Would they grasp the promise, or look to use it for their own
ends? He prayed they should be sensible—surely they were no
less threatened by the Breakers than any other clan—but
wondered if Chakthi were not, truly, mad; and Hadduth … Perhaps
that dark wind the Breakers sent out over Ket-Ta-Witko had stolen the
Tachyn wakanisha's soul.
Perhaps; but even so: what other choice had he owned? He could not
deny the Tachyn the promise of salvation for fear of Chakthi and his
Dreamer; for fear, alone, of betrayal. That would have been to deny
such honest folk as Dohnse the promise, which must surely have been a
denial of the Maker. Not all the Tachyn, he told himself, were like
Chakthi, like Hadduth.
But still … He looked out across the sparkling snow fields and
wondered; and thought that he was a frail and doubtful vessel for the
Maker's promise, for the hope of his People.
Maker, he said into the brightness of the snow and the warm mustiness
of the horse's mane, Only guide me. I'd do what you would have me do.
But I need your help because I am only frail flesh and doubt myself.
I've not dreamed lately; and I need to dream if I am to bring my
people—all the People—safe through. So give me back my
dreams, please?
He looked at the sky and saw an eagle, spinning high circles over the
long line of the Commacht as the clan straggled across the snow. He
wondered what the gallant bird saw: live hope, or sorry eating?
Did he deliver salvation or damnation?
The eagle offered no answers; nor the Maker.
And Morrhyn wished again he dreamed.
Perico looked Hazhe in the eye and said, "You did not see him; I
did. He looked"—he shrugged, spreading his hands
wide—"like a man who has spoken with the Maker. Like a man
… changed! His hair is all white now, and his eyes … his eyes
burn! They look into you and see your soul. And Rannach came back to
guide him."
"Rannach was exiled by the Council," Juh said.
Perico said, "Yes, but he risked his life to bring Morrhyn home.
And Morrhyn's message; I think we must be mad do we ignore it. The
Commacht prepared to leave even as I departed." He took his
courage firm in both hands and said it out loud: "We had best go
with them."
"Still, it defies the Council." Juh's ancient face creased
deeper as he frowned. "Rannach was forbidden Ket-Ta-Witko: he
should not have come back."
Almost, Perico shouted his frustration. Could his akaman not see that
what mattered here was Morrhyn's promise, not the manner of its
delivery? He forced himself to impatient calm and said, "Morrhyn
was wasted; had Rannach not escorted him, he'd not have made it
back."
Juh's frown deepened until his eyes were almost lost, flashing
irritably at Perico, who wondered if he had overstepped the line.
What matter? he thought. Shall we dance around petty protocol now,
when these Breakers threaten us and all the People?
Hazhe said, "Perhaps he was not meant to come back."
Perico gasped and could not stop himself from blurting out 1 again,
"You did not see him! I tell you, he's … " He raised his
hands helplessly, shrugging. "Had you only seen him—heard
him—you'd understand. You'd believe!"
"But we have not," the wakanisha returned. "Only you
have heard this fabulous promise."
Perico's face darkened in a scowl and Hazhe raised an apologetic
hand. "It's not that we disbelieve you," he said
soothingly. "But what you tell us is so … " He glanced at
Juh. "So large a thing."
"These Breakers are also a large thing," Perico snapped.
"Racharran has seen their full force, and he says it is such as
shall crush us all. Do you doubt
his word too?"
Now Hazhe frowned disapprovingly. Perico could not care: he saw his
akaman and his wakanisha prevaricating when action was required,
urgent and immediate. But he held his tongue as Juh spoke.
"Morrhyn would have us quit our Wintering Ground, eh? And go out
through the snow to the Meeting Ground; in hope of a miracle?"
He stared at Perico, who ducked his head and said, "Yes."
"Which should be a great upheaval," Juh said. "And not
much welcomed, I think. Folk would surely die along that trail, in
search of Morrhyn's promise."
"The Maker's promise!" Perico insisted.
"Perhaps." Juh looked to Hazhe. "What do you think?"
"I think," the wakanisha said, "that we must ponder
this between ourselves and decide how best to advise the clan."
Juh nodded. Perico said, "The Breakers draw ever closer. By the
full of the Rain Moon, at the latest, they'll be upon us. There's
little time for debate."
Juh's answering look was angry, as if Perico were some upstart
speaking out of turn. He said, "Perhaps. Or perhaps they'll not
find us. Perhaps the Maker sends them to scourge the Commacht for
their sins."
Now Perico gaped. "What sins?" he asked.
It was Hazhe who answered: "That Rannach slew Vachyr when the
laws of Matakwa held sway, and then defied the judgment of the
Council to return to Ket-Ta-Witko."
Perico ground his teeth. It seemed to him they were willfully blind,
willfully deaf: like Sand Boy turning his back on the flood, hands
covering his ears that he not hear the water that drowned him.
"We shall think about all you've told us," Juh said. "You
may go now."
Perico offered the old man formal thanks and quit the lodge. Outside,
the night was dark, stars hiding behind low cloud, the newborn
crescent of the Rain Moon peeking briefly from the rack like a
flirtatious maiden from under her blanket. Fires burned cheerful
through the camp and folk watched him curiously as he trudged to his
own lodge. He hiked his blanket over his head and went with face
downcast: he felt no wish to speak with anyone save his wife.
Ahwandia would listen to him; she always gave sound advice. He needed
that now, for he felt he was about to make such decisions as might
set him at odds with Juh and Hazhe.
They had not looked into Morrhyn's eyes, nor heard the surety in the
Commacht's voice. He had, and he believed; in his soul he knew what
he would do—what he knew he must do. But it would be good to
have Ahwandia's approval.
The clan moved slower than a war band, slower than Morrhyn and
Rannach. for there were so many, with horses and dogs and travois to
draw, and the teeth of the old ones and the youngest chattered in the
cold and babies cried, and late-born foals foundered in the snow so
that their mothers turned back to nurse them and ignored the shouts
of the unblooded herdsmen, and all the time the Commacht rode
cautious, wary of attack.
"At this pace we'll not reach the Meeting Ground before the New
Grass Moon." Rannach halted his borrowed horse, turning in his
saddle to look back along the sprawling line. "And the Maker
help us if we're found."
"Would you leave them?" Racharran reined his own horse to a
stop. "Any of them?"
Rannach took his eyes from the clan and turned them on his father,
shaking his head: "No."
"Well said." Racharran smiled, albeit grimly. "You
begin to think like an akaman."
Rannach snorted laughter. "Me? An akaman? Father, I am exiled by
the Council—I am under a sentence of death at this moment."
Racharran frowned and shook his head. "We've spoken of that, and
I stand with Morrhyn—what comes against the People now
transcends all else, and that judgment was negated when you brought
Morrhyn back."
Rannach nodded, the buffalo head that topped his robe bobbing with
the movement so that the curved horns shone in the rays of the
setting sun. "So you believe—and I thank you for it. But—"
"What else should I believe?" Racharran interrupted.
"I had wondered … "Rannach hesitated, and smiled from
under the horned cowl. "I had wondered if you would not deliver
that sentence."
His father stared at him, eyes wide. "Truly?" he asked.
"Truly," Rannach answered.
"Am I so hard, then?" Racharran's brow creased, and he
fidgeted with his horse's rein so that the animal pranced, curveting
in the snow.
"Yes, father; you are a very hard man. You are a stern, stiff
man; and it is not easy to fulfill your expectations."
Racharran said, "I … " and shook his head, licking his
lips. Then he spat and squared his shoulders. "I am sorry. I
never meant … "
Rannach laughed again, this time cheerfully, and reached to touch his
father's wrist. "I know—now. I've learned much in my
valley, with Arrhyna; and more from Colun and Morrhyn. I know it
cannot be easy to guide the fate of a clan. Nor to have such an enemy
as Chakthi. Coward though he be … "
He left that sentence dangling, and Racharran narrowed his eyes and
asked cautiously, "How mean you?"
Rannach grinned and said, "Colun spoke of a bear, and a man in a
tree."
"That?" Racharran smiled even as he frowned. "Colun
swore to hold silent on that."
"He deemed it wise to tell me," Rannach said. "That I
might understand you better; and why Chakthi resents you. Is it
true?"
Racharran threw back his head and roared laughter into the sunset.
"Yes!" he said when he drew breath. "In the name of
the Maker, it's true. Chakthi hung there like a ripe fruit, with his
breeches all stained and dripping with no juice any would want! It
took us a while to persuade him down. And when we did, he stank. Even
his horse shied away."
"I wish," Rannach said, "that I'd seen that."
Racharran shrugged. "Some things are best unseen." Then he
grinned. "But surely Chakthi was a sorry sight that day."
"And for that he hates you?" Rannach asked. "For that
he hates all the Commacht?"
"Does it take more?" Racharran's face grew sober. "What
makes a man your enemy? Some petty slight? Some knowledge of
weakness? In some men these things grow, like a festering wound,
until the poison spreads through all the body."
"You saved his life," Rannach said. "You and Colun—he
should be grateful!"
"Perhaps." Racharran shrugged again. "But it is not
always like that: some men resent the favor. They see it as a debt
they'd sooner not owe."
"But still a debt." Rannach frowned. "He owes you
better than what he's done."
"Yes." Racharran nodded. "But Chakthi is Chakthi, and
not much like other men; and so that old wound festers."
Rannach lowered his head and set both hands on his horse's neck, and
asked from under the shadow of the buffalo hood,
i "Do
you trust him now?"
Racharran said, "I trust Morrhyn, and I trust Dohnse."
"But Chakthi?" Rannach asked. "And Hadduth?"
"No." Racharran waited until his son looked him in the eye.
"I trust them not at all."
"And yet you let Dohnse go? You think larger than I, and
farther."
Racharran smiled wearily and said, "I am akaman of the Commacht,
and I believe that Morrhyn has spoken with the Maker. You've listened
to him, no?"
Rannach said, "Yes, you know I have. I'd not be here else."
"Go on listening to him," Racharran said, "for you'll
be akaman one day."
"I?" Rannach laughed as he shook his head.
"Yes: you," Racharran said. "You learn wisdom daily."
"I think that Morrhyn spoke only the truth," Kanseah said,
looking from Tahdase's face to Isten's. "And that if we do not
act on his words, we shall be destroyed by these Breakers."
"Who have not yet come against us," Tahdase said.
"But soon shall, I think," said Kanseah.
"Racharran said this?" Isten asked.
Kanseah nodded. "Yes. Racharran spoke of a great horde moving
across Ket-Ta-Witko; and Morrhyn spoke of visions given him by the
Maker himself, on the mountain. He says that the Breakers are come
into Ket-Ta-Witko and shall slay all the People, save we go to the
Meeting Ground."
"Where the Maker himself shall lead us to a new land?"
Isten asked.
Kanseah ducked his head in agreement: "That is what Morrhyn
said, yes."
Tahdase said, "That's a long journey, no? To quit our safe
Wintering Ground for the hills?"
"Safer than waiting here for the Breakers to come," Kanseah
said.
"Do they come," said Isten.
"We've seen the signs," Kanseah said. "Dead buffalo
and dead men. And Racharran has told me what he's seen. Shall we
ignore all that?"
"And are they meant for us?" Tahdase turned his inquiring
face to his wakanisha.
Isten shrugged. "I cannot say. But to journey to the Meeting
Ground? With the Rain Moon barely risen?"
Tahdase said, "I'd know what Juh decides. This is not a matter
to determine quickly."
Isten nodded and said, "A hard road, that. I wonder what Hazhe
makes of all this?"
"It would be best," Tahdase said, "if we acted in
concord, the Naiehe and the Aparhaso together. It should be safer
that way—must we go."
"Yes," Isten said. "Best we send a rider to the
Aparhaso and learn what Juh does."
Kanseah said, unthinking, "Not me. I've carried messages enough
of late."
Akaman and Dreamer, both, looked at him as if he'd lost his mind. He
wondered if he had—and knew he believed everything that Morrhyn
said, and that he would not go out again save to join the
Commacht—which likely, he thought, made him the sanest man
present.
"No," said Tahdase, "you've done your share. We'll
send another, eh?"
"Tomorrow," said Isten. "And when we know what Juh and
his Aparhaso do, then we'll decide."
Kanseah nodded and quit the lodge.
His mind whirled as if he were caught in the eddies of the river that
ran through the Naiche Wintering Ground. That swift current shone
bright and cold under the hibernal sun, and all down its length stood
the lodges of his clan which, he thought, might likely all be slain
by the Breakers if cautious Tahdase and wary Isten failed to act.
He looked at the sky and asked the Maker to judge him as he reached
his own decision. He had heard Morrhyn and knew what the Commacht
did; he had told his akaman and his wakanisha—dispensed his
duty. He knew in his soul that Morrhyn was right: he did not believe
there was any other choice.
He raised his arms and shouted, "Listen to me! Listen to me, all
you Naiche! Listen to what I tell you!"
Lhyn set the kettle over the fire and turned her body to the wind to
break the gusting that threatened to extinguish the flames. Even
through the furs she wore she felt the cold out here, where nothing
stood to break the blast save frail humanity. She rubbed her hands
together and held them closer to the fire, listening to the buffeting
of the wind against the hides of the lodge.
She felt afraid and hid her fear, for she'd not let her husband' or
her son—or even Morrhyn—see it. They needed the strength
of belief, and she knew—she'd looked into Morrhyn's eyes, and
theirs—that none of them entirely trusted what they did was
right but did what they believed was best; the only thing.
And she believed it, sure in her heart, and knew she must support
them.
What else was there?
So she smiled as the wind took her breath away and flung iced
splinters of frozen snow against her cheeks, and sheltered the fire
that they'd have tea to drink and warm food, and wondered how the
defenseless ones fared.
Later, when Racharran and Rannach and Morrhyn had eaten, she would go
see how the others faced this storm wind, and if they had enough to
eat.
And how many had died in the cold.
She started as a hand touched her shoulder and looked up to find
Morrhyn standing over her.
"This is not easy." His smile was like a ghost's; she
remembered him younger, when … She shook the memory off with the
ice on her furs, and said, "No," not quite sure whether
they spoke of the cold and the wind or things long past but there
still, unforgotten.
He said, "Tea?"
She nodded and said, "Soon. When the water boils."
He squatted and she looked at him, wondering how he came to be so
gaunt, his hair turned the color of sun-washed snow, and his eyes so
burning blue. She knew, of course: he'd told her; but even so she
remembered the young man who'd called her to his blanket and asked
her to decide between him and Racharran. And her answer.
"I'd welcome warm tea," he said, and smiled; and touched
her cheek. "Once, eh?"
She said, understanding, "Yes."
"But now," he said, "I'm no woman's. I'm wed to
another."
She said, "Yes."
"I've no choice," he said. "But if I had … "
Lhyn said, "Yes; I know," and took the kettle from the
flames and poured him tea.
He drank it and looked around, at the lodges erected swift against
the night and the snow, and said, "This is no easy thing any of
us do. I wonder … "
She asked when he fell silent, "What?"
"If," he said, "it is all in vain. If we shall reach
the Meeting Ground; the promise."
"Do you doubt it?" She took his hand. "You brought us
the word. How can you doubt it now?"
He shrugged and smiled, and said, "Easily. I wonder every day if
I bring the People to salvation or destruction."
She said, "Salvation, Morrhyn! You guide us to a new land, and
rescue us from the Breakers!"
"I hope it is so," he said.
She said, "It is! It must be so!" He held tight to her hand
and smiled, and said no more.
Jach accepted the tiswin Yazte offered gratefully. The Maker knew,
but this must raise his standing amongst the Lakanti—Yazte's
chosen messenger, and now come back with such incredible news and
welcomed to the akaman's lodge to sit with his chief and Kahteney.
The warriors and the maidens, both, would surely look at him anew
now; he sipped the tiswin and smiled hugely.
"And the Commacht go?" Kahteney asked.
Jach nodded. "They were readying for departure when I found
them, and it was Racharran's word that they decamp even as I left."
"To the Meeting Ground," Yazte said in a tone pitched
somewhere between question and statement.
Jach nodded and said, "Yes, to the Meeting Ground. Morrhyn said
… "
"You've told us what Morrhyn said." Yazte raised a hand to
silence the young warrior, smiling that Jach not feel slighted. He
looked to Kahteney. "What do you think?"
The wakanisha stared awhile into the fire, then said, "I think
that Morrhyn went to the Mountain and spoke with the Maker."
Jach's head bobbed vigorously. "You should have seen him! He was
… "
"Yes, yes." Again Yazte halted his enthusiastic
description. "We do not doubt what you've told us, but we must
decide what we are to do about it."
"What's to decide?" Jach could not rein his tongue. "Surely
we go with them?"
Yazte studied him with fond eyes. "There's more to it than just
striking camp, young Jach. Have you thought about the journey?"
Jach's smile flattened into a frown. He shrugged and said, "Do
you doubt Morrhyn's word?"
"No," Yazte shook his head. "But even so … "
"There's many would surely die along the way," Kahteney
said. "This cold is enemy enough, but did these … Breakers,
Morrhyn names them? … come upon us, then likely none should
survive."
"And if they come on us here," Yazte said, "then
likely none shall live."
"It's a difficult choice," Kahteney agreed.
It did not seem so to Jach: he had spoken with Morrhyn and seen the
truth. He
knew the only choice was between destruction and the
promise of a new land, but he was only a simple warrior and not long
with the braids, and he supposed Yazte and Kahteney saw a wider
picture. He looked from the wakanisha to the akaman and waited.
Yazte said, "I wish we both might have spoken with Morrhyn, and
with Racharran."
Kahteney shrugged. "Jach here was sent in our place, no? And
with instructions to learn what the Commacht do, concerning these …
Breakers. So he's done that and we know what the Commacht do."
Yazte nodded ponderously. "And what shall
we do?" he
asked, absently scratching at his wide belly.
Kahteney looked at Jach, his eyes contemplative. Jach felt himself
weighed, and elevated when the wakanisha said, "I think we
should heed him. He's our trusted man, no? And he tells us Racharran
takes his clan to the Meeting Ground."
"With the Rain Moon filling," Yazte said, "and hard
snow still on the ground."
"And these Breakers moving against us all," Kahteney said.
"On which subject I cannot doubt Racharran's word."
"It's a long way," Yazte said.
"Yes," Kahteney said: "Shall we fight them? It should
be alone, I think."
In his turn, Yazte studied Jach. The young warrior held his face
composed under that scrutiny, then gasped when his akaman said, "What
would you do, Jach?"
He said carefully, "Were it possible, I'd gather up all the
clans and ride against the Breakers. But … " He shrugged.
"It's too late for that, no? The Grannach warned us at the last
Matakwa, and we paid that warning no heed. Now it's too late: we
cannot gather, and the Breakers come into Ket-Ta-Witko like … like
… some prairie fire that rushes on and devours everything before
it, all unheeding." He broke off, nervous, fearing that he spoke
too forward. But Yazte gestured that he go on, and so he told them,
"I listened to what Morrhyn said, and Rannach, and Racharran;
and I think we had best go with the Commacht. Else, I believe that we
shall die. I believe the Maker sends the Breakers to scourge us and,
do we not heed Morrhyn's promise, then we are surely doomed."
He fell silent, eyes lowered, embarrassed: he presumed to advise men
greater than he. But still he believed all he said was true.
Softly, Kahteney said, "Out of the mouths of the young comes
wisdom."
Yazte said, "Do you truly understand what you say, Jach? Are you
right—and Morrhyn, and Racharran—then you say that the
People must quit Ket-Ta-Witko and go to some other place? That we
must up and leave this land we know for some unknown country? Are
you
ready to do that?"
Jach looked his akaman straight in the eye and said, "Yes!"
Kahteney reached out to set a hand on his shoulder and asked, "To
go out in winter? When so many shall die along the way? And perhaps
these Breakers find us?"
Jach met the Dreamer's gaze firm as he'd met Yazte's and said, "I
think it is the only way. I think that if we do not follow the
Commacht, we all shall surely die."
Kahteney smiled approvingly and turned his face to Yazte. "I
hear him," he said. "I hear truth in his voice."
"Yes." Yazte heaved a huge sigh and reached for the tiswin;
poured them all a cup before he said, "I hear the truth. So! We
join the Commacht, no?"
He looked at Jach. "This a great decision you bring us to."
Jach met his gaze and said earnestly, "The only true decision,
my akaman."
Yazte laughed. "I'll tell all those who complain that you are
the culprit, eh? That it was you convinced us to go?"
Jach said, "If you must," and shrugged his embarrassment.
"Tomorrow, eh?" Yazte looked at Kahteney. "Do we
strike camp tomorrow, we can find the Commacht in a day or two."
The wakanisha nodded and smiled at Jach. "You did well. Perhaps
the Lakanti owe you their lives."
There were already victims: colts taken by the cold, and horses
wearied past endurance; oldsters who could not survive the rigors of
the road, some babes.
They left them in the trees when trees were available for burial, and
in the snow when they could not. When stone was there, they cairned
the dead; but most were left alone and bereft of proper ceremony, for
whatever scavengers haunted the ice-clad plains to find.
Wolves flanked their way, which was both blessing and curse, for
whilst the winter-hungry packs took the weakest horses and the
weakest, or bravest, dogs, still they gave assurance there were no
Breakers.
For where the Breakers came, nothing lived.
This the dreams Morrhyn had lost as he approached the clan's
Wintering Ground now told him were true. The dreams came back as the
Commacht moved out from under the aegis of the invaders' sendings, or
perhaps it was that his clan was moved to purpose and, with the word
of promise sent out to all the People, the Maker showed a more
favorable face. Or perhaps again it was that the clan's belief raised
up a bulwark against whatever magicks the Breakers employed. He did
not understand how it could be—nor much cared—only that
the dreams came back and allowed him to guide the Commacht toward the
promise. He knew again where the long, slow column should turn aside
to avoid the strangeling beastriders; which draw might shelter their
fires; which wood hide them from the searching Breakers; which valley
offer them safe progress, where the Breakers not see them, and that
was enough for now: must be, for it was all he had.
His dreams did not reveal the outcome of the perilous trek and he
supposed that was not yet decided, and could not help but think on
those visions he had known in the cave and that one awful image of a
possible future in which all the People were slain and only the
Breakers remained.
That he tried to ignore, seeking to focus his mind on hope, and on
that other image of the promised land; but it remained always there,
like a skulking ghost that whispered all was pointless, useless.
Nor could he deny that he was afraid. To dream of danger when only he
and Rannach had been threatened was one thing—two men could
easily hide—but to conceal the entire clan from the Breakers,
that was so large an undertaking, it seemed a near-unbearable weight
newly set on his shoulders. But these dark thoughts he kept to
himself, and showed the Commacht only a confident face; and when
hearts sank he repeated the promise and raised them up. He wished his
own might rise, and asked the Maker's forgiveness for his weakness.
They traveled south at first, toward the Lakanti grass, and then
swung west, a course that would bring them ever closer to the
boundary of their grazing and the Tachyn's.
"To the Meeting Ground?" Chakthi stared at Dohnse from out
of eyes opened wide in astonishment. "In such weather?"
Dohnse nodded, his own eyes flicking sidelong from akaman to
wakanisha. "That is what Racharran said. Morrhyn says that we
can all find a new land there, free of the Breakers. The Maker will
take us there."
"Which can be no bad thing," Hadduth said, addressing
Chakthi. "Eh? These invaders are surely a plague to us all."
"And the Commacht are gone?" Chakthi frowned, as if the
idea were too large to encompass. "Quit their new Wintering
Ground now?"
"They struck their lodges even as I left," Dohnse said.
"Had all the messengers not come together, I think they'd have
been gone before. Perhaps they waited for us—to give the word."
Hadduth said, "Morrhyn's word."
"His promise," Dohnse said. "Got from the Maker."
The Tachyn Dreamer looked hard at him and asked, "You believe
that?"
"I do."
He trusted neither of them any longer, but perhaps there was still
hope. Surely he believed what Morrhyn had told him, and if that were
true, then the Tachyn must follow the Commacht or be slain and
damned. If he could persuade them to join the exodus, then perhaps
his people might live and he retain some vestige of honor.
He opened his mouth to speak, ready to persuade, to convince; but
Hadduth silenced him with a raised hand and said, "We'd best
join them, no? Should they meet the Breakers along the way, they'll
need friends."
Chakthi stared awhile at his wakanisha and then nodded: "Yes.
We'll speak with the clan this night, and in the morning go out."
Dohnse looked, frowning, from one to the other. It seemed to him that
decision had been reached too easy.
37—A Promise Given
Yazte and his Lakanti found them as they toiled up out of a valley
that hid them well, but was thick along all its length with deep
snow. The Commacht scouts saw the newcomers first and signaled back
to the column, which clambered slowly to the egress to find the
Lakanti waiting before the edgewoods of a winter-bared forest. It
heartened the Commacht to see friends again and strengthened their
belief in Morrhyn—even the doubters found it convincing that
the Lakanti akaman should believe and bring his clan to join them.
And the doubling of numbers was no bad thing, nor the supplies the
Lakanti brought, for that summer's war had left the Commacht poorly
provisioned for the trek.
Racharran smiled as he saw Yazte all swathed in furs like a great
bear astride his horse and went forward with Morrhyn, leaving Rannach
to see the clan safely up from the valley.
"Well met." He reached to clasp Yazte's hand.
"Are we?" Yazte frowned grumpily from under his cowl. "I
could be sitting warm and comfortable in my lodge if not for … "He
looked past Racharran and his eyes grew wide. "Morrhyn?"
"Yes." Morrhyn smiled.
Yazte said, "Jach told me you'd changed somewhat. But … "
Morrhyn shrugged and looked to Kahteney. "We must talk, my
brother."
Kahteney nodded. Himself slender as his akaman was plump, he looked
fleshy beside Morrhyn. "I'd hear everything," he said.
"You shall," Morrhyn promised. "But later. Do we halt
now?"
Racharran looked at the forest, then out across the snow. The sun
westered fast and the light began to fade, the temperature dropping
as the wind sent ghostly clouds swirling over the flatlands, rattling
the bare branches like clattering teeth.
"Is it safe?"
"As best I can tell." Morrhyn in turn studied the woods.
"I've not dreamed of any peril here."
"You dream?" Kahteney's voice was shocked.
"I do." Morrhyn's smile was a mixture of gratitude and
ruefulness. "Not always of pleasant things, but later we'll
speak of this, eh?"
Kahteney ducked his head slowly, as if he'd discuss it all on the
spot, but Yazte raised his voice over the gusting of the wind and
said, "Do we set our lodges inside the wood before night finds
us? Or shall we sit here talking until my old ones freeze?"
Racharran turned in his saddle to watch the tail of the column come
up out of the valley. Rannach sat his borrowed horse beside a pillar
of stone shining blackly with frozen meltwater, urging on the
youngsters herding the loose horses. "There's something you
should know," he said, angling his lance at his son.
"That Rannach's come back?" Yazte looked at the mounted
figure and shook his head. "Jach told me. Brought Morrhyn back,
he said."
Racharran nodded. "The Council's judgment?"
"Ach!" Yazte turned his head to spit into the snow. "You
knew my feelings when that was delivered—they've not changed."
Racharran said, "Even so. Do the others find us … "
"We spoke of this." Yazte glanced sidelong at Kahteney, who
smiled his agreement. "And it seems to us that Rannach's exile
must be abrogated. Morrhyn needed him, no? And the People need
Morrhyn's promise. And save for Rannach, we'd not have that. So? Do
any object to his presence, they've you and I both to argue with.
Now, can we, for the Maker's sake, set up our camp and open a flask
of tiswin?"
Racharran laughed and said, "Yes!"
The trees broke the wind somewhat, even if their skeletal branches
swung and swayed and rattled so that the night was filled with their
chattering—as if it were the Spirit Night and all the dead of
that year come wandering back. But still it was warmer than the open
prairie, and the lodgefires burned bright with friendship's heat and
shared purpose.
Lhyn smiled as she worked with Roza, readying food for the men who
spoke so earnestly of what had been and what might lie ahead. Yazte's
wife was plump and cheerful as her husband, and her company alone
lifted spirits. She felt better at ease than she had since quitting
the Wintering Ground, encompassed by friends whose presence
strengthened her—not to mention that the Lakanti had shared out
their food and furs so that all were now better kitted for the
journey.
She and Roza, with an escort of young warriors, had seen to the
distribution, and she knew now that her people stood a better chance
of finding Morrhyn's promised land with fewer losses, and that was
enough for her. So did the men speak of manly things whilst the women
readied the food that should fuel them for those endeavors, she did
not mind. Anyway, even did he not ask her advice now, Racharran would
talk it all through again and seek her thoughts when they lay under
the blankets and she give them and—usually—be heeded. So
she cooked and listened with half an ear to Roza, and half to what
the men said.
Most of it she knew, and stirred the pot as Morrhyn told of his
journey to the Mountain and the visions gotten there, and Rannach
spoke of the Grannach's secret valley and all Colun had told him.
They both told of the journey back—which filled her heart with
pride, that her son was so brave—and Racharran spoke of the
Breakers he'd seen, and the messengers sent from all the clans.
She pricked up her ears as Yazte asked, "Shall they join us, you
think?"
And saw her husband shrug and answer, "I cannot guess. They were
told … But do they hear is in the Maker's hands."
Kahteney looked at Morrhyn then, with something akin to wonder in his
eyes, and asked, "Have you dreamed of this?"
Morrhyn shrugged; Lhyn frowned to see him so thin, his shoulders like
sticks under his shirt. "No. At least, not clearly—I've
told you, there are branching paths that lead to different futures."
Yazte studied him with awe in his eyes—and, Lhyn thought,
something close to fear—and asked, "And this one? This
path we take?"
"Is safe," Morrhyn said. "And brings us to the Meeting
Ground, where the Maker will bring us to a new land."
Softly, Kahteney said, "I still cannot dream."
Lhyn let go the spoon she held: there was such sadness in his voice.
She wondered if a wakanisha's loss of dreams was harder or worse than
a mother's loss of her son. But Morrhyn had gotten back his dreams;
and she had gotten back her son: she felt sorry for Kahteney.
Morrhyn said, "Mine were lost awhile. When I came back into
Ket-Ta-Witko, toward our Wintering Ground, I lost them."
"Ach, yes!" Rannach laughed and reached for the flask of
tiswin. "And that frightened me. Think of it—we'd come out
of the hills with Breakers all around and Morrhyn guiding us past
them. Until he came to our own grazing! Then he lost his dreams. The
Wintering Ground was empty and he could not tell me where the
Commacht wintered. Ach, I had to remember a thing my father told me
years ago. That was lucky, eh?"
Lhyn said, "Rannach," and waited as he turned his face
toward her. "The tiswin goes to your head."
He frowned, and then looked shamefaced and ducked his head and said
lowly, "Yes, mother."
She said, "You have done brave things, but Arrhyna waits for you
to come back, no? And she bears your child. Shall you go back to her
a drunkard?"
Rannach shook his head and said, "No, mother," and set his
cup between his knees.
Lhyn nodded and went back to her stirring of the pot, then looked
again to where the men sat and wondered why Morrhyn faced her with
such … she could not tell … suspicion, perhaps, in his eyes. Or
guilt, or fear.
Their eyes met and he looked away, but not before she saw him compose
his features in an expression of deliberate calm that hid those
fleeting emotions she'd seen there. Abruptly, a terrible wondering
filled her, as if his glance had lit a fire of ugly doubt. It had
been at mention of Arrhyna and the child that he'd looked so
troubled, and she could conceive of only one reason. Vachyr had raped
Arrhyna—might the child then be his? Surely Morrhyn would know,
but he had said nothing and clearly Rannach believed it was his seed
that grew in Arrhyna's womb. Morrhyn's silence seemed confirmation of
that, but if he only hid the truth from Rannach? Lhyn frowned and set
such unpleasant notions aside. Better not to think of that: better,
were it true, that Rannach not know. She stirred the pot and smiled
at Roza and listened to the men talking.
"Can we trust Chakthi?" Yazte asked. "Might he not
attack us in revenge for Vachyr?"
Her husband shrugged and laughed. "The Commacht and Lakanti,
both? I think not—and does he believe, he'll surely bring his
clan to join us. What else has he, save destruction?"
Yazte said, "I don't know; only that he fought you all this
summer."
Kahteney said, "Morrhyn, what do you believe? What do you
dream?"
Morrhyn said, "As I've told you—of branching paths and
many futures. But nothing of imminent danger."
He lowered his head, not wanting to speak of all the paths, or all
the futures: they were too diverse, and too dangerous. If he spoke of
all of them, of all the fates that might, or could, befall the
People; of all the fates that might, or could, lead them to
destruction, then surely it must be too much and they founder in the
wondering of it all like a horse mired in quicksand, kicking every
which way to escape with nowhere firm footing. So he shrugged and
hoped he did the right thing and faced Kahteney with a rueful smile
that mirrored the one he gave Rannach when the young warrior asked
how Arrhyna fared, and the unborn child.
Racharran said, "We must go on anyway, or the Breakers shall
destroy us all."
Yazte said, "Them or the Tachyn. Save now Chakthi might feel
afraid … "
Racharran said, "We'll find out, no? When we pass them; and all
well, Chakthi has listened to Dohnse and will join us. Like Juh and
Tahdase, the Maker willing."
Yazte smiled and grunted like a bear, echoing, "All well. But
you're kinder than I, brother; I'd have left Chakthi and his Tachyn
to these Breakers."
"They're not all like Chakthi," Racharran said. "Dohnse
has honor."
Dohnse was praying fervently as the Tachyn quit the Wintering Ground
and rode out across the snow that Chakthi and Hadduth acted decently:
because they believed Morrhyn's promise, not for selfish reasons.
He had listened to the Commacht Dreamer and did believe, but his
akaman and his wakanisha?
Of them he could not be sure—not in his heart; not with the
utter truth he had seen in Morrhyn's eyes, heard in the Commacht
Dreamer's voice.
He believed; and had Chakthi not summoned up the clan and ordered it
quit the Wintering Ground to join the exodus, he wondered if he might
not have called rebellion against his akaman and led the Tachyn out
alone.
If they would follow him.
He thought they'd likely not: truth was no sure thing when larger
forces governed belief. And he was nothing: only a warrior disgraced
and excused by his akaman.
He was glad that Chakthi and Hadduth had listened to him, and still
not sure but that they kept some hidden design to themselves, and he
the unwitting pawn in their game.
But even so, the Tachyn struck camp and moved to join the Commacht;
and he thought by now they must have met the Lakanti, so did his
akaman intend some subterfuge or ambush then it must be against a
clan doubled and strong—Commacht and Lakanti together—and
he doubted that either Chakthi or Hadduth would risk so much.
He asked the Maker it be so, and rode on across the snow.
It was at that same river crossing where Morrhyn had first
encountered Dohnse that they met again. The Commacht and Lakanti came
on in a long, wide column across the plain, ahead of them the water
flowing too swift to freeze, and past that the broken, ridged
country, still snow-clad even as the year grew older. The scouts
halted at the ford, and when a lone Tachyn appeared, sent a man back
to bring up the akamans and the wakanishas. They came with an escort
of armed and wary warriors and halted on the east bank.
Morrhyn narrowed his eyes against the wind's fist and the glare of
sun on snow and said, "That's Dohnse."
"And the rest?" Yazte grunted suspiciously, peering about
as if he momentarily expected attack. "Hiding in ambush?"
