Aurian
Maggie
Furey
Chapter 1
THE LADY OF THE
LAKE
Ho,
little girl!"
Aurian
jumped, the blue fireball dropping from her hands to the dry leaves of the
forest floor. She scuffed hastily at the smouldering leaves with her foot, the
extinguishing spell forgotten in her panic. Her mother had forbidden her to
come out here on her own, and it was too late to hide. Aurian turned to run,
but the strangeness of the intruder in the glade stopped her in her tracks.
She had
never seen a man before. He was tall and broad, clad all in brown leather
beneath his heavy cloak, and bearing a huge sword at his side. The brown hair
on his face looked distinctly odd, reminding her, together with his brown eyes,
of the animals that were her friends. He stepped forward, his hand outstretched,
and Aurian backed hastily away from the looming figure, another fireball
beginning to form between her fingers. The man looked at her thoughtfully then
sat down on the ground, his hands clasped round his knees. Now that he was
nearer her own level, he looked far less threatening, and Aurian began to feel
a little more confident. These were her mother's lands, after all. "Who
are you?" she demanded.
"I'm
Forral—swordsman and wanderer, at your service, little lady." He inclined
his head gravely in the nearest thing to a bow that he could manage from his
sitting position.
"Yes,
but who are you?" Aurian insisted, still keeping a safe distance between
them. "What do you want? You're not supposed to be here, you know. The
animals were supposed to keep you out."
Forral
smiled, "They didn't bother me. I don't hurt animals—they don't hurt me.
It's a good way to live."
Aurian,
despite her mother's warnings, found herself warming to the man. It was a good
way to live, and she liked his smile. It seemed only fair to warn him what her
mother would do to him if she found him wandering around her lands.
"Look—" she began, but he was already speaking.
"Can
you by any chance direct me to the Lady of the Lake?"
"Who?"
Forral
waved his hands in a vague gesture. "You know— the Mage. The Lady Eilin.
If I'm not mistaken, you must be young Aurian, her daughter. You're the image
of Geraint."
Aurian's
mouth fell open. "You knew my father?"
Forral's
face was shadowed with sadness. "Indeed I did," he said softly.
"Your father and mother both. Geraint gave me my start in life. I was an
orphan, only about your age, when he found me. He got me into the swordsman's
school at the Garrison in Nexis, and was a friend to me in all the years that
followed." He sighed. "I was away soldiering in foreign parts, across
the sea, when your father died. News of—the accident— never spread that far.
I've only just returned, and when I heard—" For a moment, he struggled to
find his voice. "Well, I came at once. I've come to offer my services to
your mother."
"She
won't want you." It was out of her mouth before Aurian realized her
tactlessness. It seemed an awful thing to say, when he had come so far. And she
liked him already. In all her nine years, Aurian could remember no other human
company save that of her mother, and Eilin had little time to spare for her
daughter. She was too preoccupied with her Great Task. With only her animal
friends for companionship, Aurian's life was a lonely one. Desperately she cast
around for a way to explain, so as not to hurt her new friend's feelings.
"You see," she said, "my mother never has visitors. She's so
busy that she hardly even sees me."
Forral
looked her up and down. Had Aurian had a normal upbringing she might have been
embarrassed by the torn gray shift that she was wearing, the tangles in her red
curls, the smears on her face and the dirt ground into her bare knees. As it
was she returned his gaze unselfconsciously.
"Who
looks after you, then?" he asked at last.
Aurian
shrugged. "Nobody."
The big
man frowned. "Then it's high time somebody did. Speaking of which, are you
supposed to be doing that?" He pointed at the forgotten fireball that
still danced over the palm of her hand. Aurian snuffed it hastily and hid her
hands behind her back, wishing that she could hide her guilty expression so
easily.
AURIAN
-3
"Well
. . . not exactly," she confessed. "But it was an emergency."
She bit her lip. "You won't tell on me, will you?"
Forral
seemed to be thinking it over. "All right. I won't tell on you—this
time," he added sternly. "But don't do it again, do you hear me? It's
very dangerous. And don't think I didn't notice what you were up to when I came
into this glade. It wasn't an emergency then, was it?" Aurian felt her
face turn crimson, and Forral grinned. "Come on, youngster, let's go and
see your mother."
"She
won't be very pleased," Aurian warned him, but she could tell he didn't
believe her.
They
set off up the tree-covered slope; Forral led his tired horse and the skinny,
gangling child mounted bareback on her shaggy brown pony. Cool autumn sunlight
filtered through the naked branches, gilding the deeply drifted leaves that
crackled underfoot. At the top of the long rise, the woods came to an abrupt end.
The child halted, her expression closed and grim.
"Gods
preserve us!" Forral gazed at the devastation below him, hardly able to
believe his eyes. The news of Geraint's accident had come as a dreadful shock,
but he had never expected anything on this appalling scale! The vast, barren
crater stretched beyond the ridge, as far as the eye could see. It was almost
more than the swordsman could bear, to witness such proof of his friend's
violent end. Geraint had been the most brilliant and impetuous of the Magefolk,
favorite candidate to be the next Archmage. Arrogant and stubborn, as were all
his kind. Tall, redheaded Geraint of the explosive temper, the expansive laugh,
the endless joy in life, and the kindness of heart to befriend a ragged young
boy who dared to dream, had killed himself down there.
Geraint
had dared to dream, too, Forral thought sadly. Eight years ago he had tried,
using the ancient, half-comprehended magic of the lost Dragonfolk, to harness
vast amounts of magical energy in order to pass instantly from world to world,
with disastrous results. It was said that Geraint had come perilously close to
destroying the world, and it was already clear that his name would be cursed
through generations of Mage and Mortal alike. Forral preferred to believe that
his friend, recognizing th^ danger too late, had given his life to
I
confine
the damage to as small an area as possible. Even so, the deep crater below was
at least five leagues across, its sides a cracked and twisted mess of melted rock,
its floor like rippled black glass. Away in the distance, across the lifeless
waste, the swordsman's eyes caught the gleam of sunlight on water.
Forral
had no idea how long he stood there, dismayed by the horrific scale of the
destruction Geraint had wrought. At last he became aware of the child gazing up
at him.
"My
mother hasn't got this far," Aurian said in a small, flat voice. "I
told you she was busy. There's a lot to do."
The
swordsman was filled with pity for the little girl, growing up neglected and
friendless in this bleak wasteland. Were the rumors true, that Eilin had lost
her sanity with the death of her beloved soul mate? An adept in Earth-magic, it
was said that she had buried her grief in her obsession to restore to
fruitfulness the devastation caused by Geraint's tragic mistake. For the
child's sake, he pulled himself together and tried to look cheerful, but his
heart was sinking as they went on their way.
They
had some difficulty getting Forral's horse down to the floor of the crater, but
Aurian's surefooted pony had few problems. The child could ride like a centaur,
and was accustomed, no doubt, to negotiating the slippery, folded terrain in
the bottom of the massive bowl. It must be terrible here in summer, Forral
thought as they rode along. Even now, the glasslike rock was throwing up heat
and shimmering reflections from the pallid autumn sun. Water had"gathered
in the bottoms of some of the deeper folds, but the only sign of life was the
occasional bird flying overhead.
Aurian
finally broke the long silence between them. "What was my father
like?"
The
question took Forral by surprise, and he was very much aware of the plea that
lay behind the words. "Hasn't your mother told you?" he asked her.
"No,"
she replied. "She won't talk about him. She said that this was all his
fault." She gestured around her, her voice quavering. "She said he'd
done a bad thing, and that it was our duty to make up for it."
Forral
shuddered. What had happened to Eilin? What a terrible burden to lay on a
child! "Nonsense," he said firmly.
"Your
father was a good, kind man, and a true friend to me. What happened was an
accident. He didn't do this on purpose, pet. He made a mistake, that's all—and
don't let anybody tell you otherwise."
Aurian's
face brightened. "I wish I could remember him," she said softly.
"Will you tell me about him, as we ride?"
"Gladly,"
replied Forral.
About
two leagues from the center of the bowl, the ground began to level off to a
smooth surface with a slight downward slope. Soon the rock was covered with a
thin layer of soil, and tiny, struggling plants began to appear. By the time
the lake came into view they were riding on wiry turf starred with daisies, and
passing thickets of hawthorn, blackberry, and elder that were bowed down
beneath a rich harvest of fruit and alive with birds. Groves of shapely trees
stood along the green lake shore, some still bearing apples and pears. Forral
could not help but be impressed by the scale of Eilin's accomplishments in eight
short years. A pity she couldn't have lavished the same attention on the child.
The
lake was large and round, formed by water draining into the bottom of the
crater. In the center stood an island, obviously man (or Mage) made, that was
connected to the shore by a slender wooden bridge. On the island a tower rose
above the lake like a spear of light. Forral caught his breath. The ground
floor was surrounded by gardens and built of black stone, but above it was an
airy, glittering structure of crystal that soared high above the gleaming
wafers. The ethereal building was topped by a slender glass spire on which a
single point of light glowed like a fallen star.
"Dear
Gods, it's lovely!" Forral gasped.
Aurian
looked at it dourly. "It's where we live." She shrugged and
dismounted, setting her pony free with a farewell pat.
Forral
did likewise, on her assurance that his horse would stay nearby where there was
grazing. Leaving his saddle under a tree, he followed the child across the
bridge.
A white-sanded
path led through Eilin's gardens, past neat rows of late-season vegetables;
herb beds laid out in a precise, intricate mosaic of varied greens; and banks
of fiery autumn flowers in which sat a cluster of beehives, their occupants
humming busily among the copper-gold blooms as they made the most of this last,
rare warm spell before winter. As he followed the child into the tower, Forral
reflected that the Mage had managed to support herself and her daughter very
well in their isolation, though he wondered how Eilin obtained grain, cloth,
and other necessities that could not be won from the Valley's soil.
The
outer door of the tower led straight into the kitchen, which was obviously the
main living area. Its walls were hewn out of the dark stone of the tower's
base, giving it a cavelike appearance made cozy by the glow of the potbellied
metal stove in the corner. Colored rugs of woven wool brightened the floor, and
there was a scrubbed wooden table with benches tucked beneath. Two chairs with
padded seats were pulled up near the stove, and shelves and cupboards lined the
walls, making the most of the cramped space. Two doors hid other rooms, and
Aurian gestured to the one on the right. "That's my room," she
informed the swordsman. "She sleeps upstairs, to be near her plants."
A
delicate, twisting metal staircase led to the upper stories. Aurian hesitated
at the bottom, gesturing for Forral to precede her. His boots striking
bell-like notes on the vibrating metal treads, Forral climbed the stairs,
wondering at the look of trepidation on the child's face.
Looking
into the glass rooms of the tower as they led off the staircase, Forral saw the
practical purpose behind the building's exuberant design. The chambers were
filled with benches, on which stood trays of earth planted with young seedlings
that basked in the warmth of the afternoon sunlight trapped by the crystal
walls. A fine spray, seemingly appearing from nowhere, filled the air with
moisture, and Forral's skin prickled with the thick buildup of magic. He was
positive that the plants were actually growing before his eyes! When he finally
found the Mage in one of the upper rooms, she was too preoccupied to notice
him.
"Go
away, Aurian," Eilin muttered, without looking up. "I've told you not
to bother me when I'm working."
Eilin
had aged, the swordsman thought. It surprised him. Magefolk, like Mortals,
could be killed by illness or accident, but otherwise they lived as long as
they wanted, dying only
when
they chose to leave the world and preserving their physical forms at whatever
age they wished. Forral remembered Eilin as a vibrant young woman, but now her
dark hair was streaked with gray and her forehead was furrowed. Deep, bitter
lines tugged at the corners of her mouth, and she looked pale and pitifully
thin in her patched and faded robes.
"Eilin,
it's me—Forral," he called, stifling his dismay. He stepped forward,
holding out his arms to hug her—and recoiled as her face twisted with rage at
the sight of him.
"Get
out!" Eilin snapped. She bore down on the child, and hit her across the
face. "How dare you bring him here!"
Aurian
dodged behind Forral. "It wasn't my fault," she wailed.
Forral,
anger boiling inside him, turned to put an arm around her. "Are you all
right?"
Aurian
nodded, biting her lip, her pale face branded with an ugly red mark. Forral saw
tears in her eyes, and gave her a quick hug. "Go downstairs and wait for
me by the bridge," he told her softly.
When
the child had gone, the swordsman turned back to Eilin. "That wasn't very
fair," he said coldly.
"There's
no such thing as fair, Forral—I found that out when Geraint died. The wretched
child should have told you that I never see anyone!"
"She
did. And I ignored it. Do you want to hit me now?" He was fighting hard to
keep his anger in check.
Eilin
turned away, avoiding his eyes. "I want you to go away. Why did you come
here?"
"I
came as soon as I could, when I heard what had happened to Geraint. I wish it
had been sooner. It might have saved you from turning into a bitter old
woman."
"How
dare you!" she cried.
"It's
the plain truth, Eilin. But I came to offer you my service for Geraint's sake,
and that still stands."
Eilin
stalked away to the far side of the room, her movements jerky with anger.
"Curse you, Mortal! Fickle and faithless, like all your kind. What use is
your service now? Where were you and your service eight years ago, when I
needed you? You were Geraint's friend—he listened to you. With your help I
might have dissuaded him from his insanity. But no—you had an itch to wander—to
see the world. Well, I hope the experience was enough to recompense you for the
death of a friend. Your service comes far too late, Forral. Get out of here,
and don't come back!"
Hardened
warrior though he was, Forral flinched from Eilin's bitter words. His grief at
Geraint's death was still raw, and her accusations contained just enough truth
to hurt. Perhaps it would be as well if he did go ... Then Forral remembered
the child.
"No."
He squared his shoulders. "I'm not leaving, Eilin. It's obviously been bad
for you to be alone like this, and the child needs someone to care for her. You
might as well get used to the fact that I'm staying, because there's nothing
you can do about it."
"Oh,
can't I?" She whirled, and Forral saw too late that she held her staff in
her hand. The floor seemed to drop away beneath him, and a loud roaring filled
his ears. His vision exploded in a burst of colored lights and he gasped with
pain as a brief wrenching sensation tore through his body. Then the ground came
up to hit him, hard.
Forral
opened his eyes gingerly. He was lying on a smooth carpet of turf—on the other
side of the bridge. He stared across the calm waters at the island with its
tower and gave himself up to some serious swearing. The child came running
across the bridge, her bare feet echoing on the planks. She skidded to a halt
beside him.
"She
threw you out, then.'-^iShe didn't sound in the least surprised, but he read
anxiety in her face. He sat up and groaned.
"What
the bloody blazes was that?"
"An
apport spell." Aurian sounded proud of knowing the right word. "She's
good at those—it's how she moved all the soil into the Valley. She's had a lot
of practice."
"An
apport spell, eh?" Forral frowned, running his fingers distractedly
through his curling brown hair. "Aurian, how far could she move me with
that spell?"
The
child shrugged. "About as far as she did, I think. You're heavier than the
loads she usually moves. Why?"
"I
want to be sure she can't hurl me right out of this valley. It's an unpleasant
way to travel!"
"I
think she expects you to ride the rest of the way," Aurian said seriously,
and Forral burst out laughing.
"I
just bet she does! Well, she's in for a surprise. Aurian, how would you like to
help me set up camp?"
The
child's face lit up with incredulous delight. "You mean you're
staying?"
"It'll
take more than a few wizardly shenanigans to chase me off, lass. Of course I'm
staying!"
Aurian
had the happiest afternoon of her life. She and Forral set up his camp in a
copse of sturdy young beeches that grew to the left of the bridge. She worried
about his choice of spot, knowing he'd be safer out of her mother's sight, but
Forral simply laughed. "This is exactly what I want, youngster. Whenever
Eilin looks out of her windows she's going to see me —right here. I intend to
be a thorn in your mother's side until she gives up this nonsense."
The
camp looked good, Aurian thought. She wished she could live here. Forral had
slung a rope between two sturdy trees and untied a rolled sheet of oiled canvas
from behind his saddle. He hung this over the rope so that both sides reached
the ground, then pulled the two sides apart and weighted them with stones to
form a rough tent.
"But
the wind will blow through," Aurian objected.
Forral
shrugged. "I've put up with worse." He was cross, though, when she
told him that he couldn't burn any of the wood in the Valley. Her mother had
set. spells to protect it, and brought in fuel for the tower from outside.
Aurian had a terrible time convincing him of the danger, but to her relief he
finally gave in, though with ill grace. "I can live without a fire for
now, but Eilin had better hurry up and come to her senses before winter,"
he growled.
When
her mother called her in at dusk there was trouble, of course. Eilin, gazing
tight-lipped out the window at Forral's camp, forbade Aurian to speak to him,
or go anywhere near him. But the swordsman's cheerful defiance had filled
Aurian with newfound courage.
>
"I will talk to him, and you can't stop me!" she blurted out. Eilin
stared at her in amazement, her face darkening with anger. Aurian's rebellion
earned her a thrashing, but it only
I
increased
her determination. When it was over she turned on her mother. "I hate
you!" she sobbed, "and you won't stop me from being friends with
Forral no matter what you do to me!"
Eilin's
eyes blazed. "Don't count on it. He won't be here for long."
"He
will! He promised!"
"We'll
see about that," Eilin said grimly.
Early
next morning, Aurian let herself out of the tower and crept across the bridge.
She had bread tied up in a cloth for Forral's breakfast, and cheese from her
mother's goats that grazed the lake shore. When she reached the copse, she
stopped dead. The swordsman's camp had vanished beneath a dense cluster of
bristling vines that had sprung up overnight. Her mother's work, of course.
"Forral,"
Aurian called frantically, tugging at the unyielding creepers,
"Forral!"
After a
moment, there came a rustling from within the thicket, followed by copious
swearing. It took the swordsman the better part of a morning to hack his way
out. When he finally emerged, green and grimy, the vines began to collapse in
on themselves, and within minutes they had withered away to dust.
Forral
looked at Aurian. "This is going to be tougher than I thought," he
said.
The
following morning the vines were back. Aurian stole Forral an axe from her
mother's storeroom. The next day it was a blackberry thicket with long sharp
thorns. Forral suggested that Aurian gather the berries before they vanished,
and when he had hacked himself free, they had them for breakfast. It began to
turn into a game between them, and Aurian's loneliness vanished in her new
friend's company. In those few days she found herself laughing and smiling more
than she had done in her life. She introduced him to her animal friends. Shy
birds, elusive deer, or fierce wildcats from the forest—they all flocked
happily to Aurian and she reached out to them with her mind, relaying their
simple emotions to Forral. She was disappointed that he couldn't communicate
with them himself, though. She thought everybody could do that.
The
swordsman could do many other things, however. He was a genius at inventing
games, and had a fund of stories
about
his life as a soldier, or about princesses and dragons and heroes. Forral was
Aurian's hero, and she adored him. She never told him how her mother had beaten
her, in case it made more trouble, but to her relief, the Mage had decided to
ignore the swordsman's presence and Aurian was no longer forbidden to see him.
Instead, Eilin found many long and onerous tasks in the garden to occupy her
daughter's time, but they went twice as fast with Forral helping. Aurian knew
better than to broach the subject with her mother, and contented herself with
stealing food for him whenever Eilin's back was turned.
The
Mage, however, had not given up. On the fourth day, Forral's shelter was
surrounded by a forest of stinging nettles. Forral looked very grim when he
emerged, and Aurian, handing him dock leaves for his stings, was afraid he
would decide to leave after all. But as he rubbed the soothing leaves over his
blotched hands and face, the swordsman glared at the tower. "We'll see who
gives up first," he muttered through clenched teeth. "She's bound to
run out of ideas sooner or later."
As
autumn gave way to the first frosts of winter, matters continued in a similar
vein. Eilin's specialty was Earth-magic, and she tried to dislodge her
unwelcome guest with all the powers at her command. One night the level of the
lake rose mysteriously, and Forral's camp was flooded. One afternoon he and
Aurian returned from a walk to find the goats eating his blankets and gear.
Eilin even tried to set the birds that roosted in the grove to attack him, but
Aurian scolded them firmly and soon put a stop to that. She had jess success
with the ants, however. The day they struck, it took hours to get them out of
Forral's clothes and bedding.
One
gray, chilly morning, Aurian went out with Portal's stolen breakfast and a
flask of her mother's blackberry wine to help him keep out the cold. As she
reached the other side of the bridge, an anguished yell came from the camp.
When Aurian arrived, panting, there was no sign of the swordsman. Trembling,
she peered into his shelter.
Forral
was sitting bolt upright, paralyzed with terror and covered in hundreds of
writhing snakes which were so thickly intertwined that it was impossible to
tell where one began and another ended. Aurian, wondering where her mother had
found them all, felt sorry ipr-.fhe poor things. It was too cold for them
12 •
MAGGIE FURZY
to be
out and about, and not surprising that they clustered around the one source of
heat—Forral's body. But the swordsman was her friend, and he needed her help.
Aurian sighed and reached out with her mind to the serpents. "Shoo,"
she said firmly, speaking aloud for Forral's benefit. One by one and with great
reluctance, the snakes disentangled themselves and slithered out of the tent.
Forral's
face was absolutely white, and his hand trembled as he mopped his brow. She
handed him the flask of wine and he drained it without pausing for breath.
Aurian, in the meantime, was busy with her own angry thoughts.
"That
does it!" she said suddenly, making Forral look up in surprise. "How
dare she! All those poor snakes!"
"Poor
snakes?" the swordsman replied in a strangled voice.
"They'll
din," she replied impatiently. "It's far too cold for them. I don't
know what she's thinking of!"
He
stared at her in disbelief. "Poor snakes?"
Aurian
peeped out of the shelter, where the snakes waited, sluggish with cold and
obviously hoping to be readmitted. "They can't stay outside," she
informed Forral.
"I
hope you weren't proposing to move them back in here," he replied weakly.
Aurian
frowned, thinking hard. Then all at once, a wonderful idea struck her. "I
know!" Reaching out with her mind, she addressed the snakes.
Forral
joined her as she watched the last of the serpents making its way across the
wooden bridge. "Where are they going?"
Aurian
turned to him with a broad grin. "Where is the warmest place you can think
of around here?"
A slow
smile spread itself across Forral's face as he perceived her plan. "You
dreadful child!" He roared with laughter and swept her off her feet in a
great bear hug.
They
were halfway through breakfast when Eilin discovered the snakes in her plant
rooms. A shriek of outrage resounded across the lake.
Aurian
turned to Forral. "It looks as if I'm in trouble again," she said,
grinning, "but it was worth it. At least Mother will have to send the poor
things back where they came from."
But
Eilin had only to wait to regain her advantage against
Forral.
A few days later Aurian awakened, shivering, in her little room that led off
the kitchen. She couldn't see out the window for the thick blooms of frost that
covered the inside of the glass. "Forral!" she gasped. Snatching the
blankets from her bed she shot out of the room, not even waiting to put on her
only pair of shoes. Outside, the world was sparkling white and the air so cold
it took her breath away. Aurian ran.
It took
her a long time to wake him. When Forral finally opened his eyes, his teeth
chattered, and his lips were blue. Aurian helped him to sit up and draped her
blankets around him, rubbing his hands and feet. Then cupping her palms, she
concentrated to make a fireball.
"I
told you not to do that!" he croaked angrily.
Aurian
was stricken by the harshness of Forral's voice. The blue flame died between
her fingers, and tears sprang into her eyes. "I only wanted to help,"
she quavered.
Forral
put his arm around her shoulders. "I know, love. I'm sorry. I'm worried,
that's all. If your mother doesn't change her mind , . . Well, I can't survive
a winter without hot food and a fire, just living on bread and honey and
cheese. You can see that, can't you? I might be forced to leave."
Aurian
couldn't bear it. She flung herself into his arms, sobbing. "Take me with
you!"
Forral
sighed, "I can't, lass. You belong with your mother, and there are laws
against stealing children. You don't want me to end up in prison, do you?"
"Then
I'll run away! I won't" sta/ here without you!"
The
swordsman's arms tightened around her. "Don't do that!" he said
hastily, "Anything could happen to you. We'll give it a few more days,
shall we? Maybe things will change,"
Over
the next few days the frosts were less severe, to Aurian's relief. She left all
her blankets with Forral, telling him that she had others of her own and easing
her conscience over the barefaced lie by assuring herself that it was for his
own benefit. Shivering in her bed each night was a small sacrifice, if only
Forral would stay. Apart from nagging at her mother, which only incurred
Eilin's wrath, there was nothing more she could do. As winter deepened, Aurian
began to despair.
Then
one night the snow came. When Aurian looked out above the window at iuppertime
the landscape had already been
obscured
by the blizzard. She couldn't eat her stew, knowing that Forral was out there,
freezing, with no hot supper to warm him. Once more she begged and pleaded with
Eilin to relent, almost hysterical with fear for Forral. Eventually her
exasperated mother locked her in her room. Aurian pounded on the door until her
fists bled and yelled herself hoarse. At last, exhausted, she threw herself on
the bed and cried herself to sleep.
It was
still night when she awakened. Her throat was sore and her eyes felt gritty,
but the blood on her hands had dried. How long had she slept? Aurian leaned on
the windowsill and peered out. The blizzard had worsened, and she could see
nothing but driving snow. She gulped back a sob. Forral would die out there,
and she would be left here with her cruel mother who had killed him. It was
more than she could bear. She wished that she were dead, too. At least she'd be
with Forral. The idea frightened her, but the more she thought about it, the
more it made sense. Her mother wouldn't miss her. Aurian made her decision. She
would go and find Forral, and they could die together.
The
window catch was frozen shut. Aurian hammered at it with her shoe, muttering
Forral's favorite curses, but it refused to budge. Then it occurred to her that
if she was going to die, she wouldn't need the room again. Picking up a stool,
she drove it through the window with a satisfying crash. Wind and snow came
howling into the room, and a piece of flying glass cut her forehead. Wiping
blood out of her eyes and praying that the storm had masked the noise-|rom her
mother, she laid her pillow over the jagged shards of glass in the bottom of
the frame and climbed out.
The
snow was drifted deep below the window, and Aurian sank in almost over her
head, gasping. The cold was intense. When she floundered out of the drift the
wind hit her, flaying her face with flying snow. But it wasn't so deep here,
and she could struggle forward with difficulty on feet that were already numb.
She struck out toward the bridge, slipping and falling and picking herself up,
bending into the gale that wiped out her footprints behind her.
Aurian
stopped, uncertain. Where was the copse? She should have reached it ages ago.
She was sure she had been going in the right direction, but the swirling snow
made it
is
impossible
to see. I'm tired from crossing the bridge, she thought. That's why it's taking
so long. The memory made her shudder. She'd been forced to slide across the
slender, slippery span inch by inch, clinging to the frozen rail with numb
fingers, terrified that the wind would blow her into the lake. Now she could
hardly keep her frozen body moving, and she couldn't feel her hands and feet.
Aurian was suddenly very frightened. She wasn't sure that she wanted to die
after all, but she did want very much to reach Forral. A tear froze on her
face. "Don't be stupid," she scolded herself. "The sooner you
get going, the quicker you'll find him." Bracing herself, she set off into
the darkness once more.
It was
so cold that Forral had stopped shivering. It was a bad sign. His shelter had
blown down in the storm, but he had managed to snatch the tarpaulin just before
it blew away. He huddled in the lee of a tree with the canvas wrapped round
him, toying with the idea of breaking into the tower. But it was useless, he
knew. Eilin would only throw him out again. If she hadn't let him in by now, he
had to face the fact that it was hopeless.
"Forral,
you're a fool," he muttered. "What a senseless way to die." He
felt himself drifting into sleep, and knew that it would finish him. He wished
he could have said goodbye to the child. The thought of Aurian nagged at him,
keeping him from the sleep that tugged so strongly. "Got to say goodbye to
Aurian," he mumbled. Hooking aryarm over a low branch, he struggled
stiffly to his feet. What was that? A faint, ghostly glimmer flickered through
the whirling snow. Someone was coming toward him, carrying a lantern.
As the
figure drew nearer, the swordsman recognized the slender silhouette of Eilin,
her hair soaked into whipping, snakelike tendrils, her cloak blown back from
her shoulders, her brown robe flattened by the wind against her bony frame and
whitened by a dusting of snow. The glimmer that he'd mistaken for a lantern was
the bluish-white glow of a pale, cool ball of Magelight that hovered over the
head of her staff,
"Forral,
she's gone. Aurian is gone!" Eilin tugged at his arm, distraught. The
swordsman stared at her. Somehow his brain wouldn't focus*on her words.
Eilin
cursed and fumbled beneath her cloak, bringing out a small flask which she
unstoppered and forced between his lips. The liquor seared a trail of fire down
Forral's throat, making him gasp for breath. He had no idea what the stuff was,
but it was effective. Within minutes he felt his limbs beginning to tingle
painfully as the feeling returned to them. His mind was clearing rapidly.
"What
did you say? Where's Aurian?"
"I
told you! She's gone! I locked her in and she broke the window. There's blood
everywhere and she's out in the storm and—"
"This
is your fault!" Forral slapped her out of her hysterics, feeling grim
satisfaction at her gasp of pain. With an effort he checked the urge to
throttle her. They had to find the child. "Come on," he shouted,
plunging ahead into the blizzard, leaving Eilin floundering behind. Common
sense told him that he would never find Aurian in this blinding storm—that it
was already too late—but he cast the thought savagely away from him. It hurt
too much.
"Forral—wait!"
Eilin cried, but the swordsman took no notice. Try as she might, she could not
keep up with him. Another instant, and he had vanished without trace into the
storm. The Mage cursed savagely. "Oh, you fool!" she muttered.
"You hotheaded, idiot Mortal! Now both of you are lost."
For a
moment Eilin stood, oblivious to the freezing gale and paralyzed by guilt.
Geraint would have been furious, to see how she had put both his daughter and
his friend at risk. Forral was right to say it was all her fault. Had she only
let him stay with Aurian in the tower, this tragedy would never have happened.
Then
she gathered her wits. She had already alerted those of Aurian's animal friends
who could endure this storm to search for the child, but Forral could not
understand them. If she were to save the swordsman, she would need to find him
a surer guide. Such a guide could be summoned, she knew—but the risk was
appalling!
Mortals
had ceased long ago to believe in the Phaerie, Only the Magefblk knew the truth
behind the tales of a fey and ancient race rhac wielded the powers of the Old
Magic—for the
ancient
Magefolk, fearing their mischief and meddling, had exiled them outside the
world, imprisoning them in a mysterious Elsewhere beyond the realms of Mortal
ken. The Phaerie could not return into the world unless summoned by a Mage— and
such a summoning always bore a price. But it was her only chance to save the
swordsman and her child . . . Gripping her staff with shaking fingers, Eilin
spoke the words that would summon the Lord of the Phaerie.
She
never saw him appear. One minute, Eilin was peering blindly through the
spinning snowflakes—the next, a patch of the whirling blizzard seemed to darken
and congeal to form a towering shape, its outline shadowy and indistinct, save
for the eerie glitter of eyes that caught and threw back the gleam of her
Magelight with the intense and changeful brilliance of two winter stars.
"Who
summons the Lord of the Phaerie?" The voice, deep and vibrant, cut like a
blade of steel across the howling of the storm.
Eilin
braced herself hard against her staff, to prevent herself from sinking to her
quaking knees. "I . . ." The Earth-Mage swallowed hard to clear a
throat gone suddenly closed and dry, and tried again. "I did," she
said faintly.
"Who
are you, that you should presume to call upon the Forest Lord?" The voice
was harsh with scorn, and Eilin was stung by anger at such arrogance.
"I
am Eilin, Earth-Mage, Lady af the Lake and Mistress of this Vale," she
snapped. "As well you know, my Lord, for I have sensed you watching my
labors often enough, I have need of your aid, and there is little time to lose.
Our Mortal companion, Forral, is lost in the blizzard, seeking my daughter Aurian,
and—"
"What!"
cried the Forest Lord, his manner changing instantly. "Your daughter is in
peril? This cannot be! The future of the Phaerie—and more—rests in the hands of
that child! We have foreseen it. It will be a black day, indeed, if harm befalls
her." His form trembled. "I will summon my people to help you at
once."
I
Forral
staggered blindly through the snowdrifts, fighting cold and exhaustion, feeling
as though he were trapped in an endless nightmare. The effects of Eilin's
potion were wearing off, and his aching limbs were stiff with cold. Each time
he slipped and fell, it seemed less likely that he would ever get up again. But
lost as he was, spent as he was, he refused to give in. "What sort of
feeble excuse for a warrior are you?" he goaded himself, to blot out the
fear that coiled within his breast, far colder than the blizzard outside.
"Aurian needs you! No, by the Gods—if this is the bloody end, you'll die
on your feet, still searching."
For a
while he had left the woods, but now he was back into them, staggering like a
drunken man on strengthless legs. The going was easier here—the trees broke the
force of the wind, and Forral could use their branches for support. And thank
the Gods—that must be Eilin, ahead of him. He could see the glimmer of her
light, dancing between the tree trunks. "Eilin!" he bawled, with all
the force that his laboring lungs could muster. Curse the woman—why didn't she
hear him? "Eilin!" But she did not stop, and Forral, terrified of
losing her, had no choice but to follow the eerie glow.
Suddenly,
the trees came to an end—and there, flickering fitfully through a whirl of
snow, were two lights, side by side. "Forral!" He heard the Mage's
voice. As the swordsman staggered toward her, he slipped and fell once more.
When he picked himself up out of the snow, Eilin was bending over him —and the
two lights had-*omehow become one.
After a
sip from Eilin's flask, Forral began to feel better. "Thank goodness for
that," he muttered. "I was seeing double there for a minute! Have you
found her?"
"No—but
I know she's close by," replied Eilin. "Can you go on?"
Forral
nodded. "Aurian," he cried desperately, trying to pitch his voice
over the keening storm. But it was not the wind that he heard. Through the blizzard
came the chilling howl of a wolf, eerie and triumphant. Forral stopped dead,
transfixed with horror. "No!" he whispered.
Eilin
tugged at his arm, her face alight with joy. "They've found her!" she
shouted.
Forral
flinched as huge gray shapes materialized in the
blinding
white storm. Gods, was she truly insane? Did she really hate the child that
much? Sickened beyond measure, he raised his fist to strike her down.
"Forral,
no!" Eilin screamed. "These are Aurian's wolves— her friends. I called
them to search for her."
Stunned,
Forral slowly lowered his arm. The wolf howled again.
"Hurry,"
Eilin said, as she rushed to where the wolves were gathered.
Forral,
keeping a wary eye on the gray forms that surrounded him, lifted a limp little
body out of the snow, feeling for a pulse with chill fingers. "She's
alive!" He could have wept with relief, but that was for later.
"We've got to hurry. Can you find your way back?"
"I
can always find my way home," the Mage retorted. She struggled along at
his side with her Magelight, followed by the dozen or so lean and shaggy wolves
that had been huddled round the child, keeping her alive with the warmth of
their bodies. Their eyes never left Aurian's still form.
When
Forral reached the tower the wolves followed him determinedly inside. Keeping
out of the way, they watched as he and Eilin stripped off Aurian's wet clothes
and laid her on. a makeshift bed near the stove, wrapped in every quilt and
blanket they could find. As Eilin set water to boil, Forral sat with the child,
stroking the damp curls away from her bluish face with a trembling hand.
"Can't you do something?" he snapped.
"I
am!" Eilin banged the pan dosPn on the top of the stove, and water hissed
as it slopped over onto the hot surface. Covering her face with her hands, the
Mage burst into tears.
"It's
a bit late for that now," Forral said brutally. "As soon as she's
well—if she gets well—I'm taking her out of here, and you can do what you like
about it."
"No!"
Eilin lowered her hands to stare at him. "You cannot. I forbid it. Aurian
is my child!"
"And
what does that signify, when you do nothing but neglect her?" Forral
snapped. "The child needs love, Eilin!"
"I
do love her, you dolt!" cried the Mage.
The
swordsman shook his head. "I don't believe you, Eilin —if you do, you
never show it."
Eilin
was stung Jxy^his words. "And what would you know
I
I
about
it?" she retorted, and said no more. She thought of the conclusion of her
meeting with the awesome Lord of the Phaerie, who had agreed to find Forral and
lead her to her child
—for a
price. "Remember," he had said, "that this matter is not
resolved between us. We will meet again, Lady—and when we do, I will claim my
debt." What he might ask of her, Eilin shuddered to think—but it would be
worth it. Though she gave little credence to the words of the Forest Lord—that
Aurian would one day hold the fate of the Phaerie in her hands
—she
had been immeasurably grateful for his aid. The Phaerie had saved her, in her
folly, from causing Aurian's death—and for that, no price would be too high.
Believe what you like, Forral, she thought, but there are many ways to love—and
more ways than one of showing it!
Forral
looked on as with shaking hands the Mage concocted a stimulating tea from the
dried herbs, berries, and blossoms that hung in bunches in the kitchen. Once
they had trickled some of the brew down Aurian's throat, the child breathed
more easily and her color began to return. Forral let out a deep breath, only now
aware of his own soaked and frozen state. "We could use some of that
stuff," he suggested.
Eilin
filled two mugs and sat down beside him, handing him his steaming brew. At
first she simply sat, still and abstracted, watching her sleeping child. Then
at last she spoke, "Forral, I owe you an apology. I've been a blind
fool."
"A
complete ass," the swordsman agreed gently. He took her hand. "It's
been terribie for you, hasn't it?"
"You
have no idea." She shook her head. "I warned him, you know—I begged
him not to do it. I'm an Earth-Mage—I knew it was folly. But Geraint was always
so stubborn—"
"Not
an uncommon trait among the Mageborn, is it?" Forral pointed out. She
flinched.
"How
dare you judge me, Mortal!" she flared, and he knew his words had struck
home. "Afterward," Eilin went on, "people sought revenge. There
were Mortals here, you know, before . . ." She shuddered. "Aurian and
I were in Nexis—she was only a baby—and we barely escaped with our lives. I
wanted to undo the damage Geraint had done, to erase his memory. But as Aurian
grew, she came to resemble him—do you know, the poor child will even inherit
that hawk profile of
his
when she's older? And her eyes change from green to gray when she's angry, just
as his did. I can't look at her without seeing his face . . . Oh Gods, Forral,
I hate him!"
"You
hate him because he left you," Forral said softly. "You still love
him, Eilin."
"If
he had loved me, would he have left me alone like this?" Her voice broke.
"I miss him so much!"
"Then
let yourself mourn him. It's high time."
Forral
held her while she wept. "You know," he said at last, "Geraint
hasn't gone completely. He left part of himself right here." He indicated
the sleeping child.
"I'm
aware of that!" Eilin snapped.
"And
that's the problem, isn't it? Don't take it out on her, Eilin. She's not
responsible."
EiHn
sighed. "When you came, you made me feel so guilty —that was why I wanted
rid of you. You, a mere Mortal, forcing me to realize how much I had failed my
own child! But how can I help it, when ..." She took a deep breath.
"Forral, will you stay and look after her? Aurian deserves more than I can
give her. And she loves you."
"And
I love her. Of course I'll stay. That was the idea from the start, remember? It
just took a long time to get it into that stubborn Mage head of yours. But that
doesn't absolve you of responsibility, Eilin, You're still her mother, and I'll
expect you to make an effort."
Eilin
nodded. "I'll try, I proraise^Thank you, Forral." She leapt to her
feet. "Perhaps I should make some broth, for when she wakes. She had no
supper . . ."
Forral
gave her an encouraging smile. "See how easy it is to care, Eilin, when
you try?"
Aurian
thought she must still be dreaming. There had been a terrible nightmare about
being lost in the snow, and now here were her wolves and Forral—sitting in the
kitchen with her mother. And Eilin never smiled at her like that.
"How
are you feeling, love?" There were tears in the swordsman's eyes.
"Forral?"
Her voice came out as a feeble croak.
"It's
all right—rjn here. Drink some of this," Putting his
I
arm
around her, he propped her while he held a cup of warm broth to her lips.
"Better?" he asked.
"Everything
hurts. And I'm cold."
"I'm
not surprised. Running off into the snow like that. You daft child!" His
voice was gruff.
"I'm
sorry." Aurian glanced nervously at her mother. "But it was an
emergency."
"Now
where have I heard that excuse before?" Forral grinned. "Well, I have
news for you, young lady. I'm going to be looking after you from now on, so
you'd better start behaving yourself."
Aurian's
eyes widened slowly. She looked at her mother. "Is it true?" she
whispered.
Eilin
nodded. "I asked Forral to stay. He can take better care of you than I
have ever done."
"Oh,
thank you!" Beaming, Aurian reached up to hug her mother. Eilin froze,
looking startled, then returned her daughter's embrace.
Forral
smiled.
CKapter 2
THE SWORDSWOMAN
orral
had never guessed that taking care of a child would prove to be such hard work.
He moved into the storeroom that led off the kitchen, and two or three happy
days passed while Aurian helped him clear a living space amidst tools, seeds,
sacks of grain and garden produce, round white cheeses, wrinkled apples, pots
of honey, and bottled fruit that Eilin had laid aside for winter. The resulting
accommodation was cramped and spartan, but it was enough for a soldier's needs,
and Forral had no objection to the mixed aromas of good food in his bedroom.
The swordsman also took the time to board up Aurian's broken window until it
could be repaired properly. When she complained that it made the room too dark
he looked at her sternly. "It's your own fault. You broke it, remember?"
Aurian's jaw dropped.
After
that the battles of will occurred almost daily. Aurian had been allowed to run
wild all her life, and though it wrenched Forral's heart to be firm with her,
he knew it had to be done, for her own good. They fell out first over the matter
of baths. Aurian refused point-blank, protesting that she bathed in the lake in
summer. Wasn't that enough? Forral handed her the soap and towel. "Very
well," he said. "Go and bathe in the lake, then."
Aurian
stared out of the windo"w, stfide-eyed with disbelief. Thick snow covered
the ground and the deep, dark waters were rimmed with a broad band of ice.
"But—" she protested.
"Go
on, get moving. You're smelling the place up," he added callously.
Aurian's
lip trembled, then the Magefolk stubbornness took over. She set her jaw and
scowled. "Right!" she snapped and stamped out, slamming the door
behind her.
The
obstinate little wretch had called his bluff! Forral, horrified, ran after her.
The lake was deep around the island, and in weather this cold, he placed no
trust in the old tale that it was impossible to drown a Mage. He reached the
bottom of the garden just in time to see Aurian jump into the freezing water. --*—-%
24 •
With a
curse, the swordsman leapt forward and grabbed a handful of her hair before she
could flounder away from the bank. When he fished her out, she was already
blue. He wrapped her in his cloak and carried her inside, dumping her straight
into the steaming tub that he had placed in front of the stove. "There,"
he said, as her shivering subsided in the hot water. "Isn't that better
than the lake?" Aurian glared at him. "If you don't like it, I can
always take you back out there," he suggested.
After a
moment the child dropped her eyes. "Perhaps it's not so bad after
all," she said.
Forral
smiled, and produced a little wooden boat rhar he had made for her to play
with.
Fortunately,
once she got used to the idea, Aurian became so addicted to hot baths that his
chief problem lay in getting her out of them. Persuading her to comb her hair
was less easy, however. Her long, thick, glowing red curls were snarled with
years' worth of tangles. The first time, it took Forral a terrible hour to get
the mess sorted out while he held the struggling, shrieking child down. At last
he threw down the comb, filled with guilt. Gods, I'd rather fight a dozen
warriors, he thought, taking the sobbing little girl into his arms.
"You
hurt me!" she accused him,
"I'm
sorry, love. I know I did. But that was only because it had been left for so
long. When you do it every day—"
"I'd
rather die!" Aurian shouted.
"What
a pity." Forral sighed. "You look so beautiful now," Aurian's
head came up sharply. "Me? Beautiful? Like the princess in your
story?"
Forral
looked into her face. The childish roundness had been leaving Aurian's face in
the past few months—Eilin had been right. She would have her father's hawkish
looks, angular and high-cheekboned, with the same fierce aquiline nose.
"You're the most beautiful girl I've ever seen," he told her
sincerely. "It would be a shame if a handsome prince came by and didn't
like you because you hadn't combed your hair."
"I
don't want a stupid prince," Aurian declared firmly. "I'm going to
marry you."
The
swordsman froze. This was a complication that he
hadn't
considered. "Don't you think I'm a bit old for you?" he said lamely.
"How
old are you?"
"Thirty."
"That's
not old." Aurian shrugged. "You said my father was ninety-six when he
married my mother."
Forral
was lost for a reply. She was too young to understand the fundamental
difference between Mortal and Magefolk.
"Don't
you want to marry me?" Aurian looked hurt. "You just said I was
beautiful."
"You
are," he reassured her, "and I would love to marry you. But you're
not old enough yet. We'll talk about it again when you grow up."
"Promise?"
"Promise."
Hating himself, he added, "But only if you comb your hair. I can't marry
someone who looks like a hedge."
Aurian
sighed, "Oh, all right, then."
To
Portal's relief, Eilin taught her daughter to braid the unruly mane. That
solved the problem of most of the tangles, and Aurian began to take a delight
in looking after her hair, although the speculative looks she cast his way as
she did so gave the swordsman some cause for alarm. He knew how stubborn she
could be, once she got an idea into her head.
When
Forral had been about Aurian's age, Geraint had taught him to read. It was only
now. thap he appreciated how he must have tried the Mage's patience. FJiUn unearthed
Geraint's old library, and Forral tried to select the books that would appeal
to a child. They were old histories mostly, filled with tales of adventure and
bravado, and they proved to be the same ones with which Forral had been taught.
The wound of the swordsman's grief opened anew as he recalled his old friend's
face, bent over the page as Geraint struggled patiently to explain the mystery
to the baffled youth that had been himself.
Aurian
hated it. Not used to sitting still and concentrating, she considered the whole
business a waste of time. She took to hiding at lesson times, and Forral came
to bless his skill as a tracker. He would haul her back, Aurian protesting
bitterly all the way, and she fought^him so vehemently that Forral became
I
I
26 •
MAGGIF. FUREY
concerned
that their relationship would be irrevocably damaged.
In the
end the swordsman resorted to subterfuge, pretending to give in. "All
right," he told her with a shrug. "If it's too difficult for you we
won't bother." Aurian scowled at him suspiciously. She knew by now that
Forral always got his way in the end. Pretending to ignore her, he brewed some
tea made by Eilin from rosehips, a perfect antidote to this wintry weather.
Stirring a dollop of honey into his cup, he sat back with his feet propped on
the stove, opened the book of legends and began to read.
After a
while, Aurian began to drift around the room, looking for something to do. The
weather was much too bad to go out. Another blizzard was howling outside, and
the wind rattled the frames of the thick crystal casement, Forral watched the
child out of the corner of his eye. Eventually she approached him. "Can't
we play something?"
"Not
now," Forral said absently. "I'm busy."
Aurian's
face fell. She hung around for a while, scuffling her feet. "Forral, I'm
bored," she whined.
"I'm
not," he replied smugly. "This story is much too exciting."
Aurian
stamped her foot. "I don't believe you!" she shouted. "You're
only saying that to make me read the stupid thing!"
Forral
winced. The child was too bloody quick for her own good. Thinking quickly,, he
assumed an injured expression. "Would I lie? If you don't believe me I'll
read it to you." Looking relieved, Aurian sat down at his feet.
It
really was an exciting story. Forral had chosen it for that very reason. He
glanced down at the child's rapt expression. When they reached the climax of
the tale, where the brave young heroine was trapped on a mountain by savage
goblins and trolls, he put the book down and yawned.
"Don't
stop," Aurian urged him anxiously, biting her lip. "What happens
next?"
Forral
shrugged. "I can't be bothered to read anymore. I think I'll go for a
nap." Leaving the book on the chair, he went to his room, closing the door
firmly on the child's outraged protests.
The
swordsman returned an hour later to find Aurian poring over the book, tears of
frustration in her eyes. "It doesn't make sense," she wailed.
"It's just little black marks, and I'll never find out what
happened!"
Forral
put his arm around her. "That's just what I said to your father when he
taught me with this book."
Aurian's
eyes widened. "You did? What did he say?"
"Tough,"
replied Forral, grinning at the stunned expression on her face. "He said
that if I wanted to find out what happened, I would have to work hard and let
him teach me."
Aurian's
face grew stormy. "You tricked me! You rotten, sneaky beast\" She
threw the book against the wall and ran off to her room, slamming the door.
She
sulked for two days, refusing to speak to him, Eilin raised her eyebrows at the
change, but forbore to comment. Forral missed Aurian's cheerful company more
than he would ever have thought possible, and began to blame himself for
pushing the child too far. In the end he could bear her angry silence no
longer. "I'm sorry," he told her, "You're absolutely right. I
was rotten ant) sneaky, and I apologize. I'll read the rest of the story if you
want."
Aurian
threw her arms around him, her fece alight with her smile. "I love you,
Forral."
Forral
felt his throat tighten. "I love you, too," he said huskily.
"Why don't you go and fetch the book?"
She
drew back and looked at him thoughtfully. "You really do want me to learn
to read, donk ygu?"
He
nodded. "It means a lot to me, Aurian, You can't imagine how important it
is."
Aurian
sighed, looking like a prisoner about to be dragged to the scaffold. "I
suppose we'd better get started, then."
It took
the child a long time to grasp the rudiments of reading. Forral suspected that
much of the feult lay with him, for Aurian was intelligent enough, and he knew
that he lacked skill as a teacher. All he could do was substitute patience for
skill and keep their lessons short, stopping before Aurian became too tired or
despondent. Then he would read to her, hoping that she would be encouraged to
want to read the stories for herself. Eventually it worked. By the end of the
long winter, Aurian was reading everything she could lay her hands on, and
Eilin
had to make sure that Geraint's spellbooks were well hidden.
Forral
taught Aurian many other things that winter. He told her of Nexis, queen of
cities, which lay to the southwest and contained the Academy of the Magefolk,
where all magical lore was studied under the rule of the Archmage Miathan. He
told her of the Nexis Garrison that housed the city's crack fighting force, and
was the greatest military school in the land. Aurian learned what lay beyond
her Valley—the nearby northern hills, where men lived mainly by forestry, and
farming cattle and sheep; the east coast, famed for fishing; the countryside
south and west, where clay for pots was dug, and people grew grain, flax, and
grapes for wine that was marketed by the powerful Merchants' Guild of Nexis,
who coordinated trade between farmers and fishers, and the craftsmen of
villages and towns.
They
spent hours by the fire, as Aurian listened, enthralled, to Forral's stories of
mercenary life in the secretive Southern Kingdoms across the sea, with their
fierce, swarthy-skinned warriors. She would sit at his feet, wide-eyed and
entranced, as he spoke of ships and storms, and the mighty whales who were
lords of the deep. He told her bloodcurdling tales of ancient legend, about the
lost Dragonfolk—powerful Mages in their own right whose eyes flashed killing
fire—or of the fearsome race of winged warriors who were said to inhabit the
southern mountains. Though the swordsman was no scholar, he taught her what
little history he knew, including the names and natures of the Gods themselves.
The Goddesses: Iriana of the Beasts, Thara of the Fields, and Melisanda of the
Healing Hands. And the Gods: Chathak, God of Fire, the special deity of
warriors; Yinze of the Sky; and lonor the Wise, the God of Oceans who was
called the Reaper of Souls in the pantheon of the Southern Kingdoms. Aurian
marveled, and learned.
Spring
that year came in a single, glorious burst that quickly erased the last traces
of the terrible winter. Trees leapt into leaf and blossom, and flowers suddenly
appeared everywhere. Once again the woods around the lake became alive with
birdsong. Aurian and Forral took to spending much of their time outdoors in the
sunshine, searching for early greens to
supplement
their limited winter diet, and helping Eilin with her work of planting and
extending the fertile land beyond the lake.
Now
that the woods were burgeoning with life, Forral began to think of hunting.
They had eaten little meat over the winter—mostly the tough, salted meat of the
male kids borne by Eilin's goats the previous year. Though the Mage had tried
to disguise the strong flavor in well-seasoned soups and stews, Forral was
frankly sick of the stuff. Some rabbit might go down well, he thought, or
perhaps a bird—anything but bloody goat\ During his mercenary career, the
swordsman had learned some skill with bow and snare, and somewhat hesitantly,
he broached the subject to Eilin. Since the Earth-Mage lived at one with the
land and its creatures, he half expected an angry denial. He also feared that
Aurian might be upset, if one of her animal friends appeared on the supper
table. This being the case, Forral was staggered by the Mage's reply to his
diffident question.
"By
all means, Forral. If you want to hunt, Aurian will show you how we do it in
the Valley."
On a
golden evening, Aurian led Forral through the birch grove and the deeper mixed
woodland beyond, until they came to a wild grassy area dotted with clusters of
gorse and bramble. The spaces between their roots were laced with a multitude
of runs and holes. "This is where the rabbits mostly live," Aurian
told him softly. "They'll soon be coming out to feed."
Forral
nodded, wondering what she planned to do. Aurian had forbidden him to bring his
bow/and had dismissed his snares as cruel.
"Stay
quiet," the child whispered. She stepped out from the trees, wrapping a
thick piece of cloth around her wrist. Lifting her arm, she shrilled a piercing
whistle. For a moment, nothing happened. Then far above, a tiny dot appeared in
the vault of the sky. The speck plummeted—grew—took shape. Forral heard the
rushing whisper of wind through feathers and a harsh cry. A winged form swooped
to Aurian's wrist and clung there, extending its short, streamlined wings for
balance as it rubbed its proud head and cruel, curved beak caressingly along
her face.
Aurian
glowed with delight. "This is Swiftwing," she said, introducing the
bird. ^Af least, I call him that." The falcon
gave
Forral a scornful sideways glance with its great dark eye, hissed at him
through open beak, and returned to nibbling at her hair. For a moment the child
lingered, eye to eye in soundless communion with the fierce bird of prey; then
with a swift, upward jerk of her arm, she launched him into the sky, where he
climbed in spirals to hover, fluttering, above them. Aurian drew the bemused
swordsman into the shelter of the trees. "Now we wait," she murmured.
After a
time, the rabbits began to emerge from the bushes to feed, venturing timidly
forth with their gentle, rocking gait. Forral felt Aurian's hand clutch his
arm. "Now," she breathed. Above them, the falcon folded his wings and
dropped like a stone. It seemed that it would smash into the—
The
hawk's wings flashed open at the last second. He leveled out a bare inch from
the ground, hitting the rabbit in a cloud of flying fur and bowling it over and
over. Skimming over the grass at fingertip height, the hawk circled back to the
limp brown form that lay motionless and stunned. Talons extended, he settled on
the creature and finished it with one swift blow from his beak.
Forral
blinked, and remembered to breathe. The whole episode had happened almost too
quickly for his brain to register. He followed Aurian as she ran out to the
hawk.
"Well
done," she told the bird. "Oh, very well done!" Swiftwing hopped
off the rabbit, and settled into the grass to wait. Aurian sighed as she picked
up the dead creature. "Poor little thing," she murmured, briefly
stroking its fur before she stowed it in her bag.
"Doesn't
it bother you, this killing?" the swordsman asked her curiously.
"Of
course." She turned to him, her expression serious and somehow more adult
than he had seen it before. "It's very sad, Forral, but it happens.
Swiftwing needs to eat, and so do his mate and babies. Rabbits are rather big
for him—that's why he often stuns them first—but he eats them, and so do we. We
only take what we need, and he kills quick and clean, not like snares."
She smiled dreamily at the falcon. "And he's so beautiful up there . .
." For a moment she was lost for words, but Forral understood, for the
swift, fearless flight of the hawk had touched his own heart. "He makes me
feel as though I'm up
there,
flying with him," Aurian finished softly—then shook herself, and whistled
Swiftwing back to her wrist, all business once more. "We'll need to beat
the bushes to bring the rabbits out again—they're scared now," she said.
"If you thought that was good, wait till you see him with a moving target!
How many rabbits did you say you wanted, anyway?"
Forral
shook his head in amazement. Aurian never failed to astonish him—and this time,
he had learned something from her.
The
warm days passed, and soon the time came for the Mage to travel round the
villages and farms that lay close to the Valley. Each spring, the Mortals in
the nearby countryside welcomed her help as she used her Earth-magic to
"bless" their crops and herds, ensuring a good harvest. In return,
they supplied her with grain, tools, cloth, and other items that she could not
grow or manufacture for herself. This time, she particularly wanted a new glass
for Aurian's window, and some poultry, for her own had all perished in the
savage winter storms. The swordsman was horrified to learn that Aurian stayed
alone in the Valley while Eilin was away. He was dismayed by this new evidence
of the Mage's neglect; however, both she and Aurian seemed quite happy with the
arrangement.
"I
don't want to go," the child insisted, "I'd miss Swift-wing and the
animals. I'm all right here."
"Of
course she is," Eilin agreed. "She has the wolves to guard her, and
if anything should go wrong, Swiftwing or one of the other birds would soon
bring me a message."
Forral
sighed, and gave it up. What a foolish, stubborn, independent pair they were.
Typical Magefolk! He consoled himself that this year, at least, someone
responsible would be around to keep an eye on the child.
After
Eilin had set out on her own horse, a white mare that Forral had never seen
before since the Mage rarely had time for riding, Forral found that there was
enough work in the Valley to keep himself and Aurian very busy. Sometimes they
would go hunting with Swiftwing. The goats needed milking and the fish traps
that the Mage kept on the borders of the lake had to be regularly cleared and
reset. Even worse, the weeds in the garden seemed to be-naaking the most of the
Mage's absence by
springing
up overnight. Still awed by the magnitude of the task that Eilin had
undertaken, Forral felt duty bound to offer what help he could. As well as
laboring in the garden, he spent a good deal of time around the tower, working
to repair the worst of the winter's ravages.
Aurian
soon grew bored with it all. She would start out helping Forral with the best
of intentions, but after a while she inevitably slipped away, supposedly to see
her animals. But as time went by, the swordsman noticed that the child was
disappearing more and more often, and began to wonder. When asked how she had
spent her days, her replies were vague and evasive. Basically an honest child,
she was a terrible liar. Inevitably, Forral thought of the day they had met,
when he had caught her playing with fireballs in the glade.
The
suspicion that she might be doing it again filled Forral with deep concern. He
already knew she had inherited Eilin's Earth-magic. She could communicate with
animals, and knew the trick of making young plants thrive. That was no problem.
Eilin could supervise her efforts, and there was little she could do with
Earth-magic to hurt herself. But Geraint's skill had been Fire-magic, and the
control of raw energy that it required made it the most perilous of
disciplines. The swordsman worried. Had the child inherited that, too? Was she
one of those rare Mages whose powers encompassed all forms of magic? If so, she
would be in grave danger, without proper teaching as would all who came into
contact with her.
Forral
thought about-ronfiding his suspicions to Eilin on her return, but found
himself hesitating. Obsessed with her grief for Geraint, she would never be
able to live with a child who had inherited her soulmate's potentially
destructive powers. Just when the relationship between mother and daughter was
improving, she would reject Aurian, and that would be tragic. In any case, he
had no proof, and there was no point in upsetting matters until he did. He
would have to deal with this himself.
The
next time Aurian slipped away, Forral followed her, using his tracking skills
to stay out of sight. He was afraid that her friends the birds would give him
away, but they were too busy feeding their voracious new broods to think of
anything else. Once she was away from the tower Aurian called her pony,
and
Forral, cursing, had to run back to catch his horse. Now mostly idle, the beast
had grown fat and frisky, and he had a hard time restraining its exuberance.
When he picked up her trail again, the swordsman saw that Aurian had headed off
toward the forest beyond the crater's rim, using a roundabout route. He
frowned. She was definitely hiding something. Eventually her trail led to the
very clearing where they had first met. Forral, peering through the screening
undergrowth, gasped.
Aurian
had to concentrate very hard. Six fireballs were the most she had ever juggled
at once, and she was finding it hard to keep them all in the air and under
control without burning herself. Her face was damp with sweat, and she was
tiring quickly. One of the glowing colored balls of flame gave a sudden swerve,
heading straight for a tree, and she pulled it back under control with a
wrenching effort of will, almost singeing her hair in the process. That was
quite enough. With great care she snuffed the bobbing flames in midair and sat
down on a fallen tree trunk, feeling exhausted but pleased with herself.
Before
her ears had time to register the crashing in the undergrowth, Aurian found
herself seized by the shoulders, hauled upright, and spun round to stare into
Forral's face. She gulped, her own face burning with guilt. She had never seen
the big man look so angry.
"What
were you doing?" he shouted at her. "Say it!" Aurian opened her
mouth, but nothing came out. He shook her hard enough to rattle her teeth.
"S*y it!" he roared.
"P-playing
with fireballs." Aurian struggled to get the words out.
"And
what did I tell you?"
"N-not
to."
"Why?"
"Because
it's very dangerous," Aurian replied in a small voice, too scared even to
cry, and shocked by this transformation from kindly friend to wrathful
grown-up.
"Well,
you're about to find out how dangerous it is\" His face grim, Forral sat
down on the fallen trunk, put her across his knee, and walloped her until she
howled. The spanking was painful enough, but what hurt Aurian more was the fact
that she was being punished by her beloved Forral. After what
seemed
to her to be several lifetimes, he stopped. "You deserved that," he
said harshly, over her wails. "You knew perfectly well that you were doing
wrong, but you did it anyway. I thought I could trust you, Aurian. I see that I
can't." He dumped her on the ground. Aurian buried her face in the leaf
litter and sobbed her heart out. When she looked up, he had gone.
Aurian
was mortified. She couldn't believe that Forral had spanked her. He never hit
her! He was supposed to be her friend! Slowly it began to dawn on her that she
must truly have done a bad thing. But it was so much fun! "I won't stop
doing it," she muttered rebelliously. "I'll show him!" But the
voice of her conscience intervened. Forral never did anything without good
reason, and he had always turned out to be right. Then a new thought struck
her. What if he was so angry with her that he had gone away? Aurian scrambled
to her feet and called for her pony, suddenly desperate to get back. "Oh,
let him be there," she prayed. "I'll never do it again, if only he's
there."
She
couldn't ride. It hurt too much. Aurian scrambled off the pony and swore, then
clamped a guilty hand over her mouth. Gritting her teeth, she set off to walk,
wiping away the occasional tear that rolled down her cheek. Darkness fell as
she trudged along. Aurian knew that nothing would harm her within the crater's
bowl, for the wild creatures were her friends. Like all Magefolk, her night
vision was superb, and if she was careful there was no danger of falling down
one of the hidden folds in the land. There was no chance of getting lost,
either. All she had to do was head for the twinkling light that burned like a
beacon on top of the tower. But apart from the time she had been lost in the
snow, Aurian had never been out alone at night in the vast, empty darkness of
the wasteland. She felt overwhelmed and lonely, and Forral didn't love her
anymore. . . . Aurian gulped back a sob, feeling desperately sorry for herself.
It wasn't until years later that Forral told her he had never been far from her
side, shadowing her until she was safely within reach of home.
When
she finally crept across the bridge toward the tower, to her relief she saw a
soft light glowing in the kitchen window. Forral had come back to the tower! He
hadn't left yet, then. All the same, it took Aurian a long time to pluck up
enough courage to open the door. Forral sat at the table, his head in his
hands.
He had not heard her enter—or maybe he was ignoring her.
Aurian
crept closer. "Forral, I'm sorry," she said in a small voice. The
swordsman slowly raised his head and held out his arms. Aurian, too relieved to
speak, ran to him and climbed onto his lap. He hugged her hard, then she was
crying and to her surprise, he was crying, too. "Don't cry," she
begged him, puzzled. "Nobody spanked you," she added, with a touch of
indignation.
Forral's
mouth twitched in a smile. "Oh, child," he said. "Don't you know
how much it hurt me to punish you like that?"
For the
first time, Forral told her exactly what had happened to her father—how Geraint
had been destroyed by his own Fire-magic. By the time he had finished, Aurian
was trembling. "I didn't know," she gasped.
"I
should have told you sooner," Forral said, "but I'd hoped to spare
you until you were older. Now do you see why I was angry? It was because you
frightened me, love. What if you accidentally did the same thing? I'll do
anything to stop you, even if it does mean hurting you. I love you too much to
lose you the way your father was lost."
"But
I can't help it," Aurian protested. "Really and truly I can't! It's
inside me, and if I have nothing to do, it just sort of —pops out. What shall I
do, Forral?" she wailed, truly frightened now.
"Don't
worry, love, we'll think q£ something," Forral comforted her. He held her
in silence for a while, his brow furrowed with thought. Aurian found herself
growing more and more tired, but was reluctant to leave the comfort of his arms
for her bed. "Forral, will you tell me a story?" she asked sleepily.
"Tell me the one about the world's greatest swordsman. It's my
favorite."
"That's
it!" Forral shot bolt upright, almost spilling her from his lap.
"Aurian, how would you like to become the world's most famous
swordswoman?"
Aurian's
face lit up with incredulous delight. "Could I?" she asked, awed.
"I
don't see why not. I'll teach you—but I warn you, it'll be very hard work. You
won't get to be the greatest swords-
woman
by messing about. When I started to learn I was just about battered to bits,
and I was so sore and tired at the end of every day that I could hardly crawl
into bed. If you want me to teach you, you'll have to endure all that—and it'll
be too late then to change your mind. But at least you won't have a single
spare minute of the day to get yourself into trouble. What do you say?"
Aurian
thought about it. It didn't sound like fun the way he described it, but on the
other hand she was sore and tired right now—and she never wanted to go through
another day like this one. If it would keep her out of that kind of trouble, she
was all for it. The heroes from Forral's stories marched through her memory,
firing her imagination. "Yes," she cried, suddenly filled with
determination. "I'll do it!"
That
was the beginning of Aurian's training. The very next day, Forral made them two
wooden practice swords, and they found a secluded spot for their lessons, well
away from the tower. When Eilin returned, Forral swore Aurian to secrecy.
"I'm sure your mother wouldn't approve of this, and we don't want to have
to explain to her why we started doing it," he warned her. Aurian agreed
wholeheartedly.
At
first it was terrible. Forral made no allowance for her lack of size and
strength, and she soon learned that she would have to become very good in a
very short time if she wanted to avoid a bludgeoning. ^J'll show him,"
Aurian said through gritted teeth, as she sweated and puffed. At first it was
all she could do to dodge and turn his blows, without thinking about attacking.
Each night she would go to her bed aching and bruised all over, and the first
valuable lesson she learned was how to endure. Forral also taught her other
things—the exercises to stay supple and build muscle, and exercises of
breathing and meditation to calm and sharpen the mind for battle. Aurian had no
idea then how lucky she was. Forral, though he was too modest to admit it, was
the best. Under his tutelage she eventually learned the Is of the Warrior—the
trancelike state in which all senses combined to become something far greater
than the sum of their parts. The Is created a single sense that became an
extension of the living sword—that was the sword—
so that
by the time the mind worked out the next move, the blade was already there.
Aurian
began to love it. She lived for her lessons, going out with Forral in summer
and winter alike. She suffered and slogged and sweated and endured, and by the
time she was twelve she had the skill to take on an average swordsman twice her
age and size—and win. She was growing like a weed, and that helped. But when
her breasts began to grow she was appalled. They kept getting in the way. When
she complained about it to Forral he blushed, but made her a tight-fitting
leather vest such as female warriors favored. It laced tightly up the front and
kept the ridiculous things in check very effectively.
A few
weeks before her thirteenth birthday, Forral went away on a mysterious errand
of his own. Aurian pined, missing him keenly. In his absence the temptation to
take up her tricks with the fireballs surfaced strongly, but she was determined
to keep her promise to the swordsman. Instead, she asked her mother to teach
her more about Earth-magic.
"Ah,
now that Forral is away, you suddenly have time to spend with your
mother," Eilin complained, but she was smiling. Forral's presence had made
a tremendous difference to her, and mother and daughter were getting along much
better these days. Over those few weeks, Aurian found herself enjoying Eilin's
company. As well as magic, the Mage took the opportunity to teach her daughter
what would soon be happening to her maturing body, and the way thit Mages dealt
with the matter. And of course Aurian worked hard at Forral's exercises, hoping
to impress him with her improvement when he returned.
Forral's
return more than made up for his absence. He had brought her a princely gift
for her birthday—her own, full-size sword. There was a lump in Aurian's throat
as she unwrapped it, and drew the long, keen blade out of its black and silver
scabbard with a steely hiss. She flung her arms around Forral. "Oh, thank
you," she gasped. The sword shone brilliant blue-white in the pale winter
sunlight that ran like glittering fire down its razor-sharp edges. There was a
single white gem set into the hilt. It was more slender than Forral's great broad-
sword,
strong, elegant—and deadly. Aurian had never seen anything so beautiful.
It was
like going back to the beginning. The sword had been crafted for Aurian to grow
into, and she could barely lift the heavy blade, let alone swing it. She
gritted her teeth, and doubled her muscle-building exercises. At the end of
every lesson her back and arms ached. She found that fighting with a proper
blade called for a very different technique from the one that had served her so
well with the light, wooden practice swords, and she was forced to start all
over again. Aurian had been growing rather arrogant about her prowess, fancying
herself a great swordswoman already. Now she learned otherwise. Safety became
an important factor in their sessions. Now that she and Forral were using
lethal steel blades there was every chance that they could inflict serious
injury on one another, and Aurian had to learn that she could no longer
improvise, as she had formerly done.
It
seemed to take forever, but gradually, as she worked through the following
spring and summer, Aurian began to improve. Now, at last, the blade went where
she wanted it to. Well balanced and finely crafted, it was a delight to use.
Forral taught her how to take care of it, and she kept both blade and scabbard meticulously
clean and well oiled. The sword glittered as she swung it, and as it clove the
air, it sang. Because of this, Aurian named it Coronach, which meant
"Deathsong," and Forral didn't smile at her fancy. "A good blade
deserves a good name," he agreed gravely.
Disaster
struck near the end of that year, when the first snow covered the ground with a
thin sprinkling of white. Perhaps Forral had been too enthusiastic in giving
her the sword so soon; or maybe Aurian had become overconfident. Whatever the
reason, she made a deadly mistake. She and Forral were sparring in their usual
place when she decided, on her own initiative, to try a new move that she had
been thinking about lately. Moving back from him, she ducked and twisted,
planning to bring her blade up beneath her opponent's guard to strike at his
throat. It went dreadfully wrong. As she twisted, Aurian slipped on the snow.
She lost her balance and her stroke went wide, leaving her open to Forral's
lethal downswing. He cried out and tried to wrench the heavy blade aside, but
the
momentum
was too great. The great sword sheared into Aurian's left shoulder with a
sickening crunch of shattered bone.
Eilin
came thundering down the tower staircase, alerted by Forral's frantic shouts
for help. She stopped dead at the bottom of the stairs, her face ashen. Forral,
tears streaming down his face, bore Aurian's still body wrapped in his
blood-soaked cloak. A trail of blood led out through the open door behind him,
and pooled on the stone flags of the kitchen floor. He felt it seeping, warm
and sticky, into his clothing. "Oh Gods," he sobbed, his face
twisting with anguish. "Eilin, I've killed her!"
Eilin
was shaking as she took Aurian from him and laid her gently on the kitchen
table. He heard her gasp as she revealed the dreadful extent of the injury. The
Mage felt for a pulse in Aurian's throat. "Thank the Gods, she still
lives," she murmured.
Only
then did Forral dare look. His sword had bitten deep into Aurian's shoulder,
shattering her collarbone and almost severing her arm. Her face was gray from
shock and loss of blood. Forral sagged. The room blurred around him as he
swayed dizzily. On far too many occasions he had seen good friends maimed and
killed, and had inflicted worse wounds on enemies in battle without flinching,
but this was only a young girl, and one he loved more than life itself. It was
more than he could bear. "I'm sorry. It was my fault. I—"
"Quiet!"