"And send a man to warn us?" Racharran shook his head.
"Likely they shelter, or are not yet arrived." He turned to
Morrhyn. "What shall we do?"
Morrhyn said, "Speak with him: I trust him," and beckoned
Dohnse forward.
The Tachyn heeled his horse, splashing across the ford, and halted
before them, offering formal greetings. He eyed them somewhat
nervously, as if unsure of his reception.
"Are you come alone?" Morrhyn asked. "Or is your clan
ahead?"
"Ahead," Dohnse replied, "sheltering in the breaks.
Chakthi was … He shrugged, his face expressing uncertainty. "He
was unsure of his welcome."
Racharran said, "You gave him the message?" And even as
Dohnse nodded, "Then what doubt has he?"
Dohnse shrugged again and said, "He's a cautious man. And … "
His gesture seemed to encompass the summer's war and all the ill
feeling between his clan and the Commacht.
"Yesterday's trouble." Racharran raised a hand in sign of
peace. "Tell him we'll—"
He broke off as Yazte touched his wrist. "Tell him," the
Lakanti said, "to come meet us here; him and Hadduth. They can
lead us to your people."
His wide smile belied the mistrust implicit in his words, and Dohnse
smiled grimly back and nodded. "As you wish."
He turned his horse and went back across the river, cantering in
amongst the breaks.
Yazte's smile became genuine. "Does he set an ambush, he'll not
come. And should he think to trick us, we'll have hostages."
Morrhyn said softly, "There's no ambush. Not here."
"Even so." Yazte shrugged, then frowned as Dohnse came back
with Chakthi and Hadduth.
All three Tachyn forded the stream and reined in. Hadduth sat silent
on his horse, his eyes fixed curiously on Morrhyn, widening somewhat
as the gaunt Dreamer returned his own blue stare, and then turning
away as if the Tachyn could not meet that penetrating gaze.
Chakthi greeted them and made the sign of apology. "You've cause
enough to hate me," he said, "but it's as Dohnse told
you—Vachyr's death drove me awhile mad, and I knew not what I
did. I ask your forgiveness; and do you name blood-price, I shall pay
it."
Racharran studied him a moment. His face was clean of mourning's
white and his hair was braided. Also, he bore no weapons and his eyes
met the Commacht akaman's unflinchingly. Racharran glanced sidelong
at Morrhyn, who ducked his head a fraction.
"What threatens now outweighs all that's gone before."
Racharran ignored Yazte's eloquent sniff. "I'd see no more
slain. Neither by the Breakers nor any other. Do you accept the
promise Morrhyn brings us and swear truce, then we've peace between
us."
Chakthi nodded solemnly and raised a hand in pledge. "I swear
truce, to peace between your clan and mine. This I swear in the name
of the Maker, and do I renege, may he damn me."
Racharran in turn raised a hand and said, "Let there be peace
between us … brother."
Chakthi smiled and said, "Peace, brother."
"So be it." Racharran glanced at the sky. The sun stood
close on its zenith, bright against the steel-hard blue. "We've
a ways yet to go, and slowly with so many. Do you call up your people
and we go on?"
"As you command." Chakthi lowered his head submissively.
"Where do we station ourselves?"
Yazte said quickly, "To the rear," and favored the Tachyn
with a bland smile. "Our people are already on the move."
Chakthi's features expressed no resentment, but still Racharran
thought to say diplomatically, "Shall you be our rearguard?"
Chakthi said, "As you wish. Shall you come with me?" His
eyes encompassed all the warriors standing in audience: tacit
acceptance that he was a hostage.
"No." Racharran shook his head before Yazte had chance to
speak again. "Best that you organize your people and we ford
this river."
Chakthi nodded and turned his horse. Hadduth moved to his side, but
Dohnse hesitated an instant, as if doubtful, then shrugged and went
with them.
"I'd sooner have kept them," Yazte murmured.
"He swore on the Maker's name." Racharran watched the three
Tachyn riding for the breaks. "There's peace between us now."
Yazte spat and grunted.
Racharran said, "We need trust, are we to survive. And he gave
his word.''
"Yes." Yazte's response was ambiguous. "He did."
They crossed the river and went on into the breaks where the Tachyn
sheltered. There was no ambush, and, as the column passed, the Tachyn
fell in docile at the rear. The Commacht and the Lakanti were all
mingled, and Racharran had thought to station Rannach in their midst,
that his son and Chakthi not meet. Both had sworn vows of peace, but
even so … Both, he thought, were hotheaded, and he'd no wish to
test the new-made truce. He sent a rider back, to call Rannach up to
the fore. Did all three tribes stand between them, they need not
meet. At least, not yet.
He brought his horse closer to Morrhyn's and said, "It went
smooth enough, no?"
The wakanisha ducked his head inside his cowl and said nothing.
Racharran frowned. "You've dreamed of trouble?"
"No." Morrhyn shook his head and sighed.
"Then what?" Racharran asked. "Do you think of what
Dohnse told us? Do you expect betrayal?"
"No." Morrhyn turned briefly toward his akaman and smiled
thinly, then looked ahead again.
Chakthi had given his word, no? Had pledged his very soul, which
surely must be proof enough of his honest intent. Surely; save …
Why had Hadduth seemed so hesitant? Kahteney had been full of
questions when he learned that Morrhyn had back his dreams, but the
Tachyn wakanisha had voiced none. That seemed to Morrhyn strange—that
a Dreamer stripped of his talent not question another newly blessed
by the Maker; and after that initial observation, Hadduth had refused
to meet Morrhyn's eye.
Perhaps he was ashamed; perhaps he regretted the summer's war;
perhaps he felt guilt for his part in that trouble. Morrhyn thought
that was likely the reason—that Hadduth felt embarrassment in
his presence.
Perhaps; but he could not shake off the lingering doubt that behind
Hadduth's veiled gaze lurked something else, as if the man's blank
face hid secrets. What, he could not say, and shook his head in
frustration. Likely it was only embarrassment, or guilt; and his
dreams warned of no danger from the Tachyn along the way.
He realized Racharran studied him with worried eyes and forced a
warmer smile. "I've not dreamed of betrayal," he said. "And
we've Chakthi's promise, no?"
Racharran nodded. "Was that a lie, you'd know." His tone
hung midway between question and statement. "You'd have dreamed
of that."
Morrhyn said, "Yes," more confidently than he felt.
The Maker's promise belongs to all the People, he told himself, to
the Tachyn as much as any other clan. It cannot be denied them for
fear of nebulous doubt.
"And likely Dohnse would warn us," Racharran's voice
intruded on his musings, "did Chakthi plan anything."
"Yes." Morrhyn agreed with an eagerness born of suspicion.
"Dohnse's an honorable man."
Racharran said, "Then all's well," and turned as Rannach
came up.
"The Tachyn fall in behind." Rannach's voice was flat. "And
people say Chakthi's sworn truce."
"Good." Racharran smiled. "Now ride with us."
Rannach grinned and dutifully brought his horse into line.
They went on, clearing the breaks to climb the rising plain ahead,
where the land lay all open save for little stands of timber and
folds that might conceal the Breakers had Morrhyn not promised them
safe passage. Word spread fast amongst the refugees that the Commacht
wakanisha dreamed again, and soundly. They had heard it, of course,
the news delivered by the messengers, but to hear it said was not the
same as
knowing it: that sensate belief came with the reality
of their situation, and the many who followed only because their
akamans led them began to accept the promise, and to trust in
Morrhyn.
By now the Commacht entertained no doubts, but the more recently come
Lakanti and the even later-come Tachyn at first rode wary, knowing
that if the Breakers came on them, they were surely lost. But the
days passed and they moved inexorably, if furtively, toward the
distant mountains without attack. Sometimes they hid, seeking the
concealment of draws or woodland, or setting high ground between
themselves and the searching enemy Morrhyn warned of. But always his
warnings proved sound, and must they hide—cold and hungry for
want of fires that would betray them—then that was a small
price to pay for survival and the promise of salvation. They began to
call him Prophet, which embarrassed him greatly, for whilst he was
confident his dreaming protected them from discovery, still he felt
an irritating doubt that nagged, like a dog barking far off, at the
hinder part of his mind.
He could not clarify it or properly explain it. Nor—for fear of
disturbing the harmony that grew—would he speak of it. He
sought out Hadduth and was met with smooth apologies for past
disagreements and the Tachyn's assurance that his own dreams were not
yet returned. Neither were Kahteney's, and so Morrhyn must accept
Hadduth's word, and only wonder at his undefined misgivings.
When the akamans met—from which conferences Rannach was
tactfully banished—Chakthi was all submissive contrition,
bowing to the suggestions of Racharran and Yazte as if he were
newcome to his station and they the senior chieftains. He seemed all
repentant, and held his clan in its rearward position without
argument. Even the Lakanti akaman softened toward him and, almost,
Morrhyn came to believe his and Hadduth's good intentions.
But still not quite: there yet remained something he could not define
hidden behind their smiles and earnest eyes.
And daily the dark bulk of the mountains came closer, until, between
the setting of the Rain Moon and the rising of the Moon of the
Turning Year, they sighted the Maker's Mountain shining in promise
under a sun that grew steadily warmer.
The snow that had blanketed Ket-Ta-Witko for so long began to thaw,
which slowed them somewhat—for the rivers grew fierce with
meltwater and the ground muddy. But the Maker's Mountain rose before
them, and in the sheltered places trees put out buds, and birds sang
louder, as if in recognition of the coming spring, and that filled
them with renewed hope.
And then, with the Moon of the Turning Year gibbous in the sky, they
reached the Meeting Ground.
"What now?" Racharran asked, and five pairs of eyes turned
expectantly to Morrhyn.
He paused a moment before replying, gathering up his thoughts. "We
must wait awhile. We must give the Aparhaso and the Naiche the chance
to join us, and allow Rannach time to bring Arrhyna and Colun's
Grannach down from the valley.".
Kahteney asked softly, "How much time?"
Morrhyn shrugged and said, "The Maker will tell us when."
"Tell you." Kahteney's voice was rueful. "I've not yet
gotten back my dreams."
"They'll come." Morrhyn smiled encouragingly and looked to
where Hadduth sat, his brows rising in question.
The Tachyn wakanisha shook his head and muttered, "No. I still
cannot dream."
He met Morrhyn's stare only briefly before lowering his eyes.
"How shall it happen?" Yazte asked.
"I don't know yet. The Maker will doubtless tell me."
"Before too long, I hope." Yazte scratched a chin. "Do
the Breakers pick up our trail … "
"When they do," Chakthi said. "So large a trail
cannot go long unnoticed."
Yazte's expression suggested he found it irritating to agree with the
Tachyn, but still he ducked his head and said, "That's true."
Morrhyn shrugged again. Racharran said, "Even so, we cannot
leave the Aparahso and the Naiche."
Chakthi said, "Perhaps the Breakers have found them. Perhaps
they cannot join us."
"Still, we wait." Racharran's voice was firm, brooking no
dissent. He looked to Morrhyn, smiling. "Morrhyn shall tell us
when the time comes."
"Forgive me." Chakthi lowered his head, hands spread in
sign of apology. "As you say—we wait."
Three days they had been on the Meeting Ground. The lodges stood
close-huddled, for none felt entirely safe with the hills ringing
them and nowhere to run if worse came to worst. The warriors of all
three clans grouped daily about the approaches, and at night remained
on guard, constantly alert. Their supplies dwindled apace, and even
though the sun shone warmer each day and the snow melted, still there
was little grazing for the horse herds. Nor any game to be found—the
buffalo were not yet come back, and it seemed the deer and smaller
animals had all fled or been slain by the Breakers.
Morrhyn was assailed daily by those who dared approach him, and
always with the same question: "When?"
To all he gave the same answer: "In the Maker's good time. When
he brings us to salvation."
Most accepted, trusting him—was he not become, after all, their
Prophet?—but there were yet others who began to wonder, and
murmured cautiously amongst themselves that he was changed, that he
was the wakanisha who had deserted his clan in time of trouble, that
perhaps the exodus was a terrible mistake.
None of this was said in his hearing, but still he heard it; and
could not help but wonder if it be true—in his dreams, he got
only the suggestion he wait, that all would be well.
But he knew that food ran short in the lodges, and that the animals
fared no better. He could not help but entertain the terrible doubt
that perhaps he was a false prophet, tricked by the Breakers' magicks
and duped by them into leading the People to destruction. He prayed
each night for strength, for revelation—and got back comforting
dreams of salvation. But when he woke and went out from his lodge
into the warming sun and saw the expectant faces that turned his way,
the doubts came back. He ate the pahe root given him by Kahteney—his
own all gone—but that allowed him no clearer dreaming than
before: only
Wait!
It was hard to be a prophet, for folk expected clear and instant
answers that he could not give. He did not—honestly—know
how or when the Maker would show them the way to the new land. He
could only pray, and trust the Maker; and pray again that he was not
duped into becoming the Breakers' instrument.
Two more days passed and hope—or its loss?—arrived with
the dawning sun: Perico rode in with two hundred weary Aparhaso; and
before the same sun set, Kanseah brought a smaller group of the
Naiche.
Their explanations were echoes, like two voices chanting the same sad
song:
"Juh would not listen," Perico said. "I told him
everything; him and Hazhe.
But they would not listen! What
else could I do? They said we were safe—that what came against
us was come against the Commacht and the Tachyn for the breaking of
the Ahsa-tye-Patiko—that they'd think on it and in time
decide."
His face was haggard, near-gaunt as Morrhyn's with fear and hunger,
and his eyes roamed round in search of absolution.
Racharran said, "I warned Juh, and he'd not listen to me."
"I told Tahdase and Isten that our people were dying,"
Kanseah said. He was not in much better condition than Perico. "And
that the buffalo were slaughtered, and Morrhyn had told me why—and
by what. But they closed their eats!"
"They heard all of it," Perico said. "And still did
nothing!"
"Tahdase would know what Juh did," Kanseah said, addressing
himself to Morrhyn. "And until then, wait."
Perico said, "Juh only listened to Hazhe—and Hazhe said it
was the sins of Vachyr and Rannach brought the Breakers into
Ket-Ta-Witko, and therefore they alone were likely to suffer."
"I told them of the promise," said Kanseah. "Everything
you told me, but they blocked their ears."
"What else could I do?" Perico asked. "Those who
believed are with me."
"I defied my akaman and my wakanisha," said Kanseah. "I
told all those who'd listen of the promise, and brought them out to
join you."
"They came with me," Perico said. "All those who
believe. Juh and Hazhe wait to die. They think they're safe, but I
know they're not. The Maker forgive me, but I looked to save who I
could."
Their eyes searched out forgiveness: the assurance they had done the
right thing. The lodge grew silent.
Morrhyn felt their pain and knew their doubt. It seemed to him much
akin to his own. He prayed he be right as he said, "Those who
hear the Maker's promise shall be saved. Those who ignore it … "
He smiled sadly. "I think they shall die for their disbelief.
What you did was right—you have saved as many as you
could. Those who refused the promise … "
He shrugged. Kanseah said, "Then we're not damned?"
Morrhyn shook his head and answered, "No more than I."
That night Morrhyn dreamed of approaching danger.
He rode a great white stallion that raced toward the Maker's Mountain
whilst from the opposite direction came the figure he had seen in his
earliest dreams of the Breakers, armored in sun-bright gold, and
mounted on the strange and horrid horse with burning eyes and curling
horns. Who reached the pinnacle first should be the winner and decide
the fate of the People.
He woke before the race was ended and hurried from his lodge to warn
Racharran, his heart filled with awful dread.
Around the mid-part of the morning, with the sun shining warm on the
muddied, trampled dirt of the Meeting Ground, Motsos, who had ridden
out farther than most scouts, came back at a gallop to report
sighting a column of twenty Breakers riding their strangeling mounts
along the incoming line of the Aparhaso and the Naiche.
He'd no doubt, he said, that they followed the tracks. Before the day
ended, he thought, they must find the Meeting Ground.
38—Time Running Out
It was easy to steal the shot, and no harder to conceal bags of
powder. Sieur Gahame trusted his indentured folk—what use would
they have for such things? But the muskets, the pistols, and the
swords—Davyd had decided he should carry a blade, like
Arcole—were more difficult. Such obvious thefts would be
noticed, and so he elected to leave them until the last minute, when
their absence would be noted too late.
Besides, folk had been purchasing more weapons recently, and 'sieur
Gahame was likely to spot any missing.
It was not a matter the master discussed with his branded servants,
but none in his employ could help but notice that muskets and pistols
and blades were suddenly in great demand: 'sieur Gahame was delighted
with the trade, of course, but even so, Davyd noticed he often wore a
frown and spoke at length—and in whispers—with his
customers. And when the boy spoke with Godfry or Laurens or Prestyr,
they muttered darkly of unforeseen events and told him he was too
young to understand.
But Davyd thought he knew the reason. He was, after all, a Dreamer;
and of late his dreams were more vivid, more alarming. He had
believed Grostheim a safe enough haven, but now, as spring advanced,
the dreams of winter took on a starker note. They came more
frequently, and bloodier, as he saw his oneiric shadows rampage
through the streets. Often he woke sheet-tangled and all awash with
sweat after finding himself ringed with hairless skulls that grinned
from atop poles and warned him of his own death. He dreamed of
burning walls and shrieking women, and always the sneaking, deadly
creatures.
And then, as if in compensation, he would dream again of the
wilderness as a haven, a succoring comfort that called out to him,
promising safety. He understood those, if anything, less than the
nightmares. He was, if not accustomed, then at least reconciled to
dreams of danger. Dreams of safety he understood not at all. But
still, somehow, they reshaped his thinking, and he no longer feared
the wilderness beyond Grostheim's walls. He saw it as both hazard and
promise, and was ready to go there.
He would not remain behind when Arcole and Flysse fled.
That frightened him most of all—that they go without him. There
was no longer any doubt in his mind that they
should go. He
knew Arcole planned it, no matter his friend's hesitancy, and he
retained that absolute belief in Arcole won on the
Pride of the
Lord: somehow, regardless of the odds, Arcole
would find a
way. Of Flysse he was less sure. She was, by nature, more cautious;
and there remained, on those careful occasions he met them, that
coolness, as if disagreements remained unsettled. He had tentatively
asked of it, and got back bland responses that gave him no clear
answers, only ambiguity and doubt. So he had done his best to shut it
from his mind and concentrate on his own part in their great
adventure.
It should have been easier had Arcole set a date, but he would not—or
could not—and Davyd must be satisfied with "When the time
is ripe" and "It depends on circumstances." His dreams
warned him those circumstances drew ever closer and he chafed at the
delay, fearing Arcole waited too long.
And all the while, rumors grew to confirm his fears.
In a settlement the size of Grostheim it was hard to keep secrets,
especially when farmers came in through the spring mud to buy guns
and shot and powder. The masters spoke in whispers, but the
indentured folk had ears and heard. And though it was not said
openly, still it spread—like rot through wood, or a smoldering
spark that takes hold on a carpet and burns its way to the curtains
and then begins to eat the house's walls.
There were holdings burned, they whispered. A neighbor had gone
visiting and found only charred timbers and all the animals driven
off. Another had failed to visit as promised, and on investigation
his neighbor had found heads mounted on poles. The governor had sent
out a patrol that had not returned …
Davyd traded his news with Arcole and Flysse, so they were better
informed than most. Theirs was the surer news. Yes, the governor
had
sent out a patrol; and no, it had not returned. It was a column
of fifty mounted infantry, commanded by a Captain Danyael Corm, and
Arcole awaited his return when he might add the captain's findings to
his map and better assess the situation. And, yes, it seemed the
column should have returned by then.
Davyd told them of his dreams, and Arcole told him to stand ready.
They none of them said it aloud, but all thought it: the time loomed
close, and they all grew afraid.
And all the while Grostheim buzzed lively as a beehive with rumor and
more obvious signs of trouble. Folk began to come in from the
outlying holdings, seeking the security of the city's walls. The inns
and rooming houses filled with refugees, and tents and lean-tos
sprouted over every open space. The masters took to wearing blades
and pistols in the streets. Major Spelt increased the guards along
the walls, and Militia patrols tramped their rounds in greater
numbers. And the indentured folk whispered when they might of what
their fate should be did the unknown come. The presence of demons in
Salvation was no longer a secret whispered by the masters, but common
knowledge bruited about wherever folk met. Those brave farmers who
had elected to remain on their land were considered doomed—if
not already dead—and those who sought the safety of the city's
walls bemoaned the loss of their property and demanded to know what
the Autarchy, in the form of Governor Wyme, intended to do.
The governor's hands were as full as the streets. He must find the
means to feed the newcomers, lest riots break out. He must organize
accommodation, sanitation, and persuade reluctant owners to leave
their animals outside the walls, lest the streets become impassable.
He must sit in judgment over the inevitable quarrels of crowded,
frightened folk.
And more—he must, with Major Spelt, ready for the attack.
He had worn himself close to exhaustion with the renewal of the hexes
warding the city, and could not help but wonder if they should be
strong enough. He knew only that Grostheim faced an enemy none had
suspected, creatures that came, it seemed, silent as shadows to wreak
bloody slaughter.
He doubted Evander could send help before the summer—if the
Autarchy decided to send help at all. He had sent word back with
Tomas Var on the
Pride of the Lord, but then he had had only
suspicions, not the dreadful certainty of more recent events. And the
Pride of the Lord must cross—God grant it did!—the
Sea of Sorrows and all the wide ocean between this land and the Old
World. He had requested that the Autarchy send reinforcements,
troops, and, at the very least, one Inquisitor.
As that spring aged, Grostheim became a frightened city.
"I see no way to pass the walls." Arcole turned from his
most recent work: a copied map of the city. "There are but the
two gates and both locked at dusk, always guarded. God, this
is a
prison! It needs no hexes to hold us, only wood and soldiers!"
Flysse watched as he pushed back his hair and almost went to him, he
looked so hangdog. But not yet; she was not yet quite ready, not yet
quite certain he'd take her with him did the chance present. She
needed that reassurance, so she said, "And Davyd's dreams? What
of them?"
Arcole shrugged. "I don't doubt them. This place will be
attacked. But shall that help us?"
Flysse shrugged in turn. It had come to this between them: to this
shrugging and cold discussion of tactics; it hurt her, but she could
do no different. She was not yet ready to accept his apologies and
protestations: she must
know that he loved her as she loved
him, and bear the hurt the while.
"It would occupy the guards." Arcole frowned and rubbed his
eyes. "We might go over the wall."
"As it's attacked?" Flysse shook her head. "Won't the
Militiamen be more alert then?"
"Yes, there's that." Arcole nodded and grinned ruefully.
"But perhaps also somewhat preoccupied."
"With attacking demons who'd likely kill us soon as the guards?"
Flysse shuddered. "Surely there's a better way. What if Davyd's
owner went out? Are the farms attacked so, then shan't they need
supplies? Might we not … "
"No." Arcole waved her silent. "The farmers come in,
not go out. God! There are whole families seeking the protection of
Grostheim now, coming in like refugees from a war. Gahame's not going
to risk his neck, and even did he, he'd not take Davyd with him. Nor
might we easily find passage on his wagons."
"Then it would seem," Flysse said, "that we are
caught."
"Yes, like—pet rats in a trap. And I'd not see you caught
so."
He looked at her with sad and weary eyes, and she saw lines on his
face that had not been there in the summer and felt her resolve
waver. "Truly?" she asked.
He said, "Truly. What must I do, Flysse? What
can I do?
I'd give up my life for you. Do you not know that?"
She said, "I … " and shook her head, unsure of the
answer. Afraid of giving up her resolve, afraid of what that
secession might bring, its outcome.
He said, "I've spelled it out, no? I've told you I'll give up
these plans, do you command, and you said no. I've promised I'll not
flee without you—nor would I want to now! I've given you my
word I'll not deliver Davyd to needless danger. What more do you
need? What more can I do? Can you not forgive me?"
He closed his eyes and sighed, breath gusting exhausted from his
mouth. He spread his arms, then closed them across his chest, his
head fallen. As if, Flysse thought, he hugged his pain. He seemed so
far from the proud man she had known on the
Pride of the Lord—the
gallant she had fallen in love with and never thought could notice
her—she felt her eyes water. It was almost too much to bear;
almost …
She said, "Perhaps," and hesitated as she saw hope light
her husband's eyes. He rose a little from his seat, as if he'd come
to her, and she held up a preventive hand. "Perhaps soon,
Arcole."
"But not yet?" Hope faded; his smile was ragged.
"But not yet," she echoed, wishing she might honestly tell
him otherwise.
Captain Danyael Corm arrived tramp-ragged at Grostheim's gates. He
wore a beard and a rank odor of sweat, and his hair was turned all
white. His uniform was lost and he could barely speak his name, nor
was his horse in much better condition. They both stood haggard under
the startled eyes of the watch.
When he succeeded in making himself known, he was brought swiftly to
Spelt's quarters. There, brandy eased his tongue, and he made his
dazed report and was allowed to bathe. Dressed in a clean uniform, he
accompanied the anxious Spelt to Governor Wyme's mansion.
Arcole attended the governor as the two officers were ushered in. He
served them brandy and pipes, and was dismissed by Wyme with a curt
wave. He knew, from his clandestine investigations, that Corm had led
the column of mounted infantry. He thought the man looked shocked, as
if he had witnessed horrors his mind could not encompass. On Spelt's
grave face he read concern. He closed the door and contemplated
eavesdropping, but Benjamyn was abroad and worrying about dinner:
Arcole returned to his role of dutiful servant.
Wyme would add to his records, he thought, as he set places at the
table, and all well unwittingly share them. He placed the silver
platters and the crystal glasses with a smile that his fellow
servants attributed to a settlement with Flysse.
They were not entirely wrong in their assumption.
The two officers sat late with the governor, and Wyme sat later still
in his study. Arcole was required to help him there and bring a
cushion for his withered legs; see the brandy flask filled and a
glass set near, a pipe primed. Celinda was long abed, attended by
Flysse.
Arcole stood rigid behind the crippled man as Wyme arranged the
papers on his desk. He struck a lucifer as Wyme picked up his pipe
and was rewarded with an absent nod.
"Thank you, Arcole. You may go now."
Arcole bowed—God, it was still so hard to do that!—and
asked, no harder, "Shall I await you, 'sieur?"
Wyme ducked his head: "I'll ring, do I need you."
Like summoning a dog, Arcole thought, but I'll wait and read those
papers when you're done. And then I'll know what you know—and
use your knowledge.
He bowed again, though Wyme did not look up, and quit the room.
Flysse was alone in the kitchen and he told her, "Something's
afoot. Corm and Spelt are gone, and Wyme's greatly troubled. I'm to
wait for him, but once he's abed … "
Flysse nodded and said, "Mistress Celinda was much troubled."
Then her eyes clouded and she asked, "What think you?"
"That we stand ready," he said. 'Tell Davyd to prepare us
those guns."
"Save only it be safe for him," she returned.
"Save that," Arcole agreed. "But things go on, Flysse.
Corm wore the look of a man bearing bad news."
"And you'll go find it out, eh?" She startled him then,
when she reached across the table to touch his hand—a triumph,
that—and said, "Take care."
It was hard not to snatch up her hand, to kiss it, but he thought he
could not bear further rejection. When she was ready, she would open
her arms to him, and then he would go to her eagerly. But for now he
only nodded and waited.
Long past midnight the bell rang, and Arcole went to Wyme's study.
Grostheim's governor was in his cups, and even had he not needed
crutches to walk, still he should have needed a hand. Arcole lifted
him onto the sticks and held him upright as he staggered bedward.
Wyme muttered, "Bad news; very bad. Measures must be taken.
Strict measures, I tell you."
Arcole thought that he would regret such admissions—did he
remember them—come morning. He saw Wyme to his chamber and
settled the drunken governor on his bed. He rugged off Wyme's boots
and helped the man out of his clothes—the while wondering how
many times servants had done the same for him, and he as unthinking
as the sodden baggage he now undressed. He felt ashamed, for what he
did now and what he had done then.
As soon as Wyme began to snore, he left the governor and hurried to
the kitchen.
"Are we the only ones awake?" he asked Flysse.
She said, "I think so. I've seen none else."
"Then I'm to the study," he said. "To discover what
news Corm brought."
"Take care," she said. "I'd not see you caught. Not
now."
It was hard to resist the concern in her blue eyes. Easier to turn
back and hold her, and make better what grew again between them; but
what lay ahead might depend on what he found, and he'd live free with
Flysse. He grinned and went away.
It was stark news Wyme had noted down: confirmation of Davyd's
dreams, Arcole thought. He studied the scrawled notes with a frown,
snatching paper and pen from the governor's desk. So many holdings
ravaged. A troop of fifty mounted infantry slain, save for Corm. And
worst of all, the final ragged notes:
The demons vow to attack us. Slay us all. They shall come, they
say, and kill us because it is their land. I do not doubt it. Too
much has happened—
we are not alone here. I must send to
Evander for more soldiers. An Inquistor; my hexes are not strong
enough. Surely an Inquisitor can defend us.
Arcole stared at the alarming comments. The time had come, he
thought, and they could delay no longer. No matter how difficult,
they must find a way out of the city. He would discuss it with Flysse
and set a date, and when next they spoke with Davyd, he would tell
the lad to take the last of their provisions and stand ready to flee.
He recorded Wyme's commentary and the placements of the attacks, then
dusted the paper and folded it into his tunic, set the desk in order,
and pinched out the candle.
As he went toward the door, it opened and Benjamyn said, "What
are you doing here?"
The majordomo held a candle in a brass holder. He wore a nightshirt
and a tasseled sleeping cap. His legs were spindly and very white. He
should have looked ridiculous were it not for the outrage on his
lined face. Arcole saw Flysse standing a little way behind, her eyes
wide with alarm."
"Well?" Benjamyn demanded, advancing a step.
Arcole took a pace back. His mind raced—this could mean the
downfall of all his plans. He said, "I was tidying the
governor's study, Benjamyn." It sounded unlikely to his own
ears.
To the majordomo it obviously sounded wildly improbable.
"At this hour?" Benjamyn came another step into the room.
He raised the candle, eyes darting around, returning accusingly to
Arcole. "Did the master order it?"
Arcole said quickly, "He did," hoping Wyme's memory should
prove too fogged with brandy to contradict.
Benjamyn's tongue clicked vigorously. To Arcole it sounded like the
ticking of a clock that measured the time to his sentencing.
"
What's that?"
Benjamyn pointed at Arcole's chest.
Arcole said, "Nothing."
Benjamyn said, "Show me."
Arcole looked down, and saw a corner of paper protruding from beneath
his tunic. He cursed silently. As best he knew, Benjamyn could read
no more than a few words, but the paper alone should be sufficient to
undo him. Doubtless the majordomo would show it to Wyme, and Wyme
would immediately know his secrets stolen. Arcole had no idea what
punishment that might entail, but he was certain it must unravel all
his plans and likely see him parted from Flysse forever. He
hesitated, racking his mind for some plausible excuse.
Benjamyn came another step closer, hand extended. Arcole saw Flysse
framed in the doorway behind the majordomo.
"I stole a sheet of paper," he extemporized. "I
thought to make a sketch of Flysse."
Benjamyn's tongue clicked louder. "Then show me," he
insisted.
Arcole shook his head.
"You augment your troubles," Benjamyn warned. "I find
you ransacking the master's inner sanctum, and now you refuse to obey
me? This shall go hard for you."
"It's only a sheet of paper," Arcole said.
"Then show me," Benjamyn repeated. "Or is it more?"
Arcole was a gambler, but it was difficult to hold his expression
calm. Perhaps it was lack of practice, perhaps it was the import of
the occasion, but Benjamyn saw something that prompted his eyes to
widen and his lips to thin.
"It is, no?" he barked. Then: "God, of course! You lay
claim to having been a gentleman. You can read, eh?"
Arcole heard Flysse gasp. Benjamyn ignored her, his gaze intent on
Arcole's face. "You read the master's papers!" His
expression was horrified. "God, you spy on the master!"
He darted forward, snatching at Arcole's tunic; Arcole raised a hand
to fend him off.
This, even more, it seemed, than the original crime, offended the old
man. He shouted as Arcole's palm struck his chest, and swung the
candle holder at Arcole's head. Arcole deflected the blow, and the
brass holder was knocked from Benjamyn's grip. The candle came loose,
rolling across the floor to drip wax and flame on the carpet. Arcole
took hold of Benjamyn's wrists, twisting aside as a bony knee rose
toward his groin.
He called, "Flysse—the candle!" And to Benjamyn: "For
God's sake, be silent."
The majordomo's reply was a shriek of unalloyed rage. Arcole let go
one wrist and struggled to clamp a hand over Benjamyn's mouth.
Benjamyn promptly employed his free hand in an attempt to claw
Arcole's eyes. Desperately, Arcole wondered how long it could be
before the whole house was woken and come looking for the source of
the disturbance. No less—and no less desperately—he
wondered what to do with Benjamyn.
Flysse stamped out the guttering candle and took up the holder. The
room was dark now, save for the dull glow of the banked fire and what
little light intruded from the hall. Benjamyn's white nightshirt lent
him the appearance of a specter, attacking her husband. She saw
Arcole clutching the majordomo's arm with one hand, the other seeking
to shut off the old man's outraged yelling even as Benjamyn sought to
rake his face.
She acted without premeditation. It was as it had been when Armnory
Schweiz looked to steal her honor, save now it was Arcole—her
husband—she saw threatened. She raised the candle holder as she
had raised the pewter mug, and brought it down against the back of
Benjamyn's head.
There was an ugly sound, sharp and soft at the same time, like an ax
falling against rotten wood. Benjamyn's shouting ceased abruptly, he
grunted, and then the grunt became a failing whistle of breath.
Flysse felt wetness on her hand.
She stepped back, staring as Benjamyn went limp in Arcole's grip. Her
husband clutched at the majordomo, no longer fighting to hold him
off, but only to hold him up. Benjamyn's head lolled forward onto
Arcole's chest, and for a horrid moment Flysse saw the stain that
spread across the wool of his nightcap. She dropped the candle
holder. As it fell, she saw with terrified clarity that the edge was
dented and turned back on itself.
She said, "Oh, God, what have I done?"
Arcole lowered Benjamyn to the floor and touched gentle fingers to
the old man's neck. "Killed him," he said.
Tears formed and began to spill down Flysse's cheeks. A sob took
shape in her throat, cut short by Arcole's hands on her shoulders.
"No!" His voice was soft, but nonetheless urgent. "Flysse,
don't cry! We've not the time."
She stared at him, then down at Benjamyn. She began to tremble.
Arcole put his arms around her and pulled her tight against his
chest. "Listen to me," he said. "Flysse, do you listen
to me? Our lives depend on it, and all our plans."
It was hard to stem the shaking that gripped her, but she heard such
urgency in his voice, she did her best. She raised a tearful face to
his, and when he kissed her—gently—she did not resist,
only held him close, seeking the comfort of his arms.
"I killed him," she moaned.
"You had no choice," he said firmly. "He left you
none. Besides, you didn't mean to do it."
She said, "No," as if the single negative were a prayer for
forgiveness.
"But if he's found like this," Arcole said, "we'll
both be blamed, both suffer. Listen to me, Flysse, we've likely not
much time,"
He put his hands on her shoulders
again and pushed her back. She had sooner he held her close,
but he kept her at arm's length. Reluctantly, she looked into his
eyes.
He said, "First, we must carry him to the kitchen. Do you
understand, Flysse?"
Not sure she did, she nodded.
"None must suspect we were here." He loosed his grip just
long enough to gesture at Wyme's study. "All well, we can claim
he fell. Yes! We'll spill some grease on the floor and say he
slipped."
Dully, Flysse said, "The floor's clean, Arcole. It always is;
Dido has the scullions scrub it each night."
He cursed softly and said, "Then he only slipped. God, he's old
enough—and waking, he was likely doddery. But"—his
grip tightened on her shoulders and he shook her gently—"does
it come to accusations of murder, then I did it."
"No," she said. "I killed him. The sin is mine."
"No sin!" Arcole snapped. "An accident, no more. Did
you intend to kill him?"
Flysse shook her head. "I saw him attack you. I wanted to stop
him, only that."
"Then in the absence of intention," he said, "you
cannot be guilty.
It was an accident! Is there sin, then I
claim it. I came to Wyme's study, I involved you in my plans. What
sin exists, Flysse, is mine. And do any suggest it was murder, then I
claim that too."
She stared at him aghast. "Do you love me so much?"
Solemnly, he ducked his head. "Yes. Have I not told you? You own
my life, Flysse. My life and my heart and my soul."
"But it was I hit him," she said. "I cannot let you
take the blame for that."
"God!" He smiled at her savagely and tenderly. "Think
you I'd not have slain him? He left me little choice, eh? But do you
say aught to contradict me in this, then we shall both likely go to
the gallows, or be sold off apart to wilderness farms. And then what
shall become of Davyd, eh? He needs the one of us, at least. Far best
only I be blamed for this. And better still if we can conceal it."
She stared at him through eyes so filled with tears, his face was
hazy. Could he truly love her so much? There now seemed little doubt.
She said, "Arcole, I'm sorry."
"No time for apologies now," he said. "And I've my
share of those, beside. Shall you do as I … " Almost, he said,
"Tell you"; amended it to "Suggest?" And when she
nodded, let her go and said, "Then pick up that candle holder
and the candle."
As she did that, he lifted Benjamyn. The old man's corpse was light
as he carried it toward the kitchen. Over his shoulder he said,
"Close the door. And do any come, we were neither of us near the
study."
Flysse obeyed as if she were a puppet, her strings tugged by his
voice. A dreadful numbness gripped her. Her limbs felt heavy, her
heart seemed to beat sonorous against her ribs, filling her with
sluggish blood. Like that, she thought, that welled from Benjamyn's
shattered skull. She marveled at Arcole's calm, and at his sacrifice.
She thought she could not let him make it.
She followed him to the kitchen and watched as he set the corpse upon
the clean-scrubbed floor. A welling of blood came from the head,
pooling slow and thick.
Arcole surveyed his handiwork and said, "So. He came in and
slipped. You"—he gestured at Flysse's chair—"were
sitting there. You dozed, and when you woke, it startled him. He
slipped and fell." He took the candle holder from her and set it
close by Benjamyn's head. Then thought to light the candle and drip
wax over the floor; pinch out the candle and drop that nearby. "It
may be enough."
"And is it not?" Flysse asked.
"Then he found me at Wyme's brandy." Arcole crossed to
where that was kept and swilled a mouthful. "He threatened me
and we struggled. He fell."
"Arcole, I cannot let you do this."
He took her face in hands then and said, "Flysse, you can. You
must! Do you not see it?"
She shook her head. He took the incriminating paper from his tunic
and gave it her. "Is this found," he said, "then all
is lost.
We are lost. You and Davyd and I, all our dreams. If
Wyme suspects we were in his study, then, like Benjamyn, he'll likely
remember I can read. And then he'll find those other papers, the
maps, and we shall both be found guilty. And Davyd will have no one,
nor hope of escape from this place."
"Should that be so bad?" she asked.
"Do you forget Davyd's dreams?" he asked in return. And
when she helplessly shook her head: "No? Then I beg you do as I
say."
"You're sure?"
He nodded. "I've killed enough men that my hands are already
bloody. Can I not escape this charge, then perhaps it's a kind of
justice. But I can at least know you and Davyd go free. And do you
follow our plan, then you can likely use those maps to escape."
"Not without you," she said.
"If you must," he replied. And when she shook her head:
"You once extracted promises from me, no? Now I ask the same of
you. As you love me, I'll have your word you
will flee this
place if you safely can, and with Davyd. Your word, Flysse?"
Brown eyes locked with blue: his intense, hers blurred by tears.
Finally she nodded and said, "Is that your command, Arcole?"
"No. My wish."
"Then," she said, "I shall seek to fulfill your wish."
Then Chryselle entered the kitchen and began to scream when she saw
her husband's body.
"Coffee, by God!" Governor Wyme gestured irritably and
Nathanial sprang to fill the extended cup. "And brandy."
Wyme took the decanter and spilled a generous measure into his
coffee. He sipped, then closed his eyes and sighed gustily. His head
hurt abominably; and as if Danyael Corm had not delivered sufficient
bad news the preceding night, he must now face the demise of his
majordomo. He did not appreciate the disruption of his sleep or his
household, and that did no more than the throbbing of his skull to
improve his mood. He tugged his dressing gown tighter across his
ample belly and surveyed the scene.
It was, he thought with irritable amusement, rather like one of those
tableaux the common folk found entertaining.
The Death of the Old
Retainer, or some such trite title. Benjamyn was the centerpiece,
and most assuredly dead. Chryselle sobbed—the sound threatening
to hurt Wyme's ears—in Dido's arms. Young—what was her
name?—yes, Flysse, stood pale-faced beside her husband.
Fredrik, Wyllem and Gylbert stood like guards to either side.
Nathanial stood wide-eyed, staring at the corpse. The other servants
hung back, still and silent as waxworks.
Most definitely, Wyme decided, a tableaux. But of whose making?
He studied Benjamyn's body and the candle holder close by. Arcole had
offered an explanation that was superficially plausible, but Wyme was
not a stupid man and by nature suspicious. He hooked a finger in
Nathanial's direction and said, "Bring me that candle holder."
Nathanial obeyed, wincing as he saw the blood that discolored the
dented edge. Wyme took the thing without qualms and turned it in his
hands.
Then he pointed at the corpse and said, "Fredrik, turn him
over."
The head groom obeyed, his face impassive. Wyme said, "Drag him
over here."
He ignored Chryselle's renewed weeping as the corpse was hauled
across the floor and leant forward to survey the wreckage of
Benjamyn's skull. Then he turned the candle holder around again and
looked at Arcole.
"He slipped, eh?"
Arcole nodded.
"And fell?"
Another silent nod.
"Onto this?" Wyme held up the candle holder.
"I suppose so." Arcole shrugged.
"Because he was startled when Flysse woke."
Arcole nodded again.
"And where were you?"
"I was … " Wyme saw Arcole's eyes dart round, and Flysse
stiffen beside him. "I was … sampling your brandy." He
gestured to where the decanter was usually kept.
Wyme sipped more of the fortified coffee. There was more to this
affair than met the eye, but for now he had troubles enough to occupy
him. It was definitely time Grostheim had an Inquisitor, he thought.
An Inquisitor could unravel this in moments: his own magic did not
extend so far. God, he was not even sure his hexing powers extended
to protecting the walls from the promised arrival of the demons. But
those were thoughts for another day; he shook his head and groaned
regret of the movement. If he settled this affair swiftly, he might
manage an hour or two's more sleep.
"You were stealing my brandy," he said. And even as Arcole
voiced an affirmative: "And Benjamyn caught you at it. You
killed him, no?"
Arcole said, "No. He slipped and fell."
"Either way." Wyme reached under his dressing gown to
scratch his chest. "You are responsible."
"Flysse said sharply, "No!"
Arcole said, "Flysse … "
Wyme looked from one to the other. The woman was involved in this,
and by God she was a pretty thing. He wondered he'd not noticed her
before. Likely Celinda had, and kept her from him. He glanced at
Chryselle and a notion shaped: Had Benjamyn perhaps come seeking
Flysse? And Arcole objected, and the two men struggled, and Arcole
slain Benjamyn? Or perhaps it was all about stolen brandy. God knew,
old Benjamyn was—
had been—a disciplinarian, likely
to castigate a man for small theft, but a most excellent majordomo.
It would be hard to replace him—which irked the governor; and
the more for the notion that Arcole should have been ideal as a
replacement when Benjamyn died of natural causes or grew too old. He
had the finesse, the manners: Wyme had entertained high hopes of
Arcole.
And now they were all dashed at the worst possible time. God, who
could take Benjamyn's place? The household would be in chaos; Celinda
would undoubtedly blame him.
The governor scowled and said, "I believe you killed him. I
pronounce you guilty … "
"Without trial?"
Wyllem and Gylbert grasped Arcole's arms as he lunged forward.
Fredrik stood before him, a hand raised ready to strike. Praise God
for loyal servants, Wyme thought.
"Take him." Wyme looked to Fredrik. "There's a secure
place? A shed or suchlike, that can be locked?"
Fredrik nodded. "Do I clear out some tack, 'sieur."
"Then take him there and lock him in," Wyme said. "Make
sure he can't break out, and I'll deal with him later. Now the rest
of you go to your beds. Nathanial—my crutches."
Nathanial hurried to obey as Wyllem and Gylbert took firmer hold of
Arcole and Flysse began to sob. She clutched at him and Fredrik
pushed her away. She could only watch and weep as he was led out.
She turned to Wynne as Nathanial lifted him onto the crutches. "What
shall happen to him, 'sieur?"
Wyme halted, looking at her, and smiled. "Why, my dear," he
said, "having been found guilty of murder, he must be hanged."
39—Gambler's Luck
Flysse could hardly believe what had happened. She had known Arcole
took risks in his clandestine mapmaking, but she had never thought it
might come to this—to sentence of death. She wept as he was
taken out and locked in the tack room, and wept as she returned to
their chamber. She latched the door and flung herself on the bed, her
mind racing. It seemed that all their dreams of freedom were
shattered and she must stand helplessly by as her husband was hung.
She thought she could not bear that, especially not now, when they
had mended their love.
She could not, and so she would not: there had to be something she
could do. She dried her eyes and willed herself to think calmly, and
as the sun rose pale in a hard blue sky, she knew what she would do.
It should be dangerous, but she could not leave Arcole to his fate.
As Dido prepared the mistress's breakfast tray, and those servants
not engaged in their duties ate, Flysse approached Nathanial.
"What shall happen now?"
Nathanial wiped crumbs from his chin and shrugged. "Why, he'll
be hung, of course. In the town square, most likely." He smiled
speculatively. "I expect we'll get time off to watch."
"When?" Flysse asked, thinking that she'd like to strike
him.
Nathanial glanced at Fredrik, who said, "When the gallows is
ready."
Flysse gulped, blinking tears away. "When shall that be?"
Fredrik drank tea, studying her quizzically, then turned to
Nathanial. "How long d'you think?"
"For God's sake!" Dido turned angry eyes on the two men.
"Must you torment the poor girl? Surely she's suffered enough."
They had the grace to look somewhat embarrassed then, and Fredrik
said, "Well, there's not been a hanging in a long time, and the
old gallows was dismantled. I suppose the master'll order a new
scaffold built, and that'll .take a day or two."
"It's Saturday today," Nathanial said, "and the master
won't ask the carpenters to work Sunday, so I'd reckon it'll be
Monday."
Fredrik nodded in silent confirmation; Flysse swallowed and took the
tray Dido proffered. There might be enough time. She prayed there be
enough.
When she returned to the kitchen, she asked Dido if she might visit
Arcole. The cook hesitated, then patted Flysse's hand and said,
"Well, I suppose he is your husband. But not long, eh? Just a
quick visit, and then it's back to your duties."
Flysse blurted out her thanks and hurried away.
The tack room was located at the rear of the stables. There were no
windows, and the door was padlocked from the outside. The floor was
hard dirt and the room smelled of ancient leather and horses. Fredrik
grudgingly allowed she might spend a few moments with her husband and
locked her in, promising to return in a while.
Arcole was disheveled, but his smile was bright as he took her in his
arms.
"You've not suffered? Has Wyme said anything to you?"
"Only sour looks, and I've not seen the master."
"I shall miss you," he said, and sighed.
"Listen"—Flysse drew back so that she could see his
face—"Fredrik says you'll be hung on Monday. He thinks the
master will order the gallows started today, but tomorrow's Sunday
… "
Arcole laughed. "And a God-fearing man like Wyme wouldn't hang
anyone on Sunday, eh? Shall he allow me to attend services?"
She thought he put on a brave face, but there was no time for bravado
now. She motioned him to silence, saying, "I'll have a chance to
speak with Davyd in church."
"Bid him farewell for me," Arcole said, "and tell him
I'm sorry our plans end this way."
Flysse said, "Perhaps they don't. Listen … "
Their conversation was necessarily brief. Before long, Fredrik came
to unlock the door and advise Flysse she'd best return to her duties,
and she must hug Arcole and turn away, praying all go well. It seemed
to her that a clock ticked in her head, marking out the moments left
them.
It was almost impossible to attend to her tasks. She was unusually
clumsy, earning reprimands from Celinda and even Dido, though the
cook's were gentler than the mistress's, and she showed Flysse a
degree of rough sympathy.
Around the mid-part of the morning, Wyme ordered his carriage be
readied. "He'll be goin' to order the gallows started,"
Nathanial declared, then fell silent under Flysse's scowl.
"You'd best say a special prayer for him tomorrow," Dido
said.
Flysse nodded, thinking that she most definitely would, albeit not
the kind Dido had in mind. That night she could barely sleep, and
when the servants assembled for their walk to the church, she was the
first ready.
As they crossed the square to the church, she saw that Nathanial's
guess had been correct. A platform was already built, and timber lay
about its sides, long beams that would support, a man dangling from
the shorter cross-piece. Flysse stared at the half-finished
construction and shuddered, then grit her teeth and walked
straight-backed into the church.
Davyd found her as usual, and she thought at first he must have heard
the grim news, for his face was pale and drawn reminding her of his
expression aboard the
Pride of the Lord.
"You've heard?" she asked.
He shook his head impatiently, speaking in an urgent whisper before
she could" amplify. "Flysse, we must go soon. My dreams are
worse, and I think the demons are coming fast. I think they'll be
here before long." He broke off, frowning. "Where's
Arcole?"
"Locked in, and sentenced to death."
"What?" Davyd gaped at her, and she gestured him to be
cautious, telling him what had happened.
"No," he muttered when she was done. "Not now. God,
not now!"
Flysse said, "We must get him out. Tonight!"
Davyd was silent for a moment, as if digesting this news. Then he
nodded and asked, "What kind of lock is on the door?"
As best she could remember, Flysse described the padlock.
"I can pick that," he said confidently, "and I've all
the stuff we need."
"We must still get past the walls," she whispered, back.
"How can we get past the guards?"
Davyd grinned and said, "I think I know of a way. It won't be
pleasant, but I doubt anyone will look for us there. You know how
many folk have come to Grostheim these past weeks? Well, there are
tents set up for them, and the governor ordered trenches dug to carry
off their waste. They go under the walls … "
"If it's the only way," Flysse murmured. "But it must
be tonight."
"Yes." Davyd nodded. "I'll come tonight, with all our
stuff."
"I'll await you," Flysse said. "And God help us."
Davyd took her hand. "I'll not let Arcole down," he said,
"nor you."
Flysse sat at the kitchen table, stonily ignoring Nathanial's
attempts at flattery. Arcole was imprisoned across the yard, but
still the dark-haired servant paid her unseemly court, and no matter
how often she told him she was wed, still he pressed her.
"I am married," she said, "Arcole lives, and I am
still his wife."
"But when … " Nathanial pantomimed hanging.
"He is not yet dead," Flysse said.
"But shall be soon." Nathanial was undeterred. "And
besides, you'd had a falling-out, no?"
"We argued." Flysse nodded wearily. "And settled all
our differences. Can you not understand? I love Arcole."
"No point to loving a dead man." Nathanial would not be put
off. "A woman like you, you'll want a man. And I'm likely to
take Benjamyn's place now."
"Please, Nathanial," Flysse said, "do you leave me be?
My husband is alive, and even is he … " She shook her head,
unwilling to say the words. "Then I should be in mourning."
"But after that," said Nathanial.
Flysse started as a bell rang, thankful for the interruption. Even
the emptying of madame's chamber pot should be preferable to hearing
out Nathanial's ceaseless cajolements. But it was not Celinda: the
governor rang from his study.
"Likely in his cups again." Nathanial rose, winking. "Has
he left a glass or two, we can share it after I've got him settled,
eh?"
Flysse offered no response, only watched as he quit the kitchen.
Then gasped as Davyd came in.
"God!" She rose swiftly, eyes darting to the door that had
only just closed on Nathanial. "Davyd, you startled me."
He motioned her to silence. "No time," he whispered. "Are
you ready?"
She nodded, thinking that he seemed fevered, his green eyes burning.
She saw he wore a knife on his belt.
"You've the maps Arcole drew?" The way he glanced around
made Flysse think of hunted animals. "Where are they?"
"In our room," she said, pointing at the relevant door. It
seemed her feet were rooted now that the moment had come. Davyd's
strength surprised her as he drew her forward. "Show me,"
he urged. "And quick!"
She moved ahead and he set a hand against her back, pushing her. She
prayed that Wyme keep Nathanial occupied; did he not, then perhaps
the servant would think she had been summoned to madame. She felt her
heart beat wild against her ribs.
They found the room, and Flysse took the maps from their hiding
place.
Davyd said, "I've left our gear in the stables. Now bring me to
Arcole."
He unlatched the window and thrust it open, peering out a moment
before climbing through. Flysse followed, encumbered by her skirts
and petticoats. She thought it should be hard to flee in the dirndl.
They crossed the yard. Flysse noticed the night was moonless. It
seemed unnaturally quiet, or perhaps only their footsteps sounded
loud. Inside the stable, three bulky packs stood by the door.
"There." Flysse pointed to where Arcole was imprisoned.
"Wait here." Davyd halted her as she moved to accompany
him. "Does anyone approach, call out. But softly, eh?"
She nodded and took a vantage point beside the door. Davyd faded into
the shadows.
The lock was of a model he had picked before, and it took only
moments to trip its tumblers, even with unsteady hands. He eased the
door open, not wanting creaking hinges to give the alarm. The tiny
chamber stank, but Arcole greeted him with a smile.
"Well met, Davyd."
Davyd marveled at the man's calm: he could only nod and whisper,
"Yes."
"You've brought everything?" Arcole emerged from the
makeshift cell as if his liberation were no surprise at all.
Davyd repeated, "Yes."
"Excellent." Arcole grasped his shoulder. "Done well."
"We've a ways yet to go." Davyd endeavored to match
Arcole's insouciance, then shuddered as his dreams flared bright
inside his mind. "And tonight we'll have a diversion; I'd stake
my life on it."
"You do," said Arcole as if it were the most natural thing
in the world.
They reached the door and Flysse flung herself into her husband's
arms. Arcole gently disentangled himself, kissed her once. "I'm
hardly fit to be embraced," he murmured. Then grinned: "So,
shall we be gone?"
Davyd bent to the packs, tugging two cloaks loose. Beneath, all was
wrapped in oilskin. "These will hide your uniforms," he
said. "All well, we'll look like refugees seeking a place to
sleep."
He was gratified by Arcole's smile of approval. As they donned the
cloaks, he eased his head around the door—and jerked it back.
"Someone comes!"
Arcole beckoned him away. "Fredrik, damn him. He must have heard
something. Wait; and silently, eh?"
Davyd and Flysse moved back into the shadows. Arcole lowered his
pack, taking station where the door should hide him. As Fredrik came
in, he stepped forward, his left hand dropping onto the groom's
shoulder. He spun the startled man around, and struck him once on the
jaw. Fredrik made a whoofing sound, like one of his beloved horses,
and fell unconscious. Arcole dragged him to the tack room and locked
the door.
"So I've not forgotten how." He rubbed his knuckles. "Now,
shall we depart?"
He shouldered his pack and motioned that Davyd lead the way.
Wyme's mansion stood silent as they climbed the fence, and no one
witnessed their furtive departure. Farther into the city, the streets
were crowded. Flysse clutched Arcole's hand.
"We're no more than three newcomers," he whispered, "just
as Davyd said. Three poor lost souls seeking a bed for the night. God
knows, I at least look the part."
Flysse forced a smile and drew a little closer, then gasped as Davyd
halted abruptly, waving them back.
"A patrol!"
He turned, bringing them into an alley. It was littered with bodies,
and as they picked their way along, folk grumbled sleepily that there
was no room left. The patrol marched briskly by as they reached the
farther end, where the alleyway gave onto a wider thoroughfare, its
sidewalks lined with wagons.
"Down here," Davyd said.
Then a line of fire, like a sparkling rocket, arched across the sky
and cannon boomed from atop the walls.
Flysse screamed and Davyd shouted, both sounds lost in the roar of
cannon fire. Arcole gestured that Davyd lead the way, and they began
to run down a street thrown into sudden chaos. People emerged from
the wagons, some in nightgowns, most of the men clutching weapons,
all yelling. They gaped, milling like nervous cattle, as more flames
soared overhead. Arcole looked to where one fiery line ended on a
rooftop and shouted, "Fire arrows!" Neither Flysse nor
Davyd heard him, for the artillery along the walls kept up a
relentless din, and between the cannon's booming there was the rattle
of musketry. A handful of the flaming arrows had fired roofs, and
here and there folk flung up ladders, passing buckets from hand to
hand to douse the flames. A column of red-coated Militiamen came
pounding down the street, cursing the refugees who impeded their
progress, the sergeant waving his saber and threatening to use it on
any who got in his way. Davyd beckoned his companions, falling into
step behind the soldiers. The column cleared them a way and they ran
to the end of the street, where he led them off at an angle,
shouldering through the crowd there.
A man grabbed at him, demanding to know what transpired and where
they went. Davyd evaded his grasp and the man turned to snatch at
Flysse. Arcole knocked his hand away and bellowed, "Demons! God
preserve us, the demons are come!"
The cry was instantly taken up, adding to the tumult, and the street
became a seething mass of panicked folk. Davyd ducked between two
houses, leading them clear of the chaos.
They paused to snatch a breath. The sky over Grostheim blossomed red,
the screaming of the inhabitants vying with the thunder of the cannon
and the crackling of musket fire for supremacy.
"We've our diversion, by God," Arcole chuckled. "Even
do they notice our absence, they'll not come looking for us in a
hurry."
Flysse stared at him, alarmed by his expression. It was one of …
glee was the only word she could think of, as if he took
pleasure in the city's panic, as if he saw impending destruction as a
personal revenge.
"We've yet to get past the walls," Davyd said, then
shuddered as he added, "and past the demons."
"We shall," Arcole declared confidently. "Have faith."
Davyd nodded and attempted an unconvincing grin. "This way,
then."
They climbed a fence and hurried across a yard, into a second, where
a large dog barked madly; along a path littered with garbage to an
avenue they crossed into another alley. Folk poured from buildings,
joining the refugees in the streets, and though all were armed, they
were disorganized, standing in knots or shuffling back and forth,
uncertain what to do, so that they only jammed the thoroughfares and
hindered the Militiamen running for the walls. Arcole added to the
confusion by repeating his warning of demons as he went by, but, save
for that, the passage of three more panic-stricken refugees went
unnoticed.
The crash of cannon fire grew louder, and the air heavy with powder
smoke. Flysse saw the walls loom, red-lit, above. She could see the
soldiers there, manning the artillery pieces or leaning out to
discharge their muskets. She could not see what they fired at, but
she thought she could hear an unearthly yammering from beyond the
walls, as if hell's own hounds bayed at Grostheim's gates. Then a
more pungent odor intruded on her nostrils, and she winced at the
stench.
"Here." Davyd pointed, and grimaced. "It's the only
way."
They stood in the shadow of a warehouse. Its bulk formed one side of
a rough square, more large buildings the other two,. and the wall
itself the fourth. Between lay a patch of open ground—likely
the only open space in all the city now—bisected by a trench
lined with makeshift canvas screens. The trench ran to the wall and
disappeared beneath.
Flysse hesitated. "I'm not sure I can."
"You must!" Arcole hung an arm about her shoulders, urging
her forward. "We've come too far—there's no turning back
now."
Davyd was already moving, crouched over, across the open space.
Arcole pushed Flysse on. Her eyes began to water and she could not
help but struggle.
"As Davyd says," Arcole shouted into her ear, "it's
the only way."
She shook her head helplessly and he took her hand, dragging her
forcibly after him. "You will," he said. "God, Flysse,
do you hesitate now, I'll—" He halted, turning to face
her. "I'll go back to Wyme and give myself up. I'll hang because
you don't want to dirty your feet!"
It was unfair, but all he could think of to persuade her. Save,
perhaps, knocking her out and hauling her through, and he was not
sure she would survive that, nor even certain it was possible. He was
by no means sure he could bring himself to strike her, no matter the
reason.
She looked at him through tear-blurred eyes and forced a small smile.
"I'd not see you hang, husband. So—lead on."
"My brave Flysse." He answered her smile and touched her
cheek. "Well soon enough wash away Grostheim's filth in the
river, eh?"
She nodded and let him lead he,r to the screens.
The smell grew worse, and worse still past the canvas. Davyd stood
waiting for them, a kerchief wound about his mouth and nose. He
brought two more from his pockets, passing them over.
Arcole said, "God, Davyd, your plan stinks," and laughed.
"But it's a good one."
Davyd nodded. Above the kerchief his eyes looked no happier than
Flysse's. "It goes under the wall," he said. "The
governor had it dug when the streets filled with refugees."
"It's fitting, no?" Arcole knotted the cloth in place.
"We're no more than waste to Wyme. Do I lead now?"
Without awaiting an answer, he began to pace along the line of
canvas, toward the wall. Flysse followed, Davyd bringing up the rear.
The screens ended just before the wall, and Arcole stepped into the
trench. Filthy water climbed above his knees, disturbed insects
rising in a horrid, buzzing swarm around his head. He offered Flysse
his hand and she followed him, fighting the urge to vomit, trying to
ignore the things that floated in the latrine. It was easier to
ignore the cannonades thundering above.
Between the screens' edges and the wall lay a few feet of open
ground. They ducked down, gagging on the miasma, and reached the
opening. The wall's timbers were cut ragged here, splintery stumps
ending scant inches above the foul water.
Arcole said, "Keep low until we reach the river."
Davyd touched Flysse's shoulder and said, "It's not too far."
She smiled her thanks, and voiced a silent prayer they all survive.
Arcole said, "Ready?" And when she nodded: "Stay
close."
He went down on hands and knees, lowering himself until only his head
and back stood above the fetid stream. As he crawled under the wall,
he must duck down, all his body sinking beneath the flow.
Flysse wished she might take a deep breath, but knew that if she did
she would surely empty her stomach. She closed her eyes and clenched
her teeth tight, then followed her husband. She feared she would
panic as she went under the wall, crawling blind through a clinging
mud she had rather not think about.
It seemed to last a ghastly eternity, but she still had breath in her
lungs when a hand grasped her shoulder and lifted her up. She gazed
at Arcole, unspeaking, as she dragged the befouled kerchief from her
face and spat, staring about as Davyd's dripping head emerged.
Arcole stood to her left, flattened against the wall. The trench
curved rightward ahead, meeting the river a hundred feet or so
distant. The Restitution glimmered red in the cannon's discharges,
and the sound of gunfire on this side of the wall was deafening, as
if they stood in the heart of a storm.
Indeed they did, Flysse thought, for in the awful light of the
cannonades she saw Grostheim surrounded by demons.
They stood in groups, some along the riverbank, some close to the
walls. Some ran back and forth, as if to draw the defenders' fire;
others capered, waving weapons in challenge. All screamed; and all of
their faces were leering, painted masks. They seemed careless of the
volleys from the walls, even when canister shot tore through their
ranks. Their hatred seemed almost palpable.
Flysse could not see how it might be possible they reach the river
safely, how they might then escape. She thought they must die here.
Speech was pointless in the din, and Arcole grasped her elbow,
indicating they must crawl again. Mindlessly, numbed by the terrible
sounds, she obeyed. She glanced back at Davyd and saw his eyes huge
with barely controlled terror, in a face gone ashen under its coating
of filth. She reached back, taking his hand and squeezing, then began
to crawl.
Perhaps it was the stench—perhaps it was good fortune—but
none of the demons stood near the trench, and none came close as the
three pressed onward. They reached the river and Arcole turned
westward, hugging the shallows. A wooden jetty lay in that direction,
designed to accommodate barges plying inland. Five burned at their
moorings, and the flames that had taken hold of the jetty favored the
desperate enterprise—the demons kept clear of the
conflagration.
All three ducked low as they moved upriver, shedding their cloaks and
letting the Restitution wash off a measure of the encrusting filth.
Flysse wondered if she would ever feel clean again, or safe.
The air grew warmer as they approached the burning barges, and a film
of ash drifted over the water. Arcole motioned that they halt. The
riverbank stood high enough that they were hidden from view as he
gestured at the blazing jetty.
"We must swim to get past that." He looked to Davyd. "Can
you manage that?"
Flysse felt embarrassment that she had entirely forgotten Davyd's
dread of water, and proud of Arcole that he had not. Davyd reached
down to splash his face. Cleaned of filth, it looked wan, the bonfire
night drawing deep shadows beneath his eyes.
"Have I a choice?" he asked hoarsely.
"Not really," Arcole replied, and gestured at the bank.
"Save … "
Davyd grinned: Flysse thought she had seen such smiles on dead faces.
"I can try," he said. "But … I can't swim."
"You wrapped these well." Arcole lowered his pack into the
water. "See? It floats. Do you hold on to yours and let me pull
you."
Davyd swallowed, spat, and nodded. Arcole turned to Flysse, brows
raised in silent question. She said, "I can swim. But these
skirts hamper me."
"There's fresh clothing in these?" Arcole gestured at the
packs, and when Davyd nodded again: "Well, we all need a change,
no?"
Flysse understood his meaning: she unlaced her bodice and shrugged it
off, then the skirt and petticoats. She was not sorry to see them
drift away, though Davyd's blush prompted a match that warmed her
cheeks. Modestly, she hid herself in the river.
"Come, then." Arcole set Davyd's hands on the oilskin
parcel. "Hold tight and trust me."
Davyd closed his eyes as he felt himself towed out into the current.
Panic threatened as he felt the river tug at him, but he rested his
chin on the pack and clenched his teeth, telling himself he had no
choice.
He kept his eyes tight shut, his hands rigid on the pack's cords,
until his feet touched bottom once again. Then, warily, he opened an
eye and looked around. He was sure a demon must loom over him, or the
hulk of a burning barge collapse on him, but he saw only the
Restitution's south bank and the dinghies moored there. He began to
chuckle hysterically.
Arcole clapped a hand across his mouth, silencing him, and reached to
help Flysse. Davyd blushed anew as she came out of the water: her
underthings clung to her so that she seemed like some scantily clad
water nymph. He looked away and asked, "What now?" He
thought his voice echoed his unwilled excitement.
Arcole said, "The tide's turned, I think," and gestured at
a dinghy. "So we take one of these and float away."
40—Waiting for the Dream
The ambush was swift and furious: none sought battle honor in this
fight, only to destroy the Breakers that the People might survive.
Racharran led fifty warriors out, Yazte the same number, and also
Chakthi. Their strategy was quickly decided and they rode hard,
guided by Motsos, split into two groups where the incoming tracks ran
between a thick stand of timber and a low ridge. This, all well,
would be the killing ground. The Commacht concealed themselves
amongst the trees as the Lakanti and the Tachyn hid behind the spur.
The Breakers appeared around the mid-part of the afternoon, their
weird mounts padding swift over the muddy ground, wide heads lifting
as their nostrils flared to test the breeze. As they came abreast of
the ridge's downslope, the foremost pair roared, baring vicious
fangs. The riders slowed them, hands rising in warning.
Racharran set a buffalo horn to his lips and blew a long clarion.
His Commacht broke from the shelter of the trees, flighting arrows as
they raced down the line of Breakers. Simultaneously, Yazte led his
warriors in a charge down the ridge to hit the head of the column as
Chakthi brought his Tachyn out to attack from the rear. Shafts
feathered beasts and Breakers alike, and the afternoon grew loud with
pained and angry roaring.
Racharran spun his horse around and charged back. Briefly through the
confusion, he saw that Yazte blocked the way ahead, the Lakanti
riding the war circle, from which they sent arrows directly into the
Breakers midst. Behind, the Tachyn pushed forward, denying the
invaders' scouts escape. But the enemy seemed not to think of that
possibility and only fought, driving beasts that sprouted arrows like
the quills on a porcupine at the Commacht and the Lakanti. Chakthi's
men had an easier time, firing at armored backs and furry, scaled
rumps.
The difference in numbers was great enough that it should have been a
brief contest. But such was the strength of the Breakers' rainbow
armor—and such the power of their strange beasts—that
even though half their number fell in the first charge, still the
survivors claimed a toll. The fallen slowed them, but they
counterattacked with grim ferocity, beasts clambering over the dead
and dying to reach the ambushers, tearing at their own in their
bloodlust when the wounded hampered them. All was confusion. Horses
shrilled as talons ripped them or fangs closed bloody on necks and
hindquarters. The Breakers' long swords and ugly pikes swung and
thrust: not all the unseated warriors fought clear.
Racharran fired his last arrow into the gaping maw of a beast already
decorated with shafts and barely avoided the claws that reached for
him even as the creature roared and died. Its rider, armor hung with
shafts like battle trophies, sprang clear of the dying thing and
hefted a long blade at the Commacht akaman. Racharran swung his horse
clear and drew his hatchet. The way ahead was blocked with bodies and
he wheeled his mount toward the timber, circling back even as Motsos
sent a shaft into the Breaker. The armored figure—man or woman?
Racharran cared not—staggered and then came on. Racharran
charged back, knees urging his horse sideways, away from the swinging
sword, as he brought his ax down against the helm.
The Breaker fell onto hands and knees, and Motsos rode it down,
spinning his mount in a prancing circle that smashed hooves against
the Breaker until the body lay all broken on the ground, blood
welling from the armor's joints.
That was the last; there were no more left alive, and those beasts
that still spat and snapped their fangs were dispatched with shafts
fired from safe range.
Five Commacht were dead and five more wounded. Three Lakanti were
slain and seven bore cuts. Two Tachyn had fallen and three boasted
wounds. It was a fearsome thing that so few of the enemy made such
claim. Racharran thought on what should happen did all the horde come
to the Meeting Ground, and his face grew somber.
"We slew them!" Motsos wiped beast-blood from his face,
laughing triumphantly. "Ach, but we slew them all! We taught
them a lesson, no?"
Racharran nodded and forced himself to smile. Twenty scouts
killed—how far from the main force and how long before they
were missed and others sent? How long before the Breakers found the
Meeting Ground?
How long before Morrhyn fulfilled his promise?
The Council lodge was crowded. Perico and Kanseah sat in awkward
representation of their clans, unaccustomed to such elevation, for
they now found themselves treated as akamans, equal to the rest.
Mostly, they stayed silent and only listened.
"Our scouts must range farther." Racharran looked around
for confirmation. "Theirs got too close. And should the whole
horde come … "
"Shall those we slew be missed?" Yazte asked, his question
echoing Racharran's fear. "Will they send others?"