Eilin snapped. She lai^l her hands on the wound, her eyes narrowing in concentration'as
she summoned her powers. "I wish I'd learned more about Healing," she
muttered helplessly. But as Forral watched, holding his breath, the flow of
blood diminished to a trickle, then slowly, almost imperceptibly, it died away
altogether. Eilin straightened up and turned on him, her eyes blazing.
Forral
dropped to his knees. "Eilin, it was an accident—"
"Never
mind! Ride to Nexis, Forral. Fetch the Healer from the Academy. Hurry! We may
lose her yet!"
Relieved
to be doing something that might help, Forral ran, his last glimpse of Aurian's
pale, stricken face blazoned on his mind's eye. His horse plunged violently,
frightened by this wild-eyed madman who flung the saddle so roughly across its
back.
He clouted it hard across the nose and jerked the girth tight. Springing to its
back, he spurred away in a welter of snow, anxious to be out of the rough
terrain of the crater before dusk fell. The journey on horseback to Nexis took
five days. Forral intended to do it in two.
Onaptcr 3
THE BAKER'S
SON
ee up,
there!" Anvar flipped the reins, urging the old horse along the rough,
rutted track that slanted up from the mill by the riverside. Lazy tossed his
head and whinnied, protesting at having to haul the heavy cartload of flour up
the steep hill. "Never mind," Anvar told the horse. "At least
you're warm., I'll give you a good breakfast when we get home." He blew on
his hands and slapped them against his thighs, trying to thaw the stiffness out
of his fingers. The icy dawn chill had seeped into his bones, and the mill's
roaring fire already seemed a million miles away. But a different sort of fire
warmed young Anvar's blood as he recalled the smile of the miller's pretty
daughter, Sara.
The
wealth and power in the city of Nexis rested with the rich merchants, the
high-placed warriors from the Garrison, and the lofty Mageborn. Life was much
harder for the common folk: the craftsmen and dressmakers, the servants,
laborers, shopkeepers, bargemen, and lamplighters who kept the city running with
their menial but essential tasks, Children, perforce, learned to shoulder
responsibility at an early age, and Anvar's father, a master baker in the city,
had given his eldest son the task of fetching the flour as soon as he was old
enough to drive the cart. Though the journey was longer by road, and hard in
winter, it saved the ruinous freight tolls charged by the river's bargemen.
Ever
since Anvar's first visit to the mill long ago, fair-haired, elfin little Sara
had been his best friend. When they were younger they would sneak away in the
afternoons to play together, meeting along the narrow towpath that ran
downriver to the city. Now that they had reached the grand old age of fifteen,
however, their games had started to take a new and serious turn. Anvar was in
love, and he had no doubt whatsoever that Sara felt the same. Both sets of
parents viewed this development with tolerance. Tori, Anvar's father, and Jard
the miller both saw the advantage in combining the two businesses someday, and
of course the mothers had no say in the matter.
Anvar
smiled, still thinking of Sara, as he reached the top
of the
hill and turned the creaking cart onto the main highway. Nexis was hidden by
the freezing mist that lay gray in the forested valley below. Only the
shimmering white towers and dome of the Academy, high on their rocky promontory
above the rest of the city, were visible above the fog. Anvar's smile turned to
a scowl at the sight. They would still be asleep up there, he thought. Snoring
on swansdown mattresses while honest folk had been up and working well before
daylight! His father had no time for the Magefolk, calling them arrogant
parasites and an insult to proper men. This was such a common point of view in
Anvar's neighborhood that he had never questioned it, though he noticed that
the men in the taprooms kept their voices low as they said it, glancing
nervously over their shoulders as they spoke.
Suddenly
Anvar was wrenched out of his daydreams as the old horse shied and laid its
ears back at the sound of hoofbeats. Someone was coming up behind him,
galloping perilously fast on the icy road. He sighed and pulled the cart well
into the side. It was probably a courier, headed for the Garrison, the Academy,
or the Merchants' Quarter, and it would be more than Anvar's hide was worth to
get in the way of his betters' business.
The
horse was finished. As it thundered past, Anvar could hear the wheeze of its
labored breathing above the sound of hooves. He caught a glimpse of its
sweat-streaked, bloodstained flanks as it hurtled by, and heard the burly rider
curse it as he lashed it with the end-of the reins. The swine! Anvar raged
inwardly, furious at this cruel treatment. He urged his own horse onward
gently, as if by his kindness he could somehow make amends for what he had just
witnessed. Then he heard the fading hoofbeats falter. There was a sick thud as
the horse went down, followed by a stream of savage curses.
Anvar
rounded the bend to see the dark bulk of the dead horse lying in the road. The
body still steamed. The great bully who had been riding it stood over it, quite
unscathed and scalding the air with oaths. Anvar was consumed with anger.
Without pausing to consider the consequences, he leapt from the cart and hurled
himself at the big, bearded horseman. "You bastard!" he screamed.
"You callous bastard!" The man ignored him completely, his eye
suddenly lighting on the cart. Brush-
AURIAN •
43
ing
Anvar aside with casual, contemptuous strength, he ran forward and drew a
dagger from his belt to cut the old horse free from the traces.
Anvar
hauled himself out of the ditch, horrified at the result of his folly.
"No!" he yelled and ran forward to tug at the madman's arm. A blow
sent him spinning. The big man threw the last of the harness aside, cut off the
trailing ends of the long reins, and leapt astride the horse's bare back. Lazy
shied, rolling his eyes, and the man gave a savage jerk at the reins. Anvar
picked himself up, tears in his eyes, and hauled desperately at the rider's
muddy cloak. "Please, sir," he begged, "he's old. You
can't—"
The
stranger turned to look at him as though noticing him for the first time, his
grim expression suddenly softening to compassion and regret. "I'm truly
sorry, lad," he said gently, "but it's an emergency. There's a young
girl's life at stake, and I must get to the Healer. Try to understand, I'll
leave him at the Academy. Tell them Forral sent you," He clasped Anvar's
shoulder briefly, and was gone with a clatter of hooves. Anvar stared after him
for a long moment, then turned to contemplate the abandoned cart with its
precious load. The flour would be late that morning and Tori would be unable to
start work. They would lose money through this, for sure. Anvar sighed, and set
off walking back toward the mill to borrow a horse. His father was going to be
absolutely livid,
Anvar's
family lived in the north of Nexis, in the thickly populated labyrinth of
narrow stpeet|pthat clustered within the great city wall -on the upper slopes
of the broad valley. Farther down were the great stone thoroughfares with their
magnificent, colonnaded buildings and marvelous markets and shops. Slightly
apart, on a plateau where the slope leveled briefly before continuing its
descent, stood the large gray fortresslike complex of the legendary Garrison.
Lining the northern river-bank at the bottom of the vale were the warehouses
and wharves of the merchants, with their usual dockside complement of rats,
beggars, cutpurses, and whores. Elegant bridges leapt across the river's broad
flow at various points, connecting the working areas in the north of the city
to the very different environment on the south bank.
South
of the rivejr,, the valley sloped upward in a series of
steep
wooded terraces. Set like jewels among the trees were the opulent mansions of
the merchants with their smooth lawns and lush, glowing gardens where colored
lanterns burned on balmy summer evenings when the air was thick with the scent
of many flowers. At the mid-point of its journey through the city, the river
made a detour, looping north in an oxbow before reemerging to resume its path
to the sea. Within this loop stood a high, rocky promontory, almost an island,
connected to the southern bank by a narrow tongue of land barred with an arched
white gate. Set on top of the promontory, the highest point in the city, were
the white-walled towers of the Academy where the Magefolk dwelt in splendid and
lofty isolation.
The
morning was wearing away when Anvar drove his borrowed horse past the guards at
the northern city gate and threaded his way through the narrow streets toward
home. The houses and workshops in this part of the city were simply but solidly
constructed of wood, brick, and plaster. Most of the homes were well cared for,
and the streets were cobbled but clean. Anvar had heard that in smaller towns,
people threw their waste out of the windows, turning the thoroughfares into an
open sewer. In Nexis, jewel among cities and home of the Magefolk, such a thing
would be unthinkable. Some two hundred years previously, Bavordran, a Mage
skilled in Water-magic, had designed an elaborate and effective system of
underground sewers to furnish the entire city, and the Magefolk, for once, (for
they were not exactly famed for helping the Mortal population of Nexis,) took
the duty of their magical upkeep very seriously indeed.
Anvar's
family lived above Tori's bakery, where bread, cakes, and pies were made to
sell in the little market held daily in a nearby square. Usually the fragrance
of baking loaves filled the street, but not today. As he neared the house,
Anvar could hear his father's voice raised in anger, and chewed his lip
nervously. He'd be in trouble over this, for sure. He turned the cart carefully
down the narrow alleyway that led to the little stable behind the house, and
made Jard's horse comfortable in Lazy's stall. There was no point in delaying.
The later he was, the more angry Tori would become. Squaring his shoulders,
Anvar crossed the yard and went reluctantly into the bakery. He hoped that his
father would give him a chance to explain.
AURIAN •
45
Tori
was in no mood for excuses. "But it wasn't my fault!" Anvar pleaded.
"He knocked me down and took the horse—"
"And
you just let him! That animal is our livelihood, you stupid boy. Do you know
what you've done? Do you?" Tori raised his big fist, his arm brawny from
years of lifting bags of flour and kneading stiff dough. Anvar ducked and the
blow caught him on the shoulder, spinning him into the corner where he knocked
over a clattering stack of empty bread trays in falling. "Clumsy
fool!" His father advanced on him like a great, menacing shadow, hauled
him up and hit him again. "Stay still, you!" The baker began to
unbuckle his belt.
"Leave
him alone, Tori. It wasn't the boy's fault." Grandpa's voice was filled
with quiet authority. Anvar, nursing his bruises, sagged with relief at the
unexpected reprieve. The old man was the only person who could defy his son's
temper when Tori was in this mood.
Grandpa
was Anvar's confidant, teacher, protector, and friend. He was a great hulk of a
man, with a shock of white hair, a gentle expression, and a bristling
moustache. He'd been a carpenter by trade, and his thick-fingered hands could
do miracles of intricate, delicate carving that were much in demand, and
brought in welcome pennies to the household. But he gave away as many pieces as
he sold—much to Tori's disgust. A countryman at heart, the old man had come to
live with his son after the tragic early death of his wife, a sweet and lovely
person—and a legendary cook. It was she who had taught Tori the skills that
made his^baking so much in demand. For years Grandpa had tried to bury his
grief in his work, but now he was content to rest and enjoy his grandsons,
trying to teach them the older, simpler values of his youth. In Anvar he had a
willing pupil, but Bern, the younger brother, was his father's son, from his
dark, sturdy appearance to his love of the business and the worship of profit.
Tori
scowled. Letting go of Anvar, he turned on Grandpa. "You stay out of this,
old man!"
"I
don't think so, Tori. Not this time." Grandpa placed himself between the
wrathful baker and his victim. "You're too hard on the lad."
"And
you spoil him, you and his wretched mother! No wonder the boy is good, for
nothing!"
46 •
MAGGIE FUREV
"He's
good for a great many things, if you would give him a chance," Grandpa
said firmly. "Instead of taking it out on him, why don't you go up to the
Academy and see what's happened to the horse?"
"What?
Trek all the way across town and up that bloody great hill? Have you lost your
wits, Father? Enough of today's been wasted, thanks to this idiot!"
"Nonsense,
Tori. You can take Jard's horse, and the trip may well be worth your time. It
won't hurt to have your name known at the Academy—they eat bread too, you know.
We can start the baking while you're gone, and there's a good chance that
you'll be compensated by this Forral. From what Anvar said, he seemed an
honorable man, and if it was an emergency, what else could he do? You'd have
done the same thing yourself, if anything had happened to Bern."
Tori
hesitated for a moment, still scowling. "Those bastards could starve
before I'd sell them a crumb of my bread— and besides, you old fool, they bake
their own—or get the bootlicking Mortal scum who serve them to do it!"
Satisfied that he had had the last word he stamped out, slamming the door
behind him. Grandpa shrugged, and put an arm around Anvar's shoulders.
"Come on, son, we'd better get started. We're well behind this morning,
and your father's temper isn't likely to improve with the day."
As
Anvar followed him, Grandpa's last words to his father echoed in his head.
Bern—Tori's favorite, and he never bothered to hide it. Always BernrAnvar
looked sourly at his dark-haired younger brother, who was smirking in the
doorway. Why did Tori favor him so? Grandpa had been right. If Bern had been
hurt, his father would move mountains to help him. If it had been himself, on
the other hand . . . Anvar sighed. He knew only too well what his father
thought about him. But he wished
he knew
why.
At
nightfall Anvar dragged himself up the ladder to the cramped little attic that
he shared with Bern, having finished work at last. He had been too tired to eat
the special supper that his mother had prepared to placate his father's black
mood. Lacking the energy to undress, he threw himself down on his bed. Gods,
what a terrible day it had been! Tori had worked them like slaves, taking
Anvar's mishap out on the whole fam-
AURIAN •
47
ily.
His poor mother had been pale and shaking with fatigue by the end of the day,
and Anvar was consumed with guilt, knowing that her exhaustion was his fault.
Ria had never been strong, but she toiled without complaint, afraid that if she
faltered, Tori's wrath would fall on her son again. Anvar wondered, as he often
did, how this gentle, intelligent woman had come to wed his rough and greedy
father. She deserved far better. Delicate and slender, she had dark blond hair
and blue eyes like her elder son, and her beauty still shone through her
haggard appearance.
Ria's
past was a mystery. Unlike anyone else in their neighborhood, she could read
and write and play music, and had taught these skills to Anvar. A waste of time,
Tori had called it, and pointed out that Bern had more sense than to ape his
betters. He was learning to follow in his father's footsteps like a proper son.
But for once Ria had defied her husband, and Anvar was glad. Ever since the day
his grandpa had carved him his first little wooden flute, he had fallen in love
with music and practiced every spare minute, driving his family, especially his
father, to distraction. Soon he had mastered all the simple tunes he knew, and
had begun to compose his own, stretching the limits of the simple flute until
even Grandpa's ingenuity was hard-pressed to construct new instruments that
would give him the sounds he wanted, Anvar lived for his music. His playing and
Sara were the only consolations in his hardworking life, and he blessed his
mother for giving him such a priceless gift.
Anvar
loved Ria. Now she w«S faded, fragile, and careworn, and too cowed to stand up
to the bullying Tori. He wished he could protect her, but although he was
growing up tall and broad-shouldered, his frame was still lanky and gangling.
If it came to a confrontation, Tori could fell him with a single blow.
Anvar
sighed. He had other troubles that night. He had arranged to meet Sara in their
usual trysting place along the riverbank, but Tori's grueling workload had put
paid to that. He hoped she wouldn't be angry. He was sad too about poor Lazy,
His wind had been ruined, and Tori had callously sold him to the knacker men.
Anvar mourned the loss of the old horse. Though balky and stubborn, he had had
great character and intelligence—which he constantly used to avoid work.
Anvar
was going to miss him. Tori, however, only thought of the generous sum that
Forral had left for him at the Academy. He had not seen Anvar's horseman, for
Forral had only stopped long enough to pick up the Lady Meiriel, the Healer,
and the two had set off as fast as possible for the north on fresh horses.
Anvar wondered what she was like, this child whose life was in danger. At first
he felt inclined to resent the mysterious dying girl who had caused all this
trouble, but when he thought about it, he found himself hoping that the Healer
would get there in time to save her. That way, at least some good would come
out of Lazy's death.
Some
weeks later, Anvar's own family came to be in desperate need of the Healer's
services. All winter long, Grandpa had been complaining of tiredness and aches
in his bones, and after Solstice, in the bleak gray season that stretched
beyond the turn of the year, the old man took to his bed. He grew weaker by the
day despite Ria's diligent nursing with the herbal brews and folk remedies that
were the only recourse of the common Mortals in the city. But when Anvar,
remembering Forral, begged his father to send for the Healer, Tori admonished
him harshly. "I don't know where you get your ideas from," he said.
"A family like us send for the Healer? She'd laugh in our faces. Besides,
I'll have none of those Mageborn scum over my threshold. Now get back to work,
boy, before I take my belt to you!" That night, when Anvjir visited
Grandpa, the old man was too weak even to speak to him. He simply lay back on
the pillows, his face yellow and sunken. There was an odd transparency about
the old man's skin that Anvar had never seen before, and without knowing
why, he felt a stab of fear. "Mother, help
him," he begged.
Ria
shook her head, tears in her eyes. "Anvar, you have to face it," she
said softly. "Grandpa's dying."
"No!"
Anvar gasped. "He can't die!" He came to a sudden decision. "I'm
going for the Healer, if Father won't."
"You
can't!" Ria went absolutely white, her eyes wide with
stark
terror.
Even in
his extremity, Anvar was stunned by her reaction. Then he looked back at his
grandpa's face.
AURIAN '
49
"Why
not?" he demanded. "I'm not afraid of Father. Anyway, he's gone to
the tavern. If I'm quick he need never know."
"It's
not that!" Ria was trembling. She caught hold of Anvar's hands.
"Anvar, you and I—we must never have any dealings with the Magefolk. I
can't tell you why, but you must believe me. Stay away from them, son, for my
sake—and especially for your own."
Anvar
was dumbfounded. What had his mother to do with the Magefolk, that she should
be so terrified? But she wouldn't tell him, and there was no time to find out.
He pulled away. "I'm sorry, Mother." Quietly he slipped downstairs,
hoping to avoid Bern, who was always on the lookout for opportunities to get
him into trouble. When Anvar reached the street he started to run, heading
downhill toward the river. From the open window behind him came the sound of
his mother's frightened weeping.
Anvar
pounded along the quiet, lamplit streets. It was a long way to the river, and
his breath was coming in gasps as he neared the wharves, taking a shortcut to
the bridge nearest the Academy. Lamps were scarce in the warehouse district and
Anvar hurried nervously through the dark alleys, his feet slipping on cobbles
that were covered with filth. He was already regretting that he had chosen this
route. The district had a bad reputation. As he passed the dark, stinking
entrance to one of the smaller alleys there was a sudden scuffling noise, and
several ragged figures burst out of the shatjews. Anvar was forced to slide to
a halt as they surrounded him. They closed in on him, and he gagged on the
acrid stench of unwashed bodies. In the dim light from a rag-draped window
above, he saw the flash of knives in their hands, and his mouth went dry with
fear,
"Hand
over your money, boy," a voice growled in an unfamiliar accent.
Anvar
backed away until he was stopped by the wall. "I—I haven't got any,"
he stammered, "Please let me go. I'm going for the Healer—it's an
emergency." Irrationally, Forral's face flicked into his mind as he echoed
the big man's words.
The
cutthroat laughed. "My, aren't we grand! Going for the Healer, eh? And
with no money? Search him, boys!" Anvar was thrown to the .ground. Rough,
bony fingers rummaged
I
through
his clothing, making his flesh crawl. He had time for one enormous bellow for
help before they started to hit him.
The
nightmare came to an abrupt end as the clatter of hooves echoed down the alley.
"Troopers!" somebody yelled.
"Run
for it!"
Anvar
suddenly found himself alone, and struggled to make his bruised and aching body
rise. A hand grasped his collar, and he was hauled to his feet.
"Got
you!" Anvar found himself staring up into the stern face of a tall
soldier. "What were you up to, eh, brat?" the man
rasped.
"Please,
sir," Anvar stammered, squirming in the man's iron grip, "they set on
me. I was going to the Academy for the
Healer—"
The
trooper burst out laughing. "Come, can't you manage a better tale than
that? Do you think I was born yesterday?" He hauled Anvar to the end of
the alley, where a single lamp hung from the wall on an iron bracket. As he
took in Anvar's appearance, his expression altered. "You don't come from
around here," he accused him. "What's a lad like you doing wandering
alone in this district at night? Have you lost your wits?"
Haltingly,
Anvar told him about his grandpa.
The
trooper let go of his collar. "Lad," he said gently, "the Lady
Meiriel won't bother herself with the likes of your grandpa. Don't you know how
the Magefolk are?"
"I've
got to try," Anvar insisted. "Why wouldn't she help me? A while ago I
met tTfts man called Forral, and—"
"You
know Forral?" A look of profound respect crossed the
trooper's
seamed face.
"We
met on the road—he took my horse. He said he was going for the Healer to save a
little girl's life. If she would do that, why wouldn't she help Grandpa?"
The
soldier sighed. "Lad, don't you know who Forral w? He's a living
legend—the world's greatest swordsman—and he's friendly with some of the
Magefolk. The girl was the daughter of Eilin, the Lady of the Lake. We heard
about it at the Garrison. Why, I don't even know if the Lady Meiriel is back
yet—the Valley is a long way north of here. I'm sorry, son, but even if she has
come back, she won't haul herself out at this time of night for some Mortal's
grandpa."
AUR1AN •
51
"But
if I could explain to her . . ."
Anvar persisted.
"Well,
don't say I didn't warn you." The trooper sounded resigned. "Come on,
I'll take you on my horse. If you go up there alone, the Magefolk will likely
have you flogged for your cheek before they throw you out."
The
horse's hooves sounded loud on the causeway that led across the promontory as
Anvar and the trooper approached the white gate. The gatekeeper was an old
man—a Mortal, as were all the servants of the Magefolk. When Anvar's new friend
explained their errand, he gaped in disbelief.
"What?
Are you joking? The Lady Meiriel has just returned from a long journey this
very day. It's more than my hide's worth to disturb her. You should have more sense,
Hargorn, than to bring the boy here."
"This
is a special case," Hargorn insisted. "It's the lad who gave Forral
his horse. Why, if it hadn't been for that, the little Mage lass might have
died before the Healer could reach her. Surely that deserves some
consideration."
The old
man sighed. "Oh, very well. I'll ask her. But she's not going to be very
pleased."
He
ducked back into the squat white gatehouse. On a shelf inside stood a rack of
crystals, each glowing with a different colored light. The gatekeeper picked up
a stone that shone a deep violet-blue and spoke into it softly. After a moment
a patch of luminescence shimmered into existence in front of him, and Anvar
gasped as it resolved itself into a woman's face, with dark, cropped hair, high
cheekjxmes, and an arrogant beaked nose. Her expression was sleepy and cross.
"What is it?" she demanded brusquely. "I trust you've a good
reason for bothering me at this hour?" With many bows and apologies, the
gatekeeper explained the situation. The Lady Meiriel frowned. "How often
have I told you not to bother me with such trifles? If I had to attend every
sick Mortal in Nexis, I'd exhaust my power in a day! Send the brat away—and as
for you, the Archmage shall hear tomorrow that I'll bear your incompetence no
longer. This sort of thing is happening far too often! You're obviously not fit
for your post!" The face flickered into darkness.
The
gatekeeper turned to Hargorn. "See what you've done," he whined.
Bujjthere was no one there.
The
trooper caught up with Anvar before he reached the end of the causeway.
'"Leave me alone!" the boy shouted, blinded with tears.
Hargorn
laid a kindly hand on his shoulder. "I'm sorry, lad, but I did warn you.
Come on—I'll take you home."
Grandpa
died before morning. As Anvar wept over the old man's body, his mother sought
to comfort him. "Don't grieve so," she said softly, putting an arm
around his shaking shoulders. "Look at him." Grandpa's expression was
transfigured by a smile of pure, sublime joy. "He's gone back to
Grandma," Ria said. "He loved her so much, and he's been missing her
terribly all these years. You can see from his face that they're together
again. I know how much you'll miss him, dear, but you should be happy for him,
too."
"How
do you know?" Anvar demanded. "How can you be sure he knows about
anything now? He's dead! When that accursed Healer could have saved him!"
Ria
sighed. "Anvar, Grandpa was old and worn out. He never really liked living
in the city and he'd had a hard life. He was tired, that's all. It's not likely
that the Lady Meiriel could have done anything—"
"She
could have tried!" Anvar was dimly aware that he was shouting. "She
could have cared! But he was only a Mortal. We mean less to those Magefolk than
animals!"
Ria
sighed again and left the room, leaving him alone for the last time with his
grandfather. And as he knelt there in the cold chamber beside the empty remains
of what had been a good and loving man, a deep and remorseless hatred of the
Magefolk took root within his heart.
Lxhaptcr 4
THE ARCHMAGE
he
sound of voices woke Aurian from a fitful sleep. For a panic-stricken moment
she wondered where she was, until she saw lamplight glowing beyond the open
door that led to Meiriel's quarters at the far end of the infirmary. "Lady
Meiriel?" she called out nervously. This place seemed very strange to her,
with its stark white walls and smooth, polished marble floor reflecting the row
of empty beds. The Healer came in, brisk and smiling. "Did I wake you?"
"Is
something wrong?" Aurian asked.
"Naught
to worry about." Meiriel shrugged dismissively. "Only an ignorant
Mortal making a pest of himself down at the gate. Because we have powers, they
think our sole purpose in life is to run around helping them\"
Aurian
frowned. Any talk of Mortals reminded her painfully of Forral—but then
everything seemed to remind her of the swordsman. She clenched her fists,
willing the tears not to gather in her eyes. "Aren't we supposed to help
them?" she asked. "I don't understand."
The
Healer sat down on the edge of her bed. "Here at the Academy, Aurian,
you'll learn that it's simply not done to waste your powers on those stupid,
whining Mortals. Now, we've had a long journey, and you need to rest. Can I get
you something to help you sleep?" - /
"Yes,
please, Meiriel." Anything was better than lying awake thinking.
Trying
not to grimace, Aurian finished the potion that the Healer had brought her as
quickly as possible. Although it was sticky and tasted vile, she preferred it
to Meiriel's Sleep-magic, which was most unnerving. No time seemed to pass
while she was under the spell—she only closed her eyes for a second, it
seemed—and when she opened them, hours had been lost. Luckily, she thought, the
Healer had been understanding about her fears. Having been dragged, unwilling,
away from her home to this ^iew and frightening place, Aurian was pitifully
grateful even for Meiriel's brusque, no-nonsense kindness. Fighting back her
tears, she snuggled ^Jpwn beneath the quilt, hoping that for
once
she would fall asleep before her mind could start dwelling on the catastrophe
that had overtaken her life.
It had
taken the Healer several weeks to repair Aurian's damaged shoulder, but she
couldn't remember anything of those first days, when Meiriel had labored
endlessly with Healing-magic to save her arm. She had pieced together fragments
of shattered bone with painstaking skill, and repaired the severed muscles.
Meiriel had then used her powers to accelerate the body's natural healing, a
process which sapped a great deal of the patient's own resources and left her
in a deep sleep for several days while her body recovered its energies. When
Aurian finally awoke, the wound had closed and was mending fast, though her arm
was still stiff, feeble, and sore. Naturally, she had wanted Forral. At first
her mother kept putting her off, but in the end, on Meiriel's advice, she had
relented, and given Aurian the letter. By now she knew every terrible word by
heart:
"Aurian
love, I'm sorry I can't be here when you wake, but if I stayed to say goodbye,
I would never be able to go. I don't know if I can explain so that you'll
understand, but I'll try. Don't blame your mother—she didn't send me away this
time. I'm leaving because I am horrified at what I did to you, I had no right
to expose you to such risks. The Lady Meiriel says you'll be all right and have
full use of your arm again, and I only thank the Gods I didn't kilLyou
outright. As it is, I can never forgive myself.
"I
had to tell your mother why we started with your sword training, but don't
worry—she's not angry, unless it's with me for not telling her sooner. Anyway,
she and the Healer want you to go away to the Academy at Nexis to be trained
properly, which is only right, because you are a Mage after all. I thought
about going back with you and joining the Garrison again so that we could see
each other, but it wouldn't be fair to you. You need to settle down with your
own kind and learn to use your gifts, and I would only be in the way. So I'm
going away soldiering again.
"Aurian,
please forgive me for leaving you like this. It breaks my heart, but it's for
the best, truly. Please don't forget
me, as
I'll never forget you. And never doubt that someday we'll meet again. I'll
think of you always. All my love, Forral."
The
following weeks had passed in a blur of misery. Nothing mattered now that
Forral had gone. Had she been wrong about the swordsman? If he had truly loved
her, how could he have left her like this? Aurian, numb and aching inside, had
simply done what her mother and the Healer told her, and gradually her body
recovered sufficiently for her to make the journey back to Nexis with Meiriel.
But even the sight of so much unfamiliar new country had failed to lift her
spirits. The weather, unremittingly cold and bleak, was a perfect match for her
mood as they rode: first over wild and snowy moors, and then, once they had
reached the great road that led to the lower country, through tame and tended
farmland and forest. All this was lost on Aurian, however. She was barely aware
of her surroundings, let alone the import of the journey she was making.
It had
taken the city to bring Aurian sharply out of her self-pity. After spending
almost all her life in the solitude of her mother's isolated Valley, Nexis,
with its looming buildings and hordes of people, had terrified her. Everything
was so big, noisy, and crowded that she couldn't breathe. She hadn't known that
there were so many people in the world! Meiriel, in her own brisk way, had been
sympathetic. "Brace up, child," she had said. "Don't panic, they
won't hurt you! Take deep breaths, and stay close to me. It's a lot more
peaceful at the Academy, and you'll get used to the city in time."
Aurian
doubted that she would /ver get used to the city or the Academy, Meiriel's
pristine infirmary was very different from the familiar clutter of her mother's
tower, and since everything was so alien to her, she lived in constant fear of
doing or saying something wrong. She longed for the sanctuary of her own room,
and the strong, comforting presence of Forral.
To
bolster her faltering courage, Aurian clung tightly to the hard, slender shape
of her sword. She slept with the sheathed blade every night, for it was all she
had left of Forral.
As soon
as she had recovered sufficiently from her injury to walk, she had gone to the
clearing where they had spent so many happy hours in practice. Her precious
sword lay untouched on the ground where it had fallen. Its leather scabbard was
already stiff and starting to discolor, its blade spotted with
rust.
Shaking with sobs, Aurian had gathered it up carefully and taken it home. She
spent hours cleaning and oiling both blade and scabbard with the greatest care,
pausing often to wipe off the tears that threatened to mar her work. And
despite the objections of Meiriel and her mother, she had refused to be parted
from it, reacting so violently to the very suggestion that they had relented
and allowed her to keep it. Holding tightly to the sword, Aurian cried herself
to sleep, as she had done every night since Forral had gone away.
In her
quarters, Meiriel listened to the soft sounds of weeping, regretting that it
had been necessary to wrench the child away from home like this. When silence
fell at last, she crept to Aurian's bedside to assure herself that she was
truly asleep. Then calling a servant to watch her charge, she flung a cloak
around her shoulders and set off across the frost-silvered courtyard to the
Mages' Tower. A red light burning high in the crimson-draped windows of the
uppermost floor showed that the Archmage was in residence.
"How
goes it with the child, Meiriel?" The Archmage, like all his kind, was
very tall. With his long, silvery hair and beard, his bony hooked nose, his
dark, burning eyes and haughty demeanor, he looked the very epitome of the most
powerful Mage in the world. His scarlet robes swept the richly carpeted floor
as he crossed the room to pour Meiriel a goblet of
wine.
As
Meiriel took a seat,~the Healer saw the slim, silver-clad figure of Eliseth
sitting in the shadows by the window, and frowned. She neither liked nor
trusted the scheming, ice-cool Weather-Mage. "I thought this was to be a
private meeting,"
she
objected.
Miathan
handed her a brimming crystal goblet. "Come, Meiriel, don't be
foolish," he chided. "Since we received your message, Eliseth has
been helping me to make plans. If what you say is true, Geraint's child has
talents we can use, and will need very special handling. I should hardly have
to remind you that we need the utmost loyalty from all our people these days.
The Magefolk have dwindled. Our powers are severely proscribed by the Mages'
Code, and dissension against us among the wretched Mortals grows ever stronger.
I still control the
Garrison's
voice on the ruling Council of Three, but Rioch will be retiring before long,
and there is no suitably accommodating successor among his warriors. And the
new Merchants' Representative, that jumped-up ruffian Vannor, is already giving
me trouble."
The
Archmage frowned, and took a sip of wine. "Because a Magewoman loses her
powers during pregnancy, our race has always been slow to breed, and no new
children are being born to us. We're seriously outnumbered by the Mortals. Not
counting Eilin, who refuses to return to us, that only leaves seven Magefolk:
you and I, Eliseth and Bragar, the twins, and Finbarr. And of those, the twins
seem unable to access their full power, and Finbarr never leaves his
archives—no offense, Meiriel. I know he's your soul mate, and I regret that we
can't spare your Healing skills long enough for you to lose them during a
pregnancy. And of course we can't spare Eliseth, for the same reason. Her
studies are at a critical point—"
"Otherwise,
of course, I would be happy to make the sacrifice," Eliseth interjected
smoothly. Meiriel bit back a sarcastic retort. Liar, she thought. All you want
is power. You'd be quick enough to bear Miathan's child, if he asked you. She
turned back to the Archmage. "What has this to do with Aurian?" she
asked. "You surely don't expect her to breed you some new Magefolk? The
child is barely fourteen!"
Miathan
assumed a patient expression, looking at the Healer over his steepled hands.
"My dear Meiriel," he said suavely, "what a suggestion! Of
course I don't expect such a thing. Not yet, at any rate. But we must take the
long view here. She will not be fourteen forever. And if, as you say, her
powers may range over the entire spectrum, then they must be passed on for the
benefit of our race. In the meantime, however, I was thinking of our precarious
position among the Mortals. If word should be passed that we have a new
Mage—one whose powers are, shall we say, spectacular—then they might think
twice before crossing us. After all, they've already had an example of what her
father can do."
"That's
appalling, Miathan! It's completely immoral!" Meiriel exploded. "The
Mages' Code expressly forbids the use of magic to gain power over others."
"Of
course it does, my dear." Miathan's voice was melodi-
ous and
smooth. "But if you check the wording carefully, Meiriel, it says nothing
about people believing that a Mage might use his powers against them. If the
Mortals should happen to get hold of such an outlandish notion, then it would
hardly be our fault, would it?" he said with a shrug.
"That's
pure sophistry, and you know it! You're coming perilously close to breaking
your vows under the Code, Miathan, and you'll take us all to perdition with
you," Meiriel warned. "Do you plan to corrupt the child, too?"
Eliseth
shrugged her elegant shoulders. "Surely you're overreacting," she
said silkily. "After all, this is pure conjecture on the part of the
Archmage. All he cares about at present is helping the child, and winning her
trust. Who knows what nonsense Eilin and that uncouth Mortal have been putting
into her head? You know how hard our training is, and the girl is starting
late. She'll lack discipline, I daresay, so there will be some difficult times
ahead of her. The last thing we want is for her to end up resenting the
Magefolk—after all, we are her people. So Miathan and I have thought of a way
to deal with the problem. We only have her welfare at heart—you'll see,
Meiriel."
"Indeed
she will," Miathan said heartily. "Meiriel, tomorrow morning you will
turn Aurian over to Eliseth. After that, your part in this matter is over for
the time being, and you'll leave the rest to us. Stay away from the child, and
don't interfere."
"But—"
Meiriel protested unhappily.
Miathan's
face grew stony. "That is a direct order from your Archmage, Meiriel. You
may go now."
Aurian
disliked Eliseth on first sight. Although her face was flawlessly beautiful and
her silver hair flowed right down to her feet like a shimmering waterfall, the
Magewoman's smile never reached her gray eyes, which were hard and cold as
steel. She led Aurian to the chamber that would be her own—a tiny whitewashed
cell on the ground floor of the Mages' Tower. Furnished with the barest
simplicity, it contained a narrow bed, a table and chair, and shelves and a
chest for her possessions and clothes.
Aurian
had no possessions to arrange. Apart from the
clothes
she stood in, all she had was her sword. When Eliseth saw it, she frowned.
"You can't keep that," she said flatly. "It's much too dangerous
for a young girl. Give it to me." She reached for the sword.
In a
flash Aurian had the blade unsheathed, as Forral had taught her. "Don't
you touch my sword," she warned. Eliseth's eyes narrowed, and she made a
peculiar, twisting little gesture with her left hand. Aurian gasped as a chill,
translucent blue cloud surrounded her. She couldn't move! Her body was frozen
rigid. Icy cold seemed to burn into her very bones.
Eliseth
swooped down and plucked Coronach from Aurian's unresisting grasp, then stood
looking coldly down on her. "Listen to me, brat," she hissed.
"While you are in this place, you'll learn discipline and
obedience—especially obedience to me—or you'll suffer the consequences! Now I'm
going to find the seamstress to measure you for some decent clothes, and as a
punishment for your appalling behavior, you can remain like that until I
return."
She
swept out, taking the sword with her and leaving Aurian still frozen in
position, unable even to weep. Although she was seething with hatred for the
cold-eyed Eliseth, the lesson had left its mark. Aurian had already learned to
fear her.
Later
that day, Eliseth showed her subdued and unhappy charge around the Academy.
There was a good deal to see. The promontory was shaped like the broad blade of
a spear, with its point cut off in a gentle curve by the high wall that
surrounded the drop on all sides. The main entrance gate stood at the place
where the haft of the spear would be joined, with a small gate-house to its
left-hand side. Below the gate, the steep road up which Aurian had climbed the
previous day zigzagged down to the causeway, with its lower gatehouse.
The
buildings all faced on to a central, oval-shaped courtyard designed in a mosaic
pattern with colored flagstones. In the center, an elegant fountain sang a
soothing, bubbling song as it flung feathery arcs of water into a white marble
basin. To the left of the gatehouse was Meiriel's small infirmary, and next to
this were the kitchens and servants' quarters which adjoined the Great Hall
with its soaring arched windows. Beyond, where the wall curved round to cut off
the end of the promontory, stood the elegant and^lpfty Mages' Tower, where the
Magefolk
dwelt.
Opposite the tower on the other side of the curve was the huge library with its
complex, convoluted architecture. And beyond this, curving back toward the
gate, were the buildings designed for the study of the individual disciplines
of magic, dominated by the massive white weather dome whose outline was visible
for miles around.
All the
buildings, down to the gatehouse and the humble servants' quarters, were
constructed of dazzling white marble that seemed to be imbued with its own
internal, pearly glow. It was breathtakingly beautiful—and Aurian, scared and
homesick as she was, hated it. All the same, she marveled at the great library
with its priceless archives, the open rooftop temple on top of the Mages' Tower
with its great standing stones, and the imposing Great Hall, which stood mostly
unused now that the Magefolk were so few in number.
Aurian
was shown the special windowless building outfitted with metal doors and
furniture to enable the Mages to study Fire-magic there in safety. A low white
building contained a deep pool and many fountains, streams, conduits, and
waterfalls, for the study of Water-magic. There was a large building
constructed of glass, containing plants, grass, and even some small trees, that
reminded Aurian, with a pang, of her mother's workrooms in her tower. It was
intended, of course, for the study of Earth-magic. But the grass was brown and
withered, and all the plants were shriveled and dead. If any animals had dwelt
within, they were long gone. Eilin was the only living Mage who practiced
Earth-magic, and the room had been abandoned when she left the Academy.
The
place that Aurian found most incredible of all was the massive dome whose
outline dominated the Mages' complex. The curved chamber within was so high
that small clouds could actually gather beneath its roof, which housed a
complex series of valves and vents. This was Eliseth's room, for the study of
Weather-magic, and she left Aurian in no doubt that this was the most important
discipline of all. Aurian didn't dare ask why.
While
they were making their tour of the Academy, Eliseth introduced Aurian to the
other Magefolk. "We tend to be a solitary people," she said.
"Mostly we're occupied with our own projects, and we usually eat in our
own rooms, unless
there's
a feast or a special occasion. That being the case, you might as well meet
everyone now. All except the Archmage, of course. He's much too busy to bother
with little girls." Aurian was crushed.
Finbarr
cheered her a little, however. They found him down in the archives, which consisted
of the maze of cellars that had been carved out of the living rock beneath the
library. He was sitting at a table in a small cavern whose walls were lined
with racks of ancient scrolls. The table was completely bare except for a
stylus, two neat stacks of paper, one with writing and the other awaiting use,
and some half-dozen scrolls, neatly rolled and tied. Finbarr was reading from
another ancient document by the light of a brightly glowing ball of
luminescence that hovered dutifully and with perfect steadiness above his head.
"Still
wasting your time with this old rubbish, I see," was Eliseth's dismissive
greeting. Aurian half expected the Mage to jump—he had seemed so preoccupied
when they entered. But he simply sighed, and placed the scroll on the table,
where the two rolled-up ends immediately tried to spring together.
"Stay!" Finbarr commanded in a sharp voice. The scroll gave a quiver,
and promptly flattened out in the correct position.
Finbarr
turned to regard them with a piercing blue gaze. He was very thin, and his
clean-shaven face had the typical bony angularity of the Magefolk. His long
brown hair was streaked with gray, but his face wa* neither old nor young, and
his eyes twinkled. "Hail, O Lady of Thunder, Mistress of Storms," he intoned
mockingly. "Have you come to blast me with a blizzard of icy contempt, or
are you just going to rain on me and ruin my day?" He winked at Aurian,
who tried to stifle a giggle.
Eliseth
cursed. "Finbarr, one of these days your so-called wit is going to get you
into trouble," she snapped. "You're about as much use as these
wretched old scrolls of yours!"
Finbarr
shrugged. "At least my scrolls are pleasant company," he said,
"though not undemanding. I take it that the reason for your totally unprecedented
visit to this sanctuary of learning and wisdom is to introduce me to this
beauteous young lady." He gave^Aurian a kindly smile.
"You
know who she is, Finbarr." Eliseth was scowling. "That renegade
Geraint's brat."
Aurian
stifled a small sound of protest, clenching her fists.
With a
swift movement Finbarr pushed back his chair and squatted before Aurian,
bringing his tall lanky frame down to her level. He lifted her chin with a
gentle finger and looked deeply into her eyes. "Child, you're going to
hear a lot of that kind of nonsense within these venerable walls," he said
softly. "Just let it pass. Geraint's only fault was pride, and the same
applies to all the Magefolk who would blacken his name." He shot a flinty
look at Eliseth. "I'm not saying that what he did was right, but the same
disaster could have happened to any of us. Take no notice of what people say,
child, but be prepared to learn from his errors—and ours, for what Geraint did
was hardly unique. History is filled with similar examples—the Cataclysm, for
instance, when ancient Magefolk warred amongst themselves for power. They came
perilously close to destroying the world with the four great Artifacts of
Power,
and—"
"For
goodness' sake, Finbarr, spare us the lecture!" interrupted Eliseth,
Aurian
was shocked by her rudeness, but Finbarr seemed unsurprised. He continued ro
address his words to herself, as though the Magewoman's ill-tempered outburst
was of no importance. "I hope, my young friend, that you will never let
Eliseth teach you to scorn the knowledge that is so important to us all. If we
study our history, it teaches us not to repeat mis-takes. I know that Eliseth
is in charge of your training just now, but when you're allowed to, come back
and talk to me. I can teach you other things apart from magic, and I'll always
be here to answer your questions. I always keep a welcome for civilized
company. And now, I don't believe that Eliseth told me your
name?"
"It's
Aurian." She managed a smile for him.
"Mine
is Finbarr. I'm Meiriel's soul mate, and I hope you'll be seeing much more of
us as time goes on. In the meantime, here's my advice: apply yourself
diligently, keep out of trouble _and don't let the Lady of Misrule here grind
you down."
"It's
time we were going, Aurian," Eliseth interrupted icily.
Finbarr
grinned. "See what I mean? We'd better do as she says, or she'll have us
neck-deep in hailstones in no time!"
"Blast
you, Finbarr!" Eliseth snarled. "Don't you dare try to be funny at my
expense!"
"Sorry,
Eliseth." To Aurian, the Archivist did not look at all repentant.
"Goodbye, Aurian—for the present."
The
introduction to the other Magefolk was much less satisfactory. The twins simply
treated her with dismissive contempt, and Aurian felt very uneasy in their
company. There was something unsettlingly strange about them that she couldn't
quite place. They both had the appearance of beardless young men and both were
fair, but Davorshan had a surprisingly coarse and stocky frame for one of Mage
blood. His short-cropped blond hair had a distinct gingerish cast, and his
colorless eyes were framed with pale lashes.
Aurian
found it almost impossible to look him in the eye, for the anonymous coloring
seemed to automatically divert her gaze elsewhere. What was worse, he seemed to
be very much aware of the fact, and she suspected that he used it deliberately
to unnerve people.
Davorshan's
brother, D'arvan, was completely different in appearance—so much so that it
seemed impossible that they could be brothers, let alone twins. His pale,
flaxen hair was shoulder length, and his bone structure was so finely carved
and fragile-looking that he seemed ethereal in appearance. His beautiful face
looked almost feminine, and his deep, luminous gray eyes had long, sweeping
darMashes that many a maid would have sold her soul for. He hung back behind
his brother, saying nothing and letting Davorshan do all the talking. Had
Aurian been more mature and confident, she might have suspected him of being
painfully shy, but as it was she found him cold and fey,
"What
do they do?" Aurian asked Eliseth timidly, as they left the twins'
quarters.
The
Magewoman shrugged. "The Gods only know. They're of Mage blood—their
father was the famous Water-Mage Bavordran, and their mother was Adrina, the
Earth-Mage. Miathan is certain they must have power, but whatever it is, it
hasn't surfaced yet. We think that because they are twins, they're so tajagj^d
up in each other's minds that the
power
cannot be released. Davorshan shows some aptitude for Water-magic, but he seems
fascinated with physical methods of control, rather than magical ones. His mind
is full of pumps and pipes and aqueducts and so on. We keep telling him that
such stuff is for Mortals—we have other methods at our disposal —but we cannot
break him of the nonsense. As for D'arvan— he can't spit without his brother's
help! I've told the Archmage that it's a waste of time, but Miathan insists
that we keep trying with him."
Eliseth
did, however, seem to think a lot of the last Mage, Bragar. His discipline was
Fire-magic, as Geraint's had been, and Aurian had been looking forward to
meeting him. Her enthusiasm died as soon as she saw him. Bragar was gaunt-faced
and completely bald. His dark eyes, like Eliseth's, were devoid of warmth and
expression, giving him a reptilian appearance. His aura was as dark as his
purple robes, and Aurian, young and inexperienced though she was, could feel
the cruelty of his nature shadowing him like the blackest of wings. He looked
down at her over his high-bridged nose as though she were some species of
insect, and his voice, when he deigned to speak to her, was sardonic and
patronizing. He made Aurian's flesh creep, and she vowed to herself that she'd
keep out of his way. She already knew that she possessed her father's talent of
Fire-magic, and the thought of studying under Bragar filled her with fear.
The
weeks that followed Aurian's arrival at the Academy became one long,
inescapable nightmare. She was left in Eliseth's sole charge, and the Magewoman
was unremittingly harsh with her. Aurian lacked any formal training in magic,
and hitherto her use of her powers had been spontaneous and instinctive. Now
she had to learn to discipline her wildfire talent into the controlled and focused
power that was the true secret of Magehood. This, according to Eliseth, could
only be done by the endless repetition of drills and exercises that seemed, to
Aurian, to explain nothing and accomplish very little.
Eliseth
tried her with Fire-magic, using a candle flame which Aurian had to ignite,
extinguish, or make larger or smaller. Aurian had no idea where to start. She
also failed at
mental
communication—a rare gift among the Magefolk in any case, though Eliseth didn't
explain that to Aurian. She had some limited success with simple levitation and
Earth-magic, but Water-magic she found impossible to grasp. The magic of the
element of Air—which, as a Weather-Mage, was Eliseth's specialty—the Magewoman
dismissed as being far too difficult for Aurian, given her poor performance to
date.
Forral's
exercises in concentration helped a little, but Aurian found that focusing her
will differed greatly from concentrating her mind. Time after time, some small
distraction would interfere with her attention, and she would either lose her
gathered power completely, or it would get out of control with unfortunate
results. Eliseth's punishments on these occasions were inventive, cruel, and
humiliating, and Aurian soon became afraid even to try, lest she fail once more.
But this only got her into more trouble with her impatient teacher. Even in the
evenings, her time was not her own, for Eliseth set her to learning the entire
Mages' Code by heart, and tested her on it every day.
Aurian
was more miserable and lonely than she had ever been in her life. Things might
have been easier if she could have sent a message to her mother, or talked to
Finbarr or Meiriel, but Eliseth kept her a virtual prisoner. She made her work
all day and locked her into her room at night. Aurian lost her appetite and
couldn't sleep. She lay awake each night tossing and fretting, and each morning
the face that looked back from her mirror seemed more pale, glunrC and
hollow-eyed. She became increasingly nervous and timid, and wept at the slightest
provocation. As the weeks turned into months and spring came slowly round
again, she became more and more convinced that she would never be a Mage.
Inevitably, her hopelessness overcame even her fear of the city and the great
world outside, and she became driven by a desperate need to escape.
At last
the opportunity arrived. After a particularly trying day, Eliseth sent her to
her room—and forgot to lock the door. Aurian waited breathlessly until well
into the night, praying that the Mage would not return to imprison her once
more. Then she bundled up her spare clothing in a blanket and crept out of the
tower, expecting at any moment to hear an angry voice calling her baek*
It
seemed almost too easy. The air was mild and springlike, the full moon gave her
plenty of light, and the courtyard was completely deserted. Aurian flitted
silently from shadow to shadow, searching for another exit apart from the main
gate, which was guarded, and would only lead her down the exposed road to the
gatehouse on the causeway. As she circled the high wall of the complex, she
began to despair. Surely there must be another way out! But her searching only
brought her full circle, back to the Mages' Tower. Aurian could have sat down
and wept, but the chance to escape might never come again, and she couldn't
afford to waste it. She gritted her teeth and swore one of Forral's favorite
oaths. "Right," she muttered. "I'll climb the bloody wall!"
Searching for a better purchase on the smooth stonework, she crept into the
corner where the wall joined the rounded side of the tower. And there, hidden
in shadow, was a small wooden postern, set deep within the thick stones of the
wall! Biting her lip, Aurian wrestled with the great iron ring that served as a
handle, and pushed. The little door swung open. Aurian slipped through—and her
heart sank. Before her was a walled garden, not a way out.
From
her hiding place in the bushes that grew along the wall, Aurian scanned the
garden. It was beautifully kept, with smoothly trimmed lawns, sparkling
fountains, and neat beds of delicate spring flowers that shimmered palely in
the moonlight. Their fragrance drifted to Aurian on the warm breeze, and early
moths danced above them as though some of the blossoms had taken to the air.
Apart from a circular wooden arbor in the center, only the walls with their
cover of shrubs and vines offered shelter for a fugitive. But one wall—the one
farthest away from her—was only waist high. She could climb out! For a moment
Aurian's heart leapt. Then she got her bearings. It was the wall bounding the
edge of the steep cliff face that sheared down like the prow of a ship to the
river below. She set her jaw stubbornly, and fought down her despair. I'll just
have to try to climb down, that's all, she decided. Maybe it won't be too bad.
I'd rather die than spend another night in this place!
Aurian
slunk around the edge of the garden, staying in the shadow of the bushes and
heading for the low wall. Then suddenly she saw the old man. He had been hidden
by the arbor when she had entered, but now he was in plain sight, kneeling
over a
flower bed with a trowel in his hand. Her heart pounding, Aurian backed into
the bushes, discovering too late that they were roses. The thorns stuck
painfully into her back and caught in her clothes and hair, but she didn't dare
make a sound or move to free herself, though the old gardener seemed to be
completely engrossed in his task.
Aurian
waited. And waited, praying that the old fool would hurry up and go away.
Surely he wasn't planning to work all night? Evidently not. Suddenly, without
looking up, he said: "Isn't it uncomfortable in there?" Aurian caught
her breath, feeling the thorns drive deeper into her skin as she shrank back
into the concealing foliage. "You might as well come out, you know."
The rough old voice was not unkind. "The Archmage's private garden is
never the best place to hide, my dear. They say the very flowers whisper
secrets in his ears."
With a
gasp, Aurian shot out of the rosebushes, ripping her clothes on the thorns. The
old man smiled. "That's better. This garden hasn't seen a pretty girl in
more years than I could count." From a pocket in his patched old tunic he
took a small flask of wine, and a package neatly wrapped in a clean white
cloth. "I'm just about to eat," he said. "Do you like bread and
cheese?"
He
obviously wasn't right in the head. Aurian began to sidle toward the low wall.
"No, thank you," she said. "I'm afraid I don't have time."
"Nonsense.
It's better to run away on a full stomach than an empty one, I always
say."
"How
did you know?" The words were out before she could stop them.
He
shrugged. "It's fairly obvious. I shouldn't try the cliff, though. Nobody
has managed it yet, and it will just be a mess when you're splattered on those
rocks at the bottom."
Aurian
stared at him, defeated. A single tear trickled down her cheek.
"Come
along," the old man said kindly. "Have some supper and tell me all
about it. Perhaps I can help you."
Aurian
had never drunk wine before. Somehow she ended up with the lion's share of the
flask, and it loosened her tongue. Before long he had coaxed from her the whole
story of her life, ending with the difficulties and misery of her time at the
Acad-
emy.
The old man listened gravely, slipping in a question from time to time. He even
gave her his handkerchief when her tears began to fall once more. When she had
finished, he held out his hand. "Come with me," he said gently.
"It's time that matters were set to rights."
Aurian's
childhood injunctions about not going away with strangers were screaming
warnings at her, but the old gardener was the nearest thing she had to a
friend. Obediently she followed him across the garden and out through the
postern door. It was only when they reached the Mages' Tower that Aurian
faltered. The old fool was insane!
"I
can't!" she gasped. "Eliseth is in there, and—and the Archmage!"
She tried to pull away from him, but he held her firmly, his dark eyes burning
into hers.
"My
dear child, have you not guessed yet? I am the Archmage!"
Aurian
almost fainted. She had been complaining bitterly about the Academy to the
Archmage himself! He had caught her trying to run away and trespassing in his
private garden. She couldn't speak, and she was trembling so hard that her legs
threatened to give way beneath her.
Miathan
put a steadying arm around her shoulders. "Don't be afraid, child,"
he said. "If anyone is punished over this business, it will certainly not
be you." Still Aurian hung back, frightened by the sudden steel in his
voice. The Archmage looked down at her and sighed. "Come along,
girl," he said testily. "I won't turn you 4sto a toad. But I will
turn you into a first-class Mage!" And he smiled at her. It was such a
dazzling, kind smile that Aurian's fears vanished like melting snow.
When
they reached his rooms, the Archmage summoned a sleepy servant and ordered a
second, far more sumptuous supper for them. He seated Aurian in a soft chair by
the fire while he changed from his patched old gardening clothes into the
splendid scarlet robes of his office. She gazed around the chamber while she
waited, awed by the richness of the splendid furnishings, the deep soft carpet,
and the gold-stitched tapestries that decorated the walls. Why, this place was
fit for a king! It was a far, far cry from her cramped, bare little cell on the
bottom floor.
The
food arrived with amazing promptness, considering
that
the kitchen workers must have been hauled from their beds to prepare it. Aurian
gazed, bewildered, at the tempting array —far too much for two people. She
wondered, nervously, if she'd be expected to eat it all. And the food itself!
Eilin had little time to cook, so her meals had been good but simple— and
Eliseth seemed to think that bread and milk was enough for her to live on. Now
she was faced with meats covered in rich sauces, and vegetables and fruits
prepared in a wildly elaborate fashion. To her embarrassment, Aurian had no
idea what do with some of the exotically shaped foodstuffs. Should she pick
them up in her fingers, or would that be a breach of manners? Miathan, however,
seemed aware of her predicament. He insisted on serving her himself, and
explaining the complicated dishes to her whenever he saw her hesitate.
Encouraged by his kindness and helped by the wine, which was beginning to make
her head spin, Aurian began to relax and enjoy her food. It had been ages since
she had eaten a proper meal.
As they
ate, Miathan explained that there had been a misunderstanding, and that from
now on, he would supervise her training personally.
Aurian
went suddenly cold. "But—but Eliseth says I'm useless," she
confessed, shamefaced.
Miathan
raised his eyebrows. "What? Geraint and Eilin's daughter useless? I don't
believe it!" Reaching out a hand, he snuffed the single candle that burned
in a silver holder in the center of the table. The room was suddenly plunged
into shadow, the only light coming from'the roaring flames in the fireplace.
"Aurian, will you light the candle for me? I can't see to eat," the
Archmage said.
Aurian's
mind went blank with panic. The more she tried to focus her scattered thoughts,
the worse it became. What would he do to her if she failed? Suddenly Miathan's
strong hand closed around hers, and his warm voice cut through the chaos in her
mind.
"Relax,
child. Think of the flame. Picture it in your mind. It's only a glowing spot at
first, clinging to the wick. Then the wax on the wick starts to melt and
splutter—you can smell it— and the little flame starts to blossom and grow . .
."
Aurian's
eyes widened. It was happening! A soft pool of light crept toward the-*edges of
the room as her little flame
\W&]^m
caught
and expanded. "I did it!" she yelled triumphantly— then clamped her
hand over her mouth in horror as a roaring column of fire, responding to her
euphoria, shot up from the candle to scorch the ceiling. "Oh!" Aurian
damped the flame automatically, as she had done so often with her fireballs at
home, and shrank away from Miathan. "I'm sorry," she whispered
fearfully.
The
Archmage threw back his head and roared with laughter. "Well," he
spluttered, "I asked for that! I see that I shall have to be very careful
about my requests to you in future!"
Aurian
was dumbfounded. "You mean—it's all right? But I just ruined your
ceiling!"
"Never
mind the ceiling, my dear. The servants will soon put it right," Miathan
said. "More important, you've proved that, far from being hopeless, you
have a very powerful talent at your disposal. All we need do is teach you to
summon it— which you managed very well, once I explained how to do it— and
control it. You failed to break your link with the flame, you see, and it was
simply responding to your emotions."
"Will
you show me how?" Aurian asked eagerly,
Miathan
smiled. "Aren't you tired? It's very late."
"Tired?
No, not a bit. It's all so-—" Aunan's voice was swallowed in a huge yawn.
The
Archmage held out his hand. "Come along," he said. "You can
sleep in my bed tonight, and in the morning, I'll arrange to have you moved.
There's a set of empty rooms on the floor below—they belonged to your father,
as a matter of fact. We'll be working very closely together in future, so I'll
want you near me. How does that suit?"
"Oh,
thank you!" In an excess of gratitude, Aurian threw her arms around
Miathan's neck and hugged him. For a nervous moment she wondered if she had
gone too far, but then she saw that his stern old face was beaming. It was in
that instant that Aurian came to love him. She fell asleep in his great canopied
bed feeling happier and more secure than she had done in months, and instead of
Forral's, it was Miathan's face that filled her last drowsy thoughts,
A knock
on the door interrupted Miathan's contemplation of the sleeping young girl.
Sighing, he left the bedchamber,
closing
the door quietly behind him. As he had expected, his visitor was Eliseth.
"Could it not wait until morning?" he said crossly.
Eliseth
walked across to the fire and warmed her hands. "I couldn't sleep. I
wanted to know how it went."
"Well,
you certainly played your part successfully. The poor child was almost
terrified beyond functioning! But her power, Eliseth! It was incredible in one
so young!"
"Just
what are your plans for her?" Eliseth's voice turned sharp. "You're
training her yourself—does that mean you have her in mind to succeed you?"
Miathan
chuckled. "So that's what this nocturnal visit is about, I might have
guessed. Well, you can relax, my dear. I have no plans to appoint a successor
just yet—in feet I may never appoint one."
"What?
But—but the maximum tenure for the position is two hundred years! It always has
been,"
"Traditionally,
yes. But traditions may be put aside. I enjoy being Archmage, and besides, who
would succeed me? Though you and Bragar have ambitions in that direction—"
"Bragar?"
Eliseth gasped.
Miathan
laughed. "How naive you are! Did you think you had tamed him with the lure
of your body? It failed to work on me—what made you think it would succeed any
better with him? It's been most entertaining to watch the two of you
maneuvering and plotting around each other, but I'm well ahead of you both in
the game of poweT, Y^u'd do better to remain on my side, my dear. One day I
plan to rule the world, and there will be power and wealth to spare for my
loyal supporters," Miathan's expression became grim. "Don't think of
crossing me, Eliseth, I'm more than a match for you alone, but now you'll have
Aurian to deal with, too. You've trapped yourself nicely there, with this plan
of ours. Aurian already hates you— and now the child is mine."
A VOICE
IN THE DARK
o
that's how you do it!" Aurian ran her fingers along the racks of scrolls,
and the field of magic, marked by an aura of glittering blue Magelight,
shimmered at her touch. Aurian's face was alight with enthusiasm, and Finbarr
marveled again at the change that six years had wrought in the young Mage. At
twenty, she had blossomed into a tall, slender young woman. Her mane of
glowing, dark red hair was the same, but her face had matured into the sculpted
planes and angles that reminded him so strongly of her father. With that nose,
she would never be called pretty, but her features had a strong, stark,
compelling beauty that was all her own. And her manner had changed radically from
the cowed and nervous child he had first known. Now she was happy, confident,
and glowing—her powers increasing by the day—and an absolute sink for
knowledge. Miathan had done well with her. Almost too well, Finbarr sometimes
thought.
"Finbarr,
are you listening?"
"What?
Yes, of course . . . What were you
saying?"
Aurian
gave a long-suffering sigh, but she was smiling. "I asked you if this
preserving spell you use on the old documents actually takes them out of time
in some way?"
Finbarr
was startled. "Why yes, I suppose it does. I never really thought of it
that wajs but the idea would make sense. I found the spell in an archaic scroll
written by Barothas—you know, that ancient historian obsessed with proving the
existence of the lost Dragonfolk. He mentions several earlier references—alas,
now lost to us—that quote their ability to manipulate time, not to mention
other dimensions. Indeed, your poor father used his notes in that tragic
experiment to move from world to world. Of course, to manipulate space, as
opposed to time, one would—"
"Good
gracious, Finbarr," Have you never considered the implications of
this?"
"What
implications?" The Archivist, jolted from the realms of scholarly
discourse, felt the first stirrings of alarm.
Aurian
frowned. "Well, I don't know exactly. But I'm sure
I could
think of a few things." Her voice took on a wheedling note. "Finbarr,
would you teach me that spell?"
Finbarr
gave the young Mage a severe look. Her face was a picture of innocence, but he
was not fooled—he knew Aurian far too well. "If by that you mean will I
let you see the scroll, the answer is absolutely not. After what happened to
Geraint, I locked it safely away, and there it stays. It may console you to
know, however, that you are not the only one forbidden such knowledge—I decided
long ago that Dragon magic is too dangerous for the Magefolk to tamper with. I
deeply regret not burning the scroll when first I found it—yet even now,
knowing the damage it can wreak, I cannot bring myself to destroy part of our
history. No one but ourselves, and possibly your mother, knows of its
existence—and Aurian, I put you on your honor not to say a word of it to a
single soul, not even the Archmage." He took her hands in his own.
"Have I your promise?"
"Of
course you do!" Aurian assured him. "On condition," she added
craftily, "that you teach me the time spell!"
The
Archivist hesitated, racking his brains for a means of escape. "You must
check with Miathan first," he said at last. "He's in charge of your
training, and your schedule is far too crowded as it is."
"Oh,
that's all right," Aurian said. "I can make the extra time. In fact,
if you show me this spell, I may find a way of doing exactly that." Her
eyes twinkled mischievously. It took Finbarr a moment to grasp her meanj/ig,
and when he did his blood went cold. "Aurian! Don't you dare even
contemplate playing around with time! Have you any notion of how dangerous that
could be? The Gods only know what damage you might do!"
Aurian
patted his arm. "It's all right, Finbarr. I was only teasing." But
her eyes remained thoughtful.
"Listen,"
Finbarr said, hoping to change the subject. "Meiriel and I would like you
to come to supper with us tonight. She says she never sees you these days,
because you're so busy."
Aurian's
face fell. "Oh, I can't tonight. I need to get busy ith these books on
Weather-magic you've found for me. iathan has been helpjgg me, but Eliseth is
the specialist, and
since
she's so reluctant to teach me, I have to pick up the theory where I can. If
only I could get into that blasted dome and practice! But she always has some
excuse. It's so frustrating^' She banged her fist on the table.
Finbarr
blinked. "I didn't know you had actually started on Weather-magic," he
said.
"Well,
I needed something to fill my time when I stopped studying Fire-magic with
Bragar." i
The
Archivist frowned. "Yes, I'd heard about that. My dear child, do you not
think it was unwise to quarrel with Bragar?"
"Meaning
that you do, I suppose?" Aurian scowled. "Bra-gar is an ass! He
thinks he's such an expert, but he barely knows the first thing about
Fire-magic! I had learned everything that I could possibly learn from him, and
if he didn't like it when I told him so, that's his hard luck!"
"As
I heard it, you were tactless in the extreme," Finbarr admonished her,
"and I advise you to apologize. Mark my words, Aurian, Bragar will make
you a bad enemy."
Aurian
shrugged. "I don't have time to be soothing Bra-gar's sulks. He'll get over
it. Finbarr, please will you teach me that spell?"
"Aurian,
don't you think you have enough on your plate? You work all the hours the Gods
send. If you're not too busy to eat, you forget—and I've seen that light
burning in your rooms all night! Don't you think you should make time for a
little recreation? Or even sleep occasionally, for goodness' sake?"
"I'm
all right." Aurian's expression grew serious. "Finbarr, I want to
make Miathan proud of me. He's been so good to me —like the father I never
knew. The only way I can repay^him is to become the best Mage that ever
lived—and I will, you'll see." Her jaw tightened in the stubborn
expression that Finbarr, not to mention everyone else in the Academy from the
servants to the Archmage, knew only too well by now.
The
Archivist sighed. Meiriel was right to be concerned. Aurian had become
completely obsessive about her work, forgetting to eat and sleep, and putting
far too much strain on the inner energies that were the source of her magical
powers. The danger signs were already showing. Her face was wan and drawn, and
her skin seemed to glow with an inner light. Her green eyes were vague and
glowing.
AUR1AN •
75
Last
summer, when Finbarr had taken Aurian to visit her mother, he had tried to enlist
Eilin's aid in persuading her to slow down, but the Earth-Mage, used to her own
grueling la^ bors, had dismissed his concerns. Eilin had also been pushing
herself too hard—her self-imposed task was far too much for one Mage. Finbarr
had been alarmed by her haggard appearance, and knew that she was missing
Aurian more than she would admit; but when he had begged Eilin to return to the
Academy, she had refused outright. Like mother like daughter, Finbarr thought.
I can see where Aurian gets her obsessive behavior from—and her impossible
stubbornness!
Nonetheless,
he decided on one last attempt to get through to the headstrong young Mage.
"Aurian, listen. You must take better care of yourself! Meiriel believes
you're in danger of burning yourself out! Terrible things can happen to a Mage
who overstretches herself as you do. Miathan is proud of your accomplishments,
but he doesn't want you to lose your powers—and your mind—through being
overzealous. Believe me, it can happen. I have cases documented right here, if
you want to see them."
Aurian's
expression grew grave. "Is Meiriel really worried?"
"She
certainly is. If you would only talk to her—"
"Of
course I will!" Aurian cried impulsively. "Listen—I'll come to supper
after all, and explain that there's no problem. I'm sure I can set her mind at
rest. In the meantime, I'll take these, and make a start." Gatherim^her
armload of heavy old volumes from the table, she dashed out, forgetting, as
usual, to say goodbye.
Finbarr
sighed. Well', he had tried. Perhaps Meiriel could talk some sense into her.
The
heat struck Aurian like a blow as she emerged from the library into the dusty,
sunlit courtyard. The weather was rarely this good so far north, but the hot
spell had been going on for over a month now, and showed no signs of abating.
At first the farmers outside the city had been pleased, but now all the hay was
in and the parched corn was drooping in the fields. The river had dried to a
stinking, muddy trickle, and for the first time in living memory, water was
rationed in Nexis. The
Mortals
had started looking to the Magefolk to solve the problem, and rumors of unrest
were growing daily as the drought continued.
Aurian
gave the matter little thought. She was absorbed in her own work, and blithely
confident that Miathan could solve any problem. She had no idea of the
hardships that the Mortals were suffering, as the Academy was supplied by its
own deep underground springs, and the Magefolk suffered no lack of water. Since
she rarely left the hilltop complex, she was unaware that her people were now
discouraged from going into the city alone. Speeding across the courtyard,
Aurian decided to spend the rest of the afternoon studying in Miathan's
garden—a privilege that was uniquely hers, so close was she to the Archmage.
But when she reached the little door she heard Eliseth's voice coming from the
other side of the wall.
"Miathan,
I've done what I can. I can't make it rain just like that—the nearest clouds
are hundreds of miles away! I've set things in motion, but it will take them
days to get here, and I'm exhausting myself in the process. Those clods in the
city should be grateful! Frankly, had you not insisted, I wouldn't even bother.
Who cares about their stupid drought? The Magefolk are all right."
"Eliseth,
I explained why." Miathan sounded weary and exasperated. "You know
how volatile the situation is down there. Water is already rationed, and Meinel
says that if the river gets any lower, there is,a serious risk of disease.
There have been some isolated outbreaks already, and they're blaming the
Magefolk. If we have an epidemic, the city will go up like tinder, and I'm not
ready to deal with an angry mob. Rioch came to see me last night, and this time
he's determined to retire. He says he's too old to cope with the unrest. And
Van-nor! I suspect that secretly he's one of the main fomentors of the trouble.
He used to be bad enough, but since his wife died last year he crosses me on
the Council at every opportunity. Because Meiriel failed to save her, he blames
the Magefolk." Miathan sighed. "It would help if we could find a
successor for Rioch, but there is no sympathy for our people at the Garrison
just now. Eliseth, if you can't manage some rain soon, I don't dare contemplate
the consequences."
"I'm
doing my best!" Eliseth snapped. "If you didn't plague me with your
problems, I would have more time—"
Aurian
walked away, frowning. Poor Miathan! She hadn't realized that matters were so
serious. Perhaps if she made some progress with her studies in Weather-magic,
she would be able to help him. Suddenly decisive, she shifted the heavy stack
of books to her other arm and headed for her rooms. It was stifling in the
tower, and for once Aurian found herself wishing she lived nearer to the ground
floor, as she dragged herself up the endless spiral of steps. By the time she
reached her door, she felt weak and dizzy. A servant passed her on his way down
from Miathan's chambers, and with Finbarr's warning in mind, Aurian detained
him. She hadn't eaten all day, but on the point of asking him for some food,
she hesitated. It was too hot to eat. I can get something later, she thought.
"Bring me a cool drink," she told the man, and went into her rooms,
dropping the books on the table with a grateful sigh.
Though
there was no fire in the grate, the room was like an oven. The green and gold
curtains hung limp at the open window, and dust motes hovered in the thick bar
of sunlight that pooled on the moss-green carpet. Aurian reached for the pitcher
of water on her table, but discarded its stale and lukewarm contents with a
grimace, deciding to wait for the servant's return. If Miathan would give me my
own servant, she thought, I wouldn't suffer such neglect! She pulled up a chair
and sat down at the table, deciding that she might as well get started.
Whoever
had written the artcieirt volume had atrocious handwriting. Aurian rubbed her
eyes, which ached from trying to decipher the illegible scrawl. The lines
seemed to undulate across the page as the brassy sunlight poured through the
window, striking the parchment with a dazzling glare and scorching the back of
her head. Aurian wondered irritably when the wretched servant would bring her
drink, then turned her attention back to her work. Thank goodness Finbarr had
taught her that spell to clarify these archaic scribbles! Frowning with
con-;entration, she focused on the page, reaching deep within her-If to access
her powers.
At
first Aurian was unaware that anything was amiss. Then ic noticed that, instead
of becoming clearer, the words seemed to be getting smaller^SXfith a shock, she
realized that the pe-
riphery
of her vision had clouded so that the writing seemed far away, at the end of a
long, dark tunnel. When she tried to wrench her eyes away, her body would not
obey her. Everything was speeding away from her, and she was falling—falling
into the dark . . .
"I'm
sorry, Archmage, I can do no more. I warned her this would happen if she pushed
herself too hard." The Healer sounded upset.
Miathan
stifled his anger. This is my fault, he thought, for letting Aurian overextend
herself. "Are you sure?" he asked. "It's been three days,
Meiriel!"
Meiriel
sat down wearily on Aurian's bed. "Physically, nothing is wrong with
her," she explained. "As far as I can tell, there's no loss of her
powers. Because she overtaxed them, something inside her has withdrawn. I think
Aurian is aware of what is happening around her, but she's trapped within
herself, and we can't get through to her."
"How
long will it last?" Miathan demanded.
Meiriel
shrugged. "Who knows? To be honest, Archmage, if you can't reach her, the
situation must be bad."
"What
about her mother?"
Meiriel
shook her head. "I doubt she'd be much help. Apart from you, the only
person close to Aurian was that Mortal."
"Forral!
Of course!" Miathan drove his fist into his palm. His quick brain had
the~'glimmerings of a tremendous idea. "Forral could be the solution to
all our problems. Can you have Finbarr scry for him at once? I'll arrange for a
messenger. The sooner we can send for him, the better."
The
light from the glowing crystal on the table before the Archivist threw sharp
shadows on the wall behind him. The Archmage hovered at his shoulder, seething
with impatience.
"Will
you get out of the way, Miathan?" Finbarr's voice was uncharacteristically
sharp. "Your emotional aura is enough to block reception for miles
around!"
"Just
get on with it!" Miathan snapped. Finbarr unfolded from nis chair and
turned to glare into the Archmage's eyes. He pointed a long, bony finger at the
door. "Out!"
Miathan
blinked in astonishment. He had forgotten the fondness that had always existed
between Aurian and the Archivist. Swallowing an angry reply, he headed for the
door, and began to pace up and down the corridor outside.
After
several minutes, Finbarr's head appeared round the door. "All the way
out!" he said. "When I find your swordsman, I'll send for you."
Forral
sighed wearily, and pushed the stack of documents away from him. There was no
more space on the overcrowded desk, and a pile of papers at the back slid over
the edge and rearranged themselves across the floor. Forral swore. What had
possessed him to take command of this dead-and-alive hole at the back end of
nowhere? The southern coast was quiet these days, and the troops at the hill
forts had nothing to do but ride out to quell the occasional uprising of the
Hill Tribes; the rough, fiercely independent folk who mined minerals and metals
from these bleak southern slopes. And since the Tribes, savage though they
were, were utterly disorganized and constantly feuding with one another, that
left Forral with little to do but cope with a flood of trifling administrative
problems that were slowly driving him crazy.
The swordsman
now bitterly regretted that he had ever come to this place. It had seemed a
haven at first, for without Aurian, his life had seemed to have little purpose.
For about a year after leaving the Valley, he had wandered aimlessly, picking
up work here and there as he'could, mostly guarding caravans or warehouses for
merchants. Dull work it had been, and sometimes degrading, but he had cared
little, save that he had a dry place to sleep and food in his belly—and
sometimes a few spare coins over, to spend on drink and women. The latter, in
the end, had finished it for him. Sick of loneliness, and squalor, and
morning-after awakenings with a throbbing head and a strange face next to him
on the pillow, he had taken the post at the fort to provide himself with some
purpose in life. It had seemed like a good idea at the time, he thought
ruefully.
Forral
picked up the flask of wine, then set it down with a grimace. Boredom and
inaction were driving him to drink, and that wouldn't solve anything. He
frowned at the walls of thick gray stone that had become his prison. It was
definitely time for
a
change. Without thinking, he poured a cup of wine and began to review his
options. Mercenary work, with its danger and hardships, no longer attracted him
as it had done when he was younger. There was no doubt about it—life at the
fort had made him soft.
A knock
on the door interrupted his gloomy thoughts, and a young soldier entered
somewhat timidly. Forral was aware that his troops were giving him a wide berth
nowadays. Afraid of the Old Man's uncertain temper, he acknowledged ruefully to
himself. "Yes, what is it?" he snapped.
The
soldier saluted. "Sir, a courier has arrived for you. He bears an urgent
message from the Archmage himself!"
The
young man's tones were hushed with awe, and Forral felt much the same. What
could Miathan want with him? Aware of the young trooper's eyes on him, he
schooled his features into a semblance of unconcern. "You'd better send
him in, then."
The
dust-caked messenger was stumbling with weariness. Forral suggested that he go
to the mess hall to refresh himself, but the man handed him a scroll instead.
"The Archmage said to be sure you read it at once, sir. He said it's very
urgent."
"All
right. Sit down then, man, before you fall over." Forral poured him a
glass of wine, then sat down and broke the seal on the crumpled scroll.
"Great
Chathak!" Forral's eyes widened in disbelief. He was actually being
offered command of the Garrison, with its position on the Ruling Cdifncil of
Nexis! But the import of the news was lost in the remainder of the message.
Aurian needed him! "Take a day's rest before you start back," he told
the courier. "I have to leave at once." He overturned the chair in
his haste and shot out of the door, bellowing for his second-in-command.
Aurian
was lost. She was trapped within a maze whose dark walls enclosed her
endlessly, keeping her mind circling in an agony of hopeless frustration. She
heard voices sometimes— those of Meiriel and Finbarr, and even Miathan—but she
was helpless to respond. She lost track of time and reality, slipping away into
bizarre and frightening dreams, or sometimes returning to her childhood. The
voices faded in and out of her
consciousness,
sounding hushed and worried. Aurian clung to them desperately, fearful for her
sanity.
Then,
out of the darkness, a new voice called to her—and an old one. A dear, familiar
voice that she had despaired of ever hearing again. It shook with emotion.
"Aurian?
Aurian, love, it's me."
It was
a dream—it had to be—but her mind yearned desperately toward it. The voice grew
stern. "They tell me you've been neglecting your sword practice. How do
you expect to become the world's best swordswoman if you lie around in bed all
day?"
Ah,
that was it. She had been wounded—of course! All that stuff about the Academy
and the Archmage must have been fever dreams. Gods, they had seemed real. But
now she must be getting better, and Forral was calling to her. Aurian opened
her eyes-—and blinked in confusion. It was Forral all right, but he was
different from the man she remembered. His body was heavier, and his hair and
beard were beginning to gray. "Forral?" She struggled to sit up.
"Ah,
love!" Forral's voice was choked with emotion as he enfolded her in an
enormous hug, crushing her tightly to his breast.
Aurian
felt her heart thudding strangely. As a child she had never been so aware of
his touch. Over his shoulder she glimpsed the white walls of the infirmary, and
the familiar figures of Meiriel and the Archmage.^and her mind reeled, trying
to slot it all into place. She pulled away, touching the swordsman's face with
tentative fingers. "Forral? You've come back? You've really come
back?" He nodded, unable to speak. Aurian's eyes brimmed over, and she
threw her arms around him in a fierce hug of her own.
"I
do like to see a happy ending." Miathan's dry voice interrupted their
reunion, and Aurian wondered why he was frowning.
Forral
turned to the Archmage with a scowl. "If it is a happy ending, it's no
thanks to you," he said flatly. "How could you let this happen to
her?"
Miathan's
face darkened. Aurian winced, knowing all too well the Archmage's**e*nper, but
Forral glared back at him,
unimpressed.
"Now that I'm back I'll make bloody sure it doesn't happen again!"
"That
depends on you," Miathan said coolly. "When I put my proposition to
you, you seemed far from enthusiastic. How can you help Aurian if you are
elsewhere?"
"What
is this?" Aurian interrupted.
Forral
sighed. "The Archmage has offered me the post of Commander of the
Garrison," he said.
"That
means you'll be staying in Nexis!" Aurian could hardly contain her
delight. "Oh Forral, that's wonderful! I've missed you so much!"
Forral
looked at her helplessly, and shook his head. "All right, Miathan, I give
in. I accept. But it'll be on my terms. And before I start, I'm taking Aurian
out of here for a holiday —a long holiday—at your expense."
Aurian
and Forral left the Academy shortly thereafter unaware that they were being
watched from a window high in the Mages' Tower. "Curse her!" Bragar
snarled. "Why could the arrogant bitch not have died? Why did Miathan
bring that wretched swordsman here? The fewer pieces there are in this game,
the better, especially where Aurian is concerned."
Eliseth
laughed, a soft, smug, silvery laugh. "I wouldn't be too concerned,
Bragar." She laid a cool hand on his arm. "I have a feeling that
before too long, Miathan's little pet will remove herself from the game."
"What
do you mean?" Bragar was frowning.
Eliseth
laughed again. "You men! So obtuse! Did you not notice the way she was
looking at that oaf of a Mortal?"
"What?"
"Spare
me the indignation, Bragar! You've had Mortals many a time, and so have I. But
we had the sense to get rid of— the evidence." Eliseth purred.
"Aurian won't, I'll wager. And our dear Archmage will never brook a rival.
He has designs upon her himself!" She shrugged. "All we need do is
wait. Eventually the pieces will fall—right into our hands. And speaking of
pieces, I think we ought to recruit a pawn of our own."
"A
pawn? What do you mean? What are you plotting now, Eliseth? Meiriel and Finbarr
would never—"
"Not
them, moron!" Eliseth's voice dripped scorn. "I was talking about
Davorshan."
Bragar
burst out laughing. "My dear Eliseth, how do you propose to get him away
from that twin of his? And even if you did, what earthly use would he be? Those
two haven't the power between them to light a candle!"
"Between
them, no. But if there were only one? I believe that's the problem, Bragar.
They have sufficient power for one Mage, but their minds are so closely linked
that neither can use it. I want that power to come to us, and Davorshan is the
likeliest candidate of the two. As for parting him from D'arvan . . ."A
smug little smile tugged at the corners of Eliseth's mouth. "I believe he
has reached the stage where . . . certain inducements might work."
Bragar
reached out to embrace her. "By the Gods, but you're devious!" he
said approvingly.
"True."
Deftly, Eliseth avoided his grasp. You fool, she thought scornfully. Little do
you know just how devious I can be!
Forral
took Aurian to stay at the Fleet Deer, one of the finest inns in Nexis. From
the start, the swordsman forbade her to use the slightest hint of magic—not
even to light a candle— but now that she was reunited with her beloved Forral,
Aurian never missed it. On the first night, over the best supper the inn could
provide, she and Forral brought themselves up to the present, and the swordsman
spoke of his reluctance to accept the Garrison post.
"It's
a tremendous honor," he said, "but I don't fancy it much. I accepted
because I couldn't turn down the chance for us to be together again. Oh Gods,
lass, but I've missed you!"
Aurian
reached across the table and took his hand. "And I missed you," she
said softly. "If you only knew the tears I've shed . . ." Her eyes
flashed angrily. "How could you just go away like that?"
Forral
looked abashed. "I'm sorry, love, truly I am. I honestly thought it was
the best thing. I felt so bad about what happened, I just couldn't think
straight. Then the Healer and your mother said—" ~"*"v*
"Mother?
I might have guessed!" Aurian got hold of her anger with an effort.
"I'm sorry. I won't spoil tonight. The main thing is that you're back. But
why don't you want to take command of the Garrison?"
Forral
smiled. "How you've grown up! All these years I've thought of you as a
child, and now I find a woman. It'll take some getting used to."
The look
he gave her was lingering, and Aurian found herself blushing as the intimacy of
his gaze kindled a new and disturbing warmth within her. "The
Garrison?" she prompted, to cover her sudden, unaccountable shyness. To
her relief Forral shook himself, as though waking from a dream, and took up her
cue.
"It's
not the responsibility that worries me." He grimaced. "It's the
bloody paperwork! I hate administration!"
Aurian
laughed. "Is that all? Then don't do it!"
"Aurian,
I don't think you realize—"
"Of
course I do. But as Garrison Commander, you'll have so much influence! Hire
someone else to do the paperwork, then you'll have more time to do what you
want—and to spend with
me!"
Forral's
face was a study in amazement and relief. "Aurian,
you're
a genius!"
They
talked all night, reveling in each other's company, and for the first time in
her life, Aurian got truly drunk. Forral introduced her to peach brandy, and
she took to it all too well. The way she felt next morning came as a shock. She
awoke with a churning stomach and pounding head, and a quick, wincing glance
between the curtains showed that the sun had already reached the zenith.
When
Aurian came down to the private dining room reserved for guests at the inn, she
discovered that Forral had beaten her downstairs—but only just. One look at his
pale face and bleary eyes showed that at least they were suffering together. At
the sight of him, Aurian found herself hesitating. She'd had such dreams last
night! Dreams where Forral had kissed her, held her . . . You fool, she told
herself firmly. Why, he practically brought you up! It must have been the wine
. . . But he looked up and smiled, and she found that
she was
shaking as she sat down. It was the wine, she repeated determinedly. Only the
wine . . .
"Great
Chathak, love, you're white as a sheet!" Forral sounded concerned.
"Poor lass—it's the first time you've drunk too much, isn't it? And it's
my fault . . ."
As he
took her hand, a jolt of tingling fire sped through Aurian's body. Gods, she
thought, what's happening to me? Forral pushed a steaming cup toward her, and
she buried her face in it, to hide her confusion. It was tail/in, a tea made
from the leaves of a bush that grew in the southeast and was the staple stimulant
of the city dwellers. Aurian took a sip, grimacing at the acid taste. How she
missed her mother's teas, made from a variety of berries, flowers, or herbs,
each with a specific benefit to confer. Nonetheless, as a poor riser, Aurian
was grateful for tail/in.
Just
then one of the inn's serving men approached, all apologetic deference. They
had already discovered Forral's identity, and as for having a Mage as a guest .
. .
"I'm
sorry, Sir and Lady," he said. "This is the best we could do for
breakfast, it being so late. Times are so bad." He plunked down two plates
of what Aurian could only describe as curdled eggs, and beat a hasty retreat.
She stared in disbelief at the slimy yellow spoonful on her plate, swallowing
the bile that rose in her throat. Times being so bad? What did he mean? Surely
things weren't that bad in the city, despite the drought! She'd never had this
problem at the Academy, and supper last night had been all right. Although,
srie acknowledged wryly, she'd been so immersed in Forral that she wouldn't
have noticed if—
"Sir!
Commander Forral!" It was the landlord of the inn, and by the look of him,
the man was in a rare panic! Aurian blinked in surprise at his red-faced,
disheveled appearance. Could this be the same urbane, self-possessed man who
had welcomed them last night? He tugged at Forral's arm, completely abandoning
the servile courtesy with which the Fleet Deer treated its guests. "Sir,
come quick!" he panted. "There's a riot in the market!"
"What?"
Forral flung back his chair and leapt to his feet. "Stay here," he
told Aurian, and was gone.
For a
moment, thf*Mage's childhood habit of obedience to
the
swordsman held firm. Then her brows knotted, and her jaw began to clench. Stay
here, indeed, as though she were still a child? Sit and drink tail/in, while he
went into danger? "Some chance!" Aurian muttered. Rising swiftly, she
hurried after For-ral.
STORMBRINGER
he mess
hall of the Nexis Garrison tended to be busy during the hour of the midday
meal. The noise was usually close to deafening, as the cheerful clatter of
knife on plate and the din of competing talk and ribald jests echoed round the
bare walls of whitewashed stone. Today, nothing could be heard but a desultory
murmur of conversation and the buzz of the fat black flies that clustered round
the discarded food on the tables. Because of the drought, the imminent change
of Commander, and the looming threat of civil unrest, morale at the Garrison
was at its lowest ebb.
Maya
looked at the rows of empty tables and benches, and frowned. She was not
surprised that no one was eating. Rations were short because of the drought,
and food went rancid quickly in this heat. Vegetables and fruit were in short
supply. They went mostly to the well-off, who could afford the inflated cost;
to inns like the Fleet Deer that catered to the rich; or—the small, dark-haired
warrior scowled—to the blasted Magefolk! Maya clenched her fists beneath the
table. What had happened to justice? Everywhere else in Nexis, including the
Garrison, folk were mainly living on the stringy, fly-blown carcasses of the
beasts that were dying like flies in the scorched countryside.
"What
a bloody awful life!" Maya muttered, hardly sure whether she was speaking
to herself.'br to Hargorn.
The
aging warrior, well aware of what lay behind her gloom, gave her hand a
sympathetic squeeze. "Don't take it to heart, lovey. It's no reflection on
your abilities, or the fact that you're a woman, that the Archmage won't have
you on the Council of Three. In fact, to the troopers, it's a compliment. At
least it proves that you aren't in the old bastard's pocket. And
Second-in-Command to that great a swordsman isn't such a bad promotion, is
it?"
Maya
grimaced. "It is if you'd planned to be Commander! Besides, Forral may be
the world's greatest swordsman, but we all know he got the post because he's so
matey with the Magefolk." She banged her fist on the table. "Miathan
might as well take command himself and be done with it. If it wasn't for
Vannor,
the poor bloody Mortals who live in this city would have no representation at
all!"
"Woman
or no, you'd never have got the post with those views," Hargorn told her
bitterly. "They were what ruined my career at the Garrison. Mark my words,
lassie—stay out of city politics." He adjusted the band that held back his
long, gray-shot mane of hair, and stood up. "I'd better go. If Parric
doesn't get back soon I'll be needed to—"
"He's
not back from seeing Vannor?" Maya wished that she had drawn that duty.
She both liked and respected the tough, stocky little Head of the Merchants'
Guild, with his wry sense of humor and uncompromising attitude to life in
general and the Magefolk in particular.
Hargorn
shook his head. "Why Rioch sent Parric up there with word about his successor,
I don't know! As if it makes any difference to Vannor who the Archmage has
picked—"
"Here
comes Parric now," Maya interrupted.
It was
a long-standing Garrison joke that the wiry little Cavalrymaster could never
enter a room quietly. This time, Parric was in a paroxysm of coughing from the
white dust that blew endlessly around the dried-out Parade Ground. He was also
in a tremendous hurry. Crossing to their table, he wiped the dust from his
tanned face and balding head and downed the flat, lukewarm remains of Maya's
tankard of ale in a single gulp. "There's trouble," he said,
"and I can't find Rioch anywhere!"
It had
been a long walk from the mill to Nexis. It seemed like an even longer climb
from the river path up to Green-market Square, where the farmers from outside
the city came to sell their produce. Sara tucked stray wisps of sweat-damp hair
back into her kerchief as she trudged up the steep cobbled lane, and shifted
the clumsy basket to her other arm. She stamped her foot in annoyance as the
loose weave of the basket snagged the thin fabric of her gown. Why had her
stupid mother made her trail all this way on a fool's errand? As if there'd be
any produce to buy! Is it my fault we're short of food? she thought irritably.
Did I make the wretched drought? To add to her list of complaints, her usually
indulgent father had given her a thorough scolding for not getting up early
enough to reach the market when it opened. Sara scowled. There'd been no living
AURIAN •
89
with
the man, since the shrunken river had left the mill wheel high and dry. And
since Anvar no longer needed to come in his cart for flour, she'd had to walk
all this way\ Not, she mused, that Anvar was any fun nowadays. He was always
working, as if that would get him anywhere. The trouble was, he had no
ambition.
Nearly
there! Sara sighed gratefully, as she started to drag herself up the steep
flight of steps that led to the entrance of the square. Hot, footsore, and
hungry as she was, she was far too busy nursing her grievances to notice the
rising hubbub of angry voices. Entering the square, she walked straight into a
riot.
Vannor
galloped through the city streets at breakneck speed, having flogged his poor
horse all the way from his home on the south bank of the river. He'd received
word from the frantic stallholders of the Greenmarket, who, on seeing the ugly
mood of the crowd, had sent for the Head of their Merchants' Guild.
"Stupid idiots!" Vannor muttered in exasperation. Why hadn't they
sent to the Garrison, which was closer? It was sheer luck that Parric had been
with him today, when the flustered messenger had arrived!
Not
daring to waste time in taking a longer way around, the merchant urged his
reluctant horse straight up the stone steps that were the quickest route into
the market. By the time Parric managed to alert the troopers, the situation
could be well out of hand. On reaching the square", Vrfhnor discovered
that it already was. A huge bonfire, made from torn-down stalls, burned in the
center of the marketplace. The square was filled with a seething mass of
people. Some bore cudgels, while others, to Vannor's alarm, were armed with
torches, stones, and knives. "Down with the merchants!" they chanted.
"Down with the Magefolk!"
Vannor
cursed. He agreed, in his heart of hearts, with the latter sentiment, but as
Head of the Merchants' Guild he could hardly condone the former. The merchants
were huddled behind a barricade of upended carts, the target of missiles and
abuse. It was easy to see what had sparked the riot. Behind the traders was a
wagon laden with produce: boxes of summer fruits; root and leaf vegetables,
shriveled but sound; assorted
cheeses;
and two crates of live poultry. The cart was stamped with the mark of the
Magefolk, and had clearly been destined for the Academy. The merchants, even in
the face of the mob, were too terrified of Miathan's wrath to renege on their
bargain with the Archmage, and were still trying to defend the wagon with its
precious cargo.
Struggling
with his shying horse, Vannor paused at the edge of the square. What can I do,
he thought, against this? Where are the troopers? The trouble was, having
fought his way out of a childhood of squalid poverty to his present high
station, he sympathized with the desperate, hungry folk in the square. Yet he
was Head of the Merchants' Guild now, and his people were in danger—he had a
responsibility to them . . . He must get through to the traders, and force them
to abandon that stupid wagon! Not daring to think of the consequences, he began
to urge his shrinking mount through the impacted crowd.
It was
hard going. The horse was understandably reluctant, terrified of the mob. That
makes two of us, Vannor thought grimly, as he fought off clutching hands and
fended off the missiles as best he could. Faces, pale and pinched with hunger,
turned toward him. Somewhere in the crowd, a cry went up. With a hollow
sickness in the pit of his stomach, Vannor realized his mistake too late. To
these people, his horse meant food. A stone hit his face, and he tasted blood.
They surged behind him, blocking his retreat, but too scared, yet, to approach
the flashing heels of his mount. Though he tried to thrust a way forward, he
could make no headway. He shouted to attract the traders' attention, but they
would never hear him over this din.
Suddenly
Vannor's horse gave a shrill scream and reared, lashing out with its hooves.
The crowd shrank away from it in panic. As he wrestled with its reins, another
shriek drew the merchant's eyes downward. A young girl had fallen beneath the
flailing hooves of his mount! Wrenching the beast aside with a yank that nearly
pulled his arms from their sockets, Vannor reached down, grabbed her wrist, and
pulled her up out of danger.
She
scrambled up into his saddle, weeping, bruised, and terrified—surely nothing to
do with this wild mob. "It's all right," Vannor assured her, as she
clung to him, sobbing hyster-
AUR1AN •
91
ically.
"You're all right now!" It was an outright lie. His horse lurched, buffeted
by the crowd, and the girl gave another terrified scream. Oh Gods, the merchant
thought—how am I ever going to get us out of this?
Forral
took in the situation in a single glance. Corning from the Fleet Deer, he had
reached the square from the side opposite to Vannor, emerging from a narrow
alley behind the traders' barricade. "Chathak's bloody balls!" he
swore. What a start to his Garrison command] And where were the troopers? They
should be here. The swordsman knew that nothing could be done to calm this mob.
The merchants would have to retreat —and fast. A gang of men, their faces
distorted with hysterical rage, were lighting torches at the bonfire. Ducking
to avoid the barrage of refuse and uprooted cobbles hurled by the crowd, Forral
dodged into the cramped space behind the wagons. The terrified merchants were
doing their best to hold off the mob by thrusting their swords through the
spaces between the carts. Forral grabbed the nearest trader by the shoulder,
and spun him round. "Get out of here, man—before they think of the alley
and block your retreat! The food will delay them!"
The
merchant's face, already pale, twisted into a mask of terror. "We can't
leave the cart! The Archmage will—"
"Bugger
the Archmage!" Forral roared. "You'll be killed—"
It was
too late. With a crackle and a roar, the tinder-dry barricade of carts burst
into flame, ^s the traders fell back, screaming, the mob prepared to charge.
Aurian
had followed Forral until he entered the square. She paused then, pondering
what to do next. If she tried to join him, she knew he would send her back—and
have a thing or two to say to her when the fuss had died down. But he'd be in
danger. She should be with him! She felt sick with terror at the thought of
losing him forever. Yet Aurian knew from past experience that Forral would be
furious if she risked her own life. That's his hard luck, she decided with a
shrug. I'm too big to be spanked this time!
She
started toward the end of the alley, but just as she reached it, she noticed
that the side door of one of the houses
that
lined the square was standing slightly ajar. Aurian stopped. She rarely came
down into Nexis, but if she remembered rightly, these houses had balconies that
looked over the square. Without hesitation she slipped inside. Luckily, the
house was empty. Perhaps the occupants had gone to join the riot, Aurian
thought.
These
once grand houses that lined the market were shabby and crumbling now, for the
district was no longer in fashion with the wealthy. Aurian hunted through
spacious, well-proportioned rooms until she found one with tall windows leading
to the balcony. Opening the shutters, she stepped out _and recoiled from the
chaos below. Across the square, a man on horseback was struggling against the crowd,
who threatened to drag him down. A fair-haired girl perched before him on the
saddle, and the little fool was clinging to him hysterically, hampering his
sword arm as he tried to strike at his attackers.
Idiot!
Aurian snorted, and turned away to look down to her left, for a glimpse of
Forral. She saw him below her, arguing with one of the merchants. Then her
blood froze, as she saw a thin, deadly ribbon of flame winding through the
crowd as the torch-bearers advanced. Gods! If the barricade burned, Forral
would have no defense! Aurian's mind raced with the impetus of fear. There was
one chance to stop this madness—and only she could do it. Rain, she thought. I
must bring rain! Yet her guts knotted in terror as she remembered what had
happened when she had last tried to use her magic. She recalled the hopeless
circling in the d»k maze—her terror—her helplessness. She hadn't used her magic
since then. Would she still be able to function? Would she suffer the same fate
again? She'd had no real experience with Weather-magic, which was a difficult
and exhausting business. But she had to save Forral.
Her
fingers clenching tight around the beveled metal railing of the balcony, Aurian
pushed her awareness out beyond her body, as she had been taught. Scanning the
sky, she swore under her breath. Blue. Bright, unblemished blue, paling to
white heat near the horizon. Where were the bloody clouds that Eliseth was
supposed to have been moving? Aurian recalled what she had learned of weather
patterns in Finbarr's archaic books. The west—they should be coming from the
west. Able now to focus all her power in a single direction, Aurian pushed
her
mind out further and further. Ah! There—far out over the western ocean . . .
An
explosion of flame and a wild cheer from the crowd wrenched Aurian back to
herself with a jerk. She clung to the railing for a moment, dizzy and
disoriented from the abrupt return to her body. Then she saw. The wagons were
burning! "Forral!" Aurian was unaware that she had called his name aloud.
The clouds were too far away—how could she move such a mass of air and water in
time?
In that
frantic split second, Aurian felt the heat of the flames as they consumed the
carts—felt the anger of the mob, like another wall of fire, beating up at her
with pulsing hatred. Suddenly the face of her father, Geraint—long forgotten
from her babyhood—seemed to hang before her. She could hear his voice:
"Energy takes many forms, and the wise Mage can utilize them all. Strong
emotions—anger, fear, love—all of these can be used to fuel the potvers of
magic . . ."
Aurian
never stopped to question. There was no time. She reached out to the mad,
frenzied energy of the mob, to the raw heat-energy of the fire—and pulled . . .
It was
strange to her, this taking-in of power. It was, strictly speaking, against the
Mages' Code—yet there was so much energy surging around the square that she
could easily take what she needed, and do no harm.
The
tricky part was to pull energy into herself, and push her consciousness outward
at the same time. She had to forget her body completely, her
consciousness'almost, She had to become a pipe, a conduit, a vessel; and simply
let the energy flow through . . .
Her
seeking mind encountered the clouds once more. Would it be easier to push, or
pull? But the clouds were moving in this direction anyway. Pull, then. But how?
What was there to grasp in a cloud? Ah! Of course. Aurian stationed her will
between the clouds and the front of cold pressure that preceded them, and
pushed with all her strength toward Nexis, driving the air away to create a
vacuum. Air was lighter to move than water. Gleefully, it seemed, the clouds
rushed in to fill the space . . .
It was
almost too easy, with all this energy at her disposal. Later, Aurian was to
realize that what had taken ages in out-of-
her-body
time was scant seconds in reality. When a thick layer of cloud had capped the
city's valley like a black and sinister lid, she returned to her body, gathered
her power, and
struck
. .
.
A bolt
of lighting arced down, splintering into forks as it came. In the distance, a
rumble of thunder rolled down the river valley . . . Rain! Aurian thought,
reaching up to the low-trailing streamers of cloud. Half connected as she was
to her body, it felt as though she were clawing at the blue-black canopy, using
her fingers to drag the precious moisture down from the skies . . .
She
came abruptly back to herself as the downpour hit. It came all at once, in a
solid, heavy sheet, Instantly, Aurian's hair was flattened over her face. She
found it hard to breathe, as though she were underwater. It was cold. It
extinguished the fire in an instant.
Reluctantly,
Aurian pulled herself away from the glory of the elements. Only then, did she
hear the cheering of the crowd. The riot had vanished in an instant, as though
the rain had washed the fear and fury away. People were capering in the square,
swinging each other about in wild, giddy dances, men and women alike. The man
on the horse was picking his careful way through the celebrating crowd, heading
toward the merchants' position,
"What
have you done?"
Aurian
whirled, shocked, to find herself face-to-face with Forral. He'd used the
crumbling brickwork of the building to pull himself up to her balcony.
"How did you do it? It was you, wasn't it? How dare you put yourself in
such danger? Don't you remember why I was called back here in the first
place?"
Forral's
smoke-blackened face was grim and his voice was harsh with anger as his big
hands gripped her shoulders. Aurian shrunk away, remembering the day when he
had caught her in the forest, playing with fireballs.
Then
her Magefolk pride asserted itself, and she pulled herself erect. How dare he
treat her as if she were still a child!
Her
reaction was the last thing that Forral had expected. Aurian wrenched herself
violently out of his grasp, and for the first time, he realized that she was as
tall as he, if not slightly
taller.
Her chin tilted proudly, and her eyes blazed with cold fire in a face that was
white with anger. In her wrath she was a true Mage, and truly intimidating! The
storm above him seemed to grow in sympathy with her rage. A bolt of lightning
splintered the roof of a nearby building.
"How
dare you!" Aurian spat. "How dare you abandon me all this time, and
return for less than a day, before trying to kill yourself! And what gives you
the right to keep me from helping?"
Forral
backed away hastily, and knew it for a retreat. By no means a stupid man, he
suddenly realized that his relationship with Aurian was going to need a lot of
rethinking. But Gods, she was so magnificent in her rage—so beautiful, standing
proud and tall, like a spirit of the storm, with fire-ice flashing from her
eyes. In that moment, Forral was lost, "I . , ," he stammered.
Whatever he had meant to say was drowned in a thunder of hooves as a company of
warriors rode into the square. The troopers had arrived at last, Forral turned
back to Aurian. She was still facing him, proud and uncompromising, with a challenging
question in her eyes. The swordsman grinned, and clapped her hard on the
shoulder—the typical comradely gesture between warriors. He chuckled as he saw
her eyes widen with surprise. "Well done, lass!" he told her.
"Well done, indeed! You've saved the day!"
An hour
later, a solemn conference of leaders gathered in the private dining room of
the Flee^Deer. The room was warm with lamplight, for the heavy black clouds of
Aurian's storm still hung overhead, turning the summer afternoon into twilight.
Rain drummed on the streaming pavements outside, and ran in rivulets down the
diamond-leaded casements.
The
fawning landlord, flattered to have so many influential people beneath his
roof, served them great, brimming tankards of dark ale, and platters of fruit,
cold meats, and cheese, Aurian looked sourly at the food. Granted, there wasn't
a lot here, but to the hungry folk who had started the riot, it would have been
a feast. For the first time, she wondered why the Magefolk rations had been
singled out in the market.
As
everyone settled round the table, Aurian looked at the assembled faces,
ses*cl*ing her memory to put a name to each of
the
folk who had so recently been introduced to her. Seated on Forral's right was a
tough-looking, stocky man with close-cropped hair and beard: Vannor, Head of
the Merchants' Guild. To Aurian's left sat a small, slender woman in leather
fighting garb. Her tanned limbs were corded with muscle, and her dark braids,
still jeweled with raindrops, were wrapped round her head, warrior-fashion.
This was Lieutenant Maya, Second-in-Command of the Garrison. She was frowning
and ill at ease, biting her lip and twisting her hands in her lap. Beyond her
was Parric, the Cavalrymaster, a short, brown, wiry figure (were all these
Garrison warriors small? Aurian wondered,) with thinning brown hair and laugh
lines on his face. But he was not laughing now.
Aurian
felt uneasy herself, among these grim-faced strangers. Never before had she
been surrounded by so many Mortals! To ease her anxiety she picked up the huge
pewter tankard, brimming with ale. She had never drunk ale before—the Magefolk,
who drank wine, scorned it as common stuff and only fit for Mortals. It took
both her hands to lift the tankard, and she grimaced as she took a sip of the
foaming brew. Gods! How could the others sit there and quaff this bitter stuff!
She took another hasty sip to stop herself choking, reluctant to lose face
before these Mortals. But Vannor had noticed. He grinned at her
sympathetically, and gave her a sly wink, miming that she should keep on
drinking. Shyly, Aurian smiled back, and tried again. Ah, this time if-didn't
taste quite so bad! Maybe it was something you had to get used to.
Vannor
cleared his throat and stood up, resting his hands on the table.
"Well," he said bluntly, "we didn't come here to sit all
afternoon drinking ale. We'd best get started—and I can't think of a better way
to start than by thanking the Lady Aurian for bringing the rain, and for
releasing that Magefolk food to those in need of it. Lady, as Head of the
Merchants' Guild, I'm most grateful—as are the folk of Nexis." Turning to
her, he bowed.
Aurian
felt her face grow hot with embarrassment at such a public compliment.
Moreover, he'd used her honorific title as a Mage, and it was the first time
she had been formally addressed that way.
"I
. . ." Lost for words, she spread her hands helplessly. "What else
could I have done?"
"Well
said, Lady!" Vannor's voice rang out in approval.
Aurian
thought it might be a good time to broach the question that had been bothering
her. "Sir," she began.
"Vannor,
please, Lady." He smiled at her. "I've got no use for these fancy
titles. Just call me Vannor."
Aurian
returned his smile. "Then call me Aurian—just Aurian." She wondered
why he looked surprised at her words, and why Forral was beaming with approval.
"Anyway," she went on, somewhat flustered by the exchange. "I
wondered . . . Well, this place has food"—she pointed at the plates on the
table—"and it can't be the only one, I'm sure. Why wasn't this shared
among the people? And why was the wagon of the Magefolk singled out by the
mob?"
Vannor
seemed taken aback, and to her astonishment, he seemed unable to meet her eyes.
Forral, a half smile on his face, was watching the exchange with keen interest.
At last the merchant found his voice. "Lady—Aurian—in a way, you're right.
There's injustice in Nexis. The rich look after themselves, and the poor—well,
they manage as best they can. Those who can't, must sell themselves as
bondservants for a term of years, or in the case of heavy debt, for life. It's
nothing but legal slavery!" He scowled. "I do what I can on the
Council—I was poor myself, once—but the trouble is, as Head of the Merchants'
Guild, I represent a lot of rich people. If they don't like what I do, I'll be
voted out, and they'd replace me with someone who didn't give a hang about the
poor! So I walk a fine line . . ." He sighed. "Aurian, I have to tell
you that I get no help on the Council from the Archmage, or from his puppet,
Rioch." He directed a piercing glance at Forral, and Aurian saw the big
man suddenly stop smiling. Vannor turned his gaze back to Aurian. "Can you
deny that Miathan despises all Mortals, rich or poor?"
Now it
was Aurian's turn to blush. He was right— Miathan had said so often enough,
and, having known Forral, it made her uncomfortable. But the Archmage had
always represented Mortals as being conniving, idle, shiftless, and downright
dangerous—and Vannor the worst of the lot! The acts of today's mob had
supported his words. Yet she looked at Vannor
and
through his blunt, rough-and-ready manner saw a kind, caring, honest man. She
looked away from him, more confused than she'd ever been in her life. Suddenly
she remembered the unpleasant incident last year, when Meiriel had refused to
help Vannor's wife through a difficult childbirth. It was not necessary to
intervene, the Healer had insisted—but the woman had died. Aurian's face grew
hot with shame. No wonder Vannor had little use for her people. Suddenly she
began to understand why the Magefolk had been the target of the mob's
resentment. She only hoped her action in bringing the rain and releasing food
to the Mortals had done something to redress the balance.
"Look
here, Vannor." Forral rose, scowling, his gruff voice betraying his
irritation. "Aurian is a very young, and very minor, member of the
Magefolk. You can't go blaming her for the Archmage's—"
"I
don't, I don't!" Vannor held up his hands in a conciliatory gesture.
"My apologies, Aurian, if I suggested that\ What you did today is more
than good enough for me!"
"And
another thing," Forral cut in. "If you think that I'm Miathan's
puppet, just because Rioch was—"
"Well,
he chose you, didn't he?" Maya flared, her voice harsh with bitterness.
"What are we supposed to think?"
Forral
looked at her coldly. "Ah yes, Lieutenant Maya. I'd meant to get round to
you, before we were sidetracked. Rioch is retired, and as I hadn't taken charge
yet, you were in command of the Garrison today! Why were there no duty patrols
on the streets? Can you explain why"you didn't arrive until the emergency
was over? As Second-in-Command, I can't say you've impressed me so far!"
Aurian,
seated next to Maya, was deeply aware of the woman's distress at the charge.
The warrior's face burned, and her hands were shaking.-She squirmed beneath
Forral's accusing gaze. Her mouth opened, but she couldn't seem to speak.
Aurian
felt sorry for her. She knew how intimidating Forral could be when he was
angry. In an instinctive, impulsive gesture—for she was not generally given to
such intimacy with strangers—she clasped Maya's hand beneath the table,
offering support and comfort. The pressure was returned, and Maya flashed her a
grateful smile, seeming to find her voice at last. "Sir, I—"
"Now
just a bloody minute—Sir!" Parric leapt angrily to Maya's defense.
"It wasn't Maya's fault! You say that Rioch had retired, but it's not
true—not where we were concerned. He was still hanging around, giving the
occasional order—when he felt like it. True, he expected Maya to handle all the
dull, nitpicking jobs he couldn't be bothered with—but he didn't back her
authority, and he wouldn't let her act on her own. The poor lass was in a
bloody awful position. And today those dumb bastards didn't even think to send
for us! By the time I'd managed to get word to the Garrison, Rioch had
disappeared, bag and baggage, and nobody knew where you were, and there's poor
Maya trying to organize the troops, but everybody's running around like
chickens saying 'Where's Rioch?' and 'Who's giving orders?' Well, it was a
miracle that she got the troops out at all—especially when you consider that
she was in line for your command, and should have had it, and how much she
wanted it, but got turned down flat out of hand—"
"Parric!"
Maya looked stricken.
Parric
shrugged. "Well, it's true, and he should know it! Maya's a bloody good
soldier, Sir—the best. She deserves better than this."
Forral's
expression was rueful. "So that's how it is." He sighed. "I wish
I'd known, before I accepted this post. My apologies, Lieutenant, I was
unjust." He took a deep breath, and looked around at them all.
"Grievances have been aired today, among the five of us, that need to be
dealt with. It's no good squabbling amongst ourselves while the city falls
apart around us. We must support each other, for we"—he hit the table with
his fist, then gave a wry smile—"for lack of anyone better, are the ones
who must set Nexis to rights! And since we must trust each other, let me make
it clear, once and for all, that I don't plan to be a puppet for Miathan, or
anyone else!"
Suddenly
they were all on their feet, cheering. The tensions in the room had vanished
like smoke. Aurian looked proudly at Forral. This is his doing, she thought,
much impressed. Look how he's brought us together.
"Now."
Forral brought the meeting to order. "Maya, you left Hargorn and his
troops in charge of the market, and handing out the Magefolk food. You reckon
he's a good, experienced man, so there should be «o problems there."
"If
there are, he'll soon let you know!" Maya smiled. "Good. I like
dependable people around me. Now Parric— you organize a troop of mounted
foragers, and get into the countryside at
first light. Don't starve the
farmers by any means, but I doubt you'll have to." He grinned. "The
drought hasn't been going on that long. I suspect they're keeping the best
stuff for themselves—and hoping to push up the selling price, at the same time.
By majority vote of the Council"—he caught the merchant's eye, and Vannor
chuckled—"rationing is in force during the emergency, and their produce is
requisitioned. Don't put up with any nonsense. Mind you, don't get carried away
and start taking seed crops or breeding stock—we have to think about the
future. Take some extra troopers to cart the stuff back as soon as
possible—"
"And
send it to me." Vannor's face was alight with mischief. "I'll set up
fair distribution through those merchants of mine—and don't worry, I'll make
the misers behave. No profit-squeezing at the expense of the poor. It'll be a
new experience for them, doing good deeds!" He slapped his knee and
chortled. "Gods, this'H upset them." He winked at Forral. "I'll
say it's
your
fault, of course."
"Of
course," Forral replied solemnly, with a wink of his own. "Right,
Parric—it'll take you a while to sort things out, so you'd better get
started."
"At
once, Sir!" the Cavalrymaster replied with brisk good humor, and
emptyingJiis tankard in one gargantuan, well-practiced swallow, he went off,
grinning from ear to ear.
"Maya."
Forral turned to the warrior. "I want you to take charge of the day-to-day
running of the Garrison." He smiled at the warrior's dumbfounded
expression. "As Aurian will tell you, I'm no administrator—my skills lie
in practical warfare and teaching—so we might as well play to our strengths.
And don't worry about me supporting your authority, because I'll back you every
inch of the way. In fact, I'll draft a set of orders before you leave, so there
are no more doubts about who's in
charge."
"Thank
you, Sir." Maya's voice was level, but her face was
alight
with joy. "I'll do a good job, I promise."
"Call
me Forral." The swordsman smiled. "I've no doubt that vou'll do a
good job—as I said, I want dependable folk
around
me." He paused. "There's one more thing—I'm supposed to have a
month's leave with Aurian before I take command, and I'd still like to do that
if I can. You and Vannor, with Parric's help, should be able to handle things
now that the worst of the crisis is over—"
Suddenly
an enraged shout came from the doorway. "Who has dared to steal Magefolk
provisions, already bought and paid for, to feed the unruly rabble of this
city!" The Archmage's entrance was unexpected, and his anger was awesome.
He stood tall before them with blazing eyes, his expression thunderous. Aurian
knew a sudden stab of fear for Forral and Vannor. She had never seen Miathan so
angry.
The
merchant and the swordsman exchanged a glance. "I did." Both of them
spoke together, and as Miathan's face darkened further, Aurian knew she must
act quickly in support of her friends. Though her knees were trembling at the
thought of Miathan's stupendous wrath falling upon her, she stood up and faced
the Archmage squarely. "That's not true," she said, in a small but
steady voice. "Neither of them had the authority to release that food, so
I did it—for the honor of the Magefolk. You see, the—"
"You—did—what~>"
Miathan spoke through gritted teeth. Aurian quailed, suddenly robbed of words
by the soft menace in his voice.
"Let
her finish, Archmage." Forral's voice was quiet, but his face was set like
stone. As the swordsman spoke, Aurian felt the bracing grip of Maya's hand,
arid kriew that the warrior was on her side, returning help for help. The
unexpected support gave her the courage to continue.
"Miathan,
it's not your fault," she said. "You can't have known how bad things
were in Nexis. If you had, you'd have done something about it. Why, if you'd
seen those poor, starving folk, I know you would have released the food
yourself. I, of all people, know how kind you are. Please don't be angry—I knew
it was what you'd have wanted."
As
Vannor was later to comment irreverently, her words took the wind right out of
Miathan's sails. The Archmage was, for once in his life, completely lost for
words.
"Archmage,
the city appreciates the generosity of the Magefolk." Vannor spelce softly
and persuasively. "This Lady
has
earned you a lot of gratitude today—for her kind heart, and for bringing the
rain."
Miathan
gasped. "You did that?"
Nervously,
Aurian nodded. "I—I hope I did it right," she faltered.
"Right?
My dear girl, Eliseth has been trying for days to accomplish what you have
done! Most impressive. Most impressive, indeed. But as for the rest, you must
learn not to act without thinking. Our people needed that food."
As
Miathan's brows began to knit once more into a frown, Vannor spoke up again.
"Don't worry on that score, Archmage. Commander Forral has organized
foraging parties, and food will start coming into the city tomorrow. You've my
word that your food will be replaced as a matter of priority. Don't be angry
with the Lady Aurian—she acted from the best of motives."
"I'll
support that," Forral added. "She prevented great loss of life
today."
Miathan,
seeing that he was outnumbered, shrugged, and managed a grimace that might have
passed as a smile. "Very well," he said stiffly. "It seems I
must concede—this time." Turning on his heel, he left. Aurian, guilty
about her part in his rout and anxious to know if he had really forgiven her,
almost ran after him, there and then. Almost.
"Phew,"
Vannor said. "That was nasty! Aurian, you're a hero. You've saved our
bacon again."
Glowing
at the compliment, Aurian took a long swig of ale to dispel her shakiness
Forral was here, after all, and she was supposed to be on holiday.
"By
the Gods, lass, that was the bravest thing you've done all day!" the
swordsman told her, his face glowing with approval. Maya caught her eye and
smiled. Aurian knew, in that moment, that the seeds of friendship had been sown
between herself and this small, dark-haired warrior, and the thought pleased
her inordinately. She'd never really had a woman friend before. Smiling shyly
back at Maya in acknowledgment of the wordless understanding between them,
Aurian decided that nothing, not even the Archmage, was going to part her from
these new and special companions.
It was
long past nightfall when Vannor rode back toward his home. Though Aurian's rain
was still coming down in sheets and he was soaked to the very bone, the
merchant was smiling to himself as he crossed the white bridge near the Academy
and headed up the tree-lined, lamplit lane toward his mansion on the southern
riverbank. For the first time in over a year, since the death of his beloved
wife, Vannor felt at peace with himself. He was delighted, of course, that he'd
achieved such a good understanding with the new Garrison Commander. And having
one of the Magefolk on his side, for once, boded well for the future. And what
a brave, delightful lass she was, at that. But the true cause of the merchant's
quiet joy was Sara, the girl he had rescued from the riot.
During
his meeting with the other leaders, Vannor had left the girl in the care of the
innkeeper's wife. When he saw her again, she had been fed, and had her bruises
tended. The innkeeper's lady had loaned her a gown to replace her ruined
clothing, and her hair had been newly washed and combed. The merchant had been
amazed by the transformation. He had stood, agape like the rawest apprentice
lad, in appreciation of her fragile, ethereal beauty. Gods, but she had
reminded him of his own dear, lost, lovely wife!
Now,
Vannor was returning from taking her home to her worried family. His heart beat
faster at the memory of her slender form perched before him on his saddle, his
arms clasped tightly around her waist. It would be a while before he could see
her again, to be sure, with so moch to settle in Nexis after the drought—he'd
have his work cut out for him in the coming days—but afterward . . . His
children needed a mother again, Vannor assured himself, shrugging aside the
uncomfortable thought that Sara could not be much older than his eldest
daughter. Where love was concerned, age was never a problem! Her family had
clearly been impressed by their daughter's new friend, and Sara herself had
hardly been discouraging . . .
As he
rode up the curving, graveled drive of his mansion, Vannor's face split into a
grin of pure joy. He knew where she lived now, and by all the Gods, once this
crisis was over, he meant to see her again!
CKapter 7
DEATH BY
FIRE
ith the
coming of the rain, the threat of unrest in the ———— city soon died away.
Regular supplies of food, small at first but gradually increasing, began to
trickle into Nexis as Parric's bands of foragers warmed to their work, and the
reluctant merchants (browbeaten into cooperation by Vannor) began to oversee
the fair distribution of rations. At last the people of Nexis could eat
again—though it was sheer, contrary human nature, perhaps, that led them to
give the credit for the happy change in their circumstances to the young,
fire-haired Mage who had brought the rain.
Word of
Aurian's actions had spread through Nexis like wildfire, and wherever she and
Forral went, the young Mage was embarrassed to find she had gained many new
admirers. Though the Magefolk, with their dramatic, finely sculpted appearance,
could not be anonymous in a Mortal crowd, Aurian was stunned that time and
again, people would recognize her. They picked her out to thank her, or, in the
case of the crafters, pressed their finest wares on her as gifts. The last
straw, however, was a woman who emerged from the crowd in a tightly packed
market and handed her a grimy, bawling, and very wet baby that apparently she
was supposed to kiss. Gods, it had been hard to extricate herself from that
with good grace! Later, when Aurian complained about it to Forral over a much-needed
flagon of ale, the swordsman shrugged. "Don't worry, love," he had
said. "It's only a nine days' wonder. The excitement will soon die down.
In the meantime, be glad that they're grateful, for once, to the Magefolk.
You've done your people a lot of good, and I hope Miathan appreciates it."
In
fact, Forral thought, Aurian had done the most good for the people of Nexis
through her influence with Miathan, for her exchange with the Archmage seemed
to have affected him for the better. To the surprise of the swordsman and the
merchant, Miathan had backed them on the Council when the first of the farmers
arrived in the city, complaining about a visit from Parric's warriors. Miathan
had sanctioned the foraging, and it had been the farmers' fear of the Archmage
that had allowed it to
succeed.
After that, word sped through the countryside as fast as it had flashed across
the city, and the troops experienced little resistance. Miathan was happy for
the Magefolk to take the credit given to Aurian for ending the drought, and
Forral had been relieved that relations between the Mage and her mentor seemed
to be back on a friendly footing.
Aurian
soon found Forral to be right. The people of Nexis had their own lives to lead,
and before very long she had ceased to be the victim of their embarrassing
attentions. Freed from their unwelcome curiosity and her new notoriety, and
with the Garrison prospering in Maya's familiar, capable hands, she and Forral
were soon free to resume their interrupted vacation.
After a
while, their days settled into a pattern. Sometimes they would simply walk
around the city and see the sights, and Aurian discovered a new fascination in
hunting around the merchants' booths, with their silks and velvets, their
jewels and perfume and combs. Now that she was in Forral's company, she
suddenly found herself taking an unprecedented interest in her appearance.
Though she considered the elaborate gowns that were currently in fashion among
the city's women too impractical for words, the landlord of the Fleet Deer was
more than ready to direct her to the best dressmakers, and his wife, who
considered herself an expert in taste and style, was happy to advise her. The
gray Mages' robes that Aurian usually wore were soon consigned to the back of
the closet in favor of bright, well-cut new garments, and she "was^
staggered by her own transformation. Forral was very tolerant. "You spend
what you like," he said, grinning. "The Archmage is paying for it,
after all."
Though
Aurian possessed more than her share of Magefolk pride, she had never been
particularly vain about her appearance. Yet the swordsman's reaction to her new
finery was both gratifying and disturbing. Time after time, she would find him
looking at her—but when she caught his eye, he would quickly turn away. To make
matters worse, Aurian found herself playing this watching game. She found a
strange new fascination in the white flash of Forral's smile through his
grizzled beard, or the play of muscles in his brawny, sword-scarred limbs as he
moved, despite his bulk, with the silent grace of the born
swordsman.
She would see his powerful, blunt-fingered, capable hands and marvel that so
much strength could be combined with such gentleness. She'd imagine them
touching her, caress-
woiiJd
check herseJf sharply,
in
Aurian s childhood. Since Forml's recurn, a new restraint had grown between
them—a tension, half guilt, half excitement, that underscored their friendship.
Yet for all that, they were inseparable. Each tried their hardest to pretend
that nothing had changed, though Aurian's heart would lift in the most
unsettling manner whenever he entered the room, and her senses were swamped by
a giddy, breathless feeling of happiness when he was close to her. But she had
always been this glad to see him . . . hadn't she? "It's all right,"
Aurian would tell herself, as she lay awake in the night in her small,
white-walled room at the inn. "It's only that we're old friends who've
been apart for so long. We need to get used to each other again, that's
all." And as time went on, she almost started to believe it. With
familiarity, the tensions between them seemed to be easing—a little.
On some
evenings, they would meet Vannor, or Maya and Parric, if he was in the city,
and spend happy hours talking and carousing in one of the city's many inns. It
was on these nights that Aurian found herself warming more and more to Maya's
company, and the two women soon found themselves well on the way to becoming
the^closest of friends.
On days
when the weather was fine, the Mage and Forral, and sometimes Maya, if she
could spare the time, would borrow horses from the Garrison and take a picnic
into the hilly countryside around Nexis, or hire a boat to sail the dozen or so
miles downriver to the sea. Aurian had never seen the sea before, but she loved
it. They would swim in the invigorating, strangely buoyant waters, and spend
hours basking on the sands. Her body lost the pallor it had gained from years
of indoor study, and her physical strength began to return. Hoping it might
help to get their friendship back on its old, familiar footing, Aurian, with
Maya's enthusiastic support, nagged Forral into agreeing to resume her sword
training. He was reluctant at first, because the accident of so many years ago
was still fresh in
his
mind. But Aurian knew that he was secretly pleased. She still had her sword,
which Miathan had returned to her, and the thought that she'd soon be using it
again helped to cheer her up when at last the vacation was over.
Finally
the day arrived when Forral was due to take up his new duties as Commander of
the Garrison, and the young Mage had to return to the Academy. Seeking an
excuse to linger a little longer in one another's company, they decided to
delay Aurian's return with a last shopping expedition in the Grand Arcade, an
interconnecting scries of pillared stone halls housing hundreds of little shops
and stalls that catered to the well-heeled section of the Nexis community. It
was said that virtually anything could be bought there—if one had enough money.
Most of the endless variety of goods on display were far beyond the means of
Aurian and Forral, but they enjoyed wandering up and down the brightly lit
aisles, planning what they would buy if they ever became rich.
At
last, footsore and hungry, they stopped at a baker's shop, lured by a glorious
aroma of warm, fresh bread. While Forral was buying pasties from the woman
behind the counter, a young man emerged from the back of the shop carrying a
tray of loaves. Aurian saw him stop and stare at the swordsman, his blue eyes
suddenly widening. As they walked away from the shop, Aurian noticed that
Forral was frowning. "Never mind," she said. "The vacation may
be over, but we can still see a lot of each other."
Forral
shook his head. "It isn'tjthat," he replied. "It was that lad in
the baker's shop—I'm sure I know him from somewhere, but I can't think
where."
Anvar
was disappointed. He'd hoped for some acknowledgment from the swordsman, but
Forral had obviously failed to remember him. But a man who kept company with
one of those arrogant Magefolk—even if it was the one who was said to have
brought the rain (which he privately doubted)—would scarcely have time for a
common baker's son. He shrugged, and set down the heavy tray. "That's the
lot," he told his mother. "I'll mind the shop now, if you want to
rest."
Ria
shook her head. "Thank you, dear, but I'm fine. Why don't you go now?
IJcnow you're meeting Sara this evening."
"Are
you sure?" Since Tori had bought the shop, Ria's life had become much
easier, but Anvar still liked to spare his mother whenever he could.
Ria
smiled, and hugged him. "Of course. It's almost closing time anyway, and
it's a lovely evening. You two youngsters enjoy yourselves—oh, and give my love
to Sara."
"Thanks,
Mother." Anvar hugged her, and taking off his white apron, he dashed out
of the shop.
As he
made his way out of the arcade and down to the river, Anvar couldn't help
reflecting on the changes that had taken place in his life since he had last
seen Forral. When Grandpa died, Tori had found a chest in the old man's room,
filled with clever, wonderfully detailed carvings of birds, animals, and
people. As was often the case, the death of the artist pushed the prices up,
and Grandpa's consummate works of art soon became fashionable among the rich
folk of the city. With such patronage, Tori soon had enough money to put the
next phase of his business into action. His idea was simple but cunning. He
bought the shop in the Arcade, and though the only premises he could afford
were too small for a bakery, he installed a single oven in the back. Stocks of
almost-baked loaves were brought down from the old bakery by horse and cart to
be finished in the little oven, and soon the mouth-watering smell of fresh
bread was wafting through the Arcade, bringing in the customers in droves.
Despite
the temporary-rhardships caused by the drought, the business had taken off like
wildfire, keeping the whole family busy. Ria and Anvar worked in the shop while
Bern and Tori labored in the bakery. Bern loved the trade, and set himself to
becoming as good a baker as his father. Anvar knew that his brother wished him
out of the way, so that one day he could inherit the business, and to be
honest, it only seemed fair. Anvar wanted to be a minstrel, and had no interest
in becoming a baker. But while his father lived, he had little say in the
matter.
Apart
from his music, Sara was the main consolation of Anvar's life. On these long
summer evenings they would meet down by the river and stroll along the
tree-shaded banks that smelled of damp earth and wild garlic. Sometimes they
would
AURIAN •
lo9
take a
bottle of wine and some of Tori's bread and stay out all night to make love
under the stars.
The
thought of his love made Anvar's feet fly faster along the dusty towpath. How
he longed to see her! During the drought, he had missed his visits to the mill.
His father had kept both himself and Bern busy, riding into the countryside or
scrounging round the markets of Nexis to find enough food to support the family
through the crisis. In fact, Anvar had been out of the city on just such an
errand when the riot had occurred, and he had missed the so-called miracle
performed by the young Mage who had brought the rain. Sara had been there,
though—his heart chilled at the thought of her exposed to the dangers of the
riot—although since that day, he could never persuade her to speak of it.
Afterward,
when they had started to meet again, Sara had seemed different, somehow. More
moody and discontented, less happy to see him than of old, and inclined to fall
into long and secretive silences. It worried Anvar a little, but he told
himself that her strangeness was probably due to trouble at home. He knew her
family had suffered during the drought, and wished he could have done more to
help them.
When he
reached their meeting place by the old stone bridge beyond the outskirts of the
city, Sara was waiting for him, her small body lithe and slender in a thin
summer dress and her long golden hair unbound like a blaze of sunbeams. Anvar
ran toward her, his heart pounding, but the expression on her face stopped him
dead. - j
"What's
wrong, love?" Anvar put his arms around her, trying to stifle his hurt at
the stiffening of her body and the way her eyes avoided his.
"I'm
pregnant. I'm pregnant, Anvar!"
"But
that's wonderful!" Her words had shocked him, true, but nevertheless,
Anvar felt a fierce, overriding surge of pride. Sara turned on him, her eyes
wild.
"Wonderful?"
she cried. "What's wonderful about it, you idiot? What will Father say?
This is all your fault!" Tears poured down her cheeks. "What am I
going to do?" she wailed.
Anvar
led her down the grassy bank to the riverside and sat her down gently, putting
an arm around her. "Don't worry, Sara," he said. "I'll ta^k to
your father. It'll be all right, I
promise.
Oh, there'll be shouting from our families, and a few things said about being
more careful, and what will people say, but it'll blow over. They know how
things stand between us, and they've always approved. We'll just have to bring
our plans forward, that's all."
"But
I didn't want to get married yet!" cried Sara. "I'd hoped that ... I
mean I—I haven't lived\"
Her
words cut him to the quick. Anvar stared at her, suddenly feeling icy cold.
"But I thought you wanted to marry me," he said. He took a deep
breath. "Sara, have you changed your mind?" He saw the quick flare of
panic in her eyes.
"No!"
she said hastily. "No—look Anvar, I'm sorry. I didn't mean it like that.
I'm just upset, that's all. And frightened." She stared up at him with
huge violet eyes. "Anvar, please. I—I need you."
Sara's
lovemaking that night had a frenzied, almost desperate quality. Again and again
she wanted him, as though to blot out her worries with the physical act. Anvar
had no objections. He thought he understood, and besides, the fact that the one
he loved was now bearing his child made her doubly precious to
him.
Anvar
awoke late next morning, cold and stiff and damp from the dew, and in the harsh
light of day, he began to worry after all, about what their families would say.
"Look," he said to Sara, "why don't you come with me now and
we'll talk to my mother. She's the best person to break the news to."
Sara
bit her lip. "Do \ have to? Can't you tell her, Anvar?"
she
whined.
"No."
Anvar took her firmly by the hand. "We'll have to face this sooner or
later. Come on—I'm late already, and Mother will have to open up on her own.
She never could manage to light that blasted oven." He set off quickly
along the path, with Sara trailing reluctantly behind him.
When
they arrived at the Arcade, a crowd of impatient customers had gathered outside
the shop, and Anvar and Sara had to shoulder their way through. As they
entered, Anvar saw Ria kneeling amid a haphazard pile of kindling and tinder,
struggling, as usual, to light the oven.
What
happened next would be etched on Anvar's memory forever, returning over and
over to haunt his worst nightmares.
AUR1AN •
111
As they
entered, he saw his mother take the oil lamp from the shelf and pour its
contents over the logs. "No!" he screamed, but it was too late. Ria
struck a spark and the oven exploded in a sheet of flame, trapping her behind a
wall of fire with her hair and clothes alight.
To the
end of his days, Anvar had no idea how it happened. Afterward, all he could
remember was shouting "STOP!" in a superhuman voice. A huge surge of
force came out of nowhere, flattening him against the wall—and the flames went
out. Immediately. Totally. Anvar crumpled to the floor, weak and dizzy. He tore
his eyes from the blackened, smoking thing that was his mother to see Sara
staring at him, her eyes filled with horror, her mouth open in a soundless
scream.
Someone
fetched the baker. Anvar vaguely remembered his father's hands around his
throat, and Tori's voice screaming. "You did this! You killed her!"
Still
in shock and sick with guilt, Anvar made no move to defend himself. It took
four men to drag the baker off him. Even when Tori was calmer, and had heard
exactly what had happened, he eyed his son with cold hatred. People in the
Arcade rallied round. Someone offered to take the weeping Sara back to her
family, and the cheesemaker from the next stall took Anvar and his father home.
Ria's body followed, wrapped in blankets, on another cart. A kindly neighbor
put Anvar to bed, and gave him a draught to make him sleep.
Anvar
was awakened by voices./Tve housed your bastard long enough," Tori was
saying, his voice thick with venom. "It was my one chance to get a woman
like Ria to accept me. She'd never say who the father was—I thought it must be
some merchant who was too grand to marry her after her family lost their money.
But after the way Anvar put that fire out—and a dozen witnesses will back my
word—it's clear that his father was one of your people, Sir."
"Indeed?"
The other voice was gruff and harsh. "This is a grave accusation, baker.
You know that matings between Mortal and Magefolk are not acceptable to either
community."
"I
know, Sir. But I think that was why Ria was abandoned when she became pregnant.
And what Anvar did today proves it—so with all due tesgect, he's your
responsibility now. I don't
care
what you do with him, just so long as you get him out of here. I never want to
set eyes on him again!"
There
was a long pause, then the other spoke again. "Very well—on condition that
you deny the whole story. If there was a lapse by one of the Magefolk, I don't
want it to become common gossip. Will you sign an indenture bonding him to my
service for the rest of his life?"
"I'll
sign anything, if it'll get rid of him." "Then I'll take him with me
now." A rough hand shook Anvar's shoulder, and he found himself staring up
into the craggy, eagle face of the Archmage himself! "Get up, boy,"
he snapped. "Come with me!"
"Get
a move on, fool!" In a temper, Miathan jerked the rope that bound the
wrists of his new bondservant and kicked his horse forward, increasing the
pace. The young man fell with a wailing cry, skinning hands and knees already
scraped raw from previous falls during his stumbling journey through the city
streets. The Archmage had ridden on for several yards before he realized that
this time, the boy had failed to get up, and was being dragged behind like a
sack of bones.
Miathan
reined in with a curse. It only needed one interfering guard to come along—and
he'd be the center of far more attention than he wished. .He dismounted,
thanking providence that the hour was late, and most folk were off the streets.
Anvar lay in the gutter—where he belonged, the Archmage thought
spitefully—sobbing quietly. "Get up, you!" Miathan unleashed his rage
with a vicious kick, but his victim simply whimpered, and lay
there unmoving. "Oh
Gods—this is all
I need!" Miathan muttered
savagely. With angry, magically impelled strength, he lifted Anvar and threw
him roughly across his saddle. He tried not to look at the boy's face, with its
resemblance to Ria. She's dead now, he reminded himself. Dead at
last.
As he
led the horse down the steeply sloping lane toward
the
bridge, Miathan found himself wondering how she had
managed
to hide herself and her son for all these years. Had she
*~-
-"""W npver have allowed her to bear this half-
r I
U» 1,,,,)
AURIAN •
113
been,
to allow himself to be allured by a Mortal in the first place!
It was
part of Miathan's Magefolk arrogance that he had nothing but contempt for the
Mortals with whom he shared his world and his city, thinking of them as little
more than animals. It was particularly unfortunate for Anvar that his discovery
had come at this time, when the Archmage was still smarting from Aurian's
defection, and her unfortunate, unanticipated friendship with the despised and
lowly race. Because he was anxious to retain her respect and goodwill, in order
to foster his future plans for her, he had been forced into the invidious and
humiliating position of making concessions to Forral and Vannor that he would
never otherwise have countermanded.
Already,
the Archmage was beginning to regret bringing the swordsman back into Aurian's
life—the very same Mortal who had corrupted his one-time friend Geraint with
those ridiculous ideas of rights for Mortals! But at least Aurian was younger,
more easily influenced, Miathan mused. And she must be influenced! This very
day, his plans had taken a new and unexpected turn, when the young Mage had
returned to the Academy. A mere month's absence had turned the child into a
woman! Miathan had been stunned by the difference that was not merely due to
her new clothing. He saw her sudden awakening, the new yet innocent air of
maturity, the awareness of her female self that cloaked her in arVaura of
unconscious sensuality. It stirred feelings within him that he believed he'd
put away long ago in favor of cold ambition.
How it
had galled the Archmage that some clod of a Mortal—and one that he himself had
summoned, at that—had been the one to bring about this transformation! Now,
suddenly, he found that he wanted Aurian for himself—and by all the Gods, she
belonged to him, not that unworthy, low-born animal of a swordsman! Still, he
had both the will and the opportunity to win her back—and in the meantime, he
had another Mortal—one to whom he also owed a debt of revenge, for daring to
exist in defiance of his wishes—upon whom to vent his wrath.
It was
night outside the Mages' Tower. Anvar stood blinking in the warm lamplight of
the Archmage's opulent quarters, still half drugged and hardly aware of what
was happening to him. His legs ached from climbing the endless spiral of steps
that had led to this room, and his body was scored and bruised from being
brutally hauled through the streets. His arms and wrists were in a fire of
agony from the merciless pulling of Miathan's rope, and he was confused and
terrified. What was he doing here? Why had the Archmage taken him away from his
home? Were the Magefolk intending to punish him for his part in his mother's
death? Anvar choked back a sob. Why, why had he not been on time this morning?
It was all his fault! But why had his father sent him away with Miathan? Did
Tori really hate him that much?
Miathan
propelled him roughly to a seat and stood glaring down at him with the cold of
a thousand winters in his eyes. Anvar began to tremble.
"So,"
the Archmage said harshly. "After all these years you've turned up to
plague me! I had planned to have you destroyed before you were born, had your
wretched mother not run away. Still, you may have your uses."
He
placed a hand on either side of Anvar's head. Anvar gasped with pain. It felt
as though his brains were being wrenched inside out. Doubling over, he vomited
onto the floor. "Imbecile!" The blow from the Archmage's fist rocked
his head back on his shoulders. Anvar tried to cringe away, but Miathan caught
hold of his hair and hung a sparkling, flatfish crystal on a silver chain round
his neck. "I will not tolerate a mongrel joining the ranks of the
Magefolk," he said. "You may have power—but I'll soon take care of
that!" He lifted his staff, crying out some words in a strange and
convoluted tongue.
The
crystal round Anvar's neck blazed with a sudden, unearthly light. Anvar
screamed out in agony and collapsed on the floor clutching at his head, feeling
as though the very life were being sucked out of his body. He was dimly aware
that Miathan was removing the crystal, and when the pain subsided and his
vision cleared, he saw the Archmage hanging it around his own neck with a smug
smile. "So much for your powers," he said. "Now they belong to
me. Just one more refinement, I think, before we send you where you belong, you
half-breed bastard!"
AUR1AN •
115
Once
more he put his hands on Anvar's head, and held his terrified gaze with burning
eyes. Anvar felt as though a band of icy steel were being clamped tightly about
his brow.
"Can
you feel it?" the Archmage asked. "It will be with you for the rest
of your life, Anvar. Normally you won't even notice its presence—but if you try
to tell anyone what you did today, or about your Magefolk heritage—if you even
try to think about it—that band will tighten, causing you unspeakable agony. If
you persist, it will kill you, make no mistake."
There
was a knock at the door. "Enter," Miathan called. A huge man with
greasy black hair and a brutish face entered the chamber. He bowed
deferentially to the Archmage, flicking a puzzled glance at Anvar, who still
huddled, groaning, on the floor.
"You
sent for me, Sir?"
"Indeed
I did, Janok." Miathan beamed. "I was told of your complaint that
you're short of help in the kitchens, and I have a new bondservant for you. He
comes from a baker's family, so he may be of some use to you. His father gave
him over to me—after he killed his own mother."
Janok
frowned. "Sir, you want me to take a murderer into my kitchen?"
"Don't
worry," Miathan said blithely. "He's a cowardly little brute at best.
Treat him as he deserves, and you should have no trouble. If he proves too much
for you to cope with, you may, of course, refer the matter to me." His
eyes were steely with an unspoken threat. '
"Very
well. Sir," Janok mumbled, defeated but obviously unhappy. "Come
here, you."
He went
to Anvar, and taking a handful of his shirt, lifted him bodily off the floor.
As he was dragged out, the last thing that Anvar saw was A smirk of cruel
satisfaction on Miathan's face. The Archmage was gloating.
Onaptcr 8
BONDAGE
s
usual, Anvar never saw the sly foot that tripped him. ____ He was carrying the
heavy bin full of meat offal and vegetable peelings toward the kitchen's outer
door when there was a sharp pain in his ankle. Then he was down, sprawling on
the flagstones that he had scrubbed only this morning, in a welter of blood and
stinking garbage.
The
Head Cook's furious bellow silenced the titters of the other kitchen workers.
"Stupid, clumsy oaf!" Janok's heavy boot caught Anvar hard in the
stomach, in the ribs, and in the face. Seizing a broom that had been propped
against the wall, Janok began to beat him, cursing him all the while. Anvar
howled as the heavy shank struck down repeatedly on his back and shoulders. He
tried to crawl away to escape the blows, but his feet slipped on the slimy
offal and he went facedown into the bloody mess, cracking his chin hard on the
stone floor. Dimly, he heard someone laugh. It saved him. Raging, Janok turned
on the watching servants. "What are you standing there for? Get back to
work, before I beat the lot of you. It lacks but two hours to the Solstice
Feast!" He threw the broom across Anvar's body and gave him one last kick
for good measure. "Get this mess cleaned up, you!"
Whimpering,
Anvar struggled to rise, afraid of the consequences if he did not.HHe felt sick
and breathless, his body clenched in a knot of pain. Gently he probed the side
of his face, where Janok's boot had struck. Nothing seemed broken, but his jaw
hurt, and he would have another bruise to go with the marks that Janok's fists
had left yesterday, and the days before. Using the broom for support, Anvar hauled
himself shakily upright. No one offered to help him. Stiffly, painfully, he
began to sweep up the mess. Now he would have the floor to scrub again.
The
four months that Anvar had spent in the kitchens of the Academy had been a
living nightmare. There were only eight Magefolk, but they were very awkward in
their eating habits. They wanted separate and elaborate meals at different
times and places, and refused to eat together in the Great Hall
AUR1AN •
117
adjoining
the kitchen. This made a great deal of work—and Janok gave Anvar all the worst
tasks. The Head Cook was an evil-tempered bully who brutalized all the kitchen
menials, but he had selected Anvar out for special attention.