Racharran said, "I do not understand these people. They are not
like any warriors I have fought."
He smiled brief apology to Chakthi for that, and the Tachyn waved a
dismissive hand, answering the smile with his own. Since the fight he
was better trusted; even fat Yazte spoke civilly to him now. He
looked to Morrhyn and said, "You dreamed of this—can you
not tell us what else might come?"
Morrhyn sighed and shook his head. "I know only that we must
wait for the Grannach." He made no mention of Rannach: for all
Chakthi had led his warriors in this day's battle, still he could not
entirely believe the man was honest, that behind his newly mild
demeanor there did not yet lurk resentment. "I think that until
they come, the Maker will not reveal his plans."
Chakthi shrugged. "Imthink they'd best come soon."
"That's true." Yazte nodded ponderously and said aloud what
they all knew: "Food's short, and folk grow restless. They
wonder if all our flight was useless."
He raised a hand, signing apology to Morrhyn. The wakanisha nodded.
"I know," he said softly, "and had I better answers,
I'd give them. But … "
There was silence awhile, ominous. Then Racharran said,
"Two days' ride, at least." He glanced sidelong at Morrhyn.
"With so many defenseless ones, we'll need ample warning."
The others grunted their agreement. Morrhyn lowered his head. He felt
wretched: a prophet with insufficient answers, only his faith to
sustain him—and that beset with horrid doubt.
Across the fire Kahteney favored him with a supportive smile. Hadduth
sat expressionless, his narrow face a mask that gave away nothing.
"If," Yazte said, and hesitated; coughed as if reluctant to
go on, "if they do attack, this is not a good place to fight."
"We've no other choice." Racharran shrugged. "I've
thought of that; I've a plan of sorts."
Chakthi said, "To what end?"
"They can come only from the one direction," Racharran
said. "The hills ring us here, so they must come in through the
pass."
"Shall we meet them there?" Yazte kept his eyes on
Racharran, not looking at Morrhyn. "That should mean fighting
mostly afoot."
"True." Racharran smiled grimly. "But are the Grannach
with us, their stone magic should work to our advantage."
"To block the pass?" Chakthi asked. "Send the stone
down on the Breakers?"
"That, yes," Racharran said, "And our warriors on the
heights."
"And the defenseless ones?" asked Yazte.
"They run for the high hills." Racharran gestured to where
the mountains rose. "Hopefully, with Grannach guides. We can, at
least, give them some time; and we go after."
Chakthi said quietly, "If the Grannach come."
"Yes—if." Racharran looked at the Tachyn out of
troubled eyes. "If not, then we must fight alone. But still,
there's Morrhyn's promise. And I've faith in that yet!"
Morrhyn smiled his thanks, but he saw that the rest only looked at
him with the same closed expression Hadduth wore.
That night he dreamed again of the white stallion racing for the
Mountain. And as before, that goal was contested by the armored
figure on the weird horse. Sometimes it seemed he ran ahead of the
Breaker, sometimes that the Breaker ran faster. It was as if they
galloped the sky, for the hills that ringed the majestic pinnacle of
the Maker's Mountain were as nothing to their steeds, no more than
ruts and furrows. He heeled the stallion to ever greater efforts, and
the great horse responded willingly. But the Mountain seemed no
closer, and he could not tell who might reach it first.
He woke nervous, his mouth dry and his head throbbing with a dull
ache that reverberated against his eyes. He thought he still heard
the stallion's hooves pounding, the gusting of its breath, but then
he realized those sounds came from beyond his lodge and felt a rush
of terrible panic.
Had the Breakers come?
He threw off his sleeping furs and, naked, unlaced the lodge-flap to
thrust out his head.
The sky was yet dull, dawn no more than a faint promise on the
eastern horizon, but the Meeting Ground woke noisy. Dogs barked and
he heard people shouting. His heart beating fast, he tugged on shirt,
breeches, and boots, and draped a blanket about his shoulders as he
hurried out.
Then he shouted his joy as he saw the line of Grannach moving through
the lodges, Rannach and Arrhyna leading their horses at the head,
Colun and Marjia striding beside them.
There were too many for the Council lodge, so they all sat as if in
Matakwa, circled within a ring of guardian warriors, all others—both
the People and the Grannach—standing beyond and listening
eagerly. What grim news there was was swiftly exchanged, and they
settled to discussing the future.
Colun said, "The Breakers own the mountains now. There is
nowhere safe."
"Nor the grass," Racharran said. "Nowhere in all
Ket-Ta-Witko."
Colun grunted as if this were no more than he expected and combed his
beard with stubby fingers. "So, Morrhyn?"
All eyes turned toward him: those of the men seated about the inner
circle and the ring of guards, and all those beyond. Silence
descended; even the dogs fell quiet. The morning was yet young, the
sun barely above the treetops, the surrounding hills still shadowy.
But when he turned his face toward the Maker's Mountain, he saw the
pinnacle bright-lit, shining like a burnished golden blade raised
against the sky. The eternal snow still decked the uppermost heights,
but it was lit all golden, and glittered so that it was hard to hold
his eyes open against that illumination. But he did, even as he felt
tears stream down his cheeks, and so he saw the white stallion that
reared up over the Mountain, hooves pawing the heavens, and felt all
his faith come flooding back, washing doubt away.
For long moments he stared, watching the burning Mountain and the
ethereal horse, and then both were gone. The horse shook its head and
became a drifting cloud; the Mountain became again a looming peak not
yet touched by the sun.
He wiped his face and said, "You saw?"
Colun stared at him. Racharran shook his head. Kahteney asked, "Saw
what?"
He pointed toward the Mountain and saw incomprehension on their
faces. He felt his mouth stretch in a triumphant smile.
When he spoke, his voice was confident.
"The Grannach are come," he said, "and now the Maker
will reveal his promise. This I know."
Blunt as ever, Colun said, "When?"
He shook his head, smiling still. As if forever imprinted on his
eyes, he saw the vision still. "Soon," he promised. "The
Maker will show me soon." He looked to where Kahteney sat.
"You've pahe left?"
Kahteney nodded solemnly.
"Good." Morrhyn stretched. "Do you give it me, I think
I shall dream well."
He was deep in dreams when the scouts came in on lathered horses,
their reports all the same.
The Breakers were two days' ride out, approaching from all
directions. Like the migrating buffalo, they came fast, following the
trails of all the clans, converging on the Meeting Ground which they
must surely reach even as the Moon of the Turning Year reached its
fullest.
Morrhyn lay dreaming as the news spread like wildfire through the
camp. Racharran thought to wake him, but Kahteney warned against
that.
"The pahe owns him now," the Lakanti Dreamer explained,
"and it should be dangerous to interrupt him. Likely you could
not, anyway. And does he dream the means of our salvation … "
He shrugged, his eyes troubled as he faced Racharran. In them the
Commacht akaman saw his own fear, his own dread doubt—
and if
he does not, then what point to waking him? We are doomed, so let him
sleep on and die in his sleep.
Racharran nodded and turned to Colun. "You've Stone Shapers with
you?"
"Yes." Colun's eyes narrowed under craggy brows. "Baran's
the strongest, but there are some seven others.
Swiftly, Racharran outlined his plan.
Colun frowned and tugged at his beard and said, "I don't know if
the golans can work their magic here."
Racharran fought to hide his frustration at the slow, deliberate
Grannach ways and asked, "Why not send for them, that we might
find out?"
Colun grunted and shouted for a man to bring Baran.
When the squat Stone Shaper was put the question, he chewed on his
luxuriant moustache awhile and gave the same answer. Then he grinned
through his beard and said, "But we can find out, no?"
"The Breakers will be on us within two days," Racharran
said. "Two days at the most, and likely less."
Baran nodded as if this were all the time in the world. "Then
we'd best set to work, eh? This shall be interesting."
He ambled away, voice raised in a bellow that summoned his fellow
golans. Racharran turned back to Colun.
"Can your folk take the defenseless ones into the hills?"
His voice was hoarse, his expression desperate. "Does Morrhyn
not wake … "
"There's no point." Colun shook his head, his own face
rueful. "We sealed our passages when we left."
Racharran said, "Even so."
Colun shook his head again. "The valleys are all sealed off, and
nowhere else for so many. This Maker-cursed winter's not yet all gone
up there, and you've not enough food for all of them. Also"—he
turned to glance mournfully toward his lost mountains—"the
Breakers have left their foul beasts roaming up there."
Racharran's hands stretched wide and closed into fists. Almost, he
shouted curses at the Maker, at Morrhyn. Almost, but not quite: a
spark of faith still burned. He opened his mouth to speak, but Colun
forestalled him.
"There's no escaping into the hills. They'd die up there; better
they die here. It should be easier."
"At the Breakers' hands?" Racharran stared at him, aghast.
"Under the teeth of their beasts?"
"No." Colun took a deep breath; sighed. "Remember, I
saw what the Breakers did to the Whaztaye. It should be better if the
defenseless ones took their own lives. Better none live if the
Breakers prevail."
That "if" sounded to Racharran most horribly like "when."
He nodded. "Then so be it." He looked around, at the somber
faces surrounding him. "We fight here. The Maker willing, we
shall survive."
Softly, Yazte said, "The Maker grant Morrhyn wakes and fulfills
that promise."
"The Maker grant." Racharran ducked his head in earnest
agreement. "But meanwhile, best we ready for the worst."
They set to planning their defense, which did not take them long:
there was little enough to decide. Less, could Baran and his fellow
Stone Shapers not block the entrance; and even if they did, it could
still be only a matter of time before the Breakers climbed the hills.
Rannach faced Nemeth and Zeil and bowed his head, saying solemnly,
"I'd ask your forgiveness."
Husband and wife exchanged a look, and Nemeth said, "For what?"
"For the unhappiness I've brought her."
"Unhappiness?" Nemeth frowned, gesturing to where Arrhyna
sat, her belly larger now. "Our daughter is unhappy?"
"I am not," Arrhyna said.
Rannach said, "Had I not slain Vachyr, perhaps none of this
would have happened."
"Ach!" Zeil chopped air, "Vachyr
stole your
bride, our daughter," He shaped a sign of warding. "The
Maker forgive me, but I was glad when I saw Vachyr's body across your
saddle."
"Even so; Morrhyn has told me that sin was a part of what
delivered this." His hand indicated the camp, all abustle with
preparations for war.
Zeil said gently, "And also Morrhyn has said that he could not
have survived the journey back without you."
"And that he believes the Maker must forgive you, no?"
Nemeth said, "Then how shall we not?"
"Still, it seems that we all shall … " Rannach shrugged,
glancing at his wife.
Arrhyna smiled calmly and ended the sentence for him. "Die?"
She turned, still smiling, to her parents. "Sometimes my
husband's faith wavers. He forgets Morrhyn's promise."
Rannach frowned. "Morrhyn lies adreaming," Fie sighed and
took Arrhyna's hand. "Likely he'll be dreaming when the Breakers
come."
Arrhyna said to her parents, "You see?" and set a hand on
Rannach's cheek so that his face was turned toward her. "You
must believe, my husband. You
must\"
Rannach said, eyes wide and loving, "Do you? Truly?"
Confidently, she answered, "Yes,"
He touched the hand that touched his cheek, and a darkness filled his
eyes. "Even so—are you wrong, and I not with you … "
His hand fell, a finger tapping the hilt of the small knife she wore.
She said, "It will not come to
that. But should it, then I'd not live on without you."
"It can be done." Baran beamed as if proud of that
knowledge. "I'd wondered if our magic would work here. But—yes:
we can do it."
Racharran sighed and offered silent thanks to the Maker. That must
buy them a little time at least.
The Stone Shaper perched himself like a hairy rock on the very edge
of the pass, peering curiously up and down its length, with Colun
squatting beside him. Racharran, none too easy so close to the drop,
watched them.
"How much?" Baran asked. "We can seal it all now, or
just the egress." He turned, grinning wickedly. "We might
allow them entry and then bring down the stone. I should enjoy that."
Racharran looked past him to where the lodges covered the Meeting
Ground. They could be struck in moments. The horses were already
gathered into one great herd. The People knew what came against them,
and the defenseless ones wore blades now. Warriors were chosen to
dispatch those too infirm to slay themselves. They waited: for
Morrhyn to wake or the Breakers come, none—even those strongest
in their faith—any longer certain which should come first.
The sun shone bright, warmer than ever, and the Moon of the Turning
Year would reach its fullness in two more nights.
And the Breakers be on them before then.
Morrhyn, he thought, wake up!
He looked to Yazte and Chakthi, who stood a little way back from the
rim with Perico and Kanseah, and asked, "How think you? All now,
or as they enter?"
Colun said, "Seal the farther end now. Let their vanguard enter
this end, and then … " He clapped his hands.
Baran nodded enthusiastically.
Yazte said, "Our bowmen might wait here."
"And my Grannach," Colun added.
Racharran sought Chakthi's response: the Tachyn shrugged as if the
decision were not his to make.
Kanseah said nervously, "Might it not be better to block all the
pass?"
Colun grunted, twisting to eye the Naiche warrior. "They come in
their thousands, no? Do they find a wall of stone before them,
they'll halt and look to climb it. And that shall not take them
long."
"And if it's done as you suggest?" Perico asked.
Colun smiled. "We slay no few of them on the first day, perhaps
that shall give them pause." He rose, staring to where the
Maker's Mountain shone in the sun, and gestured obeisance. "Perhaps
pause enough that Morrhyn wakes."
Racharran said, "The Maker grant it be so."
Yazte said, "It might at least surprise them."
"And kill them," said Baran.
"Your way." Racharran touched the Stone Shaper on one broad
shoulder. "With bowmen and Grannach stationed to the sides. Slay as
many as you can; and when the rest attempt climb, we'll be waiting."
The two Grannach exchanged a look of triumph and rose to their feet.
Grinning, Colun said, "I told you these flatlanders would see
sense."
Baran chuckled and cupped his hands about his mouth. A long, loud
wailing rang out.
"What's that?" Racharran asked.
"The signal," Colun replied. "The magic's readied—now
the walls go down."
"The People!" Racharran clutched the Grannach. "They'll
not be harmed?"
"None, my word on it." Colun's smile spread like a crack
splitting a rock. "My folk stand guard and hold yours back. We
decided all this last night."
Racharran began to speak, but his words were lost under the thunder
of breaking stone. Where the pass fed onto the Meeting Ground, the
walls shifted, bulging outward as if the stone lost its solidity,
becoming for a moment elastic. Then great shards and boulders fell
away from the walls to tumble down in one great, rumbling descent.
Dust filled the afternoon air, darkening the sky like the smoke of a
forest fire, hiding the Meeting Ground awhile. The cliff shuddered
under Racharran's feet and he sprang back, clear of the rim, where
Colun and Baran stood grinning proudly. The others stood wide-eyed.
Kanseah looked afraid, as if he doubted the safety of their position.
When the pall settled and the earth had ceased its trembling,
Racharran saw the Meeting Ground was sealed off by a wall of jagged
stone that stretched across the pass from rim to rim. A few last
boulders still dropped, bouncing down the near-vertical face to
shatter at the foot.
"That was well done!" Colun clapped an enthusiastic hand to
Baran's shoulder. "The rest?"
"We'll work it now." Baran pointed along the rimrock, to
where his fellow Stone Shapers came running. He smiled, the
expression prompting Racharran to think of wolves. "When they
come, it shall be to a Grannach welcome."
"We'll leave you to it, then." Colun beckoned the Matawaye
away. "This is Stone Shaper work, and best left to them."
Racharran nodded. His ears still rang with echoes of the avalanche.
This surely shall buy us time, he thought. But how much?
"When Baran and the others have set their spells, we'd best set
our guards." Colun spoke as if toppling passes were an everyday
event. "Meanwhile … has anyone a flask or two of tiswin?"
"You look weary." Lhyn's fingers were deft as they tied off
her husband's braids. "Shall you rest now?"
"I am weary." Racharran flexed his shoulders, sighing. "I
am weary to my soul. But no, not rest—there's no time. Do the
Breakers move by night … "
"The guards are set, no?" Lhyn fastened silver brooches in
his hair, pinning the warrior's braids. "Men watch, and the
Stone Shapers are in place. What more can you do?"
"Be there; wait," he answered. "Pray."
"Wait here," she said. "Pray here. With me."
He smiled a slow, sad smile and took her in his arms, wondering all
the while if it was for the last time. "I cannot," he said
against her cheek. "Better the People see me; see all their
akamans. We must go strutting about and pretend that all's well.
Besides, I'd be there on the cliff if they come."
"Yes, I know." She kissed him. "I am selfish—I'd
have you to myself this night."
He met her kiss and held her close a moment, then loosed his hold.
"Have you any regrets?"
She smiled and stroked his cheek and shook her head. "None."
"Good; nor I." He reached for his weapons. "The Maker
be with us all."
"He is." She rose with him, going to the lodgeflap.
"Perhaps Morrhyn shall wake soon."
Racharran nodded and tried to smile. "Perhaps."
41—The Promise
Clouds scarred the moon's face and curtained the stars. A wind gusted
chill along the clifftop, whispering mournfully. A dog barked, was
answered, and then fell silent. The night was filled with a palpable
tension, as if the darkness possessed its own weight and pressed down
upon the watchers.
Out on the flat beyond the hills, fires burned, myriad points of
light that stretched out and back in a great mass that moved
inexorably forward, toward the Meeting Ground. It was as if,
Racharran thought, some vast funereal procession came to the People.
He looked to the right and left, checking the warriors and the
Grannach he knew were in place. It was hard to wait: the People
fought on horseback, swift; not like this, nor by night. He spat, and
glanced westward, to where the Maker's Mountain stood. The peak was
cloud-shrouded, only a dim bulk against the sky.
Morrhyn, wake!
He turned his face back to the plain. The lights were closer, massing
until they seemed a solid line of fire, like a river of flame that
ran in flood toward the pass. He checked his arrows, knowing they
were sound: needing something to do. He glanced at his son. Rannach
sat stroking a stone along the edges of his hatchet, his eyes fixed
firm on the blade. To his other side, Colun squatted with Baran and
three of the Grannach Stone Shapers. All carried battle-axes and wide
knives; Colun was humming tunelessly. Spread out along the cliffs rim
were some two hundred Commacht, Perico with his Aparhaso warriors,
and Kanseah with his Naiche. Across the width of the gap, invisible
in the cloudy night, Yazte and his Lakanti waited with Chakthi and
his Tachyn, four Stone Shapers with them.
More men waited behind: reinforcements. Kahteney and Hadduth were
amongst the lodges; and Morrhyn.
The fires came on: so fast. By the midpoint of the night they must
surely reach the pass. Racharran felt a terrible certainty the
Breakers would attack, not waiting for dawn but commencing their
onslaught immediately, like the dark, shadow creatures they were. He
murmured a prayer: that Morrhyn wake, and then that the People defeat
these monstrous invaders. He asked the Maker's forgiveness of his
doubt, and prayed Lhyn die easily, and he with honor.
It was hard now to believe that any could survive.
He saw Rannach looking at him and smiled, wondering if the expression
was truly as sour as it felt.
Rannach said, "Father, I'm sorry."
Racharran nodded, his smile warmed by that, and clasped his son's
shoulder. "And I. But that's in the past now, eh?"
Rannach ducked his head and touched his father's hand. Then his face
grew fierce and he indicated the waiting men, the cliffs scarp. "We
shall not die alone. They'll not easily take the Meeting Ground."
"No, not easily."
"Arrhyna believes Morrhyn will wake." Rannach's smile was
both tender and sad.
"Perhaps." Racharran shrugged. It was momentarily harder to
hope.
The lights drew closer, bobbing and dancing through the expectant
night as if all the fireflies in the world had gathered, or a wall of
scourging flame rushed at the People. Soon it was possible to see
that each was a torch held aloft by an individual rider. There were
so many, Racharran thought, so very many, and all with the single,
awful purpose. His mouth felt dry and he spat again; and wondered if
he was afraid, or only sad that soon the People should be
slaughtered, and Ket-Ta-Witko lost to them.
The wind got up and blew the cloud away to the east. The Moon of the
Turning Year emerged huge and bright, a single night from its full
girth. It lit the Maker's Mountain with a silver radiance, the
pinnacle blazing eerily above the lesser peaks.
Stars pricked the sky; fewer, it seemed, than the approaching
torches.
Colun said, "Good. We can see them clearer now."
The great burning column slowed, bunching so that it became a single,
vast mass. And still it moved forward, but now a group of riders came
charging on ahead, almost to the ingress of the pass.
Men nocked arrows, and Racharran called softly, "Hold! Not yet!
Wait on my word," hoping that Yazte and Chakthi gave the same
command.
The Breakers halted and he saw two dismount. Their torches burned
atop long poles that they drove into the ground, one to either side
of the pass like guiding beacons. Faces hid by garish helms stared at
the opening, at the heights above, and then the Breakers swung back
astride their weirdling mounts and with the others raced back to the
main horde.
Now that the cloud was gone and the night was grown silvery, the
watchers on the cliffs could see that each pole bore a crossbar, from
which things were hung, swaying slowly, turning: heads.
From one pole, Juh and Hazhe gazed blindly toward the Meeting Ground;
from the other, Tahdase and Isten fixed blank eyes on the pass.
Racharran heard Perico cry out softly, and when he looked in that
direction, he saw Kanseah shape a sign of warding.
Then a single horn sounded and all the torches were doused.
By the moon's light the Breakers' bright armor glittered and shone
ethereal, as if phantom rainbows spilled across the plain.
The horn sounded again and they charged.
Racharran heard Baran chuckle, and saw the Stone Shaper begin to move
his hands, chanting lowly.
The foremost Breakers entered the pass. Their beasts growled and
snarled now, the sound like the rumble of falling stone or the
grumbling of flood-water filling up the passage. Twenty abreast they
came, racing their mounts onward, urging them to the slaughter, more
than Racharran could count.
They filled the pass and he turned his head to where the Grannach's
new-formed wall blocked the egress. He saw the vanguard haul their
animals to a stop, the lion-beasts rearing, pawing the air, roaring
their frustration. The riders struggled to turn them back, shouting
to those who followed. But the beasts' howling dinned too loud and
the press came on too eager, driving the forerunners up against the
wall. The strangeling animals fought one another as they were forced
together, rearing up to claw and bite their fellows, even the riders.
Then Baran's chanting, and that of his companion Stone Shapers, grew
louder, rising to a guttural crescendo. And ceased.
It seemed then that the earth itself moved. Racharran felt himself
lifted up and dropped as the pass caved in. The sound of it deafened
him—not even the running buffalo herds made such a thunder. He
saw the rimrock shudder and bulge, then fragment and topple down.
Vast blocks of stone rained onto the Breakers, crushing riders and
their mounts like bugs under the terrible fury of the Stone Shapers'
magic. It was a brief vision, fragmented as the rock that rained down
to fill the pass along all its length. And the sound lasted far
longer, as if the stone bones of Ket-Ta-Witko roared in triumph. That
seemed to echo off the sky itself, so that men covered their ears and
flattened on the ground, awed by this demonstration of Grannach
power. A cloud rose, hiding the stars and the moon, and small shards
of rock exploded upward, as if the broken walls ground ever deeper
onto their prey, expelling the lesser pieces.
Beyond the entrance to the pass, the horde halted as boulders tumbled
outward, bouncing and rolling across the grass to claim more victims.
The poles that dangled the severed heads of Juh and Hazhe, Tahdase
and Isten, were broken and buried, and where the pass had stood,
there now existed only a barrier of stone. It blocked the ingress and
its face was unsound, all filled with treacherously loose rock and
spills of shale. Before it, spread in a wide fan, the ground was
littered with boulders.
The dust cloud fell back and the thunder ground to a reluctant halt.
Then the night filled with a new sound as the Breakers raised their
heads and howled their anger. Their beasts roared as the advancing
army pushed those closest to the wall against the tumbled rocks, and
for a while confusion reigned.
Then the lone horn sounded and slowly order was imposed on the
milling throng. The snarling, fighting creatures were forced to
snapping obedience as the riders drew them back, regrouping. Once
more they clustered in a solid mass and, by the light of the
burgeoning moon, the watchers on the rimrock saw armored figures
dismount, stripping their beasts of harness as others, carrying poles
that ended in long spikes with recurved hooks, came forward. These
wore night-black armor painted with sigils on chest and back that
glowed the dull crimson of old, dried blood.
"We've fought these," Colun said. "They're
beastmasters of some kind."
There was no need of further explanation: the jet-armored figures
drove the beasts forward through the toppled boulders, goading the
creatures to the wall, to the foot of the cliffs.
Like enormous cats, they began to scramble upward.
"Our work, this." Baran rose and shouted across the length
of the new-formed wall. "Do you call your men back from the
rim."
The Stone Shapers began their chanting again. Racharran watched the
Breakers' beasts climb. Fifty of them, he guessed; less as some lost
footing on the unsure rock and fell, yowling furiously, to the
ground. Those limped and licked at hurts, and snarled irritably as
the beastmasters drove them back to their task.
Fresh stone came loose from the wall and the cliffs' edges, and it
seemed the rock shifted under the weight of the clambering creatures,
no longer packed solid but become suddenly impermanent. The beasts
screamed and fell, and from above them boulders tumbled, flinging
them away or crushing them until none remained on the slopes.
Twice more the dark-armored beastmasters forced the surviving animals
to attempt the climb; and twice more Baran and his fellows sent stone
against them, thwarting the attempts.
The horn belled and the beastmasters fell back, bringing the animals
with them. Only nine lived still, and they limped, favoring wounds.
"A lesson taught them, eh?" Colun's voice was triumphant.
"I doubt they'll try that again."
"Likely not." Racharran smiled wearily. "But what
shall come next?"
He realized the sky grew light. The moon was gone away to the west,
and along the eastern horizon a band of brightness presaged the sun's
rising. The disc came up red-golden as fire and sent long lances of
brilliance across the plain. It shone bright on the Breakers'
rainbow-hued armor and on the furred and scaled hides of their
mounts. It seemed to Racharran they covered all the grass, and he
knew they were not defeated; would not give up. He knew they must,
sooner or later, overcome by sheer weight of numbers.
And tonight the Moon of the Turning Year would reach its full.
Morrhyn, wake!
For want of occupation, Lhyn spilled leaves into a pot and set the
tea to brewing. Through the hides of the lodge she could hear the
sounds of battle, distant but yet horribly clear. She wondered if
Racharran lived—and Rannach—and prayed they did and were
not wounded. She prayed that Morrhyn wake, and fought to still the
doubting voice that whispered he would not, or if he did, it should
be too late.
She looked at the sleeping man, his snowy hair spread loose on the
furs, and saw him shift, turning this way and that, the lids of his
closed eyes moving, twitching.
Kahteney said softly, "He dreams. Surely, he dreams."
Lhyn turned to the Lakanti wakanisha, but said nothing. There seemed
nothing to say that had not already been spoken. Kahteney smiled
wanly and shrugged.
Hadduth only sat, his lean-planed face unmoving as his dark eyes,
which neither blinked nor shifted from Morrhyn's face.
Lhyn wished he were not there. No matter Chakthi's vow, no matter the
Tachyn fought with the rest, she could not feel comfortable with
Hadduth. There was something indefinable about the man, something
secretive and hidden. She thought his eyes were bland and unyielding
as a snake's.
Maker, she prayed, let him wake in time.
And stirred the tea and waited.
"We can do no more." Baran gestured angrily at the jagged
rimrock. "Do we bring down more, there'll be no cliff left—only
a slope they can climb."
Racharran nodded, accepting. The cliffs edge was no longer a regular
line but all indented and broken where the Stone Shapers had sent it
down onto the Breakers. The ground below was spread with rocks and
shattered bodies, those of armored attackers and beasts alike. He
nocked a shaft. Colun and his Grannach, warriors and Stone Shapers
alike, drew heavy axes.
"We bowmen will look to shoot them as they climb."
Racharran addressed the Grannach creddan. "Do you take those who
reach the rim."
Colun smiled and Racharran called out the order to the Matawaye.
The sun stood high now, the sky all blue and cloudless, marked with
the wheeling shapes of the crows and ravens that gathered in
anticipation of carrion feast. At least, Racharran thought, we've the
advantage of height. The Breakers' arrows fell short of the rimrock,
and the breaking of the cliff edge crenellated the stone so that the
warriors enjoyed some small measure of cover from which to fire their
shafts.
Even so, he thought, it can be only a matter of time.
At his side, Rannach tensed his bowstring and grinned. "This is
a good day to die."
Racharran answered, "Yes," and wished they might live.
"They come again!"
Kanseah's shout brought him to the edge. More Breakers attempted the
ascent. They seemed like brightly colored insects as they clambered
upward, limber for all the weight of their armor. Racharran angled
his bow and drew the string to his cheek, let fly, and saw his shaft
pierce an armored shoulder. The Breaker slowed, a hand falling free
of its hold, and Rannach's arrow drove down between pauldron and
helmet. The Breaker jerked, arching back from the slope, and fell
away. The body dropped and was trodden down as more rushed to the
climb, careless of their dead. They seemed to Racharran not at all
like men, but entirely insectile in their grim determination. He
thought that did the warriors slay enough, the rest would likely use
the bodies for a ramp and climb the cliff on a ladder of corpses.
Save the Matawaye would run out of arrows before that, and it come to
hand-to-hand fighting. He nocked a second shaft and took aim.
"Look! What do they do?"
Rannach pointed to where Breakers turned their weirdling beasts from
the mass. Two groups there were, each of hundreds, riding off in
opposite directions along the line of hills.
"They seek to flank us," Racharran answered grimly. "They
look to find an undefended place to climb."
He turned, shouting for Colun, and indicated the departing Breakers.
"Leave them to us." Colun bellowed for Baran to join him.
"We'll crush them like bugs."
He summoned his Grannach and sent a runner across the blockage of the
pass to advise those on the farther side. Soon two parties of the
Stone Folk went trotting to meet the flankers. Racharran sent a
hundred warriors with each group.
And still the Breakers continued their assault.
"Shall we win?"
Arrhyna stroked absently at her rounded belly, staring toward the
pass, her head cocked as she listened to the clamor.
"It's in the Maker's hands now." Marjia stroked a stone
against the edges of a blade. "I pray he favors us, but … "
She shrugged.
Arrhyna looked down at her, seeing a face so calm, it seemed carved
of stone. "I'd know how Rannach fares," she said. "I'd
go to him."
"No!" Marjia looked up from her sharpening. "That's
warriors' work up there. And you've a child to think of."
"You fought." Arrhyna scowled her frustration. "You
told me of the fighting in the caves."
"That was necessity." Marjia inspected the blade and found
it satisfactory; sheathed it on her ample waist. "And do they
get past the men, I'll fight them again. But they've not yet, and so
we've hope still."
"Have we?" Arrhyna sighed and made herself settle beside
the tranquil Grannach woman. "I told Rannach to have faith, but
the moon shall be full this night. And Morrhyn said that was when …
" She, in her turn, shrugged.
"Then there's still time, no?" Marjia took Arrhyna's hands.
"Perhaps Morrhyn shall wake soon and show us the way."
Arrhyna clutched the comfort of the hard, warm hands and looked into
Marjia's blue eyes. "Even does he," she said softly,
ashamed her faith faltered, "how can so many escape? He spoke of
a new land but, even does he wake, I cannot understand how we shall
reach it."
"The ways of the Maker are mysterious," Marjia said. "And
not always for us to comprehend. That's the duty of your wakanishas,
no? Perhaps our duty is only to believe, to have faith even where it
seems impossible hope can exist."
"Like here?" Arrhyna smiled sadly.
"Yes, like here." Marjia answered her smile with one more
confident. "Now, do we prepare food? Our men will grow
famished—fighting's hungry work."
Arrhyna nodded: better to work—to do what she could—than
wonder if Rannach lived, or if at any moment Breakers should appear.
Motsos grunted as the arrow struck his shoulder, then cursed as his
hand went numb and dropped his bow. The Maker-bedamned Breakers
should not have the range—surely their bows could not flight
shafts so far.
Unless …
He jumped back as a second arrow whistled past his head, and cursed
again. Along the line he saw an Aparhaso stagger, a bright yellow
shaft protruding from his throat. Then a crimson shaft, and a black,
sprouted from the man's chest and he fell down.
"Magic!" Motsos risked standing to shout his warning.
"There's magic in their arrows!"
He heard his call taken up and passed along, and others scream out
the same as they realized a new power was in play. He sat down and
twisted his head to study the arrow thrusting from his shoulder. It
was a pale blue, very much like the color of the sky, and as he
grasped it, he wondered if the head was barbed.
When he tugged, he got his answer: yes. Fire ignited in his shoulder
and he cursed some more and let go; drew his knife and gritted his
teeth and set to cutting through the shaft. When he was done, his
left arm hung useless by his side and he could no longer feel his
fingers or move them: he hoped the head was not poisoned. He
stretched on his belly and crawled back to the rim, intent on
retrieving his bow. It was too good a weapon to leave—a full
winter in the making; the work of a peaceful winter when the world
turned as it should and Ket-Ta-Witko had been safe.
The bow was fallen into a gap made by the Grannach. Motsos bellied
his way forward and reached out.
His fingers were closed tight on the bow when the arrow pierced his
eye. His last thought was that now he would see Bylas and the others
again.
"Get back!" Racharran took a fistful of bis son's shirt and
yanked Rannach from the cliff edge. "There's magic in their
shafts!"
Rannach struggled free, his face dark with anger. "Then how can
we fight them?" He nocked an arrow even as he spoke. "Must
we stand back and let them climb?"
Racharran clasped his arm lest he go back. "We fire only from
cover! Only from safety!"
"And grant them the rim?" Rannach shook his head, breaking
free. "They'll be on us like ants over honey. They'll take the
hills and enter the Meeting Ground."
"And swifter are we dead." Racharran moved in front of his
son. "Listen! Use your bow—yes! But only from a safe
place, eh?"
Rannach smiled sourly. "Where's safe here, Father?"
"Use the broken stone." Racharran stepped aside and looked
around. The cliff top was wide, and where it ran back toward the
Meeting Ground there were stunted trees and scrubby bushes. The
reinforcements waited there, watching the Breakers' bright arrows
loft above the rim. He ran to them, thinking the Grannach's
battle-axes should be useful now, and wondering how his allies fared.
His orders were swiftly issued and as swiftly obeyed: the waiting men
were grateful for occupation and set to work eagerly.
Soon screens of bush and ramshackle bulwarks of felled timber were
set along the rimrock. Little of it was sound enough to halt the
bright shafts, but it provided some measure of cover for the People's
bowmen. And Rannach was right: did the Breakers reach the rim, all
was lost.
Racharran took up his own bow and found himself a place. The sun was
warm on his back, and when he glanced up he saw the bright burning
disc was gone past its zenith and moved toward the west. Soon the
Moon of the Turning Year would climb above the eastern horizon, and
then night fall.
He wondered how long that night might be.
He loosed an arrow and ducked as three shafts tore into the screen of
bushes. They were so colorful, like the armor the Breakers wore. He
thought of those he'd seen, and how beautiful they were, and wondered
at that—for it seemed somehow an obscenity that people so
handsome should be so evil.
He fired again and risked a downward observation, cursing aloud at
what he saw.
Too many of the Matawaye were forced back from the rim, and the
Breakers climbed easier now. More were on the scarp, moving
inexorably upward, and soon it must surely come to hand-to-hand
fighting. And then … Racharran cursed again, for then surely all
was lost.
Save …
Morrhyn, wake up!
His mouth and throat were dry and his eyes awhile unfocused. He felt
both horribly weary and invigorated, as if he returned from a long
and arduous journey and must soon begin another. He groaned and
pushed the furs away and felt hands on him, a wetness on his parched
tongue.
He swallowed and groaned and forced his eyes to see.
Lhyn's face hovered above him and he smiled. She looked so lovely;
and also afraid, as if hope tantalized her and she not quite dare
believe it.
He said, "We shall be saved," and wondered if that was his
voice croaking. He raised a trembling hand to the cup and drank
again, and then spoke clearer, louder: "I've seen the way and we
must be ready."
Lhyn smiled as Kahteney's face appeared above her shoulder. "How?"
the Lakanti asked.
Morrhyn shook his head and said, "There's not the time for the
telling; later."
Lhyn asked, "When?"
And he told her with absolute certainty, "When the Moon of the
Turning Year shines on the Maker's Mountain."
Kahteney said, "That might not be soon enough."
Morrhyn frowned. "How so?" Then gasped. "How long have
I dreamed?"
Lhyn said, "Days."
"The Breakers are come," Kahteney said. "They're
beyond the hills now and coming up the cliffs. They've magic in their
arrows and our warriors lose the advantage."
Morrhyn pushed the furs aside, careless of modesty. "What's the
hour?"
Kahteney said, "Dusk. Soon the moon will light the Mountain."
Morrhyn looked about for clothing. "Then we've truly little
time." He felt his heart race.
Even now, when the Maker had shown the fulfillment of his promise,
there was still doubt, still that sharp knife edge of time to walk.
No, he told himself as he dragged on breeches, I cannot doubt now. I
must not! He showed me the way—he would not be so cruel as to
show me that and then take it away.
Through the folds of his shirt he heard Kahteney ask, "What
shall we do?"
He answered as his head emerged: "Strike camp. Ready the People
for departure. Send word to the warriors—tell them they must
hold the Breakers awhile longer and then fall back as the moon lights
the Mountain. They must be
here"—he struck the
ground in emphasis—"when the time comes; else they'll be
left behind."
Hadduth spoke for the first time: "I'll take that word."
He rose on the saying and ducked through the lodgeflap and was gone
before Morrhyn had further chance to speak.
Morrhyn grunted, tugging on his boots. Doubt's dog barked as the skin
fell down on Hadduth's retreating back. He had sooner kept the Tachyn
Dreamer with him, but it was too late now—he could only hope
his fears not be realized.
Lhyn said, "Shall you eat something?" And he smiled at her
and shook his head, saying, "I've not the time. Nor you—we
must tell the People, that they be ready."
She nodded and he rose, hesitating a moment as his legs trembled and
threatened to give way under him. Lhyn took his arm and he rested
against her for a moment, and briefly thought of all the things that
might have been and now never could. Then he stood erect and pushed
the lodgeflap aside and went out onto the Meeting Ground.
Bats fluttered in the dying light, and already stars showed overhead.
The moon hung massive above the hills, huge and bright and yellow,
paling the fires that burned. There were folk outside, waiting, all
their faces lit with expectation as he appeared; waiting for the
Prophet whose word perhaps came too late.
He raised his arms, even though the only sounds were those of battle
and me barking of excited dogs and the whickering of horses that
wondered why they were not ridden in the fight.
He began to speak, telling them what they must do.
"There are too many!" Colun rested panting on his grounded
ax. The crescent head was bloodied and his shirt and breeches were
all dark with gore. "The Maker damn them, but they forced us
back!"
"The Stone Shapers?" Racharran asked.
"Did what they could." Colun wiped a hand through a beard
all matted and bloody. "They sent the cliffs down, but still the
cursed Breakers came. When Baran toppled stone on them, those still
living rode farther along the foot, and we cannot match those beasts
they ride for speed. They outdistanced us and found a place."
"They're on the rim?" Racharran peered into the darkening
night. "How far away?"
"We slowed them somewhat." Colun smiled grimly. "The
Stone Shapers cracked the hills—put a ravine between us and
them they'll find hard to cross. But sooner or later they will; and
the Shapers are exhausted. There's a limit to how much stone magic
they can work before it drains them." He gestured to where Baran
squatted. The golan sat with down-hung head, his shoulders heaving as
he breathed.
Racharran mouthed a curse and asked, "How many?"
Colun answered, "Hundreds, and more coming. They bring their
beasts up now."
"The Maker help us." Racharran sighed and clapped a hand to
Colun's broad shoulder. "You did well, my friend, but now … "
"Save the Maker aid us, save Morrhyn deliver his promise … "
Colun shrugged, glancing up to where the full moon climbed the sky.
"We're lost."
Racharran cursed again, then shouted for Rannach.
When his son came, he said, "Listen, the Breakers are on the
cliff, and before long … " He imparted Colun's news. Rannach
scowled and asked, "What do we do?"
"You," Racharran said, "take our reinforcements and
fall back on the Meeting Ground. Take Perico and Kanseah with you,
them and their men."
"Perico's dead," Rannach said. "I saw him fall."
"The Maker accept his soul." Racharran took his son's hand.
"You take the Aparhaso. Form a battle line around the Meeting
Ground."
"I'd sooner stay here," Rannach said. "With you."
"No." Racharran smiled. "I need a man I can trust down
there."
Obstinately, Rannach said, "Send Yazte. Or Chakthi."
Colun shook his head. "The Breakers will come from that
direction too."
"The Lakanti and the Tachyn will hold that side," Racharran
said, urgent now. "And I'll hold this with our Commacht."
"And we Grannach," Colun said.
"And the Grannach," Racharran allowed. "But I'd know
the defenseless ones are warded. I charge you with this duty,
Rannach. Do you hold the Meeting Ground secure."
For a moment it seemed Rannach would argue, but then he ducked his
head and said, "As my akaman commands."
Racharran said, "As your father asks, eh?"
"Yes," Rannach said. "And you?"
"I'll hold here," Racharran said, "as long as we can.
Then we'll fall back. The Meeting Ground shall be our last line of
defense."
"Save," Colun said, "that Morrhyn wakes."
Racharran said, "Save that, yes."
Rannach only grunted and clutched his father's hand. Then he turned
and ran to where the reinforcements waited, shouting for them to
follow him.
"He grows up," Colun said.
"Yes." Racharran's smile grew melancholy. "But not
likely to old age."
"Perhaps Morrhyn shall wake." Colun shrugged. "Even
now."
"Perhaps." Racharran looked at the moon. Its light planed
his face with shadows. "But he cuts it fine."
He nocked his last arrow and went stealthy to the rim, intent the
shaft should count. The defenders ran short now, and even did they
employ the Breakers' shafts, those were fashioned for longer bows and
clumsy fired from the shorter Matawaye bows. Soon there would be no
more arrows—nor Stone Shapers to send falling rock—and
the Breakers would gain the rim and it come to close fighting.
Racharran tossed his bow behind him and did the only thing he could
think of now, which was to shoulder loose the woody barricade and
send it tumbling down the cliff. Then he moved back, drawing hatchet
and knife, and waited for the first Breakers to surmount the rimrock.
Dohnse saw Hadduth crouch down at Chakthi's side, his mouth close
against the akaman's ear. He wondered what news the wakanisha
brought, and felt a sudden rush of hope when Chakthi's mouth
stretched out in a smile and he nodded vigorously. Akaman and Dreamer
clasped hands and then Hadduth went scuttling away, back toward the
Meeting Ground. Chakthi, still beaming, beckoned Dohnse to him.
"Morrhyn has woken!" Chakthi's hand grabbed hard on
Dohnse's wrist. "When the moon lights the Maker's Mountain, he
says we shall be saved!"
"Praise the Maker!" Dohnse smiled: there
was still
hope. "Praise Morrhyn!"
"Yes, praise them both." Chakthi loosed his grip and
pointed across the walled pass. "Go tell Racharran. He trusts
you, no?"
Dohnse nodded. "I think he does. But what do I tell him?"
"That—" Chakthi paused a moment. He smiled still, and
it seemed to Dohnse a smile of triumph, of promises met and prayers
answered. Dohnse wondered why it made him think of bared fangs. "Tell
him that we must hold the rimrock that long—until the moon
lights the Maker's Mountain—and then fall back. It must be done
swift—Morrhyn will see the defenseless ones safe through—"
Chakthi paused again, as if gathering his thoughts. "I know not
how, only that Hadduth told me Morrhyn knows the means, and we must
hold until then. So—tell Racharran that I shall hold this side
until then. And does he hold the other, all shall be well."
Dohnse nodded. Inside his head he voiced a prayer of thanks to the
Maker, and to Morrhyn. Aloud, he asked, "And Yazte and his
Lakanti; the Grannach?"
Chakthi's smile flattened. "I'll tell Yazte to take them back,"
he said. His smile widened again. "Tell Racharran I'd make good
all our past differences. I'd earn back my honor: that I claim that
right! Tell him we Tachyn shall hold this side alone—so that
the Lakanti and the Grannach have a better chance at Morrhyn's
promise. Now go!"
Dohnse said, "I'll come back to fight beside you."
Chakthi shrugged carelessly: "If you can. If not, go with the
Commacht."
Dohnse nodded and ran to where the Commacht stood.
The Moon of the Turning Year climbed the sky. Morrhyn watched, unsure
whether he willed it to rise faster or slower—to bring swifter
the promise, or delay the departure that more might live. He knew it
could not be long before the Breakers gained the hills and came down
onto the Meeting Ground; he prayed there be enough time.
He clutched his furs closer as the night wind skirled sparks up from
the fires and brought the sounds of combat to his ears. He wondered
if he truly heard so clear, or if it was only imagination that belled
out the roaring of the Breakers' weirdling beasts and the clatter of
steel, the shouts and screams of dying men.
Around him in a wide, expectant mass, the People waited.
The lodges were struck and packed, the horses eager, the dogs darting
and barking, knowing some great movement was afoot. Children cried,
unnerved by what they felt and could not understand.
Rannach and Kanseah and all their men stood in a wide ring about the
Meeting Ground, and it seemed to Morrhyn that he could smell their
anticipation like sweat on the wind.
The moon climbed up—so slowly. It lit the Meeting Ground and
spread its light over the hills and slowly, slowly, carried that
light toward the Maker's Mountain, which stood yet faint against the
stars.
Lhyn touched his elbow and he smiled at her, seeing how the moonlight
shone on her hair. Arrhyna was with her; and Marjia, with all the
Grannach women and their rocky little children; and Nemeth and Ziel;
and all their belongings with them, horses and dogs and loaded
travois.
Waiting.
He prayed they all come safely through.
And watched the moon pursue its slow ascent and listened to the
sounds of battle.
And the distant barking of doubt's dog, which—now, when all
hung poised on the moment of the promise—he had no time to
listen to.
"Tell Yazte to go." Racharran smiled gratefully at Dohnse.
"Tell him to take his Lakanti and all the Grannach down. Does
Chakthi wish to gain honor, then let him. Tell him I'll hold here as
long as I can."
Dohnse said, "I'd stay with you."
Racharran clasped his hand. Said: "You honor me with that; but,
no. Better you take back my word."
Dohnse said, "I'll take it and come back. Save you forbid me."
Racharran said, "I'll not forbid you. But why?"
Dohnse shrugged. "We'll not all leave this place, eh? I think
that I shall likely die this night, and I'd sooner die amongst the
Commacht than with Chakthi."
Racharran said, "As you wish. But listen—not all of us
shall die, and do you live, you've a place amongst the Commacht. If
you wish."
Dohnse said, "I do," and smiled and ran away, back to where
Chakthi waited for his message.
The Breakers gained the cliff top now, and for every one that fell it
seemed three more clambered over the rimrock.
They came relentless, careless of their own dead, and the defenders
grew weary. Matawaye and Grannach fell, and still bright arrows flew,
and the defenders of Ket-Ta-Witko fell back—and fell dead—and
fought the invaders down every bloody footstep pacing out the
invaders' advance toward the Meeting Ground.
Racharran's arms ached, his muscles throbbing as he wielded hatchet
and knife against armor that deflected his blows, save when he
chanced his life and went in close to strike where armor joined and
left an opening through which he could drive a blade, or drive his
hatchet down on helm or upswung, sword-bearing arm.
But he fought on—all the warriors fought on—even as the
roaring of the Breakers' beasts came echoing down the night to tell
him they'd crossed the Grannach's ravines to attack from the flanks
and came down out of the hills to close around the Meeting Ground.
Colun fought beside him, and he knew the Grannach creddan wearied no
less than he. It was odd to see a Grannach wearied, but Colun's ax
swung slower and, more often than not, his blows failed to cut the
rainbow armor that came flooding over the rimrock so that he must
hack and pound, and grunt and gasp at the effort.
"Fall back!" Racharran shouted as best he could out of
lungs all robbed of wind, and a throat parched dry. "Fall back
to the Meeting Ground!"
His people needed not much urging: the Breakers supplied that goad,
like a floodtide ramming against a fragile dam. Like some terrible,
inexorable force that washed and ground down anything standing
against it. Racharran ran with them, back from the cliff edge over
which Breakers now clambered unhindered, away from the approaching
roars of blood-hungry beasts.
He looked at Colun and said, "Go back. I'll hold them."
Colun said, "No! I'll die here with you."
"No!" He set his knife to the Grannach's chest. "You're
creddan of all the Grannach now. Take your people to Morrhyn's
promise! You owe them that! They'll need you, where you go."
Colun said, "And you? Shall the Commacht not need their akaman?
Your People not need a leader?"
"Rannach is akaman now." Racharran pricked his knife harder
against Colun's chest. "Tell the People that, eh? Tell my son;
and tell Lhyn. But go!
Now!"
Colun stared at him, ignoring the blade, and asked, "Is this
truly your wish?"
Racharran said, "Yes! Now do you go, or shall it all be a waste?
Look—you see the moon?"
Colun raised his eyes: the Moon of the Turning Year shone yellow
above them. The disc stood high now and its light struck the Maker's
Mountain bright as the sun at noon.
The snowcapped pinnacle glittered, shining pristine. It blazed under
the moon's brilliance like a torch defying darkness. Its peak shone
as white-hot against the Grannach's eyes as smelting metal, its
flanks all lit like white bridal robes: all full of promise.
Racharran said, "Go!"
And Colun ducked his head and took his old friend's hand and said,
"Yes; do you command it."
"I do. Take your people to safety; and can I not join you, watch
over my people. Be the Stone Guardians again."
Colun said, "I will," and called his folk to him and led
them toward the Meeting Ground and the promise.
42—Exodus and Betrayal
Morrhyn raised his arms, widespread, as if he'd embrace the moonlit
Mountain. Limned bright now by the Moon of the Turning Year, the
pinnacle appeared larger than ever, rising vast and majestic against
the sky. It seemed to swell, inflated and enlarged by the moon,
climbing the night so that its bulk hid the stars and all the
surrounding hills. It seemed that only the Mountain and the moon
existed, twin promises of escape, of refuge and salvation. And
between those enormities, under them as if quelled by their majesty,
there was silence. The light that descended from above and which
reflected off the Mountain seemed to leach out all sound. The clamor
of the battle faded and the animals fell silent, and none of the
waiting People spoke.
Morrhyn began to chant, soft at first but then louder, his voice
rising in a shout that echoed over the Meeting Ground, and all the
People took it up and raised their voices in unison, in prayer to the
Maker that he grant his promise and take them away.
Then it seemed white fire burned about the peak, as if the eternal
snow ignited and blazed, a beacon so bright that even the moon was
dulled beneath its radiance. Morrhyn fell silent, and the People with
him, as if that enormous light stole their voices. But none took
their eyes from the Mountain, even as tears formed and it seemed they
must be blinded.
So all saw the beacon swell and from it come a great arcing ray of
brilliance that fell on the Meeting Ground and all the people there.
Shadows flung long, and men and women clutched one another in hope
and fear. It was if a gate opened where no gate could be, nor any
opening that men understood, for it was an opening in the very fabric
of existence, as if within the light the air itself was rent,
exposing a wide hole—at first black within the radiance, but
then clearer, so that through it they saw …
… Another land: a new and promised land where mountains rose under
a sky of pure blue and the grass stretched out lush, and clean rivers
ran. It was at first as if the gate afforded such a view as an eagle
might own, high and wide. But then that vista hurtled closer, as if
the eagle stooped, and through the gate they saw the grass as if it
were but a few short steps away, and they needed only pace out that
distance to be there.
None moved. The light burned from off the Maker's Mountain, and at
the center of the Meeting Ground the gate stood, white light arching
over the earth of Ket-Ta-Witko, over the soil of the new land beyond.
Sound returned: the dreadful roaring of the Breakers' beasts and the
clatter 'of steel, the shouts and screams that spoke of dying.
Morrhyn shouted, "Go! Go through!"
But still none moved, only stood awed.
Morrhyn took Lhyn's shoulder and pushed her forward. "Go!"
She shook her head.
"The Maker fulfills his promise!" He shouted into her face.
"Shall you ignore it now?"
Again she shook her head and softly said, "Let yours be the
first foot to tread that place."
"I cannot." He let go her shoulder. "I must wait here
for the last to come."
She said, "Then I'll wait with you."
He looked to Arrhyna, but she in turn shook her head and said, "I
go with Rannach."
He turned about. All around, faces paled and stark in the brilliance
stared at the gate. A horse stamped and whickered as if impatient
with the awestruck People. Almost, Morrhyn cursed them for their
reticence, fearing their reverence should delay them and even now see
them fall victim to the approaching Breakers.
He turned to Kahteney. "Shall you be the first, brother?"
Kahteney smiled and shook his head. "I wait for Yazte."
Hadduth stood watching and Morrhyn turned to him. He'd sooner not see
the Tachyn Dreamer be the first, but someone had to take that step
and he knew it could not be he. He did not understand how he knew,
but still the knowledge was there: he must wait until the last
moment, else the gate close. He gestured to Hadduth.
"No." Hadduth stood rigid, his eyes dark pools that held no
expression. "I am not worthy."
"In the Maker's name, what is that?" Morrhyn turned as
Yazte came puffing up, his battle-bloodied Lakanti with him.
"The new land." Morrhyn clasped the akaman's wrist. It was
slick with blood. "The Maker opens the way for us. Shall you
lead the People through?"
Yazte frowned. "That's surely your honor. Or Racharran's. Save
..
Lhyn saw his expression and asked, "Where is he?"
"Holding the line." Yazte gestured with a hatchet whose
blade was all stained dark. "Falling back. Chakthi fights with
him."
Morrhyn pointed at the gate and the Lakanti shook his head. "Let
the defenseless ones go through. I'll wait here until they're safe;
wait for Racharran."
High across the night the gate burned white. Through it the grass
shifted, rustling softly as wind rippled the luxuriant growth.
Morrhyn groaned—this was unexpected agony, that the Maker open
the way and the People prevaricate.
Then Colun came trotting at the head of his Grannach. He stared at
the gate, and then at Morrhyn.
"Why do you wait?"
"I must," Morrhyn said. "And the rest … afraid, I
think. None will take the first step."
Colun frowned and muttered, "Flatlanders!" Then shouted:
"Marjia?"
His wife came forward. In the gate's light her yellow hair was
silver. Colun said, "Our possessions?" and she turned
slightly that he might see the bundle she carried, which was all they
had brought out of their hills.
Colun looked at Morrhyn, a question in his deepset eyes.
Morrhyn nodded and said, "Do you go through, then?"
"Is this your wish?" Colun asked.
"Do you go through, then perhaps the rest shall follow."
Morrhyn smiled. "And it seems fitting the Stone Folk be the
first, no?"
"First or last." Colun peered through the gate. "Save
someone goes it would seem you flatlanders shall stand gawping until
the Breakers come. So … " He hefted his ax. "Grannach, to
me! We go to a new land, praise the Maker."
He took Marjia's hand and walked into the gate, his Grannach behind.
For an instant their shapes wavered, like figures blurred in heat
haze. Then they were solid again, walking out onto grass that crushed
beneath their feet, staring around with growing smites, their eyes
wide with wonder and delight.
When all the Grannach were through, Colun looked back and shouted,
"Can you hear me?"
His voice came as if from afar, but nonetheless clear. Morrhyn called
back, "Yes. What do you see?"
"A fine new land." Colun swept his ax out in a wide
gesture. "A land like Ket-Ta-Witko must have been when first the
Maker birthed us. There are mountains over there."
Morrhyn could not see where he pointed. The arch, of the gate allowed
only a limited, view, as if a lodgeflap were raised on a new morning,
on
a new world.
"So?" Colun bellowed. "Do you flatlanders come on? Or
shall you deny the Maker's gift?"
Morrhyn turned again to Yazte. "Go through. Lead the People to
salvation."
Yazte hesitated and said, "Racharran?"
Morrhyn said, "I'll wait for him.
But you—for the Maker's sake, for his love!—take them
through!"
Yazte puffed out his plump cheeks and shrugged. Then he beckoned Roza
to him and raised his hatchet. "Bring up the horses!" His
voice was a roar. "We go to find Morrhyn's promised land! Ware,
Colun—the horses come!"
The Grannach scattered as the Lakanti drove the horses through. The
herds were gathered together, and the animals of the Commacht and the
Aparhaso and the Naiche and the Tachyn went with those of the Lakanti
in a great running mass that spread out across the sunlit prairie,
galloping as if glad to be free of the Breakers' threat, charging
with tossing heads and a great thunderous pounding of hooves to where
a river curved blue across the green. Yazte raised his eyes to where
the Maker's Mountain shone in the night and made gesture of
obeisance, then walked under the white-blazing arch with Roza at his
side and Kahteney close behind, and all his warriors and their women
and children and dogs following.
It was as if his safe passing shattered the People's fear: they
surged forward, vying now to pass under the arch of the gate and find
salvation.
For a while all was tumult. Dogs barked joyfully and children, woken
from restive sleep, began to howl. Morrhyn watched them go, and gave
thanks to the Maker for this great and impossible gift.
The Meeting Ground emptied. He looked about and saw Lhyn and Arrhyna,
only; waiting still. He supposed Hadduth must have gone with the
rest.
He said, "You can do nothing here. Go through."
They hesitated, watching his face.
He said, "The rest will come soon. Rannach and Racharran with
them, the Maker willing."
Lhyn said, "And if they are not?"
He smiled tentatively. "I'll wait for them. But you must go
through. What point to delay? Better you go set up the lodges, eh?
They'll be hungry when they come."
Still they hesitated, and he said: "The Maker opens us a way,
but there's not so much time. This gate must close, lest the Breakers
follow us."
Lhyn said, "And does it close before they come? What if
Racharran and Rannach are trapped here?"
He looked into her frightened eyes and said, "Shall you deny the
Maker, then? Shall it all be for nothing? All Racharran's done; and
Rannach? Think you they'd want you to wait and risk your lives? I
tell you—no! Better you be safe and they not have that concern,
eh?"
She stared at him, unmoving.
"When they come," he said, "it shall be swift. I'll
see them through—my word on that. You go, and await them
there."
He stabbed a finger at the gate, where laughing Matawaye and Grannach
raised their faces to a blue and sun-bright sky. Some knelt to kiss
the ground; some went to free horses of the travois; others set to
capturing the loose animals.
He said, "Do you love them, go!"
Arrhyna glanced at Lhyn. The older woman looked past Morrhyn to the
hills surrounding the Meeting Ground. Behind the radiance of the
Maker's Mountain and the bright brilliance of the burning gate, the
hills were indistinct. But the wind carried the sounds of fighting
now. Morrhyn took Lhyn's arm and turned her away from that: turned
her toward the promise. She struggled against his grip and he thought
how much he loved her; and took her other arm and pushed her bodily
toward the gate.
He said, "You'll not die."
And shoved her through.
She cried out, tottering and falling onto her back on soft green
grass. For a moment she stared indignantly. Morrhyn turned away and
took Arrhyna's hand and led her to the opening. She looked at him a
moment and said, "Send Rannach safe through, eh?" And he
ducked his head and loosed her hand and watched as she stepped under
the arch into the new land.
Then he looked away, narrowing his eyes against the brightness, and
waited for the rest, praying they come timely.
The Breakers owned the hills now.
They came up over the rimrock in a kaleidoscope flood. And out of the
deeper hills spreading back around the Meeting Ground, they came with
a wave of their beasts driven before them by the beastmasters, the
bright-armored warriors behind. The fangs and claws and hides of the
beasts were stained with the blood of the defenders, and the swords
and pikes and spears the Breakers wielded shone no cleaner under the
moon.
Rannach withdrew: he had no other choice—save to die—and
runners had brought word the promised exodus was begun.
He could see the Maker's Mountain shining godly against the sky, and
the great lance of light it sent down onto the Meeting Ground. It
seemed a vast white bonfire burned there, lofting up from where once
the Council fires had burned and he been judged and exiled. It seemed
the People walked into that fire and did not emerge. Gone to
Morrhyn's promised land, he supposed. And wondered if he should find
that place, or die in Ket-Ta-Witko.
Were he not wed, he thought he would choose that latter: it was a
sorry thing to give up the land to the Breakers.
But he was, and Arrhyna carried his child, and that imposed on him
another duty. So he gave up notions of honorable death and its
consequent atonement for his sins and shouted that all fall back on
the Meeting Ground, on the light that burned there and the white arch
that blazed and swallowed the People into the Maker's promise.
"So, brother, we fight together at last."
Chakthi wiped a bloodied knife against his breeches and smiled at
Racharran.
The Commacht akaman smiled back. "In defense of Ket-Ta-Witko,
brother. Is this not better?"
The Maker's burning promise set shadows about Chakthi's eyes and
whitened his smiling teeth like a wolfs fangs. He nodded, then
shouted, "Ware, brother!"
A Breaker, armor red as fresh-spilled blood, charged from the bushes.
Racharran ducked under the sweeping sword and swung his hatchet
against the plated belly. The Breaker grunted and bent, and Chakthi
darted in to thrust his knife through the divide of helmet and
neckguard. The Breaker gasped. Racharran struck again with his
hatchet and the red armor darkened as blood spilled out.
"And we fight well, eh?" Chakthi worked his blade in again
and the Breaker stilled.
Racharran said, "We do. But"—he gestured at the
undergrowth—"best we fall back, eh?"
"As you command," Chakthi said.
The bushes swayed as bodies armored, and bodies furred and scaled,
pushed through. Down the steep slopes of the hills lay corpses: more
of the People than the Breakers. Racharran shouted the order and the
defenders withdrew.
Dohnse spat, thinking that his mouth was surely too dry to form
saliva, and wished they might just turn and run for the promise
blazing at the center of the Meeting Ground. But he had sworn
allegiance to Racharran and could not, now, quit the akaman. Nor, was
he honest, would he: not until all the People were gone safe to the
new land Morrhyn promised. It seemed only right he be amongst the
last, and hoped he might be.
Nor could he, even now, forget those looks Chakthi had exchanged with
Hadduth, or the doubt he had expressed to Racharran. He hoped—prayed,
even—he was wrong, but he could not forget; or quite trust
Chakthi.
He clutched his hatchet and the pike he'd taken from a slain Breaker,
and moved back toward the tempting light of the Meeting Ground.
Rannach brought his men onto the trampled grass and ringed them
around the gate.
It was strange, that blazing white archway, that from one side looked
onto springtime plains lit by a friendly yellow sun, and from the
other was only a white flickering in the noisy night, as if the moon
were reflected off water. Through the one side he could see Arrhyna
and Lhyn staring hopefully back at him; and Yazte and Colun, and the
People already gone through. He smiled at his wife and his mother and
waited for his father.
Morrhyn said, "They come! Look!"
The wakanisha pointed across the Meeting Ground, and Rannach saw the
last of the warriors come spilling down from the foothills. Racharran
and Chakthi spurred them on, the last of the last, shouting for the
men to group on the gate.
He gripped his weapons tighter then, for close behind came beasts and
Breakers, rushing down the slopes swift as charging buffalo, or
avalanches in winter. He shouted encouragement and wished his arrows
were not all spent, or that all the horses had not gone through the
gate, that he might charge to the attack.
But he could not—only hold and wait and pray.
Morrhyn said, "Go through!" and Rannach shook his head.
"Now!" Morrhyn grasped his shoulder, propelling him toward
the gate. "You've a wife waiting for you there, and a child to
be born. The first in the new land! Go!"
Rannach said, "My father … "
"Comes!" Morrhyn thrust a hand to where Racharran ran for
the gate. "See? Now go! Call up your men and take them through."
Rannach looked into the Dreamer's blue stare and opened his mouth to
argue. Morrhyn set a finger on his lips and said, "The People
shall need leaders in the new land, and you shall be one. Now go, for
the Maker's sake!"
Rannach wiped his mouth, stared toward where his father came, and
said, "What of you?"
"The gate closes after me." Morrhyn's face was urgent as
his voice. "I'll see them safely through and none of the
Breakers."
Rannach nodded and turned toward the gate. Arrhyna stood there,
beckoning. He shouted for his men to join him and pointed at the
arch.
"Go through! Now!"
They went and he clasped Morrhyn's hand. "Your word my father
shall be safe?"
"The Maker willing." Morrhyn nodded.
Rannach looked a last time to the running figures and then flung
himself through the gate. Arrhyna came into his arms, careless of the
blood that decorated his shirt and breeches, his skin, and she held
him close. Lhyn touched his arm and stared back through the opening
of reality's fabric. He put an arm around his mother's shoulders, and
all three watched what they could of Ket-Ta-Witko's final drama.
It was flight only now, and what defense they put up desperate and
running. Ket-Ta-Witko was lost to them, but the new land waited
beyond the gate. It was the promise of the lodgefire's warmth on a
winter night when the wind howled and flung blizzards at the
wanderer, save the blizzard was the Breakers and the howling that of
their beasts. It was the log a drowning man clutches in the flood,
save that log burned white and was a gift to all, and the flood was
rainbow-armored and furred and fanged and scaled and clawed. They
ran, spurred on by Morrhyn's shouts to efforts greater than seemed
possible, when limbs wearied and ached from the fighting and breath
came short. Commacht held up limping Tachyn, and Tachyn with
streaming wounds supported injured Commacht. There was but the one
shared purpose: to reach the gate.
None hesitated—only went through as Morrhyn pointed the way and
fell thankful into the arms of loved ones and brothers, or simply
collapsed onto the grass and wept thanks to the Maker and his
Prophet.
Racharran and Chakthi were the last. Them and Dohnse, so that in the
confusion he was the only one to see what happened.
They all bore wounds. The pike Dohnse had taken he used as a staff:
his breeches hung tattered about his left leg, where claws had scored
deep lines that filled his boot with blood, and the sword cut across
his shoulder and chest burned like fire. Chakthi's face was
blood-masked and he limped on a cut leg. Racharran supported him, for
all the Commacht akaman was in no better condition. His shirt was
severed crossways over his ribs and flesh flapped loose there, his
right arm leaving a trail of droplets, and one eye was swollen shut,
blood coursing from the cut to paint his cheek.
The Commacht akaman glanced around, scanning the slopes as best he
could to be sure none were left behind.
Chakthi said, "Come, brother, we're the last."
Racharran said, "You're sure?"
"Yes! There are no more left alive."
Racharran turned his damaged face to Dohnse and asked him the same
question, and Dohnse nodded and said, "I see no others."
Morrhyn shouted that they come and Racharran turned his head one last
time to peer all bloody at the hills. "Then best we go, eh?"
They began to run as best they could toward the light of the promise.
Racharran held Chakthi up; Dohnse came after, casting swift glances
back over his shoulder.
He saw the first of the great lionbeasts come snarling down through
the trees and bushes that footed the hills and shouted a warning.
Racharran grunted and forced his legs to faster pace, holding
Chakthi's left arm across his shoulders, his right supportive around
the Tachyn's waist. Chakthi hobbled beside; Dohnse brought up the
rear.
He saw the weirdling beast come charging over the open ground and
shouted, "Go on! I'll take it!"
The creature ran slavering and snarling at them, and he marveled at
how large it was—big as a horse—and took the pike and
grounded the butt, shouting his defiance.
The beast saw him and its jaws gaped wide, all filled with knifeblade
teeth, and he knelt, groaning as his wounded leg blazed pain, and
held the pike firm.
The beast roared and sprang. Dohnse watched stark-eyed as it rose up
against the light the moon and the Mountain threw across the Meeting
Ground, and saw it fill the sky.
He rolled aside as it came down on him; down onto the blade of the
pike, which pierced its chest and drove through its ribs under the
beast's own weight and came out from its back.
Wincing, he clambered upright, clutching his hatchet. The beast
curled about the pike, snapping at the shaft, legs clawing. Blood
stained its hide black under the brilliance of the Maker's Mountain
and the burning moon. Dohnse turned and stumbled after Racharran and
Chakthi.
And thus saw.
Morrhyn waited by the white arch that rose above the center of the
Meeting Ground. Racharran carried Chakthi toward him.
The Prophet turned as if answering some shout from beyond the gate.
And Chakthi drew a knife and stabbed Racharran.
The Commacht akaman jerked upright. His arms let go of Chakthi and he
staggered a little way aside. He stared at the Tachyn he had called
his brother out of eyes that opened wide in pain and disbelief.
Dohnse saw his mouth move but could not hear what he said because the
moonlit night was too loud with roaring and the shouts of the
Breakers. But he saw Racharran clutch the blade protruding from his
ribs and pull it loose, and then fall onto his knees with blood
coming out his mouth. And Chakthi laugh and—limping no
longer—kick Racharran in the chest. Then resuming his limp, go
to the gate and speak a moment with Morrhyn before going through.
Dohnse went to where Racharran lay.
He cradled Racharran's head, staring aghast at eyes that had already
lost their light and dulled. Racharran coughed, barking gouts of red
and pink-stained bubbles out of a mouth that stretched back from his
teeth, which chattered even as his legs kicked and drummed against
the ground of Ket-Ta-Witko. His body stiffened in Dohnse's arms,
arching up, spine curved so that only his heels and shoulders touched
the soil. Then all his body went limp and he loosed one last
shuddering sigh that whistled into Dohnse's face. And he was dead.
"Dohnse!" Morrhyn's voice seemed to come from a long way
off. "Dohnse, come! Hurry!"
He closed Racharran's dully staring eyes and took up his hatchet.
"Dohnse! Now!"
He rose, shaky on his hurt leg: worse for what he had witnessed. And
thought to pick up Racharran's body and carry it to the new land. But
beasts and Breakers came over the Meeting Ground like a flood, like a
blizzard, and Morrhyn shouted at him to come. And so he only made
Racharran a promise and turned away.
And went through the gate.
It was warm there—as it should be in the Moon of the Turning
Year—and he smelled the sweet scent of the grass and felt the
wind on his face, and saw all the People gathered in a great
wondering mass. And looked back at the arch of white light that rose
over the prairie and saw Morrhyn step through.
The gate closed behind the Prophet.
He came with beasts and Breakers howling on his heels, and the gate
closed.
It was like the snuffing of an ember. There was an arch of brightness
that rose over the grass, white as moon-washed snow against the sky's
blue, and through it could be seen Ket-Ta-Witko's night, lit by the
Moon of the Turning Year, and the invaders charging, hungry to gain
entry.
And then there was nothing. Morrhyn stepped through and the gate
ceased to exist.