Each
day Anvar scrubbed the greasy stone floors, peeled root vegetables, and washed
an endless succession of dishes until his hands were cracked and raw. Janok
made him scrape and polish the blackened copper pots until they gleamed. He
cleaned the silver, took out the rubbish, and cut and fetched wood for the ovens
and ranges until his back ached. All he was given to eat were kitchen scraps.
If Anvar dropped or broke anything, he was beaten. If he managed to drag his
way to the end of a day without getting into trouble, Janok found an excuse to
hit him anyway.
Things
might have been easier if Anvar had made any friends among the other menials,
but they were a miserable, surly lot, and letting someone else bear the brunt
of the Head Cook's temper suited them very well. Janok had made a point of
telling them that Anvar had murdered his mother, and kitchen gossip being what
it was, the tale grew with every telling. No one spoke to him, except to curse
him or give him orders, and they went out of their way to get him into trouble
with cruel practical jokes. When his back was turned, they poured boiling water
into the pots he was washing, so that he scalded his hands. When he cleaned the
silver, tarnished items would vanish, to reappear when Janok entered the room.
If he was carrying hot food or trays of 3ishr£s, he was tripped or pushed so
that his burden went flying. They blamed him for their own mistakes, too. If
anything went wrong in the kitchen, it was Anvar's fault.
Anvar
was in constant torment over what the Archmage had done to him. How had he come
to be here? Whenever he tried to remember what had happened in Miathan's
quarters, his thoughts were erased by the agony that knifed through his skull.
After a while, it became easier to believe that he was being punished for Ria's
death. Anvar was consumed with grief for his mother, and he truly believed he
was to blame. If he had been on time, she would still be alive. He might as
well have murdered her. So great was his despair that only the thought of Sara
kept him from taking his own life. What had become of
her? He
had let her down when she needed him. Anvar fretted himself sick over her fate,
and that of her unborn child. But he was helpless—imprisoned here with the
conspicuous Magefolk bondmark tattoed on the back of his left hand in indelible
dye. In the early days, before his spirit was utterly broken, Anvar had
considered trying to escape in one of the carts that brought fresh produce from
the markets to the Academy each day, but it was hopeless. Janok had him watched
constantly, and even if he had managed to get away, the penalties for runaway
bondservants were severe.
Now the
Winter Solstice was upon them, but the holiday brought no joy to Anvar. Once
they had finished preparing the Mages' Solstice Feast, the kitchen menials were
free to celebrate the festival. Casks of ale were broached, and a lively party
was soon under way in the kitchen. There was eating, drinking— lots of
drinking—and a great deal of horseplay. Drunken couples cavorted on tables
where food would be prepared tomorrow, and Janok had the youngest laundry maid
facedown over the bags of flour that were stacked in a corner; his flushed,
sweating face contorted in a slack leer as he lifted her skirts. Judging from
her muffled shrieks, she was not enjoying the experience—but Janok was king of
his little domain, and gave her no choice.
Anvar,
watching from his damp and squalid sleeping place beneath the stone sinks, felt
sick with disgust. They had excluded him from their festivities, and for once
he was glad. It was now, when everyort? was celebrating, that he missed his
home and family most keenly. Anvar crouched in his dank, cramped refuge,
nursing his bruises and grief. Had he not been late that morning, Ria would be
alive now. He and Sara would be married, and looking forward to the birth of
their child in the spring. Anvar wondered where she was tonight, and how she
was spending her Solstice. Overcome with despair, he wept. Anvar was exhausted.
His body was weak and aching from grinding toil and Janok's brutal beatings,
and activity in the kitchen that day had been frantic, because of the Mages'
feast. Despite the din, he eventually dozed. When he awakened everything was
quiet. The fire had burned low and the servants were snoring where they lay,
sleeping off the ale. Anvar sat up, his pain and weariness forgotten. This was
his chance to escape! At
AUR1AN '
119
last he
could see Sara, and set his mind at rest. Perhaps they could run away together!
D'arvan
thought the Great Hall looked magnificent in its festive finery. He loved this
vast, imposing chamber. For some reason, it had always been the place where he
felt most at home. Its double row of supporting pillars, cunningly carved from
dark stone in the shape of trees whose branches interlaced to support the
ceiling, had been decorated with bright-berried evergreens, and Magelight
blazed golden in crystal globes on the walls. The dancing flames of scarlet
candles were reflected in the polished wood of the tables, and a huge log fire
roared in the massive fireplace.
It was
late, and most of the Magefolk had already retired. Elewin, the Academy's Chief
Steward, was up in the gallery serving mulled wine to the tired musicians, to
fortify them for their journey home through the snow, and servants were
clearing away the remains of the Solstice Feast. Though traditionally only the
fruits of the wildwood were eaten at Solstice, Janok had outdone himself this
year. D'arvan had been staggered by the variety of foodstuffs served. Haunches
of venison and a roast boar stuffed with herbs and wild apples; roast pheasant
and swan decorated with their own plumage, and pigeon and rabbit pies.
Succulent trout from forest streams had been broiled with flaked nuts, and
there were wild roots and winter greens, dried mushrooms in a sauce of wild
garlic, and a mound of truffles. During the growing season, Janok's nfiost
trusted workers had scoured the woods near the city, seeking ingredients for
this feast, and had preserved fruits and berries in syrups and fortified wines
for cakes, tarts, and sweetmeats crystallized with honey. D'arvan sat back, and
loosened his belt. What a feast it had been!
Aurian's
yawn pulled him back from his thoughts. "Well, that's it for me," she
said. "I'm worn out. Forral almost battered me to death in sword practice
this morning, and I have to be up early tomorrow for more of the same, Solstice
Day or no. Good night, D'arvan."
"Good
night, Aurian, and—" D'arvan cursed the wretched shyness that always kept
him so tongue-tied. "And thank you for keeping me company tonight,"
he finished softly.
Aurian
smiled. "Thank you, D'arvan. I don't know what I'd have done without you.
Gods, but these Magefolk feasts are
dull!"
The
wealth of feeling in her words was a comfort to him. She had stayed with him
for most of the evening, telling him about her current Healing studies with
Meiriel, and her new Mortal friends at the Garrison, but all the time he had
thought she was doing it from pity, since Davorshan had so hurtfully ignored
his presence. His twin had spent the whole night dancing with Eliseth, dining
with Eliseth, laughing and flirting with her. He had eyes for no one else. Now
the pair were seated near the fire, lingering over their goblets of wine, deep
in conversation.
Aurian,
as if she knew what was troubling him, frowned at Eliseth and her rapt
companion. "D'arvan," she said, "It's none of my business, but
maybe you spend too much time with your brother. If you want, you would be
welcome to visit the Garrison with me sometimes. They're good people, you'd like
them, and I think you need a change of company."
D'arvan
stared at her, startled and lost for an answer. Go among a lot of strangers?
Alone? The notion terrified him. He had never done anything without his
brother! Yet he appreciated the kindness of her offer. It seemed she had
noticed that during these last months, Davorshan had been spending more and
more time with Eliseth and her friends.
D'arvan
twisted his hands together beneath the table, fighting despair. Davorshan had
said that the Weather-Mage was teaching him to bring forth some of his dormant
powers. If it was true—and his brother never lied to him—then he, D'arvan, was
now the only powerless Mage in the Academy! He shivered. How long would Miathan
let him stay, if he had no powers? Where would he go if the Archmage cast him
out? "Are you all right?" Aurian sounded concerned. D'arvan longed to
confide in her and ask for her help—oh Gods, he needed a friend right now! But
his crippling shyness kept him silent, and he didn't want her to blame his
brother. For some reason, she had never liked Davorshan. "I must be
tired," he prevaricated. "Perhaps I'll go to bed."
Aurian
raised a skeptical eyebrow, then shrugged slightly. "Good idea—that's
where I'm going. Anyway, think about
what I
said. The offer is always open. And D'arvan, if you ever need someone to talk
to—well, I'm available."
After
she had gone, D'arvan sat alone, waiting for his brother. Eventually, growing
weary, he went to bid his twin good night. Davorshan sat beside Eliseth, his
arm around her shoulders, their heads very close as they talked in soft voices.
The Magewoman was stunning in a gown of shimmering ice-blue. Her long hair was
intricately braided and coiled with a thin, interlacing silver chain. At
D'arvan's hesitant approach, Davorshan looked up sharply. Attuned as always to
his twin's thoughts, D'arvan sensed annoyance, a flicker of guilt—and something
else. Something wrong.
Before
he could identify it, Davorshan's shields slammed down, shutting him out for the
first time in their lives. D'arvan reeled as though he had been struck. He had
never felt so alone —as if a part of himself had been brutally torn away. The
isolation—the loss—the uncertainty—he was too overwhelmed by pain and confusion
to speak.
"How
dare you spy on me!" Davorshan shouted, his face flushing crimson.
"I'm sick of you following me around with that pathetic expression on your
face! Get away from me, do you hear? Leave me alone!"
D'arvan
was stunned by the bitter hostility of his brother's tone. As he fled, gulping
back sobs, he was pursued by the sound of Eliseth's silvery laughter.
Anvar
tiptoed across the floor of the cavernous kitchen, carefully avoiding the
sleeping bodies. The door opened silently to a swirl of fine, wind-driven snow.
Anvar grabbed an empty flour sack to cover his head and shoulders and slipped
outside, closing the door quietly behind him. The night was bitterly cold. The
darkened courtyard was empty, and no lights burned in the Mages' Tower. The two
guards at the upper gate were huddled over a brazier in the gatehouse with a
shared bottle, playing dice and keeping out of the icy wind that pierced
Anvar's filthy, ragged clothing as he lurked in the shadows. Every minute or
so, one of the guards would look up from the game, keeping an eye on the gate.
Anvar cursed. He had to escape—he had to! Butiiow? The bitter wind was rapidly
suck-
ing the
heat from his body, and every minute he lingered here increased his chance of
being discovered.
Voices!
Anvar jumped. His heart hammering wildly, he peered round the corner of the
building, to see the door of the Great Hall open, spilling golden light onto
the snow. A group of figures came out, all cloaked and hooded, and bearing a
variety of oddly shaped burdens, well wrapped against the cold. Of course!
Anvar remembered hearing that there would be musicians at the Mage's feast. Now
they were going home. Going
out!
Not
daring to consider the risks, Anvar hid in the shadows of the narrow alley
between the infirmary and the kitchens until they had all passed him, heading
for the gates. He darted across the intervening space, keeping low, and tagged
on to the end of the group, hoping his sack would pass for a hood in the dim
light. The tired musicians, muffled deep in their cloaks and only concerned
with getting home out of the cold, never noticed the addition to their number.
Nor did the tipsy guards. "Joyous Solstice," they called as the
musicians went through. As the gate clanged shut behind him, Anvar sagged with
relief.
There
was a new watchman in the gatehouse at the bottom of the hill. He was younger
than the one Anvar remembered from years ago. He was mulling ale at his small
fireplace as the musicians approached, and was more concerned with his steaming
jug than anything else. He opened the spiked iron gates with scarcely a glance,
and waved them impatiently through. Free! Anvar's heart soared^The musicians
passed over the causeway and into the tree-lined avenue leading to the bridge
that crossed back into the city. Anvar detached himself from the group and hid
until they were well away, before crossing the slender stone span himself. Once
across the river, he circled through the back streets to give the wharves a
wide berth, keeping a watchful eye out for patrols from the Garrison. Avoiding
groups of drunken revelers, he angled back toward the towpath and made his way
upriver.
The
journey seemed longer than he remembered. The snow fell thicker now, and was
heaping in drifts across the path. Visibility was poor, and Anvar was forced to
stay near the thickets on the bank with their clutching, thorny limbs—or run
the risk of blundering into the river. The exertion of his
AUR1AN '
123
escape
had intensified the pain of his battered body, and he shook with cold and
fatigue as the wind blew into his face, blinding him with its burden of snow.
Stubbornly he staggered on, drawn by the thought of seeing Sara again.
The
shadowy figure of a woman, cloaked and hooded against the snow, stood by the
mill looking down at the speeding, glimmering waters of the millrace.
Anvar's
heart beat fast. "Sara?" he whispered.
The
woman spun round with a sharp exclamation. "Anvar!" It was Verla,
Sara's mother.
"Please,"
Anvar begged her, ignoring the hostility in her voice. "I've got to see
Sara. Is she all right?"
"How
can you ask? How dare you come here, after all the anguish you've caused
us?"
"What
do you mean?" He grasped her shoulders. "What has happened? Tell
me!"
"All
right!" Verla spat. She shook herself free from his grip. "After what
happened," she said grimly, "Jard refused to let Sara bear your
child. He took her to a back-street midwife in the city."
"No!"
Anvar tried out in horror.
"Oh,
yes. The woman got rid of the babe, but things went amiss, and now Sara will
never bear children."
Anvar
sank to his knees on the snowy path, his head in his hands. "Oh,
Gods," he whispered. Sara! His child!
"After
that," Verla continued remorselessly, "Jard sold her in marriage to
Vannor." - j
"What?
The Vannor?" Anvar gasped. No one crossed the most powerful merchant in
the city—especially if they had heard the dark rumors about his violent past on
the wharves, before he became rich and respectable.
"The
same," Verla said bitterly. "He didn't mind that she was barren. He
has children from his first wife. He wanted Sara in his bed, and he was
prepared to pay. I don't know whether she's happy—we never see her. I hope
you're pleased with what you've done, Anvar. Now get away from here. I never
want to set eyes on you again!"
Anvar
was opening his mouth to protest, when a heavy blow cracked across the back of
his head. Stunned and half blind with pain, he collapsed onto the snow. The
last thing he
heard
was Jard's voice. "Well done, Verla! Tie him up, while I go-for the
Guards." The miller seized his hand, examining the brand by the light of
the torch he carried. "There's sure to be a reward for a runaway
bondservant."
It was
Midwinter's Night, the longest of the year, and D'arvan, lying awake, had
counted many dark hours before Davorshan returned with the dawn to the rooms
that he shared with his brother. D'arvan had been left in no doubt as to the
way in which his twin had passed the night. With his concentration distracted
by passion, Davorshan's shielding was fitful; his link with his brother was too
strong and reflexive to be broken on a whim. D'arvan had been tortured by such
thoughts, such feelings, such glimpses of Eliseth, lying naked on a white fur
coverlet. The chiming silver of her laugh—the burning of her touch, imprinted
on his skin as it was on his brother's—the slippery touch of cool satin
sheets—his own lone and shameful spending, which had echoed the climax of
Davorshan's frantic lust and in its passing left him drained and guilty, and
sick at heart.
Even
after the storm of Davorshan's passion had finally and mercifully spent itself,
D'arvan had passed a wretched night. His thoughts, still scattered by the shock
of the brutal, abrupt isolation from his twin's mind and the maelstrom of lust
that had followed, had been wavering back and forth between grief and anger and
guilt—blaming his brother, blaming Eliseth, and blaming himself. Davorshan is
all I have—that thought wove through and through the others in an endless
litany of despair. It's always been that way, but now he has someone else . . .
What will I do without him?
Throughout
their lives, the twins had been forced to depend on one another, D'arvan could
barely remember his father and mother—Bavordran and Adrina had elected to pass
from their lives when he had been very small, but the fact that they had chosen
to bear two infants, and then abandoned them so precipitately, made no sense to
the young Mage. The older Magefolk would never speak of it, but his parents had
not been happy together, D'arvan was sure—as sure as he was that his mother, at
least, had not wanted to leave him. He had a vague, confused memory of a savage
quarrel, and Adrina's face all
AURIAN •
125
streaked
with tears as she rocked him to sleep. He had never seen her again. With their
parents gone, the twins had been raised, in a careless fashion, by Meiriel and
Finbarr and the Academy's servants, and had very naturally compensated for the
lack of parental love by their devotion to one another—a bond that had been
suddenly, and savagely, severed by Eliseth.
Before
Davorshan entered their room, D'arvan had sensed his return. He always knew
when his brother was close. And though he dreaded seeing his twin once more, he
was glad of any respite from his anguished thoughts—until the brother of his
soul crept in, grinning smugly, and reeking of wine and Eliseth's heavy
perfume. He tiptoed past D'arvan's bed without sparing him a single glance.
"It's
all right—I'm awake. You needn't bother to creep!" The venom in his own
voice surprised D'arvan—but the anger had won out, after all.
Davorshan
lacked even the grace to look guilty. Not for a single moment did his
complacent expression alter. Shrugging, he sat down on the bottom of D'arvan's
bed, all openness and charm, his hostile shielding seemingly banished.
"You have good reason to be angry with me," he said. "Listen,
D'ar—I'm sorry about what happened earlier, at the feast. It was just that I
wanted to be alone with Eliseth—you'll see how it is, when you find someone of
your own. I never meant to shut you out so suddenly, but there are some things
that you just cannot share —not even with your own dear brother."
Even a
few short hours ago, D'arvan would have believed him. Would have trusted him,
and rejoiced that their differences had been explained, and dismissed.
Davorshan's mind was open to him once more, in all its old comforting
familiarity. Except . . . Acting on pure instinct, D'arvan swept up all the
bitterness and treachery and pain that had formed the dregs of this wretched
night, and fashioned them into a lancelike probe of will that stabbed
searchingly into his brother's mind.
Davorshan
had no warning—no time in which to react. "Curse you!" he shrieked,
recoiling and slamming up a block with which to foil the piercing attack. But
it was too late. D'arvan's probe had already encountered the hard, dark,
pulsing core of secrets that his brother had so cunningly concealed behind his
open guise. _ ^
Shaking,
D'arvan snatched back his probe as though he had been burned. Gods—why did I do
it? he thought despairingly. Why couldn't I leave well enough alone? This
second betrayal hurts even worse than the first!
"Why
did you do that?" Davorshan's sorrowful whisper echoed his thoughts.
"I want this—I want her, and nothing— not even you—will keep me from her!
But truly, brother, I had no wish to hurt you."
It
might have been the truth—Davorshan certainly seemed sincere—but D'arvan had
had enough of lies and treachery. He could not risk a third betrayal.
"Leave me alone—just leave me alone!" For the first time in his life,
he closed his mind to his brother, and turned his face away, staring
steadfastly at the wall through tear-blurred eyes until he heard Davorshan seek
his bed. It was the hardest, most painful thing he had ever done. To distract
his mind from the crushing weight of loneliness, he fueled his faltering
courage with his anger against his brother, and forced himself to think of
Aurian and her offer. Perhaps she was right—if he could no longer count on his
brother, perhaps he ought to meet other people. After the Solstice, he would
ask her to take him to the Garrison. Until then, he would simply mourn.
Chapter 9
A WARRIOR'S
HEART
he
muscles in Aurian's back and shoulders screamed in protest. The sword felt
unbelievably heavy in her tired hands. She stepped back to give herself a
little extra time to react, her blade lifted defensively as she watched Forral
through narrowed eyes, trying to anticipate his next move. It was a quick
sideways strike—low, almost taking her legs out from under her. Aurian jumped
back, parrying clumsily, feeling the shock of the clashing blades run numbingly
through her hands. She caught the quick white flash of Forral's grin through
his curling brown beard.
Lifting
her blade again, Aurian cursed the swordsman's tirelessness, cursed his
insistence that they practice even on Solstice Morn, cursed her stupidity in
drinking too much the previous night, and not going to bed sooner. Drat that D'arvan!
Sweat ran down stinging into her eyes and dripped onto the sands of the
Garrison's great, barnlike practice arena. Trembling with weariness, she forced
her sword up to parry Forral's lightning thrusts. Why on earth had she nagged
him to resume her sword training? She would never have believed that she could
be so out of condition, so out of practice. And four months of sweaty,
back-breaking torture on these sands seemed to have brought little improvement.
Would she ever get her old skills back? -
s
Forral
drove in suddenly, his heavy sword a flickering swirl of light as he employed
the famous circling twist of the blade— his own trademark, which neither Aurian
nor anyone else could seem to master. She gasped with pain as her wrists
snapped round, and her sword flew spinning from her hands to land some distance
away.
Forral
shook his head. "You're dead!" he said. Before Aurian had time to
react, he spun her round by the shoulder and whacked her hard across the
backside with the flat of his blade. It was a trick she was all too familiar
with—one that he used on all his pupils as an incentive not to repeat their
errors.
"Ow!"
Aurian wailed indignantly, rubbing at the sting. Tears of exhaustion
and/rustration sprang into her eyes.
Forral's
arms went comfortingly around her, one big hand kneading the tight, aching
muscles across her shoulders and in the back of her neck. "Never mind,
love," he said softly. "I know it's hard, but you simply can't afford
to make mistakes that will kill you. It's coming back to you, though—I can see
the improvement. You're making up a lot of lost time, that's all. Just stick at
it, and we'll soon have you back in fighting
shape."
Aurian
leaned into his chest, smelling clean sweat and the tough, scarred leather of
his fighting vest. His words of encouragement warmed her, and she was grateful
for the support of his brawny arms round her weary body. "All right,
Forral," she murmured trustingly.
Lightly,
he kissed the top of her head, and at his touch, Aurian's heart give a dizzy
lurch. A tingling heat swept through her body. Again. It happened now, whenever
he was close to her. Oh, Forral! She'd loved him since she was a child, but
after his return, the change in the quality of that love had left her baffled
and thwarted. She had finally admitted to herself that she wanted more, now,
than the affectionate comradeship they had always shared.
Aurian
tightened her arms round his neck and looked up searchingly into his face,
unable to hide her longing. As always, his eyes met hers for an agonizing
instant, then flicked away. "Come on," he said gruffly, stepping back
from her. "Vannor's coming this morning, remember? We'd better get cleaned
up for that snooty wife of hi*rV Without looking at her, he walked away. Her throat
tight with misery, Aurian retrieved her fallen sword and followed him out of
the arena.
Vannor
and his lady had arrived early, and were waiting in Forral's rooms. Aurian felt
a stab of annoyance as the elegant young woman wrinkled her nose fastidiously
at the sight of her in her battle-scarred leather vest and breeches. Aurian had
taken an intense dislike to Vannor's new wife. The slender, blond young woman
looked around Forral's wood-paneled, workmanlike quarters with an air of
distaste, as though disgusted to find herself in such a lowly place. Sourly,
Aurian wondered how, since the girl was so much shorter than herself and
Forral, she could still manage to look down her nose at the two of them. With
her own feelings still stinging from Forral's
latest
rebuff, she found the besotted look in Vannor's eyes as he gazed at his wife
very hard to take.
Aurian
was fond of the blunt, straightforward merchant. Short and stocky, his beard
and hair cropped very short, Vannor resembled exactly what he was—a former
dockside tough made good. His rough voice was still edged with the gritty
accent of the wharves, and he took no pains to alter it. But his hard exterior
disguised a warm, generous heart. He plainly doted on Sara. She was
magnificently clad in rich, fur-trimmed velvet, her hair done up in an
elaborate knot, her fingers, wrists, and ears dripping with the jewels he had
bought her. She looked flawlessly beautiful—except for her haughty expression,
and the hard, calculating look that came into her eyes whenever she looked at
her husband.
Vannor,
as Head of the Merchants' Guild, had planned this Solstice visit to the
Garrison as a courtesy to the new Commander. The Archmage, the third member of
the Ruling Council, was expected later. It was not a lively gathering. Though
Vannor and Forral were good company as a rule, the normally bluff and hearty
merchant seemed constrained by his wife's presence, and Forral was unusually
quiet, frowning more than he smiled. Aurian, nursing her heartache, was wondering
if she should excuse herself and go back to the Academy, when there came a
knock at the door. Forral went to answer it, and Aurian, relieved at the
interruption, followed him into the outer chamber.
It was
Parric, the Cavalrymaster/rhe leathery, balding little man was Duty Officer for
the day, and his manner was apologetic, "Sorry to disturb you, Forral, but
a miller along the river has caught a runaway bondservant. We've just brought
him in."
Forral
sighed. Aurian knew that he loathed the practice of bonding, but unfortunately,
he had been unable to influence the Council against it. The Archmage supported
it, and Vannor was forced to bow to the wishes of the merchants that he
represented, who increased their profits through not having to pay their bonded
labor.
"For
goodness' sake, Parric!" Forral said testily. "Why bother me with
this now? Just lock him up, and we'll deal with him tomorrow, artetushf
holiday."
Parric
looked uncomfortable. "Sir—I think you should see him. The poor sod's in
an awful state—beaten black and blue! Honestly, I don't blame him for trying to
run away. I wouldn't treat a dog the way he's been treated."
Forral
frowned. "Sorry, Parric—that's different, of course. We had better look
into it. I won't have people getting away with that kind of abuse. Who is he
bonded to?"
Parric
hesitated. "Well, it's a bit awkward, you see—"
"Come
on, man, you've seen his mark! Stop maithering
and
tell me!"
The Cavalrymaster glanced uneasily at
Aurian. "He's
bonded
to the Academy."
"What!"
Aurian was stunned. "But he can't be—"
"He
is. And it's a bloody disgrace, let me tell you." Parric's look was
plainly accusing.
"Steady
on, Parric," Forral intervened, putting his arm around the indignant Mage.
"Just bring him in, and we'll get this straightened out."
"He's
outside." Parric beckoned through the open doorway, and two guards
entered, supporting a limp, ragged form between them. The man stank. His
clothing was tattered and filthy, and soaked through. He was shivering
violently, and his skin had a bluish tinge. His face was swollen and covered in
bruises,
Aurian
was horrified. Who at the Academy had treated the poor man so badly? Suddenly
his eyes opened—the most brilliant, piercing blue that Aurian had ever seen.
They looked straight past her, and stretched wide in joyful astonishment,
"Sara!"
the man gasped.
Aurian
whirled to see Vannor's wife standing in the inner doorway, her face deathly
white. Drawing herself upright, Sara looked down on the runaway servant with
icy contempt. "Who is this wretch?" she demanded coldly, "I
never saw him before in my life!"
"But
he knows your name," Forral pointed out with a
frown.
Sara
shrugged. "I'm married to the most important merchant in the city. Lots of
people know my name. Vannor, take me home. This revolting creature is making me
ill!"
Vannor
shrugged helplessly. "All right," he said. "Forral, you'll
excuse us?" Taking his wife's arm, he led her out.
As they
passed the prisoner, he struggled free from the guards and fell at Sara's feet,
clutching at the hem of her gown. "Sara, please . . ." he begged.
With an
exclamation of disgust, the woman twitched her skirts from his grasp and swept
out of the door. Aurian closed her eyes against the naked hurt and betrayal on
his face. Sara was lying, she was sure. The man buried his face in his hands,
and began to sob. Aurian, galvanized by the tortured, hopeless weeping, dropped
to her knees at his side, her heart aching for him.
"Poor
man," she said softly. "Don't worry, we'll take care of you. And
whoever did this to you ..." Her voice grew fierce. "I'll make sure
it never happens again!"
Anvar
looked up at the call, red-haired woman. He could tell from her appearance that
she was a Mage, and recognized her as Forral's companion when the swordsman had
come to the shop, that day so long ago. Her eyes were flinty with anger. In his
horror at Sara's betrayal, he had failed to hear her comforting words, and
thought her rage was directed at him. Anvar made a strangled sound of fear deep
in his throat—then broke out into a sudden fit of sneezing. The Mage frowned,
and fished in her pocket for a handkerchief, which she handed to him. No
ladylike scrap of lace, this, but a large square of white linen that, judging
from the oily smearr, locked as though it had last been used for cleaning &
sword. As he blew, she placed a cool hand on Anvar's brow. "Forral, he's
ill!" she said sharply. "Help me get him inside. Parric, fetch some broth
from the mess hall. He looks half starved. Hurry!"
Anvar
saw the two men look at each other and shrug, then he was hoisted up by Forral
himself, and half carried into a snug inner room where a bright fire burned.
"Put
him on the couch."
Anvar
wondered who she was, to be giving orders to the Garrison Commander. Imprisoned
as he had been in the Academy kitchens, he had never come into contact with any
of the Magefolk.
"But
Aurian," heXfiJthy," Forral protested.
132 •
MAGGIE FURRY
So this
was the Lady Aurian, said to be the Archmage's favorite! Anvar felt sick with
fear. When he had been brought before Commander Forral, he had hoped to be able
to plead his case. But now he was back in the hands of the Magefolk—and who
knew what punishment the Archmage would have in store
for
him?
The
Mage spread a blanket on the couch and helped him sit, putting an arm around
his shoulders—right on the bruises where Janok had beaten him with the broom.
The pain made him cry out. In one swift movement, she ripped away the remnants
of his tattered shirt. Anvar heard her make an inarticulate retching sound,
then she swore viciously. "Who did that?" she growled, turning him to
face her.
Anvar
could feel her anger beating against him like a physical presence. She seemed
to grow in stature, and her green eyes glowed with an icy gray light. With a
sudden thrill of fear, he realized that she was not the Archmage's protegee for
nothing. He began to tremble.
"Steady,
love. He's terrified. Don't worry, lad, she's not
angry with
you,"
Portal's
gentle voice gave Anvar courage. "It was Janok,"
he
whispered,
"The
bastard\" Aurian exploded, leaping up and striking her fist on the high
marble mantelpiece with such magically impelled force that the thick stone
corner broke off in a flash of
light.
Anvar
was awestruclc^but Forral simply sighed. "Aurian,"
he
said, in tones of mild reproof.
Guiltily
the Mage retrieved the broken piece from the hearth and set it back into place.
"Sorry, Forral." As she passed her hand across it, the stone fused
together without a trace of a join. She shook her head. "I can't believe
this could happen in the Academy," she said. "Wait until Miathan gets
here! In the meantime—" She returned to Anvar as she spoke. "I'll see
what I can do to help this poor soul."
"Aurian,
no!" Portal's voice was urgent.
"Whyever
not?" Aurian sounded astonished. "I've learned enough from Meiriel to
be able to Heal—"
"It's
not that," Forral said. "He's a runaway, and—"
"It
makes no difference!" Aurian insisted angrily.
"Look,
love, I know it's hard, but Miathan has the right to punish him. If he sees
what's been done to him, it should go easier on the poor lad. Besides, the
Archmage should know what's going on in his halls." Forral's voice was
stern. "This has got to be stopped."
Sara
stormed into her bedroom, venting her temper on the door with a vicious slam'
that in a lesser home would have shaken the building to its very rafters. Not
here, though. Van-nor's mansion had been constructed by master craftsmen out of
the best materials that gold could buy. Despite the entire weight of her body
behind the shove, the heavy slab of oak swung ponderously shut on its oiled and
balanced hinges, and slipped smoothly into its frame with a barely audible
click. Robbed of its expression, the pressure of Sara's rage could only
increase. Screeching obscenities like a dockside fishwife, she picked up the
nearest object to hand—a white porcelain vase filled with hyacinth and winter
roses—and flung it at the offending door.
Sara
gasped, her rage stifled for an instant by horror at the damage she had
caused—the shattered vase, a gouge in the door's silken paneling, the crushed
and twisted flowers, and the water stains that dimmed the jeweled colors of the
room's rich carpet. Then her shoulders straightened in defiance. So the carpet
was ruined—so what? This place was hers now, as well as Vannor's. And she would
treat it as she pleased, It would serve him right if she tore his precious
hpuse apart with her bare hands!
As her
anger flared up anew, Sara paced the room, heedless of the splintered porcelain
and broken blooms that she was treading into the carpet's deep pile. How dare
Vannor take her to task for her rudeness in so brusquely leaving that uncouth oaf
of a soldier and that hoydenish scarecrow Mage! How dare he give her such a
dress ing-down—and in front of his wretched, smirking children!
But at
the thought of her husband, Sara's recalcitrance faltered a little. This had
been their first real quarrel—in all the months of their marriage, Vannor had
never before raised his voice to her. She'd been a fool today, she suddenly
realized— careless, overconfident, too certain that she had him in her
134 •
MAGGIE FURF.Y
power.
She would have to make it up with him, and as soon as possible. He was her
security—her wonderful, newfound wealth and luxury. Her protection against her
father, and what he'd done to her, against squalor and poverty and endless
brutal toil, against the scandal of having been pregnant to some stinking wreck
of a bondservant who was no better than an animal . . . As the vision of Anvar
rose up in her mind's eye, Sara began to tremble. Her shock at seeing him so
unexpectedly after all this time, her horror when he had called her by name,
had completely scattered her wits. All she could think of was flight—of putting
as great a distance as possible between herself and the bruised and filthy
bundle of rags who had called her with Anvar's voice, and beseeched her with
those blazing blue
eyes.
With
hands that shook violently, Sara unlocked the delicate lacquered cabinet that
stood by her bed and pulled out a crystal decanter that shot splintered rainbow
sparks into the room's wintry light. It was her solace and her secret—her maid
had been well bribed to keep it filled, and keep her mouth shut. On the
nights—most nights—that Vannor visited her bed, she would lock the door when he
had finished and gone, and sit through the long wakeful hours, drinking wine
and piling the white counterpane with all her jewels, in little heaps that
sparkled warmly in the candlelight.
Oh
Gods. She splashed wine into a goblet, drank it off, and poured again. I'd give
anything, she thought, if only this morning had never happened! "Xt last,
she knew what had become of Anvar. Tori had simply claimed that he'd gone, and
most people believed that he had run off in the aftermath of Ria's accident,
and left Nexis for good. Her parents, of course, had assumed that he was
fleeing his responsibilities to his sweetheart and her unborn child. Sara too
had preferred to think of his departure in that light—that way, she could
accept Van-nor's suit without any bothersome feelings of guilt— "At the
wine again, stepmother?"
Sara
spun round with a curse. Zanna! Vannor's younger daughter stood in the doorway,
glowering, as usual, through her unkempt fringe of thick brown hair that had
defied the efforts of a battalion of maids to keep it tidy. Sara bit her lip
in i vexation. How had the bloody
brat crept in so quietly!-*
AURIAN •
135
"What
do you mean, again?" she mocked, trying to brazen it out. The girl
detested her, as she very,well knew, and the feeling was mutual. The last thing
Sara needed today was the little wretch stirring up more trouble for her with
Vannor!
Antor,
the merchant's little son whose birth had cleared the way for Sara to marry
Vannor, was no trouble. He was too small to really know who she was or care,
and Sara simply left him to his nursemaids. Corielle, the older daughter, had
been easily managed. She was of an age with Sara, and the two girls shared a
similar golden beauty. She was also of an age to be extremely interested in
men—and not just the scions of the rich merchant houses that her doting father
had marked out as suitable suitors. A few occasions of careless chaperoning—of
turning a blind eye to the odd love note, and secret tryst—and Sara had won her
over. Not so with Zanna, however. Taking after her father in looks, the child
was as plain as a pikestaff, but she was too clever by half, and far too
knowing to be only fourteen. It simply wasn't natural!
"Next
time, you should tell Gelda to hide the bottle better when she brings it
upstairs ..." Though Zanna spoke respectfully to her stepmother when
Vannor was in earshot, her tone, in private, was pert and mocking.
Sara's
hands clenched tight around the fragile crystal of the goblet. Gods, how she'd
like to strangle the little bitch! When she spoke, her voice was low, and
shaking with fury, "Listen, brat—you mention a single word of this to your
father, and I'll make you sorry you were ever bbrnf Do you hear me?"
Zanna's
eyes, beneath that flopping curtain of hair that irritated Sara so, narrowed in
calculation, Vannor's blood ran true in her veins, all right! The minx was a
merchant through and through!
"I
might not," Zanna said carelessly, "I'm sure that someone as clever
as you can think of some way to make it worth my while!"
It was
all too much. "Get out!" Sam shrieked. "Get out now—and send
Gelda to clear up this mess!"
Zanna
looked down at the shards of porcelain that littered the floor, and her
expression changed from smugness to a stony hatred chat was shocking in one so
young. "That was Mother's
I
favorite
vase," she said in a small, tight voice. "Gods, I hate
you."
It was
the first time she had actually said the words aloud. Then she was gone,
leaving a shaken Sara to pour herself another drink and wonder how, after her
own failure to slam the door, the child could have managed it so effectively.
Anvar
fought to stay conscious, out of fear of what the Archmage might do to him if
he were asleep and helpless. The Lady tried to feed him broth, propping him
with one arm while she held the cup of warm liquid to his lips with the other.
He couldn't swallow it. His head throbbed from Jard's treacherous blow, and his
body ached all over. It hurt to breathe. His stomach was knotted in
trepidation. When he heard Miathan's voice, talking to Forral in the outer
room, he began to struggle violently, sending the cup flying and drenching both
himself and
the
Mage.
Then
the Archmage was in the room, towering over him, his eyes burning with rage.
"You!" he snarled, reaching out to haul Anvar to his feet. Anvar
cringed back, whimpering. "Miathan, no!" Aurian sounded shocked.
"Aurian, don't interfere," Miathan said sharply.
"The wretch has broken his bond, and must be punished."
"Punished?"
Aurian's voice rose in disbelief. "He's been punished enough! Have you
seen what Janok did to him?"
"She's
right, Miathan," Forral said. "This goes beyond the bounds of
reason." ~~:
"You
mind your own business!" Miathan snapped. "It is my business."
Forral scowled. "It's my duty to enforce the law in Nexis, and Magefolk or
not, I won't turn a blind eye to such brutality. Even a bondservant has some
rights. How would you look if word of this got out?"
Anvar
felt a surge of hope. They were defending him. They were both defending him,
even the Mage!
Miathan
seemed taken aback, but he recovered quickly. "My dear Forral, you
misunderstand me," he said. "Of course there must be no repetition of
this unfortunate incident, and I assure you that I will look into the matter—in
detail." He frowned at Anvar as he spoke. "You should know, however,
that this man is a troublemaker, and very dangerous."
"He
doesn't look dangerous to me," Forral said bluntly. "The poor
beggar's scared out of his wits. Surely you could pardon him this time,
Archmage. He's suffered enough."
"Please,
Miathan—for me?" Aurian added her own plea, looking trustingly at the
Archmage. Had it not been for the desperate extremity in which he found
himself, Anvar could have laughed at the trapped expression on Miathan's face.
"Oh,
very well," the Archmage muttered at last. "I shall speak to Janok on
my return."
At the
sound of the Head Cook's name, Anvar moaned. Not the kitchens again! He
couldn't! Desperate, he caught hold of the Mage's hand as she stood by his
side, and levered his weak body down onto his knees. "Don't let them send
me back there," he begged. "He'll kill me. Please—"
"Anvar!"
Miathan's voice was like a whiplash. "How dare you! Leave the Lady Aurian
alone!" He bore down on Anvar, who cowered away, burying his face in his
hands.
"No!"
Anvar shrieked. "Please! Don't hurt me again!" He screamed again as
Miathan's spell took hold, its icy band of agony clamping tightly around his
brow. Helpless, he fell twitching to the floor.
"Dear
Gods!" Aurian exclaimed, kneeling beside him.
Suddenly
the pain was gone. Anvar, able to breathe again, looked up and saw a clear
message in Miathan's glinting eyes. // you tell, you'll die! And he knew that
Miathan had removed the pain before Aurian could investigate. "It's all
right," he muttered helplessly. "I'm all right."
Aurian
frowned. "What the blazes was that? I don't understand ..." She
looked at the Archmage. "What did he mean, Miathan? You haven't hurt
him—have you?"
The
Archmage laughed harshly. "Don't be ridiculous! The man is clearly
insane."
"I
don't think so." Slowly, Aurian shook her head. "No, he's just
terrified, I'm sure. It's very strange, though. Where did he come from?"
"Really,
Aurian, is all this fuss necessary?" Miathan said testily. "Let me
send him back to the Academy, then perhaps we can enjoy the rest of the
day."
"Miathan,
you can't send him back to the kitchens," Aurian pleaded. "Not after
what he's been through. Wait—I
know!"
Her face suddenly lit up. "You've been promising me my own servant for
ages. Let me have him!"
"What!"
Miathan thundered. "Certainly not! It's absolutely out of the
question!"
Aurian's
eyes widened with surprise at his refusal. She got to her feet, confronting the
Archmage, her jaw jutting stubbornly. "I don't see why not. It seems a
perfect solution to me. Please, Miathan."
"Aurian,
no. I shall find you another servant, but Anvar is most unsuitable. What he
needs is discipline."
"Discipline,
my eye!" Aurian snapped. "He's had too much discipline, if you ask
me. What he needs is kindness!"
"I
will be the judge of that!" The very air seemed to crackle and spark as
the two Mages stood, eye to eye, glaring furiously at one another, while Anvar
held his breath.
"Aurian,"
Forral intervened urgently, "perhaps the Archmage is right. If he's truly
dangerous—"
"Don't
you start!" Aurian snapped at the startled swordsman. "I'm absolutely
sick of the pair of you! I'm no longer a child, to be constantly deferring to
your so-called wisdom." Her voice curdled with scorn. "I'm right in
this case, I know it. I want to help this poor man—to restore the honor of the
Magefolk. It's our fault that he ended up this way. But instead of letting me
trust my judgment, all I get from you two is specious quibbles! It's
pathetic!"
Miathan
looked thunderous. "Aurian!" he roared. "How dare you speak to
me in that fashion! Get back to the Academy
at
once!"
"I
will not!" Aurian shouted. "You may rule the Academy, but you don't
rule the world, and you don't rule me! My father and my mother left, and so can
I!"
Miathan
went white at her words, and Anvar was puzzled by the sudden flicker of panic
in his eyes. Abruptly, he seemed to shrink. "Very well, my dear," he
said. "Since it obviously means so much to you, Anvar is yours."
Aurian
seemed staggered by his sudden capitulation. As the tension drained from the
room, she blushed, shamefaced. "Miathan, thank you," she said softly.
"You're so good to me. I shouldn't have lost my temper, and I'm truly
sorry."
"So
am I," Miathan said feelingly. He held out his arms,
and Aurian
ran to hug him. "I'll make him behave," she promised. "I swear I
will."
Miathan
looked at her gravely. "Indeed you must. You are now responsible for this
man, and I hold you answerable for his conduct. If he misbehaves—he goes
straight back to the kitchens!" He glowered at Anvar. "Anvar, I trust
you will not abuse the Lady Aurian's kindness."
Anvar,
meeting that steely gaze, shivered.
Miathan
smiled coldly. "Now, before I permit you to enter this lady's service, you
must swear, before these witnesses, that you will not try to escape
again."
Anvar
froze. Trapped! The Mage was smiling at him encouragingly. Unwittingly, she had
trapped him with her kindness! He had no choice, and he knew it. With a sinking
heart, he gave his word.
The
Archmage was seething as he returned to the Academy through the snowy streets.
How dare Aurian defy him! And over his own, accursed half-breed bastard!
Miathan ground his teeth. He wanted to kill Anvar, to bury once and for all the
mistake of his younger days—but he could not. If Anvar should die, then the
power that he had stolen from the wretch would be lost for good. Miathan had to
keep him alive. He needed that power.
Aurian's
words still stung. So I don't rule the world, he thought. Well, one day I will—then
Aurian will pay for her defiance! And it was fitting that Anvar should provide
the means. Miathan smiled. With the additional powers he had stolen, nothing
could stop him. It was simply a case of biding his time and waiting for the
right moment to strike.
Miathan
was obsessed with power. His ambition was to restore the great old days when
Magefolk had used their power to rule the Mortal race. To achieve this, he had
wormed his way into the position of Archmage with merciless cunning and
stealth. He and Geraint had been friends—until Aurian's father, with his
subversive affection for Mortals, had been nominated as the next Archmage. It
had been simple to engineer the "accident" that had removed his
rival, but Miathan had not reckoned with the guilt that had pursued him at the
murder of another Mage. In atojjgment, he had originally planned to make
Aurian
his successor, but now he had evolved a new plan for Geraint's daughter. He
wanted her at his side, as his consort— and in his bed. A surge of desire
consumed the Archmage at the thought of Aurian. It had turned him cold when she
threatened
to
leave.
Miathan
now knew that he had erred in bringing Forral to Nexis. He had thought that by
using Aurian as a lever, he would retain control of the Garrison's voice on the
Ruling Council, but his plan had backfired. Because of her allegiance to her
Mortal friend and teacher, his pupil was becoming increasingly intractable, and
her loyalty, which he had fostered with such painstaking care over the years, was
weakening. Unfortunately, there was no way at present to solve the problem. If
he was implicated in Forral's removal, Aurian would never forgive
him.
Miathan
resigned himself to patience. Sooner or later, he would find an opportunity to
deal with the swordsman. In the meantime, he must at all costs keep Aurian's
love and trust. With Forral out of the way he would soon break her to his
bidding, and use her powers to further his ends. Miathan smiled to himself. How
difficult could it be, to rid himself of one man? Forral was only a Mortal,
after all.
Aurian
was weary but satisfied. This had been her first essay in the skills that
Meiriel was teaching her, but everything had gone well. Those long hours
studying the intricate workings of the human body and^ learning to channel her
power to repair damage and speed natural healing had not been in vain. Though
she still had much to learn, her first independent efforts had been a success.
As though dusting off her hands, Aurian banished the last flickering blue
traces of Magelight that marked her Healing spells.
Her new
servant rested comfortably between clean sheets in a room that had been
provided by a rather tight-lipped Forral. Now that he was clean, she could see
the bruises fading rapidly against his pale, fair skin. Soon they would be
gone, and the Mage blessed her powers that could work such miracles. His eyes
flickered open, and Aurian caught her breath at their vivid blue intensity.
"How
do you feel?" she asked.
"It
doesn't hurt," he said wonderingly. "It really doesn't hurt! Gods,
I'd forgotten . . ."
Aurian
swallowed a lump in her throat. How the poor wretch had suffered! "It
won't hurt anymore," she assured him. "I've taken care of it."
"Magefolk
don't Heal Mortals!" His voice rose in disbelief. "Lady Meiriel
wouldn't Heal my grandpa, and he died!"
Knowing
Meiriel, Aurian was uncomfortably aware that he could be telling the truth.
"Well, Lady Aurian Heals Mortals," she said briskly, "and you
certainly needed it!"
"Lady—what's
going to happen to me?"
Aurian
gave him a reassuring smile, trying to soothe away the fear that showed on his
face. "Don't you remember? From now on you'll be my servant, and I'll make
sure you're never hurt like that again. You're safe now."
"Oh."
He sounded far from convinced.
Well,
what did you expect from a bondservant? Aurian thought to herself. Gratitude?
She smiled at her own folly. If I were him, she decided, I probably wouldn't
trust me, either.
This
time he managed to swallow the broth she gave him, and soon afterward he fell
asleep. Aurian also needed to eat, to replace the energy expended in her
Healing, and after the appalling business of getting her patient clean, she
badly needed a bath herself. But she lingered for a while, watching him as he
slept and trying to shake off the nagging feeling that she had seen him before.
Anvar, had the Archmage called him? His body was long in the bed and broaH
shouldered, but dreadfully thin. Well, that could be remedied. He looked
younger than she had first thought, probably not much older than herself. His
face, even in repose, seemed melancholy, with fine lines between his brows, and
at the corners of his generous mouth. His jaw was firm, though his nose was
rather big, and his fine bronze hair curled into the nape of his neck. And
those eyes! Aurian had never seen such eyes on a Mortal.
Forral
entered the room, and found Aurian regarding her patient with an oddly tender
expression. He was rocked back on his heels by a violent surge of jealousy.
What was it about this bloody man anyway, that she had defended him so fiercely
against the Archmagep—and himself?
Aurian looked
up quickly, her
expression suddenly
clouded.
"I
didn't hear you come in."
"I
noticed." He couldn't keep the gruffness from his voice.
Aurian
winced. "Forral, I'm sorry I lost my temper with you. I'm really grateful
for your help—"
"You've
a warrior's heart, lass, to defend what you believe in so fiercely—and to take
on the Archmage, too! I'll always help you, you know that, but . . . Aurian,
are you sure this was a good idea?"
"Forral,
not again! Don't you understand that I'm no longer a child?"
Her
meaning was all too clear. She sounded so sad, so wistful, that he had to fight
the urge to tell her that he loved her, that he wanted her as she so plainly
wanted him. Forral pulled himself together. It was impossible. There were
reasons for the proscription against love between Magefolk and Mortals —reasons
that she had not considered. He had to protect her. He steeled himself against
the longing in her eyes, forcing himself to be genial.
"I'm
sorry, love," he said. "I've looked after you since you were a little
scrap of a thing, remember? Us old folk tend to forget how fast our charges
grow up."
She
looked away, and Forral knew she was trying to hide her hurt from him. He left
the room hastily, closing the door behind him. Leaning against the polished
panels, he swore softly and continuously for several minutes. How much longer
could this go on? He should never have come back! Seeing how things were
turning out, he should have left at once. He should leave now, but ... He
couldn't. He couldn't leave her again. With a sigh, Forral turned away from
Aurian's door and went off to find himself a very large drink. These days, it
was the only thing that helped.
Ohapter 1 O
A SHADOW
OF EVIL
hen
Anvar returned to the Academy as the Lady Aurian's servant, he found that his
life changed completely. He no longer had to suffer the bullying of the kitchen
workers, for the personal servants of the Magefolk lived apart from the
menials, and under very different conditions. The Chief Steward Elewin, a tall,
gaunt, silver-haired old man with a gentle expression, ruled the household
servants with a rod of iron, but he was scrupulously fair, and tolerated no
gossip among his charges. As long as Anvar worked hard and kept out of trouble,
Elewin made sure he was left alone.
Anvar
had a bunk in the servants' dormitory next to the Mages' Tower. Regular, hearty
meals were served in the adjacent refectory, and personal servants were issued
clean, neat working clothes every day.
Anvar
was torn between gratitude and resentment for the Mage who had rescued him. She
had saved him from the Archmage's wrath, and thanks to her, his life had
improved considerably—but by asking him to swear Miathan's oath, she had
trapped him here. But he had no other life, since Sara had rejected him so
cruelly. Yet how could he blame her? His fathering of a child on her had led to
her being sold in marriage to that brute of a merchant. Even-if she had dared
to help him with Vannor present, why should she? She had every reason to hate
him! Anvar was heartbroken and bereft. Now he had nothing—not even hope. All he
had was work. So he worked as hard as he could, wishing that his Lady would
give him more to do, so he would have less time to think. Elewin was pleased
with him, and Anvar welcomed the Steward's kindly praise after Janok's abuse.
The
other Magefolk took little notice of the servants. On rare occasions when he
came into contact with them, Anvar found Meiriel brisk and efficient, Finbarr
kindly but vague, and Eliseth cold and scathing. D'arvan rarely spoke.
Davorshan and Bragar were the two to avoid. Davorshan was simply a bully, but
there was a genujjD^ streak of cruelty in Bragar. He regu-
larly
abused the servants, who were all afraid of him. Even Elewin gave the Fire-Mage
a wide berth.
Anvar
had expected that the Lady Aurian, having settled his fate with typical
Magefolk arrogance, would have little time for a mere servant, but he was
wrong. She always had a smile and a kind word for him, and invariably thanked
him for his efforts. Her consideration earned her little respect from the other
servants, and this so puzzled him that he plucked up courage to ask Elewin
about it.
"It's
simple enough," the Steward said. "The household staff, I'm afraid,
is somewhat lacking in imagination, and the Lady Aurian differs from other
Mages, because of her association with Mortals. It violates what the servants
see as the natural order at the Academy, and it makes them nervous." His
gray eyes twinkled. "Personally, I find it refreshing, but don't you go
repeating that, young Anvar. And never confuse her kindness with softness. If
you take liberties, you'll soon find that she has the usual Magefolk
temper!"
Anvar
took the advice to heart. He was still wary of his Lady, who was one of the
hated Magefolk, and not to be trusted. He lived in constant dread of what would
happen when the tale that he had murdered his mother spread from the kitchens
to the servants' quarters, and thence, gossip being what it was, to his new
mistress. He wondered why the Archmage had not told her himself, especially
during their confrontation at the Garrison. But one morning, within a month of
his joining the household--staff, he found the other servants whispering in
corners and avoiding him, and he knew that the secret was out. Even the kindly
Elewin was looking at him with a frown. Anvar was glad to collect the Lady's
breakfast—the warm, soft, fresh-baked rolls that were all she ate at this early
hour, and a huge pot of taillin—and hurry away to the sanctuary of her room.
The
Mage rose early for her sword practice at the Garrison, and on these iron-hard
winter mornings her room was dark and chill. Anvar laid the table and lit the
lamps, and was cleaning the fireplace when Aurian, never at her best at this
hour, entered looking cross and bleary-eyed. Anvar busied himself at the
hearth, trying to make himself inconspicuous and praying that the rumors had
not reached her. He heard her footsteps
crossing
the floor behind him, the scrape of her chair on the carpet, and the sound of
taillin pouring into a cup. After a moment, she cleared her throat.
"Anvar—I
want to talk to you."
Anvar's
heart lurched, as his terror of the Magefolk blazed up within him, renewed. He
dropped the bucket with an ear-splitting clang, and to his horror, the ash flew
up in a cloud to cover every surface. The Mage leapt up from her ruined
breakfast with a blistering oath, her hair and face turning powdery gray.
Anvar
threw himself at her feet, quaking. "Lady, please—" he begged.
"It was an accident!"
"Of
course it was!" Aurian knelt at his side. "Don't cringe like that,
Anvar—I'm sorry I frightened you. I was half asleep, and that noise startled me
out of my wits!"
She was
apologizing—to him? Anvar looked up at the Mage in astonishment.
Aurian's
lips began to twitch. "Gods," she chuckled, "you look like the offspring
of a ghost and a scarecrow!" She ran her hands through her abundant red
hair, and was immediately enveloped in a choking gray cloud.
"Lady,
I'm so terribly sorry," Anvar said in dismay, as she coughed and
spluttered.
"Not
to worry. We'll soon fix it." She gave a flip of her fingers—and instantly
every speck of ash was back in the bucket. Throwing logs into the fireplace,
she ignited them with a careless gesture. "We Magefolk'are ^o used to
people running around after us, we forget we can do things for ourselves!"
Then her manner sobered. "Come and sit with me, Anvar. There's something I
need to ask you."
The
Lady led him to the table, and gave him taillin in her own cup. His hands were
shaking as he took it. Aurian sat down opposite, holding his eyes with her
steady green gaze. "Elewin tells me you killed your own mother," she
said bluntly. "Is it true?"
Anvar
bit his lip, not knowing how to reply. He was terrified of invoking Miathan's
spell if he tried to tell the truth. Besides, she would never believe him.
"Well?"
The Mage broke the lengthening silence. "Why won't you speak? Are»yeu
afraid?" She reached across the table
to take
his hand. "Look," she said gently, "I can't believe this, and
neither can Elewin. When he heard from Janok, who was apparently told by
Miathan, that you're a murderer, he was so concerned that he came straight to
me with the tale. It seems wrong to me too, Anvar. If you were accused of
murder, your case should have come before Forral, but it never did. I want to
hear your side. If you were wrongly bonded, I'll do my best to set things
straight."
Anvar
stared at her, unable to believe that she was on his side. "It's no
good," he said at last. "My father was within his rights to bond me.
I wasn't old enough—by a month—to be considered a man under the law."
"And
the rest?" Aurian said softly.
Anvar
struggled to hold back his tears. "How could I have killed her?" he
cried. "I loved her!"
With
infinite patience, Aurian coaxed the story of his mother's death from him,
though he couldn't tell her how he had put out the fire. "It was an
accident," he finished, "but it happened because of me. My father
blamed me, and signed my life away for revenge."
Aurian
shuddered. "Your father is a bastard," she said.
"No."
Anvar shook his head, his face burning with shame. "I'm the bastard. That
was why he did it." It was the closest he could come to telling her the
whole truth.
"Anvar!"
Aurian's grip on his hand tightened, and her expression grew fierce. "Listen.
Even if I can't do anything about the bonding, I won't have you unjustly
accused of murder! I'll talk to Forral this morning. At least we can clear your
name."
From
that day, Anvar's relationship with the Mage began to change. Aurian had Forral
investigate his story, and after questioning the shopkeepers of the Arcade, the
Commander ruled that Ria's death had been an accident. Aurian announced the
fact within the Academy, and at last Anvar was freed from the sideways looks
and accusing whispers. Only when it had gone, did he appreciate the extent of
the strain he had suffered, with the false accusation hanging over him, and
Mage or no, Anvar was truly grateful to his Lady.
Aurian's
kindness to him became more marked, as if she
were
trying to make amends for the misery he had suffered. Often, as he worked in
her rooms, she would make him sit and have a glass of wine, or some taillin
with her, and Anvar became aware of a new peril. As they talked, Aurian would
drop in a question about his past or his family, and he'd be lost for an
answer. She was so easy to talk to that he found himself in constant danger of
bringing the Archmage's terrible spell into effect. Sometimes he longed to try
to confide in her, and ask her help, but though she had done so much for him,
she was still a Mage, and Miathan's favorite, and somehow he could never quite
bring himself to trust her.
Nonetheless,
as time went by, Anvar became increasingly concerned about his Lady. She worked
too hard, as though she, like himself, were trying to drive away her troubles
with activity. She would come from her sword training, or her Healing work with
Meiriel, looking utterly exhausted. And Anvar, no stranger to sorrow, often
wondered at the sadness that shadowed her face. She began to spend less and
less time at the Garrison, eventually only going there for her morning
practice. Anvar noticed this, and wondered if Aurian's unhappiness was somehow
connected with Forral.
He knew
for certain, however, that Miathan was worrying her with his attentions. As the
year went on, the Archmage began to visit Aurian at odd hours—late at night, or
in the morning when she was bathing after her session at the Garrison. He plied
her with gifts, and was always finding excuses to touch her. Anvar saw the
gleam of possessive lust in the Archmage's eyes, and he feared for her.
Since
his terror of Miathan was undiminished, Anvar was unnerved by his frequent
visits. When the Archmage was present, Aurian began to find excuses for her
servant to be in her rooms, inventing any number of trifling tasks to keep him
there. Anvar could hardly blame her—in fact, he was relieved that she had some
instinct of self-protection, though he could see that she was confounded by
Miathan's behavior. Unbelievable as it seemed to him, she looked on Miathan
almost as a father, and simply could not believe that he would betray her trust
in him.
Aurian
may have been reluctant to face the truth, but Anvar had no doubts^A$ he
worked, he could feel Miathan's
eyes
boring into his back, and if he turned around, he was confronted by a savage
glare filled with loathing and hostility— and an unmistakable threat. The
thought of crossing the Archmage made him quake with terror. Miathan was not
one to be thwarted for long, and Anvar's only protection was Aurian, for the
Archmage was not ready to upset her by depriving her of her servant. But it was
only a matter of time. Anvar knew that Miathan's patience was limited, and
sooner or later, matters would come to a head.
When he
heard that Aurian usually visited her mother during the summer, Anvar was
tormented by fear. While he knew it would benefit his Lady to get away from
both Forral and Miathan for a time, he was terrified that she would leave him
behind, defenseless and in the Archmage's power. He was sure that if she did,
he would not be there when she returned. He doubted that he'd even be alive.
The day
before Aurian was due to leave, Anvar was sitting on her bedroom floor with an
oily rag in one hand and one of her riding boots in the other. He gave a final
polish to the soft brown leather, then set the boot down beside its companion
and turned with a sigh to the neatly folded clothing on the bed. H«~ was
supposed to be packing Aurian's saddlebags, but was find-j ing it impossible to
concentrate on his task. The Mage had sr'" not told him whether he could
go with her—she'd said that some reason Miathan had refused to allow it, but
she still he to persuade him. Anvar knew what that meant. He was surprised,
therefore, when he heard Aurian enter her rooms lil a hurricane. The door
slammed shut with a resounding crasl followed by a string of lurid curses.
Anvar shuddered. Obvi^ ously, Miathan had still said no. J
Aurian stormed
into her bedroom, still swearing, pulled up short at the sight of
him. "Anvar! I didn't thit you'd still be here!"
"I'm
sorry, Lady—it's taking longer than I thought." "Never mind—there's
no rush." Aurian returned to thr other chamber and came back with two
goblets of wine. Handing one to him, she sat down on the bed. "I'm sorry,
Anvar. The Archmage just won't budge! I don't know what's come over him
lately—he never used to be like this!"
Though
he tried to hide his fear, the glass began to shake
stil
in
Anvar's hands, and Aurian gave him a knowing, sympathetic look. "Don't
look so worried," she said hastily. "I know you're afraid of Miathan,
but you won't see much of him while I'm away. Finbarr and I were talking last
night, and he suggested that you could help him in the Archives. He's sorting
documents just now, and it's too much for one person to manage. Would you
mind?"
Would
he mind? Anvar felt giddy with relief. Ever since she had discovered that he
could read, Aurian had given him the task of organizing her own researches, so
by now he knew Finbarr very well. Although he was a Mage, Anvar could not help
liking the clever Archivist, and as Finbarr's servant, he knew he'd be safe.
Down in the catacombs, he would be well out of Miathan's way, though he
wondered whether Finbarr would have much use for him. Knowing his Lady, Aurian
had probably talked the Archivist into the idea.
When
Anvar went to take up his new duties, Finbarr's dirty, disheveled appearance
disabused him of the notion. The Archivist greeted him with relief. "My,
but you're a sight for sore eyes, Anvar! Aurian offered to help me with this
appalling c, but I insisted that she go away as usual. I've been worried jut
her lately—she insists on working too hard! Besides, all I is a quick brain and
an extra pair of hands—though you're as good to look at, if you'll forgive my
saying so. Come this '—I'm working right down on the lower levels." He
held his dusty hands with a grimace. "There's stuff down there at hasn't
been disturbed in cent-uriej!"
The
days of Aurian's absence passed quickly for Anvar. He to work harder for
Finbarr than he had done for his Lady, he found an endless fascination in
sorting the ancient docu-lents. The Archivist was delighted to have his
assistance, and lore than happy to encourage his interest.
Finbarr
was attempting to use the much neglected sorting "'of the lower levels to
further his research into his own pet subject: the ancient history of the
Magefolk. "If you look into the annals, my boy," he told Anvar,
"you will find that every Archivist has had his particular obsession. It's
an odd position, this—the holder's magical talents are of small importance,
except that they can be used to further the work in hand. My own
powers,
for instance, mainly encompass Air and Fire, but my predecessor was a
Water-Mage, and the work she did in drying out these very lower levels, so that
we can work in them, was invaluable. But what counts most is a love of order,
and an insatiable thirst for knowledge—that's what makes an Archivist!"
While
they worked, Anvar would listen happily as Finbarr expounded his theories on
the disastrous wars of the Ancient Magefolk. "So much was lost," the
Archivist would mourn, "in the destruction of Old Nexis. There are vague,
unsubstantiated hints, you know, in some of the Chronicles, that we were not
the only race of Magefolk at that time! Of course, we know that the Dragonfolk
existed, though our knowledge of them is scant. But certain sources—alas,
discredited as the blackest of heretics by many previous Archivists—hint that
the Cataclysm was actually set in motion by a Mage who could fly, if you can
believe it! Still others suggest that there were Mages who could live beneath
the sea, and that all these races had a part in the forming of the four
legendary Weapons of the Elements .
. ." He sighed. "If
only I could find something that might decrease our ignorance of those times
... If those four Implements of Power really did exist, then surely they must
still be at large in the world—and should they fall into the wrong hands, then
history could easily repeat itself . . ."
Though
Anvar, unlike Finbarr, refused to lose sleep over the possibility of another
Cataclysm, he hoped that the Archivist would find what K? sought. There was a
time, he knew, when Finbarr's pursuit of knowledge for knowledge's sake would
have angered him, given the poverty and suffering that existed among so many
Mortals. But the Archivist meant well ... In all honesty, he found Finbarr's
enthusiasm very contagious.
On a
bright, crisp day that presaged the turning of the season to autumn, Finbarr
decided it was time to tackle the lowest level of all. "I must make the
most of you, before Aurian gets back." He smiled. "She is due any day
now. I wonder what she'd say if I decided to steal you for good?" For a
moment, Anvar was tempted by the idea. He had enjoyed assisting the Archivist,
but more to the point, he had seen nothing of the Archmage while Aurian was
away. He'd be safer as Finbarr's ft,
AURIAN •
151
servant,
and he would also escape the torment of Miathan's visits to his Lady.
Nonetheless, he felt a strange pang of reluctance at the thought of leaving
Aurian. Lately, he had found himself looking every day for her return, and had
finally been forced to the astonishing conclusion that he missed her.
Anvar
followed Finbarr down through the maze of passages and stairways that had been
hewn out of the living rock of the promontory. They passed beyond the upper
levels where the Archivist had set lights of glowing crystal, until their only
illumination was the glowing ball of Magelight that Finbarr sent before them.
Their shadows, cast by the iridescent, silvery globe, bobbed and danced like
puppets on the rough stone walls.
"I
thought we would make a start in here." Finbarr ducked through a doorless
archway, and Anvar followed him into a small stone chamber whose walls were
filled with crumbling wooden shelving. The place was shrouded in dust and
cobwebs, and many of the shelves had collapsed beneath the weight of documents.
Scrolls and papers lirtered the floor in haphazard piles. The Archivist sighed.
"By lonor the Wise," he muttered, "my predecessors neglected
these lower levels disgracefully! It's a lifetime's work to put it right, Anvar
my friend—and that being the case, we'd better get started!" He felt in
the pockets of his robes, and grimaced in irritation. "Drat! I forgot to
bring my crystals with me to light our labors!"
"I'll
go," Anvar offered. "I know where you keep them, Sir." - j
"Never
mind. If you trek all the way up to the library and back again, we'll lose half
the day. Besides, it's a tricky route for the uninitiated." Finbarr's eyes
twinkled. "Aurian would never forgive me if I lost you in the bowels of
the earth! We'll manage." He tossed the ball of Magelight toward the
ceiling, but it went too high, splattering against the buttressed stone in an
explosion of sparks and plunging them into utter blackness.
"Festering
bat turds! I'm always doing that!" Finbarr's voice echoed, sharp with
annoyance, out of the darkness.
Anvar
caught his breath. His night vision had always been excellent, but he had never
experienced such absolute darkness. It pressed on him as though the entire
weight of the hill were resting on his shoulders. In panic, he turned to flee.
His foot
caught
in a pile of scrolls and he overbalanced, falling hard against the wall. The
shelves above him collapsed in an avalanche of papers and splintered wood—then
an entire section of the wall gave way beneath his weight, in a cloud of dust
and a rumble of stone.
Finbarr
struck a new light. "By the Gods, Anvar! See what you've found!" His
young-old face was alight with excitement. Anvar scrambled out of the wreckage,
brushing off rubble and dust. Beyond the wall was a chamber—no, a cave. A tunnel
led from it at the far side, promising further secrets beyond. Finbarr's eyes
glowed with rapture as he looked at the treasures within. Ancient volumes,
their gilded bindings winking in the Magelight, were piled in chests and
scattered across the floor, as though they had been abandoned in a hurry.
Tapestries lay stacked in a corner, and a pile of artifacts—personal belongings
by their look—were tumbled against the opposite wall. As Anvar looked, a
beautiful golden chalice toppled from the pile and rolled across the floor
toward him. He stepped forward to catch it, but Finbarr thrust him back.
"Wait!
There's magic here! This place is protected!" Seizing his arm, the
Archivist hauled Anvar out of the chamber. "If I'm not mistaken," he
said, "you have just made the most valuable discovery of our age! We must
fetch the Archmage at once!"
Before
she entered the Mages' Tower, Aurian took a good long look around the familiar
courtyard of the Academy and decided that she was glad to be back. Although
she'd enjoyed her visit with Eilin, she had missed Forral dreadfully, and had
also been worried about Anvar, and how he had managed in her absence. Once
again, she wondered why he was so afraid of Miathan, and why the Archmage
seemed to have taken such a marked dislike to him. If Miathan had truly
believed that Anvar was a murderer, it would explain the mystery—but if that
was so, then why had his attitude not altered when her servant's name had been
cleared?
As she
lugged her heavy saddlebags up the stairs of the Mages' Tower, Aurian found
herself wishing that Anvar had been there to help. Somehow, she'd been
disappointed not to find him standing in the courtyard waiting for her.
"Aurian,
you are
an idiot \" she told herself, as she panted her way up the steps.
"How could he possibly know you were coming? Besides, he has better things
to do!"
All
thoughts of Anvar vanished as she let herself into her rooms. Miathan was
already there, waiting for her. "My dearest Aurian!" The Archmage
stepped forward, hands outstretched in welcome. "I saw you ride into the
courtyard from my window. How glad I am that you're safely home!"
Aurian
stepped back hastily from his effusive greeting, dropping her saddlebags. As
Miathan's arms went round her, she felt herself stiffen with panic. How had he
managed to get into her rooms? She'd thought that she and Anvar had the only
keys. Had something happened to her servant? She flinched away from the fey
brightness of Miathan's eyes, the excitement betrayed by his jerky movements.
It had been easy, while she was away, to convince herself that his odd behavior
had all been her imagination, but suddenly she knew better. And now, at last,
he had her alone.
As he
left the library, Anvar saw Aurian's horse standing patiently outside the door
of the Mages' Tower, and all thoughts of his amazing discovery in the catacombs
fled. "My Lady!" he cried joyfully. "She's back!" He raced
across the courtyard and up the tower stairs, followed by a smiling Finbarr.
"No!
Get away from me, Miathan!" Aurian's cry rang out just as Anvar and
Finbarr reached_her.quarters. Anvar gasped with horror. The Archmage! He tugged
frantically at the handle of the door, but it was locked. Without thinking, he
threw himself at the door, hammering loudly on the wooden panels, and heard the
Archmage curse. After a moment, the door was flung open.
The hem
of Miathan's robe was tattered and smoldering, and his hands were blistered and
black with soot. His face was livid with rage. "How dare you interrupt
me," he snarled, raising his hand to strike, but Finbarr stepped forward
quickly between the Archmage and his prey, and Anvar blessed the Archivist's
presence of mind as Miathan drew back quickly with a stifled oath.
"I
interrupted you, Miathan," Finbarr said calmly, for all
154 •
MAGGIE: FUREY
the
world as though nothing were amiss. "You must excuse the servant's
excitement—we've made an incredible discovery in the Archives that you must see
at once." Without waiting for a reply, he pushed past the dumbfounded
Archmage and entered the room. Anvar followed him quickly—and stopped dead, at
the sight of his mistress.
Aurian
was backed into a corner, her clothes torn and her eyes blazing with anger. Her
hair, untangled from its intricate braiding, swept almost to the floor in a
tide of crimson. Her hand was drawn back like a claw, clutching a searing
fireball, and a smoking scar on the carpet proved that it was not the first. As
she saw Finbarr and her servant, the Mage extinguished the flame between her fingers
and leaned back against the wall, white and shaking.
Anvar
went rigid with fury, but Finbarr laid a restraining hand on his arm. "Is
anything wrong, Aurian?" He gave the Archmage a hard look.
Miathan
shrugged. "A simple experiment with Fire-magic that got out of hand,"
he replied calmly. "I was trying to help her when you arrived."
"Shall
I send for Meiriel?" Finbarr addressed the Archmage, but his eyes went to
Aurian as he spoke.
"That
won't be necessary," Miathan snapped. Then he turned to Finbarr, all
smiles again. "Well, shall we go and look at your amazing discovery? I'm
sure the Lady will join us, too." It was little short of a command, and
Anvar knew that the Archmage was reluctant •«> leave her alone.
"She'll
follow when she's recovered," Finbarr said blithely. "I know how
draining these . . . experiments can be. Come, Archmage—this won't wait."
He shepherded Miathan out of the door. Once the Archmage had gone, he turned
back to Anvar with a frown. "Take care of your mistress," he
whispered. "I'll deal with Miathan." Then he was gone.
Aurian
crossed the room and sat down on the couch, shuddering, her face hidden in her
hands. "He was waiting for me," she whispered. "When I got back,
he was waiting. He—he just seemed to go mad, Anvar! He said he'd waited long
enough, and didn't want to wait any longer. Oh Gods!" Her gasp was half a
sob. "How could he! He was always like a father to me!" Not knowing
what else to do, Anvar poured her a glass of
wine.
She took it gratefully, and he knelt at her feet. He could hardly bear to look
into her horrified, pain-shadowed eyes. "Lady—he didn't . . ."
Aurian
grimaced, and shook her head. "No," she said shakily. "He had a
damned good try, though! It's a good thing I know how to fight!"
Anvar
saw the gleam of tears in her eyes, and a startling surge of protectiveness
swept over him. Greatly daring, he took her hands. "Don't worry, Lady,
Finbarr saw what had happened. He said he'd speak to the Archmage.
Besides," he added fiercely, "Miathan won't get another chance—I'll
see to that! I'll stay with you, no matter what he says. I'll never leave you
alone with him, I promise."
"Thank
you for that, Anvar. I know it's hard for you, because you're afraid of the
Archmage—and after today, I can begin to see why!" Aurian shuddered.
"It'll
be all right, Lady. Surely he couldn't do anything in front of a witness."
Anvar wished that he could make himself sound more confident.
Aurian
sighed. "I only hope you're right. Otherwise—I don't know what I'm going
to do."
CxKapter 11
TRIAL BY
COMBAT
t's
truly autumn now, Aurian thought, as she rode through the deserted streets
toward the Garrison. The weather was fine and clear as dawn stroked the city's
roofs with golden fingers, but the light was paler now, the air clear and
crisp. For the first time in months Aurian wore her cloak, and was grateful for
it. Miathan had given her a new one, a luxurious mantle of thick soft wool dyed
her favorite emerald-green, but it hung neglected behind her door while Aurian
instead wore Forral's sturdy old soldier's cloak made from the tough oily wool
of mountain sheep. She knew it was foolish, but wearing his cast-off cloak
seemed to bring him closer to her. The swordsman was still keeping a discreet,
unbridgeable distance between them, and she was close to despair. She had loved
him for so long! Ever since her childhood. She hadn't known then that it was
forbidden for a Mage to love a Mortal, and now it was too late. How could she
ever love anyone else?
Which
brought her back to her other, far more pressing problem. Miathan. Since the
Archmage had first adopted her as his pupil, he had treated her like a favorite
daughter, and she'd loved and respected him as such, But yesterday's happenings
had changed everything. Aurian shuddered, unable to shake off a crawling
feeling of uncleanliness. Though she had never taken a lover, she'd been well
educated by her earthy friends at the Garrison, and the idea of sKSring
Miathan's bed filled her with revulsion. His cruelty to Anvar had first given
her cause to doubt him—and had he deliberately lied about the servant being a
murderer? Aurian knew that she would never be able to trust the Archmage again,
and her relationship with him was now tinged with an undercurrent of fear. Last
night, in the excitement caused by Anvar's discovery, she had managed to avoid
being alone with Miathan, but how long could she keep avoiding him? He was the
most powerful person in the city, and what he wanted, he could take.
Apart from
Finbarr, Aurian dared confide in none of the Magefolk. If this had been
Miathan's intention all along, any or all of them might be in the plot. To be
chosen by the Archmage
as a
consort was deemed the greatest of honors. Eliseth would give her right arm for
it, Aurian thought wryly. She thought of discussing it with Maya, but then
Forral would be sure to find out, and she wanted to avoid that, knowing full
well how he would react. He was no match for the Archmage.
It's no
use, Aurian thought despairingly. I should leave Nexis and go back to the
Valley. But though it was the only sensible option, she could not stop the
tears coming at the thought. How can I leave? What will happen to Anvar without
me? He belongs to the Academy—I wouldn't be allowed to take him. And how can I
leave Finbarr, and Maya and Parric and Vannor? And, oh—Forral! How could I bear
to lose him again? Weary as she was after yesterday's shock and a sleepless
night, her thoughts circled in hopeless misery, without ever coming near to a
solution.
Absorbed
in her troubles, the Mage rode through the great stone gateway of the Garrison,
scarcely aware that she had arrived. Too late, she heard the thunder of hooves
bearing down on her. Her training saved her—that, and blind instinct. She felt
the wind from the sword stroke whistle over her head as she dived beneath the
belly of her horse, one foot still in the stirrup, one hand clutching the reins
and the pommel of the saddle. Drawing her dagger with her free hand, she sliced
the girth of her assailant's mount as it passed, then hauled herself upright
and wheeled her horse around in time to see the other's saddle rock and tip,
dumping the rider into the dust of the parade ground, Aurian grinned. Parric,
with-wljjwn she had lately been training, sat on the hard-packed earth,
swearing horribly.
"Got
you!" Aurian crowed, her troubles, for the moment, vanished. "You owe
me a beer, Parric."
The
little Cavalry master gave her a sour look, and spat out a mouthful of dust.
"Pah! Beer, indeed! You were so bloody slow, I could have had your head
off if I'd wanted!"
"Rubbish!"
Aurian retorted. "What are you doing down there, then? Go on, admit it, I
won."
"Didn't!" '
)
"Did!"
She looked around for support, and saw Maya over on the archery range at the
far side of the parade ground, watching D'arvan shooting at targets with
Fional, the Garrison's crack archer. _J._
"Maya,
did you see it?" she called. "I did win, didn't I?"
Forral's
Second-in-Command—the slender, dark-haired young woman whose luminous, delicate
beauty belied whiplash reflexes and one of the most aggressive, effective
fighting styles that Aurian had ever seen—stood little over five feet tall, but
she had no trouble keeping order—even the biggest trooper feared her acid
tongue. Yet she was quiet and shy among strangers, preferring the company of a
few intimate friends. Since their first meeting so long ago in the Fleet Deer,
she and Aurian had become very close. What was more, Maya seemed to be
acquiring a taste for Magefolk. Since D'arvan had started coming with Aurian to
the Garrison, he and Portal's Second-in-Command could usually be found
together.
Aurian
was delighted that the shy young Mage had found a friend outside the Academy.
He had grieved so hard, at first, over Davorshan's defection to Eliseth.
D'arvan's early visits to the Garrison had been strained and awkward, and for a
while she had despaired, but his shyness had eventually been vanquished by the
discovery of an incredible talent for archery, of all things. Then Maya had won
his trust at last, and taken a weight of worry from the Mage's shoulders. The
twins, at this point, seemed to have called a truce; though they had moved to
separate rooms, they had apparently learned to live with the differences that
had alienated them from one another. And Aurian, to her surprise, had been well
repaid for her kindness to D'arvan, for she had gained another friend within
the Academy where she had least expecTed to find one.
Aurian
was brought back from her thoughts by Parric's voice. "Well, you heard
her—did she win?"
Fional
simply shrugged, and D'arvan, intent on his shooting, gave the two assailants
an absentminded wave. Maya, however, sauntered across to them, grinning.
"Parric's right, you were slow," she said to Aurian.
"See?"
the Cavalrymaster jeered. Aurian's face fell.
"But,"
Maya went on, "you were bloody effective. Cutting that girth was the
neatest trick I've seen in ages! Face it, Parric, you've taught her too well. I
give the result to Aurian."
"Ha!"
Aurian pointed at the little man. "Told you!"
"Bloody women!" Parric muttered disgustedly as he
picked
himself up, beating the dust out of his clothing. "Always stick
together!"
Aurian
dismounted with a smile. An outsider, she thought, would have been horrified by
the incident, but within the Garrison, such surprise attacks were commonplace.
The troopers were a close-knit family. They policed the city and its surrounds,
dealt with any trouble, and fought any battles or wars that the Council needed
fighting; and they were well aware of the dangers of their profession. Hence
the potentially lethal tricks they played on one another. They pushed
themselves and their comrades to the limits out of friendship—to sharpen their
wits and skills, and increase their chances of survival. It was very effective.
Now, thanks to Forral and her comrades-in-arms, she was a better fighter than
she had ever been, and the friendships she had made were worth more than gold.
Aurian
suddenly became aware that Maya was speaking to her. "What did you
say?"
"I
said, how was your visit to your mother?"
"Oh,
I don't know—about the same as usual." Gods, had she only returned
yesterday? It seemed unbelievable to Aurian.
"Honestly,
you're miles away this morning," Maya said. Linking arms, the two women
strolled towards the barnlike building that housed the Garrison practice floor.
"I've
been up all night, as D'arvan might have told you, had you been able to get his
attention away from his archery," Aurian told her. "There's
great-excitement at the Academy. Finbarr found some caves beneath the archives,
filled with old documents that might hold the lost history of the Magefolk,
before the Cataclysm."
Maya
shuddered at the mention of the long-ago magical wars that had almost destroyed
the world, and made a sign against evil. "Gods," she said, "I
thought everything had been destroyed!"
"We
all did, but apparently someone had the sense to hide this stuff away out of
danger. Although the Academy of that time was leveled along with the rest of
the city, these artifacts survived the centuries," Aurian said. "It
took us half the night to unravel the spells protecting them, just so that we
could touch them, and thea-they started to disintegrate. We spent the
rest of
the night working preservative magic so that we wouldn't lose the lot."
"If
you ask me, you should have left them well alone," Maya said darkly.
"Mark my words, Aurian, no good will come of digging up ancient
evils."
At her
friend's words, Aurian felt her skin prickle. The day seemed to darken with the
presentiment of some impending catastrophe. She shivered.
"What's
wrong?" Maya asked sharply.
"Nothing.
I'm tired, that's all." She tried to convince herself that it was true.
"Are
you sure you should fight this morning?" Maya sounded anxious. "Tired
people make mistakes, you know."
Aurian
stopped in her tracks. "Great Chathak! I'd forgotten all about that!"
"Wonderful,"
Maya said dryly. "This year Forral chooses you, out of everyone in the
Garrison, to partner him in the demonstration duel for the new recruits, and
you forget. It's only an honor given to the best warrior in the place. No
wonder such a little thing slipped your mind!"
"Oh
shut up, Maya!" Aurian snapped.
"Staying
up all night hasn't made any difference to your legendary grouchiness first
thing in the morning!" Maya teased, then her face grew serious, "I'm
sorry, Aurian. I can see that something's bothering you. Look, do you want to
talk about it? We have time. Forral overslept again." She made a wry face.
Aurian
sighed, as her friend's sympathy tempted her to spill out all her worries. With
an effort she pulled herself together. "Thanks, Maya, but it's something
I'll have to sort out for myself," she said. "If we have time,
though, I could kill for some tat//in!"
As they
sat in the deserted mess hall cradling their steaming cups, Maya returned to
the attack. "It's not this business with Forral, is it?" she
persisted.
"What?"
For an instant Aurian thought her friend had discovered her feelings for the
swordsman, but Maya's next words disabused her. "He's managed to hide it
from most of the Garrison, but no one can drink like that without it coming to
light sooner or later."
Aurian's
heart sank. "How long has this been going on?"
Maya
shrugged. "Weeks—months, really. But lately it's been getting worse, and
as Forral's friend, as well as his deputy, I'm worried. He's losing his edge,
Aurian. I can see it already, and you know what it's like around here. Sooner
or later somebody will pull a stunt on him like Parric did to you this morning,
and he's going to get hurt." Maya stopped short at the horrified
expression on Aurian's face. "Damn my big mouth! You didn't know, did
you?"
"It's
all right," Aurian said weakly. "I wish you'd told me sooner. Maybe I
can talk to him about it." /
"Thanks,
Aurian. I'm sorry to burden you with this, but he might listen to you.
He—" Maya suddenly shut her mouth, her eyes narrowing. She stood up abruptly.
"Come on," she said, "It's time we were going."
The
banks of wooden benches around the practice floor were packed to capacity. The
new recruits sat on one side, and the remaining seats were packed with every
off-duty member of the Garrison who could squeeze in. The annual
no-holds-barred exhibition fight, to show the newcomers what would eventually
be expected of them, was always spectacular, and no one wanted to miss seeing
the world's greatest swordsman in action—especially this year. Forral always
chose the best warrior as his opponent, and in nominating Aurian he had risked
the charge of favoritism. The troopers, however, knew better, and the
wagering—strictly illegal—on the fight was heavier than usual.
The
atmosphere was tense with excitement as Aurian entered the arena. She'd done
the exercises and meditations to prepare her body and mind for the coming
fight, but still she found herself glancing worriedly at Forral as he entered.
Apart from a slight puffiness about the eyes, he seemed well enough, and Aurian
forced herself to put Maya's confidence out of her mind until later. The two
contestants, clad alike in sleeveless leather fighting vests, leather breeches,
and soft boots, bowed to each other formally, and the fight began.
Aurian circled
warily, knowing better than to commit herself too hastily with a warrior of
Forral's caliber. Suddenly he lunged, finding an opening she could have sworn
was never there. She leapt back, feeling his sword's very tip graze the tough
leather of her vest just over her ribs. Good thing she was fast on her feet.
She-feigned a stumble, then drove in to one
side. A
trickle of blood appeared on Forral's left arm, and the audience's startled
gasp echoed Aurian's own. First blood to her, and so soon! He should never have
fallen for an old trick like that. She had to do something. She drove in again,
straight this time. Forral blocked her blow with his upraised sword, and they
strained against each other, nose to nose, blades locked. Aurian heard the
spectators gasp again. They thought she had made an error in closing with the
burlier, stronger man, but her move had been deliberate. "Slowing up, old
man?" she taunted softly. "Today's the day I beat you, Forral."
She saw
shock and anger flick across his face, but there was no time for more. In a
whirling flurry of steel he disengaged, almost wrenching Aurian's blade from
her hand. Then the fight was on in earnest. To Aurian, time seemed to slow as
she and Forral wove their intricate dance of death across the sands. All other
concerns were forgotten as the world narrowed to herself, her opponent, and the
gleaming steel they wielded.
Coronach
screamed its death song as it clove the air, and Aurian exulted with the
blade—and became the blade with its clean, sharp flicker followed by the
jarring impact that ran up her arms as the two swords clashed again and again.
She registered the warm trickle of blood from a dozen minor wounds, then forgot
them. Forral was also bleeding in several places. He was red-faced and panting
now, his movements less fluent than her own. With a sudden shock, Aurian
realized that she could beat him, though the split second's distraction almost
cost her the fight. She saw Forral's downswing just in time, tucked in her head
and rolled, coming up again, sword still in hand, to press the attack. Step by
step, she began to force him backward.
The
awareness that he was losing began to dawn on Forral's face, and with it, the
atmosphere of the fight was changed. He was proud of her—Aurian knew it as
though she had picked the thought from his mind. As they fought, the air was
charged with a tension between them, a bond so close that they were almost
fighting as one, and Aurian knew that they were no longer fighting against each
other—they were fighting with one another, though each was striving their
utmost to win. Despite her wounds and the tiredness that was creeping over her,
the feeling was like heady wine. A slow smile spread across Forral's
face,
and she found herself grinning back in answer. Never had they been so utterly
together.
The
fight went down in Garrison legend. Those fortunate enough to witness it said
afterward that the moves were so fast that they could hardly be seen. No one
knew how long it took —Aurian lost all track of time in the exhilaration of the
contest. Then, abruptly, it was over. Forral was sprawled on the sand at her
feet, the tip of her sword at his throat.
The
audience was stunned into silence as Aurian lifted her blade to salute him,
sagging with exhaustion as the tension of the fight drained from her limbs.
Leaning on her sword, she put out a hand to help Forral to his feet. As he
rose, their eyes met, and in that one glance, all the words, all the feelings
that they had hidden in their hearts for so long, passed between them. There
was no more hiding now. Supporting each other, they left the arena. The crowd,
as if released from a spell, leapt to its feet and burst into tumultuous
cheers. Aurian exchanged a startled look with Forral. They had both forgotten
all about the crowd.
Without
a word, they limped back to Forral's quarters. Before the door had time to
close, they were in each other's arms. They made love right there on the
floor—blood, sweat, sand, and all. The touch of Forral's hands sent delightful
shivers over Aurian's skin as he discarded her bloodstained clothing, and his
own. She remembered crying out once, as he first penetrated her, and later she
found bruises on his shoulders where her fingers had clenched in that
instam>of pain. Forral cried out as his body tensed and shuddered; he had
longed for this moment for so many years, he could delay no longer. Then he
relaxed against her, kissing her eyes, her neck, her mouth. Aurian moaned,
still tense, wanting . . . She felt his hand caress her breasts, her thighs,
then between her thighs, and as he brought her to her own release he entered
her once more, and this time, when the moment came, they were together; their
passion lasting and deep and strong with friendship and respect and the deep,
deep joy of an old love turned new.
They
lay in each other's arms, letting the world drift slowly back to them. Aurian
was filled with awe. She had passed through the most important event in a
woman's life— and Forral loved her. JSJpt as the young girl he had known, but
i
as a
woman. She felt transformed, and so, somehow, was he. Aurian felt unaccountably
shy in the presence of this muscular, hairy man—her lover. Then he turned to
her, his face alight with tenderness, and he was Forral again, whom she had
always loved and trusted.
"Ah,
love," he murmured, "if you only knew . . ."
Aurian
reached out to touch his face. "I've known ever since I was a little girl.
I told you then, remember?"
"Aye,
so you did. 1 thought it was just a childish fancy, though. I didn't take into
account how stubborn you can be, And what a fighter! Gods, but I was proud of
you today!"
"You
taught me, Forral—and now you've taught me something else." Aunan's eyes
danced. "Who do you think won this time, then?"
"Wretch!"
Forral laughed. "Who do you think won?"
"I
think," Aurian said happily, "it was a draw." And she kissed
him.
They
bathed, and doctored each other's wounds from the duel. Aurian wanted no
magical Healing today. She had magic of another kind, and every one of these
scars was precious to her. None of the cuts was serious, but now that Aurian
was noticing them, they stung. She was beginning to stiffen up after being
sweated up in a battle then making love on a drafty floor. But it made no difference.
She and Forral were stupefied with wonder. They could hardly stop touching each
other, and gazing into one another's^eyes. To Aurian it was like coming home.
Their
ministrations might have developed into something more, but they were
interrupted by a discreet knock on the door. Forral swore, and went to answer
it. No one was there, but a large tray, laden with food and drink, had been
left on the floor. As Forral put it on the table, Aurian spotted a slip of
folded paper propped against a flask of wine. Forral opened it, and burst out
laughing. "I might have known!" He handed the note to Aurian, who
recognized Maya's neat, compressed hand. "About bloody time!" it
said.
After
they had eaten, they decided to see if their love felt as good between clean
sheets. It was even better. Dusk found them sitting up in bed, sipping peach
brandy as the sound of
Maya's
voice drilling the hapless new recruits in the parade ground drifted through
the open window.
Aurian
sipped the mellow spirit. The warm glow, as it trickled down her throat,
matched the glow she felt inside. But it reminded her of more serious matters,
and she turned to Forral. It was best to get things right out in the open.
"Why
have you started drinking so much?" she asked him.
Forral
almost dropped the glass. His face flushed guiltily. "Who told you?"
"Maya.
She's worried, Forral, and so am I."
"Gods,
does that wretched woman know everything? Between the two of you, a man doesn't
stand a chance!"
"That's
because we care about you," Aurian said softly,
Forral
put his arm round her, "I know, love, and I'm sorry, A man gets defensive
when he knows he's been acting like a fool. It was just—well, it was you."
"Me?"
He
nodded, "I don't know when I stopped thinking of you as a child, but when
I did—well, I've had women before . . ."
"Oh?"
Aurian's voice had a dangerous edge. His previous lovers were the last thing
she wanted to discuss right now!
"But
not for a long time," Forral said hastily, ruffling her hair. "Anyway,
I knew you felt the same, I tried to avoid this happening, to protect you, but
I knew I was hurting you, and it hurt me too—-and so I started drinking,"
"Well,
why didn't you say something?" Aurian demanded, "Think of the time
we've wasted!" j
Forral
sighed. "Look, let's talk about this another time. We've been so happy
today, I don't want to spoil it."
"No,"
Aurian said fiercely, "I want to know. You said yourself that I'm not a
child anymore. Is it something to do with this stupid Mage—Mortal proscription?
Because I've already thought about that, and I don't care. If need be, we can
go away together. Miathan doesn't own the world."
"No,
it's not Miathan, though we'll have trouble enough when he finds out about
this. But there's something that you haven't considered." Forral's face
looked very grave. "Aurian, you're Mageborn. Unless something kills you,
you can live as long as you want. It's different for me—I'm a Mortal. I'm not a
young man—I'm over forty now—and even if I survive the
dangers
of a warrior's life, how many years do you think I'll have left? I tried to
stop this from happening because I love you, and all too soon I'll be dead, and
I can't bear to think of you left alone to grieve."
Aurian
felt a dizzy lurch in the pit of her stomach. She had never considered Forral's
mortality. As she stared at him in horror, the room seemed to vanish around
her, and she felt the same premonitory shiver of dread that she had experienced
that morning. It seemed as though his features had been overlaid with a vision
of that same dear face, but pale and still, the eyes closed in the sleep of
death.
"No!"
Her own tearing cry brought her back to reality. The vision vanished as she
buried herself in Forral's arms, sobbing.
He held
her tightly, and it seemed as though his warrior's strength were flowing into
her. She stiffened her spine and wiped her eyes, and her chin went up in the
old stubborn gesture. "If grief is the price of our love," she said,
"then I'll pay it. Not willingly, maybe, but in full. I love you, Forral.
I've waited years for this, and I'm not losing you now. Even Magefolk don't
live forever. We may be parted for a while, but someday I'll find you again, I
promise, in the worlds Beyond. I already have Miathan to fight—I'll take on
Death too, if need be."
There
were tears in Forral's eyes, but he smiled. "My warrior," he said
gruffly. "I'm^lad you're on my side."
"Always.
And I'll be there for a long time yet!"
Forral
hugged her. "The Gods help anyone who tries to come between us. One thing
though, love. When I'm dead—"
"Don't
say that!" Aurian cried.
"Just
this once," Forral said firmly, "and I want you to remember what I'm
going to tell you now. You don't know grief yet, but I do, and I want to warn
you. When I die, at first you may want to follow me. Don't. You've been blessed
with the gift of long life, Aurian, and many other gifts besides. It would be a
grave sin to throw those gifts away. I can't go on with our love if it will rob
you of your future. No, love—when I'm gone, I want you to find someone else, if
you can, and be happy."
"How
can I?" Aurian protested bitterly. "How could you ask such a thing of
me?"
"Because
I love you, and I don't want you to go through the years alone. That would be
foolish and unfair. I've seen people waste their lives moping around the graves
of their loved ones. Don't you ever make that mistake, because I won't be
there. I'll be with you, wherever you are, in your heart. If I ever catch you
at my graveside, I'll—I'll make it rain on you, see if I don't!"
Despite
her anguish, Aurian had to smile at that, and as the moment lightened, they
turned to talk of happier things. But Aurian kept his words in her heart. She
felt older now, and sadder, but stronger and more determined than ever. Now
that she understood its transience, her love for Forral was bittersweet, but
infinitely precious.
Miathan
had missed Aurian the previous day. As soon as she entered the room, hand in
hand with Forral, he knew where she had been—and why. Forral did not bow.
"Archmage," he said calmly, "Aurian and I have become
lovers."
At the
words of this upstart Mortal, Miarhan felt his guts twist with icy rage. Aurian
met him eye to eye, her face pale but her expression unrepentant. He turned his
fury on Forral. "Lawbreaker!" he hissed, his voice shaking wi.th
anger. "Seducer! Transgressor!"
"What?"
Aurian was aflame with indignation. "You dare accuse Forral—" She bit
off her-wojds with a sideways look at the warrior, and Miathan saw her fighting
to conquer her anger. Ah, he thought. So she had never told him.
"What
you have done is forbidden," he snapped.
"Nonsense!"
Aurian retorted. "The Mage—Moral proscription isn't a law, and it's not in
the Mages' Code. It's a recommendation made for practical reasons. If Forral
and I can live with the problems, what affair is it of yours?"
Miathan
was beside himself with rage. "This affair will be the scandal of the
whole city! How dare you embarrass the Magefolk, and me, in this way?"
"Not
so, Miathan," Forral intervened. "The people view Aurian differently
from the other Magefolk, after that business of the drought. They^s.ee her with
me, or going to and fro from
the
Garrison, and frankly, they find her much more acceptable than the rest of you.
My people already think of her as one of themselves, and the troopers will soon
deal with any loose talk. Vannor is fond of her too, so there'll be no trouble
from the merchants—"
"Well,
there will be trouble from the Magefolk!" Miathan stormed. "I'll
break you for this, Forral. I'll have you thrown off the Council! Banished from
the city—"
Forral
smiled coldly. "I don't think so, Archmage, You see, it's no longer up to
you to arrange the military presence on the Council. You might be interested to
know that I've already appointed my successor^-in case anything should go
amiss. You know Maya, my Second-in-Command? For some reason, she has no time
for this idea of the Magefolk running Nexis, You'll really have fun wrangling
with her on the Council! Vannor is looking forward to it already."
"But—but
you can't do that!" Miathan spluttered. Forral grinned. "Oh, yes I
can. Vannor seconded the nomination, and we had it set down in the official
records."
The
Archmage was aghast. He took a step toward Forral, intending to blast him into
oblivion. But Aurian stepped quickly in front of the swordsman, raising her
hand in a sweeping gesture. Miathan saw the air blur and shimmer as her magical
shield snapped into place. There was a look of pure hatred on her face that he
had never seen before.
"Just
try it, Miathan," she growled, "I'm not your pupil for nothing. Let's
see how rtTuch you've taught me!"
She
meant it! Miathan was on the verge of losing her completely, and his carefully
tended plans would be lost with her. His age-old cunning reasserted itself. He
was an expert in deceit, and he was ruthless. He knew now that he had erred
badly in letting his lust get the better of him when Aurian had returned from
the Valley. Somehow, in her absence, he had persuaded himself that once he
possessed her body, he would win her heart. Witless fool! This was no simple
Mortal girl, to be overawed by his position and his powers. And now, thanks to
his clumsy haste, he had driven her right into the arms—and the bed—of that
swordsman. A just punishment indeed, for his
own
stupidity!
Miathan
knew he must win back Aurian's trust—and in
order
to do so, he'd have to swallow his pride. Trembling with strain, he forced down
his anger and schooled his features into a semblance of regret. "Aurian,
please forgive me. I'm truly sorry —for everything. I have behaved very badly
to you, and I truly wish to make amends. Forral, my deepest apologies. I should
have anticipated this long ago, knowing how Aurian feels about you." He
sighed. "I cannot say that I approve—but I love Aurian, and I value your
support. If this is what you want, I must accept it. Be happy, then—for as long
as you can."
Aurian
hesitated, suspicion written clearly on her face.
"My
dear, I beg you." Miathan forced tears into his eyes. "Don't punish
me for my hastiness. I would rather lose anything in the world than your good
opinion. I swear by my very magic that I accept and respect your
decision."
"Thank
you, Archmage."
Though
her reply was spoken calmly, the Archmage saw Aurian relax a little, and heard
relief in her voice as she lowered her shields at last. But where she would
once have come running to hug him, she remained where she was, with one hand on
Forral's arm. Miathan gritted his teeth against the surge of possessive desire
that welled up in him. By the Gods, when he finally took her, this humiliation
would be repaid a thousandfold ...
Once
Aurian and Forral were safely away, the Archmage took out his fury in a blast
of force that shook the tower to its foundations. He strode across the, smoking
carpet, kicking the splintered furniture aside, and pressed a section of the
blackened wall. A panel flew open with a click, revealing a hollow space.
Miathan reached inside and took out a golden goblet, He sat by the window on
the one undamaged chair, staring blindly out and caressing the rich,
intricately chased metal. The cup was wide and shallow, with a slim golden stem
and a broad, heavy base. It hummed with power—a power so ancient and so great
that it brought the very air alive. Miathan smiled. Not all was lost—he had
found this precious thing in the cave that Finbarr had discovered, and had
stolen it secretly away before the others saw it. He knew what it was, and it
changed everything.
In the
dark years following the Cataclysm, most of the
history
and lore of the ancient Magefolk had been lost. All that remained of the
shining Elder Age were vague, colorful legends, so corrupted by time that it
was impossible to sift the truth from minstrels' lays and old wives' tales. One
legend, however, Miathan now knew to be true. It spoke of the four great
magical Weapons of the Elements—the Harp of Winds, the Staff of Earth, the
Sword of Fire—and the Caldron of Rebirth. Although it now took the form of this
golden chalice, Miathan was sure that he held a fragment, possibly refashioned
to disguise it, of the Caldron, He was also certain that it held the Caldron's
power, and that, given time, he could learn to master it,
Miathan's
eyes burned. Let them wait, those who dared defy him! Aurian, Forral,
Vannor—-and Anvar, that accursed abomination who had thwarted him when he'd
been so close to his goal. Let them enjoy their petty victory for a while. Let
Finbarr labor like a blind mole in his Archives, unwittingly providing his
Archmage with the very information that he needed to bend the world to his
will. Let Aurian copulate like an animal with that thrice-damned, rutting
swordsman, blithely unaware of the fate in store for her . . .
Fear
pierced Miathan's heart like a sword of ice. How history repeated itself! He
thought of Ria~so sweet, so compliant beneath him—and remembered his disgust
when she had told him he was to be the father of a half-breed monster. What if
it should happen again—to Aurian? The thought of her bearing Forral's brat
turned him sickjto the very core. But wait—what if the child, if child there
were, should really be a monster? That would suit his ends, for such a creature
could hardly possess magical powers,'and it would also punish Aurian and Forral
for their perfidy.
Miarhan
drew his power around him, and as he did so, he felt the chalice quiver in his
hands. Choosing his words carefully, he summoned a deadly bane against any such
babe, that it should take the form, not of the human that had fathered it, but
of the first beast that Aurian set eyes on after she had given birth. As he
spoke the curse, the grail flared with a brief, cold light and there was a
noise like a thunderclap, far across the city.
Triumph
swelled within the Archmage's
heart. So the
thing
retained its powers! It would take much study to learn how to wield it
effectively, but in the end this weapon would give him mastery over the
world—and over Aurian. After that, he would have all the long ages to make her
pay for what she had done.
I
CKapter 12
THE NlGHTRUNNER
t was
the day before Solstice Eve, but Vannor's daughter Zanna was finding that
seasonal goodwill was in short supply. She and Dulsina, the housekeeper, had
been forced to make a special trip to the food markets of the Grand Arcade for
Vannor's cook, who had been in a terrible mood. It was Sara's fault, of course.
The meals for the festival required considerable planning in advance, and
Hebba, who had cooked for the family for years, had her Solstice routine
organized with immaculate timing, right down to the last delicious morsel. Her
reaction, therefore, when Sara had decided the day before the Solstice
celebrations were due to begin that it was time to make some changes, had been
a mix of horror, outrage—and utter panic. Vannor was out, and his eldest
daughter, Corielle, had recently wed the son of a wealthy sea captain, and
moved to the port of Easthaven with her new husband. It had been left to Zanna,
as usual, to deal with the trouble as best she could.
As
Hebba would not trust the kitchen maids with the errand—("What? Send them
girls down there to dawdle and dally all day?")—Dulsina and Zanna had been
sent off with a long list of delicacies by the frantic cook, who was turning
the kitchen upside down in her frenzy. Zanna was glad to escape— the two
kitchen maids had already been in tears. She couldn't blame poor Hebba, but
Zanna resented the fact that the rest of the household, and herself in particular,
had to bear the brunt of the cook's temper, while Sara, as usual, had escaped
the consequences of her thoughtlessness. While Hebba might call Sara "a
little guttersnipe" behind her back, she was not prepared to cross the
mistress of the house.
Because
it was almost Solstice, the Grand Arcade was crowded to overflowing. At first,
Zanna had enjoyed the bustle. The long, colonnaded aisles were brightly lie by
endless lines of glowing Vamps, and the air was fragrant with the mingling
aromas of spices, cheeses, smoked meats, and seasonal fruits. The stallholders
were shouting to draw attention to the best of their wares, and people called
out cheerful greetings to friends that they met in the crowd.
AURIAN '
173
As time
wore on, however, and the stocks of delicacies were depleted, folk became
tired, cross, and despondent. The crowd seemed to be increasing all the time,
and the building, for all its vast size, became unbearably stuffy and hot.
Zanna, overburdened with purchases, felt sweaty and bedraggled. Her ribs were
bruised where she had been elbowed by the thrusting crowds. Her feet had been
trodden on repeatedly, and were sore from trudging the hard stone floors of the
Arcade. Her head ached, she was desperately thirsty, and the tottering pile of
packages in her aching arms was hampering her progress through the crush of
people. Really, she decided, this is impossible! We've done enough, and if Sara
wants anything more she can bloody well come and get it herself. She turned to
say as much to Dulsina—and discovered, to her horror, that the housekeeper was
nowhere in sight. I must have lost her in the crowd, she thought. Dear Gods,
how will I ever find her again?
Zanna
tried to stop, and was cursed by impatient folk who jostled her roughly aside.
Because of her short stature, she couldn't see a thing, and she was carried
along helplessly, forced to move with the flow in order to stay on her feet.
Zanna bit her lip, determined not to panic. I have to get out of here, she
thought—but how?
"Ho,
Zanna? Are you all alone?" A steadying hand grasped Zanna's shoulder. A
slight, but respectful space opened around her in the crowd, and to her relief,
she found that she could breathe again. She looked up, with gratitude, into the
kindly face of the Lady Aurian, who was -accompanied by Lieutenant Maya from
the Garrison. "Gods, what a dreadful crush," the Mage said
cheerfully. "I'm not surprised you were struggling! Maya and I slipped
down here to buy a gift for Forral, and we've been just about trampled to death!"
Her arching brows twitched together in a slight frown. "Could Vannor not
spare a servant to send with you?"
Zanna,
who had met both the Lady Aurian and Maya on several occasions when she had
wheedled her father into taking her with him to the Garrison, admired both
women tremendously. But the Mage, in particular, was everything that Zanna
wished to be. Feeling overawed at finding herself in such exalted company, she
explained about losing Dulsina, and found herself telling her syrqpa|hetic rescuers
the whole story of her
disastrous
day. At the mention of Sara's name, she saw the two women exchange a grimace.
Aurian opened her mouth as if to comment, but, on catching Maya's eye, closed
it grimly again, with a slight shake of her head.
"Right,"
Maya said briskly. "Let's get you and your parcels back to your
carriage—if Dulsina has any sense, that's where she'll be. I expect she's in a
rare panic by now!"
The
Mage and Maya divided Zanna's purchases between them, and escorted her out of
the Arcade. The crowd seemed to melt away before the two grim-faced women in
their fighting clothes, and Zanna was tremendously impressed. As Maya had
predicted, they met the housekeeper in the great arched en-tranceway. Dulsina,
frantic with worry, had been just about to go back inside to search for her
missing charge, Zanna was embarrassed by her fussing, and grateful to Aurian
for cutting her short.
The
Mage herself helped Zanna into the carriage, and settled her packages around
her. Vannor's daughter looked back wistfully as the carriage drove away,
calling out her thanks again to the two women, who were already turning away to
walk along the street. The sound of their conversation floated back to her on
the still evening air,
"Gods,
Maya," she heard the Mage say, "That wife of Vannor's is such a
bitch!"
"You're
telling me! If it were up to me, I'd drop her in the river—in a sack! Do you
fancy a beer now?"
Zanna
smiled to hersejf. Somehow, it helped a lot to know that she was not alone in
her opinion of her stepmother.
The
errands had taken longer than Zanna had expected, and dusk was falling as they
clattered across the Academy bridge and turned to climb the wooded hill that
led to home. It looked as though it might snow again. The hazy sky above Nexis
was suffused with an unearthly copper glow, etched by lines of smoke that rose
straight as penstrokes in the still air. Zanna snuggled into the thick fur of
the carriage rug, fidgeting with the discomfort of frozen fingers and aching
feet. She sighed wistfully at the thought of the cookfires glowing in the
city's different homes, the scents of citrus and spices and roasting meats, and
the bright, excited faces of children. She knew that she would be going home to
a very different scene. Hebba
never worked
well when she was flustered, and after today's upheavals, this year's Solstice
celebrations at Vannor's house were likely to be a disaster.
The
lamplighters were at work, and as the carriage labored up the steep, snowy
hill, a string of golden globes burst into life one by one, to mark the road
ahead.
The
snow had been raked from the curving sweep that led to the mansion, and the
coachman, relieved at getting up the slippery hill without injuring Vannor's
priceless black horses, finished the journey in style, rattling up to the door
in a spatter of gravel. Zanna had meant to accompany him to the back door, to
help unload the precious packages, but Dulsina was having none of it,
"No
you don't, my girl!" she said. "Get inside and I'll fetch you a nice
hot drink. Put your feet up for a while. It's bad enough you had to traipse
round the market like a serving wench—your poor mother, bless her, would turn
in her grave . , ."
Zanna
let her rattle on as they went inside, knowing that the housekeeper's
indignation was really on behalf of them both. Dulsina bore her years well; her
skin was clear and un-lined, and her dark hair without a trace of gray. She had
been very close to Zanna's mother, and it was that friendship, so kitchen
gossip said, that had kept her feelings hidden frpm Vannor after his wife's
death. The servants, however, had looked upon her eventual marriage to the
merchant as a certainty— until Sara had come along. ** J
As
Dulsina bustled off down the kitchen stairs, Zanna paused in the spacious hall
to unwrap the cloaks and shawls in which the zealous housekeeper had swathed
her. She sighed. Dulsina meant well, but she was tired of being coddled like a
child! Inevitably, her thoughts turned to the Lady Aurian. Mage and warrior, she
could ride and fight like a man, and you wouldn't find anyone wrapping her in
half a shipment of wool! I wish I could be like her, Zanna thought. She was
unwrapping her scarf from around her ears when she heard a resounding screech
of rage, Gods! Not another disaster today! Zanna ran. She was halfway upstairs
when she heard the howls of her little brother.
The
noise came»fe>m Sara's room—and in other circum-
fr
stances,
Zanna might have laughed. Antor, now a mobile and mischievous three-year-old,
had escaped his nursemaid, and found his way to Sara's open door.
Unfortunately, she had been out at the time, but the collection of jars on the
mirrored night table had proved an irresistible temptation to the child.
The
reek of spilled perfume hit Zanna as she entered. She took in the whole scene
at a glance—the powder spilled across the carpet; the upended jars and bottles,
their lotions pooling on the table; a frieze of greasy, colored handprints that
tracked across the wall, the furnishings, and even the counterpane. And Sara,
her face contorted and flushed with rage, was hitting Antor over and over
again.
Zanna
never stopped to think—her resentment of Sara and her fierce protectiveness
toward little Antor fused in a flash of rage. "Leave him alone, you
bitch!" She flew across the room and dragged the child away. She had never
meant for things to get out of hand—this was her stepmother, after all—but when
Sara slapped her, Zanna lost all sense of restraint. She got in one good hard
blow before Sara started hitting back, and then they were on the floor, biting,
scratching, pulling each other's hair and screaming like wildcats, with Antor,
in the background, adding his own shrill wails to the commotion.
Neither
of them heard Vannor enter. The first that they knew of his presence was when
he waded into the fray and flung his daughter and wife apart. One look at his
face, and the fire of Zanna's rage turned to ashen horror. Antor's howls were
the only sound that broke the silence—until a chuckle came from the direction
of the door. "On my oath, Vannor—you've a pair of hellions here! I had no
idea your home life was so interesting."
To
Zanna's horror, a stranger stood in the doorway, witness to the disgraceful
brawl. Despite her acute embarrassment, she felt her heart turn over at the
sight of the handsome young man. Vannor scowled, looking angrier than ever,
then he turned to the visitor and forced a smile.
"Why
don't you go downstairs, Yanis, while I sort this out," he said. "You
know where the drink's kept!"
The
interruption had given Sara time to gather her wits. As soon as the stranger
had gone, she seized her husband's arm.
AURIAN •
177
"Vannor,
she attacked me! And look what that wretched brat has done! I insist that you
punish them, or—"
"Or
what? You'll go back to the poverty I took you from?" Vannor's face was
bleak as stone. Sara turned white at his words, and shut her mouth abruptly.
Zanna sighed with relief. Her dad was so entranced by his new wife that she had
feared he would take Sara's part—but her relief was short-lived when Vannor
turned to look at her. With a sinking heart, Zanna realized that Sara was not
the only one who was in trouble. "Get to your room," Vannor growled.
"I'll deal with you later!"
Zanna
had been prepared for her father's anger, but his disappointment was more than
she could bear. "I thought I could depend on you to be sensible,"
Vannor stormed at her. "I know you miss your mother—don't you think I miss
her, too? I know you don't want Sara in her place. But I won't have my home
turned into a battlefield, Zanna! Sara is your stepmother, and you'll treat her
with respect!"
Zanna,
choking with tears, was unable to speak. Vannor, who had been about to leave,
turned quickly and came to her, putting his arms around her as she sobbed.
"Look, lass, don't cry. I'm not such a fool as to put all the blame on you
for what happened—I've spoken to Sara." He looked so grim that Zanna
wondered what had been said between them. "She'll not mistreat Antor
again, I promise. But she isn't used to children, and—"
"Curse
it, Dad, why must you make excuses for her? Can't you see she's—" The mad,
untirrielywords spilled out of Zanna before she could stop them—and were
silenced abruptly by Vannor's slap. "You watch your mouth, girl, or by the
Gods I'll—" His face twisted with rage and anguish, Vannor stamped out,
slamming the door behind him.
The
merchant went downstairs, completely at his wits' end. He was ashamed of what
he had just done, and sickened by his earlier scene with Sara. He adored both
his wife and daughter—but why couldn't they try to get along? He rubbed his
aching head. Gods, what a night! When he'd left that morning, everything had
been running smoothly as usual. He had come back a few short hours later to
find the house in an uproar!
In the
brief time *ince his return, Vannor had calmed his
bawling
son and turned him over to a bristling Dulsina, (who, judging by the look on
her face, meant to have words with him before the night was out). He had dismissed
the nursemaid, who'd been outside, flirting with the gardener, while Antor was
getting into mischief. Having sent the girl packing, in tears, he had found
himself confronted by a furious cook, with baggage, who announced that if her
Solstice Feast was no longer good enough for him, he had better make his own in
future! Hebba had marched out, leaving him gaping. As if these disasters were
not enough, he had followed them up with a blistering row with Sara, who was no
longer speaking to him, and had hurt his favorite daughter. What a bloody awful
Solstice this is going to be! Vannor thought bitterly.
It was
only then, as he was heading for the welcome sanctuary of his library, that he
remembered the visitor. Vannor groaned. If that idiot Yanis was desperate
enough to come to the house, it had to mean trouble. Yanis, who was sitting by
the roaring log fire, leapt to his feet when Vannor entered the library, his
handsome face taut and anxious.
"Vannor,
I'm sorry to come here like this. I know what you said about secrecy, but . .
." He looked away, biting his lip. "Oh Gods," he muttered.
"It wasn't my fault, I swear! How was I to know they would—"
"Whoa,
whoa!" Vannor held up a hand to stop the young man in mid-protest.
"If this is more bad news, Yanis, for the Gods' sake, let me get myself a
drink first!"
Vannor
had not been Zanna's only visitor that night—her stepmother had come close on
his heels. Sara's visit had been brief, and she had said very little, but her
words had turned Zanna cold with fear. "Well, brat—since you are so
protective of children, perhaps you ought to have some of your own," she
had said, with vicious sweetness. "Now that you've turned fifteen, I must
take my duties as a stepmother more seriously, and start casting around for a
suitable husband for you!" And with a whirl of skirts, she had gone.
Long
after Zanna had wept herself out, she lay awake in the darkness, dreading the
future. She knew that Sara would never rest now, until her troublesome
stepdaughter was out of the way for good. Vannor s daughter was a practical
girl, and she
AURIAN '
179
faced
facts squarely. Marriage was the obvious solution to Sara's problems, and Zanna
felt a chill go through her. Oh Gods, she thought. She'll dress me up like a stupid
doll, make Vannor give me an enormous dowry, and hand me over to the first
witless, overbred merchant's son who wants the money! The thought filled her
with such panic that she wanted to run—but where could she run to? Suddenly,
for no apparent reason, the face of her father's mysterious visitor came into
her mind: his shaggy dark hair falling across those dark gray eyes, which
crinkled at the corners when he smiled . . .
The
door of her room opened quietly, and Zanna started, blushing as though her
thoughts must be transparent. To her surprise, her visitor was Dulsina.
"Shhh," the housekeeper whispered. "Light the candle and get
dressed—you're going away for a while."
"What?"
Zanna froze. Horror congealed like a choking lump in her throat.
"Dad?" She could hardly form the whispered words. "Is he sending
me away?"
"No,
you goose—as if he ever would! Listen, Zanna. Your stepmother is as furious as
a wasp in a bottle tonight. Now that you've made trouble between her and
Vannor, she'll—"
"I
know what she plans to do," Zanna said wretchedly, "and it's worse
than you could possibly imagine. She wants to marry me off, Dulsina!"
"I
heard," Dulsina said grimly. "It's a housekeeper's privilege to
eavesdrop! Not that Vannor is such a heartless dolt as to force you to wed
against your wilt . j. But you know how desperate he is for his daughters to
make a good match. There would be pressure on you to consent. Anyway, you're
young yet to be thinking of husbands, no matter what the custom is among these
witless merchants! I thought to send you to my sister Remana until the fuss
dies down. Antor can go, too— doing without the pair of you for a while might
bring that old fool Vannor to his senses!"
Zanna
wondered if she was dreaming. Though it might be wise to get away until Sara
had calmed down, it was not like levelheaded Dulsina to come up with such a
wild idea. And never before had she heard the housekeeper criticize her father.
In a daze, she dressed herself warmly and began to pack some clothes under
Dulsina'^direction, while the housekeeper ex-
plained:
"You've a good head on your shoulders, Zanna—I know you can be trusted
with the secret. My sister Remana is— was, I should say—wed to Leynard, leader
of the Nightrun-ners."
Zanna
gaped at her, a nightgown, half folded, forgotten in her hands. The
Nightrunners? The elusive smugglers who traded with the prohibited Southern
Kingdoms for silks, gems, and spices and had driven generations of Garrison
Commanders to despair? Prim Dulsina had a sister wed to a smuggler?
"You
may as well know," Dulsina was saying. "Your dad made his fortune
through trading in partnership with the Nightrunners. His visitor tonight is my
nephew Yanis—he became leader last year when Leynard was lost at sea. When he
goes back, he'll be taking you with him." She paused, her eyes twinkling.
"Mark you, he's afraid of Vannor, so the less he knows of the truth, the
better. I'll give you a note for my sister —Remana will take care of you."
"But
what about Dad?" Zanna protested. "He'll be so angry. And what if
Sara arranges a husband for me in any case? Anyway, if I know Dad, he'll come
and fetch me straight back again. Besides, I'll miss him so! How can I leave
him—and at Solstice, too?"
"Child,
you worry too much!" Dulsina hugged her. "Vannor won't blame you—it's
me he'll be angry with. And Sara will be much too busy to make mischief."
She grinned. "With you away, Vannor will see who was really running the
household— and I won't be taking up^"where you left off! Let Sara occupy
herself with all those tiresome details that you and I have been taking off her
shoulders. If she wants to play the great lady, it's time she learned that
there is far more to it than sitting around counting her jewels!"
"But
what if Dad comes after me?" Zanna persisted.
"Impossible!"
Dulsina said briskly. "The smugglers' hide-out is a deadly secret—so much
so that Leynard wouldn't even tell his partner. Vannor won't know where you
are, and I won't tell him—not unless there is a real emergency. Just trust me,
my dear, and all will be well."
Zanna
hesitated. Then she thought of what her future would be like, married to a dull
merchant's son who did not love her. She had no illusions about her looks—she
was short
AURIAN •
181
and
sturdy, like her father, with a plain, no-nonsense face: A far cry from the
willowy, delicate creatures that the well-heeled merchant classes liked to
decorate their opulent homes. She was clever and quick-minded, and it was her
greatest frustration that her dad would never let her work with him in trade.
"Whoever heard of a lady merchant?" he would chide her gently.
"Why, it's just not done!"
There
are lady Magefolk, though, Zanna thought resentfully—and lady warriors. Why not
a lady merchant, I'd like to know? Inevitably, her mind went back to that
afternoon, and her meeting with Aurian and Maya. Well, you wanted to be like
them, she told herself—maybe this is your chance. Lifting her chin, she turned
to Dulsina. "You're right," she said. "I'm ready to go!"
Yanis
left the mansion in a hurry, by the back door, his ears still ringing from
Vannor's epithets. Dear Gods, but when his father's old partner flew into a
rage, it was enough to scare the wits out of a man! "It wasn't my
fault," he muttered helplessly. After the unpleasant evening he had just
spent with Vannor, the excuse was starting to sound rather thin, even to
himself.
"Where
am I going wrong?" he sighed as he made his way back to the river,
slinking through the merchant's terraced garden with his sea boots crunching
softly on the snowy ground. It had all seemed simple when he had accompanied
his father to the South. Leynard had taught him^how to find his way to the
remote, secluded bay that was the clandestine rendezvous with the Southerners.
Yanis knew the series of lamp-flashes that were the secret signal to grant him
safe passage in Southern waters. Unfortunately, the one vital piece of
information that his father had not passed on, was how not to get swindled by
those slimy Southern bast—
"Hist!
Yanis!"
The
smuggler whirled abruptly, his hand on his sword. He was astonished to see his
aunt Dulsina beckoning to him from the bushes at the bottom of the garden, near
the small, ornate boathouse where Vannor kept his pleasure craft. In the dim
snowlight, it looked as though she were carrying a large bundle, so thickly
swathed in shawls that it looked almost circular.
Grabbing
his arm with her free hand, she pulled him into the shelter of the shrubbery.
"Listen,"
she told him without preamble. "Vannor wants you to take his children to
stay with Remana for a while."
Yanis
blinked. "He does? He never mentioned it. And why are you all hiding in
the bushes, Aunt Dulsina?"
Dulsina
sighed. "Because you shouldn't be here, remember? Vannor thought that if
you left the house with the youngsters, it would attract too much attention, so
I brought them down here to meet you. Off you go now—take good care of the
children, and remember to give my love to your mother. And Yanis—be careful.
Don't get caught!"
Before
Yanis could say a word, she had dumped Vannor's son into his unready arms and
bustled away, with a quick parting hug for the cloaked and muffled figure that
must be the merchant's daughter. Yanis, speechless, thrust his squirming burden
at the girl, and bent to pull on the rope that tethered his small boat beneath
the concealing sweep of willows at the water's edge. Somehow, he managed to get
them, with their several bundles, off the frost-slick jetty and into the little
craft. The girl was sniffling into a lacy slip of a handkerchief, and the
smuggler's heart sank,
"Are
you all right?" he asked nervously,
"Yes."
The voice was little more than a whisper—then to his relief, she sat up
straight, settled the infant on her lap, and put the handkerchief away.
"Yes," she repeated firmly. "I'm fine. I don't like leaving Dad,
but I always wanted adventure. I'm sick of sitting at home sewing, and all that
tedious female stuff!"
Yanis
grinned. She was going to be all right, after all, "You sound tike my
mum," he told her. "She wanted adventure too— and ended up marrying a
smuggler!"
A
chuckle emerged from the shadows of the girl's hood. "Xt \east Ym going to
the right pVace, then."
She was
a droll little thing, and no mistake.' Snorting with laughter, Yanis picked up
his oars and set off to row swiftfy downriver through the frost-glittering
night, to his fast little ship that vjas mooted in a quiet cove around the
headland from the port of Norberth.
AURIAN •
183
Yanis,
thankful that it was Solstice, and the hours of darkness were so long, ordered
the ghost-gray sails to be unfurled. Steering his sleek little ship out of the
twisting inlet that had shielded it from prying eyes, he headed, with a
tremendous sense of relief, out to sea. His passengers were safely asleep
below, tired out from their journey. Two children would only be in the way as
he dodged along the treacherous coastline in the darkness, avoiding the safer
sea lanes that were crowded with fishing fleets from the villages and the
clumsy, wallowing vessels of the legitimate merchant-traders.
Besides,
it was best to keep the youngsters out of sight of the crew, who were in a
state of near rebellion after the disastrous voyage to the South. They had made
it clear to Yanis that they were far from happy with the responsibility of
these unexpected passengers. Vannor might have made the Nightrunners rich
through his trading connections, but they were still in awe of his reputation
as a dangerous man to cross.
"What
if there's a storm?" Gevan, the mate, had whined, "What happens if
the young'uns fell overboard and drown? What will Vannor say if we're caught
with his brats on board, by one of Forral's patrols? That big bastard from the
Garrison is getting too clever by half!"
"What
if—what if!" Yanis had mocked, "Why, Vannor himself sent his
youngsters with us!"
"And
what about that girl?" Gejran had continued, undeterred. "I always
said a ship's no place for a woman!"
"You'd
better not let my mam hear you saying that," Yanis grinned. "She'll
stretch your guts for rigging!"
"I
don't count your mam as a woman—she's a sailor born and bred, that one—which
that little lass below is not!" The mate stumped off, still muttering
darkly.
In
truth, Yanis had his own misgivings, but they differed from those of his crew,
who had only seen Zanna's small figure muffled up in cloaks. They thought she
was still a child—but he had seen her up at the house, brawling with Vannor's
wife, and she was older than she looked.
During
the long and tiresome trip downriver, Yanis had been putting two andjwo
together—and he was for from happy
with
the result. Why had Vannor suddenly decided to send his children to the
smugglers? Why had he not mentioned it earlier? Why had Aunt Dulsina appeared
with them so unexpectedly, and hurried them off so quickly? There could only be
one answer. "That cunning bastard!" Yanis muttered. "He's
sending his daughter to spy on me!"
Suddenly
it was all too clear. Vannor, angry because Yanis had been cheated by the
Southerners, had sent his wretched girl to mingle with the smugglers and probe
their secrets. And then —Yanis swore. The leadership! Vannor meant to depose
him, and take over the smuggling operation himself.
"Oh—we're
sailing!"
The
voice, so close at hand, made Yanis jump. That wretched girl had crept up so
quietly while he stood at the wheel that he was taken completely by surprise.
Startled and unthinking, he gave voice to his suspicions. "Spying already,
eh? Well, I know what you're up to, girl, and it won't work, see?"
Yanis
had been so kind to Antor and herself on their way downriver that Zanna was
shocked by his sudden hostility. Biting her lip, she fought back tears. The
rest of the crew had looked so unfriendly when she ventured up on deck that she
had been counting on the support of their leader. What had she done to earn his
anger? Remembering the grave, dignified manner with which Dulsina deflated
Vannor's fierce rages, Zanna drew herself up to her full, albeit scant, height.
"If you know what I'm up to," she said coldly, "I hope you'll
tell me—for I'm sure I have no idea."
"You
have no idea, indeed!" Yanis mocked her. "You and Vannor didn't think
I had the wits to work it out, did you? Poor, daft Yanis—he'll never guess he's
being spied on—he's so thickheaded that he gets cheated by Southerners!"
Most of
this outburst was a mystery to Zanna, but she heard the bitterness in his
voice—and caught the name of Vannor. "Dad? But he doesn't even know I'm
here—" Horrified, she caught herself up with a hand to her mouth, but it
was too late. Yanis looked at her with narrowed eyes. "What?" he
yelped. "He doesn't know you're here?"
Gods,
but he looked so fierce! Zanna backed away from
AURIAN •
185
him,
the words tumbling out of her as she tried to explain. "Well, he must know
now, of course, because Dulsina will have told him, but he didn't know, when we
came away ..." Her words trailed off. Yanis looked at her, stone-faced,
not helping at all.
"I
had to get away from Sara!" she protested. "She meant to marry me off
to some moon-faced merchant's son—"
"Vannor
didn't send you?" Yanis was gaping at her.
Zanna
sighed. No wonder he was cheated by the Southerners, she thought.
"No," she repeated. "Dulsina said you wouldn't take us if you
knew, so—" She shrugged. "I'm afraid she didn't exactly tell you the
truth—"
"Gods'
bloody teeth! I have to get you back, before he finds out!" Yanis spun the
wheel, and the ship lurched and shuddered, heeling over as the wind spilled from
its sails. Curses and shouts of protest could be heard all over the deck as the
crew were tumbled about.
"No,"
Zanna cried. "You can't!" Without thinking, she tried to wrench the
wheel from his grasp, to return the ship to its original course. For a grim
moment they grappled, while the vessel wallowed and tipped.
"You
idiot!" Yanis bellowed. "You'll have us over!" Giving in to her,
he let the ship swing round, heaving a sigh of relief as the tilting vessel
straightened and the wind swelled its shadowy gray sails once more. "Get
below!" he snapped at Zanna. "I ought to throw you overboard!"
"Not
until you've heard what J haye to say." Zanna stood her ground. "You
can't take us back," she insisted. Didn't this fool realize that she was
trying to keep him out of trouble? Yanis was not to blame for the disappearance
of Vannor's children—but her father wouldn't see things in that light!
Desperately she tried to think of a way to change the young smuggler's mind.
"Do you want your crew to see how you were taken in? You'll be a
laughingstock!"
"What
in the name of all the Gods are you playing at, Yanis? Are you trying to send
us to the bottom?" Gevan thrust forward, his weatherbeaten face pale with
anger.
"It
was my fault," Zanna said quickly, trying to look meek. "I—I thought
I could steer it, but—"
"You
let this child take the wheel?" Gevan turned on Yanis.
"Have
you lost your mind?" The crew, limping and rubbing their bruises, were
gathering around, awaiting the outcome of the confrontation with avid
curiosity.
"You
can't blame Yanis—I told him I knew how to do it," Zanna insisted.
"What?"
Yanis looked baffled. "But—"
Zanna
kicked him sharply in the ankle. "I'm truly sorry, sir—I only wanted to
try . . ." She turned her most winning smile on the mate—and jumped, as
Yanis whispered in her ear.
"Take
the wheel a minute—just keep her exactly as she is," Before she knew it,
Zanna, rigid with anxiety, was hanging on to the wheel with trembling hands.
"Thara's
titties!" Gevan spat disgustedly. "I don't know which of you is the
bigger fool—" His words ended in a choking gurgle as Yanis lifted him off
the deck with a twisted handful of shirt, and pinned him, struggling, across
the ship's rail with a knee in his groin and his head hanging down toward the
waves that surged and foamed along the vessel's side.
"Now,"
said Yanis, "you'll apologize to the lady for your foul language, and then
you'll apologize to me!" He loosened his grip slightly on the pop-eyed
mate's collar, still holding him in his perilous position while Gevan gasped
out his apologies, Yanis lowered the terrified man to the deck and stepped back
to look at his dumbstruck crew.
"I
know you don't think much of me, compared with my dad. Oh yes—I've heard you
muttering and whispering in corners! But there can only begone captain of this
ship, and one leader of the smugglers, see? If anyone else wants to take over,
you can speak up now or not at all, but you'll have take me on, first—and
you'll take the leadership over my dead body!" For a long, grim moment he
held their eyes, until one by one, the crew turned and slunk away.
Zanna
felt like cheering. She gazed at Yanis with shining eyes, but he was looking
past her at—
"Look
out!" Pushing her roughly to one side, he seized the wheel and wrenched it
hard over. The ship swung and heeled, its timbers creaking in protest, and
Zanna, as she tumbled into the scuppers, caught a glimpse of a dark, jagged
shape against the starry sky, and the thundering crash of waves on rock.
As the
vessel straightened, Yanis turned to her with a grin,
AURIAN '
187
and
extended a hand to help her to her feet. "Got to keep your eyes skinned,
sailing this close to the coast at night," he said cheerfully. Zanna, her
heart still hammering, looked at him openmouthed.
"Apart
from that, though," he added condescendingly, "you did very well for
the first time. We'll make a sailor of you yet!"
"I
wouldn't count on it," Zanna said weakly. "Gods, Yams —I never saw
that rock! It was se dark. How did you know?"
Yanis
winked at her, and his teeth flashed white as he laughed. "See—not as daft
as you thought, am I? Even though I did get cheated by the Southerners!"
"I
never said you were daft!" Zanna protested.
"No,
but your dad did, and a lot more besides!" Though he spoke lightly, she
could hear an undercurrent of bitterness in his voice,
"What
happened?" she asked him softly,
Yanis
sighed. "It's been going on for a long time, this trade with the
Southerners—in the family, you might say. When Vannor came in with Dad, and
found us new markets, we started to prosper. We trade with the Corsairs, who
are supposed to defend their coast, but who are the worst bunch of knaves and
scoundrels you'll ever see. They'll do anything to line their pockets!"
"What
do you trade?" Zanna was fascinated,
Yanis
shrugged, "Various things. Theirs is a hot, desert country and not much
grows thece. We trade them wood and wool and grain, mostly—-common enough stuff
here, but worth a fortune to the Southerners. In exchange, we get spices,
silks, and gems—or we're supposed to!" he added glumly, "This time,
when we got back and opened the caskets, they had the good stuff on top, but
the rest was worthless sand!"
"But
didn't you think to check?" Zanna asked in amazement.
"Check?"
Yanis glared at her fiercely. "It's not a bloody game, you know, it's
deadly serious—and deadly dangerous. We have no time to check! We slip in,
exchange the goods as fast as possible, then we run for home as fast as we can."
"Hmm
. . ." Zanna frowned thoughtfully, "Then the whole operation depends
on good faith," A surge of excitement
ran
through her. This was a real challenge! "Leave it to me!" she told
Yanis. "I'll think of a way to beat those crooked Southerners—I promise!"
The
young smuggler's mouth twitched for an instant, but he failed to hide his
smile. "Of course you will," he said kindly, as though addressing a
very small child.
Drat
him, Zanna seethed. He doesn't believe I can do it! Still, Yanis had only just
decided not to take her back to Vannor —she wouldn't risk a quarrel now. Zanna
turned away from him angrily. "I ought to get back to Antor," she
said mildly— but really, it was an excuse to go below and do some hard
thinking. I'll show him, she thought. Just wait. He may not know it, but he
needs my brain. I can make a place for myself among these smugglers, I know I
can. I'll make them respect me if it's the last thing I do!
CKapter 13
A SOLSTICE
GIFT
urian
leaned back in her chair and took another pull at her flagon of ale. "I'm
still astonished that Miathan has accepted the fact that you and I are
lovers—especially after—" She stopped abruptly, biting her lip. She had
never dared to tell Forral about Miathan's attack on her. "If he was only
pretending to approve, I think the facade would have slipped by now, but after
almost four months . . ." She shrugged. "Admittedly I haven't see
much of him lately—he's busy with some pet project of his own—but when I do,
he's as kindly as ever. And the way he turns a blind eye to you sleeping at the
Academy with me, and defends us from the other Magefolk—" She broke off
with a sigh.
"This
unpleasantness with Meiriel is still bothering you, isn't it?" Forral
prompted.
"I
can't help it, Forral. I don't mind about the others— Eliseth and Bragan were
always rotten to the core, not to mention Davorshan—but Meiriel ... I would
never have believed she could be so prejudiced! She had even refused to teach
me any more until Miathan intervened and made her continue my lessons. It's
awful to lose a friend like this, but not even Finbarr can talk her
round."
"Never
mind, love." Forral covered her hand with his own. "If she wants to
be like that, there's notning we can do about it. If she had been any sort of
friend in the first place, she would be glad for you."
"That's
what Anvar said." Aurian managed a smile. "He's come a long way from
that terrified creature we rescued last Solstice. You must admit, I was right
about him."
"You
were indeed, and I'm glad. He turned out to be a good lad, Aurian, despite what
Miathan said about him."
"I
wonder about that." Aurian frowned. "He does a mar-velous job of
looking after me, but he rarely smiles, and he's still terrified of the
Archmage, although he won't tell me why. What's more, he won't talk about his
past, his family—anything. I'd like to help.him—he always looks so unhappy—but
how can
I if he won't trust me?" She glowered into her beer. "Gods, how I
hate mysteries."
It was
Solstice Eve, and the two of them had started the seasonal celebrations early
with a visit to the Invisible Unicorn. Conveniently close to the Garrison, the
tavern was the favorite haunt of the off-duty troopers. The long, low taproom
was shabby but homely with its ceiling of sturdy, lamp-hung beams and huge
arched fireplace of red brick that always housed a welcoming blaze. The once
white walls were mellowed by a patina of smoke, and the floor was covered with
a thick layer of sawdust to soak up spilled ale and the blood from the
occasional rowdy brawls that were overlooked—usually—by the tolerant landlord.
The company was good, and the beer was excellent. It was one of Aurian's
favorite places, but tonight she had too much on her mind to be able to relax
and enjoy herself.
Forral
reached over and topped up their beer from the big pewter jug on the table.
"You can't really blame the lad, you know. It must be terrible to be a
bondservant, even with the kindest of mistresses. He's lost his family and
future—and supposing he had a girl before? What would have happened to her?
Gods, this bonding is barbaric!"
It was
a sore point with Forral, one over which he had clashed repeatedly but
unsuccessfully with the other Council members, especially the Archmage, during
the past year. "But if Anvar won't confide in you, what can you do?"
he added, "After rescuing him the way you did, I find it odd that he won't
trust you, at least.**£ The swordsman frowned. "You're right, though—it's
strange how Miathan hates him. The other servants are beneath his notice."
Seeing Aurian's gloomy face, he sought to lighten her mood. "Don't worry
about it now, love. It's Solstice Eve, and we should be enjoying ourselves,
I'll tell you what—why don't I take Anvar out with me tonight while you're at
the Mages' Feast? I wish you didn't have to go to the damned thing, but we'll
have our own celebration later. And it might cheer that poor lad of yours up to
get out with me and the troops."
Aurian
brightened. "That's a kind thought, Forral. I'll tell Elewin when I go
back to the Academy. There are always enough servants in attendance at the
Feast, so Anvar won't be missed. I wish I could come with you, but I daren't
risk upset-
AUR1AN •
191
ting
Miathan—not when we're on such shaky ground with the Magefolk. Anyway, Finbarr
and I have a plan to cheer up D'arvan tonight—he could use the company. He's
had a rough time of it this year, what with his brother joining Eliseth's
clique—and there is still no sign of his powers surfacing, and Miathan is looking
on him with greater disapproval every day. I suspect that Eliseth is trying to
persuade the Archmage to get rid of him, so that she can have Davorshan to
herself. It's a blessing that D'arvan has made some friends at the Garrison—
Maya, especially—but at the Academy he's becoming increasingly isolated. I do
feel sorry for him."
"More
good deeds, eh?" Forral chuckled, but she saw the gleam of pride in his
eyes, and knew that he approved,
"Well,
it is the season of goodwill and all that," Aurian made a face. "I
think I had better start fortifying myself. Is there any of that beer
left?"
Anvar
sat alone on his bunk in the servants' dormitory, playing a mournful air on the
little wooden flute that his grandfather had carved for him so long ago. It was
the only one of his instruments that he'd been able to bring with him to the
Academy, and oh, how he missed them! Elewin, at the Lady Aurian's request, had
excused him from serving at the Feast, and while he appreciated her kindness in
giving him the holiday, what was the point? He had nowhere to go. As usual, at
this time of year, his thoughts were with the loved ones he had lost-Grandpa
and his mother—and Safa.^who was equally lost to him now. Trying unsuccessfully
to put them out of his mind, Anvar played on, merging his loneliness with the
achingly sad notes of Grandpa's flute.
Suddenly
the door was flung open, and Commander Forral stood there. "There you
are!" he said, "I've been looking all over for you. What are you
doing here all alone, lad? Aurian has to attend the Feast tonight, so we
thought you might fancy keeping me company while I have a few beers with the
lads and lasses from the Garrison."
He
tugged the astonished Anvar to his feet, barely giving him time to snatch his
cloak from its peg on the wall. Its threadbare appearance stopped Forral in his
tracks. "What's this?" he said, frowning^ "You can't go out in
that dishrag, lad.
It's
snowing! Here—" He unclasped his own thick, weatherproof soldier's cloak
and draped it round Anvar's shoulders, kicking the offending old garment under
the bunk. "That's better. It suits you too, us being about the same height
and all. I know—you keep it. A Solstice gift, for looking after Aurian so well.
I've a spare in her room, so we'll just go and get it, then we can be
off."
Anvar
was overwhelmed. This was his second Solstice at the Academy, and in all that
time, no one had ever given him a gift. Swallowing hard, he tried to stammer
his thanks, and Forral clapped him on the shoulder in a comradely fashion.
"Not
at all, lad. You deserve it. Now let's get off to the tavern. There's good ale
just begging to be appreciated, and it's our duty to do our share!"
Anvar
had a wonderful time at the Invisible Unicorn. The troops from the Garrison
were full of Solstice cheer, and the talk and laughter and ale flowed in equal
quantities. Then someone discovered that Anvar could sing, and a battered old
guitar was borrowed from its usual decorative place on the wall, despite feeble
protests from the long-suffering landlord. The pleasure of playing a real
instrument soon overcame Anvar's diffidence about performing, and the troops
joined in with great enthusiasm. Soon the walls were ringing to the sound of
rowdy, bawdy barrack-room ballads whose general subject matter and volume soon
sent the tavern's more sobersided customers scurrying for home. The4andlord,
noticing the rate at which his ale kegs were emptying, had long ago ceased to
object.
All too
soon, the evening had flown and everyone said farewell. Reluctantly Anvar hung
the borrowed guitar back on the wall. It took several attempts, because he
couldn't see which of the two nails was the real one and couldn't hit, either.
He and Forral made their unsteady way back to the Academy through the crisp new
snow, leaning against each other at an acute angle with their arms draped round
one another's shoulders. They each carried a large bottle of wine in their free
hands and sang as they went on their way, trading rude folk ballads for
scurrilous soldiers' songs, and threatening to awaken the entire city with
their noise. Anvar didn't care. Tonight, for once, he was truly enjoying
himself.
AURIAN •
193
Meiriel
was not enjoying the Mages' Feast. She swirled the meager ration of wine around
in the bottom of her cup and took a chaste sip, glowering across at the merry
group who occupied the opposite table.
"Finbarr
seems happy tonight." Eliseth slid into the empty chair beside the Healer.
Meiriel
frowned. She could have done without the Weather-Mage and her sly insinuations.
She shrugged, forcing the appearance of nonchalance. "It's a rare occasion
when Finbarr can be dragged out of his Archives to a celebration. He isn't used
to all this wine," Despite her efforts to hide it, her anger broke
through. "It's all very well for Aurian—she's accustomed to carousing all
hours with those low-born Mortal scum from the Garrison."
"Don't
we all know it!" Eliseth said sympathetically, "Believe me, Meiriel,
we can see the shape of things to come. Why, that wretched swordsman of hers
already spends half his time here, profaning our halls with his presence.
Before long, she'll be inviting the rest of her Mortal friends, and our peace
and seclusion will be gone forever. Why does Miathan not put a stop to
it?"
"You
know why," Meiriel said sourly. "Aurian has the Archmage wrapped
around her little finger!"
"And
not only the Archmage, it seems." Eliseth indicated the next table, where
Finbarr and D'arvan were laughing and drinking with Aurian. The gibe hit home.
Meiriel,
her emotions already inflamed by the wine, felt her face flush hot with rage.
"You mind your own business, you bitch!"
Eliseth's
sympathetic expression did not alter. "I simply wished to warn you,"
she said smoothly, "but if you've noticed ..." She left the thought
hanging, the more powerful to Meiriel for being unstated. "Have you
thought," she went on, "that if Aurian should abandon her Mortal
lover for ambition's sake—for she could never be the next Archmage with such a
scandalous encumbrance—she would need to seek a mate among the Magefolk?"
Meiriel
stared a&J^r. "Just what are you trying to say?"
Eliseth
shrugged. "Only that the possibilities are limited. She hates Davorshan
and Bragar, D'arvan is next to useless, and it's rumored that she has already
rejected Miathan, fool that she is."
"Finbarr
would never leave me!" It hardly sounded convincing, even to herself.
Meiriel had been harboring jealous thoughts of late, since Finbarr had taken
Aurian's side over the disgraceful business with that Mortal,
"Well,
that's all right, then. You have nothing to worry about," Eliseth said
heartily. "I was about to offer a small suggestion that might be to your
interest, but—"
"What?"