Past where it had stood, the grass ran out wide and wind-ruffled. A
river turned and twisted lazy blue under the sun. In the distance
mountains bulked shadow across the horizon. Birds sang and insects
buzzed.
Dohnse stood, favoring his wounded leg, and saw Chakthi deep in
conversation with Hadduth. Rannach sat with his arms around Arrhyna.
Lhyn stared at the gate, her face stricken, tears coursing unheeded
down her cheeks.
Dohnse turned to Morrhyn and said, "There's a thing I must tell
you. About Racharran's murder."
43—New Land: New Judgements
"He lies! The Maker damn his soul—he lies!"
Chakthi turned like a cornered wolverine, spinning and spitting at
the faces surrounding him. Night was fallen over the new land, and
the fires of a new Council painted his lupine features red and
shadowed, as if indignation and guilt played there in equal measure.
The light of a moon akin to that of the Moon of the Turning Year hung
westward in the sky, not far off its setting. It joined the fires'
light to decorate the faces of the watchers judgmental. They
sat—Rannach and Morrhyn, Yazte and Kahteney, Colun, Kanseah;
Hadduth: all those vested with the authority of Ket-Ta-Witko—alert
and listening. Past them, the People; hushed and waiting.
Chakthi stabbed a finger in Dohnse's direction and said again, "He
lies!"
Morrhyn raised his face to the moon. It shone so bright, so new and
fresh—a welcome to this new land. He sighed, wishing such
doubts had been left behind.
And wondered if the barking he heard was doubt's black dog mocking
him or only one from the vast encampment shouting its joy to be safe.
He looked to Dohnse and gestured for the Tachyn warrior to speak.
Dohnse said, "I do not lie. I saw what I saw—Chakthi took
out his knife and put it between Racharran's ribs."
"Liar!"
Chakthi spat at Dohnse.
Dohnse said, "I do not lie; you lie. I'll fight you to prove the
truth."
"No!" Morrhyn raised his hand. "We came to this new
land to escape bloodshed. Now shall we begin our life here by
spilling blood?"
They looked to him: he was the Prophet now, undoubted. His word was
law. He looked to where Lhyn sat and saw the trails of tears down her
cheeks. He felt a terrible sadness, and wondered what he should say,
knowing it would be accepted.
Kahteney voiced it: "How do you judge, Morrhyn?"
He sighed: the weight was not gone, even here. He looked at Rannach
and saw anger stretching the younger man's features tight. He thought
it all began again—the enmity and the killing—and that
perhaps it was such emotion that had opened the ways between the
worlds for the Breakers to come through and slake their thirst for
conquest and destruction. The breaking of the Ahsa-tye-Patiko had, he
knew, brought them to Ket-Ta-Witko. Now was it to begin again, as if
the People left behind them guilt's spoor to be followed by the
destroyers of worlds?
He voiced a silent prayer to the Maker and said, "I shall sleep
on it. The Maker willing, I'll dream of the answer."
Dohnse stared at Chakthi and then at Morrhyn and said, "Racharran
promised me a place amongst the Commacht. I'd have that, be it your
will."
Morrhyn shrugged and looked at Rannach. "You're akaman of the
Commacht now—how say you?"
Rannach said, "I'd honor my father's promise. Nor"—he
stared at Chakthi—"do I doubt what Dohnse says."
Chakthi glowered, his eyes lit red and savage as any wolverine's.
Morrhyn watched him and heard the dog bark louder. Over and over, he
thought, like dirt thrown up from the hooves of a running horse. Can
we not put this aside?
But Racharran had been his friend and Lhyn sat silently weeping, and
he knew he must decide. He prayed the Maker give him answer and said,
"Let the akaman of the Commacht choose whether or not he accept
Dohnse amongst us."
Rannach said, "He's welcome."
Dohnse smiled his gratitude and Morrhyn said, "For the rest,
I'll give my answer in the morning. Now do we give thanks to the
Maker for this new land?"
The dream was very clear, showing him precisely what he must say. But
even so, behind it—like shadows thrown by bright fire—there
was an element of doubt, as if what was just and right hung balanced
by darker emotions, retribution and revenge to be later delivered.
But he knew what he must say, and went out from his lodge to the
waiting People.
They gathered in nervous silence—all save the worst hurt and
the youngest—their joy in the new land tainted with doubt and
suspicion. It was, in a way, the first Matakwa in this new and
unnamed place, and it seemed to Morrhyn not so different from that
last in lost Ket-Ta-Witko.
He walked into the circle and said, "I have dreamed," and
turned his face to Chakthi. "Do you speak of what happened?"
Chakthi glanced sidelong at Hadduth and rose. His wounds were
cleansed and sewn, the stitched cuts lending him a ferocious aspect.
He said, "I fought to the last beside Racharran and we came
together to the gate. We both were wounded, and my brother held me
up—he was a brave man and a great warrior."
There came a murmur of approval at that, loudest from those Tachyn
still loyal to their akaman. Chakthi paused, favoring his hurt leg,
rubbing as if absently at the wound.
Morrhyn said, "Go on." His voice was impassive, expressing
nothing.
Chakthi nodded and said, "The Breakers and their beasts came
close on our heels. I felt my brother Racharran falter … " His
voice trailed off and he closed his eyes a moment, as if pained by
the memory. "I tried to hold him, but I lacked the strength. I
saw an arrow in him—a Breaker's shaft—and he said to me,
'I am slain, brother. Go on.' I did my best to bring him to the gate,
but the life went out of him fast and I could not—I could only
leave him, and ask the Maker accept his soul." Slowly he turned
around, his eyes roving the circle as if defying any there to
contradict him, falling finally on Dohnse. "And does any here
say different, they lie."
A murmuring then, soon swallowed by silence. The morning sun shone
warm on green grass that whispered a faint song under the wind's
gentle caress. Crickets chattered and high overhead a hawk hung black
against the cloudless sky.
Faces turned expectant to Morrhyn. Rannach whispered, "Do you
deliver judgment?"
Morrhyn whispered back, "That is not my place. I am not akaman
of the Commacht, but only wakanisha."
Rannach said, "You're the Prophet," in a puzzled voice.
Morrhyn motioned him to silence and said, "This tale has another
shape and we should hear that. Dohnse, do you speak?"
He stared fixedly at Chakthi, but the Tachyn akaman ignored his blue
gaze, seating himself and whispering with Hadduth. Dohnse rose.
He clutched a pole, resting his weight on the stick for fear he
collapse. For all his leg was sewn and bound, it still throbbed as if
a fire burned where the claws had scored him. He cleared his throat
and said, "I was with them—Racharran and Chakthi—and
we were the last. A beast came after us and I slew it, and when I
rose I saw Chakthi take out a knife and drive it between Racharran's
ribs. Then he kicked Racharran and went on through the gate."
Chakthi shouted, "Liar! Who else saw this?"
Dohnse shrugged and said, "None, I think."
Chakthi smiled and said, "Where was Morrhyn, then? He waited by
the gate, no? But he saw nothing."
Dohnse said, "Morrhyn was turned away. He spoke through the gate
and did not see what you did. But I saw it."
Chakthi curled his lip and spat.
Morrhyn said carefully, his eyes again firm on Chakthi, "So this
tale has two tellings; and very different. Which do we believe?"
Chakthi said, "I am akaman of the Tachyn and this man only a
warrior."
Morrhyn said, "Does that make his word any less?"
"Than mine?" Chakthi nodded. "Yes."
"Akaman or warrior," Morrhyn said, "still the Maker
judges. And on his scales, all are equal." Still he locked his
eyes: on Chakthi. "Have you aught else to say?"
Hadduth whispered into the akaman's ear and Chakthi shook his head.
Yazte said, "Morrhyn, you are the Prophet. You brought us here,
and you say you've dreamed. Then do you tell us your dream? What
is
the truth here?"
Morrhyn sighed and looked at the hawk. The bird still rode the wind,
lofty and arrogant in its freedom. He thought perhaps he had none any
longer, but only duty, which was a hard burden. It would be easy to
speak of the dream and deliver judgment: the Maker had shown him what
had happened; and what should happen did he take the role of decider.
He could make it easy for the People—shout out the truth and
order sentence. But then he would be forever the Prophet, and they
always look to him for answers when those solutions were better found
in their own minds, their own spirits. The Maker offered hope—their
presence in this new land was proof enough of that—but also he
looked to men to do right of their own volition, not be only guided
like herded horses.
So he said, "The truth? The truth is what Dohnse tells us, that
Chakthi slew Racharran."
Noise then: a great shouting. Knives appeared, bright in the sun.
Colun was on his feet, a hand extended in angry accusation, his voice
roaring for sentence of death. Morrhyn saw Lhyn staring at the
Tachyn, her eyes spilling out tears and her lips writhing back from
her teeth. Yazte rose ponderous, hand on his belt knife. Rannach
remained seated—which allowed Morrhyn some measure of hope—but
his face was dark with rage and disgust.
Morrhyn climbed upright and raised his arms: silence fell—he
was the Prophet.
"We are come to a new land," he said, "which is a gift
of the Maker, when else we might have died. But it seems we bring
with us all the troubles of Ket-Ta-Witko. Do you all think about
that? Think about how much this Council is like the last Matakwa,
when that which drove us from our homeland began."
Yazte said, "Tell us what to do."
Morrhyn shook his head. "No. That is not for me to decide."
Yazte opened his mouth to speak again, but Kahteney took his arm and
spoke to him, and the Lakanti chieftain shrugged and scowled, and
fell quiet.
Rannach asked, "Then who? Who decides if not you?"
Morrhyn looked at the young man and said, "You."
It hung on this, precarious as an egg balanced on a knife's blade,
delicate and deadly as that hawk riding the unseen currents of the
sky. The dream—the Maker—had shown him that: Rannach must
decide; or … He had rather not think of that "or," and so
he held his tongue and stared at Rannach, waiting.
"I am not fit," Rannach said.
Morrhyn said, "You are akaman of the Commacht now. It was your
father Chakthi murdered." It was hard, that, with Lhyn's eyes
wide upon him, all tear-tracked. "Yours, then, the decision."
Yazte said, "That's fair."
And Colun, "Yes! Let Rannach decide."
Chakthi said, "Is this Matakwa as the Prophet claims, then
all
must have a voice, and the decision be reached by all."
"This is our way and has always been our way." Hadduth rose
to his feet and spoke loud. "At that last Matakwa—when
Vachyr was slain—Racharran had no say because it was his son
accused! Now accusation of murder is made against Chakthi, and
Racharran's son asked to decide the verdict. How can that be fair?
Racharran himself would not agree to it."
Voices murmured, "No!" Others murmured, "Yes!"
And some said, "Execute him!"
More called for Morrhyn to decide: because he was the Prophet.
He raised his arms again. It was somewhat embarrassing to own such
repute that that simple gesture delivered silence. He said, "I
will not."
Kahteney rose. "Perhaps there's another way. The Prophet says
that Rannach must decide; Chakthi and Hadduth say no. So—shall
this Matakwa elect the judges? Or the judge?"
Morrhyn said again, "I'll not be the judge. This is for the
People to decide."
Kahteney said, "Then I give my vote to Rannach."
Yazte said, "He's mine also."
Colun said, "And mine."
Hadduth said, "The Grannach have no voice in the Council of the
People."
Kanseah said, "The Naiche shall abide by Rannach's judgment."
There was no one yet to speak for the Aparhaso, so Morrhyn said,
"Shall it be so? Shall Rannach judge?"
And there came an answer that matched the bellowing of the Breakers'
beasts in its volume: "
Yes!"
"So be it." Morrhyn beckoned Rannach to stand. "The
judgment is yours to make."
Chakthi shouted, "No! This is not the way. This is not how the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko has it."
Hadduth joined him in his protest, and no few of the Tachyn; but all
the rest—which was the great mass of the People—shouted
them down and they were forced to angry silence.
Rannach stood. He looked around the circle: at Morrhyn and his
mother, at his wife, at Yazte and Kahteney and Colun, at Dohnse and
all the rest waiting for his word, and finally at Chakthi.
"I believe Dohnse speaks the truth," he said. "And
Morrhyn. I believe that Chakthi slew my father."
Shouts came: calling for Chakthi's death. Morrhyn waited, hanging
like that hawk on the currents of Rannach's words. All hinged on
this: the dreamed future, which might go the one way or the other,
dependent on men, on one man—Rannach.
Rannach said, "This year past, I slew Vachyr. I believed that
what I did was right. But had I let him live—had I brought him
back alive to judgment—then perhaps the Breakers would not have
come to Ket-Ta-Witko. Perhaps there would have been no war between
the Commacht and the Tachyn. Perhaps we should all live still in that
old land the Maker gave us. But I did not think then; now I do."
He paused, staring round. His eyes were fierce, defying any to argue
him. Morrhyn waited, patient as the hawk; nor any less hungry.
"Blood was shed then," Rannach continued, "when blood
should not have been shed. Morrhyn taught me that it broke the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko and delivered the Maker's wrath against all the
People. It delivered the Breakers upon us."
The hawk folded its wings and stooped: salvation or damnation?
Morrhyn waited with the rest. The dream spread out down its intricate
paths, like a spider's web—mazed and fragile and strong until
broken.
And Rannach said, "I'd not chance again the Maker's wrath. We
are brought to a new land, which is good." He gestured at the
rolling grass, the blue-running rivers, the distant mountains. "I'd
not again chance breaking the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. I'd not spoil the
grass of this new land with blood. Listen! My wife grows large with a
child—shall he be born to war? Or shall we live peaceful? We
are exiled from Ket-Ta-Witko by what I did, and Vachyr, and Chakthi.
But I'd not see that strife again. I'd see a peaceful land where my
son might grow up without war.
"So—I claim no blood right against Chakthi. He slew my
father, but I'll not claim his life."
Yazte said, "No payment? He murdered your father—my
brother!—and you'd let him go free? That I cannot accept."
Shy Kanseah, even, said, "I believe the Prophet; I believe
Dohnse. Can you let your father go unavenged?"
Rannach looked at Morrhyn, who gave back no clear answer save an
enigmatic smile, and said: "I would not soil the grass of this
new land with blood. Does Chakthi confess his sins and swear
repentance and fealty to all the People, then I say he and his Tachyn
live with us; and let our coming here wash away past sins."
He turned his eyes challenging on Chakthi. Morrhyn fought a smile—it
went well so far: one path the dream had shown him. But there were
yet more to be taken, to other destinies.
And Chakthi took one as he stared at Rannach and shook his head and
said, "Swear fealty to you?
No!
I confess no sins; neither accept your right to judge me."
The hawk rose up and Morrhyn was not sure whether its claws hung open
or closed.
"Then I give judgment," Rannach said.
Chakthi said, "You cannot."
Yazte said, "He can—we sit in Chiefs' Council and we have
all agreed. Rannach's is the final word."
"One day, old man," Chakthi said, "I swear I shall
kill you."
Yazte laughed and said, "Dream on, murderer."
Chakthi surged up, but Hadduth grasped his arm and pulled him down
even as the Lakanti and the Tachyn again drew weapons.
Kahteney said, "What is this judgment?"
And Rannach said, "That we of the People who are true to the
Ahsa-tye-Patiko cannot live with such as he, or any who follow him. I
say that we send them away, where they not soil us with lies and envy
and hatred. I say that they go"—he flung out an arm to
where the line of distant mountains stretched all shadowy and
cloud-hung across the eastern horizon—"there! Beyond those
hills; and find themselves a place and never come back to where the
People live."
Chakthi scowled, and Hadduth whispered again into his ear. Morrhyn
smiled, glad that path was taken.
Colun said, "Those look like good mountains. I'd take my
Grannach there and build our tunnels again. How think you, Baran?"
Baran nodded and said, "Yes. Let's go there."
And Colun said, "We'll be the Stone Guardians again, eh? And
forbid Chakthi and any fools who follow him passage back."
Baran grinned through his beard and glowered at the Tachyn and said,
"Yes. We'll seal off the hills and never let them through."
Rannach said, "So be it. Let all who follow Chakthi strike their
lodges and go with him. They shall go in peace—unharmed!—and
cross the hills and never come back on pain of death. Save"—he
stared fierce around—"any who come here like us—like
exiles fleeing destruction and oppression—shall be welcomed.
Any who come seeking that refuge the Maker gave
us shall be
welcome amongst the People.
"How say you?"
His question was answered with a roar of approval and agreement from
all save those still loyal to Chakthi.
Morrhyn felt pride swell, and bright hope: Rannach had learned well
in exile, and in the long, hard moons that followed. He had chosen a
path that seemed to the Dreamer the best—the one that led to
peace and a future fruitful to all the People. He seemed to inherit
his father's wisdom, and—hopeful—the wakanisha smiled at
Rannach.
Who said, "Those who'd go with Chakthi shall quit this place
tomorrow, before the sun stands noonday. Is that fair?"
Yazte said, "More than fair. I'd send them out now."
Rannach said, "They need time. They've wounds also."
Morrhyn blessed him for that.
Yazte shrugged and Colun asked, "Shall we Grannach go with them
and guard their passage?"
Morrhyn waited again for Rannach's decision, and was no less pleased
when Rannach said, "Let them first take out their horses from
the herd and all they own, and then warriors from all of the People
escort them to the hills; those who'd go. All others are welcome to
remain. But those who go with Chakthi shall be taken there by all the
clans—the Commacht and the Lakanti, the Naiche and the
Aparhaso, the Grannach—that all see them gone across the
mountains, nor ever return save to swear loyalty to all the People
and the Ahsa-tye-Patiko. That"—he looked to where Morrhyn
sat smiling—"is my judgment."
Chakthi scowled and climbed halfway to his feet, but Hadduth held him
back again and whispered to him, and the Tachyn akaman, still sullen,
acquiesced and began to smile.
And Morrhyn remembered another path his dreams had taken, and
wondered again about the weight and the burden that duty gave him.
But he closed his mouth on the warnings he'd shout because he knew
this was a thing to be determined by men who were not Dreamers, and
must decide their own fates. He was the Prophet and saw the many
paths, but did he outline them all, then none had choice—which
was the balancing of the Maker's scales.
Yet still he wondered, as he looked at Chakthi and Hadduth, if it had
not been better he told all he knew. That, or take a knife and drive
it into both of them as they, together, had driven that blade into
Racharran.
But he did not, only bowed his head and agreed with Rannach's
judgment.
It was the best he could do: the only thing he could do, and leave
the People themselves.
The Tachyn still loyal to Chakthi struck their lodges not long after
the sun rose. They gathered up their horses and their dogs and all
else they possessed. They set their worst wounded on travois and
began the long trek to whatever awaited them past the mountains.
Colun and his Grannach went with them, and an escort of all the
warriors Rannach had decreed.
They were not so many—Dohnse was believed, and the Prophet's
dreaming—and for those who went with Chakthi and Hadduth, there
was an equal number that remained behind.
They were welcomed into the clans still loyal to the People, though
it was a sad welcoming, for much was lost. Not only Ket-Ta-Witko, but
also those things that had made them what they were—and all of
them knew those things were changed.
Chakthi and all who followed him seemed no longer of the People, but
tainted by the sin of the Breakers' dark wind, and all those who
watched them go wondered at their fate, and what their anger might
bring.
Morrhyn watched the long column go out and thought of what his dreams
had shown him: if all was now well, and the People safe, or the
Breakers come again because …
He set that doubt aside and asked, "What shall we call this
land?"
Rannach said, "Ket-Ta-Thanne."
Which meant in the language of the People
The Promised Land.
Morrhyn nodded and said, "That seems fitting."
And so it was named: Ket-Ta-Thanne.
And the People settled there—the Commacht and the Lakanti, the
Aparhaso and the Naiche and the Grannach—and spread across the
grass and into the mountains, and set up their lodges and built their
tunnels, and dwelt in harmony, all of them—save Chakthi's
Tachyn, who had gone across the mountains the Grannach guarded to
whatever lay beyond.
And while all remembered Rannach's vow that Ket-Ta-Thanne should be
always a refuge for exiles, it seemed they were the only folk in all
those wide spaces, and none realized how soon they would be called
upon to honor that promise.
44—A Desperate Enterprise
Arcole saw Flysse and Davyd settled safely in the dinghy, the packs
amidships, and used Davyd's knife to cut the mooring line. He
shouldered the rowboat out into deeper water—all the time
praying the tide was turned enough it should carry them upriver—and
hauled himself on board.
"Keep low," he warned. "Are we seen, hopefully they'll
think this only an empty, drifting boat."
Obeying his own instruction, he crouched beneath the gunwales,
endeavoring not to breathe in his own odor. God, but he smelled foul!
And surely no chance to strip off his reeking clothing and bathe
until dawn, at least. By then, were his calculations right—did
the tide favor them, and the demons not halt them—they should
be far enough from Grostheim that they might risk a brief halt. He
thought their escape must go unnoticed for some time: even did the
city withstand the siege, there would be confusion in its aftermath.
Fredrik would doubtless report their flight to Wyme, but the governor
would be fully occupied reorganizing his city. Likely he'd not
consider the possibility of his servants fleeing into the arms of the
demons, but rather think them hiding within the walls. Even did he
reach the conclusion that they had fled past the walls, then surely
he would think them dead at the demons' hands. Pursuit by Militiamen
seemed definitely unlikely.
But pursuit by the demons … That was another matter. Arcole
wondered what they were. His clandestine studies had suggested they
were savage beyond belief, and the little he had seen of them
supported this. But he had somehow supposed they should look other
than men, yet the figures he had seen capering under the walls had
appeared, at least relatively, human. They were not giants or
deformed, as best he could tell, and whilst their faces had seemed
unearthly, he thought that the result of paint rather than any
demonic malformation. Still, he hoped he would not be presented the
opportunity to study them at close quarters.
He felt the dinghy rock gently, and risked a swift glance at the
riverbank. The twin landmarks of Grostheim and the blazing barges lay
astern now—the current
did carry them inland—fading
slowly into the moonless night. Stars shone above, their light
replacing the fiery glow so that the Restitution glittered as if
sprinkled with quicksilver. They drifted closer to the bank than was
comfortable, but he dared not ply the oars yet, for fear the demons
spot them.
"I think we're safe." He reached back to stroke Flysse's
ankle. "In a while, I'll use the oars."
Then he cursed as something moved across the water behind them.
"What is it?" Flysse's voice was husky with fear and
nausea.
Arcole said, "I spoke too soon," and looked forward across
the packs to where Davyd lay. "There are muskets in these?"
Davyd said, "Two, wrapped in oilskin, with powder and shot. Also
three pistols."
Arcole began to feel at the packs, seeking the weapons. His fingers
found the hard outline of a musket and he cut the securing cords,
dragging out the gun.
Flysse asked again, "What is it?" Her question was more
urgent now.
Arcole slit the oilskin wrapping the musket and began to load.
"Pursuit." He looked back, ignoring Flysse's gasp as she
turned and saw what came after them.
It was a canoe. It sat low in the water, prow and stern curving up
and over like the horns of some malign river beast. Four demons
paddled the craft with a dreadful vigor; a fifth crouched in the
nose. Arcole thought he held a nocked bow.
"Davyd!" He tossed the boy the knife. "Find the second
musket and load it."
Davyd began to slash at a pack. "I've never fired a musket,"
he said.
"I have," Arcole returned. "Only load for me. Flysse,
stay down."
"I can row," she said.
"No." Arcole shook his head. "They've four oarsmen.
And"—he cocked the musket—"I need a steady hand
for this."
He settled back on the packs, sighting sternward over Flysse's body.
The musket was of cheap production, no more than a trade weapon, and
he was accustomed to the finest: he prayed the thing fired true. He
squeezed the trigger.
Water fountained ahead and to the left of the canoe. Arcole cursed
and began to reload. The canoe gained: it seemed to leap across the
surface. Arcole saw the demon at the prow loose an arrow; felt its
passage past his face. He fired again.
The heavy lead ball burst splinters from the canoe's curving bow.
Davyd said, "Ready!"
Arcole took the offered gun and passed Davyd the spent weapon.
The shot landed to starboard of their pursuers, an arm's length
clear. Arcole cursed.
"Ready."
Davyd's voice was hoarse with terror, and his hand trembled as he
gave Arcole the musket. Arcole said, "Gahame should sight in his
guns better," and was rewarded with a nervous laugh.
This one pulls to the left and fires short, he reminded himself, and
that damned canoe is closing on us fast. He adjusted his aim, then
paused as a shaft struck hard against the dinghy's stern. Flysse gave
a little scream and Arcole took a deep breath. The bowman nocked a
fresh arrow. Arcole fired as he drew his string.
The demon screamed and fell back amongst the oarsmen: Arcole whooped
gleefully as the canoe slowed and veered off course.
He took the second musket—this pulls right—and fired
again. Chips flew from the canoe and a second agonized cry rang out.
"So demons can be slain!" Arcole shouted. "Davyd?"
The boy had the gun ready. The canoe turned farther into the river as
the rowers lost their stroke, presenting a broader target. Arcole's
next shot sent a demon spilling overboard. Only two remained now, and
it seemed they gave up the chase. One rose, sending a hatchet
whirling toward the dinghy. It struck the stern and sank. Arcole
fired again, aiming for the craft now, blowing a hole in the thin
side, close on the waterline. Davyd held out a loaded musket, but he
shook his head.
"Best we save our shot." He gestured cheerfully at the
canoe. "I think we've dissuaded them, and there's but the one
came after us."
The canoe took on water now, settling deeper, and the surviving
demons seemed more intent on avoiding a swim to the bank than
continuing the hunt. They set to paddling shoreward, falling steadily
astern as the dinghy drifted upstream.
"Flysse, you're not hurt?" Arcole set the musket down.
"Davyd?"
Flysse said, "No," in a small voice. "Only afraid."
Davyd said, "I'm hale," as steadily as he could.
"You did well," Arcole declared, "and we're surely
safe now."
Flysse rose to find a bench. Reproachfully, she said, "You told
me that before, no?"
"I did," Arcole agreed solemnly. "But this time I
think I'm right."
His smile was infectious and Flysse began to laugh; soon Davyd joined
in.
"And," Arcole chuckled, "I told you I'd use the oars
in a while. See how I keep my word?"
He found the oars and began to row.
By daybreak his hands were blistered and he thought his spine must
soon crack, but he continued at his task until the sun was up and the
river shone golden all around. Grassy banks drifted by, and stands of
timber, but they saw no one, nor did any demons appear behind them.
Arcole deemed it safe to rest and take stock: he turned the boat to
the shore.
They beached on a strand of dark sand overhung by willows, their
arrival sending a flock of twittering birds skyward. A heron squawked
a protest and took lumbering flight. Arcole slumped at the oars and
it was Davyd who sprang overboard to drag the dinghy ashore.
Wearily, his body aching, Arcole joined the boy, and with Flysse's
aid they manhandled the boat under the cover of the drooping willows.
For a while they all three slumped on the sand, scarce able to
believe they looked on a morning not bound by Grostheim's walls. The
river ran empty before them, and behind, past the willows, the bank
rose higher than a man's head.
"Are we safe?" Flysse asked.
"I'll check." Arcole made to rise, but Davyd motioned him
back, saying, "I'll go. You rest here."
Arcole gestured his assent, and Davyd clambered up the bank to peer
over the top.
"Grass," he reported. "For as far as I could see,
except for some trees. There are no houses, nor any people."
"Good." Arcole lay back against the dinghy. "I suggest
we rest here awhile. Do we have any food?"
Davyd said, "I brought none. Only clothes and the weapons and
such."
"No matter." Arcole grinned. "We shall feast on
freedom, and perhaps tonight hunt our dinner. Meanwhile, the river
shall be our bath. God!" He plucked at his shirt, grimacing. "I
stink. A change of clothes will be a blessing."
Flysse was abruptly aware of her undressed state. Arcole seemed too
tired to notice, but Davyd kept his eyes averted, and when he did
look toward her, his cheeks grew red. After all they had been
through, it seemed almost amusing that her dishabille should
embarrass him so, but his obvious discomfort was unnerving and she
found her herself eager to be more modestly dressed.
"There are clothes in the packs?" she asked. And when Davyd
nodded—not looking at her—she said, "Then I'd take
mine and bathe."
Arcole said, "Don't go far, and be careful," as Davyd
opened the three packs and sorted out the contents.
He handed Flysse a sturdy linen shirt and a pair of buckskin
breeches, a belt and a pair of high, soft boots. "I'm sorry."
His eyes darted about, looking everywhere but at her as his face
flushed bright pink. "There are no … "He gestured
vaguely. "No … um, small things."
"No matter." Flysse smiled as she took his offering. "These
are ample."
She carried the gear away, down the beach to where the willows
screened her from the two men. Then all modesty was forgotten as she
tore off her undergarments and splashed into the water.
Back at the dinghy, Arcole forced himself to examine their supplies.
The map he had so painstakingly constructed was blurred from its
watery journey, the ink badly run and most of his annotations now
indecipherable. Even so, aided by his memory, he thought it should
serve them well enough; and Davyd's loot was invaluable.
In addition to shirts and breeches and boots the twins of Flysse's
outfit, there were the two muskets, three holstered pistols, several
horns of powder and bags of shot; three knives complete with sheaths,
and two smallswords in plain leather scabbards. Also three
tinderboxes, two canteens, and a collection of wire snares and
fishing lines; the tarpaulins would serve as cloaks and tents both.
Arcole voiced his appreciation.
"Sieur Gahame carries no … " Davyd coughed nervously,
blushing, and in a mumbled rush, "Underthings. Nothing like
that. So I couldn't … I'm sorry."
"Sorry?" Arcole grunted as he leaned forward to slap the
boy on the shoulder. "God, Davyd, you've done us proud. I marvel
you were able to gather all this!"
Davyd's blush was replaced with a smile. "I am—was—a
thief," he murmured.
"A most excellent thief." Arcole chuckled. "The finest
thief I've ever known. How could we have won through without you?"
Davyd basked in the praise, embarrassment and fear fading. He felt
Arcole treated him like a man, and that filled him with pride. Even
better, the dream voice that had echoed in his head was silent now,
gone with the terror he seemed to have left behind along the
Restitution. He rose to his feet.
"Shall I make a fire?" he asked.
"Perhaps not yet." Arcole shook his head and yawned. "The
smoke might betray us, and the sun's warm enough, no? Indeed, I think
I shall lie here awhile and enjoy it—after I've washed off this
stink."
Davyd nodded, and they waited until Flysse returned. Her wet hair
hung like liquid gold about her fresh-scrubbed face, and in her
homespun shirt and buckskin breeches she looked like some
soldier-maid. The more when Arcole had her affix a pistol and a knife
to her belt.
"I know nothing of guns," she protested. "Neither how
to fire nor to load."
"I'll teach you," Arcole promised. "I'll teach you
both. And Davyd how to use that fine blade."
It was not, in truth, a very
fine blade, but serviceable enough; and the pleasure on Davyd's face
was ample reward for the lie.
"And now," Arcole clambered stiffly to his feet, groaning
as his aching back protested. "I shall bathe. And then sleep
awhile."
"Shall that be safe?" Flysse asked.
"Likely," came the answer. "Surely necessary, for I
doubt I can row again until I've rested."
"I can," Davyd said eagerly. "I can row while you
sleep."
Arcole felt no wish to dampen the boy's enthusiasm, but neither did
he trust him to handle the dinghy successfully. Once, he would have
said it plain—careless of Davyd's mortification—but now
he was changed and looked to avoid giving the boy hurt. Indeed, he
thought as he studied the earnest young face, Davyd was no longer a
boy. Perhaps not yet quite a man, for all he took a man's part in
this venture, but surely no longer a boy.
"I suspect," he said gently, "that we shall all
benefit from sleep. Do you stand guard, that I may sleep easy?"
"I will," said Davyd, and took up a musket.
Arcole said, "Well done," and went to bathe.
The river ran chilly and the sand he used to scrub his body was
abrasive, but to be once more clean was pure joy, augmented by
victory. Although that, he reminded himself as he ground sand into
his hair, was not yet full-won. He was confident no Militiamen would
come after them, but the demons were a different prospect—he
had no idea whether the creatures would leave them go or mount a
pursuit. He knew—or at least guessed—they came out of the
wilderness: therefore, the wilderness might well hold more. Perhaps
they fled one band only to reach another, and the wilderness itself
might well prove hostile.
Nor did the territory claimed by Evander offer refuge. Not all the
homesteaders had come in to Grostheim, and those still occupying
their holdings—were they not slain by the demons—would
hardly welcome three branded exiles. The map would guide them, show
them where the holdings lay so that they might go cautious and
unseen, but true liberty must inevitably lie in the very jaws of
danger—in the wilderness itself.
No, he told himself, we have not won yet. One victory, perhaps to
escape Grostheim—but surely more battles ahead. Perhaps with
demons, perhaps with the wild creatures of the forests, perhaps with
the elements themselves. And then they must make some kind of life in
the wilderness: survival would be no easy thing.
But, he told himself as the enormity of their venture loomed huge in
his mind, threatening to douse his optimism, we
did escape. We
fought off demons, and we have weapons, snares Flysse knows how to
use; and Davyd's dreams. His spirits rose again as he thought of
that. Davyd's dreaming had shown them the time was come, had warned
of the attack; and Davyd had spoken of dreams that suggested the
wilderness could be a friendly place. So they must rely on that
strange ability to ward them and guide them, and go on. After all,
they had no other way to go save onward.
Cheered, Arcole sank his discarded clothing in the shallows and
dressed, then returned to the beach.
He sent Davyd off to bathe and settled himself on the sun-warmed
sand. Flysse came to sit beside him.
"There's danger still, no?" she asked quietly.
He took her hand and said, "We knew that when we planned this
venture. That was why I had intended to leave you behind. Save,"
he added quickly as he saw her stiffen, the pain that flashed in her
blue eyes, "I wonder if I truly could have done that. And now?
Whatever we face ahead, I am glad I face it with you."
Flysse smiled and bent to kiss him. He put his arms around her and
drew her down: it had been so long since they lay together. Their
caresses grew more ardent, and then Flysse pulled back.
"Remember Davyd," she said reluctantly. "He'll return
soon, and he was embarrassed enough when I stood in my underthings."
"I thought you looked charming," Arcole murmured. And
sighed: "But, yes, I'd not upset him."
Flysse stroked his hair. "Perhaps tonight," she whispered.
"Surely soon; but now, do you sleep?"
Arcole offered no argument, but stretched out, closing his eyes as he
murmured, "Tell Davyd he's on watch, eh? He'll like that."
Flysse nodded and continued to gently stroke his hair as his
breathing slowed and became sonorous. The furrows that had etched his
brow faded as he relaxed, and his lips parted in a slow smile. She
thought how much she loved this man, and put aside contemplation of
the perils ahead. Whatever they might be, she and Arcole, and Davyd,
would be together. She refused to believe they could fail now.
"He sleeps?" Davyd came up softly, his stolen boots silent
on the sand. When Flysse nodded, he stooped to take a cord and pull
back his hair. He said, "I'll take the watch."
"He asked you do that," Flysse said.
She smiled as Davyd nodded gravely, thinking that he grew apace; that
with his sword and pistol, his knife and his musket, he looked like
some youthful frontiersman. Then she thought of his dreams and
wondered if he, more than any of them, had a truer inkling of what
lay ahead. Almost, she asked him, but decided not. He was intent on
his duty now, and the memory of his face when he had spoken of his
dreams lingered. She had sooner not remind him of those nightmares.