It came out more sharply than Meiriel had intended, and she cursed the slip as
she saw the Weather-Mage smile.
Eliseth
leaned close. "You know Miathan's abhorrence for half-breeds. If Aurian
were to bear the swordsman's brat, then the Archmage would surely exile her for
good." She drew back, looking closely into Meiriel's face.
"But
Aurian would never let that happen—and her control of such matters is too
good—A taught her myself."
"But
you are the Healer, Meiriel. You must have the power to undo what you've
taught—that is, if you want to. Just think —one small counterspell would rid us
of Aurian and her unsavory influence for good. Really, it would be a favor to
everyone concerned. Aurian's loyalties are pulling her more and more toward the
Mortals, unthinkable though it is. With the decision made for her, she'd be
happier elsewhere, and she and Forral could be together in peace." Eliseth
shrugged. "And what better opportunity could you have than tonight? Aurian
has already drunk a good deal—she is enjoying herself too much to notice your interference.
Why, she'll think she has made the slip herself—when she finds out. She would
never suspect you."
As she
rejoined Davorshan and Bragar, Eliseth was smiling. "Well?" Bragar
asked her. "How did it go?" The man would never learn subtlety.
"It
could scarcely be better." The Weather-Mage seated herself, smoothing her
skirts with fastidious care, and poured herself a goblet of wine. "As I
thought, it was no trouble at all to make Meiriel's ridiculous jealousy work in
our favor. Oh, she
protested
of course, and said she could never contemplate such a thing—but the seed has
been sown. She'll do it, never fear."
She
turned to Davorshan with a dazzling smile, smugly noting the anger on Bragar's
face. While the fools were at each other's throats vying for her favors, she
could easily control them both. "Well, Davorshan," she purred,
"now that Aurian is taken care of, we can turn to the business of removing
your unfortunate brother. Why don't you fetch some more wine? Suddenly I feel
like celebrating!"
When
they got back to the Academy, having been sternly "shushed" by the
guards at the gate, Anvar and Forral came to an unsteady halt outside Aurian's
rooms. "Come in, lad," Forral said gaily if somewhat indistinctly.
"Come and have a drink with Aurian. You haven't had a drink with Aurian
yet, and she'll get mad if you don't. And we don't want to make her mad,"
he added in an exaggerated whisper, making such a face that Anvar had to prop
himself weakly against the wall, he was laughing so much. Forral opened the
door and the two of them practically fell into the room,
Aurian
had been doing a fair amount of celebrating herself, judging by her flushed
face and the brilliance of her sparkling green eyes. She'd discarded the somber
Mage's robes or practical warrior's garb that she usually wore, and was instead
dressed in holiday finery—a tawny gold gown of velvet with a deep neckline and
long flowing sleeves. Her -wealth of fiery hair was caught back in a loose web
of gold, and she glowed like a living flame in the soft candlelight. Anvar felt
his heart give a couple of unsteady thumps. He had never realized that she was
so beautiful.
Forral
swooped down on her and, totally unembarrassed by Anvar's presence, covered her
face with kisses. She laughed, and flinging her arms around him, kissed him
back,
"You
look as though you've been having a good time," Aurian said 'with a smile,
"Me
an' Anvar have been down to the Unicorn with the lads and lasses," Forral
informed her, "but we missed you."
"And
I missed you two—ah—too." Aurian laughed. "I've been pining for my
SoTstice kiss all night." She made a doleful
face,
and Forral kissed her again. Then she discovered the bottle of wine that he
held. "You love! Is that for me?"
"We
couldn't celebrate without you," Forral declared grandly. "I'll open
it." Divesting Anvar of cloak and bottle, he poured wine for the three of
them and they stood in front of the fire and lifted their glasses to each
other.
"Joyous
Solstice, love," Aurian said to Forral. "Joyous Solstice,
Anvar."
And to
Anvar, for the first time in two years, it truly was.
They
sat together round the table and, to Anvar's embarrassment, Forral told Aurian
about his impromptu concert. "Truly, love, it was amazing," he said.
"Anvar here played that guitar like—like you handle a sword—all rhythm and
fire and flow. I wish you could have heard him."
"So
do I," Aurian said. "It sounds wonderful. Wherever did you learn to
play like that, Anvar?"
Because
Anvar felt so happy, and because the wine had loosened his tongue, he found
himself telling them about Ria teaching him music, and how his grandpa had made
instruments for him that he had lost when he came to the Academy. Tears filled
his eyes as he spoke of the two people he had loved so much, who were both dead
now,
Gently,
Aurian reached across and brushed a tear from his face. "Don't be sad,
Anvar, They're still with you, in the gift of music that you love so much.
They'll always be there—in your hands, and in your heart."
She
exchanged a look-with Forral—a look filled with such depths of love and sorrow
that Anvar, suddenly understanding, became uncertain whether his tears were for
himself, or for these two who had been so kind to him, and whose love was
doomed to someday end in tragedy.
Their
glasses were empty, and Aurian got up a little unsteadily to fetch some wine
that she said was perfect for a special occasion. "Miathan gave me this
for Solstice," she said, uncorking the dusty bottle. "It's one of his
special vintages. He would have fifty fits if he found out who'd been drinking
it!" The two men chuckled, and thanks to the Archmage's gift, the party
soon cheered up again.
The
three of them sang together, unaccompanied and softly, because the hour was
late. A fleeting thought of having
to get
up to serve breakfast crossed Anvar's mind, but he ignored it. How could
tomorrow ever come? This night was held forever in a timeless web of delight.
Aurian's contralto voice thrilled him. He'd never known that she could sing. By
the time they reached the bottom of the bottle they were back to bawdy ballads
and silly children's songs, and all three were laughing helplessly.
"Oh,
dear," Aurian gasped, wiping her streaming eyes. "I haven't had such
a good time in ages!" She tilted the bottle to refill their glasses, but
only a few drops trickled out, "Bat turds!" She muttered Finbarr's
favorite curse. "That's the last!"
"I
should go anyway," Anvar said, struggling to his feet. "I have to get
up in the morning to bring you lazy lot your breakfast." He had spoken
thoughtlessly, confident for once that his words would not cause offense, but
Aurian's face fell. "Oh, Anvar, I'm sorry. I wasn't thinking . . ."
Forral
frowned, "Look, lad," he said, "you know it's not Aurian's
fault. She can't release you from your bond, and my hands are tied. I'd have
this bondservant business stopped tomorrow if I could, but I'm outnumbered on
the Council. Don't think I haven't tried. And why blame poor Aurian? She didn't
make you a bondservant—she only tried to help you. Does she treat you like a
slave? She's been worrying herself silly over you these last months, did you
know that? She'd like nothing better than to free you if she could, and this is
no way to treat her in return!"
That
was too much, "I know that!" Anvar cried angrily. "But how would
you feel if you were in my place? You don't know what it's like to have
nothing—no freedom, no future, no hope! To always force yourself to be
respectful, to watch each word lest you're punished for speaking out of turn,
to always be at someone's beck and call. You and the Lady Aurian have a place
in the world. You have respect; you have each other to love, and to love you.
Can I ever hope for that? I'm a bondservant—I'm not free to love. Can you
imagine how lonely that can be? For the rest of my life I'll have nothing to
look forward to—nothing and no one of my own!"
"Oh,
Anvar." Aurian's eyes brimmed with sympathy. Going to Anvar, she took his
hands, "I wish there was something I could do," she said sefcty.
Anvar,
already ashamed of his outburst, felt guiltier than ever. "Lady, I'm
sorry," he said. "I didn't mean to sound as if I were complaining
about you. Why, you've been so kind to me . . ." He struggled to find the
words. "I wouldn't have missed tonight for all the world."
"Nor
would I," Aurian assured him, and he knew his apology had been accepted.
She dug into a drawer and produced a small packet of herbs which she tucked
into Anvar's pocket. "Make that into a tea in the morning," she said.
"It's one of Meiriel's cure-alls—wonderful for aching heads. I'm sure I'll
be in no state tomorrow to attempt any Healing! Sleep as late as you want,
Anvar, and when you get round to it, bring enough
breakfast
for three."
Anvar
assumed that Miathan must be breakfasting with Aurian and Forral, and suddenly
the evening was ruined. With a sigh, he turned to go. But Forral detained him,
putting an arm around his shoulders. "We understand, lad," he said
softly. "Both of us do. I don't know if we can influence the Archmage, but
maybe next year we can try to get you down to the Garrison. I know you said
that Aurian has been teaching you a bit of swordplay. If you look like you can
learn, and it suits you, maybe Miathan would let you join my troop. You're too
good a man to waste your life drudging for bloody Mages—begging your pardon,
love," he added quickly, glancing at Aurian and covering his mouth in
embarrassment. "I didn't mean you, of
course."
To
Anvar's surprise ^Aurian, far from being angry, was delighted. "Forral,
what a splendid idea!" She hugged the swordsman fiercely. Anvar felt as
though a heavy weight had been lifted from his heart. In an excess of gratitude
he hugged Forral too, joining in the general embrace, his face cracking in a
grin so wide it almost hurt.
Then
Aurian was hugging him, and Forral suddenly said: "Here, you haven't given
Anvar a Solstice kiss yet. Fancy forgetting that!"
"Goodness,"
Aurian said, "you're absolutely right!" She put her arms around
Anvar's neck and he felt her lips brush his cheek, light as a butterfly's wing.
"That's
pathetic, lass!" Forral roared. "Can't you do better than that? Go
on, it's Solstice. Kiss him properly!" And she
did.
Not a kiss of passion, such as Forral had received, but a gentle, generous kiss
nonetheless, and to Anvar, strangely precious. Once again, he felt his heart
pound unsteadily, the touch of her soft lips on his making him tremble.
"That's
more like it!" Forral said, and suddenly Anvar remembered his presence.
"You've brought back his smile, love," the swordsman said to Aurian.
"Well,
I should hope so!" the Mage replied. For an instant she looked deep into
Anvar's eyes. "You should smile more often, Anvar—it suits you. Well, if
things work out, maybe you'll have more reason to smile in the future."
"I'll
drink to that," Forral said. "Oh, curse it—we can't!" So they
said their good-nights instead. That night Anvar's bed seemed less hard and
cold than it usually did, and his dreams were sweet.
Anvar
paid for the previous night's celebrations on Solstice Morn. His head was
pounding fit to fall off, and he wished it would—anything to be rid of the
pain. But Aurian's remedy worked wonders, and soon he felt able to get her
breakfast tray ready, though the smell of the food gave him some queasy
moments.
As he
carried the tray up the tower steps to Aurian's door, Anvar heard the sound of
hurrying footsteps behind him and turned to see the Mage herself, cloaked and
booted for a trip outdoors. She was out of breath and carried a large, flattish
wooden box in her arms. He wo'hdefed where she had been so early, especially if
she felt as delicate as he did. As she approached, Anvar saw that she looked
rather tired and drawn, but the cold had brought a glow to her cheeks and a little
of last night's sparkle back into her eyes. Snowflakes were melting into
brilliant diamond drops in her wind-tangled hair and the spicy, musky perfume
that she favored was overlaid with the fresh, invigorating scent of the snowy
open air.
Thinking
of her kiss the previous night, Anvar felt himself blush. Would she regret what
had happened under the influence of the wine? Would she turn away in
embarrassment or scorn? But the smile she gave him was frank and friendly—and
sympathetic.
"You,
too?" slwssid with a wry smile, putting a hand to
her
forehead. Anvar nodded. "Never mind," she said. "It was worth
it. I enjoyed every minute of last night."
Anvar
was startled. Did she know what he'd been thinking? Did her words carry some
hidden meaning? Frowning, he followed the Mage into her rooms.
"Gods,
what a mess!" Aurian grimaced at the litter of bottles and goblets, and
went to open the curtains.
Anvar
put down the tray and began to tidy the debris while she lit the fire—a task
that never took her long. The sound of their bustle must have awakened Forral,
for Anvar heard a groan from the bed in the adjacent room. Aurian ran to the
swordsman, her face full of sympathy, and Anvar cursed his own stupidity.
Hidden meanings, indeed! What a fool he was! Thoroughly ashamed of himself, he
turned to go.
Aurian's
face appeared round the bedroom door. "Don't go yet, Anvar!" she
said.
Anvar
waited reluctantly as she mixed some of Meiriel's medicine and took it in to
Forral. The loving closeness of the pair emphasized the emptiness of his own
life, and he felt left out and, in truth, a little jealous. Besides, he didn't
want to risk meeting Miathan.
"When
are you expecting the Archmage, Lady?" Anvar asked as Aurian came back
into the room.
"Miathan?
Is he corning? Has there been a message?"
Aurian
frowned.
Anvar
gestured at the table set for three. "No, but I
thought
..." • -*
The
Mage's face broke into a grin. "Gracious, no," she said.
"Miathan won't eat with me while Forral is here. I thought you might like
to join us this morning, since it's Solstice Day. Go on, sit down. Forral's
coming."
When
the swordsman appeared, his haggard face turned green at the sight of the food.
"Do I have to eat that stuff?" he asked plaintively.
"Go
on, try it," Aurian urged. "It's just what you need."
"Bossy!"
Forral grumbled, but sure enough, the food and Aurian's medicine soon began to
work, and by the time the last plate was cleared, everyone was feeling much
better.
Aurian
turned to Anvar. "Forral and I exchanged gifts last night," she said,
"and it occurred to me that I hadn't given you
anything,
so . . ." She leaned across and lifted the box that had been propped in
the corner. "This is for you."
Anvar
held the box on his lap, not knowing what to say. It was almost too much.
Forral, last night, had given him the cloak—and now this. Slowly he opened the
lid. There, cradled by a thick padding of cloth, lay a beautiful guitar, its
gleaming wood rich with intricate inlay—work of real quality. He stared at
Aurian, not daring to believe.
"Is
it all right?" she asked. "I should have let you choose for yourself,
but I wanted to surprise you. I'm sure the maker would change it if you don't
like it, even though he wasn't too pleased at being knocked out of bed this
morning!"
Anvar
lifted the instrument carefully out of the box and struck a chord. It needed
tuning after its journey in the cold, but the tone was mellow and sweet.
"Oh, Lady, thank you," he whispered. His throat felt tight, and his
eyes filled with tears. No matter how much he feared and hated most of the
Magefolk, he knew now that Aurian was a very special exception. If he had to be
a bondservant, he could not have hoped for a kinder mistress.
In the
snowy weeks that followed Solstice, Anvar's life was brightened by the Lady
Aurian's gift. The Mage suggested that he keep it in her rooms, rather than
leaving the precious instrument unattended in the servants' quarters, and since
she was away from the chambers so much, -he cpuld practice there to his heart's
content. At their suggestion, he began to accompany Aurian and Forral down to
the Invisible Unicorn in the evenings to play for the troopers, and his talent
was so well appreciated that he suddenly found himself gaining many new
friends.
One
night, Anvar was at the Unicorn with his Lady and her warrior friends, Maya and
Parric. Forral was occupied at the Garrison with work for the next day's
Council meeting. Since Forral and Aurian had become lovers, the swordsman had
been clashing more and more with Miathan, and Anvar knew that Aurian was
becoming increasingly concerned. She was quiet and distracted that night; her
brow was clouded with a frown that not even Parric 's,jnost outrageous sallies
had been able to
lift.
The arrival of Vannor, however, brought a new animation to the Mage's face.
"Well?"
Aurian demanded, as the merchant settled down with his ale. "Did you find
Dulsina? Did you ask her to come
back?"
Vannor
gave her a mock-fierce scowl. "Did I have much choice, after that
tongue-lashing I got from you and Maya? Yes, I found her—she was staying with a
cousin who has a lodging house near the Garrison. Yes, she consented to come
back— after she'd made me grovel, that is!"
"Serves
you right for dismissing her in the first place!" Maya snorted. "We
have no sympathy, do we, Aurian?"
"Not
a bit!" the Mage chuckled. "You must admit, Vannor, it wasn't a very
clever move, considering that Dulsina is the only one who knows where your
children are! You said she had sent them to stay with her sister, didn't
you?"
"That's
right," the merchant said, with a heartiness that Anvar, looking on, found
oddly false. "But there's no mystery," Vannor went on.
"Dulsina's sister lives up the coast somewhere near Wyvernesse. Dulsina
didn't want to tell me at first—I think she expected me to go charging up there
causing trouble." He signed. "I miss them, you know—especially Zanna—
but Dulsina's sister will take good care of them. It'll do them good to get out
of the city for a while, and I must admit that it's restful not to have Sara
and Zanna squabbling all the time. On reflection, Dulsina was right to do what
she did—I should have known that she was-acting in the best interests of
everyone."
"I'll
wager that Sara's glad to have Dulsina back!" Aurian's eyes glinted
wickedly, and Anvar pricked up his ears.
"I'll
say!" Vannor snorted. "In truth, we're all glad to have her back—the
household was falling apart around our ears without her. Even Sara said—"
At this
point, Anvar went to fetch a new jug of ale. Listening to Vannor talking of
Sara as his wife was just too painful. He was returning to the others at their
favorite table by the fireside when a pale, faltering figure appeared in the
tavern doorway. Anvar caught his breath in astonishment. D'arvan! What was he
doing here?
"Aurian—thank
the Gods you're here!" The young Mage
staggered
to the table, flinging himself on Aurian, who had leapt to her feet.
"Miathan threw me out! And Davorshan— he—"
"D'arvan!"
Aurian had automatically put her arms around the distraught Mage's shoulders.
Anvar saw her recoil as though she had been stung, and her hands, when she took
them away, were covered with blood. The Mage recovered herself quickly.
"Hurry," she hissed at Anvar. "Help me get him out of here,
before anyone notices!"
"Do
you want me to help?" Vannor asked.
Aurian
shook her head. "No, Vannor—just divert attention, if you would. I don't
want the word to get out that a Mage was attacked!"
"We'll
follow in a moment," Maya whispered, looking alarmed. Anvar helped the
Mage catch D'arvan as he collapsed, and she made her hasty good-nights to
Parric and Maya. They headed for the door, supporting his limp body between
them.
"Honestly,"
Maya was saying to Vannor in a loud voice as they left, for the benefit of
anyone who might be curious. "She's told him time and again about drinking
so much!"
Aurian
was relieved when they finally reached the door to Forral's quarters. D'arvan's
breathing was becoming more and more labored, although, since he had managed to
get from the Academy to the Unicorn, she didn't think the wound was too
serious. She had acted decisively in the tavern, getting him away before the
other customers harf time to become curious, but now the shock was taking its
toll, and she was weary from half dragging D'arvan through streets filled with
slippery slush, taking a circuitous route through the back lanes to avoid the
stares of passers-by.
"Aurian!
What the bloody blazes has happened?" A tired-looking Forral opened the
door, his mouth slack with astonishment. Without answering, Aurian helped Anvar
to lay D'arvan on the couch. Forral put his arms around her, and she relaxed
for a moment, leaning against his shoulder. "Are you all right, love?"
he asked her, and she pulled herself upright and kissed him, glad that he was
there.
"I
am, but D'arvan isn't," she said. "He's been hurt. Forral,
will
you light another lamp and get us all some wine while I see to him? Anvar will
tell you what happened."
Sitting
on the edge of the couch, Aurian pulled away the torn remains of D'arvan's
robes to expose his back, feeling a mixture of relief and consternation. The
wound was a long slice, bloody but shallow—and it had obviously been done with
a knife. It wasn't serious, thank the Gods—but who in the world had tried to
stab the Mage? Aurian was well aware that most of the Magefolk were unpopular
with the city's inhabitants, but this was unthinkable!
By now,
Aurian was well advanced in the skills of Healing. As she concentrated her
powers, the wound was suffused by a faint violet-blue glow, and she had the
satisfaction of seeing the sundered tissues start to knit before her eyes as
the bleeding stopped and the gash began to close. As D'arvan's pain ceased, she
felt his body relax beneath her hands, and his eyes flickered open. She helped
him to a sitting position, and Forral handed him a cup of wine.
Just
then the Cavalrymaster entered with Maya, "Don't worry," Parric
assured Aurian. "Whoever attacked him, they didn't follow you here."
"Is
he all right?" Maya asked anxiously. "Has he told you how it
happened?"
"Not
yet." The Mage frowned. "I'm just about to ask him." D'arvan's
fine-boned face was even paler than usual, but he was conscious, and seemed
fairly alert. "You'll want to sleep," Aurian told him, '*but drink
your wine, before you rest." She sat down beside him, gratefully taking a
goblet of wine from Forral, "You're safe now," she said, "We're
in the Garrison. D'arvan—can you tell me what happened?"
D'arvan
shuddered. "Miathan," he whispered, "He sent for me. He said
that I was never going to be any use, and told me to get out of the
Academy," His hands trembled so that wine slopped out of the cup. "He
had the guards throw me out of the top gate. I—I didn't know what to do; so I
was coming to find you. Then, as I was crossing the causeway, Davorshan—my own
brother—leapt out from behind the wall and tried to stab me."
Aurian
caught her breath. Davorshan? A Mage attacking another Mage? Brother against
brother? One thing was certain, she thought grimly. Eliseth was behind this,
somehow.
"I
knew he was there," D'arvan went on. "We're so closely linked, it
saved me. I saw my murder in his mind, and I dodged, but the knife caught me,
then we struggled and I managed to get away. The guards at the lower gate heard
the disturbance, and he had to stop to talk to them. Aurian—how could he do
this?" He dropped the cup, burying his face in his hands.
Aurian
put her arms around him, "You say you knew his mind," she prompted
gently, when he became calmer. "Do you know why he did it?"
D'arvan
nodded. "He—he's been working with Eliseth, and making some progress with
Water-magic," he said, "He had decided that we must have only enough
power for one Mage between us, and since Miathan had banished me, he could kill
me so that all the power would be his."
"But
that's ridiculous!"
"I
don't think so," D'arvan said. "I've suspected as much myself. It's
the only explanation. We've been tangling up this power between us, but since
Davorshan discovered where his skills lay, he's been able to reach some of it.
Maybe I could, if I had any talents, but I've tried everything—"
"Wait
a minute!" Aurian sat up abruptly, "No you haven't! Gods take me for
a fool, why didn't we think of it sooner? You haven't tried Earth-magic, for
the simple reason that there's no one at the Academy who teaches it. D'arvan,
we'll send you to my mother! No one will know where you are, so you'll be safe.
Eilin can shield you, and she'll teach you. And it would be a great help for
her. She won't admit it, but she desperately needs some company."
"But
I'm not sure , . ." D'arvan began doubtfully,
"Oh,
nonsense. You have to try, don't you see? At least you'll know for certain. And
you can't let that brother of yours get away with this without a fight!"
"Well
. . . I've always liked plants and
things . . ."
"Of
course you have," Aurian noticed that D'arvan's eyelids were drooping,
"Look, get some rest now, I'll get a blanket and you can sleep on the
couch. You'll be safe here, and in a day or so we'll see about smuggling you
out of the city. At all costs, the other Magefolk mustn't find out where you
are."
"I'll
send Maya with him," Forral suggested. "She'll see that he gets there
safely."
"Of
course I'll go," Maya said. Stooping, she embraced the young Mage.
"Don't you worry," she told him. "We'll take care
of
you."
When
Maya and Parric had gone to their beds, Aurian and Forral stood with their arms
around each other, looking down at the sleeping Mage. Now that D'arvan was
asleep, Aurian could no longer contain her rage at the way he had been treated.
"Forral, I don't like what's happening. Nothing's as it should be anymore
at the Academy, and as for Miathan—well, after the way he treated Anvar,
and—and now this . . ." Still she couldn't bring herself to
tell Forral about the Archmage's attack on her. But her decision had crystallized. "Forral, I've had enough! I'm sick of
the Academy—and the Magefolk, most of them. We have so many powers, but we
never think of using them to help people! Think of the good we could have done,
if my people had not been so arrogant and self-absorbed. I want to leave—to
find my own way in the world. And I want to be with you—all the time, not just
for these snatched moments!"
Forral
looked at her gravely. "Maybe you're right," he said softly.
"I've felt this way about the Magefolk for so long— Gods, if it hadn't
been for you, I'd have left long ago. Of course we can go, love. But we'll have
to make our plans carefully, and we must flee fast and far to escape Miathan.
He won't let you go
easily!" ^
"We
must take Anvaf with us, too," Aurian said urgently. She looked around at
her servant, who had fallen asleep in a chair. "At least we can give him
back his freedom." Gently, so as not to wake him, she covered him with
another blanket from
Forral's
bedchamber.
"We
could all do with some sleep," Forral suggested. "Once D'arvan and
Maya are safely on their way, we'll be able to make some plans of our
own." He yawned. "Come on, love. Come to bed. We're too tired to
think straight—and I want my wits about me tomorrow. I have another wrangle to
face in Council with that bloody Archmage—can you believe he wants to raise the
sewer tax again? He won't be satisfied until he's bled this city dry. If this
is to be my last fight with him, I mean to make it a good one—especially after
what I've seen tonight!"
Aurian
climbed gratefully into bed with her lover, ruefully noting the scarcity of
covers. "You'd better not steal the bedclothes tonight," she told
Forral. "I'll have trouble keeping warm as it is." She snuggled close
to him. "It reminds me of when I was little, when I gave you all my
blankets so that you wouldn't have to leave the Valley." She flung her
arms around him. "Oh Gods, Forral, I love you! I couldn't bear to think of
losing you."
Forral
held her close, stroking her hair. "You'll never lose me," he
reassured her. "Never, while I live."
As he
spoke, Aurian again felt that premonitory prickle of dread, like ice sheeting
over her bare skin. She shuddered, and tightened her grasp on Forral until he
grunted a sleepy protest. It can't be true, she assured herself desperately.
I'm tired and worried, that's all—I'm imagining things. She closed her eyes
firmly, and did her best to thrust her fears from her mind. But weary as she
was, Aurian got no sleep that night.
1
1 I
Cxhapter 14
THE DEATH
WRAITHS
he
meetings of the Council of Three were held in the ____ Guildhall, a magnificent
circular building near the Grand Arcade. The decisions that ruled the city were
made at a small gilded table in the very center of the vast round chamber, and
anyone wishing to observe the proceedings could watch from the gallery of the
hall, though usually only a few stalwarts were present. Narvish, the City
Recorder, sat with the Three to record what took place.
When
Forral arrived at the Guildhall, every seat in the gallery was taken. Interest
in this meeting was unusually high because the matter under discussion would
affect every man, woman, and child in the city. The Archmage wanted to raise
the sewer tax, the sum paid by every citizen in Nexis for the upkeep of the
sewer system that made life so pleasant and healthy for them. Magic kept the
water circulating, pumping the city's waste away downriver, and no one objected
to giving the Magefolk a small tithe for the convenience, but Miathan's new
demands were extortionate, especially for those with large families. There was
a great deal of anger among the city's people at the prospect, and feelings
against the Archmage and the Council were running high.
Vannor
had already arrived, and was seated alone at the table, looking uncomfortable.
When Forral took the Garrison Commander's chair, the Head of the Merchants'
Guild leaned toward him, his low voice masked by the general hubbub in the
room. "Forral, no offense, but I know that Miathan has you in an invidious
position on this Council, because of Aurian. But have you thought this business
through? The tax will cripple the poor people of the city, and it'll be your
job to enforce it. What will happen to those who can't pay? What if they all
refuse to pay it? The way feelings are running at the moment they well might.
If this new law goes through, we'll be up to our necks in shit—in more ways
than one!"
In
spite of himself, Forral grinned. "You have a wonderful way with words,
Vannor."
"So
they tell me." The blunt-faced merchant returned his
smile,
and Forral regretted that his relationship with Aurian had always prevented him
from outfacing the Archmage in a public display of opposition. Vannor deserved
better. It would be a real pleasure to help him out this time.
Miathan
swept into the room, making his grand entrance as usual, flanked by that
obsequious little toad Narvish. Forral's mouth tightened at the sight of the
City Recorder—a stringy, gap-toothed old fossil who was the bane of the
swordsman's life. Rumor had it that Narvish took bribes from Miathan, and to
Forral's certain knowledge, the records of recent meetings had been slanted in
favor of the Archmage. Nothing major, of course. Nothing that could be proved.
But an altered emphasis, perhaps, or an odd word or two displaced, that threw
the account of a straightforward discussion into confusion and doubt. Well,
there would be no chance of that today, Forral thought grimly. This would be a
public debate, settled by a simple majority vote, and now that Aurian had
decided to leave the Magefolk, the swordsman no longer had to dance to the
Archmage's tune. Miathan was going to be in for a big surprise, Forral thought.
He was looking forward to it immensely.
The
debate took up the whole of its allotted three hours, and Forral could feel the
surprise emanating from the audience. Such a thing had never been known during
the Archmage's tenure. Miathan had always made sure that he had at least one
supporter on the Council, and had always had his way, sweeping any opposition
easily aside. But not this time. After a while, Vannor no longer bothered
to^iide his smile, as the two Mortal men systematically destroyed every one of
the Archmage's suave arguments between them. Forral contented himself with
smiling inwardly as he watched Miathan's expression gcow blacker and blacker.
At last
the Voting Bell was rung, putting an end to any further debate. Narvish, who
had been looking increasingly alarmed as the discussion continued, rose to his
feet and addressed the meeting. "The Archmage Miathan has put forward a
motion to this Council to increase the sewer tax by ten silver pieces," he
intoned. "Those in favor of accepting the motion into the city's statutes,
please rise."
There
was utter silence as the Archmage rose to his feet— alone. Forral saw Miaih^n
turn to him, expecting him to have
risen
also. With a show of nonchalance, he leaned back in his chair, and put his
booted feet up on the gilded Council table. A gasp echoed through the room. The
Archmage's expression changed from complacency to baffled rage. Narvish,
completely at a loss, looked wildly around, as if searching for a means of
escape. "Ah ... Is that everyone?" he squeaked.
"Get
on with it, man," Vannor growled, but his eyes were twinkling. The
merchant appeared to be enjoying himself hugely. The greasy little Recorder
sidled away from the fuming Archmage. "Ah . . . All those against?"
Slowly,
Forral removed his feet from the table and stood up with Vannor, as the chamber
erupted into tumultuous applause. The Archmage, his face absolutely livid, opened
his mouth to speak, but Forral held his glare with a look of stony defiance.
Miathan turned on his heel and stormed out of the hall, for once in his life
utterly defeated.
The
Archmage paced the floor of his chamber, barely able to contain his rage. This
time, Forral had gone too far. How dared he stand with that upstart Vannor,
flaunting the supremacy of those Mortal scum over one of the Mageborn! Miathan
knew that the rule of the city was slipping out of his grasp, along with all
his greater plans. Enough was enough. Aurian or no Aurian, Forral had just
signed his own death warrant.
Miathan
frowned, remembering something else. Something that he had not previously
connected with Forral's defiance. Since he had exiled D'arvan last night, the
Mage had simply vanished. Where could he be? Miathan's spies had failed to
locate him in the city, and the Archmage wondered if he had made the right
decision in acceding to the pleas of Eliseth and Bragar to get rid of D'arvan,
who, they insisted, was impeding his brother's progress. Better to have one
working Mage loyal to us, they had said, than two who are useless. But Miathan
wondered now. Someone of Mage blood was still a potential source of power, and
it disturbed him to have D'arvan away from his influence. What if he was
hatching some plot with Forral and— Miathan winced at the thought—Aurian? And
what did Eliseth and Bragar mean by "loyal to us"? Was Davorshan
loyal to the Archmage, or simply to them? Miathan wrestled with the
possibilities, falling into the classic trap of those who spend their
lives
plotting and scheming against others. He was convinced that the others, in
their turn, were plotting to overthrow him.
Eliseth
and Bragar appeared to be loyal, but he did not completely trust them. Certainly
not enough to tell them about this. Miathan stroked the burnished golden rim of
the chalice that stood on the table before him. This would serve him well, if
they should move against him! Finbarr's research had provided him with the
answers he needed. Here indeed lay the power of the Caldron, and like all the
tools of Gramarye, the High Magic, it could be used as boon—or bane. Miathan
smiled. The Mages' Code was for simpletons! Here, under his hand, lay a weapon
so formidable—
His
deliberations were interrupted by a soft knock at the door. Miathan cursed, and
quickly pulled an embroidered cloth over the chalice to hide it.
"Enter," he called.
It was
Meiriel. She bowed low. "Your pardon, Lord Archmage," she said,
"I must speak with you urgently."
"This
is very formal, is it not, Meiriel?" Miathan forced joviality into his
voice. There was no evidence that the Healer was against him, and he might need
all the support he could get. "Come, sit. Let me pour you some wine."
Meiriel
seemed very disturbed. Her jaw worked; her eyes darted everywhere as she sat
and accepted the cup from him. Before he had time to sit again she had blurted
out her news. "Aurian is with child, Archmage!"
Miathan
froze, half seated as_he .was. The room seemed darker, and suddenly chill.
"Are you sure?" he whispered.
"I'm
certain," Meiriel said. "The aura of a Mage changes once a child is
conceived. A Healer can see it, though Magewomen themselves are later than
Mortals in making the discovery, since we are trained to suppress the cycles
that would otherwise warn us. It can be little more than two months yet and I
don't think Aurian knows—she can hardly have expected it. But soon—very
soon—she will know."
Miathan
fell heavily into the chair. "Oh Gods," he whispered. "Gods—not
this!"
The
Healer, braced as she was for a furious outburst, looked at him in confusion,
then took a sudden, gulping breath. "How could you let this happen!"
she spat. "With a Mortal!"
"Be
silent!" Miaffiaft snapped, not listening. He was re-
membering
a day long ago when a blue-eyed Mortargirl had wept before him, as she told him
similar news—and, more urgently, a day not so very long ago, when he had
conceived a terrible curse . . . His Aurian, gravid with that cursed Mortal's
monstrous spawn—a monster that he himself had helped to create, just as much as
they—
"Archmage?"
The Healer was tugging urgently at his
sleeve.
"Curse
you, Meiriel, get out—no, wait!" He crushed her hands in an iron grip.
"You are a Healer—could you get rid of this child? Without Aurian
knowing?"
"What?"
Meiriel stared at him. "What are you saying?" "Listen."
Miathan leaned close. "You said that Aurian is unaware of her pregnancy.
We must end it, Meiriel, and as a Healer, it would be a simple matter for you.
But if Aurian finds out, she would never allow it, and she has power enough to
prevent you. So we must act quickly. I'll summon her now, and put spells of
deep sleep on her while you dispose of the child. When she wakes, she will be
none the wiser. We can say she was taken ill—that she overtaxed herself again,
and"—the Archmage shrugged—"the matter will end there." His eyes
met those of the Healer. "After that, I shall deal with that thrice-cursed
swordsman once and for all. This must not be allowed to happen again!"
The
Healer gaped at him. "But . . ." she floundered, "you weren't
supposed to—I mean, I—"
"Meiriel!"
the Arcrfmage barked. "Can you do it or not?" With an effort, the
Healer got hold of herself. "I suppose so," she whispered unhappily.
"Excellent."
The Archmage smiled. "My dear Meiriel, I am well pleased with you. This
will not go unrewarded. Are you sure that no one suspects? Finbarr?
Anyone?"
"As
if I would tell Finbarr!" Meiriel's lip curled. "He'd be no friend to
us in this. He's besotted with the wretched woman!" Her eyes flashed
angrily.
Miathan's
eyes narrowed. So she was jealous of Aurian? He filed the information away in
his mind, for future use. "Very well," he said. "I'll send for
Aurian now."
"Blasted,
bloody thing!" Aurian tugged fiercely at the brush, which was inextricably
tangled with a snarl of her hair. Then in temper she threw the whole thing away
from her— brush, hair, and all—with the inevitable result.
"Ouch!"
She banged her fist hard on the table, making the mirror tremble.
"Lady,
let me." Anvar hurried to her side, hastily retrieving the brush, which
swung in midair, dangling from the tangled lock of hair. He freed it carefully,
then, while she rubbed at her head, he brought her a glass of wine, taking the
brush with him to forestall a further outburst. For some reason, his mistress
seemed to be growing awfully moody of late.
Aurian
took a huge gulp of the wine and smiled at him. "Thank you, Anvar. I don't
know what I'd do without you." She rubbed irritably at her forehead.
"Stupid of me, to carry on like that. I don't know what's the matter with
me these days. You had better give me the brush back, or I'll never be in time
to meet Forral."
"Shall
I do it, Lady?" Anvar offered. "I used to brush my mother's hair
..." He flinched from the memory. Why did it still hurt so, to think of
her? "Anyway," he went on hastily, "she always said I was
gentle."
"Perhaps
you should," Aurian agreed. She looked surprised at the mention of his
past, but Anvar knew that she had given up trying to question him about it.
Anvar
took up the brush and began to work on her hair, carefully unknotting the snags
with his fingers before carrying on. He enjoyed the feel of the long, thick
strands that slipped like heavy silk through his hands. Soon he was brushing in
long, smooth strokes, and he saw the rigid set of Aurian's shoulders beginning
to rela^,
"That's
lovely," she sighed. "Bless you, Anvar. I can't think how it got so
tangled—it usually doesn't when it's braided. It must have been Parric's
cavalry practice. I've been on the horse, off the horse, underneath it even,
all day—and that doesn't count the times when I fell, or was knocked off!"
"Is
fighting on horseback very different, Lady?" Anvar asked. Lately, she had
been teaching him the rudiments of swordsmanship, and he was determined to
excel.
Aurian
nodded. "Completely different," she said. "For one
thing,
you count on force rather than agility because you are far less maneuverable.
There are different fighting styles, depending on whether your opponents are
mounted or on foot. If they're on foot, they'll be trying to get in underneath
and disable the horse, which in itself is a very formidable weapon— warhorses
are trained to fight as well as their warriors—" She broke off with a
rueful smile. "Sorry, Anvar. I didn't mean to start a lecture. Parric has
me eating, sleeping, and breathing horsemanship at the moment."
Anvar
smiled back at her reflection in the mirror, enjoying the ease that existed
between them nowadays. "Shall I braid it
again?"
he asked.
"You
can do that, too?" Aurian sounded surprised. "Gods, Anvar, is there
no end to your talents?" She chuckled. "I suppose you realize that
you've just talked yourself into another job? All that braiding makes my arms
ache!"
"I'd
be happy to do it, Lady," Anvar said, and was surprised to realize that it
was true.
"Thank
you, Anvar. I appreciate that. But not tonight. We're dining with Vannor, and I
think I'll look like a lady, rather than a warrior." She slipped a fillet
of twisted gold over her burnished hair to hold the fiery mass in place, and
stood, smoothing the skirts of her emerald-green gown. "Well," she
said, "I must be off. See you later, Anvar—oh, drat! Who can
that
be?"
Anvar
went to answer the door. It was a servant, summoning the Lady Aurian to
"the presence of the Archmage. Aurian scowled when he gave her the
message. "Bat turds! I'm going to be late! Did he say what Miathan
wanted?"
"I'm
sorry, Lady." Anvar shook his head. The Mage gave a long-suffering sigh,
but he had glimpsed the flicker of fear behind her casual pose. "Lady—if
you want to get away, I'll go and tell the Archmage that I made a mistake, and
that you've already gone," he offered.
"Thanks—but
I'd better go myself. Miathan is the sort to blame the messenger for the
tidings! I'll come back for my cloak before I go—hopefully this won't take too
long."
When
Aurian had gone, Anvar busied himself about her rooms, tidying away the
clothing she'd discarded on her return from the Garrison. He picked up her
leather fighting clothes
and her
sword belt and boots, rolling them into a bundle with the cloak that had once
belonged to Forral. He left them by the door, near her sword that stood propped
against the wall. He'd clean them later, he thought. They stank of horses. He
emptied her bath, built up the fire, and placed a new flask of wine on the
table, ready for her return. His tasks completed, Anvar was about to reach for
his guitar to while away a solitary hour or two, when he saw her staff, which
had rolled beneath the bed, forgotten.
A staff
was a vital tool for a Mage, serving to focus and concentrate their power. Each
of the Magefolk, on reaching a certain degree of aptitude, would make a staff from
one of the traditional magical trees—from a branch or a root, as they
preferred—and fuse it with their power and personality. Aurian had delayed long
over making her staff, knowing she was clumsy at carving and afraid that the
result would be a disaster.
Seeking
a way to repay her generous Solstice gift, Anvar had gone to the woods south of
the river and found a twisted root of beech, Aurian's favorite tree. He had
carved it carefully, using the skills his grandpa had taught him and using the
natural twists of the wood to form the two Serpents of the High Magic—the
Serpent of Might and the Serpent of Wisdom— that coiled, intertwining, up the
length of the staff from bottom to top. It was the most beautiful thing he had
ever made, with a force and life of its own, even before it was imbued with
magic. Aurian had been overjoyed wi/h it, and her delight had been reward
indeed for Anvar.
Anvar
bent to pick up the staff—and dropped it as though it had burned him. When his
fingers had touched the wood, he'd felt a jolt of fear—a flash of panic as
though Aurian had cried out to him in helpless desperation. Cautiously, he
reached for it again, but this time, there was nothing. Turning the staff in
his hands, Anvar frowned. What had happened to Aurian? She had been gone for
ages! Was something wrong? Had she managed to reach out to him via this
implement that he had made, and she had infused with her power? A knot of pain
formed between Anvar's eyes at the thought, but he refused to be put off,
remembering the flash of fear on her face when she was summoned by Miathan.
Terrified though he was of the
Archmage,
Anvar knew he would have to find out if she was all
right.
With
dragging feet, he climbed to the topmost floor, trying without success to
convince himself that he'd imagined the whole thing. Miathan's door was
slightly ajar. Anvar was lifting his hand to knock when he heard voices within.
The Archmage —and Meiriel? Where was Aurian? He froze, one hand lifted, chilled
by what he heard.
"It
isn't working, Miathan." Meiriel's voice was strained. "Even under
your spells, she instinctively fights to protect the
child."
"Plague
on it! Is there nothing you can do?" "Well . . . There's a drug that I could try. It would
work on her mind, to make her malleable to our commands. We might be able to
make her expel the brat herself." "Do you have it with you?"
"Of
course!" Meiriel snapped. "We must hurry, though. It will take the
drug about an hour to take effect, and if we should be discovered in the meantime—"
"Don't
worry. Eliseth and her companions will no doubt be occupied in plotting their
usual mischief, and you know that Finbarr never leaves his Archives! Get on
with it, Meiriel! For-ral's child must not survive this night!"
Anvar
gasped, steadying himself against the cold stone wall of the tower, his mind
spinning with confusion . . . Aurian's
babe, destroyed as Sara's had been, and for similar reasons . . . His child-^Forral's child . . . Forral! Turning, Anvar ran, soft-footed
until he was well around the first curve, then descending the spiral stairs at
a breakneck pace. Without thinking, he thrust the staff into his belt as he
reached the bottom, then pelted across the torchlit courtyard to the stables
next to the guardhouse. "A horse, quick!" he yelled to the startled
guards. "I'm on an urgent errand for the Lady Aurian!" They knew by
now that he was the Lady's trusted servant, and did not hinder him. He snatched
a bridle and forced it onto the nearest animal, then without waiting for a
saddle he vaulted astride, ducking beneath the stable doorway. He spurred out
of the gate just as the guards raised the signal lantern that would alert the
gatekeeper to open the lower gates.
Anvar
reached the gates of the Garrison, pursued by several
mounted
troopers who had taken exception to him hurtling through the city streets,
heedlessly scattering the passersby who got in his way. Two guards stood forth
to bar his way, and Anvar wrenched at the horse's mouth, throwing himself off
the startled beast before it had time to skid to a halt. He thrust the reins at
the astonished soldiers. "Commander Forral!" he gasped.
"Quick—where is he?"
Luckily
one of the guards was Parric. "In his quarters, but—" He was talking
to empty air. Anvar had gone, shouldering past him and running across the
parade ground to the officers' quarters. The troopers, arriving close on his
heels, looked at Parric, who simply shrugged.
Anvar
hammered frantically on Forral's door, almost hitting the Commander in the face
as he opened it.
"Anvar,
what in the world . .
."
Anvar
almost fell into the room, barely noticing Vannor seated by the fire. Clutching
at Forral's tunic, he gasped out his story. The result was unexpected. Anvar,
knowing Forral as a cool, capable, professional soldier, had failed to realize
that the swordsman might have a blind spot where Aurian was concerned. Forral's
face went absolutely white; all reason fled from his eyes. "Miathan,"
he howled in an inhuman voice, and snatching up his sword, he fled from the
room. Vannor and Anvar stared at each other, horrified, then, as one, they
rushed out after the berserk swordsman.
By the
time they had found norses and made their way through the crowded streets of
the clty^Torral was well ahead of them. The gatehouse on the causeway showed
the horrific evidence of his passing: the gatekeeper lay huddled and twisted in
a pool of blood. In the courtyard above was a worse scene of carnage, with dead
guards and servants littering the bloodstained paving stones. Forral's warhorse
stood by the tower door, its sides heaving, its ears laid back and nostrils
flaring at the scent of blood. Anvar and Vannor hurled themselves from their
mounts and dashed up the steps of the tower—only to stop dead on Miathan's threshold,
frozen by the horror within.
Aurian
was lost in a dark dream, fighting with all her strength against something dark
and nebulous, twisted and unspeakably evil—something that strove to possess her
very soul.
She
fought, desperate, weaponless, feeling herself gradually beginning to weaken,
feeling her will slowly slipping away in the face of the dark terror—the voice
that strove to master her. Then another voice reached her, crying Miathan's
name. Forral! She clung to his voice—a lifeline pulling her up—up and
out ...
Aurian
opened her eyes, saw the lamplight of Miathan's opulent quarters, saw Meiriel
cowering in a corner—and saw Forral, splattered with blood and clutching a
gory, dripping sword, advancing on the Archmage. Miathan retreated behind the
table, snatching at a cloth that covered something ... A chalice of graven,
burnished gold. In a chilling voice,
the Archmage began to intone the words of a spell, in a language ancient and
steeped in evil. Aurian felt an agonizing buzzing within her skull as the
buildup of dark, obscene magic permeated the chamber. "Miathan, no!"
she shrieked, struggling to fight off the effects of the drug and rise from the
couch where she lay. Forral continued his slow, inexorable advance, murder in
his eyes. Desperate, Aurian sent out a frantic mental call for help—to Finbarr,
the only Mage she could still trust.
The air
thickened and grew dark. In the gloom, the outside of the cup began to glow
with a pale, sickly luminescence like rotting fungus, its inside enclosing a
black, bottomless pit from which issued a hideous stench. The air was chill
with a cold from beyond the very grave, and reeked of rot and putrefaction.
Then something stjrred in the depths of the chalice and a shadow, like a drift
of black, oily smoke, poured over the rim. A single red eye burned steadily
within the moiling, churning vapors as the specter expanded and coalesced.
Forral shrank away as its deadly light fell upon him. A freezing wave of
malevolence filled the room, striking the swordsman to his knees as
the creature drifted
slowly in his
direction. He screamed once,
horribly, his face contorted.
"Miathan—no!"
The Archmage turned at the sound of Aurian's shriek, to see her struggling to
rise from the couch, her eyes fixed in horror on the abomination that he had
summoned. Then she turned to him, and the agony on her face struck straight to
his heart. "Take it back!" she cried. "Please,
Miathan,
spare him! I'll do anything—I swear it! I beg you, take it back!"
For a
moment, the Archmage hesitated—and his creature paused, hovering. He already
owed Aurian a blood debt for the murder of her father, and in his own, grasping
way, he truly loved her. Anything, she had said—and he had her oath on it.
Having won her gratitude for sparing Forral, surely he would win back her
heart?
He
turned, fully intending to call the creature back—until he saw the swordsman
trapped in his corner. All at once, the memory of his humiliation at Forral's
hands that morning returned in force. This—this filthy upstart Mortal was
Aurian's lover! He had laid hands on her body, had filled her with his seed—and
now she carried his monstrous brat! Enough! The Archmage's mind was utterly
consumed by the searing flames of jealousy—and his one chance to redeem himself
from evil was utterly lost.
Aurian
saw Miathan turn to the abomination—and saw his face contort into a hideous
mask of hatred. "Take him!" he shrieked. Forral huddled flat against
the wall, staring wild-eyed at the Thing that stalked him. Although he was
utterly fearless in the face of any human foe, this \w^s more than even Forral
could face. Aurian gasped, her body breaking out into an icy sweat. Never had
she seen anything like this! It took all her courage not to break and run, to
flee in mindless panic from this manifestation of evil that was_advancing on
her love with deadly intent.
It was
like a wisp of dark cloud—a smoky wraith that writhed and undulated with a
sickening pulsation, twisting and recombining in a series of leering,
malevolent demon faces that flickered and shimmered in a way that tortured and
wrenched both the eye and the gut. It was impossible to look at it; impossible
to look away. Aurian felt her head beginning to throb. The Thing was surrounded
by a swirling vortex of cold evil that sucked at her, leeching the warmth and
strength from her body, and she suddenly knew she had little time in which to
act.
With
the strength of desperation, she wrenched herself to her feet and leapt
across^the room, hurling herself in front of the
swordsman
and snapping her magical shield into place to protect them both. The Thing kept
advancing, slow and inexorable. Aurian bit back a scream as it hit her
shield—and passed straight through as though nothing were there! Forcing down
her panic, she backed toward Forral, snatching the sword from his nerveless
fingers.
The
blade thrummed, flaring into fiery light as Aurian infused it with the force of
her Fire-magic. She went for the abomination with a great, two-handed swipe, cleaving
it straight through the middle. Her blade met no resistance, as though it had
passed through smoke. The specter gave a deep, chilling chuckle—and the two
halves rejoined, flowing effortlessly back together. Shock exploded through
her, as her blade went dark and dead. Aurian staggered back weakly, dropping
the sword, her hands and arms numb with a pervasive chill that was quickly
spreading. The abomination advanced, seeming to grow in size, blotting out the
room with its massive, shadowy form. Passing over her as she lay helpless, it
swooped upon the swordsman, engulfing him in its reeking darkness. Forral gave
one last, strangled cry—her name—as the dark mass flowed over him. Then there
was silence. Slowly, the abomination
lifted.
Forral
lay, white and still, as Aurian had seen him so long ago, in a dread vision.
"Forral!" she shrieked, a cry wrenched with anguish from the depths
of her soul, as, heedless of her own danger, she flung hesself upon him. But it
was too late. Forral's body beneath her was lifeless, an icy husk, his
breathing stilled, his great, generous, loving heart stopped forever,
Anvar
reached the doorway in time to see Forral fall. He saw Aurian, oblivious in her
grief to her own danger, hurl herself across his body, weeping as she tried to
revive him, seeking desperately with her Healer's senses for one last spark of
life to which she could cling. With a jarring whine, the dark, roiling
monstrosity swooped down toward her, its black maw gaping. "No!"
Miathan screamed. "Not her, you fool!" The Thing ignored him.
Strengthened by the life-force of its victim, it was now beyond his control.
With an inarticulate cry, Anvar leapt forward, only to be shouldered aside by
the tall, lanky
AURIAN
-221
form of
Finbarr, bearing his staff. He lifted it, feeing the monster, and cried out
some words in a strong, ringing voice.
The
abomination gave a startled flicker, suddenly finding itself enclosed by a
misty blue aura. Then it stopped, frozen, hanging helplessly in midair scant
inches away from Aurian's face, taken completely out of time by Finbarr's
preserving spell. Miathan recoiled with a vile curse, and lifting his hands,
uttered a spell of his own. More dark shapes, more and more, began to pour over
the rim of the chalice. Finbarr countered them with his own spell, freezing
each Wraith as it emerged, his damp face contorted with strain.
"Nihilim!" he shouted. "The Death Wraiths of the Caldron!
Anvar—get Aurian out of here!" Meiriel, in her corner, was shrieking.
Anvar
needed no second telling. He dashed across to Aurian, ducking around the frozen
form of the hideous monstrosity that loomed over her. She clutched frantically
at Forral, as Anvar tugged at her arm. "Aurian, come on," he yelled,
"Please—there's nothing you can do for him!" His own face was flooded
with tears,
Aurian
looked up at him, and her eyes suddenly cleared, as though she recognized him
for the first time. She dragged a sleeve across her tearstained face and
nodded, then turned back to Forral, touching his face with a gentle hand, in
farewell, "Safe journey, love," she whispered, "until we meet
again." Then, with a sob, she tore herself away, leaning heavily on
Anvar's arm as they staggered toward the door.
Finbarr
was still fighting the Arcjimage's endless succession of Wraiths. He was
staggering with weakness now, Vannor stood at the door, paralyzed with horror,
his face deathly white. Anvar thrust Aurian into his arms.
"Help
her," he yelled. "Hurry!" He ran ahead of them down the stairs
and ducked into Aurian's room, snatching up her bundle of discarded warrior's
clothing and her sword. There was no time for more. He caught up with Vannor
and Aurian at the bottom of the stairs and helped the distraught Mage mount one
of the horses, Vannor mounted the other, and Anvar passed his bundle to the
merchant before leaping up behind Aurian and snatching up the reins.
"To
my house!" Vannor shouted, and spurred toward the gates, trampling the
fallen bodies of the guards in his haste.
swordsman
and snapping her magical shield into place to protect them both. The Thing kept
advancing, slow and inexorable. Aurian bit back a scream as it hit her
shield—and passed straight through as though nothing were there! Forcing down
her panic, she backed toward Forral, snatching the sword from his nerveless
fingers.
The
blade thrummed, flaring into fiery light as Aurian infused it with the force of
her Fire-magic. She went for the abomination with a great, two-handed swipe,
cleaving it straight through the middle. Her blade met no resistance, as though
it had passed through smoke. The specter gave a deep, chilling chuckle—and the
two halves rejoined, flowing effortlessly back together. Shock exploded through
her, as her blade went dark and dead. Aurian staggered back weakly, dropping
the sword, her hands and arms numb with a pervasive chill that was quickly
spreading. The abomination advanced, seeming to grow in size, blotting out the
room with its massive, shadowy form. Passing over her as she lay helpless, it
swooped upon the swordsman, engulfing him in its reeking darkness. Forral gave
one last, strangled cry—her name—as the dark mass flowed over him. Then there
was silence. Slowly, the abomination
lifted.
Forral
lay, white and still, as Aurian had seen him so long ago, in a dread vision,
"Forral!" she shrieked, a cry wrenched with anguish from the depths
of her soul, as, heedless of her own danger, she flung herself upon him. But it
was too late. Forral's body beneath her was lifeless, an icy husk, his breathing
stilled, his great, generous, loving heart stopped forever.
Anvar
reached the doorway in time to see Forral fall. He saw Aurian, oblivious in her
grief to her own danger, hurl herself across his body, weeping as she tried to
revive him, seeking desperately with her Healer's senses for one last spark of
life to which she could cling. With a jarring whine, the dark, roiling
monstrosity swooped down toward her, its black maw gaping. "No!"
Miathan screamed. "Not her, you fool!" The Thing ignored him.
Strengthened by the life-force of its victim, it was now beyond his control.
With an inarticulate cry, Anvar leapt forward, only to be shouldered aside by
the tall, lanky
form of
Finbarr, bearing his staff. He lifted it, facing the monster, and cried out
some words in a strong, ringing voice.
The
abomination gave a startled flicker, suddenly finding itself enclosed by a
misty blue aura. Then it stopped, frozen, hanging helplessly in midair scant
inches away from Aurian'$ face, taken completely out of time by Finbarr's
preserving spell. Miathan recoiled with a vile curse, and lifting his hands,
uttered a spell of his own. More dark shapes, more and more, began to pour over
the rim of the chalice. Finbarr countered them with his own spell, freezing
each Wraith as it emerged, his damp face contorted with strain,
"Nihilim!" he shouted. "The Death Wraiths of the Caldron!
Anvar—get Aurian out of here!" Meiriel, in her corner, was shrieking,
Anvar
needed no second telling. He dashed across to Aurian, ducking around the frozen
form of the hideous monstrosity that loomed over her. She clutched frantically
at Forral, as Anvar tugged at her arm. "Aurian, come on," he yelled.
"Please—there's nothing you can do for him!" His own fact-was flooded
with tears.
Aurian
looked up at him, and her eyes suddenly cleared, as though she recognized him
for the first time. She dragged t sleeve across her tearstained face and
nodded, then turned back to Forral, touching his race with a gentle hand, in
farewell. "Safe journey, love," she whispered, "until we meet
again." Then, with a sob, she tore herself away, leaning heavily on
Anvar's arm as they staggered toward the door.
Finbarr
was still fighting the -Arcjimage's endless succession of Wraiths, He was
staggering with weakness now. Vannor stood at the door, paralyzed with horror,
his face deathly white, Anvar thrust Aurian into his arms.
"Help
her," he yelled. "Hurry!" He ran ahead of them down the stairs
and ducked into Aurian's room, snatching up her bundle of discarded warrior's
clothing and her sword. There was no time for more. He caught up with Vannor
and Aurian at the bottom of the stairs and helped the distraught Mage mount one
of the horses. Vannor mounted the other, and Anvar passed his bundle to the
merchant before leaping up behind Aurian and snatching up the reins.
"To
my house!" Vannor shouted, and spurred toward the gates, trampling the
fallen bodies of the guards in his haste.
As they
passed the gates, they heard a terrible shriek from the tower—Meiriel's voice.
Aurian stiffened in Anvar's arms and gasped, flinching as though she had been
struck. "Finbarr. He's dead," she said in a small, bleak voice, as
though this last grief were the utter end and nothing could ever touch her
again. As Anvar looked back at the tower, he saw the sinister black shapes of
the Wraiths already beginning to pour out of the upper windows, heading for the
city.
They
thundered across the causeway, away from the horror behind them, and turning
right, took the lamplit road that climbed away amidst the trees, never once
pausing in their wild flight until they reached the sturdy carved doors of
Vannor's mansion. Pushing past the bewildered servant who opened the door, the
merchant led them across the tiled hallway and into his study. Dropping
Aurian's bundle on the floor, he gestured for Anvar to help the Mage to the
couch, and poured strong spirits for each before dropping shakily into his own
chair. "Gods," he said. "What are we going to do?" Pulling
a handkerchief from his pocket, he mopped his brow. "It's obvious,"
he went on, with the calm of deep shock, "that Miathan is insane. He's
broken the Mages' Code and unleashed a horror such as this city has never seen.
He always wanted power—he'll take it now, make no mistake. And he'll be after
us—and Aurian in particular. You'll have to get her away from here, lad. The
only question is, where? Could you go north, Lady, to your
mother?" <__
Aurian
sat stiffly beside Anvar on the couch, staring at nothing, her eyes wide and
blank, her face gray. Her knuckles • were clenched white about her untouched
cup.
"Lady?"
Anvar prompted gently. Putting an arm around her shoulders, he guided her hands
that held the cup to her lips, encouraging her to drink.
As she
swallowed the fiery liquor a tremor passed through her, and the terrible
tension of her body eased a little. "Forral," she whispered
longingly. Her eyes began to focus, and Anvar could hardly bear to meet that
lost, pain-filled gaze. Then she looked away, and with a shaking hand held her
cup out to Vannor to be refilled, and downed the liquor in one swift gulp.
"Anvar,
what happened?" she asked. "What did the Archmage do to me? Why were
you and—and Forral there?"
Briefly,
his voice trembling with emotion, Anvar told her, and saw her eyes grow wide
with shock. "Child?" she gasped. "What child? I'm not—I can't
be!" For a moment her expression clouded, and Anvar guessed that she was
probing within, with her Healer's extra sense. "Dear Gods," she murmured.
"Solstice! It must have been at Solstice. We were drunk that night ... So
happy . . . But I couldn't have been so careless—it's impossible ..."
Suddenly her eyes flared with a terrible anger. "Meiriel!" she
snarled. "Meiriel betrayed me! It's the only possibility! By all the Gods,
she'll pay for this, before I'm done!"
Leaping
to her feet, she whirled toward Vannor, suddenly grimly decisive. "You go
north, Vannor, if you will," she said. "My mother must be warned that
the Archmage has turned traitor and renegade. We'll need her powers before this
is done. Gather together any who'll support us as you go. I'm going south, to
the hill forts, to raise an army. I swear to you that I'll never rest until
Miathan has paid in full for his deeds tonight!"
"What!"
Vannor sprang upright in turn, white an4 shaken. "Aurian, don't be so
rash! Will you break the Mages' Code for revenge? Don't you remember the bitter
lessons of the Cataclysm? You can't unleash that horror again!"
The
Mage met his gaze without flinching. "I have no choice," she said.
"Miathan has already broken the Code. Finbarr said those—things—were
Nihilim, the Death Wraiths, and that can only mean that he possesses the
Caldron of ancient legend, and has turned its power to^evil. If we don't stop
him, he'll eventually hold the very world in his hand."
Vannor
sat down abruptly. "How could you hope to defeat him, when he holds such a
powerful weapon?"
"I
don't know," Aurian admitted. "But I have to try, or die in the
attempt."
There
was no swaying her, and time was too short, danger too near, for argument.
Anvar, afraid to his very soul, knew that he would have to accompany her. Who
knew what the Mage might do, in her grief? And she hardly seemed to be
considering her unborn child. Someone had to take care of her, and it was the
very least he could do, in atonement.
Having
had some little time to reflect on what had passed, Anvar was consume$L.w,ith
guilt over his part in Forral's death.
Had he
paused to consider toe consequences before rusing to seek the swordsman, Forral
would still be alive and so would Finbarr. And Miathan would not have unleashed
the terror of the Wraiths. True, the babe wou\d have perished, but hard though
the choice was, Anvar knew that Aurian would always have chosen her love. Just
now, she had submerged her grief in the need to act, but eventually it would
occur to her, as it had to him, who was truly responsible. He shuddered at what
she might do to him then. But it would only be what he deserved. Anvar closed
his eyes in grief. Was he doomed always to be the bane of those dearest to him?
First his mother, then Sara—and now Forral and Aurian. He truly wished that he
had died instead of the swordsman—and he was certain that Aurian would feel the
same way.
Aurian
and Vannor made their plans swiftly. Vannor would take his personal guards and
try to locate Parric in the city, and gather support there to resist the
Archmage. Anvar shuddered, marveling at the merchant's courage. He was
shamefully glad that he would not have to venture into those Wraith-infested
streets. He and Aurian were to take Vannor's little boat, a light pleasure
craft, and escape downriver to the port. The Mage had decided that the quickest
way to reach the southern forts would be by sea, and Vannor provided her with
gold to pay for their passage on a ship. Then the merchant made a request of
Aurian that snapped Anvar out of his introspection with a jolt. "When you
go, will you take Sara with you? She'd be safer in one of the southern forts
than with m?."
Aurian
frowned. "Vannor, I can't," she said bluntly. "Though
Forral"—her voice trembled at the mention eft "his name_"though
he taught me a lot about adventuring, this will be the first such journey that
I've made, and having Sara with me would endanger both us and herself. Truly,
she'd be safer with you."
"Aurian,
please," Vannor begged. "I know she's not made for hardship, but
she'll be in worse danger if she stays here."
.Aurian
sighed. "Very well, Vannor. I owe you that much, and more besides—but bear
in mind that we won't be able to cosset her."
Vannor's
face brightened. "Thank you, Lady," he said. "I'll have her
brought here at once."
rounded
on Vannor like a fury, accusing him of all kinds of stupidity for becoming
involved in the first place, for incurring the Archmage's wrath and ruining
their lives. The merchant looked thoroughly ashamed of her behavior, and
Aurian's lip curled in disgust. Anvar stayed silent in the background, his
heart pounding as he drank in her beauty once more. Though she was ignoring his
presence, he had seen her face turn white at the sight of him, and was tortured
anew by the memory of her repudiation the last time they had met. Yet had it
stemmed from hatred of him—or fear of Vannor discovering the shameful secret of
her past?
It was
plain from the scene before him that all the love in the marriage was on
Vannor's side. When Sara addressed her husband, Anvar saw nothing but coldness
and scorn. Her mother had said that Sara's father had sold her in marriage to
Vannor. Had she been forced against her will? Was she a prisoner in these rich
surroundings? It would explain her behavior toward the merchant, whom Anvar
knew to be a kind and decent man at heart. And if she hated Vannor, how would
the girl react when she discovered that she would be traveling with her former
lover, who had fathered a child on her and left her to face the consequences?
Vannor's
explanation never got as far as including Anvar. When the merchant managed to
get a word in edgewise to tell Sara their plans, she refused point-blank to go.
"Why should I?" she snapped, stamping her foot*, "I'm not
wandering the world like a vagabond, with her" She glared at Aurian,
"None of this U my fault—the Archmage can't blame me. I didn't choose to
marry a fool—or an outlaw!"
Anvar
saw the hurt on Vannor's face, saw Aurian curse and step forward, her hand
upraised. He leapt forward, certain that the Mage was about to strike her, but
Aurian simply laid her hand on Sara's head and said: ''Sleep!" Sara
crumpled to the ground. "Don't worry," Aurian said, catching Vannor's
worried glance as he knelt by his wife. "It'll keep her out of mischief
for a while. Send for someone to carry her down to the boat, Vannor. We've
delayed too long already."
"Is
she all right?" the merchant asked.
"Of
course she-w. Far more than she deserves to be,"
Aurian
replied irritably. "She's only asleep. But I warn you, Vannor—the next
time she starts carrying on like that, I really will slap her—with the greatest
pleasure!"
The
wind was rising, driving ragged tatters of cloud across the face of a sickly
half-moon whose fitful, flickering light afforded glimpses of dark, bare
branches tossing against the sky. Patches of unmelted snow still lingered on
the wooded river-banks by Vannor's little boathouse and the river ran swiftly,
sending choppy waves lapping hungrily against the edge of the low wooden jetty.
One of Vannor's guards held a shielded lantern aloft, and another pulled the
small boat out of its shelter and held it steady while the merchant gently laid
the sleeping, warmly wrapped form of his wife inside, pillowing her head on the
pathetic bundles that contained their belongings.
Anvar
shivered. He was wearing a cloak borrowed from Vannor, but between the chill of
the night and the shock that had finally caught up with him, he was seized with
an uncontrollable trembling. Aurian stood beside him, huddled miserably in
Forral's old cloak, her face pale and set like stone. Only her indomitable
will, he knew, was keeping her from collapse, and he feared for her.
Vannor
looked long at Sara and kissed her in farewell, then turned to Aurian, catching
her up in a rough hug. "The Gods go with you, Lady," he said in a
choked voice, tears running freely down his cheeks. ^
"And
with you, dear Vannor." Aurian's voice caught on a sob. She swallowed
hard. "Take care of yourself," she said softly and, wiping her eyes,
she drew her hood over her head and climbed down into the boat, careful of the
sword that she now bore at her side. She thrust her staff, which she had
reclaimed from Anvar, into her belt, and took hold of the pole, ready to push
off. Vannor came to Anvar and seized his hand in a warm grasp. "Take care
of them, lad," he said. "Take care of them
both."
Anvar
nodded, speechless. He climbed aboard the frail little craft and took up the
oars. Aurian pushed with the pole and the boat swung out into the current of
the dark river. As they gathered speed, Vannor's form quickly dwindled, and
passed
Cxkapter 15
FLIGHT AND
PURSUIT
eeping
close into the shadows of the bank, Aurian poled the boat swiftly downstream as
Anvar labored at the oars. Running with the current, they fled the horror
behind them, skimming first past trees, then the finely tended gardens of
merchants' mansions, then past more trees. Aurian gripped the pole tightly and
put her back into the work, steeling herself against the heavy, burning pain of
her grief, blind to the dark, choppy waters that swirled around them. Forral's
face was all that she could see. Forral—left behind, but gone much further than
that—gone forever. She'd never see his beloved face again, alight with life and
love. Never feel his arms around her, never . . .
"Stop
that, you fool," she muttered to herself through clenched teeth. "Not
now. Not yet."
Anvar
looked up, concern on his face. "Lady, are you all right?"
"Shut
up," Aurian said tightly, "Shut up and row."
It was
some twelve miles to the port of Norbetth at the river's mouth, and they
concentrated on covering the distance as quickly as possible. They passed mills
and villages, meadows and woods, aided by the swift current that was swollen by
winter's melting snow. Aurian's muscles ached, her hands were blistered, and
sweat stung her eyes. Once, Sara moaned and began to stir as Aurian's spell
weakened. The Mage cursed. That should never have happened! What was wrong with
her magic? Laying her pole down in the bottom of the boat, she squatted beside
the girl. "Sleep," she commanded in a ringing voice, laying her hand
on Sara's forehead. Sara relaxed once more, her eyes closed, her breathing slow
and even, and Aurian sighed with relief. When she took her hand away, the
girl's forehead was dark with blood. Anvar gasped,
"Don't
worry, it's only mine," Aurian said, looking ruefully at her raw and
bleeding palms. She picked up the pole again, and went grimly back to work.
Time
passed. Aurian could feel nothing now, through the haze of pain and exhatfsrion
that enveloped her. Surely they
must be
near ing their destination? This black, bitter night seemed to have gone on
forever. Suddenly, her long pole found no bottom, and she flailed wildly,
overbalanced by the force of her thrust. As she fell, one hand hit hard wood
and she clutched at it with all her strength, losing her pole as she struck the
icy water. It was deep here—too deep—and the force of the current plucked and
buffeted at her numbing body as she clung, one-handed, to the stern of the
boat. Already she could feel her grasp beginning to weaken, her fingers starting
to slip on the
wet
wood ...
In that
moment, a curious peace came over Aurian—a strange, relaxed clarity of thought.
All she had to do was let go, and she would be safe, out of reach of Miathan,
who had betrayed her so bitterly, away from all this grief and strife. And
Forral, dearest Forral, would be waiting . , .
"Hold
on, Lady, I'm coming!" Anvar's voice was like a slap in the face. Strong
fingers grasped her wrist, then her arm. Strong hands were hauling her back
aboard the rocking boat. Aurian tried to protest, but she was too weak to
fight. She slithered down in a shivering, sodden heap on the bottom
boards.
"Lady,
the weir!" Anvar's voice was shrill with panic above the river's roar.
Aurian wiped water from her eyes. White foam streaked past on the dark water as
the frail craft began to rock wildly, picking up speed, Anvar was struggling
with the oars, blinded by flying spray, and even as she looked the left one
slipped from his grasp, "whirled greedily away by the rushing waters. Immediately
the boat swung round, spinning violently and listing dangerously to one side,
out of control. Aurian smiled. Forral, she thought, yearning. Only a moment
more . . . Then, out of nowhere, she seemed to hear the swordsman's voice.
"You'll want to follow me. Don't." She looked at Anvar. He had just
saved her life. No matter how deep her own despair, what right had she to take
him with her?
Cursing
bitterly, Aurian grabbed her staff. "Get out of the way," she yelled.
She barged past Anvar into the bows, over the top of Sara, struggling to keep a
grip on both her staff and the lurching boat. A glimmer of white stretched
across the river ahead of her, desperately close. The roar grew to a booming
thunder. Aurian placed her staff crosswise in her lap, across the
bows of
the boat, gripping it tightly in both hands, her knuckles clenched white around
the polished wood as she concentrated with all her might. The calm sound of her
chanting cut across the thunder of the weir. The staff began to glow, shimmering
with a blue-white light that spread, like tiny fingers of lightning, to
encompass the entire boat as it reached the edge of the weir and began to tip .
. .
Aurian
heard Anvar's gasp of fear—and then, as she made one last, wrenching effort,
the boat straightened itself, floating serenely above the churning maelstrom,
supported upon a surface of pure light. Gently they were borne forward, over
the danger, then just as gently the little craft came to rest in a stretch of
quiet water in the shallows beyond the force of the weir.
Aurian
blinked, and collapsed panting across her staff, letting the darkness swallow
her as the light of her magic was extinguished. She had bitten her lip, and her
mouth was filled with the metallic taste of her own blood. Dimly, she felt
Anvar pull her into his arms. Gently he pulled her soaked, tangled hair back
from her face, and wiped the trickle of blood from her chin. "Aurian?
Lady?" His voice was anxious. With an effort she opened her eyes.
"Are
you all right?" Anvar said.
"Tired."
That one word cost her an enormous effort. "Get us there, Anvar." Her
voice seemed to be coming from far away. Had he heard her? But Anvar nodded. He
settled her as best he could in the cramped space of the 6ow^} pillowing her
head on his wet cloak, and turned to pick up the single remaining oar.
Gratefully, Aurian closed her eyes.
When
she opened them again, buildings lined the river-banks. They passed dwellings,
warehouses, and mills and then, founding a curve, they swept beneath the great
bridge that marked the boundary of the port of Norberth, A mighty arch of white
stone, it sprang across the river that by now had grown broad and sluggish.
Rippled reflections from the lights of the town covered the underside of the
arch with an ever-changing network of dappled silver, and the river chuckled
hollowly beneath the echoing stonework. Once past the bridge, they passed
quickly through the town itself and swept out into the pool of the port. The
masts a«f figging of sailing vessels webbed the
sky,
and Aurian wondered which of these ships would be the one to take her south.
Anvar paddled a zigzag course toward a rotting and abandoned wharf on the south
side of the harbor, grabbing at the slimy pilings to pull the boat underneath
the little pier, where its shadows would hide them.
Aurian
dragged herself wearily upright and rummaged in one of the bundles that lay in
the bottom of the boat, finding a little silver flask and a hastily wrapped
package of meat, bread, and cheese that was beginning to disintegrate from the
soaking it had taken at the weir. She took a deep swig of Vannor's fierce
liquor, feeling its heat course through her stiff, chilled body. She handed the
flask to Anvar, who took it gratefully. In her Mage's night vision he looked
gray and haggard, his eyes dark-circled with weariness, his blond hair dark and
straggling from the river's spray. Aurian divided the sodden food between them
and they ate in silence, both of them too tired to speak. The Mage felt better
for eating, feeling the food restoring, temporarily she knew, a measure of the
energy she had lost in using her power to save them from the weir.
The
weir. Ah, she'd come so close then—so close to escaping all this. Suddenly
Aurian was overwhelmed by her grief, by all her burdens, by the peril and the
near impossibility of the task she had set herself. She turned to Anvar,
consumed with rage at his interference—and hit him, as hard as she could,
across the face. "That's for saving my life!" she snapped. She saw
surprise and hurt orchis face, then his mouth tightened grimly as his hand
lashed out to hit her back. "And that's for saving mine!" he
retorted. The sound of the slap echoed sharply across the water, and Aurian
rocked backward, one hand pressed to her stinging cheek, her eyes wide with
shock.
Anvar
looked away, shamefaced. "Lady, I'm sorry," he mumbled.
Slowly,
Aurian shook her head. How could she fault his response, which mirrored her own
despair so exactly? For the first time she realized that she was not alone—that
he shared her predicament, and her suffering. She held out her hand to him—a
gesture between equals—between friends. "I'm sorry too, Anvar," she
said softly. "I had no right—it's just that I don't know how I'll ever
find the strength to go on with this."
Her
voice faltered, as the rigid control she had maintained all through the night
began to crumble.
Anvar
took her proffered hand. "Then we'll do it together," he said, and
gathered her into his arms as she began to sob, giving in at last to all her
grief as she accepted the burden of continuing to live.
After a
time Aurian pulled away from Anvar, wiping her face on her sleeve.
"That's
a terrible habit," he said, with a crooked grin, and she managed a shaky
smile in return.
"Someone
forgot to pack the handkerchiefs," she said.
"Disgraceful,"
Anvar said. "I'd beat your servant, if I were you."
"Oh,
he has his good points. At least he remembered to bring my proper
clothes." Aurian rummaged in the bottom of the boat, hauling her bundle
out from beneath Sara's head. "I'd better get moving and find us a ship.
It'll be getting light all too soon, and I want us safely out of sight before
too many people are up and moving about. Thank goodness the nights are so long
just now."
As she
spoke, she pulled her fighting clothes out of the pack, and began to strip off
the soaked, tattered remnants of her green gown. Anvar averted his eyes
politely, but Aurian was forced to enlist his aid in donning her warrior's
gear, since the leather was damp from their encounter with the weir and her
fingers were stiff with cold.
"Right,"
she said briskly, when she was ready, "I'll try to be as quick as I
can."
"Lady,
surely you don't mean to go alone?"
"Can't
be helped." Aurian looked down at Sara's unconscious form with a frown.
"You'll have to stay here and keep an eye on her." She grimaced.
"Gods, but she's going to be a nuisance."
"Lady,
I ..." Anvar found himself flushing guiltily. How could he even begin to
explain to her about Sara—about the love that they had once shared?
Aurian
looked at him quizzically. "You do know her, don't you?" she said.
"Thsrday, when they brought you to the Garri-
son—when
we first met—she was lying, wasn't she, when she said she'd never seen you
before?"
Miserably,
Anvar nodded, wondering how she would react when he told her that he and
Vannor's wife had once been
lovers.
Luckily,
Aurian spared him. "More complications, eh?" she said ruefully.
"Well, you can tell me about it later, Anvar. I really must get
going." Fastening her damp cloak around her shoulders, she climbed
carefully up the tangle of half-collapsed timbers that supported the old pier
and vanished among the shadows of the wharf.
Anvar
settled back into the bottom of the boat and lapsed into his own worried
thoughts. Aurian's sudden briskness had not fooled him in the least. He knew
how deeply she was grieving for Forral, and was concerned about the effect that
it would have on her judgment. This whole plan of hers, to raise an army to
defeat the Archmage, was pure insanity. But he had no better p/nn co offer—only
eo flee, as &r and as fast as possible. We)], they -were doing that now,
and perhaps in time she would come to her senses.
Anvar
wondered where Vannor was now. Had the merchant managed to escape? Suddenly, it
occurred to him that if Vannor was killed, then Sara would be free . . .
Guiltily, he stifled the thought. Vannor was a good man, he knew that now. He
wondered how the merchant would react to the knowledge that he had given his
beloved wife into the hands of her one-time lover. Sara, he was surer^didn't
care two pins for her doting husband, and Anvar wondered what she would do now
that she was free from him. He looked down at her as she slept, her golden hair
tumbled around her shoulders. She looked so fragile —so beautiful. With a pang,
Anvar remembered the old days, when they were young and in love, happy with
each other and confident in their future. Was there no hope that they could be
that way again? Had he not a right to some happiness?
The
light of a damp, gray day was growing by the time Aurian made her way back
along the wharf, keeping close to the cover of the derelict warehouses. It had
taken forever to find a vessel whose captain would convey them, and his price
had been extortionate—far more than the gold that Vannor had
given
her. She'd given him all she had, and done some fast talking to convince him
that the remainder would be waiting at the journey's end. As she returned to
Anvar, the Mage worried about the company they would be keeping on board the
rat-infested, leaky old ship. She had never in her life seen such a
villainous-looking crew, but she knew she had no choice but to risk it. If
Miathan was not already searching for them, he soon would be.
By the
time she reached the boat, Aurian felt faint with weariness, her mind fuzzy and
slow. Anvar scrambled up, offering his hand to help her descend the slick,
rotting timbers, and she was grateful for his steadying grasp. "Come
on," she said, when they had reached the safety of the boat. "I've
bought us passage to Easthaven. We can travel overland from there."
"What
about Sara?"
"We
don't have time to argue the issue. I'll take care of it." Aurian snapped
her fingers near the sleeping girl's face. "Come," she commanded.
Sara's eyes flicked open, her expression utterly blank. She rose stiffly to her
feet, and Anvar grabbed quickly at a piling to steady the rocking boat.
"We
can't take her aboard like that!" he protested.
"We
have to. Pull her hood down over her face and take her arm. You'll have to
guide her." Aurian's expression brooked no argument.
They
had a dreadful struggle to get the girl up onto the pier, but after that Sara
walked along quite naturally, steered by Anvar's guiding hand while Aurian
carried the packs. The one or two early passersby that they met paid them
little heed, and Aurian began to breathe more easily.
But
when Anvar saw the ship that was to take them, he stopped dead, his face a
picture of dismay. "Oh, Lady, no," he said. "You can't possibly
be serious."
"Anvar,
what do you want from me?" Aurian snapped, close to tears. "Look at
the state of us! We hardly look respectable, do we? Did you think any decent
captain was going to take us? I did my best—and it's better than waiting here
for Miathan to find us!" To that, she knew, Anvar could have no answer.
Shaking
his head, he led Sara up the narrow, slippery gangplank that led to the dcqk of
the dilapidated little sailing ship.
Captain
Jurdag had side-whiskers and greasy ginger hair tied in a pigtail. Gold rings
glinted in his ears, and his narrow face and feral expression reminded Aurian
of a weasel. He bowed to her with leering mock courtesy, and the rest of the
lounging crew—a shabby, scarred, pockmarked bunch—snickered.
Aurian
gave them a level, steely glare, and there was a sudden, tense silence.
"Show us to our cabin, Captain, and prepare to make sail," she said
coolly.
"Very
well, Lady." The captain turned the word into an epithet, and Aurian,
seeing Anvar's face flush with anger, gripped his arm tightly and shook her
head.
They
were shown into a tiny, filthy cabin in the stern of the ship that the captain
had obviously vacated for their use. Aurian picked up a pile of stinking
unwashed clothes from the floor and handed them to him. "Yours, I
imagine," she said. "That will be all for now."
He
left, scowling, and Aurian barred the door behind him with a sigh of relief.
"Dear Gods!" she said. "I'm sorry about this, Anvar."
Anvar
was struggling with the catch of a tiny salt-encrusted pane set in the stern
wall. It was the only means of ventilation in the room. "How long does it
take to get to Easthaven?" he asked faintly.
"With
good winds, about four days," Aurian said gloomily. "If we don't get
our throats cut in the meantime."
The
Mage led Sara tq^he only bunk, and laid her down. "Rut," she said
softly, and Sara's eyes closed again. "There," Aurian said wearily.
"She'll sleep naturally now, and wake when she's ready. Pray Gods it won't
be too soon." Drawing Coronach, she sat down on the floor, resting her
back against the bunk, and fell asleep instantly, her sword in her hand.
Aurian
was rudely awakened by the sound of Sara's wails. "I won't stay here, I
won't! It's filthy and it stinks and it's infested with bugs! I want to go
home! This is your fault, Anvar. If you hadn't—"
The
Mage leapt to her feet, confronting the raging girl who was sitting on the
bunk, her skirts drawn tightly around her ankles. "Shut up!" she
ordered sharply. Sara stopped short in the midst of her tirade, glaring up at
her. Aurian registered
the
rocking motion of the ship beneath her feet, and ignoring Sara, leaned past her
to look out of the tiny stern port. "There's the land, back there,"
she said calmly, pointing out of the window. "I suggest you start swimming
now, before it gets any farther away. I don't think you'll fit through the
window, but I'm sure we can arrange to have you thrown over the side."
Sara's
face twisted with rage. "I hate you!" she snapped.
"Hate
away," said Aurian evenly. "It doesn't bother me. But just bear in
mind that you don't have a home anymore. This stinking, louse-ridden hole is
all you have, and this is where you'll stay until we reach Easthaven."
Sara's
mouth fell open. "You mean I'm a prisoner?" she shrieked. "You
can't do this! How dare you! When Vannor hears of this—"
"Vannor
sent you with me for your own protection. Your safety is my responsibility, and
I'm telling you that you won't leave this cabin for any reason. If anyone comes
to the door, get into the bunk and cover yourself with the blanket—especially
your face. Whatever happens you must not show yourself to any of the ship's
crew. I've told the captain you're sick with the pox —that should keep them—"
"What?"
Sara yelled, completely outraged.
"Lady
. . ." Anvar protested. "It
isn't fair to—"
"Have
you two ever seen a young woman raped by a gang of pirates?" Aurian*s
matter-of-fact tone brought the others up short. There was sudden fear in
Sara's eyes. "I haven't," Aurian went on, "and I don't want to
see it rrow. This ship is crewed by the most villainous, vicious-looking gang
of cutthroats I've ever set eyes on, and if they get one look at you, I won't
be able to stop them, and neither will Anvar. I know that this is hard on you,
Sara. Anvar is right, it isn't fair, and I'm sorry. But do it my way,
please—for all our sakes."
Sara
stared at her for a moment, then fell facedown on the bunk and burst into
tears. Anvar rushed to comfort her. Aurian glanced at him in surprise, then
turned with a shrug and left the cabin.
Aurian
sat, one leg tucked beneath her on the narrow bench that curved around the bows
of the ship. So far, the crew seemed to be giving her a wide berth, although
she felt their
eyes on
her as she watched the hazy sun making its slow descent toward the dim horizon
to her right. She was thinking back to the previous night, trying her best to
sort the hard facts from the haze of anger, grief, and fear that overlaid her
memory of all that had happened. The child—that was one matter. Wonder-ingly,
Aurian turned her thoughts inward, to touch that dim spark of life—so tiny,
yet, that she hadn't known it even existed. Try as she might, she was unable to
stifle the resentment that flared within her. If it had not been for this
child, Forral would still be alive . . . Yet now, it was all that was left of
him. It should be precious to her. And it had hardly asked to be brought into
being. That was her fault, her own carelessness in letting Meiriel betray her.
All the poor thing had was enemies —the Archmage would take its life as he had
taken its father's . . .
How
could she ever hope to defeat Miathan? Aurian shuddered. It had been all very
well, in the heat of the moment, to swear that oath, and she meant to bring it
home to him in any way she could—but how? The Archmage was mad, and renegade,
and he possessed a weapon far beyond her capabilities. How powerful was the
Caldron? What was the point of raising an army against such power? Thousands of
people would be killed to no purpose. But what had happened to the other lost
artifacts of the High Magic? Ah. If she could only trace even one of them . . .
But where could she even start to look? They had been lost for centuries, .Aurian*s
thoughts circled in hopeless frustration. This is too much for me, she thought.
If only Forral were here , , ,
As she
thought of her love, his image suddenly came into her mind—not dead, as she had
last seen him, but alive, and sitting, of all the incongruous places, in the
taproom of the Invisible Unicorn. He was leaning across the beer-stained table
toward her, explaining something, and Aurian realized that she was remembering
a conversation that they had had some time ago. "If a problem seems too big,"
he was saying, "you'll never get anywhere by battering yourself against
it. Break it up into steps, and deal with the first thing first. Then, more
often than not, you'll find that the other steps will fall into place,"
It was
good advice, and timely, Aurian smiled, remember-
AURIAN •
237
ing.
"Thank you, love," she whispered, and the image seemed to smile in
return as it faded from her mind. Aurian blinked at the ocean before her, and
shook her head. Had it been a memory? A vision? Imagination? She had no idea,
but it had left her feeling more at peace, and obscurely comforted. And her
path was suddenly clear before her. Do the first thing first. Well, the first
thing was to get this journey safely over—to escape from the pirates and the Archmage
and get to the hill forts, where she could find some help and some measure of
safety. And after that? Well, she would see.
Aurian
whirled at the sound of soft footsteps behind her. Her sword was halfway out of
its scabbard before she realized that it was Anvar, who stepped back, startled.
She shrugged apologetically, and moved to make room for him on the bench,
"How is Sara?" she asked him.
Anvar
made a wry face. "Still upset," he said. "Cursing Vannor, and
you, and me, and just about everybody she can think of."
Aurian
sighed. "As long as she curses inside the cabin, I'm not going to waste
time worrying about it. We'll never get the wretched girl to realize that she's
not the only person in the world with troubles."
Anvar
looked concerned « the reminder. "How are you, Lady? I didn't like to
leave you alone for so long, only she—"
"I'll
survive. I suppose I'll have to, really." Aurian tempered her grim words
with a smile for him. "And I didn't mind being alone, Anvar, The crew
aren't bothering me—they seem to have some respect for this"—she patted
the hilt of her sword —"and I needed to do some thinking,"
"Lady,
what are we going to do?"
"I
don't know," Aurian could see no point in lying to him. "I wouldn't
worry about it too much at the moment, Anvar. We have to get off this ship
alive first. Let's just concentrate on that for now. I wonder what passes for
food around here?"
What
passed for food turned out to be a greasy, nauseating gray slop that went by
the name of "stew," Sara, in particular, was far from impressed, and
said so in no uncertain terms. "I can't eat this!" she protested.
"It's disgusting! I'll be sick!"
"If
you're going Jp^be sick, be sure and do it out the
window,"
Aurian said brutally, forcing another spoonful of the vile stuff down and
trying not to think of dead rats. Sara retired to her bunk in offended silence,
and soon the sound of sobbing could be heard coming from beneath the blanket.
"Lady,"
Anvar whispered awkwardly, "couldn't you be— well, more gentle with her?
It's hard for her—she's not used to
this."
Aurian
swore. "Anvar, may I remind you that we aren't on a picnic here? We're
fleeing for our lives, and we have no time to cosset Sara. It's the same for
all of us, you know! She'll just have to get used to it—and bloody quick!"
Hurling her empty plate across the floor, she stormed out of the cabin,
slamming the door behind her.
Anvar
winced, wondering whether to follow her or not. After a moment's hesitation he
went to comfort Sara, "Sara, don't cry. She doesn't mean it. She's
suffering, what with For-
ral—"
"Shut
up about her!" Sara sat up abruptly, hurling the blanket aside, her eyes
wild in her flushed face. "In fact, don't talk to me at all! You kidnapped
me, you and her—and just when I thought I was safe from you, and that I'd never
have to set eyes on you again—"
"Let's
not start that again," Anvar said wearily. "Vannor begged us to take
you. I don't think you understand the danger we were in. We had no other
choice,"
"Vannor!"
Sara spatT^That beast! That imbecile! I despise him!"
"Sara,
Vannor loves you."
"What
would you know about it? You told me that you loved me, once. And how did you
prove your love? You got me pregnant then abandoned me to be sold to that uncouth
brute! So don't sit there and talk to me about love, Anvar!"
"That
wasn't my fault!" Anvar thrust his left hand, which bore the hateful mark
of the bondservant, in front of her face, "Do you think I—"
"Anvar!"
The cabin door banged open, Aurian stood there, her hair wild and tangled from
the wind, her face white and strained. "Anvar—the Arehmage! He's searching
for us! I think he knows where we've gone!"
"What?"
Anvar leapt to his feet. "How?"
The
Mage closed the cabin door, and leaned back against it. "He's
scrying—probably with a crystal—that's the most powerful way. I had no idea
that he could even do it. It was always Finbarr's special talent . . ."
Her mouth twisted with pain at the memory of her dead friend, slain by the Archmage.
"He must have picked up our trail on the river, from the residue of the
magic that I had to use to get us over the weir, and guessed the way we would
take. He's searching the ocean now —I was up on deck and I felt his mind
sweeping across."
"Gods!
Did he find us?"
Aurian
shook her head, "I managed to shield us in time. His power felt tentative,
not too strong. I think this is new to him. But it won't take him long to
learn, not with the power of the Caldron to draw on. And he won't give up until
he finds us."
"What
will he do?" Anvar felt sick with dread. "Will he send those—things
after us?" Seeing the stricken expression on Aurian's face, he cursed
himself for reminding her of the monster that had killed Forral.
But
when Aurian spoke, her voice was steady. "No. I doubt it. He seemed to
have very little control over the Nihilim, once he had unleashed them."
She shuddered, "When I think of those abominations loose in Nexis . . .
But I don't think they'll bother us. The Gods only know what he will send after
us, Anvar. He could strike.at us in any number of ways. The only thing we can
do is to stay hidden, I'll have to shield US all—the whole ship—constantly from
now on."
"But
Lady, you can't!" Anvar was appalled, remembering how the effort of her magic
had exhausted her on the river, "We have at least three more days to go,
and you're worn out already!"
"I
know. But it can't be helped. We have to try, for our very lives, and I'll need
your help,"
"Me?"
Aurian
nodded. "I'll have to stay awake. If I sleep, my shields will crumble, and
leave us open to discovery. You've got to keep me awake, Anvar, and I'm afraid
that means staying awake yourself. Ta!kjta»rne, sing to me—if all else fails,
hit me
24o •
—but
don't let me fall asleep, whatever you do, or we're lost. Promise me,
Anvar."
"I
promise, Lady," Anvar assured her. But I don't know how, he thought,
dreading the long, grueling vigil that lay before them.
chapter 16
A RENDEZVOUS
WITH WOLVES
he day
was darkening into evening as Eliseth swept into the Archmage's tower room
without knocking. Miathan was bent with slit-eyed concentration over a crystal
that lay on a black cloth on the table. He looked up, dark eyes flashing, as
the Magewoman entered. "For pity's sake, Eliseth, can you not leave me in
peace? Don't you know how difficult this is? If it were not for Finbarr's
notes^"
"Were
it not for Finbarr, your blasted abominations would have slaughtered us all by
now!" Eliseth snapped. "By the Gods, Miathan, why did you not tell us
about this?" She gestured at the Caldron, which stood on the table. It was
no longer a thing of beauty; its finely wrought gold was black and tarnished.
"You of all people should know the dangers of tampering with High Magic,"
Eliseth went on. "Bragar and I could have helped you to research its
powers and their mastery; but no—you had to do it by yourself. And see what has
happened! One Mage is dead, one's missing, and one is a raving wreck. The Gods
only know how many Mortals your creatures killed in the city last night—the
whole place is in an uproar—"
"Enough!"
Miathan roared. He paced the room, breathing deeply, striving not to lose
control 4s he had done last night, with such disastrous results, "What is
the situation in the city now?" he asked in a calmer voice,
"That's
why I came—to report on your dirty work," Eliseth sat down, rubbing her
eyes wearily. "Bragar and I have been combing the city, trying to seek out
and neutralize your creatures. The Gods know whether we got them all—I doubt
it, myself. We've been spreading the tale that although no one knows where they
came from, the heroic Magefolk are risking life and limb to defend the citizens
of Nexis," Her voice dripped scorn, "They seem to be swallowing it—at
least for the moment—so this would be a good time to consolidate your hold on
the city, while people are still terrified."
"What
of the G««ison?" Miathan asked sharply,
Eliseth
shrugged. "The troops are reeling from the tragic death of their beloved
leader—I had his body dumped where you told me, and it didn't take them long to
find it. They have their hands full keeping order just now, what with panic and
looting and such, and there seems to be a distinct shortage of leaders. Maya,
Forral's Second-in-Command, is away on some mysterious errand or other, no one
knows where, and the Cavalrymaster, Parric, seems to have disappeared.
Deserted, probably, if he had any sense. There has been no sign of his body so
far, at any rate."
"Excellent."
Miathan rubbed his hands together. "We may salvage this yet. Well done,
Eliseth."
"If
we do, just remember who helped get you out of this mess," Eliseth replied
shortly. "What shall we do with all your frozen Wraiths, Miathan? You have
no idea how to get the wretched things back into the Caldron, and we can hardly
leave them all over the city!"
"Use
an apport spell—it worked on the ones that were here." Miathan gestured
round the room, now empty of Wraiths. "I have them stored down in
Finbarr's Archives for the present—what place more fitting?"
Eliseth
frowned. "Frankly, I dislike the idea of sitting on top of those things.
We all know how to undo the preserving spell and bring them back into time
again—you had better be careful, Miathan."
"I'm
always careful." Miathan's voice held a thinly veiled threat. "I
intend to have that section of the catacombs sealed, and only you, Bragar, and
I will know the whereabouts of the creatures. And I'm sure 1 can trust
you—can't I?"
"Of
course you can." Eliseth swallowed uneasily. "How is Meiriel, by the
way?"
"Still
out of her mind." Miathan sighed, "Finbarr's death affected her
badly. I've wasted half the day persuading her that Aurian was responsible, and
not myself. She's in such a vulnerable state just now that I succeeded in the
end. Which, if Aurian can be located, may prove useful to us."
"Is
there any sign of Aurian?"
"No—but
I shall find her, never fear. She escaped by river, that I do know. I found
traces of her magic by the weir. I could not locate her in Norberth, so I've
extended the search to the
ocean.
It would seem that Vannor has gone with her, unless you found any trace of him
in the city."
Eliseth
shook her head. "Miathan," she ventured, "should you not be
concentrating on Nexis just now? This is a critical time for us, with Vannor
gone and Forral dead."
"No!"
Miathan's eyes blazed with a mad light. "I must find her, Eliseth! You
know that she will not let Forral's death go unavenged. Besides, there is still
the matter of that accursed child. It must not be allowed to survive!"
"Don't
fret, Archmage, I'm sure you'll find her," Eliseth soothed. "In the
meantime, I can take care of things for you here. I must have help, though.
Elewin says that most of the servants and guards are either dead or fleeing."
"See
to it, then." Miathan, already turning back to his crystal, waved an
absent gesture of dismissal.
"One
more thing." Eliseth hesitated, "Must you send Davorshan away just
now? The Magefolk are spread very thin and I could really use his help."
The
Archmage glanced up at her. "Yes, as a matter of fact I must. He must go
to the Valley, Eliseth, for Eilin is the only remaining threat to us here. I
intend to be rid of the Lady of the Lake—for good,"
Maya
was limping as she climbed the wooded slope that bordered the rim of the
moonlit Valley. She tugged at the reins of D'arvan's horse, which she was
leading. It had been unbelievably bad luck, her own horse going lame that
morning, after they had made such good time on their journey north! It was one
more thing to cope with on top of the trouble she'd been having with D'arvan
for the past three days. Stopping for breath, she glanced worriedly back at the
Mage, who sat limply on the horse, his delicately molded face expressionless,
his eyes blank.
Maya
muttered a barrack-room curse. She wished he would snap out of it! He had
almost scared her to death that night when he'd been seized by a strange,
sudden fit. One minute they had been sitting quietly by their small
campfire—the next, he had gone absolutely rigid, his face contorted, his eyes
rolling back in his head until only the whites were showing. He had screamed
out som*ttfirtg about Finbarr being dead, and
monsters,
and Miathan, before collapsing. Since then, he had been as impassive as stone.
He could ride if she put him on the horse, eat if she put food into his mouth,
and sleep, or so it seemed, if she closed his eyes and laid him down. But for
all the response she'd been able to get from him, Maya might as well be lugging
a corpse around. The thought sent a shiver through the warrior. She was truly
fond of the young Mage, and had been trying hard not to dwell on the
possibility that his condition might be permanent. Maya bit her lip. I hope I
find Aurian's mother soon, she thought. Surely she will be able to help
D'arvan?
Catching
her breath, Maya trudged doggedly on toward the head of the slope. Whatever the
trouble was, she hoped that the Lady Eilin would be able to sort it out, and
let her get back to the city. She had a feeling that something was badly wrong,
and her instincts, developed over a dozen years of soldiering, rarely let her
down. She knew from Aurian that if a Mage died, all other Magefolk felt the
death. Had D'arvan been reacting to •• Finbarr's passing? And what about the
Archmage, and the monsters? If there was trouble in Nexis, then Maya knew that
her place was with her troops, and she was seething with frustration. Close as
she and D'arvan had grown over the last months, she was ashamed to find herself
wishing that she had never volunteered for this task of playing nursemaid.
Suddenly
the Valley stretched below her, vast in the moonlight. Maya gasped. It was
immense! What sort of destructive force could have caused"*his huge crater
to be formed? She led the horse along the edge, seeking a safe way to descend
the steep black walls. Then, to her horror, a blood-chilling sound shrilled
through the forest behind her. The eerie song of many wolves—hunting! The horse
threw up its head and reared, spilling D'arvan to the ground. Maya swore and
hung on grimly to the reins, fighting the terrified beast, "No you
don't," she muttered. "I'm not losing you, too!"
Somehow
she got the reins wrapped round a sturdy tree limb, and tied them firmly. The
horse plunged and screamed at the end of its tether as she ran back to where
D'arvan lay. There was no sign of any injury*—he seemed as unaffected as ever
by the fall. She hauled his limp form over to the tree, propped him against the
trunk, and straightened, panting. The howls grew
nearer,
turning shrill with excitement. They were on her trail! Great Chathak, they
were all around her!
Maya
considered letting the horse go, hoping it would lure them away from her, but
decided to save that as a last resort. She still had to get D'Arvan across the
Valley, and while he was like this, she would never manage it on her own.
Stooping, she scrabbled together a small pile of twigs and dead leaves for
tinder, and struck a spark, feeding her fire with the larger dead boughs that
lay beneath the tree. Wolves feared fire. Drawing her sword, she thrust it
point down in the earth in front of her, ready to her hand. Unslinging her bow
from her shoulder, Maya nocked an arrow and stood at bay beside D'arvan, her
back against the tree.
Like a
shadowy tide, the wolves surged through the trees, yelping triumphantly. Then
they saw the fire, The gray wave broke, hesitated. One wolf stepped out into
the firelight—the leader—a huge, shaggy silver beast whose eyes flared
green-gold in the glow of the flames. Maya pulled back the bowstring to its
full tension, aimed, and—
"Wait!"
"What
the—" Maya jumped—the arrow went wide. Bloody D'arvan! Why had he chosen
that split second to wake up? Feverishly she groped in her quiver for another
shaft.
"Maya,
wait!" D'arvan's voice was urgent now. "It's all right. I can talk to
him. He won't hurt us."
Maya
set the arrow to her string—then hesitated, staring at the wolf in utter
disbelief. It sat*on ^fts haunches, its mouth gaping in a wide grin, its tongue
lolling from the side of its mouth—for all the world like the friendly hound
that cadged scraps at the door of the Garrison kitchen, The rest of the pack
sat in similar postures, or lay, relaxed, on the ground. Maya did not move.
"D'arvan," she said quietly, through gritted teeth, "would you
mind telling me what the blazes is going on?"
The
young Mage struggled to sit up, "They guard the Valley," he said.
"Eilin sent them to watch after—after what happened the other night."
"What
did happen the other night, D'arvan?"
D'arvan
grimaced with pain, "Finbarr , , ," He shook his head, his eyes
veiled and haunted. He was having to
answer by the sound oNwoves that first sounded ringingly on
246 •
MAGGIE FURLY
rock,
then softer on the loam of the forest floor. Maya tightened her bowstring, and
the wolves leapt to their feet.
A white
horse sprang forth between the trees, bearing the cloaked figure of a
wild-haired woman. The staff in her hand blazed with unearthly green light. The
tip of Maya's arrow burst into incandescent flame, and the warrior dropped it
hastily, cursing.
"Who
are you?" The voice was tense.
Maya
took a deep breath, and forced herself to stay very still. "Maya,
Lieutenant from the Nexis Garrison, and friend to the Lady Aurian. I bear a
message from her to her mother, the Lady Eilin." Slowly, she reached
inside her tunic for the tightly rolled scroll and bowed as she held it out to
the Lady.
One of
the wolves padded forward and took the scroll in its mouth. It walked softly
across to Eilin, and delivered its burden into her hand. By the light of her
staff, Eilin examined it, and nodded. "That is her seal," she said
softly. Breaking the seal, she unrolled the sheet, quickly scanning its
contents.
"Are
you D'arvan?" The Lady turned to the young Mage, who scrambled to his feet
and bowed.
"Yes,
Lady Eilin."
"Stay
there!" Eilin's voice cracked across the clearing, and the big wolf gave a
low, warning growl. "How do I know that I can trust you?" the Lady
said. "After what happened the other night . . ." She shook her head.
"Will
somebody please tell me what happened the other night?" Maya interrupted.
Eilin
glanced at her sharply, "You mean you don't know?"
"My
fault, Lady," D'arvan said. "Finbarr's death shocked me so badly . .
." He shrugged. "I knew nothing after that, until I awakened and saw
the wolves."
"As
well for you that you woke up then," Eilin said dryly. "Aurian says
in her message that your powers never surfaced. How is it, then, that you can
speak with my wolves?"
"I
don't know," D'arvan confessed. "I never tried to communicate with
animals before. ! didn't know I could,"
"Well,
there may be hope for you yet," Eilin said, "That is, if you are
telling me the truth. Will you be Tested?"
D'arvan
nodded, and stepped forward, his expression strained. The Lady held out her
glowing staff, and he reached
out his
hand to grasp the iron-shod heel. The green glow flared into a dazzling aureole
that consumed the body of the young Mage, and D'arvan gasped, falling to his
knees. Through the scintillating glare, Maya saw sweat break out on his
forehead, and stepped forward, an involuntary cry escaping her lips. But the
big wolf barred her way, and others advanced to circle her. Then it was over.
The Magelight died away, leaving only the flickering flames of Maya's little
fire, as D'arvan relinquished his hold on the staff with a sigh of relief, his
shoulders slumping.
Eilin
smiled. "Bravely done, young Mage," she said. "The Test of Truth
is not a pleasant experience, or an easy one." She turned to Maya.
"My apologies, Lieutenant Maya, for my suspicion. But grave times are upon
us—the gravest the world has faced since the Cataclysm."
"Lady,
what has happened?" Maya begged, "If there's trouble in Nexis, I
should go back at once."
Eilin
shook her head. "No, child. It would be a grave mistake to rush back to
Nexis, unrested and uninformed as you are. In fact, it would probably be
pointless for you to return at all. Be patient a little longer. Come home with
me, and I will tell you what I know, ill news though it is, then we can decide
what to do for the best,"
"Very
well, Lady." Maya curbed her impatience; she felt forced to accept the
sense of this.
The
Lady Eilin took D'arvan up on her own horse, and Maya carefully buried the
remains of her fire and, mounting the other skittish beast, followed in their
wake. The wolves remained behind, on guard.
The
warm red glow of the stove in Eilin's kitchen dispelled the chill of the wintry
night outside. The Lady soon had them seated in comfort, eating bread and
cheese and cradling cups of fragrant, steaming tea. As the Mage sat down with
her own cup, Maya leaned forward, desperate for news.
Eilin
opened her mouth as if to begin, then paused, with a little shrug of
helplessness. "I'm sorry," she said. "I haven't spoken to anyone
for so long; one gets out of the habit," She sighed. "Still, it
musfbe done," She closed her eyes, remember-
ing.
Maya wanted to shriek with frustration, but held her tongue, schooling herself
to patience.
"I
generally go to bed with the sun," Eilin said at last. "Three nights
ago, I awakened suddenly—f thought I neard* Aurian calling me. Calling for
help. She sounded so desperate— I knew it was not a dream. I could hear nothing
more, but I was afraid, afraid to my very soul. Shaking, I got out of bed and
sought my crystal. It's been years since I last attempted scrying —what need
had I to look at the world outside? As long as I had the occasional visit from
Aurian I knew she was all right. But that night I looked—and I saw—" Her
voice cracked, her hands whitening in their tight grasp round the cup.
"What
did you see?" Maya pressed. "Lady, please—"
Eilin
drew a long, shuddering breath. "Abominations," she said.
"Creatures of horror beyond all imagining. The Archmage has tampered with
an ancient artifact from the past. Out of legend, out of history, he has
unleashed the Death Wraiths of the Caldron."
Maya
knew little of such matters, but she saw the shock on D'arvan's face, saw the
look of dread that he and Eilin exchanged.
"There
was more," the Lady went on, her eyes shadowed with grief. "Maya, I'm
sorry—more sorry and more grieved than you'll ever know, to have to tell you
this. The Archmage set one of those hideous creatures on Forral. I saw him
fall, and saw him die."
"No,"
Maya whispered,. The world stood still around her. "Oh, Lady, no." As
a warrior, she had thought herself inured to the loss of comrades in battle,
but now she felt her throat tighten with unshed tears. Not Forral! Please, not
Forral! She had never known a better man! Not only was he her commander, but he
had also been her close friend over the last few years, as had Aurian. Poor
Aurian! Maya caught her breath. "What of Aurian?" she gasped.
"Alive.
Finbarr came in time to save her. Somehow he found a way to disable those
monstrosities, and two men— Mortal men—got her away." Eilin's voice was
strained. "I have no idea what happened to her afterward. They fled, I
suppose. She lives, I'm certain, but I cannot find her. I lost my link when
poor Finbarr died. The Wraiths were too many for him. He fell
in the
end, and D'arvan must have felt his death as all we Magefolk did."
"Yes,"
D'arvan whispered. "I felt his passing. Dear Gods, Lady, what are we to do?
How could Miathan be capable of such an act?"
"Miathan
was always capable of far more than most people gave him credit for."
Eilin's eyes hardened. "I had no proof that he had a hand in Geraint's
death, but I had my suspicions. That was one of the reasons why I fled to this
place when Aurian was a baby. But as the years passed, I persuaded myself that
it was a foolish fancy, born of grief, and that was why I permitted my daughter
to go to the Academy when she was older. Folly! I should have trusted my
instincts! But I wish I knew why the Archmage has so suddenly turned to this
new evil. D'arvan, you were at the Academy until lately. Can you shed any light
on this matter?"
"Not
really, Lady, though Miathan has been acting oddly of late. What he did to
me—he and my brother . . ." D'arvan told her his story.
Eilin
frowned. "Ridiculous!" she said. "Of course you have power, he
should know that!" Then she paused. "Ah, but does he?" she
murmured. "D'arvan, did your mother ever tell you about your father?"
The
young Mage blinked, puzzled. "Tell me what, Lady? They both passed when I
was very young—strangely enough, about the same time that Miathan became
Archmage—but I can remember my father quite weil. Uavordran was a Water-Mage;
clever, yes, but not special in any way. What should she have to tell me about
him?"
Eilin
seemed lost in thought for a moment, then she straightened, her expression
suddenly decisive. "Perhaps I am the only one who does know," she
muttered to herself. "Perhaps Adrina chose to confide only in me."
She looked straight at D'arvan. "Prepare yourself for a shock, young
Mage," she said. "Davorshan is not your twin, and only half your
brother. Bavor-dran was his father, but yours . . . well, that is quite a different
matter."
The cup
fell from D'arvan's hands and splintered on the floor without his even
noticing. "What do you mean?" he gasped. "It can't be trjyjs^How
can it?"
"Oh,
we Magewomen can manage these things if we must," Eilin said. "Having
conceived you, Adrina was quick to see that Bavordran had a son of his own, to
allay his suspicions. You were brought into being within mere days of one
another, and it was fairly simple for her to arrange for you to be born at the
same time—as well as her Earth-magic, she had a singular Healing gift."
She shrugged. "It was a bold move on her part— from the very start, people
wondered why the two of you looked
so
different."
"But
..." D'arvan floundered, as though the words were
choking
him. "Then—who is my father?"
Eilin
smiled. "Hellorin, the Forest Lord."
"Lady, that
is not amusing!" Maya had never
heard
YfatNatv
so\vc\& %o M\g,t^. "\\orw Aaxt ^ou mock w\e. "N\t.h such a.
jest!
The Lord of the Phaerie, indeed. What nonsense! They have no existence outside
legends and children's stories."
Eilin
gave him a stern look. "Lad, do you think I'd jest over such a thing? You
are completely mistaken, as are most folk. The Phaerie do indeed exist—and have
existed far longer than either Mortals or Magefolk. They have their own powers,
different from ours, and if they use them to remain apart from us, I cannot
blame them. Your mother never told me how she met and fell in love with
Hellorin, though it was no secret in the Academy that she and Bavordran bore little
love for one another. She only agreed to become his soulmate at the insis-tance
of Zandar, her father, the Archmage before Miathan. He was concerned that the
.Magefolk were dying out, and Bavordran was the only available mate."
Eilin sighed. "Well, she joined with him in the end, out of love and
respect for her father, but she gained no happiness from it. Bavordran was the
dullest, most self-centered Mage I've ever met, and he made her life a misery
in a thousand ways. As Adrina's friend, I'm glad she found love, however
briefly, with her Phaerie Lord. And you were the result, D'arvan. Your brother
was her child of duty, but you were the child of her heart."
D'arvan
shuddered. "But Lady," he cried despairingly, "what does that
make me?"
"Unique!"
Eilin replied briskly. "In my opinion, D'arvan, you are by no means
inferior to the rest of the Magefolk. Aurian believes you may have a talent for
Earth-magic, and your ability
to
speak with my wolves would seem to confirm that. We'll soon see how far you can
develop in that direction. As for any abilities you may have inherited from
your father's side—well, I scarcely know where to begin. The powers of the
Phaerie are far beyond the experience of any Mage. Let us concentrate first on
what I can teach you, then I suggest you go and ask Hellorin."
"What?"
D'arvan gasped.
"I
don't see why not," Eilin replied. "I know that the Phaerie are close
to us in this valley. They approve of my work here—bringing back the trees, and
such. If his own son were to call him, then surely their Lord would answer. But
. . ." She held up a warning hand. "I beg you not to rush into such a
meeting, D'arvan. The Phaerie have a reputation for being tricky folk, and I
don't want to risk losing you to them just now. Miathan must be opposed, and
with Aurian missing and Finbarr dead, that leaves only you and me. I wouldn't
trust the rest of them as far as I could spit!"
"But
Lady, what can we possibly do against the Archmage?" D'arvan said.
"Just
now, I have no idea. I think we may have to wait and see what happens. Anyway,
I'm tired, you're tired—and you have had far too many shocks in one night to be
able to think straight. And poor Maya looks as though she could fall asleep at
any second." Eilin gave the warrior a kindly smile. "I suggest we all
go to bed for what's left of the night, and make our plans in the
morning."
No one
argued. Too many shocks ipdeed, Maya thought, as Eilin showed her to the little
room off the kitchen that had once been occupied by Forral. D'arvan had been
given Aurian's old room. The painful reminders of her two lost friends made
Maya realize that there was one piece of news that she had not imparted to the
Lady. "Lady Eilin," she said abruptly, unable to think of a gentle
way to break the news. "Did you know that Aurian and Forral were
lovers?"
"Lovers.-'"
For a terrifying moment Eilin's eyes blazed into her own, then the Magewoman
dropped her face into her hands. "Dear Gods," she whispered.
"Why did I never foresee it? There was always such a depth of love between
them—but how could they have been so foolish?" She turned to Maya, her
eyes dim with pain. "Well,jtjjey cannot be blamed for the Archmage
turning
to evil—but now we know what made him act when he did. Miathan, with his
obsession with the purity of our race, would take such a joining ill,
indeed." She shook her head. "My poor child," she murmured.
"My poor, poor children." As Eilin mounted the tower stairs, Maya
heard the soft sound of her weeping.
In the
dead of night—the dark, oppressive time when it seemed that dawn would never
come—Maya left her room to sit by the embers of the kitchen stove. Weary though
she was, she had finally given up trying to sleep. Her thoughts were filled
with sorrow for Forral, who seemed so close to her in the room that had once
been his, and with fear for Aurian, now a fugitive. Gods, how she must be
grieving! Maya also worried about her city, in the grip of an evil madman, and
her troops, who would be bearing the brunt of the disaster. Between grief and
worry, she was finding it impossible to think clearly. The more she tried, the
worse it became. What's wrong with me? she thought despairingly. I'm a bloody
soldier. I'm trained to deal with emergencies. There must be something I can
do! But whatever it was, it eluded her. Never before had she felt so alone—Or
so utterly, wretchedly helpless.
The
sound of a door opening made her reach for her sword _but the intruder was only
D'arvan, coming out of his room. He looked haggard and haunted. "You,
too?" Maya said ruefully, suddenly glad of the company.
D'arvan
glared at her. "How could I possibly sleep, after what I've been told
toiwght?" he snapped.
"How,
indeed? I can't sleep after what I've been told, and you've had it far worse
than me." The self-pity in the Mage's voice had served as a salutary
reminder to Maya of just how close she had come to sinking into that same trap
herself. "Want some tea?" she offered.
"No!
I want this not to be! I want to wake up and find myself in my bed in the Academy,
with everything safe and normal—and none of this ever to have happened."
He sank to the floor beside Maya's chair and leaned his head against the arm.
Though he was trying to conceal it from her, she could feel him shaking with
sobs.
Maya
stroked his fine, pale hair. "Me, too, pet," she murmured sadly,
"me, too."
AURIAN •
253
D'arvan
looked up at her quickly, dragging a hand across his eyes. "Gods, how you
must despise me!" he choked.
Maya
was taken aback. "Whatever for?" she said.
"Because
I'm good for nothing! I'm a useless coward—I can only weep like a maid and make
a nuisance of myself! But you're a warrior—you're brave—I know how brave you
are! You would never shame yourself by giving way like this!"
Maya
chuckled. "Little do you know. Less than an hour ago I was lying next door
bawling my heart out!"
D'arvan's
eyes went wide. "Truly?"
"Of
course, dafty. We've had terrible news—treachery heaped on tragedy—and you've
had some shocks to cope with on top of that! This is the best time for us to
give way to our feelings—here, where we're safe for the moment. It's never
wrong to need—or take—comfort, D'arvan. That's something we both need right
now." As she spoke, Maya slipped to the floor beside the young Mage and
put her arms around him.
He
turned his face away. "How can you bear to touch me?" he muttered.
"You don't know what I am."
"Balls!
I know exactly what you are—I've known for months. You're shy and good-hearted,
you like music and flowers, and you have the most amazing aptitude for archery
I've ever seen. I couldn't believe it when you tried my bow that first day at
the Garrison, then told me you'd never handled one before! So that's one thing
you're good at, for a start. You can talk to wolves, and the Lady Eilin thinks
you'll be fine at Earth-magic—and who knows what talents you might have
inherited from your father! I know what you are, D'arvan. You're very special,
indeed."
It
started with her simply comforting him. As she spoke, Maya felt D'arvan relax,
and gradually his arms crept around her. Rather to her surprise, that comforted
her, and she found her mind turning to just how attractive she had been
beginning to find him lately. Stop! her common sense warned her. This is folly!
You know what happened to Aurian and Forral. But Maya didn't care. She had no
delusions about their plight, and suddenly it seemed to her that this might be
the last chance—for both of them. "Do you know," she murmured to
D'arvan, "you have the most beautiful face I've ever seen?" And she
kissed him. -»••«•=*
turning
to evil—but now we know what made him act when he did. Miathan, with his
obsession with the purity of our race, would take such a joining ill,
indeed." She shook her head. "My poor child," she murmured.
"My poor, poor children." As Eilin mounted the tower stairs, Maya
heard the soft sound of her weeping.
In the
dead of night—the dark, oppressive time when it seemed that dawn would never
come—Maya left her room to sit by the embers of the kitchen stove. Weary though
she was, she had finally given up trying to sleep. Her thoughts were filled
with sorrow for Forral, who seemed so close to her in the room that had once
been his, and with fear for Aurian, now a fugitive. Gods, how she must be
grieving! Maya also worried about her city, in the grip of an evil madman, and
her troops, who would be bearing the brunt of the disaster. Between grief and
worry, she was finding it impossible to think clearly. The more she tried, the
worse it became. What's wrong with me? she thought despairingly. I'm a bloody
soldier. I'm trained to deal with emergencies. There must be something I can
do! But whatever it was, it eluded her. Never before had she felt so alone—or
so utterly, wretchedly helpless.
The
sound of a door opening made her reach for her sword _but the intruder was only
D'arvan, coming out of his room. He looked haggard and haunted. "You,
too?" Maya said ruefully, suddenly glad of the company.
D'arvan
glared at her. "How could I possibly sleep, after what I've been told toaight?"
he snapped.
"How,
indeed? I can't sleep after what I've been told, and you've had it far worse
than me." The self-pity in the Mage's voice had served as a salutary
reminder to Maya of just how close she had come to sinking into that same trap
herself. "Want some tea?" she offered.
"No!
I want this not to be! I want to wake up and find myself in my bed in the
Academy, with everything safe and normal—and none of this ever to have
happened." He sank to the floor beside Maya's chair and leaned his head
against the arm. Though he was trying to conceal it from her, she could feel
him shaking with sobs.
Maya
stroked his fine, pale hair. "Me, too, pet," she murmured sadly,
"me, too."
D'arvan
looked up at her quickly, dragging a hand across his eyes. "Gods, how you
must despise me!" he choked.
Maya
was taken aback. "Whatever for?" she said.
"Because
I'm good for nothing! I'm a useless coward—I can only weep like a maid and make
a nuisance of myself! But you're a warrior—you're brave—I know how brave you
are! You would never shame yourself by giving way like this!"
Maya
chuckled. "Little do you know. Less than an hour ago I was lying next door
bawling my heart out!"
D'arvan's
eyes went wide. "Truly?"
"Of
course, dafty. We've had terrible news—treachery heaped on tragedy—and you've
had some shocks to cope with on top of that! This is the best time for us to
give way to our feelings—here, where we're safe for the moment. It's never
wrong to need—or take—comfort, D'arvan. That's something we both need right
now." As she spoke, Maya slipped to the floor beside the young Mage and
put her arms around him.
He
turned his face away. "How can you bear to touch me?" he muttered.
"You don't know what I am,"
"Balls!
I know exactly what you are—I've known for months. You're shy and good-hearted,
you like music and flowers, and you have the most amazing aptitude for archery
I've ever seen. I couldn't believe it when you tried my bow that first day at
the Garrison, then told me you'd never handled one before! So that's one thing
you're good at, for a start. You can talk to wolves, and the Lady Eilin thinks
you'll be fine at Earth-magic—and who knows what talenft y»u might have
inherited from your father! I know what you are, D'arvan. You're very special,
indeed."
It
started with her simply comforting him. As she spoke, Maya felt D'arvan relax,
and gradually his arms crept around her. Rather to her surprise, that comforted
her, and she found her mind turning to just how attractive she had been beginning
to find him lately. Stop! her common sense warned her. This is folly! You know
what happened to Aurian and Forral. But Maya didn't care. She had no delusions
about their plight, and suddenly it seemed to her that this might be the last
chance—for both of them. "Do you know," she murmured to D'arvan,
"you have the most beautiful face I've ever seen?" And she kissed
him. «*".-»
The
Mage froze, his lips unresponsive against her own, then suddenly he tore
himself away. "No!" he gasped. "I can't!"
Feeling
unutterably foolish, Maya tried to make light of the situation, wondering how
she could manage a dignified escape. "That bad, eh?" she said with a
shrug.
D'arvan's
face went crimson. "Maya, no! I mean—don't think ... It wasn't you . .
."
"Well,
that's a comfort, anyway." Her attempts to rescue him from his floundering
seemed to be making matters worse.
He
turned his face away, refusing to meet her eyes. "I'm sorry," he
muttered. "I can't. I mean I've never—Oh, curse it, I don't even know where
to start]"
Maya
smiled. "If you want," she said softly, "I would consider it
both an honor and a pleasure to teach you."
He was
clumsy at first—clumsy and awkward and painfully shy. But Maya was patient.
Gently, unhurriedly, she encouraged and instructed him, and the look of wonder
on D'arvan's face—first at his own pleasure, and later, when she taught him to
pleasure her—was more than reward enough. Seeing his glowing expression as the
dawn light crept through the window of his room, Maya was flooded with a
feeling of tenderness so intense that it took her breath away. Selective though
she'd been about her lovers in the past, never had any of them evoked such a
feeling within her. She reached out to touch his face, "There," she
told him. "Now we've found something else you're good at."
D'arvan
blushed, bat his eyes gleamed with delight. "Oh, Maya. I never dreamed . .
. Maya—you won't go back to the city, will you? I won't be parted from you
now!"
Maya's
brows knit in a frown as she realized how badly she had complicated matters.
"D'arvan," she said gently, "the time will come when we'll have
to fight. You know that, don't you?"
To
Maya's surprise, the Mage met her eyes with a clear, steady gaze. "I
know—and I'm ready to fight," he said. "It's difficult to explain,
but, after my—After Davorshan betrayed me, it was as though I had no reason for
existing. I felt empty, like a shadow. But now it's different." He smiled.
"For the first time in my life I feel like my own, whole self—and now I
have something to fight for. All I ask is that whatever form the battle takes,
we face it together. And if you really feel that you
AURIAN •
255
must
return to Nexis, my magic can wait. I can still shoot a bow, you know. I've had
the best possible teacher—in all things."
Maya
was stunned by his words. At last she found her voice. "I can think of a
hundred reasons why I should go back," she said. "But somehow . . .
Well, maybe it would be best if I stayed for a while. The Lady Eilin seems to
think that my returning to Nexis would serve no purpose, though I do feel
guilty about leaving my post. But I don't want to leave you either, dear heart.
Perhaps, together, we could work out some way of combining our talents against
the Archmage—depending, of course, on whether Eilin will approve this
arrangement. She'll probably be horrified, and throw me out of the Valley at
once,"
"In
that case," D'arvan said firmly, with a new, joyous ring to his voice,
"she can throw us both out—together."
They
were asleep when Eilin found them in the morning, curled together on the
rumpled bed like two cats. D'arvan's skin was very white where his arms
encircled Maya's brown, wiry body, and he was smiling as he slept. The
warrior's long dark hair, loosed from its braid, fell across them both like a
cloak. The Lady stared at them in silence for a long moment, her brows creased
in a frown. "Not again," she sighed, then shrugged helplessly and
cast her eyes heavenward. "Oh Gods," she murmured. "Why do you
keep doing this? Now I have three of them to worry about!" " ./
Chapter 17
SHIPWRECK
he
lantern rocked on its ceiling hook with the motion »__ of the ship, its dim
circle of light swinging back and forth across the wooden floor and walls with
hypnotic regular-
,fy.
Aurian sat bolt upright, crOSS-\eggek \t\ ftft «tt«!l ^ vVfc tiny cabin,
holding her shield in place to conceal ehe vessel from the force of Miathan's
seeking wiiJ. Occasiona/Jy she felt the pressure of his mind brush across her
shield, and held her breath until he had passed on, away over the dark waves.
Yet time and again, despite the peril, despite the fact that she had chosen her
position so that she could not fall asleep without falling over and wakening
herself, Aurian felt her leaden eyelids begin to close.
This
was the second night of her vigil. She had passed the first night successfully
by drawing deep on the hidden well-springs of her magical power to keep herself
awake and her shields firm. And she and Anvar had spent most of the inter
vening day on deck in the bracing sea air, until the looks and mutterings of
the increasingly restive pirate crew had driven them back to the cabin.
Sara
was still scorning to speak to them, and had remained huddled in sour misery on
her bunk, so at least there had been peace from that quarter. By unspoken
consent, they had avoided speaking of Anvar's connection with Vannor's wife,
though Aurian still wondered. Now she had insisted that Anvar sleep for a time,
while she could still be confident of staying awake, and he dozed beside her,
stirring restlessly as though he also felt the power of Miathan's seeking mind
that passed and repassed across them. Aurian was reluctant to awaken him, but
eventually, when her leaden eyelids refused to stay open any longer, she knew
that she must. "Anvar," she whispered, prodding him awake,
"Anvar, I need your help."
"All
right." He sounded bleary and dazed, and Aurian wondered if she looked as
bad as he did—disheveled and dirty, his face drawn and gray with weariness,
Anvar passed the water flask to her, before drinking himself. "Is he still
out there?" he whispered.
Aurian
nodded. "It's best we don't speak of him when he's seeking for us,"
she warned. "When I talk, it weakens my concentration on shielding, so we
should choose subjects as far as possible from the things we're trying to
escape."
Anvar
groaned. "It's impossible not to think of him," he said. "What
can we talk about, then, Lady?"
Aurian
shrugged. "The weather?" she suggested ruefully. "That should
occupy us for all of two minutes."
"Let's
pretend we're going far away—to another place entirely," Anvar suggested.
"That might confuse him, if anything should leak through your shields. You
know, Lady, I can't help but feel that I would like to go away—far, far away
from all this trouble. Do you know anything about the Southern lands beyond the
sea?"
Aurian
did, having picked up the information from Forral, who in his younger days had
been a secret gatherer of intelligence in the South. It was just such a
mission, in feet, that had kept him away from home for so long at the time of
Geraint's leath. The Garrison tried to stay informed, because the bellig-nt
Southern races were always a potential threat. Glad of the distraction, the
Mage was only too willing to tell Anvar what she knew.
The
bleak hills of the south coast ended at the ocean that divided the northern
landmass from the vast Southern Kingdoms beyond. There was little congress or
communication between the two continents, though spies, if they returned at
all, had testified to the belligerence and4uperior numbers of the warlike
inhabitants of the larger continent. Luckily, the Southerners feared the powers
of the Magefolk, and so far, that had been enough to keep them at bay.
It was
known that there were at least three kingdoms in the South, though beyond that,
where the deserts gave way to impenetrable jungle, all was mystery, A range of
high mountains near the northern coast were said to be inhabited by the
legendary Winged Folk, who guarded their peak-top aeries with savage
determination. Between the mountains and the sea, where the peaks dropped down
to green, pine-clad valleys, was the kingdom of the Xandim. Trapped between
mountains and ocean, their space was limited, and it was said that they coveted
the northern lands wkfa their rich pastures for the fabulous
horses
that they bred. South of the mountains was a desert, beyond which lay the
country of the Khazahlim, a fierce warrior race ruled by a savage tyrant king.
With such neighbors across the sea, it was not surprising that the Ruling
Council of Nexis kept the bleak hills of their southern coastline well
defended.
"I
wonder if the Southerners really are as dangerous as all that?" Anvar
mused.
"It's
said that they bear no love for my sort," Aurian said, "so it would
be as well if I didn't try to find out. But I know what you mean. I would like
to visit new lands—to try to leave the past behind. But for me that's
impossible, though you might do it someday."
"Me?"
Anvar's eyes went involuntarily to the bondmark on his hand. "But I'm only
a servant. I couldn't expect—"
"Nonsense!"
Aurian retorted. "Because you're a servant? Why should you be inferior
because of the work you do? Why, you're a far better man than some of those
arrogant, bullying Magefolk! If I were Archmage, I would— Oh!" Aurian felt
sick with dismay as she realized what she had done. "Oh, Anvar, I had the
chance, didn't I? I could have changed things for the better . . ."
"You
never thought of that?" Anvar asked in surprise.
"It
never crossed my mind—I didn't care about that kind of power. Like a fool, I
never considered the good I could have done. I threw it all away, when I took
Forral as my lover. Gods, it was me who brought this disaster down on us.
Forral even warned me ..." Aurian"t>uried her face in her shaking
hands.
Anvar,
alarmed by her bitter self-recrimination and afraid that in her distracted mood
she would drop her shields and bring discovery on them, reached out and pulled
her hands away from her face. "Lady," he said firmly, "don't
blame yourself. The Archmage is evil—the Mortals in Nexis have always hated and
feared him. He would have grasped power in the end, whatever you had done, and
the results would likely have been the same. You would have fought him—you and
Commander Forral, and Vannor and Finbarr. People would have died in any case.
Thank the Gods that you're alive to fight him now. Don't give in like this,
Lady—we need you. We all need you."
For a
moment hope dawned on Aurian's face, then she sighed. "Kind words, Anvar,
but if Forral and I hadn't—"
Anvar
gripped her shoulders. "Don't say that, Lady. Don't ever say that! What
happened between you and the Commander was inevitable! Any fool could see how
much you loved each other, and if the Archmage had cared about you, he would
have rejoiced for you! Can you tell me honestly that you, or Forral for that
matter, would have had it any other way?"
"No,"
Aurian confessed after a long moment. "You're right, Anvar. At least we
had what we had, but—"
"Then
stop feeling sorry for yourself and get those bloody shields back up!"
Anvar snapped. The Mage recoiled as though he had struck her, anger flaring in
her eyes. Then suddenly she began to laugh—a low chuckle that accompanied the
relaxing of the tension in her face and shoulders. "Ah, Anvar, you're good
for me," she said. "If anyone can get me through this, you can. I'm
glad you're here."
Somehow
they made it through the night, each keeping the other awake when they began to
falter. Using Aurian's dagger to scratch on the floorboards, they played all
the childhood games of words and wits that they could remember. When it became
too much of an effort to concentrate, they told jokes instead, and sung their
way—softly, so as not to awaken Sara—through all the old songs and ballads they
knew. But they were always aware of Miathan's restless will, ceaselessly
combing the oceans in search of them.
By the
time the dawn light was creeping through the tiny stern port, Aurian's eyes
felt gritty, and her voice was scratchy and hoarse. She stopped singing,
&nd Anvar did, too.
He
rubbed his eyes and stretched, yawning hugely. "Thank the Gods it's
getting light," he said. "I know we still have a long time to go, but
it feels as though we've passed another hurdle, at least. You know—in spite of
everything, I enjoyed last night." He seemed shy and hesitant, unsure of
his right to say such a thing.
Aurian
smiled. "So did I. You make a good companion, Anvar."
"You,
too. Lady," Anvar said, "I wish I had seen that sooner, instead of
being so preoccupied with resenting my position as a servant—"
"You
two are up early!"
Aurian
spun roottd, startled, to see Sara scowling from the
bunk.
"We've been up all night," she snapped, nettled by Sara's tone.
"Since you're awake, let Anvar have the bunk for a while," she added.
"He needs to sleep. I'll walk around on deck for a while—it might wake me
up a bit."
"That's
not fair!" Anvar protested. "I slept last night—" "Anvar,
we have at least two nights to go," Aurian said gently, warmed by his
concern. "I can't count on you to keep me awake if you're dropping from
exhaustion. If you get some rest now, we might manage." She fished in the
pack that Van-nor had given them, and brought out a small packet. "Before
you do, could you get that dreadful cook to make me some taillin? It might help
keep me going." Then in the act of handing it over, she stopped.
"Would you look at me?" she said ruefully. "After all I said
about being companions, I've still got you running around for me! I'll go
myself, Anvar. You get some
sleep."
"No."
Anvar took the packet from her hand. "I'll get it. If
you're
staying awake, it's the least I can do."
Sara
looked sourly after him as he went out. "Ever the devoted servant,"
she said, sneering. "That's all he's good for!"
"What
do you mean by that?" Aurian was furious.
Sara
shrugged. "Ask Anvar," was all that she would say.
Aurian
rubbed a hand over her face. I can't tope with this just now, she thought.
"Sara, don't make trouble," she warned. "If you can't treat
Anvar decently, just leave him alone." With that, she left the
cabirv,unable to spend another minute in
Sara's
company.
Aurian
sat in the bow, drinking taillin and watching the rose-gold glow of sunrise
flood the ocean. It was some time since she had felt Miathan's presence, and
she wondered if he was asleep, or perhaps occupied in ordering a city that must
have gone mad with panic when his creatures had attacked. She wondered what was
happening in Nexis, then thrust the thought firmly from her mind. She couldn't
be certain that the Archmage had given up, and she dared not relax her
vigilance. In order to keep awake, she got to her feet and began to walk back
and forth across the narrow, pitching deck, ignoring the curious stares of the
few crew members who were up and about
at this
early hour.
After a
time, the wind freshened enough to make pacing
impossible
on the lurching deck, and the Mage went below to the cramped, greasy galley to
coax another unpalatable meal from the ship's cook. The smell that assailed her
as she climbed down through the narrow hatchway was disgustingly familiar. Not
stew again! Aurian felt her stomach heave. Gritting her teeth against the surge
of nausea, she shot back up the ladder and rushed to be sick over the side. She
felt too wretched to care about the sniggers from the ill-assorted crew.
When it
was over, she sat limply on her bench in the bow, drinking cold taillin
straight from the jug and blotting her damp brow on her sleeve. Gods, she
thought, that wasn't seasickness! For the first time, the problems of being
pregnant while on the run truly came home to her. She touched her belly, where
the tiny scrap of life lay, snug and uncaring, and sighed.
"Lady,
wake up!"
Aurian
jumped at the sound of Anvar's voice, catching up her fallen shields in panic.
Horrified, she cursed her own carelessness and weakness. If Miathan had found
them . . . She shuddered. "What a fool I am!" she said. "I'm sorry,
Anvar. How long have I slept?"
Anvar
squinted at the sun. "Most of the morning, it looks like. Don't worry,
Lady, it was for the best. The Archmage hasn't found us, and you needed the
rest. In your condition—" He stopped, blushing.
"I
know," Aurian said ruefully, "First the little pest made me throw up,
then it made me sleep! At this rate, it's going to be more of a nuisance than
Sara!" J
"Lady,
you don't mean that," Anvar chided,
Aurian
sighed. "I suppose not," she admitted, "Even though it is
true."
Aurian
shared the last of the taillin with Anvar, and they breakfasted on iron-hard
slabs of biscuit that he'd coaxed from the cook. The Mage felt better for the
sleep. Her nausea had gone, and she was cheered up by the sparkling day. The green
waves danced in the stiff following wind that bowed the canvas of the old
patched sails. The pale sun beamed, playing tag with fluffy puffs of cloud that
raced like driven sheep across the sky. The brisk wind was refreshing, blowing
away the last cobwebs of sleep.
When
they hadAnashed the daunting task of chewing their
way
through breakfast, Anvar pulled a little wooden flute from his pocket.
"Would you like me to play for you?" he asked. "That would be
lovely," Aurian said.
So
Anvar played—funny, lively little tunes of his own devising, to go with the
brisk, bright day. His music soon attracted the crew, who began to find excuses
to lurk within earshot of the merry pipe. Aurian was amazed to see their faces
break into smiles, as they clapped their hands and stamped in time to the
music. Soon they were teaching Anvar chanteys and hornpipes, and dancing with
wild abandon to the tunes. When the captain came to berate his men for leaving
their posts, he too was caught up in the festive spirit. Casting an eye over
the perfect weather, he ordered that a cask of rough spirits be broached.
It was
due to the drink that things got out of hand. Since Aurian and Anvar needed to
stay alert, they did not join in the drinking. Anvar had left his seat in the bow
to be nearer the dancers, and Aurian was watching them, keeping her
concentration firmly on her shields. Suddenly an arm went round her shoulders,
and there was a blast of foul breath in her face. A tin cup brimming with
liquor was thrust in front of her.
"Have
a drink, darlin'," a slurred voice said.
Aurian
turned to look into the leering, unshaven face of a filthy pirate. "No
thank you," she said, trying to keep matters
calm.
"I
said, have a drink!" Grabbing her hair, he forced the cup into her mouth
with his^other hand, spilling the sticky stuff down her chin and the front of
her shirt.
Because
of the concentration involved in keeping up her shields, Aurian was slow to
react. Before she could move, Anvar was there. He jerked the man to his feet
and punched him squarely in the face, sending him crashing onto the deck. There
was a chill glint in his eye, a set to his jaw that Aurian had never seen
before. "Keep your hands off her," he growled.
The
cutthroat scrambled up, a wicked-looking curved dagger in his hand. Aurian's
heart sank. She got quietly to her feet, her hand on her sword hilt.
"Why
should you have two women, an' us have none?" the pirate snarled.
"Well, I'll have 'em both—once I've gutted you!"
Anvar
stepped back, drawing his own weapon—a pathetically inadequate belt knife that
Vannor had given him. The pirates crowded round like wolves closing in on their
prey.
The
tension was broken by a slithering hiss, as Aurian drew her sword. She stepped
up beside Anvar, her voice calm and level. "You'd better stop them,
Captain—if you want to continue this voyage with a crew."
"Bollocks,
lads—'tis only a maid," the brigand with the dagger roared, and charged.
Aurian's
blade flicked through the air so quickly that it hardly seemed to move—and the
curved dagger flew over the side and into the ocean as its owner collapsed,
howling, on the deck, clutching his knife hand that was spraying blood.
The
Mage pointed the tip of her sword at the hapless pirate. "The next time you
try that," she said into the dumbfounded silence, "it won't be your
hand. It'll be those bollocks you were mentioning. Yours—or anyone else's who
dares to interfere with me!" She locked eyes with the captain, who
hesitated, glaring. "Do you want to live to spend the gold I gave
you?" Aurian asked grimly.
Cursing,
he spat on the deck. "Get below, boys, and leave the passengers alone!
Their gold'll buy you plenty of whores in port." Muttering darkly, the
crew dispersed. Aurian's bleeding attacker was dragged away by his comrades.
To
Anvar's amazement, Aurian turned to the captain with a smile. "Thank you,
Captain ^Jurdag," she said. "I'm most grateful to you. You've spared
us a lot of unpleasantness."
Anvar
gaped at her, staggered by her dissembling—and even more astonished to see it
working.
"No
trouble, Lady," the captain said, although he looked rather tight-lipped.
"If you and the gentleman have any problems with the crew, I'll be glad to
deal with them. I'm sure a lady like you needn't carry such ironmongery
about." His voice held an unmistakable threat.
"I
wouldn't be without it," Aurian assured him, a similar edge to her own
voice.'"It's much too useful."
The
captain stared at her, then at Anvar. "Gods' blood," he said,
"you're a brave man to take her on!"
Anvar
felt a sta«.*>f surprise. So the captain thought they
were a
couple? Well, it wouldn't do any harm. Bluffing for all he was worth, he put a
nonchalant arm around Aurian's shoulders. "Oh, I think I can handle
her," he said coolly. Giving them a dark \ook, the captain went below.
"Why,
you—" Aurian turned on Anvar, all indignation, but there was laughter
dancing in her eyes. "So you can handle
me,
eh?" she growled.
"Lady,
I wouldn't dare try," Anvar confessed ruefully. "I certainly gave a
poor account of myself today. I never thought about that animal having a knife.
When I saw him maul you, I just wanted to smash his teeth down his throat. And
don't say you could have done that yourself—I know you could. I wanted the
pleasure of doing it, that's all." He was surprised to find he was
speaking through clenched teeth.
Aurian
smiled. "I don't mind, Anvar. It was a true act of chivalry, and I'm
grateful. But if you're going to make a habit of it, beware of hidden weapons.
I don't want to lose you, too." Her smile gone, her eyes suddenly shadowed
with sadness, she turned abruptly and walked away from him, to the opposite
rail of the ship. Anvar cursed under his breath, wishing that everything didn't
remind her of Forral, wishing he could do something to ease her sorrow.
Aurian,
her hands locked round the rail, stood gazing across the endless ocean. Were
there other lands across that vast expanse? Why had no ooe. gone to look, and
if they had, what had become of them? Aurian found herself wishing that she
could go—that she and Forral could have gone together. She found herself
remembering the time they had talked about his death. "/'// always be with
you," he had said. Aurian felt a prickling in the nape of her neck. Could
it be true? She had never managed to master his odd, circling flick of the
blade—and yet today, when she had needed to disarm the pirate—it had come to
her as naturally as breathing! Could it be true, that he was still with her?
But if it were, surely she should be able to feel something—feel his
presence—something? She shook her head, confused, unwilling to let her heart
fool her into accepting a lie just because she needed it so badly. And yet .
. .
Anvar
came to stand beside her, not speaking, the breeze mfflin& the tawny curls
at the nape of his neck. "Is Miathan
still
up to his tricks?" he asked at last, and Aurian knew that he was as
anxious as she to break the mood that had fallen between them.
"I
haven't felt him for several hours now, luckily for us," she said. "I
suppose he has to rest sometime—it's hard work, scrying. I daren't relax my
guard again, though."
Anvar
was about to reply, but Aurian grasped his arm, forestalling him, turning
toward a new, strange sound that caught her attention. It came from out at
sea—wild, high swirls of song that sent thrills through her body, rooting her
to the spot in rapt attention. "Listen," she breathed, clutching at
his arm. "Oh, listen! Can't you hear it?"
Anvar
peered out to sea, trying to find the source of the haunting sounds. "What
is it?" he asked her. "Why—they're singing!"
They
waited, listening intently as the sounds gradually drew nearer. Then far out
across the waves, a series of immense dark shapes erupted from the water,
leaping high, twisting in the air and falling back into the sea amidst
fountaining walls of white foam. Feathery white plumes shot skyward, twice as
high as a man, filling the sunlit air with rainbows. "Whales!" Aurian
exclaimed. "Forral told me about them. Oh, Anvar, how beautiful!"
Aurian
gripped the rail tightly in her excitement. As the creatures drew nearer, she
saw that they were indeed immense, the largest of them longer than the ship.
They numbered about half a dozen, including, to her delight, two babies. The
Mage gazed at them, lost in wonder, admiring the huge, streamlined bodies that
moved with delicate grace through the water, the perfect arching curves of
their tail flukes that beat the surface with exuberant power as they dived. She
noticed the tender care that the giant family showed for the two babies,
warding and watching them always.