Davyd cradled his musket and strode to the farther end of the beach.
He hoped no demons came paddling up the river: he knew how to load
the gun—could repair it, given tools—but he had never in
his life fired a musket. It was tempting to try it out, but that
would wake Arcole and frighten Flysse—and perhaps give warning
of their presence—so he only raised the weapon to his shoulder
and sighted down the barrel, carefully cocking and lowering the
hammer. Then he stopped, angry with himself: he was behaving like a
child, as if the musket were a toy, but he was no longer a child and
the musket a real and dangerous weapon. He blushed and glanced back
to where Flysse lay with Arcole, hoping she had not witnessed his
infantile game.
Then blushed anew as memory of her in her underthings kindled. She
was Arcole's wife, and he should not entertain such thoughts as
lurked on the heels of the memory. Arcole was his friend—his
savior—and Flysse was wed: decent folk did not think of their
friend's wives in such a fashion. He scowled and climbed the bank,
high enough he might peer out across the grasslands.
It war, to him, a strange sight; for an instant almost as disturbing
as the open sea had been. He was not accustomed to open places, and
this spread wide and clear as any ocean. He thought the grass like
water, the stands of timber like islands. The horizon shimmered in
the rising heat—summer, he thought, could not be far off.
Evander seemed a lifetime distant, even Grostheim now, for they could
never return. He wondered if the city stood, or if the demons had
prevailed. If so, then 'sieur Gahame was surely dead, Laurens and
Godfry with him. He could not decide if he was sorry. He thought that
at least no Inquisitor would ever find him here, and turned his eyes
to the west.
The forest edge was no more than a dark blur, shifting like distant
smoke in the haze. He had no idea how long it should take them to
reach that … refuge? He was not sure. There was that element in his
dreams that had suggested safety, but also threat. He closed his eyes
and for a moment endeavored to conjure up the horror of his recent
dreams. It was entirely gone, and he breathed a sigh of relief.
Perhaps tonight—or whenever he slept—he would dream again
and prove his usefulness. He had, after all, warned of the demons'
attack, and he was the one who had secured the clothes they wore and
the weapons they carried. Without his skills Arcole would still lie
caged. In fact, he decided, they owed him their lives: pride rose.
Then guilt. Had Arcole not befriended him,
he would be in Grostheim now. Perhaps his skull would decorate
some demon's trophy pole; and did he live, it should be as an
indentured exile, all his life. No, whatever he had done for Arcole,
Arcole had done as much and more for him. These were not things for
tallies, such columns of loss and profit as 'sieur Gahame totted, but
matters of comradeship, of shared purpose. It was as if they were a
family—he and Flysse and Arcole. He only wished he could forget
how Flysse had looked.
Arcole woke around noon. Flysse lay asleep beside him and Davyd
prowled the beach like some soldier eager for battle. He yawned and
rose, his aches somewhat abated now, and went to the river, splashing
his face.
"What now?" Davyd asked.
"We'd best be gone." Arcole looked east, down the
Restitution. "All well, there'll be no pursuit. But even so …
"
Davyd nodded. "How far to the forest?"
"Some days, at least." Arcole flexed his hands. They were
not soft, but neither was he accustomed to rowing a dinghy for so
long. "Can you handle an oar?"
"I don't know," Davyd answered. "I've never tried."
"There's a skill to it." Arcole looked at his palms and
winced. Then chuckled. "Something else I must teach you, eh?"
"Now?" Davyd asked.
"Perhaps not yet." Arcole shook his head, and saw
disappointment cloud the young face, prompting him to add, "You've
had no sleep as yet. God, you must be exhausted."
"I can stay awake," Davyd promised.
"And you would, I've no doubt." Arcole set a hand on his
shoulder. "But I'd sooner you slept. Do you dream, you can warn
us or guide us to safety. That's your duty for now, eh?"
Davyd accepted and they gathered up their gear, stowing it in the
dinghy. They filled the canteens and Arcole was about to launch the
boat, but Flysse bade him wait, tugging her shirt loose. The tails
were long, and she cut strips that she bound about his hands.
"Thank you." He bowed elegantly, and bussed her cheek.
"Now, westward ho, eh?"
They pushed the little craft into the river and took their
places—Arcole at the oars, Davyd at the prow, Flysse in the
stern. The tide had turned and they were not yet so far from
Deliverance Bay that they escaped its influence: Arcole must work
hard to keep them headed upstream. Sleep had restored him somewhat,
but soon enough he felt his back and shoulders protest anew at the
unfamiliar effort, and must endeavor to ignore the ache that grew and
spread until it seemed all his body throbbed. He gritted his teeth
and continued rowing.
Davyd closed his eyes—he did, indeed, feel weary—but he
was far too excited to sleep. What if demons lay ahead? Arcole faced
backward and would not see them, and Flysse might miss them: Davyd
felt he had a duty to remain awake, watchful. He settled his musket
across his knees and adjusted the unfamiliar length of the smallsword
across the bench, scanning the river ahead.
The Restitution remained empty of other traffic, though as they moved
steadily westward they saw indications of landward habitation. The
signs were not encouraging. There was a burned-out building close to
the water: perhaps once a stopping place for barges, it was now only
a collection of charred timber. Later, where the banks flattened,
they saw a farm in the distance—like the first structure, now
razed. Farm animals watched them go by—cattle and pigs,
chickens, some horses. Milch cows lowed mournfully, protesting their
swollen udders.
"I could milk those," Flysse said.
"And I could shoot one," Arcole returned. "Or a hog.
Perhaps tonight."
"Why not now?" Flysse asked.
"I'd sooner put more distance between us and Grostheim," he
replied. "And find some sheltered spot to spend the night."
"What if there are no animals?"
"I've the map, remember." Arcole grinned. "The farms
are marked and we can scout them, halt each night near a holding and
hunt our dinner."
Davyd said nothing, but the thought of roasted meat set his stomach
to grumbling. He wished he had been able to steal food of some kind.
Escape, he decided, would be far more flavorsome on a full belly.
As the sun approached the faraway forests, the Restitution swept in a
leisurely bend to the north and woodland came down to the river on
the flanks of a little knoll. Grass spread wide around the timbered
hillock, and they could see cattle grazing. Arcole checked the map
and saw a farm marked: the Danby holding, destroyed by demons. He
elected to make camp for the night. He was, anyway, not sure he could
row any longer.
They beached the dinghy and warily scouted their surroundings. The
wood was small, and concealed—as best they could tell, none
being expert in these matters—anything hostile. There was ample
dry wood for a fire, and the sky held no threat of rain. Arcole
unwrapped his hands. The palms were tender, but not so bad he could
not shoot. He took a musket, announcing his intention of finding them
beef for their dinner.
"It should not be difficult," he said. "Do you wait
here?"
"The both of us?" Flysse asked.
"Yes," Arcole replied. "I'll not be long."
Flysse smiled mischievously and asked, "And when you've shot our
dinner, what then?"
"Why," he said, "we eat it, of course."
"Roasted whole?" she asked with deliberate innocence. "Or
shall you cut us tender steaks?"
Arcole frowned, forced to realize his mistake.
Flysse laughed and said, "You've no idea how to butcher meat,
eh?" And when he shook his head: "I've seen it done. I'll
show you how."
"What about me?" asked Davyd. He felt none too happy at the
prospect of being left alone.
"Best you guard our camp," Arcole said. "Do you see
anything, fire a shot and we'll return. We'll not be far away."
Davyd nodded dubiously. Arcole said, "I doubt I shall need more
than one shot to kill a cow, so—do we find anything amiss,
you'll hear two shots, fired close."
Davyd ducked his head again. Flysse took a canteen and went with
Arcole.
"Is it such thirsty work?" Arcole asked.
"No." Flysse shook her head. "But you'll need this.
Wait and see."
They walked out onto the grass. Dusk was not far off, and the light
of the descending sun shone clear and brilliant over the plain.
Flights of birds winged overhead, homeward bound, and crickets buzzed
loud in the warm air. Shadowy in the distance, Arcole thought he made
out the shape of the destroyed farm. He supposed that if demons
lingered, they would make fires—if demons had need of fires—but
he could see no smoke. He hoped there were none; elected to take the
risk: fresh meat would be a boon.
The cattle stood grazing or chewing the cud, watching the approaching
couple with curious, placid eyes. They showed no sign of fear and,
almost, Arcole felt guilty as he raised his musket and sighted on a
piebald cow.
She grunted as the shot struck, and fell down on her forelegs. It
seemed she bowed to inescapable fate. Then she toppled onto her side,
kicked awhile, and lay still.
Arcole motioned Flysse down as he reloaded the musket, waiting. Save
for the nervous lowing of the other cattle, he heard nothing, nor did
anything move on the plain, save for a flock of small, startled birds
that burst into flight at the detonation. In a while he rose and went
forward.
"Wait," Flysse said. "Best take off your shirt."
Arcole frowned but did as he was bade.
Flysse smiled and said, "You've never seen your dinner
prepared." And when he shook his head, "It's bloody work."
"I'd sooner eat in a civilized dining room," Arcole sighed,
then drew his knife. "Tell me what to do, eh?"
He set to work, following her instructions even as he frowned his
distaste of the bloody task. His arms were soon painted with red,
splashes decorating his chest, but inexpert though his carving was,
in time long steaks lay on the grass, and a haunch.
Flysse uncorked the canteen that he might sluice off the gore. Arcole
studied the remains of the cow, thinking that enough was left to feed
them for a week. "Is that all we take?" he asked.
"Save we stay here to smoke it," she advised him. "We've
easily enough for a day or two, and more would only spoil. Are there
loose herds all along the way, we can find more."
He bowed to her superior wisdom, aware that she knew far more about
such matters than he. Were Flysse not there, he would have simply
hacked at the carcass, taking whatever he could cut. He could
hunt—handle a musket—but in this area Flysse was the
expert. We make a fine couple, he thought, and told her so.
"We've all our different skills, I think." She handed him
his shirt. "Now, how do we carry this meat back without we get
all bloody?"
The steaks they skewered on the musket's ramrod; Arcole shouldered
the leg, and they returned to the beach.
Davyd had gathered wood, piling it where the bulk of the dinghy would
conceal the glow from the river. "I thought it better to wait
until dark before lighting it," he said. "So the smoke
won't show."
"Well done." Arcole applauded. "You learn fast."
Davyd grinned, and they settled in companionable silence to await
nightfall.
It seemed wise to set a watch, and in light of his hard work that
day, Flysse and Davyd insisted Arcole take the first turn, that he
might then sleep the remainder of the night. He offered little
argument, and it was agreed Flysse take the middle watch and Davyd
the last. Unspoken went the thought that Davyd might dream of what
lay ahead.
It was a wide and starry night, as if the heavens celebrated their
first day of freedom, and Arcole sat watching the river slide silvery
and empty by. He heard the calling of owls in the little wood, and
bats swooped about his head. His belly was full, and for all he knew
they faced hardship in the days to come, he felt content. Were he
only able to lie with Flysse, he thought he should be entirely happy.
He turned as he heard a muffled cry, seeing Davyd twist about on his
canvas bed, throwing up an arm as if in defense. Almost, he went to
the lad, but then held back. Did Davyd dream of their future, it
should be better to leave him lie, better they have warning. He
cradled his musket and sought to block out the faint sounds.
When Flysse came to relieve him, she said, "Davyd dreams."
He said, "I know," and pulled her down beside him. "As
do I, save mine are all of you."
She said, "Arcole … " and then lost her ability to speak
under the pressure of his lips. It was hard—very hard—to
resist, but she was a modest woman, and Davyd lay nearby—might
wake and see them. So she took her hands from his neck and set them
against his chest and pushed him back.
"Not here," she gasped. "Not where Davyd … "
Arcole sighed and lowered his head in acceptance. "God, Flysse,
but this is not easy." His voice was throaty with desire.
"No," she murmured. "I know; nor for me. But ..
"But I understand," he whispered, and touched his mouth to
her cheek. Then took her hand and grinned. "It shall spur me on.
I shall row as no man has ever rowed before, that we reach the
forests and … "He was not quite sure what should happen then.
He extemporized: "I shall build us a cabin, and Davyd another—a
decent distance off!—and we shall have privacy to … "
His grin spread wide. Once Flysse would have blushed at the innuendo,
but now she smiled and nodded eagerly. "I pray it be so,
husband. And soon,"
"It shall be," he promised. "Wife."
"And are you to row so hard," she said, "then you had
best sleep now, eh?"
Arcole had sooner remain with her, but she spoke the truth and he
nodded, passing her the musket. "This is primed," he
explained. "You need only cock the hammer—thus—then
squeeze the trigger. Your pistol works the same way."
Flysse took the musket gingerly. "You must teach me how to
load," she said.
"As I promised." Arcole rose. "And how to shoot. And
you must teach me how to butcher meat and set a snare."
"We'll teach each other," Flysse said.
"I think," he murmured, "that we already do."
He found his bed and stretched out, listening to the small sounds
Davyd made. He wondered what they augured; but not for long—he
was incredibly weary, and even as Davyd groaned and thrashed, he
drifted down into welcome sleep. All well, the morning would be soon
enough to discuss the future.
45—The River
"There was the river, running into the forest. It went toward
mountains, and I knew I must reach them, but not how." Davyd
shook his head, struggling to find the words that might accurately
describe his dream. It not easy: words were too precise for such
amorphous things, too limiting when the oneiric images flickered and
shifted and were, anyway, composed more of emotion than any
substantial matter. "I had to leave the river, and then I was in
the forest. It …
felt … dangerous, as if it watched me. Or
something in it watched me. Then there was fire, and I thought it
must devour me, but then a wind blew down from the mountains and made
a way through the flames. I went that way, and the fire reached for
me."
He broke off, shuddering at the memory. Flysse set a hand on his
shoulder, her touch a solace; Arcole passed him a canteen. He drank,
and sighed, smiling ruefully.
"It's hard to describe, but … Anyway, the fire reached for me,
and then the wind blew stronger and drove it back a little. I walked
into the wind—toward the mountains. I knew I should be safe
there if I could only reach a place—a special place—but I
didn't know where it was. I just had to go into the mountains to find
it. The fire came after me, chasing me. I ran, and then I woke."
He shrugged. It felt strange even now, even with these good friends,
to talk about his dreaming. It was a matter kept secret for so
long—on pain of horrid death—it still unnerved him to
discuss it so openly. He raised his head, reassuring himself they sat
beneath the open sky, beside the Restitution—far from Grostheim
and the Autarchy. That calmed him a little, but still it was not a
thing with which he felt entirely comfortable.
"What do you think it means?" Arcole looked from the
smudged map to Davyd's face. "You're our guide in this, no?"
The words were designed to encourage Davyd, and he smiled his thanks.
"I'm not sure," he said slowly. "Before I came to
Salvation, the dreams were never so clear. They warned me of
danger—as I've told you—but never so … so … "
"Specifically?" Arcole supplied.
Davyd supposed that was the word and ducked his head in agreement.
"Never so specifically," he said. "It was like …
Well, if I were planning a job and dreamed of burning, or Militiamen,
I knew I shouldn't try it. But since I came here, I've dreamed of …
specific? … things, like the forests and the demons."
"Were there demons in this dream?" Arcole asked.
"No." Davyd shook his head. "Only the fire—which
means danger—and the wind and the mountains. I suppose that
means the mountains are safe. If we can find the special place."
"Perhaps as we get closer to the mountains," Flysse said,
"you'll know."
"Perhaps," Davyd allowed cautiously.
Arcole studied the map. "The river isn't charted past
Salvation's boundary." He turned his head, staring to the west.
"It comes out of the wilderness, and past the forest's edge
there's nothing drawn. But rivers rise in high ground, so … "
"We follow the river," Flysse said.
"As far as we can." Arcole frowned. "But the closer we
get to the mountains, the stronger the downstream current gets. There
has to come a time we can't row against it, and we must proceed on
foot."
Flysse said, "Isn't that what you planned?"
He nodded. "But I confess my plans were mostly concentrated on
escaping Grostheim. After that, I was relying on Davyd."
That seemed a tremendous burden, but Davyd squared his shoulders and
said, "I'll do my best."
"I know you will," Arcole declared. "I've faith in
you. So, we know there's danger in the forest." He folded the
map. "That much we knew already. Also that Davyd's dreamed of
safety there. Now we know there's a specific place—we head for
that."
"How?" asked Flysse. "Davyd doesn't know where it is."
Or if it really exists, Davyd thought.
"I trust him," said Arcole, smiling. "If he's dreamed
there's such a place, then it's there and we only need find it. Davyd
will dream the way for us,"
His confidence was flattering, but still Davyd could not help the
disturbing thought that his dreams warned of danger in equal measure
with safety: they did not tell him which should prevail. It was hard,
this burden of trust.
"So, do we go?" Arcole rose businesslike to his feet,
retying the bandages about his hands. "Are we to reach the
safety of the mountains, we've some way yet to go."
He kicked sand over the fire and turned toward the dinghy. Davyd
thought he likely sought to occupy them all, that none brood overlong
on the bad part of the dream. Well, he was happy enough with that. He
gathered up his gear and followed Arcole to the boat.
That day, around noon, they saw a band of demons on the north bank.
In the sun's bright light the creatures seemed somewhat less
terrifying than the fire-lit shadow-shapes of Grostheim's night, but
nonetheless menacing. There were six of them, barbarically clad in
leather and animal skins, their hair woven in long braids. Their
faces were distorted by bars of paint, black and white and red, so
that it was difficult to discern clear features. Their hostility was
obvious: they raised bows and sent arrows arcing across the water as
Arcole turned the dinghy to midstream. They wore the shapes of men,
as best he could tell, but he had no wish to study them close and
bent to his oars, propelling the little boat out of range.
The demons promptly mounted horses and for a while paced the boat,
howling, but the river was wide, and turned, and timber showed more
frequently along the banks. In time they fell away behind.
Arcole wondered if they would continue the pursuit. It was an
alarming thought—mounted, the creatures might well catch up. He
decided that their camp that night should be on the southern shore.
"I think," he gasped, "that I must teach you two how
to shoot as soon as we've time."
Flysse nodded from the stern, her eyes fixed nervously on the north
bank. In the bow, Davyd clutched his musket with white-knuckled
fingers, little more color in his face.
"We've lost them," Arcole declared with far more confidence
than he felt. "And tonight we'll have the river betwixt us and
them."
"What," Davyd asked in a low voice, "if there are
others on that side?"
It was not possible to shrug as he plied the oars, so Arcole only
grunted and said, "We'll pick our spot with care, eh?"
Davyd frowned and said, "I didn't dream of them."
None had explanation for that, and so neither Flysse nor Arcole gave
answer only looked at each other.
"I should have," Davyd continued. "God! If my dreaming
is to be useful, I should have dreamed of them."
His voice was plaintive, and Arcole said, "Perhaps your dreams
are of the great events only. Like the attack on Grostheim, or the
sea serpent."
"No." Davyd refused to be mollified. "My thieving was
no 'great event,' but I dreamed of danger when I did that." He
shook his head and asked, "What use to dream of 'great events'
if some band of six come on us in ambuscade and I don't give
warning?"
"Perhaps," Flysse said, "you must concentrate."
"How so?" asked Davyd. "What do you mean?"
Flysse's brow wrinkled as she thought, seeking to define her notion.
"Before, in Bantar," she said at last, "did you
try
to dream?"
Davyd thought a moment, then shook his head. "Not try." He
smiled wanly. "I was always afraid I might be discovered. That
an Inquisitor … " He fell silent, shivering at the memory.
"No, I never
tried to dream. Until … "
"Until?" Flysse prompted him.
"Until I came to Grostheim." Davyd spoke slowly, as if
realization were dragged unwilling from his mind. "When Arcole
spoke of our escape and looked to me for warning … Yes, then I
tried. It was not … pleasant. I was afraid."
"But you made the effort," said Flysse. "You sought to
dream. You concentrated on it."
She waited until Davyd nodded. Arcole went on rowing, waiting himself
to see where this led.
"There are no Inquisitors here." Flysse's hand gestured at
the river, the empty landscape beyond. "Nor hexers or priests.
Only we three, and the danger of the demons."
Davyd pondered awhile, then ducked his head in reluctant agreement.
"And the demons," Flysse continued, "are a danger like
the God's Militia. It's as if you were planning a—"
Almost, she said "robbery," but amended that to "job.
Yes, it's as if each day, each night, you plan a job. It's like that,
save now there's no need to fear discovery by the Autarchy."
"No," Davyd agreed. "I suppose not."
"So perhaps," Flysse said, "if you
try to dream
… If you lie down determined to dream … "
"It might work," Davyd finished for her. "Yes, it
might."
He sounded doubtful still, or wary, so Flysse said, "It worked
before, no? When Arcole asked that you warn of the attack, it worked
then—when you tried."
Davyd said, "Yes."
Flysse said, "And it should be without risk of burning. It
should be in a good cause." She smiled encouragingly. "It
should be in defense of us all, no?"
"That's true." Davyd's nod was more enthusiastic now. It
was hard to resist Flysse's smile, harder to think of some demon
taking her head. He was, after all, their guide in such matters:
Arcole had said so. It remained a frightening responsibility; but he
would not—could not, he thought—deny Flysse. He said,
"Yes, that's true. From now on I'll try."
Flysse said, "You are very brave." And though he did not
think it so, he basked in the accolade and endeavored to set his jaw
in a stern and manly line. He could not bear to think that harm might
come to her for want of his efforts. Yes, he would try hard; he would
be their dream guide, if it lay in his power. He liked that—Dream
Guide. That, he decided, was his title now, though he blushed to say
it out loud. He nodded solemnly and returned his attention to the
river ahead.
Arcole caught Flysse's eye and beamed his approval. God, to think
that he had once considered her beneath him—a tavern wench, a
farm girl. She was so much more than that, he felt ashamed of those
old, near-forgotten thoughts. God, but he loved this woman!
By mid-afternoon he could row no longer. His arms lost strength and
his back protested each sweep of the oars. He thought that did he not
rest, the dinghy must drift on the current. And that was now all
downstream: they were long past the influence of Deliverance Bay's
tidal flow, the Restitution turning its power to the east. Did they
drift, then it must be back the way they had come.
"We must halt," he said. "I can row no more."
Flysse said, "It's early yet."
"Even so." In unintended emphasis he missed his stroke, the
starboard oar sweeping clear of the water so that he pitched
backward, almost tumbling from the bench. "No, enough."
"We'll take over," she said. "Davyd and I."
Arcole could do no more than hold them steady against the current.
"You don't know how," he said. "And it's hard work."
"Then it's time we learnt," she replied. "Nor am I a
stranger to hard work."
He hesitated, and Davyd lent his argument to Flysse's. "You said
you'd teach us," he reminded Arcole. "And can we all take
turns at the oars, then surely we must make better time."
"Very well." Arcole bowed to their persuasions. "But
first, bandage your hands, or they'll be raw by dusk." He held
the dinghy stationary as they cut strips from their shirts. "Then
we must change places. But carefully, eh? Else we all find ourselves
in the river."
The dinghy rocked precariously as they shifted position. Arcole went
to the stern, where he might watch them and issue instructions;
Flysse and Davyd settled together on the rowing bench.
"So, you must do this in unison."
"'What's that?" asked Davyd.
Arcole said, "Together. Each oar must land at the same time, or
you'll be fighting each other and we'll zig and zag and go nowhere.
Now, this is how you do it … "
Their progress was at first erratic, and more than once one or the
other tumbled backward off the bench. Flysse was glad she wore
breeches: in skirts she'd have no dignity left. Twice, oars were
dropped, and caught only by dint of speed and good fortune. For some
time they did no more than hold station, but then they began to
move—slowly—upstream again. Arcole voiced his approval,
and was answered with two triumphant smiles.
He brought the map from his shirt and set to calculating the distance
traveled. By his reckoning they should reach a holding before dusk.
Wyme had not marked the farm as visited by the demons, but, he
thought, the map was drawn some time ago. He decided they could not
risk discovery, and blessed Flysse for her butcher's skill—there
was ample meat they could eat well again. And, he thought, eyeing the
sweaty faces of the two rowers, we all shall need sustenance tonight.
He rose a little, studying the river ahead. Wyme's maps had not run
to such details as the marking of woods or highlands, and he thought
to find a suitable resting place, hopefully sheltered from
observation.
One appeared in a while. The terrain grew rougher, and a low bluff
showed where the Restitution meandered southward. Loblolly pines grew
tall on the crest, running down the steep flanks to form a screen
between the river and the land. He pointed, advising Flysse and Davyd
of their destination, then must explain how the boat might be turned
in the desired direction.
It took some time before they reached the bench beneath the bluff and
got the dinghy beached. Neither Flysse nor Davyd was reluctant to
halt their labors, and Arcole could not resist chuckling as they
groaned and stretched their backs.
"Hard work, eh?" Flysse scowled; Davyd grunted. Arcole,
somewhat rested now, told them, "Do you take your ease here and
I'll climb up that headland, see what's beyond. Do we have …
visitors … then fire a pistol, and I'll return."
Flysse plucked her shirt away from her breasts and asked, "Can
we safely bathe? I'm … '" She grimaced her distaste.
"When I return," Arcole said. "When we know it's
safe."
She nodded and said, "Be careful."
"Yes." He took his musket and set to climbing.
From atop the bluff he could see the Restitution sweep away in wide
curves to north and south, thankfully empty. The far bank was a
heat-hazed blur, and for a while he checked the sky there for sign of
smoke. None showed, and he moved warily through the pines until he
might see what lay inland.
At the edge of the hurst he perused the map again. As best he
calculated, the closest holding was the Bayliss farm, a good league
or more to the west. He wondered if he stood on Bayliss land, and if
the farm survived still. He could see no signs of habitation; no
cattle grazed the vast expanse of grass spread out before him, and
there was no smoke to indicate fires of any kind. Faint in the
distance he saw the glitter of a stream, and dotted over the plain
were stands of timber. He hoped none hid demons, and decided that
their watch this night should be set upon the bluff: that would
afford a better vantage point than the bench.
As he returned it came to him that he fell back into a way of
thinking he had believed lay behind him. This sense of ever-present
peril, the need to set a guard each night, the endless vigilance—it
all reminded him of the conflict Evander named the War of
Restitution, the Levan the Conquest. Evander had won that struggle,
he thought, but shall not win this small fight. No, neither Evander
nor the demons—whatever they may be—shall defeat us.
He was grinning as he approached the others.
"The land stands empty," he reported. "And the river.
Flysse, do you wish to bathe, it's safe enough."
Flysse said, "Praise God," in a voice so earnest, Arcole
could not resist taking her in his arms and kissing her soundly.
"And we'll get a fire ready," he promised, then glancing at
the sky: "Though lighting it must wait, I fear."
"No matter." Flysse lifted hair rendered heavy by her
efforts from her neck. "The sun is still warm—I'll bask
awhile."
Davyd could not help the image that flashed into his mind at that,
and turned away so neither she nor Arcole could see him blush. "I'll
gather wood," he declared gruffly.
"There's plenty up there." Arcole stabbed a finger at the
bluff.
"Fresh pine?" Flysse shook her head. "That spits and
smokes. Better search along the shore for drifted wood, or fallen
branches. It's dry stuff we need."
Arcole exaggerated a bow. "I learn apace," he laughed.
"God, what would I do without you? Without the two of you?"
"Go hungry without me," she answered, chuckling. "And
without Davyd … "
Her laughter died. She shook her head and turned away. Davyd watched
her, thinking, I'll do my best. Is it in my power, I
shall
be your Dream Guide and see you safe from harm. Then added
guiltily, Yours and Arcole's both, and set to searching for suitable
kindling.
That night Arcole insisted he take the first watch, that he be able
to sleep the remainder and, hopefully, dream of any danger ahead.
Davyd took his musket and scrambled up the cliff to take station on
the rim. The river ran smooth and dark as oil below him, and the
banked fire was a dim red eye between the boat and the bluff. He
could barely make out the shapes of Flysse and Arcole—and did
not like to look too hard—but when he did, he thought they lay
together and felt a sudden flush of … He was not sure, it was a
feeling compounded of mixed emotions: envy and embarrassment and
guilt. For a while he wished he were Arcole, and could not help
imagining how it might feel to lie with Flysse in his arms. Then,
angry with himself for such thoughts, he rose and patrolled inland,
creeping stealthily through the pines until he reached the edge and
looked out across the grass. Far off, he thought he saw faint light,
as if from windows, or perhaps a group of close-spaced fires. He
wondered if he should return to the river to report the sight. But
what if Flysse and Arcole still lay together? He felt his cheeks grow
warm at the notion of interrupting them, and decided that if
folk—settlers or demons—sat around those fires, they
could not know they were observed, neither were they close enough to
represent any immediate threat. He stood awhile, watching, then
returned to the bluffs rim.
All was silent below, save for the soft whispering of the river.
Stars spread overhead, brilliant as jewels scattered across a velvet
cloth, and the slender crescent of the new moon drifted leisurely
westward. Davyd squatted, musket across his thighs, fighting against
the images of Flysse that threatened to intrude.
I must not, he told himself sternly, but still there came the
insidious thought: What if Arcole were not with us?
He was grateful when Arcole came to relieve him. "I thought I
saw lights," he reported. "A long way off to the west."
"The Bayliss holding's in that direction." Arcole seemed in
a great good humor; Davyd felt a rush of guilty envy. "It might
be that: I'll take a look. Meanwhile, sleep well."
Davyd nodded and climbed down to the river.
Flysse stirred sleepily as he found his bedroll. He saw that hers and
Arcole's were laid together. He took his own a little way off and
stretched out, telling himself, I am the Dream Guide. I must do my
duty and not think of her.
He doubted that should be possible, but his efforts at the oars and
the tension of the day seeped suddenly into him, so that he slept
Before he knew it. And dreamed.
"There was no danger in it," he said around a mouthful of
roasted beef. "I dreamed of a meeting, no more than that. I saw
no faces, but I don't think they were demons."
"Can you be sure?" Arcole said.
"There was no sense of danger." Davyd shrugged. "I
can't be
sure, but before … " He scratched at his
cheek, where the brand stood pale against his growing tan. "There
was always the feeling of danger before."
Flysse said, "You slept undisturbed." And when he frowned,
amplified: "You've always tossed and turned, cried out."
He nodded thoughtfully and said, "I suppose I did. Surely when I
dreamed of the attack on Grostheim, I woke frightened. This was not
like that at all. This was quite peaceful."
"So." Arcole wiped grease from his beard. "We're to
have a meeting, eh? Likely, a peaceful meeting."
Davyd spread his hands in an equivocal gesture. "I suppose so; I
don't know for sure." He smiled apologetically. "I'm
sorry."
"Sorry?" Arcole laughed, and reached to slap his shoulder,
turning to Flysse. "D'you hear him? He predicts our future and
then apologizes."
"It's not very clear," said Davyd. "I'd hoped to do
better."
"You do the best you can," Arcole returned. "I'd ask
no more of any man."
Davyd liked that: that Arcole named him a man. He felt better. "I'll
practice," he said, not sure how he would do that, but
nonetheless determined.
Curious—and not a little wary—they loaded the dinghy and
continued on their way. The sun was not long risen, but still it lit
the river as if the water were molten gold. The sky was a pristine
blue, the breeze that came out of the west refreshing. Herons stood,
patient fishermen, along the banks, and an osprey stooped to snatch a
plump trout. Magpies chattered, and from a stretch of woodland a
great black flock of crows took noisy flight.
Before midmorning, as they drew level with the Bayliss farm, Davyd's
dream was proved true.
He crouched in the bow, scanning the shore and the river ahead, so he
was the first to see them. He gasped, settling a thumb on the
musket's hammer, then said, "People!"
Arcole backed water, turning the dinghy that he might see.
Flysse said, "Not demons, I think."
"Evanderans are no less dangerous." Arcole craned around,
squinting shoreward. "Does some farmer see our brands, he'll
look to take us in."
"I think they're all indentured folk." Davyd shaded his
eyes against the brilliance of the sun. "They look all ragged."
Arcole asked, "Are they armed?"
"They've axes and such," Davyd replied. "I can see no
guns."
Arcole turned the dinghy closer to the shore and held it stationary
as he surveyed the watchers. They crowded on a little jetty, studying
the approaching boat. They appeared a sorry lot, four women and three
men, unkempt and dressed in dirty homespun. They waved at the boat.
He saw no firearms, but as Davyd had warned, they held axes and other
tools. He brought the dinghy closer still.
"Flysse, do you pass me my musket?"
She obeyed even as she said, "Surely they offer no harm. Look, I
can see their brands."
"Even so." Arcole nodded. "Davyd, do I give the word,
fire over their heads."
He let the dinghy drift a little nearer and called out, "Greetings,
friends. Who are you?"
They seemed nonplussed as they saw the trio in the dinghy clearly.
The oldest man shouted, "You've come from Grostheim?"
"We have," Arcole replied. "And you?"
"Where are the others?" The man scanned the river as if he
anticipated a flotilla. "Where are the soldiers?"
"Busy defending the city," Arcole called. "We're all
alone."
A woman wailed at that, clutching a screaming child to her breast.
"No soldiers?" asked the man. "Oh, God save us! Did
the master send you?"
"Who's the master?" Arcole shouted.
"Sieur Bayliss," came the reply. "Him and the mistress
quit the holding weeks back. Told us to hang on, he did. Said he'd
have soldiers come to bring us in."
"Grostheim was under siege when we … departed," Arcole
called. "I know nothing of this Bayliss."
The man gaped. He turned to his companions, an expression of
bewilderment on his bearded face. A younger fellow pushed to the fore
and shouted, "You're exiles, no? Indentured folk like us?"
"Exiles, yes," Arcole called back. "But no longer
indentured. We chose to quit our … employment. We're headed west."
The young man turned slowly in that direction, staring at the distant
shadow of the forests as if he struggled to comprehend Arcole's
words.
"You're runaways? You're going into the wilderness?"
"To live free," Arcole returned.
"And you don't bring help?"
"I fear not."
"The masters'll hunt you down." The older man spoke again,
goggling now, as if their presence might somehow contaminate him.
"The governor'll send Militiamen after you."
"The Militiamen are otherwise occupied," Arcole gave back.
"Or were when we left. The demons came in force against the
city, and I doubt we'll be missed."
"No soldiers," a woman cried. "No help. Oh, God, we're
done for."
The young man said, "You've a boat."
"A very small boat," Arcole said. "Barely large enough
for us three. Surely too small for ten people, or even seven.
Besides, you're safer here than in Grostheim."
The young man looked set to argue, but the older put a hand on his
arm and said, "He's right, Gerold. We'd swamp that little thing.
And if he speaks the truth about Grostheim … "
"He does," Flysse called. "The demons are all around
the city—we fled in the confusion."
"Then what shall we do?" asked the oldster.
Arcole said, "You've not yet been attacked?"
"Not yet," came the answer in a tone of despair.
"Did Bayliss leave you weapons?" Arcole asked.
The man frowned as if the question were nonsensical and shook his
head. "We're indentured folk, not allowed weapons." He
touched his brand to emphasize his words. "The master took all
the muskets and pistols with him."
Arcole said, "A kindly master, eh?" in a tone of contempt.
The young man said, "You've guns."
"Only these," Arcole replied. "Which we shall need, I
think."
Gerold hefted the ax he carried; Davyd raised his musket across his
chest. Surely it could not come to a fight? His dream had suggested
no danger. He caught Gerald's eye and for a moment they stared at
each other, then the ax was lowered and Gerold muttered, "God,
does it come to this? We all wear the brand, no? Shall we fight one
another?"
Davyd said, "I'd not."
Arcole said, "It's the masters to blame—the Autarchy of
Evander. They use folk like us as they will, but when danger
threatens—then they run, looking only to save their own skins."
Gerold said, "That's true, but of little comfort. What's to
become of us?"
"Have the demons not yet attacked this farm," Arcole said,
"then perhaps they never will. You may be safe here; surely
safer than did you try for Grostheim."
Gerold spat and said, "So we're to remain; tend the master's
herds and fields while he hides behind the city walls. And then, does
he return?"
Arcole said, "You might keep the place for your own. Or you
could follow us into the forests."
"The wilderness?" Gerold shook his head vigorously,
spitting and crossing his fingers. "That's where the demons come
from, no? I'll not go there."
"Nor I," agreed the oldster. "Nor any of us. But,
friend, might you not stay? We'd stand a better chance with your
muskets." "
"Would you fight the Autarchy?" Arcole asked. "When
Bayliss comes back—if he does—would you claim this farm
for your own?"
It was as if he suggested some great obscenity. The old man stood
with dropped jaw, and Gerold stared at Arcole as if he were crazed.
'The others shook their heads and voiced denial.
"Then what of us?" Arcole pressed. "You ask us to
stay—to risk our lives, perhaps, in your defense. But when
Bayliss returns, you'd welcome him—and hand us over?"
Gerold, at least, had the grace to blush. The old man shrugged and
said, "That's the way of the world, no? The masters rule and we
serve. What else can we do?"
Arcole said, "Save you've the courage to stand up for
yourselves, nothing. But we go west, to freedom."
"More like to your deaths," the old man grunted.
"Perhaps." Arcole smiled. "But is that our fate, we'll
die free."
"At least rest here awhile," the old man suggested. "We've
food aplenty."
Arcole shook his head. "I think not. The day's young yet, and
we've a way to travel. Fare you well."
He wasted no more time, but set to propelling the dinghy out into the
stream, away from the dock. The exiles stood watching, their
expressions hopeless.
"Might we not have stayed?" Flysse asked.
"Why?" Arcole returned. "There's nothing for us there,
save likely they'd seek to take our guns. And should Bayliss come
home, hand us over."
"Think you they would?" she asked. "Truly?"
Arcole nodded. "Those were defeated folk. They've accepted their
lot—Evander's beaten them down."
From the bow, Davyd said, "I was afraid that Gerold was going to
attack us. I feared I'd have to shoot."
"I didn't," Arcole replied calmly. "I trusted your
dream."
Davyd pondered that awhile, then grinned. "Yes," he said.
"I dreamed true, no?"
"You did," said Arcole. "You did, indeed."
They floated on, the days steadily warmer as spring gave way to
summer, pulling to midstream where Arcole's map showed holdings—they
none of them felt any desire to repeat their sad encounter with the
hapless folk of the Bayliss holding. When their food ran low, Arcole
shot—he could not think of it as hunting—a cow or a hog
from the herds now roaming loose over the empty farmlands. Flysse
demonstrated her rustic skills, filling the canteens with fresh milk,
or finding vegetables to supplement the meat. Twice, she brought them
eggs.
Davyd tried his hand with the fishing lines, but had no luck, and
Arcole would not yet permit him to fire the musket for fear of
wasting shot. Had he not dreamed, he would have felt useless; but the
dreams came often now, and he grew more adept in their
interpretation. It seemed that his ability increased as they drew
closer to the wilderness.
Three times he warned against the danger of landing, and they duly
saw demons on the shore, pushing on until night hid them and they
deemed it safe to beach the dinghy. Three more times he urged they
hold to midstream, and demons appeared along the bank, pacing the
boat until the terrain or the sweeps of the river denied them further
pursuit. And all the time the shadow line of the forests grew more
distinct, no longer a faraway goal, but daily more real. The
wilderness began to assume a looming physical presence, and Davyd
spent more and more time each day scanning its nearing edges, seeking
to find the mountains beyond.
When his surveillance was rewarded, he doubted the evidence his eyes
gave him. Ahead, it was as though a vast brush had painted a line of
darkness across the horizon. The pale, bright green of the grasslands
gave way to darker hues, green and blue and black: the wilderness
forest. That enormous swath was wide enough, but it in turn was
dwarfed by what stood beyond and above. It seemed the forests climbed
to meet the sky, save a wall of stone stood above the timber as if
supporting the heavens. He could scarcely believe anything so massive
existed in all the world as those great peaks. They ran as far as he
could see to north and south, cloud shrouding the summits, their
flanks all blue and gray above the green darkness of the treeline,
sparkling white higher up. He thought that if safety lay there, it
should be certainly very hard to find, for he could not envisage how
anyone might climb such a barrier.
But on more nights than one, it was if a voice whispered from the
mountains, calling him, summoning him to them. He could not
understand it, but he believed—in his blood and the marrow of
his bones—that he must go there, must bring Flysse and Arcole
to that refuge. That he must play his part of Dream Guide.
As the forests loomed ever closer, so the signs of habitation fell
away. Arcole's map showed no more holdings, and the animals grazing
the riverside pastures thinned. They held a council and decided to
rest awhile, long enough that Flysse might smoke meat for them to
carry with them. Arcole was loath to chance the forest's hunting: he
feared all their shot might be needed against more savage creatures,
and indeed Davyd's dreams now suggested great peril lay ahead. It was
if they must pass a test of some kind before they could hope to gain
the promised sanctuary, and often as he dreamed of the mountains and
safety, he dreamed of fire and demons. But did he wake sweating,
gripped by remembered terror, still there was a boon to the delay.
Arcole taught him and Flysse to use their weapons, and began to teach
Davyd the rudiments of sword-play.
The lessons were, of necessity, sparse, the use of powder and shot
limited, but the basics were conveyed and afforded them both a small
sense of security. Davyd thought that at least, did the demons fall
on them, they might now give a fair account of themselves. Even so,
as nightly he dreamed of threat, he longed to be gone. To face
whatever lay ahead must surely be better than this waiting. He felt
only relief when Flysse announced their supplies ready, and Arcole
declared it time to go.
46—The Wilderness
Timber flanked the Restitution now, and the current grew daily
stronger. The banks narrowed, rocks began to show, and when the first
cascade appeared, Arcole declared it time to leave the dinghy and
proceed on foot.
It was strange to walk again; stranger still that their way wound
amongst vast trees, branches spreading wide and leafy overhead so
that the sky was more often than not hidden and they marched in
shadow dappled with harlequin patterns of filtered sunlight. Birds
sang but were seldom seen, and startled beasts—deer and boars
and bears—surprised them, fleeing half glimpsed from their
approach. They none of them felt at ease. They had Davyd's dreams to
set their nerves on edge, their ears straining to discern the
unfamiliar forest sounds, their eyes scanning the crepuscular woods.
They momentarily anticipated the onslaught of demons, coming
screaming out of the trees.
Arcole took the lead, Davyd the rear, and they followed the river
because it led them westward toward the mountains, and that was the
direction Davyd's dreams told them to go. It was hard traveling, for
the land soon rose, the river tumbling down over steep falls or
cutting a way through rocky gorges, the banks often impossible to
traverse, so that they must meander deeper into the forest and trust
their ears to tell them where the water ran. But westward, always
westward, the tree-shaded sun on their backs in the mornings, on
their faces come the afternoons.
And did Arcole head their little column, it was Davyd who guided them
now.
The content of the dreams still frightened him, but he was at peace
with the ability. Indeed, he was proud of his role as Dream Guide and
grew daily more confident. When he urged caution, Arcole listened,
and Flysse studied him with wide and wondering eyes. Davyd could not
help luxuriating in her admiration any more than he could resist the
pleasure he felt at Arcole's trust, but it was easier to resist his
guilty thoughts under the burden of responsibility. When he took his
turn on guard and images of Flysse came hot into his mind, he pushed
them away—there was too much danger here to allow such
distractions. And when he slept, it was not Flysse who invaded his
dreams, but images of demons and peril, and the sense of a hazardous
maze to be traversed before they might reach safety.
That remained a promise. When he dreamed of flight from yelling
monsters or of raging flames, there was always, behind the nightmare
images, that vision of the mountains, and the sense of a cool wind,
protective against the fire. He could still neither explain nor
understand it, only
know that sanctuary lay ahead. He thought
the wilderness changed him; surely, he felt, he was no longer a
frightened boy looking to Arcole for protection, but now a man. He
thought, even, that he felt hair on his chin, and was proud of that.
Four days into the forest he dreamed that they should hide, and
consequently they passed the next day huddled in a cave beside a
waterfall. Arcole, spying from the rimrock, advised that a band of
some twenty or more demons went east along their backtrail. The
following morning Davyd announced it was safe to continue, and they
clambered cold and damp from their hiding place.
Soon after that he urged they detour, away from the river, and Arcole
agreed without demur, even though the going was hard and they neither
saw nor heard demons.
One night he forbade them a fire. It had rained that day and they
were soaked, but still Arcole concurred and they found a place where
pines had toppled, one bringing down another across a shallow bowl,
roofing the hollow so that it was hidden from casual sight: had Davyd
not dreamed of such a place, they would not have found it. They
gathered deadfall branches, constructing a shelter that was as much
camouflage as protection against the night's cold, and leant against
one another for warmth. Arcole and Davyd sat to either side of
Flysse, close, and it was impossible for Davyd to ignore her
proximity until voices sounded soft through the darkness.
Then he only held his musket tight and ransacked his memory for
precise recollection of the dream that had warned against a fire.
It had been a jumbled affair, of savage hunters and cowering prey,
and his only certainty was that they must not risk discovery. He
clenched his jaw then, for his teeth threatened to chatter, and he
could not tell if that was the cold or the chill of the dreadful fear
that gripped him. He turned his head and saw Flysse's face a pale
shape in the gloom. Almost, he took her hand, but then he saw she
clutched at Arcole's arm and envied his friend that touch. He had
thought such impulses banished: he turned his eyes away and cursed
silently, not sure whether he cursed Arcole or himself.
Outside, beyond the sheltering trunks, the voices came closer. Soft
calls went back and forth. Davyd strained to hear them clear. It
seemed he could almost understand what they said, but that was
impossible; and he told himself his imagination ran wild. He hooked a
finger about the musket's trigger, his thumb on the hammer. He vowed
that no demon should take Flysse whilst he still lived.
The voices came closer, until they sounded from just outside the
makeshift shelter. The moon was filled, drifting cold, indifferent
light over the forest, and its illumination granted Davyd brief
glimpses of feet and legs clad in buckskin. He saw the boots the
demons wore were decorated with colored beads, and flinched as the
fallen pines vibrated under a demon's weight. Dead needles and shards
of moldering bark cascaded down, crawling things dropping. One landed
on his face and he must fight the urge to slap it away. He felt
Flysse, rigid beside him. Her eyes were wide and staring and her lips
were clenched. She held a pistol. Past her, Arcole held his musket
upright, angled at the treacherous roof. Davyd thought his pounding
heart must surely beat loud enough that the demons hear it, or some
crawling, biting thing prompt him to involuntary movement. His hands
began to ache as they gripped his musket: he forced himself to relax
his hold. He struggled to breathe evenly. Dear God! The dream had
warned of danger, but not like this, not so close. He could not
understood how the demons could fail to see them.
The pines shuddered some more, creaking as the demon walked across
them. It said something in its odd, almost comprehensible tongue, and
then a fresh downpour rained over the three as it sprang clear. The
voices receded, fading away, and finally were gone.
No one moved or spoke. Davyd felt sweat run hot down his face, cold
down his back. An owl hooted, then some large animal shuffled past.
Deep in the forest a beast snarled, and another screamed.
In a voice so soft it should not carry past the shelter, Arcole said,
"I believe they're gone."
Davyd was surprised so low a tone could sound so tense. He turned his
head slowly sideways, shuddering as something with too many legs fell
down his chest and began to crawl over his belly. It was more than he
could bear: he pressed a hand to his wet shirt, crushing the insect.
"Careful." Arcole's warning was still pitched low. "Best,
I think, that we stay here. How say you, Davyd?"
He nodded, not trusting his voice. He thought that if he spoke at
all, he would likely scream. He felt horribly cold and thrust a hand
into his mouth, biting, that his teeth not rattle announcement of
their presence. Arcole's teeth flashed white in a brief smile. Then
Davyd flinched as Flysse's hand touched his.
She put her mouth close to his ear. Her breath was warm and made him
shiver. "Praise God for your dreams," she murmured.
"Without you we'd surely be dead."
He stretched his mouth in what he hoped was a gallant smile, though
it was more likely a grimace. Flysse answered his smile and touched
her lips to his cheek. It was a cruel kindness.
Arcole said, "Do you two sleep now, and I'll watch the night."
Flysse said, "I doubt I can. My heart races too fast." But
she rested her head against his shoulder and closed her eyes.
Davyd wished it were his shoulder cradling her head. He wished the
confines of their shelter did not press them so close. He doubted he
could sleep. The last thing he remembered was Arcole's low voice:
"None snores, eh?"
That night he dreamed the wind blew warm and strong out of the
mountains, and there was no fire nor any demons—only the wind,
like summer sunlight on his face. In the morning he knew it was safe
to go on.
"Think you they hunt us?" Arcole asked as they prepared to
leave.
Davyd stretched, flexing cramped muscles. "I don't know,"
he said. "How can they know we're here?"
"Perhaps they've some way of sending messages." Arcole
shrugged. "Perhaps those bands we saw along the river send word.
Perhaps they hunt us because we slew their fellows."
"I think perhaps they claim all this land for their own, and
name any who come here enemy. I think they are filled with hate."
The words were no sooner uttered than Davyd wondered why he said
them; they seemed to come involuntary, from that part of him that
dreamed. Surely it was not a thing he had considered before: survival
was enough. He frowned, confused, and brushed bark and bugs from his
hair.
Arcole nodded thoughtfully. "And how much do they claim?"
"Likely all of Salvation," Davyd answered, but it seemed
another spoke, his mouth only the tool of utterance.
Arcole studied him a moment, then: "And the mountains? Beyond
the mountains?"
"Safety." Suddenly Davyd was entirely himself again. He
shook his head, shrugging, wondering if the frightening night had
deranged him. "I don't know, only that the mountains are our one
chance."
Arcole fixed his pack across his back. "They'll not be easy to
climb." He smiled. "But perhaps you'll dream us up a pass."
Davyd nodded. "Perhaps."
The mountains were invisible now, lost behind the curtain of trees.
They seemed very far away, and he could not imagine climbing such
heights. For an instant he wondered if escape was only an impossible
dream, the wind that promised safety only a subterfuge, a trick.
Perhaps his dreaming would bring them all safe through the forests
only to see them die amongst those gigantic peaks. For a moment he
doubted.
Then he gasped, his vision blurring. It was as if he dreamed awake:
he felt the wind on his face, and through the timber saw a light that
burned off doubt. In a voice he was not sure belonged to him, he
said, "The mountains are safe. We must go there."
He staggered and felt Arcole's hands on him, holding him upright. His
friend's face was etched with concern.
"Are you fevered?"
"I'm … " He shook his head. "No … we're safe now.
must go on … To the mountains."
Arcole let him go, said, "Yes. But are you hale?"
For a moment he stared at Davyd as if he were a stranger; for a
moment Davyd felt he
was a stranger. Then he swallowed,
ducking his head. His vision cleared and he saw only the forest
again. He said, "I am," and grinned. "Save that I'm
wet and cold and would sleep a week or so, all's well."
Hesitantly, Arcole said, "It should be dangerous to chance a
fire now. Those creatures might see the smoke."
It sounded like an apology: it was odd to hear such indecision from
so confident a man, and Davyd frowned. "I'll dry out as we
walk," he said. "And tonight we can build a fire."
"As you say." Arcole looked to his priming as if he could
no longer meet Davyd's eyes.
Flysse had retired into the trees to perform her ablutions, and
halted within their shade when she heard the curious conversation.
She did not intend to eavesdrop, but there was that about Davyd's
manner that prompted her to wait and listen. He was so much changed
from the frightened boy she had comforted in Bantar, she scarce
recognized him any longer. He had seemed so young then, so skinny and
afraid, she could not help but mother him. Now he was a young man. He
had grown tall and muscular, and between their arrival in Grostheim
and now his voice had deepened. And there were other changes. She
wished she had not kissed him—she feared it should stoke the
fires she sensed burned within him, and that could lead only to
difficulties.
It was no longer possible to ignore the fact that he harbored
feelings for her. She supposed that was not so unusual, and thought
that had they remained in Grostheim, he would, in time, have
transferred that infatuation to some girl of his own age. But they
had not remained—they were three folk fleeing into the
wilderness, and that forced them ever more proximate. She wished she
could find some way to damp his ardor without hurting his feelings.
Perhaps when they reached the promised sanctuary of the mountains …
Which prompted fresh wonderings. That Davyd was a Dreamer, she
accepted—was grateful for his talent—but even in that he
changed. She had urged he endeavor to employ his gift more precisely,
and since that day it seemed the ability increased apace. He dreamed
nightly now. Indeed, did she interpret what she had just heard
aright, he now began to dream awake. She understood the look Arcole
had given him: it was as if Davyd entered some strange transitional
phase, as if the butterfly began to emerge from the cocoon. He
remained the youth she knew, and at the same time seemed a stranger.
She wondered what he would be when finally grown to maturity.
She rested a hand against the gnarled bole of a pine and looked to
the sky. The sun came out now, the clouds that had delivered the rain
blown off on a high westerly wind. Light came down bright through the
branches, warm as a lover's promise, and the forest seemed a tranquil
place. It had been since they reached these woods, she thought, that
Davyd's prophetic dreams had grown so much stronger. Along the river,
as they closed on the wilderness, the ability had burgeoned, but now
it was stronger than ever. It was as if he saw each day mapped out,
and was no longer at all hesitant in his predictions. He told them
where to walk and where to camp, when they might forage for food
and—most important of all—when they need hide. Without
him she doubted even Arcole could survive for long, and even as she
was grateful, she felt a little frightened. Almost, she thought,
Davyd became something more than human.
Then, as she came out from the timber and he saw her approach, he was
only Davyd again, smiling and then blushing, busying himself with his
gear. He was bedraggled, his lengthening hair a lank red curtain
about his face, his shirt stretched wet across his broadened
shoulders. She smiled, but he was aping Arcole, checking the priming
of his musket, and did not see.
"Do we break our fast?" she asked for want of something to
say. "Or do we flee?"
Arcole said, "Our guide tells me we're safe for now. But best we
go on, look forward to a fire tonight. Eh, Davyd?"
Flysse knew her husband well enough to recognize he sought to heal
whatever breach that earlier strangeness might have opened, and
smiled her approval. Davyd did not look up, only nodded absently and
murmured, "Yes; tonight."
"Then onward we go," Arcole declared, then looked at Davyd
and asked, "Do you take the lead?" Davyd stared back,
momentarily perplexed. "Me?" He pushed wet hair from his
forehead, which furrowed now.
"It seems only fitting," Arcole replied. "You guide
us, no? Your rightful place is in the lead.
Davyd thought a moment, then nodded. "I suppose so," he
allowed, seeming not entirely convinced. "But I don't think it
really makes much difference."
Arcole said, "Even so," and bowed, gesturing that Davyd set
himself to the fore.
Davyd straightened his back, squared his shoulders, and grinned as he
braced his musket across his chest.
"Follow me, then."
Arcole saluted and motioned Flysse ahead of him as he took station at
the rear.
That night they found a clearing cut by a little rill that bubbled
through the grass. They built a fire and Flysse set out snares,
winning them four plump rabbits. They still set a watch, but just as
Davyd had promised, no danger came—only a black bear that
snuffled down to the water, then lumbered off grumbling as it caught
their scent.
It had by now become their accepted custom that Davyd take the first
watch, that he have the remainder of the night to dream. Flysse
waited until he slept, then crept to where Arcole sat: she felt a
need to express her thoughts.
"He changes," she whispered. "I saw what happened this
morning."
"That was odd, no?" Arcole returned her. "But to our
good, I think."
"Yes." Flysse nodded against his chest. "But why? He
was not like this in Grostheim."
Arcole shrugged. "I've not met a Dreamer before, only seen them
burned. Perhaps the hexes on Grostheim's walls prevented him. Perhaps
danger brings out the talent, or it's to do with the wilderness.
Perhaps it was your suggestion."
"How could the wilderness make him dream?" she asked. "And
if it does, do the demons dream also?"
"I don't know." Arcole shrugged again. "Perhaps they
do. I'd hazard the guess they've magic of some kind. How else could
they creep up on the city so?"
Flysse said, "Do you think it still stands?"
"Perhaps." Arcole nuzzled her hair. "The walls were
strong, and hexed; the Militia had weapons aplenty. Wyme might have
sent back to Evander, asking for reinforcements."
Flysse said, "Do the demons prevail, we shall be all alone."
Arcole laughed softly and said, "That was our plan, no? And does
Davyd bring us to this 'safe place' of his … Perhaps we shall find
folk there. Hopefully of kinder disposition."
Flysse lifted her head to look into his eyes. "Think you it
could be so?" she asked. "Can there be other folk here,
kinder?"
"Who knows?" Arcole bent to kiss her gently. "All I
know for sure is that we must go on. We've little other choice, eh?"
"If the demons have magic," Flysse murmured, "shall
they not find us?"
"They've not so far," Arcole said. "And we've Davyd
for our guide. We must trust
his magic to bring us through."
"Yes." Flysse was silent awhile, then: "He changes in
other ways."
"He grows," Arcole said. "And fast."
"He grows and … " Flysse hesitated to say it.
Arcole finished the sentence for her: "He harbors a barely
concealed passion for you. Yes, think you I've not noticed that?"
"It's … difficult." Flysse looked to where Davyd lay,
glad that he slept soundly. "I'd not hurt him, but it is
sometimes … embarrassing."
"I cannot find it in me to condemn him for finding you
desirable." Arcole spoke with exaggerated solemnity. "After
all, I share that passion. But do you wish me to speak with him … "
"No!" Flysse shook her head. "That should only make it
worse. He'd feel guilty—God, he already does! Sometimes he'll
not meet my eye, but only blushes and turns away—and I'd not
come between you. But when we reach his 'safe place'—when we
halt—what then?"
"Perhaps," said Arcole slowly, "we must share you."
"Sieur!" Flysse punched his chest, hard enough he winced.
"I am your wife.
Yours! I'll not be passed about like
some doxy. Is that the way of it in the Levan? Be it so, it is not
mine!"
She heard a strange sound then, coming from her husband's throat. It
was as if he choked, and for an instant she feared her blow had
wounded him. Then she realized he suppressed laughter—and
struck him again.
"Think you I'd share you with anyone?" he asked. "God,
Flysse, were Davyd not my friend, I'd call him out just for the way
he looks at you!"
Flysse smiled, mollified. "Even so," she whispered, "he
becomes a man, and it shall likely become a problem, no?"
Arcole nodded, thoughtful now. "If there are folk in his 'safe
place,' " he said, "then surely there must be women there.
If not … Well, perhaps he and I shall go back to Salvation to steal
him a wife."
"Steal a woman?" Flysse was shocked.
"Do the demons leave any alive," Arcole said. "He
becomes, after all, a handsome enough young man. Perhaps some branded
girl dreams of freedom and would welcome a handsome young rover to
satisfy her dreams."
Flysse wondered if he was serious, and if she could approve. "Would
you do that for Davyd?" she asked. "Truly?"
"For Davyd," Arcole replied, "yes. Sooner than Come to
blows over you."
"I hope," Flysse said earnestly, "That there
are
folk in the 'safe place.' I'd not see you go back, husband. Not
leave me again."
"Nor I." Arcole spoke no less fervently. "But for now,
all we can do is hope, eh? Let us reach this promised sanctuary, and
then discuss Davyd's future."
Flysse said, "Yes," and snuggled against him, drowsy now.
The forest rose sleeper as they progressed westward, spurs of stone
beginning to thrust through the timber as if the mountains clawed an
anchorage in the lowlands. Often now they could see the heights like
an enormous wall before them. Their passage slowed in consequence,
for often they must clamber up vertiginous slopes or detour around
those too precipitous to climb. Sometimes there were gorges so sheer
they could only traverse the cliff edge until gentler terrain allowed
them passage. The high waters of the river were left behind, lost in
the maze of timber and undulating land, and they relied entirely on
Davyd to guide them and still they must hide when he ordered.
It seemed there were fewer demons roaming the woodlands now, and days
passed when Davyd announced it safe to hunt, or delay as Flysse found
mushrooms and wild onions and other plants that flavored the deer
Arcole brought down, or the grouse and rabbits she snared.
Davyd enjoyed those days, for Arcole taught him to stalk
and—finally—allowed him a shot at a deer. He was mightily
proud of his kill, and could not resist telling the tale of the hunt
in great detail to Flysse. No less did he enjoy his continuing
lessons with the smallsword, the more for Arcole's praise of his
burgeoning skill.
"You've the makings of a fine swordsman," Arcole announced
to his delight. "Do you only practice, I think you shall be very
good indeed."
Davyd beamed his pleasure. Flysse, watching them, was somewhat less
pleased. It occurred to her that if her worst doubts were realized—if
Davyd s infatuation did not wane—he might make some indecorous
approach and Arcole take offense. It might, she thought, come to a
fight; and her husband taught Davyd his talents. As yet, the young
man would stand no chance against Arcole's superior skill, but if
Arcole taught him well enough … Flysse prayed events not reach that
turn—she'd see neither of them harmed.
They continued to climb, the forest thinning as they moved ever
deeper into the foothills. The beech and maple of the eastern edges
gave way to spruce and tamarack, balsam fir, and their route lay
often over open ground, across high shoulders of rock and slopes of
littered scree. The mountains were no longer hidden, but always in
sight, vast buttresses rising overhead, the peaks beyond misty with
cloud. They seemed as much a barrier as sanctuary, for as their
enormity was revealed, so it dawned on the travelers that the
conquest of such monoliths was impossible. They would surely freeze
or starve or fall to their deaths did they attempt to ascend that
sky-challenging wall.
But Davyd led them unerring as a scented hound. It was as if a
lodestone lay inside his skull, guiding him to the unknown refuge of
his dreams. He did not hesitate, and neither Arcole nor Flysse
offered argument as he urged them onward, though their muscles
protested the climbing and their bellies grew hollow as the game grew
scarcer.
The deer and rabbits of the lower forests did not venture there, and
the great horned sheep that traversed the ledges defied hunting, too
often leaping agile away before Arcole or Davyd had the chance to
fire, those shot too often tumbling down into inaccessible ravines.
They went often hungry and often cold, for kindling was harder to
find and the nights grew chill; but Davyd insisted they must go on,
and his companions followed.
They went up through the foothills to the flanks of the true
mountains, where only bare stone rose above and the only food was the
fish they caught in lonely tarns. For days Davyd had dreamed only of
the wind, of its promise, then one night, on a shelf that shone like
polished onyx under the moon, he moaned and tossed about, and woke
wide-eyed and sweating.
"They're close!" he gasped, staring around, his hands
instinctively finding his musket, clutching the gun to his chest.
"Oh, God! We may not have time!"
He sprang to his feet, ignoring his companions as he ran to the shelf
s edge, scanning the slopes below. Arcole bade Flysse secure their
packs and hurried to join him.
"What did you dream?"
Davyd turned fevered eyes on the man. "Fire met the wind,"
he moaned. "Always before, the wind has turned the fire back.
This time it couldn't! I stood between, but when I tried to walk into
the wind, hands of flame reached out to pull me back. Arcole, we must
hurry!"
"Yes." Arcole surveyed the heights. "But to where?"
The shelf was reached up a near-vertical slope, backed along most of
its length by a sheer wall of impassable stone. To the north, it
curved and fell down in a rocky jumble to a ravine where white water
foamed. There, the cliff was climbable—but barely, and only
with time-consuming difficulty. Were they on that ascent when the
demons came, they would have no chance: the demons need only stand
below and pick them off.
Davyd said, "Up! It's the only way."
"If they catch us there, we're dead." Arcole surveyed the
cliff, the shelf. "Do we stand here and fight, we've surely a
better chance."
"No!" Davyd shook his head. "We must climb. Do we stay
here, we're lost."
Arcole said, "Caught on that climb, we're lost."
Davyd faced him. His eyes were wild and red with tortured sleep,
shifting about as if he momentarily anticipated the arrival of the
demons. "Trust me," he croaked. "Arcole, you
must!"
Arcole looked at his face and nodded: it was impossible to argue with
such fervor. "So be it." He spun, calling to Flysse. "We
must climb. Now!"
Urgency was palpable as they ran toward her and she handed them their
packs, fixing her own across her back. They thrust their muskets
through the rolled tarpaulins and slung them in place. None spoke as
they hurried to the farther end of the shelf.
Then Arcole said, "Flysse, do you go first. That way … "
He fell silent as a yammering shriek disturbed the morning. More rang
out, as if wild dogs came running hot on their scent. They began to
climb.
It seemed madness to attempt the ascent. Leisurely, it should likely
have taken the better part of the morning to reach the rimrock. It
needed care, the cautious checking of hand and footholds. Yet now
they went incautious, swift as strength and rock allowed. Flysse had
a brief wild image of frightened spiders running up a wall.
The howling grew louder. She heard Arcole curse. An arrow clattered
off the rock above her, sparking chips that fell like sharp rain
against her face. She dared not look down, only climb and pray.
Arcole lodged the fingers of his left hand on a jut of stone and
tugged his pistol loose. It was difficult to cock the hammer without
losing the priming, without loosing his precarious footing. He
twisted round as far as he was able and saw a snarling, painted demon
below, sighting down the length of an arrow. He fired, and the demon
screamed, falling back. He jammed the spent pistol into his belt and
went on climbing. He could not believe—did Davyd dream it, or
no—that they could survive this.
Davyd only climbed. A dreadful fear gripped him, far worse than the
thought of crashing to the shelf below or any contemplation of an
arrow striking. He would prefer that to falling into the hands of the
demons—he
knew his death should be slow at their hands.
He somehow knew, as surely as if he dreamed it, that those creatures
would recognize him as a Dreamer and punish him for that damning gift
in ways worse than even an Inquisitor might invent. He damned himself
for a failure—he was the Dream Guide! He should have
anticipated this. He could not understand how he had failed, save all
had been some weird, oneiric design to bring them to this impasse.
Perhaps the demons had played with him, driving him to this place.
Perhaps they had put the dreams in his head.
Then, suddenly as it had come before, he felt the wind touch his
face, and—as before, when he had doubted—he felt he saw a
light like a welcoming lantern at the mouth of a long, dark street.
Almost, he lurched back, but his fingers and his toes held their grip
and he clung only a moment to the sheer rock, not knowing he smiled.
He felt once more confident—this
was the only way. Had
they remained on the shelf, the demons would have overwhelmed them
with sheer weight of numbers. It still seemed entirely impossible,
but this way—this fly's climb—
was their only hope.
He heard Arcole grunt, "Climb, for God's sake!" and
realized he had halted. The crash of an arrow galvanized him and he
went limber upward, strong now, as if the wind had toned his muscles,
washed away fatigue. It remained hideously dangerous—likely
still impossible—but hope drew him on, sure as baited hook to
fish. Were he to die now, it should be in strength, not fear.
Then panic threatened as he heard Arcole cry out and craned his head
around to see his friend's face contorted in a grimace of pain. A
shaft jutted from his waist, above the hip. He feared Arcole must
lose his grip and tumble down. He reached toward the man even as
Flysse screamed.
"No!" Arcole's lips stretched back from gritted teeth. "Go
on, both of you. It's not so bad."
Davyd hesitated, and Arcole mouthed a foul curse. "Go on, I say.
You can't help me. Go on!"
Still, Davyd hesitated. Arcole spat against the stone and eased
upward until he was level with Davyd.
"Do I fall, then I charge you with Flysse's care." His
voice was hoarse, his breath labored. "She'll need you. Now go
on."
He began to struggle past, and Davyd saw the red stain spreading
across his shirt. Flysse began to climb again: Davyd saw no choice
but to follow.
They clambered up, Davyd's warning dream delivered just soon enough
that they rose past the arrows' range. The shafts clattered about
their feet, then below them. Flysse and Arcole both climbed with grim
determination, their faces to the rock, not looking back. Davyd
risked a glance and saw demons mounting after them—three, then
five, then seven; twenty or more below, shrieking as they watched the
vertical pursuit.
Up: fingers wearing ragged against the stone, leaving bloody smears
where they found niches, toes scrabbling for footholds, lungs searing
with the effort. And still the cliff lofted above, the demons swift
behind. Flysse thought of slow bugs chased by lithe spiders.
Then a shriek; another. Rocks fell. They flattened against the stone.
More missiles went by them: demons were smashed away.
Flysse screamed again, pushing back from the cliff as a face appeared
above her. Almost she fell, but strong hands grasped her wrists and
snatched her up, inward: into the stone.
Arcole looked up at her cry and saw her disappear. It was not
possible—no ledge or cave existed there, but still she
disappeared. He fought the pain of his wound, shouting her name as he
willed his exhausted body to fresh effort. Wildly, he wondered if the
arrow had slain him, and now he clambered through that limbo the
priests spoke of, punished for his sins. If so, he still felt
pain—the arrow burned a fiery shaft at every movement. He had
not known such agony since his branding.
He shouted "Flysse!" again, and gaped as a face showed
where no face could be. It was a round, thick-bearded visage that
looked as if some mossy rock were carved in semblance of human
physiognomy. He wondered if this were some other kind of demon. No
matter: it had taken Flysse and he would go after her.
Davyd felt more confident, but even so it was bewildering to see
Flysse drawn into the rockface. And then Arcole, as he achieved the
place. He climbed with a fury that took him past Davyd, and an odd
face appeared, framed in shimmering dark light, as if it peered out
from a night-washed cavern mouth. It smiled, exposing wide and craggy
teeth, and reached for Arcole with large, knobby hands, and Arcole
was gone.
Davyd stared, wishing for the reassurance of the dream wind, the
light, but all he saw now was empty stone.
Then the face again, another beside, like clumsy clay effigies, both
grimacing and beckoning. When they appeared, so did the shadow of the
impossible cave. Their hands opened to take him, fingers powerful as
the manacles he had once worn closing about his wrists. He felt his
feet torn free of the cliff, and for an instant he hung in empty air.
Then he was hauled, ungainly as a filled sack, into a cave.
He landed gasping. Large, booted feet surrounded him, descending from
sturdy legs clad in tanned leather. When he looked up, he saw a ring
of bearded faces that made him think of the gnomes Aunt Dory had told
him dwelt inside the hills and came out by night to steal away human
children. They wore wide swords, and several carried battle-axes, the
blades like lethal crescent moons. Their eyes were large and
luminous, peering unreadable at the refugees. Davyd lay panting,
turning his head to find his companions. Flysse crouched against a
wall of stone, her gaze intent on Arcole. He lay on his face, the
shaft of the demon's arrow rising from his back. Davyd could see his
shirt and breeches stained with blood; he could not tell if his
friend still breathed. Behind them, where he and Arcole and Flysse
had been pulled into the mountain—where the cavern's mouth
should be—there was only smooth dark stone.