The
Mage was so enthralled that she forgot the shield. And as it fell away,
unnoticed, the first thoughts touched her mind. Thoughts as great and deep as
the ocean itself. Thoughts of surprise, curiosity; thoughts full of deepest
love, boundless joy, and endless sorrow. She, Aurian, was the first of her
people in aeons to communicate with the People of the Sea. People who made no
wars, who d^Lno violence; who spent their days think-
ing and
playing and singing songs, making love and caring for their children—and
thinking their deep, wise, gentle thoughts. And their wisdom! The Mortals and
Magefolk who squabbled and scurried across the face of the earth gave themselves
no time, no peace to develop their minds—to become one with the oneness of all
things. But the race of Leviathan knew. They carried in their mighty brains the
wisdom of the Universe— these beings that mankind called animals! And with that
wisdom came love.
Aurian
never saw the lookout awaken from his rum-fogged sleep—never heard his cry:
"Whales! Whales ho!" She only came back to herself when the crew came
tumbling out onto the deck, falling over each other in their haste to lower the
long, sharp-nosed wooden boat that hung from the side of the ship. Her joy
turned to horror as she saw them reaching for the wicked harpoons with their
steel barbs.
"No!"
she cried, reaching for her sword, desperate to stop them. Then Anvar was in
her way, blocking her path, grabbing her by the shoulders. "Lady,
don't!" he said, "It means gold to them—lots of gold. They wouldn't
hesitate to kill you over
this!"
Aurian
struggled with him, reluctant, despite her desperation, to hurt him. "Get
out of my way," she cried, "I've got to
stop
them!"
"You'll
have to kill me first." Anvar's voice was quiet, but his eyes met hers
without flinching. "I'm not letting you kill yourself over this,
Auria"rr."
It was
too late. The boat had been lowered. The men were climbing in. Eight strong
rowers, four on each side—and a man in the bow, clutching a harpoon. Aurian
glared at Anvar. "Damn you!" she spat. "Run!" she screamed
at the whales, projecting the thought with all the force of her mind. "Run,
oh run!" The whales, discovering the danger, turned and fled, diving for
safety beneath the surface. But the boat was swift, the oarsmen propelling it
through the water with mighty strokes And the whales had to surface to breathe.
Aurian was holding her own breath. The captain and the three remaining crev.
members worked frantically, trimming the sails to follow the flight of the
stricken creatures as closely as they could.
For a
moment Aurian thought the whales would escape.
ien she
saw the smallest baby left behind, exhausted. It swam bly on the surface,
uttering plaintive cries for help as the boat closed in, the distance narrowing
rapidly. The man in the bow raised his arm, clutching the harpoon, another
ready in his left hand. Why? Then Aurian saw what he had already seen. The
whale-child's mother, racing frantically back to her stricken baby—as he had
known she would. The harpoonist pulled his arm back for the cast . . .
Aurian
cried out, raising her hand in a sharp gesture—and the boat disintegrated,
every plank flying apart from every other, pitching the floundering men into
the sea.
"Bring
her round," Jurdag bellowed. "Get some ropes!"
In the
confusion, the mother whale, joined now by her mate, managed to round up their
lost child. Helping the baby along, one on either side, they followed the rest
of their family to the safety of the open sea, their cries of gratitude ringing
in Aurian's mind as she relaxed, weak with relief.
Then,
suddenly, she felt the triumphant grasp of Miathan's mind as he located her
through the use of her magic. "Get out!" she screamed silently,
striking back with all the force she could muster. She felt his pain and shock,
felt his clutch slip away— and slammed her shield back into place. But she
knew, with a sinking heart, that it was too late. She had betrayed them. He
knew where they were, and he would be back.
Then
Anvar was upon her, his face rigid with fury, "You did that!" he
hissed, "Don't you know that sailors can't swim? You've probably drowned
them all! ^And what if they realize that they've got a bloody Mage on board?
How could you be so stupid^and so callous?"
It was
more than Aurian could take. "How dare you question my deeds?" she
snarled.
Anvar's
Up curled. "Ah," he said bitterly. "Now it comes out. How dare I,
a mere servant, criticize one of the great and lordly Magefolk! All that talk
about being companions! Pah!" He spat contemptuously onto the deck.
"When it comes down to it, Lady, you're no less arrogant and despicable
than the rest of them!" Shouldering her roughly aside, he stormed back
into the cabin, slamming the door behind him.
Sara
was startled by the violence of Anvar's entrance. "That Mage," she
heard him mutter. "That bloody bitch!" She stifled a smile of
triumph. So he had quarreled with Aurian! It was hardly what she had expected,
but ... In the long hours spent in this dingy hole, she had done some hard
thinking. She knew that she was very much alone—cut off, possibly forever, from
the luxuries of her former life. It was unlikely that she'd see that ass Vannor
again, so she was going to need someone to take care of her—and at the moment,
Anvar was her only option. At least she had always been able to twist him round
her little finger—that was about the only advantage, she thought scornfully. The
problem had lain in getting him away from that red-haired harpy. But now, here
he was—upset, and off balance. Easy. "Why, Anvar," she said,
"whatever has happened?"
He told
her—at great length—pacing back and forth in the cramped confines of the cabin.
Sara could make little sense of it all, but that didn't matter. "I can't
believe it," he kept saying, shaking his head in baffled dismay. "I
just can't believe
it of
her."
"Who
knows what the Magefolk are capable of?" Sara said insinuatingly. "They've
never had our interests at heart. What does it matter, anyway? You're free of
them now, don't you see.' Free of her. What can she do about it? When we dock
at Easthaven, we can do what we like, go where we want. We could be together .
. ."
"Sara?"
Anvar turfieYi to her, stunned. Did she mean it? Could it possibly be true,
that she still loved him after all?
The few
feet of space between them was a gulf of years, of hurt, of heartache, but Sara
seemed to fly over the intervening gap, and at long last her slight form was in
his arms once more. As she turned her face to him, the lamplight glowed on her
fine-spun hair and her eyes glistened with tears. "Thank goodness,"
she whispered. "Thank goodness I've found you at last!"
Anvar
could hardly believe it. Were all his dreams finally
coming
true?
"I
was so afraid," Sara went on. "But you've been so brave. You've been
wonderful, wonderful." Breathlessly she hurried on without giving him a
chance to speak. "Oh, Anvar, I've missed you so much!"
At last
Anvar found his voice. "But I thought you hated , Sara. After what you
said—"
She
sighed. "Anvar, I was so deeply hurt. I—I hardly knew what I was doing.
Forgive me, please. You're the only man I've ever loved . . ." Her tears
overflowed, spilling down her flawless face.
Anvar
crushed her to his breast, never wanting to let her go, his heart soaring.
"Sara, my love, don't cry. That's all over now. We'll do whatever you say,
anything you want. We'll go away, and be together."
Sara smiled.
Then, putting her arms around his neck, she kissed him, long and deep, with all
the lost passion of their youth. For a moment Anvar was completely taken aback,
but her kiss awakened all the frustrated longings he had kept buried in his
heart. His arms tightened around her as he returned her kisses with increasing
urgency and fervor. His heart began to pound, and he found himself going rigid
with excitement as he fumbled at the fastenings of her bodice to touch her
breasts, her—
"What
is this?" Aurian stood in the doorway, her voice stern, her expression
thunderous. "Is this how you repay Vannor for his love?" she stormed
at Sara, who gave a little cry of fear, her hands fumbling at the open neck of
her dress.
Anvar
put himself between the two women. "You mind your own business," he
told the Mage flatly. "Sara and I were lovers once, and parted through no
fault of our own—I was sold into slavery to you, and she was sokKinto slavery
of another kind. We've suffered enough, and now we're going to take what's due
to us—and don't you try to interfere!"
"Not
interfere!" Aurian cried. "By the Gods, Anvar, how could you sink so
low? With another man's wife—a good man, who trusted you!"
"Don't
you lecture me on bloody morals!" Anvar yelled at her, beside himself with
rage at the insidious guilt her words had raised. "You—you
murderess!"
Aurian
stared at him, her mouth open, her face white and blank with shock. Then she
whirled, and was gone. Sara smiled a smug little smile.
Everything
was quiet on deck. Not a soul was about, except the captain at the helm and the
solitary lookout perched high above on the mainmast. The rest of the crew were
below, greatly subdued by the loss of two of their comrades in the accident
that afternoon. One of the dead had been the harpoonist, and Aurian could not
bring herself to be sorry for his loss. She went quietly to her accustomed
place in the bow, her mind reeling from the shock of what she had just
witnessed, and the venom of Anvar's attack.
"Murderess!"
The accusation rang in her ears. How could he possibly understand? He thought
of the Leviathan as animals. He'd be quick enough to act to save a human child!
Well, he might . . . Anvar had not been trained as a warrior, as she had.
People needed warriors to do their killing, so that they could keep their own
consciences clear, and lay the blame at someone else's door . . .
Forral
understood. He had told her once: "It's a dirty job, when you come down to
it. They use you to wade through the blood and muck and corpses, while your
friends get slaughtered around you. They use you to deal with the people who
stand in their way so they don't risk their flabby bodies and snow-white
consciences—and then, if you have the gall to survive, to be there afterward as
a living reminder, they turn on you and cry 'atrocity'!"
"Then
why do we do it?" she had asked him.
He had
smiled then. "Think of the people at the Garrison," he had said.
"There's nothing like the comradeship that warriors share. And do you
remember the fight we had, the day we first made love? If you remember how that
felt, then you know." And she had known.
Gods,
how she missed Forral! How she wanted him. She had nothing now; her heart was
filled with a bleak, aching void. How could she live with this pain for the
rest of her life? Aurian saw the keg of spirits that had been left behind,
forgotten, on deck. An empty tin cup was rolling round in the scuppers by her
feet. A voice at the back of her mind warned of danger, of the need to be
alert, but she ignored it. What does it matter? she thought dully. I've made a
total mess of everything anyway. Picking up the cup, she went to fill it. It
was poor comfort, but it might help to dull the pain for a while.
They
had made love. As soon as the Mage left, Sara had seized Anvar with savage
ferocity, pulling him down with her on the bunk and tearing at his clothes. It
had been so long . . . How could he resist? Like animals, they had taken each
other in the sordid cabin, mindless in their lust. Now that it was over, Anvar
felt drained and guilty, and somehow used. The old, sweet innocence of their
love had vanished. He chided himself for his folly. He and Sara loved each
other—and now, at last, she was his again. What did anything matter in
comparison to that? He rolled over to take her in his arms. Perhaps this time
it would be better—
"Not
now." Sara's words were like a slap in the face.
"Why
not?" Anvar exclaimed in injured tones, and reached for her again.
Sara
slapped his hands away, then favored him with a smile. "There'll be time
for that later," she said, "when we're off this rotten ship. But now
you must go and make sure that the Mage is staying awake."
"What?
She won't want to see me now, after what I said to her." Anvar felt a pang
of guilt.
"Who
cares what she wants!" Sara's voice was hard. "The important thing is
that we survive this journey. Don't you see, the Archmage isn't after us. Once
we dock, we can be free of her, and him, forever." - s
Not to
see Aurian again? Somehow, Anvar could not imagine it. But Sara was right, he
supposed. After tonight, the Mage would never want to see him again anyway.
Everything had changed so suddenly . . . But Sara was right. The main
consideration was that the Archmage should not find them. Sighing, he rummaged
on the floor for his clothes, and dressed hastily. Sara gave him a farewell
peck on the cheek, sending him on his way.
Anvar
crossed the deck, feeling a dreadful reluctance to face the Mage. But all such
thoughts fled from his mind when he saw her asleep in the bow with her head on
the ship's fail and a half-empty cup of liquor by her side. Traces of tears
glistened on her face:*A--€hill ran down Anvar's spine, a sudden
feeling that
danger lurked—very close. He
leaned over to awaken her, shaking her
shoulder.
It
happened with unbelievable speed. Aurian was on her feet, her hands fastened in
a crushing grip around his throat— and the eyes that blazed into his were not
her own! Anvar fought for breath, clawing in panic at the choking hands.
Aurian's
mouth opened, her face contorting into a horrible parody of itself, and Anvar's
blood froze as Miathan's voice issued from her snarling lips. "Anvar! I
should have known. I should have ended your miserable life long ago. And how
fitting it is, that I use her hands to slay you!"
The
grip around Anvar's throat tightened. At the last instant, while he still
could, he screamed, "Aurian, no!" He couldn't take another breath.
His lungs burned, his vision was darkening. Then suddenly the hands released
him, and he was pushed violently away to fall on the deck, wheezing as he tried
to suck air down his bruised throat. From a distance he heard a voice. Oh,
mercy, it was Aurian, calling his name. As his vision cleared, he saw her face
above him in the dim light. Her own face, frowning. She looked very shaken.
"Are you all right?" Aurian said.
Anvar
nodded, and let her help him up onto the bench. His throat felt crushed. He
reached for the cup of rum, and took a painful swallow. "Are you?" he
whispered hoarsely. "I am now." She sounded very grim. "Lady,
what happened?" he asked her. "Can you remember?"
Aurian
looked away from him, speaking in terse, emotionless tones. "I fell
asleep. And suddenly, I wasn't in my body anymore. I was somewhere else, all
gray and misty—not in this world at all."
"Is
that possible?" Anvar gasped.
"Of
course it's bloody possible!" the Mage snapped. For all her efforts at
control, she was shaking. "Miathan—he had taken me there. He was holding
me somehow, and I couldn't move, couldn't get back. I tried to fight, but I
couldn't do anything. Then I heard your voice, and it seemed to break his
concentration. I fought him then, all right!" She shook her head.
"But I shouldn't have won—not on ground of his choosing. It seemed as
though he weren't using all his power."
"Probably
because he was occupying your body at the same time," Anvar suggested.
"So
that's why I was trying to kill you!" Aurian cried. "Oh Gods—the
thought of him inside my mind, using my body—" She turned away, retching
violently.
Anvar
offered her the cup of spirits, but she waved it away. "How did you get
back?" he asked her, in the hope that it might distract her from the
horror.
"I
don't know—there was this kind of jolt, and I found myself with my hands around
your throat."
"Where
is he now?" Anvar felt a sudden stab of alarm.
Aurian
frowned. "I don't know, and I don't like it. He—"
A huge
wave crashed up over the bow, drenching them both in shockingly cold water.
Gasping, Aurian pulled her streaming hair out of her eyes and looked up,
aghast. Black, boiling clouds streamed across the sky, blotting out the stars
with unbelievable speed. A mighty gust of wind tore at the sails and the masts
creaked dangerously as the ship heeled over at an alarming angle. The lookout
fell with a shriek from the tilted mast and vanished among the churning waves.
Another wave swept over the deck as the bow dipped into a deep trough. Aurian
and Anvar found themselves in a tangled heap in the scuppers, knocked there by
the wall of water. The crew came racing up from below. "What the blazes is
going on?" Jurdag yelled. "No bloody storm comes up that fast!"
The
strength of the gale was increasing—and with it the height of the waves that
tore at the little ship. Once again she heeled dangerously, and Aurian clutched
at Anvar as a torrent of water crashed over the side. "Cut it loose!"
Jurdag was screaming, and the Mage looked up at the panic in his voice. The
soaking mainsail had jammed in place, and the wind was pushing it inexorably
over, threatening to capsize the ship. Two men scrambled up the rigging to do
his bidding, but the next mountainous wave washed them away. The mast dipped
alarmingly once more, the heavy sail almost going under.
Aurian
knew she must act swiftly. Rising to her feet, she made a scrambling dash for
the foremast, clinging to it for dear life as the deck pitched and lurched
beneath her. Biting her lip, she tried to focus on rinf'Straining sail, but it
was impossible to
concentrate
on her magic and keep her hold on the mast. She looked round for Anvar.
"Anchor me," she yelled above the shrieking storm. "Hold
me!" In a moment he was at her side, putting one arm around the mast and
bracing himself against ' the
tilting deck while holding her firmly round the waist with j
the
other arm.
"Now!"
Aurian lifted her hands—and with a sound like a I thunderclap, the sail split up the middle, ripping apart
from • top to bottom. Immediately the
ship began to straighten as the canvas wound itself round the mast in a tangle
of ropes. Th< captain stood gaping for a moment, then began to order
th( i crew to cut away the wreckage
and reef the foresail. Even with a |
single slip of canvas on the foremast, the ship ran hideously fast
before
the storm.
Anvar
put his mouth close to Aurian's ear. "It's bad," he shouted.
"We'd better get Sara." Holding firmly to each other and whatever
else happened to come to hand, they staggered and crawled across the wave-swept
deck, in constant danger ot being swept away by solid sheets of water that
threatened to swamp the ship. It seemed a lifetime before they reached the
sanctuary
of the cabin.
The
door was blocked by a tangle of flotsam, washed across the deck by the invading
sea. Aurian cursed and raised her hand again. "Protect your eyes!"
she yelled at Anvar. Shards and splinters flew as she blasted the mass away.
Anvar wrenched the door open and they cushed inside, a swirling flood of icy
water
at
their heels.
Sara
screamed and scrambled onto the bunk as the waters rushed across the cabin
floor. Anvar, fighting the force of the water, struggled to close the door
without success, until Aurian also put her shoulder to it. Between them they
forced it shut, preventing any more of the ocean from entering. Aurian, gasping
for breath, looked ruefully down at the dirty water that lapped around her
boots. "Well," she said, "at least the floor's had its first
good wash in ages." She ducked across the room for her staff, and thrust
it securely into her belt. "Let's go," she said tersely. "We
can't be caught in here if the ship goes down." "Lady, surely this
must blow itself out?" There was a tacit
plea in
Anvar's voice.
Anrian
shook her head. "No, Anvar. This storm is Eliseth's
doing,
and it won't end until she runs out of strength, which won't be for some
time—or until the ship is sunk. Miathan wants us dead."
Sara
gave a frightened little cry. "We'll be killed!" she wailed, and
burst into tears.
Anvar
looked at the Mage, gray-faced. "Lady, I can't swim," he said.
Aurian
stared at him, bracing herself against the heaving floor. "What do you
mean, you can't swim?" she said.
"I
can't. Sara can—she had to, living beside the river—but my father always kept
me too busy to learn."
Aurian
smacked a palm against her forehead. "As if we hadn't problems
enough!" she said. "Stay by me—I'll try to help you. But to be
honest, Anvar, you'll only be out of this mess a few minutes quicker than the
rest of us. Nobody could survive a sea like this." She felt bitter, and
wretched, and utterly defeated.
A
volley of thunder overhead made them jump, and a vivid flare of lightning
brightened the window. There was a rending crack overhead, followed by a crash
that shook the entire ship. The lamp went out, plunging them into darkness.
Aurian was thrown abruptly forward, falling with Anvar and Sara in a tangle of
bruised limbs. She scrambled to her feet, clinging to the bunk to keep her
footing, and formed a ball of Magelight. The floor was canted at a steep angle,
toward the bow. Aurian swore. Anvar was still hampered by Sara, and the Mage
pulled her away to let him rise. "Hurry," she yelled. "We've got
to get out!"
When
they reached the deck, utter chaos met their eyes. The mainmast had been struck
by lightning. Catching fire, it had snapped halfway down, falling into the
rigging of the foremast, which had collapsed in turn, bringing with it a
splintered area of the deck, and smashing the bow on the starboard side. It
protruded across the water, unbalancing the ship and causing her to swing
broadside to the battering waves that were already beginning to break her up.
The sea was flooding in across the shattered bow, pulling the ship further
under. The captain was still clinging desperately to the wheel—a futile
gesture, since the rudder was out of the water.
The
ship was going-'under. As they stood, paralyzed by the
sight
before them, she began to turn over. The deck was slanting too steeply—they
were falling! Aurian felt Anvar grab her shoulder then lose his grip as she
plummeted into the icy sea, felt the current trying to draw her down with the
foundered ship. The water closed over her head in a froth of bubbles, and she
struck out desperately, trying to get clear of the danger. But the current was
too strong. She held her breath as she was sucked beneath the waves—then
Miathan was back. She felt the grasp of his will, like icy claws sinking deep
into her mind.
It was
too much. When she was so close to drowning, when she needed all her resources
to survive, he was there again! Aurian felt rage building within her like a
crimson tide. She remembered Finbarr's brave stand, remembered Forral, brutally
slain by the Archmage's vile creatures. Miathan had even deprived him of a
decent warrior's death. Unthinking in her blind fury, she opened her mouth to
curse him aloud. Salt water seared her throat, flooded burning into her lungs.
Well, she'd do her best to take him with her. With a wrench she broke from his
grasp, ripping her consciousness free of her body and arrowing her will back,
back to Nexis. He was there, hunched like a spider over his crystal. Aurian
entered the crystal, and gathering all the force of her Fire-magic, she
launched a bolt of energy—straight at his eyes. Miathan shrieked—a horrible,
tearing sound, and clasped his hands over his face. Smoke leaked between his
fingers as he reeled away, blinded.
Not
enough. Damn this weakness. As her dying body pulled her back, Aurian tasted
bitter failure. He still lived, she knew. There was only one comfort to cling
to with the last shreds of consciousness as she was sucked back into the agony
of her body. She had blinded him—destroyed his eyes irrevocably. That's for
Forral, you bastard, she thought. Then the darkness took her.
Chapter 18
LEVIATHAN
he was
swimming. What the blazes was going on? This couldn't be death—not another
dark, freezing ocean! Some inner sense of time told Aurian that only a few
seconds had passed since she'd lost consciousness—in fact, it was little longer
than that since she had fallen into the sea. Then, to her utter astonishment,
she realized that she was breathing easily. Breathing underwater! Aurian
laughed aloud, the sound muffled and distorted as her lungs forced water through
her mouth. So the legends were true, that you couldn't drown a Mage! Her body
must have made the change instinctively, adapting her lungs to deal with the
new medium. I'll wager Miathan doesn't know about this, she thought
triumphantly. He'll think I'm dead, and I've given him too much to worry about,
for him to suspect otherwise. Gods, I hope he's in agony!
Then
the Mage remembered Anvar and Sara. Their lungs would not adapt. They would be
drowning! Heading back to the mass of floating wreckage from the stricken ship,
she dived, trying to ignore the insidious thought that it would probably be
useless. But she had promised Vannor that she would take care of Sara, and it
was she herself who had brought Anvar to this fate. She had to try. But
Aurian^bund it impossible to see anything beneath the dark waves. Even her
Mage's night vision could not cope with that. She wished she could be like the
whales, with their extra sense that enabled them to recognize shapes in the
blackest depths . . . Of course! Beneath the water, she sang—a song that she
had only learned today but seemed to have known all her life . . . Aurian sang,
calling the Leviathans in her mind, to beg for their aid. And to her relief,
they answered.
They
were with her in an amazingly short time, combing the wreckage-strewn waters to
find what she sought. One of them was soon beside her, his immense bulk
dwarfing her as she swam. She recognized his thought patterns as those of the
father of the whale-cfeikl she had saved. His deep, kindly voice
echoed
in her mind. "I have the man. My mate seeks the other. Can you climb onto
my back, Little One? The man needs help."
Aurian
thanked him and headed for the surface, where the whale rested with his broad
back just out of the water. The Mage scrambled up with some difficulty, hoping
that she wouldn't hurt him. She only had time for an instant's surprise at the
warmth of his sleek skin beneath her hands, before she found herself gasping
and choking, unable to breathe. She was drowning—drowning in air!
This
time Aurian did not lose consciousness, though the panic-filled moments while
her lungs adjusted seemed to last a lifetime. She tried to stay aware of what
was happening, knowing that someday the knowledge might stand her in good
stead. "Have you considered the implications of this thing?" The
words she had once said to Finbarr came back with startling clarity as she
choked
and wheezed.
Aurian
looked around dazedly. She felt cold and exhausted, but was relieved to be
breathing normally once more. She lay on the whale's broad, barnacle-encrusted
back, rocking gently with a sea that was already growing calm. And there was
Anvar, lying limp and motionless a few feet away. Balancing carefully, she
crawled over to his side. He felt cold—very cold—and he was not breathing. A
chill passed through Aurian. Was she too
late?
The
Mage tried to reach out with her HeaVer's senses—and found, to her horror, that
she could not. Cold and exhaustion had taken their toll, arid she had thrown
every shred of her power into her attack on Miathan. The effort of contacting
the Leviathan had completed the drain. Aurian cursed, hammering a fist into her
thigh in frustration. Now, at the time of her greatest need, her body had
betrayed her! Until food and rest had restored her, she would be unable to
summon the intense energies used in Healing.
Fighting
panic, Aurian racked her brains. Surely there wa an alternative? Remembering
Meiriel's instructions for such an emergency, she turned Anvar over and pressed
hard and repeatedly on his back. Water trickled from his mouth, but he did not
breathe. Aurian pushed harder, the exertion warming her despite the icy wind.
"Breathe, blast you!" She was tiring quickly; cold sweat trickled
down her face.
At
last, as Aurian was on the verge of despair, Anvar's chest heaved once, then
again. He coughed and retched, spitting out seawater and taking great, gasping
breaths. His eyes stared wide at the calming sea and the vast, curving back of
the whale. He struggled in the Mage's arms and tried to speak, but could only
splutter and choke.
"Steady,
Anvar—you'll be better soon." With sympathy, Aurian remembered her own
terrifying struggle on the whale's back, before her lungs had adapted back to
breathing air. "Rest for a minute, and get your breath back while I tell
you what happened. The whales, Anvar—they aren't just beasts, they're
intelligent. I can talk to them, in my mind, and this one saved your life . .
."As she was explaining her part in his rescue, Anvar interrupted her.
"Sara?"
he asked, in a faint, hoarse voice.
Aurian
shook her head. "I don't know, Anvar. Wait, and I'll—"
"Why
didn't they save her?" Harsh and accusing, his voice cut across her own.
"Did you ask them to try?"
Aurian
recoiled in indignant rage. Why, the miserable, ungrateful— He had no thought
of how close she had come to losing her own life, or thanks for saving his! For
an instant her mind went back to that dreadful night on the river, when she had
lashed out at him in her grief over Forral. Maybe Anvar was doing the same
thing—but no. He had called her a murderess, and the memory still burned.
Goaded beyond bearing by this new proof of his lack of trust in her^he could
only react with anger. That does it, she thought. When we get to land, I'm
finished with him!
"Anger,
Little One?" The whale's warm tones echoed chid-ingly through her mind.
"The
other member of our party has been lost, Mighty One," Aurian explained.
"The man blames me."
"He
blames you?" Wry humor bubbled beneath the thoughts of the giant. "He
must think a great deal of you, to believe you capable of shouldering such
awesome responsibilities!"
Aurian,
once she was over her surprise at the notion, was quick to deny it. "I
fear not, Mighty One. Where I am concerned, his mind seems filled with
doubt."
The
Leviathan laughed. "Little One, when we doubt our own
selves
greatly, we often find it more comfortable to transfer that doubt to another.
The man will learn, in time. As for his lost friend, you may tell him to put
aside his fears. My sister has her safe, and she will reach land before we
will. For this, he has you to thank."
As
Aurian had expected, Anvar's face lit up at the tidings. But when he reached
out in an excess of joy to hug her, she moved angrily away from him. "Stay
away from me!" she snapped. "You've already made it clear what you
really think of me. Once we reach land, you and that selfish little featherhead
are on your own—and I wish you joy of her, Anvar, for one day she'll betray you
as she's already betrayed poor Vannor!"
Anvar's
face darkened. "How dare you talk about Sara like that!" he shouted.
"You've been unfair to her from the start. You have no idea what she's
suffered—"
"No,
and I couldn't care less! I can see what she's become, and that's enough for
me. She'll use you, you fool, and drop you as soon as it's expedient—but at
least I won't be around to see it this time. I'm finished with both of you, and
I hope I never
see you
again!"
Furious
as she was, the expression on Anvar's face gave Aurian pause. She had never
seen him look so angry. "That suits me!" he retorted hotly. "I
noticed that you had no objections to using me over the last year or so. Well,
let me tell you this, Lady—I'm done with slaving for the bloody Magefolk. After
today, Sara and I will make our own way in the world— without your
interference"
At this
point the whale intervened, saying that the anger emanating from their minds
was causing him great distress. Aurian, instantly contrite, apologized to the
massive creature. She moved as far away from Anvar as the Leviathan's broad
back would permit, and for the first time in days, settled herself for a good
sleep. Surprisingly, it was long in coming. She had lost Forral's thick cloak
in the shipwreck, and her wet clothes clunj; to her like a sheath of ice. The
Mage gave in to a passing wish that she could curl up with Anvar, so that at
least they could share what paltry heat remained to them. A surreptitious
glance showed him huddled tight in his own lonely place, visibh shivering, but
refusing to make a move toward her. Well, /'« not going to ask him! Aurian
thought. If he wants to get warm, have to come over here. So she stayed where
she was, with
nothing
to sustain her but empty, stubborn Magefolk pride, until finally her exhaustion
claimed her.
Dawn
found them approaching land. The sky had cleared to the palest blue. The sea
was flat calm, and the air surprisingly warm. Aurian awakened, bleary-eyed and
unrested, to see a beach of fine silvery sand broken by clumps of jagged rock.
A lush, dense strip of unfamiliar forest lay behind it, and beyond that towered
cliffs of convoluted gray stone that soared to a staggering height. The silky,
perfumed air was alive with the shrill calls of unknown creatures beneath the
forest canopy. Shock ran through Aurian. This was no northern shore! The
violent storm had blown them right to the fabled Southern Lands!
The
whale halted an arrow's flight from the shore, where the water was deep enough
to float his massive bulk. Aurian turned to Anvar. "This is where you get
off," she said tersely. "He says that his sister left Sara here, so
she should be about somewhere."
Anvar
hx>ked astonished. "You really can talk to that thing, can't you?"
he said.
"Thing?
He's as intelligent a creature as you, Anvar, and I find his conversation
infinitely preferable to yours, so go away." Aurian set her jaw, averting
her eyes from Anvar's injured expression. It's a bit late now, to be looking
hurt, she thought grimly.
Anvar
looked down into the water, which was crystal clear in this sheltered bay.
Following his ga^e, Aurian saw myriads of bright fish darting through the
lapis-blue depths. "Aurian, it's too deep here! I can't—"
The
Mage could see the panic in Anvar's eyes, and belatedly remembered his
inability to swim. She remembered her terror the previous night, when the
choking water had surged into her tortured lungs, and shuddered. Anvar was
shaking, and she fought in vain against a surge of pity for him. "All
right," she sighed. "I'll help you."
Keeping
her voice calm and reassuring, she said, "This is what we'll do. I'll go
first—" Suiting word to deed, she slid off the whale's sloping back and
into the water. After the bitingly cold seas of the northern climes, its warmth
came as a pleasant shock. After a brief consjaltation with the whale, she
turned to
t
Anvar. "Now, I want you to slide down here.
His fluke's
just—"
"His
what?"
"His
fin, then, if you like. It's just under the water, so you can stand on it, and
you won't go under."
Anvar
hesitated, biting his lip.
"Go
on—he says it doesn't bother him," Aurian urged.
"Maybe—but
it bothers me!" Anvar muttered through
clenched
teeth.
"Look,
it's perfectly safe. I won't let your head go under, I promise. Trust me,
Anvar—for once." She couldn't keep the
edge
out of her voice.
Finally
Aurian managed to coax Anvar onto the fluke that the patient whale was holding
steady. The water came up to his chin. Thank goodness he's tall, Aurian thought
as she swam to his side. "Don't grab me!" she warned, realizing what
he was about to do. She righted herself and stood beside him on the fluke—and
discovered his problem. It was difficult to stand upright in the buoyant, salty
water. The body wanted to tilt
itself
and float.
Aurian
placed her hand on the back of Anvar's head.
"What
are you doing?" he gasped.
"Don't
panic. I'm holding your head out of the water. All you have to do is take a
deep breath and lean back—just relax and your feet will come up naturally.
You'll float, I promise, and you won't go under. I'll have you safe."
After a
time, An vaf plucked up enough courage to do as she said. Aurian was swamped by
a flurry of foam as he panicked, floundering and thrashing and clutching at
her. At the expense of a ducking, she managed to keep him from swallowing too
much water and got him right side up, back on the fluke. Pushing the heavy,
clinging curtain of hair out of her face, she found an indignant Anvar glaring
at her with red, salt-stung eyes.
"You
said I'd float\"
"I
said relax, you double-dyed dimwit, then you'd float!" "I can't
relax! I'm bloody terrified!
It took
a while, but finally they managed to get the float ing part of the operation
sorted out. Anvar lay back, his fat breaking into an astonished smile.
"Anvar,
don't forget to breathe!"
More
floundering. But eventually they managed it, and after that, towing him to
shore was a comparatively simple matter. Within minutes they found themselves
standing knee-deep in a gay lacework of surf that tumbled and danced up the
beach.
"Well,"
Aurian said. "If you ever get into deep water again, at least you'll be
able to float." On an impulse, she reached down and pulled a long, lethal
dagger from her boot top, handing it to him without looking him in the eye.
"Take this," she told him. "At least you won't be unarmed."
It
struck them both at the same time that this was the moment of their parting.
There was a sudden, tense silence as they stood, up to their knees in water,
and looked at one another. Suddenly, Aurian was tempted to reconsider. This was
insane! How could she leave Anvar? She found herself unable to turn away from
him, and he too seemed unhappy and undecided, biting his lip while he fidgeted
with her dagger. Oh, drat this, Aurian thought. We're behaving like children!
An apology was out of the question—after all, he was in the wrong —but she was
about to open her mouth to tell him that they ought to stay together when—
The
spell was shattered as Sara erupted from the forest and dashed down the beach
toward them, calling Anvar's name. "Oh, Anvar—I was so afraid! Those
beastly sea monsters—I thought I'd be eaten for sure!" She .gave a sudden
shriek. "Oh! Look out—there's one right behind you! Quick, get out of the
water!"
"Sara—thank
the Gods you're safe!" Forgetting the Mage, Anvar left the water in a
flurry of foam, and ran to her. Aurian cursed, and turned away in disgust.
Breasting the warm waves, she swam out to the Leviathan and climbed onto his back,
her heart weighing her down more than her wet clothes. When she looked back,
Sara was in Anvar's arms.
Sara's
shrill voice carried clearly across the water. "Well, who cares if she
goes! We don't want her with us anyway!"
The
Mage gritted her teeth and braced herself against the warm body of the whale.
"Let's go," she said. She never heard Anvar's frantic voice, calling
her back.
Anvar
was furious. "Be quiet! She'll hear you!" He still could not believe
that Aurian was actually leaving. He felt somehow lost, anchorless. He called
to her, begging her to wait, but the whale was sounding, exhaling deeply in a
roaring geyser of water and air. She could never have heard him. Sara's arms
twined persuasively round his neck as she kissed him, turning his face from the
ocean, effectively stopping him from calling again. "Never mind her,"
she murmured. "Think of your freedom, Anvar. Think of us."
The
Leviathan could move very fast when he wanted to. Anvar broke away from the
kiss, but the Mage was already out of earshot. "What in the name of the
Gods do you think you're doing?" he snapped at Sara. "It's not a
question of freedom, you idiot! Not just now. We should be sticking
together!" In his heart he knew, with a sickening sense of shame, that it
was he himself who had driven the Mage away.
"How
dare you speak to me like that!" Sara flared. "How is it supposed to
be my fault? It wasn't I who called her a murderer! I thought you wanted us to
be together, just the two of us." Her face crumpled, and tears spilled
from her guileless violet eyes. "I thought you loved me, but it was her
you wanted all along . . ." Picking up her tattered skirts, she ran away
from him, along the beach.
Gods,
what else could go wrong? With a groan, Anvar hastened to follow her.-The early
sun blazed down from a vibrant, cloudless sky. Its silky heat was already
enough to dry the clothes on Anvar's body, but the chill of last night's stormy
waters seemed to have settled immovably into his bones. The drying salt and
sand made his skin feel stiff and gritty, his eyes smarted, and he ached all
over. Panting in the heat, he caught up with Sara, and put an arm around her.
"I'm sorry," he told her. "Truly I am—and I do want to be with
you."
After a
while, Sara allowed herself to be mollified, but there was a certain hard look
in her eye that made Anvar feel as though he would be treading on thin ice for
a while. Bloody women! he thought sourly. He looked out to sea, but Aurian had
vanished. They were alone. "Come on," he said resignedly. "Let's
go and find some water."
Luckily,
fresh water was plentiful in the forest. It drained down from the cliffs
behind, forming many streams that passed through the lush fringe of forest on
their way down to the sea. Anvar and Sara only had to walk a little way along
the beach before they stumbled on the first of these streamlets where it
entered the ocean. They followed it up into the shadowed forest, where the air
was cool and moist, the broad-leaved trees and tangle of thick vegetation overhead
cutting off most of the sunlight.
The air
was filled with a zithering chorus of insect noises, interspersed with strident
animal shrieks and birdcalls from the canopy overhead. Sara shrank fearfully
against Anvar, unnerved by the strange sounds. "It's all right," he
reassured her hopefully. "They're only animals and birds." But he
used Aurian's dagger to cut them two stout staves from a nearby tree, thinking
as he did so how annoyed she would be at this abuse of her good blade.
The
waters of the brook gathered in a hollow to create a small, deepish pool.
Around its sides the vegetation had been nibbled back by animals, leaving a
strip of earth and leaf litter. The mud at the brink was cross-stitched with
the tracks of animals who had come down to drink. Anvar stopped to examine
them. Small rodent prints, the slots of tiny deer, sinister S-tracks of
snakes—and what were these? They looked like prints of hands—tiny human hands!
Anvar felt a prickle in the back of his neck. Suddenly the forest seemed full
of unseen eyes. He hastily scuffed the tracks away~wirii his boot before Sara
could see them.
Parched
by the heat and the seawater he had swallowed, Anvar flung himself down to
drink, splashing cool, fresh water on his salt-tightened face. Once his first,
urgent thirst had been quenched he looked around, fearful of losing his way in
the forest—until he remembered, sheepishly, that he only had to follow the
stream. He felt relieved. If Aurian should change her mind . . . But she would
not—not after the way he had treated her. How he regretted his harsh words of
the previous night. If he had only kept his temper, instead of flying to the
attack because she had made him feel guilty. Surely she would have understood .
. .
Gods,
but he wasjmpgry! Desperate to ease the gnawing
fr
emptiness
inside him, Anvar pondered the possibilities of finding food in this alien
place.
Sara
must have been thinking the same thing. "Anvar, I need something to
eat!"
It was
little short of a command, and Anvar felt a stab of irritation. Aurian had
never spoken to him like that, and he had been her servant! Striving to keep
his voice calm, he said: "So do I. Shush, let me think a minute."
"But
I'm hungry. 1 want something to eat now!"
Luckily,
Anvar's long-departed grandpa came to the rescue. He had filled the young boy's
childhood with tales of his own youth in the country. By the time he was nine,
Anvar had been fully conversant with the skills of trout-tickling—in theory, at
any rate. And not far away was an ocean teeming with fish. "Come on,"
he said to Sara. "We'll catch some fish for
dinner."
In
practice, it proved to be a lot more difficult than it had sounded. Out in the
open sea, the fish seemed to have developed some magic of their own. Again and
again, as Anvar's careful hand almost closed on their sleek, shining bodies,
the fish suddenly vanished, leaving the exasperated fisherman with a handful of
empty ocean. Anvar stood waist-deep in the sea, growing more irritated by the
second. Why wouldn't the bloody things stay still? His eyes ached from peering
into the dazzling waters, and the sun beat fiercely on his unprotected head and
back. He seemed to have been doing this for hours. Try as he would, he could
not shake off the "fiction that the damned fish were mocking his bumbling
efforts. As he lifted his hands out of the water, he saw that the skin on his
fingers was white and wrinkled.
"Anvar?
Anvar!" Sara's voice rang out from the shore. What did the wretched girl
want? He was vaguely aware that she'd been calling for some time. He turned—and
there she stood, laughing, holding up a bag made from a white square of linen
torn from one of her petticoats. It was bulging and squirming in her grasp.
"Look! I've caught some!"
For a
split second he could cheerfully have strangled her Then the import of her
words sunk in, and Anvar was both astonished and relieved. Moving as quickly as
he could against the clinging pressure of the water, he waded back to her
through
the shallows. "How in the world did you manage that?" he said, trying
not to sound as indignant as he felt.
Sara
dumped her writhing bundle down on the white sands and put her arms around his
sunburned neck, making him wince. "Easy." She smirked. "Aren't
you proud of me?"
"Of
course!" he snapped, glaring at her, and Sara relented.
"Did
you not notice?" she said. "The tide's turned, Anvar." She
gestured to a reef, now exposed, that pointed out like a finger into the ocean.
"There are lots of fish over there, trapped in the rock pools,"
"The
tide?" Anvar felt stupid. He knew about tides, but not having been to the
sea before, he had never understood their import.
The
realization hit Sara at once. "Oh," she said. "You've never been
to the sea before, have you?"
"How
could I?" Anvar snapped. "The Magefolk don't give their servants
outings to the coast, you know! How do you know so much about it, anyway?"
Sara
looked away for a moment. "Vannor used to take me in the summer."
Seeing the look on Anvar's face, she hastily changed the subject. She couldn't
afford to alienate him. "Anyway," she said brightly, "I'm
useless. I may have caught them —-I couldn't help but do that—but I can't kill
them. And as for dealing with the horrid bits, well, it always makes me
sick."
She had
obviously said the fighf thing, because Anvar smiled. "I'll do that. I
learned how to do it in the kitchens at the Academy."
Sara
shuddered. She wished he wouldn't keep reminding her that he was a servant.
Living with Vannor, she had grown used to having servants around, and had
ceased to think of them as human beings. They were just, well, there—polite,
anonymous, and at her beck and call. It made her feel unclean, somehow, to be
making love to one of them. Still, for expediency's sake, she could put up with
it. Turning to Anvar, she gave him her brightest smile, which had always worked
with Vannor. "It's a good thing there's somebody practical around,"
she told Anvar, "I'm afraid I'm just hopeless. Do you know how to get this
fire starte4£l'%
Before
his ill-fated fishing attempt, Anvar had left his tinder and flint with his
discarded shirt on a sunbaked rock to dry out. There was plenty of wood between
the forest's edge and the high-tide mark, and Anvar soon had a fire going. He
used Aurian's dagger to gut the fish, feeling guilty again, for he knew she had
given him the weapon for more important reasons than this. He baked the fish on
flat rocks at the fire's edge, and they feasted in the shade of the forest's
eaves, by the stream, where the lush foliage protected them from the midday
sun.
Anvar
awakened in the cool, fragrant dusk. The last blush of sunset glowed behind the
tall cliffs, and bats swooped over the beach, hunting insects lured by the glow
of the fire. Now-the sun had gone, hordes of tiny scuttling crabs were makin|
off with the remains of the fish. Anvar shuddered, and scrambled hastily to his
feet, wincing at the fiery stiffness of v sunburned back, and trying to clear
the fuzz of sleep from brain. All that staying awake with Aurian had finally
caught with him, he supposed. He must have fallen asleep before had even
finished eating.
Then he
realized, with a start, that Sara was missing! Ar iously, Anvar scanned the
beach. Surely she wouldn't be stupid as to wander off alone? Taking a branch
from their fit wood pile, he kindled one end at the fire, and examined tl spot
where she had been sitting. There was no sign of a stm( gle, so no beast from
thr=forest had seized her. Then he saw footprints, leading to the stream, then
away into the jungl With a curse, Anvar plunged into the shadowed forest,
folio* ing the course of the water.
The
forest at night was far more eerie than the glowii emerald jungle of the
daytime. Roots writhed up to trip h«« vines (snakes?) brushed his face, almost
startling him into dr ping the torch. Branches grasped at his clothing. Faces
le out from trees, seeming to grimace in the flickering torchligl The mold
underfoot was slick with the evening's dew, a1 sickly glowing growths sprung
from rotting logs, remindi him horribly of the chalice from which Miathan had
relea< his Wraiths. Anvar's heart hammered; his breath came si and gasping.
What was that light ahead? A strange, flicker!
ghost-light.
Anvar slowed his pace, creeping carefully up to the clearing that cradled the
little pool—and stopped, enchanted. A nymph was bathing in the still, dark
water. She was pale-skinned and golden-haired: surrounded and waited upon by a
court of fallen stars that danced above the water, crowning her with silver.
Anvar held his breath. An errant star danced close to him, and he saw that it
was a flying insect whose body glowed with cool, white fire. Then the nymph
turned to face him, standing naked in the enchanted pool, her golden hair
streaming across her shoulders. Sara.
Anvar
was enraptured, helpless in the face of such otherworldly beauty. He had meant
to chide her for venturing alone into the forest at night, to rebuke her for
her lack of common jnse. Instead he found himself moving inexorably toward her,
f sleepwalker drawn by the lure of an elusive dream. Throwing m his guttering
torch and casting aside his clothes, he >ined Sara in the pool.
She
stiffened, a protest half articulated on her lips. Then ith a shrug, she lifted
her face to his kisses, her arms to return embrace. They made love on the brink
of the pool. Anvar afire, carried away on the wings of love, of passion, by the
auty of Sara and the lambent night that combined to form a igle transcendent
whole. So carried away was he that it was in the instant of climax that he felt
an uneasy hint of ibt that Sara was not with him. Oh, her body, yes. Su-emely
responsive, making all the right moves, the appropri-sounds. But in that
explosive instant her eyes flew open, and >king into them, he realized that
Sara herself was elsewhere, away.
Anvar
let his body relax, his heart thudding rapidly against breast. Sara smiled, and
ran her fingers idly through his jr. You imagined it, he thought. Trick of the
light with those ined fireflies. But his joy had fled, and his heart's ease was
slaced by a desperate awareness of how much he needed her. am his childhood she
had been his—and now, at last, he had to himself. The idea of losing her was
unthinkable. But for first time, he felt an insidious touch of doubt, like an
icy ;er. Had Aurian been right? Had Sara been callously using inor for her own
ends? And now, was she using A/w? "I'm cold," Sara aersplained.
"Cold and muddy." She gri-
maced,
and tried to wriggle out from beneath him. "Now I'll have to bathe
again!"
With a
sigh, Anvar let her go, joining her in the pool to bathe. The unexpected
coldness of the water, now that he was in a state to notice such things, sent
the last remnants of the night's magic fleeing as quickly as it had come.
Without
speaking, they walked back to the beach, where Anvar rekindled a huge blaze.
"I'm
hungry again," Sara whined. But the last of the fish had been carried away
by the crabs, and Anvar knew they had no chance of finding food in the dark.
"Try to sleep," he said. "We'll find something in the
morning."
"And
then what?" she demanded. "We can't mess around in this dreadful
wilderness forever, you know."
To
Anvar this place was a paradise, if he didn't count the sunburn, but he
supposed she was right. "I don't know," he said. "If we climb
the cliffs tomorrow—"
"What?
Climb up there? You must be joking!" Anvar sighed. "Well, we can make our way along the
shore, then, camping as we go. The cliffs can't go on forever." "And
which direction do we take?" Sara countered. "Why, you don't even
know what lands we're in!"
"Neither
do you," Anvar retorted, nettled, "and you've traveled farther than I
have, or so you say. Why don't you make a suggestion?"
"You're
absolutely useless, Anvar! You don't know anything! I wish I'd never-^1"
Sara bit the words off abruptly.
"You
wish you'd never what?" Anvar felt an ominous chill at her words. But Sara
turned away from him, refusing to say more, and he was reluctant to press her.
Within a matter of minutes she was asleep, or at least pretending to be.
Anvar
stared miserably at the night sky. The stars seemed closer here, mellow lamps
set in a velvet canopy. It was a far cry from the glittering star-crazed sky of
his northern home, and suddenly he felt lost, and, despite Sara's sleeping form
huddled next to him, very much alone. He wondered where Aurian was, and was
bitterly sorry for his hurtful words. She'd have known what to do. Forral had
taught her well. Even when she found herself at a loss, her courage made up for
the lack. In truth, he admitted ruefully, it was the near arrogance of her
certainty
AURIAN •
291
that
sometimes annoyed him so. That and the fact that she was a Mage, one of the
race that had robbed him of his place in the world. He toyed with the dagger
she had given him, its clean, sharp, businesslike lines reminding him of its
owner. Where was she now? he wondered. How would she manage—pregnant, alone,
and grieving, with Miathan in close pursuit. He began to worry about her,
feeling that he had failed in his responsibility. But despite his troubles, the
days of terror and flight had taken a greater toll than Anvar realized. Long
before he could awaken Sara to take a watch, he fell asleep in the midst of his
reverie.
Had
they known to what lands they had come, and what race inhabited them, Anvar and
Sara would never have built a great fire, like a beacon on the beach. Had they
been aware of the danger, they would have hidden in the forest and been more
careful about setting watches. As it was, they slept innocently on, their fire
visible for miles from the open sea. When the long black galley glided up to
the beach they were unaware of it, and even the light crunch of boots on the
sand and the hiss of drawn steel failed to wake them.
Anvar
was awakened by the clutch of hands on his body, and the sound of Sara's scream
ripping through the night. He struggled violently, gaining his feet for a
moment and groping for Aurian's dagger. But the blade had fallen from his hand
while he slept, and was lost in the sand. He had time for a glimpse of
flickering torches, swartbjr faces, and white, grinning teeth before a heavy
blow on the back of his head knocked him unconscious.
Chapter 19
THE CATACLYSM
he
Leviathan's name was Ithalasa. Sensing Aurian's •••——_ need for rest, he told
her that he would take her to a sheltered sea lagoon farther south, where his
people often found sanctuary. As they went on their way, the Mage saw the
cliffs behind the shoreline to her right gradually coming closer to the sea
until they formed the coastline itself, and Aurian's view of the Southern Lands
consisted of a high wall of sharp-edged gray crags with the odd touch of dark
green where tough, scrubby bushes had found a foothold within the many
crevices. Sometimes the cliffs would curve inward, forming deep, sheltered
bays, but Ithalasa kept going, passing them one after another. An
indecipherable murmuring on the very edge of the Mage's thoughts told her that
he was communicating with other whales as he traveled.
Aurian's
head ached from the dazzle of the sun on the sparkling blue waters. She was
ravenously hungry, and very miserable. Try as she would, she could not get
Anvar out of her mind. Whenever she closed her eyes to try to sleep, she saw
his unhappy face, as they stood together on the beach. Then, just as she was on
the point of asking Ithalasa to turn back, she'd remember what had happened
between the two of them and Sara, the previous night, a"ffd her anger
would come boiling up all over again. And if she was not thinking of Anvar, she
was thinking of Forral, which was even worse. At last, because she had no idea
what to do next, and she was desperate to distract herself from her loneliness
and the guilt of having abandoned the others, she decided to confide in
Ithalasa, and ask his advice. Ithalasa's response to Aurian's talc was
startling. She was drenched all over again as his massive tail lashed the water
in agitation. "The Caldron is found? It has passed into evil hands? Oh,
rue this bitter day!" His distress washed over the Mage, almost swamping
her consciousness with its intensity.
"You
know of the Caldron?" Aurian asked, balancing with difficulty on his
slippery, pitching back.
"/
know," Ithalasa replied gravely. "My people carry in their \
AURIAN '
293
minds
all the lost secrets of the Cataclysm. It is our burden and our sorrow. That
part of the past is best buried and lost."
He
knew. Dear Gods, he knew! The Leviathan had the answers that Aurian sought. But
she could sense, without any need for further words, his reluctance to speak of
the matter. Still, she had to try. "My sorrow to distress you, Great One,
but will you tell me? If I hope to fight this evil, my ignorance puts a deadly
weapon into the hands of my foes. And fight I must, or die in the attempt. I
have sworn to bring the Archmage's evil to an end."
"Child,
how can I?" Ithalasa's thoughts were tinged with deep regret. "7
understand your need to oppose this evil, but all the races of the Magefolk
swore never to revive this perilous knowledge, lest the Cataclysm come again. I
cannot tell you. Would you have the world's destruction on your conscience, and
mine?"
Aurian
sighed. "Mighty One, Wise One, 1 may be young and untutored by your terms,
but I understand the fearsome responsibility that rests with me. I know what
devastation a war between the Magefolk could unleash. But if I should gain the
three lost Weapons, surely Miathan could be subdued without too much damage
being done? 1 tell you frankly that I am trained in the arts of war. But I was
taught by one who had no love for violence or destruction. He was the best and
gentlest of men, and the greatest of the many great gifts he gave me was
respect for my fellow beings, no matter what their race, and a hatred of
senseless death and bloodshed."
The
Leviathan paused a long while in thought, but his mind was veiled from the
Mage. At last he sighed, a mighty sigh that threw a sparkling, irideseeijf
fountain from his blowhole. "Little One—supposing you found the Weapons,
Supposing you used them to defeat the Archmage, and in doing so, gained the
fourth also. What would you do then?"
"I
would give the Weapons to you," Aurian told him, without hesitation,
"Your people would be far better guardians of such perilous things. I
would leave it to you to judge whether they should be kept, concealed, or
destroyed, I seek no power—only the fulfilment of my task,"
"Are
you certain of this?" Ithalasa's thoughts were tinged with surprise.
"/
swear it. Great One, you may Read me if you wish, so that you can be sure I
speak the truth."
"You
would subntj^fp that?" The Leviathan sounded aston-
ished.
Reading was hardly ever done. Far deeper and more intense than the Test of
Truth, it was said to reveal the depths of a person's very soul—and in the
hands of a skilled practitioner, it was open to dangerous meddling and abuse.
In even suggesting such a thing, Aurian had declared her absolute trust in
Ithalasa. "I would—and I will," the Mage said firmly. "Very
well, Little One. I accept—and 1 am honored." Steeling herself, Aurian opened her mind to Ithalasa's probing thoughts. It
was worse than her worst imaginings—a wrenching intrusion far deeper, far more
intimate than any physical rape could ever be. The Leviathan sifted through her
mind, turning over the very silt and dregs of her soul—all that was unworthy or
petty, all the faults of pride and temper and stubbornness that were so much a
part of Aurian's makeup. All the things that she had denied, or kept safely hidden
from herself, were churned up like clouding mud disturbed from the bottom of a
clear stream. When it was over, she found herself huddled in a tight ball on
the behemoth's knobbly back, sickened and shaking.
"Little
One, be easy." The Leviathan's words spread like a soothing balm through
Aurian's ravaged and abraded consciousness. "Even the Gods themselves,
they say, never attained perfection. It is not pleasant to confront one's
faults, but therein lies the path to true wisdom—and that is why so few ever
attain it. There is great good in you—great honesty and honor and courage,
coupled with a loving heart—that far outweighs the bad. Keep a balance between
both aspects of yourself, Daughter, and all will be well."
Daughter—he
had called her Daughter! Aurian's wretchedness was lightened by a fierce surge
of love and pride. She tried to gain control of herself, at least enough to ask
for his answer, but he spared her the effort.
"For
my part, you have my trust," he told her, "and I owe you a great debt,
for saving my child. But I may not make this decision alone. See, we are near
the lagoon—there, beyond that tall point thai juts into the ocean. It is safe
there—and you must eat and rest. WhiL you sleep, I will consult with my people,
and plead your case, for thi\ decision must be made by all our race, not one
alone."
The
Mage's heart sank. After all she'd gone through , . But she knew that Ithalasa
had done all he could, and it would be wrong to press him further. With a
tremendous effort
Aurian
summoned the grace to thank him as she ought. There was a smile behind the
Leviathan's reply, and she knew that he approved of her efforts.
"SeeP" he told her. "Already your wisdom grows."
The
lagoon was almost a complete circle, hemmed in by reefs on the ocean side and
tall cliffs on its landward edge. It was as safe as it could possibly
be—nothing could come to this place unless it swam or flew. Aurian swam to the
strip of stony beach that curved round the farthest edge, and Ithalasa herded
fish into the shallows for her to catch. She was grateful for his help, knowing
that she would never have managed otherwise. As she was starting her fire to
cook them, the Leviathan took his leave, promising to return as soon as
possible.
The
Mage was bone-weary. She ate her fish half asleep, and after drinking from a
spring that trickled down the cliff, she lay down to rest, trusting the
powerful sun to dry her clothes on her body. This time, Aurian fell asleep at
once, and while she slept, she dreamed. A wondrous dream of the past, set in
the dawning ages of her own world.
The
Magefolk were numerous and powerful and ruled the world. They controlled the
weather and the elements, the seas and the crops in the fields, the birds and
beasts and Mortal men without magic, who, little more than animals themselves,
were their servants and slaves. All across the lands and seas dwelt the four
great races of the Magefolk=—ojae race to control each of the four Elemental
Magics.
The
Human Magefolk, or Wizards, as they then called themselves, ruled the element
of Earth. They had speech with all creatures of the earth, and the trees and
all things that grew. The most skilled among them could even speak with the
very rocks of the mountains. Their task was to keep all things fruitful, all in
balance that lived or grew upon the earth, so that each might prosper and
thrive, and fill its rightful place in the interlinking web of life.
Their
brethren, the Winged Magefolk, or Skyfolk as they chose to be known, controlled
the element of Air. They dwelt in lofty aerie-cities in the tallest mountains,
and were responsible for the birds, and^alj other creatures that flew. Their
powers
harnessed
the mighty winds, which bore the rain clouds to make the world fruitful.
In the
essential business of weather, they worked with the masters of the element of
Water—the Magefolk of the Race of Leviathan, in whose charge were the waters of
the world and the creatures that dwelt therein. They controlled the seas, the
rivers and lakes, and using the Cold Magic in the days before it was turned to
evil, the great ice caps in the far north and south of the world. Theirs was
the gift of rain, which was borne where it was needed by the winds of the
Skyfolk. The Leviathans, because of their aquatic home, were not human in
shape. Since the water bore their weight, some developed to immense sizes. They
were streamlined and sleek, with great curved flukes to steer and flat
horizontal tails to propel them at great speed. But they were
warm-blooded and air-breathing, and bore their young alive. It was said that they were the oldest race of Magefolk, from
which the others had sprung. They certainly possessed the deepest wisdom of
all, and the most profound joy
in
life.
The
element of Fire was the province of the Dragonfolk, who dwelt in the broad
desert lands. In appearance, they were most dramatic of all. Long-necked,
long-tailed, sinuous creatures, they were winged, and their scales glowed with
a metallic sheen. Their bulbous, glowing, gemlike eyes allowed them to see all
around without turning their heads. They were born pure silver, and chose
thei,r,<preferred color in infancy, retaining that hue ever after. Though
some chose blues, greens, and blacks, most preferred the colors of their element
of Fire— shades of red or gold.
The
Dragonfolk could produce two kinds of fire. They could turn the energy stored
within them into a long jet of flame which they exhaled—but their other fire
was more lethal. They could focus energy through the crystalline structure of
their eyes to form a slender, concentrated beam with appalling destructive
capacity. Thus were born the legends that a dragon's stare was deadly. Their
teeth and claws were deadly too, but these were for defense only, for the
Dragonfolk ate no flesh. Instead they spread out their massive translucent
wings, ribbed like those of a bat, to absorb pure energy directly from the sun
itself, as a plant does with its leaves. The wings were
AUR1AN •
297
ill-adapted
for flight, but an adult dragon could glide for short distances. The young,
being lighter and smaller, could fly farther.
Within
the province of the Dragonfolk's Fire-magic lay the art of storing power within
gems and crystals that had been formed by heat and pressure within the earth,
and the skill of working and smelting metals. All forms of fiery energy lay
within their art, and they were capable of producing the most deadly and
terrifying weapons. But being a peaceful folk, they kept these a closely
guarded secret.
Because
of the very nature of the Universe, the four Elemental Magics had four Negative
Magics to balance them, and it was the responsibility of the Magefolk to keep
these under control, and if possible, turned upon themselves to positive ends.
None of these powers were the specific domain of any one race of Magefolk, but
each was the responsibility of all, since all the Negative Magics were wild,
unpredictable, and potentially very destructive.
The
first, and most primeval of the Negative powers, was the Old Magic. This called
upon ancient, elemental forces as old as time that had stalked the chaos of the
newborn Universe before the Guardians brought the Magefolk into the balance to
provide order. The Old Magic was the power of these ancient spirits—the Rock
Spirits or Moldan, who once walked in giant, troll-like form; the Tree Spirits
or Veridai; and the Naiads, the Spirits of the Waters. These ancient spirits
had long been brought under control by the Fathers of the Magefolk, and were
now trapped and powerless, unless deliberately called into the world.
More
lately born were other races who called upon the Old Magic: the Mer-folk and
the Phaerie and Dwelven races, who lived in peace with the ancient spirits in
the deep waters, in the heart of primeval forests, and beneath the hollow
hills. These could, as they wished, dwell either in the mundane world, or in
the Elsewhere inhabited by the elemental spirits. It was rumored that they were
the offspring of matings between early Magefolk and the ancient spirits, but
whether or no, the An-cient Magefolk had seen fit to imprison them in the
mysterious Isewhere of the Old Magic, to protect the peoples who later
came to
inhabit the world, for they were said to be tricky, false,
and
dangerous.
To call
on any of these elemental beings was a perilous business. Released from their
long imprisonment back into the world, they wielded great power, but were
likely to turn it upon summoner as well as foe. But some of them, to the
consternation of the Magefolk, did still wander free, occasionally appearing to
turn the tide of history in some new direction— and rightly so, for without
Chance as well as Balance, the Universe would grind to a halt.
The
second of the Negative Magics was of a much more sinister nature, its origins
shrouded in mystery. It was Necromancy—the Death Magic, by which a sorcerer
could sap the very life-force of another. Like the Death Wraiths, who used this
magic to feed themselves, an evil Mage could use another's j life energy to fuel his power,
making it temporarily stronger. This vampirelike annihilation of life was so
grossly against the i very grain
of the Universe that few of the Magefolk even knew | of its existence, and those who did guarded the secret to
their f
utmost
capacity.
Then
there was the Cold Magic. This was the Magic of Entropy, which drew its power
from the chill, lifeless black depths of the Universe. In the hands of a
powerful Mage, the j Cold Magic
could sap the very heat of the sun itself, plunging | the world into the darkness of eternal winter. 1
The
Wild Magic was the fourth of the Negative Magics. This governed the primeval
forces of nature—tempests, hurri-
j canes, and whirlwinds; floods and tidal waves; earthquakes, volcanoes,
and lightning. It was said that by employing the Wild • Magic, a Mage could make the very soul of the world rise
up as a living force. But to make it biddable—ah, that was another
matter.
In her
dream, Aurian saw these matters acted out in a panoply of history that spanned
generations. At last she saw how, in defense against the Negative Magics, the
four races of Magefolk had created the Weapons of the Elements. She saw how the
Race of Leviathan crafted the Caldron of Life, which was to be a defense
against the very Necromancy for which Miathan had used it. She saw the
Skyfolk's Harp of Winds, which was made to master the Wild Magic, but which, in
evil
hands,
could be used to summon it, for the Magefolk, in their pride, had forgotten a
fundamental fact—that a weapon has two edges. She saw the Wizards, her
ancestors, create the Staff of Earth to control the Old Magic, and saw with
horror how it turned on them to release an Elemental free upon the world—a
Moldan, which had cracked open the sea-filled rift between the Northern and
Southern lands. It was only then that the Magefolk realized their error.
The
powerful Dragonfolk, masters of weaponry, turned aside then from their task to
create a ward against the Cold Magic. Instead they created a Master Weapon—the
Sword of Flame, whose powers were manifold, and transcended those of the other
three Weapons. This ultimate weapon was judged to be too dangerous to fall into
the wrong hands. A Dragonfolk Seer foretold a time when the Sword would be
needed to save the world from evil, but that was unimaginably far into the
future. Under his guidance, the Sword was crafted for One alone to wield. The
blade had a mysterious intelligence of its own, and was made to know the hand
for which it had been created, but to reduce the risk, it was sealed in a
great, imperishable crystal. To gain the Sword, the One had to discover a way
to release the blade. When all was done, the Dragonfolk hid the Sword beyond
all seeking, and the few who knew where it had been bestowed took their own
lives. Thus did the Sword of Flame pass out of all knowledge.
Aurian
blinked, and saw dawn ]>ght gilding the silver of the lagcxm. Every detail
of the dream was etched clearly in her mind. She shivered in the slight dawn
chill and stretched limbs that were stiff and bruised by the rocks on which she
had lain. Turning her powers within herself, she made a brief contact with the
tiny spark of life that was her child and Forral's. Forral. Ah, Forral. Would
she awaken every day for the rest of her life to be crushed all over again by
the bleak knowledge that he was gone? But the child—their child—seemed well. It
slept, safe and snug within her, and Aurian prayed that it would remain so.
Then she saw the dark bulk of Ithalasa surface above the brightening waters of
the lagoon, and all other thoughts fled from her mind.
"Is
it well, Fatbg.^' she asked him, trying
to keep the
urgency
from her mental voice. "What did your people say?
chuckled—she
heard it quite clearly within her mind. "Foolish child—think! You know
their answer already!" "I do?" Aurian, never at her best on
first awakening, was
baffled.
Ithalasa
chuckled again. "Of course you do. Half of what you
sought,
you have already been told!"
"My
dream! Of course!" Aurian, filled with excitement, ran down the beach and
dived into the now cool water to swim close to the Leviathan's massive head.
His
bright, deep little eye twinkled at her. "We thought it the best and
quickest way," he said.
"Oh,
thank you, Great One!" Aurian gasped. Ithalasa sighed. "// was not an
easy decision, but we pray that it was the right one. I beg you, Daughter—if
you succeed in your task, do not forget the vows you made me. We have no wish
to create a tyrant from our deeds this day."
Aurian
was sobered. Now that she had seen for herself the scale of the powers that she
would be presuming to deal with, she understood all too well what a great trust
the Leviathans had placed upon her. Treading water, she reached out to touch
Ithalasa's knobbly head. "/ understand, Father. 1 won t fail you, 1
swear
it."
Once
again, Ithalasa helped her catch fish for her breakfast. Aurian had slept for
half a day and a whole night and was ravenous, her body responding to the needs
of the child within her. As she ate, she spotee further with the Leviathan.
"Fatk< I'm confused," she said.
"/ nei>er knew there were four races Magefolk. At the Academy,
we were taught that we were the only ones. We call ourselves the Magefolk,
rather than Wizards, as you say vH used to. What happened to the other races?
Why don't we know ai you? What happened to the Weapons?"
"Ah.
That, as they say, is another story, within which the swers to all your
questions are inextricably linked. It is the tra\ history of the Cataclysm, and
it is that, to my sorrow, which I mi
tell
you next."
But
Aurian's conscience was troubling her. Since she seen her faults through
Ithalasa's Reading, the Mage's a with Anvar had cooled and congealed into a
choking mass guilt. She knew how her arrogance had stung him, and she I
no idea
of the truth behind the affair with Sara, over which they had quarreled so
bitterly. They had both been at fault—but how often had Forral told her never
to desert her comrades, no matter what? Aurian was ashamed, and that apart,
there was a prompting voice within her, some instinct that insisted she return
at once. There was nothing for it. No matter how it galled her, she would have
to go back for them. The idiots would never manage on their own, and she had
promised Van-nor that she would look after his wretched, faithless wife.
"Wise
One, before you tell me this tale, I must find my companions whom we left
yesterday. I should never have left them, and I fear they may be in
trouble."
Ithalasa
sighed. "Ah, Little One, did I not say that you were learning wisdom? But
now, I fear, you must learn something else— him.' to choose between a lesser
good and a greater one. I dare not delay in telling you the remainder of the
tale. Though my voice was enough to sway my people, they had many doubts. They
may change their minds at any time, and if even one of them should do so, I
would be unable to tell you more. That is why we must act with all speed. The
tale of the Cataclysm is long, and there would be little point in traveling by
night. Besides, you are still weary, and the child within you requires that you
rest after such intense mental communication. If you wish to hear the rest, we
may not seek your friends until tomorrow."
Aurian
bit her lip, trapped between conscience and necessity. She had to know the
rest. The future of the world might
nd on it. Anvar and Sara would be all right,
surely? had landed them in a safe~ plate. But that inner voice
Id not
be silenced, and it told her that she was wrong, ian shook her head, wrestling
with it. I'm sorry, she told it last. I must do this—it's too important to
lose. When I've
id out
what I need to know, I'll go back for Anvar and Sara.
Ithalasa
waited, as near inshore as he could come, staying
t and
detached until Aurian had resolved her dilemma.
The
Mage turned to him. "Very well," she said, "I will stay
hear
what you have to tell me."
"You
are right, 1 think. This will give you the knowledge that
people
lost long ago. Use it wisely,
child." And with that,
asa's
thoughts overwhelmed her mind, filling it with words
visions
that unreeled before her, showing her the terrors
tragedies
of a time^k>ng gone.
In the
days of the golden past, all was peace and harmony. The four races of the
Magefolk labored together in their great task, to keep the world peaceful and
prosperous and fair. But Chance ever lurks, wolflike, outside the gates of
Balance, waiting to swing Fate to a new course. Evil stars heralded the births
of Incondor and Chiannala.
Incondor
was one of the Winged Folk, his face handsome,
his
body muscular and lithe. His great feathered wings had the
iridescent
darkness of the raven's plumes. Though young, he
was
mighty in sorcery and showed promise of becoming even
greater—until,
overcome by his arrogance, he fell. For a wager
—a
stupid, drunken wager with his wild friends, he stole the
Harp of
Winds to summon the forbidden Wild Magic, creating
a
whirlwind to bear him to the heavens, higher than any of his
folk
had ever ventured before. But the whirlwind, fueled by the
errant
power of the Wild Magic, proved too mighty for him to
control.
Its forces tore and smashed his wings beyond repair,
before
flinging him to earth in a tangle of crushed and broken
limbs.
It went on to wreak great havoc, killing many, before it
could
be brought under control by the Wise
Ones of the
Winged
Folk.
As for
Incondor, it was deemed that he had been punished enough, for the sky would now
be denied him forever, and without the freedom of the air, the lives of the
Skyfolk became bleak and without meithing. Earthbound, crippled and disgraced,
he was exiled from the lands of his people and sent to Nexis, the greatest city
of the Wizards. It was hoped that there, along with the Healing for which the
Wizards were famed, he-might also find wisdom at last. The former was
accomplished, as far as it could be, although his body would be forever twisted
and his wings were beyond saving. Before the latter could take place, however,
he met Chiannala, and Chance brought Balance
down.
Chiannala
was the offspring of a Wizard and his Mortal servant. Such pairings were
possible, given the physical similarities between the races, but they rarely
occurred because tht brevity of Mortal lifespans could cause the Mage partner
much grief. It must also be said that pride being an integral part ot
AURIAN •
3o3
the
Magefolk nature, the Wizards looked down on the Mortals as lowly, primitive
creatures that were powerless in a world where Magic was all. However, not all
Wizards thought in this way, and unions did occasionally take place. The
offspring of these could favor either parent, turning out to be Mortal or Mage,
as chance allowed.
Chiannala
favored her father, and at an early age rejected her Mortal mother completely,
throwing herself obsessively into the study of magic and the development of her
powers in an attempt to eradicate the lowly Mortal stain on her ancestry. But
it was not to be. Though she excelled in her studies to such an extent that she
became the obvious candidate to be the next Chief Wizard, she was rejected by
the Council because she was a half-breed. Bitter and thwarted, she came to meet
Incondor in Nexis, and found him of a like mind—and the seeds of disaster were
sown. For revenge on the Magefolk who had rejected them both, they plotted to
seize power, and rule the world.
Turning
the powers of Healing to destructive ends, Chiannala engineered a plague—a
deadly illness that swept through the Wizards like a scythe, killing many and
throwing their society into turmoil while they desperately sought a cure. In
the confusion, the Staff of Earth was discovered to be missing, and none knew
where it had been bestowed. Incondor, meanwhile, unleashed Wild Magic upon the
mountain aeries of the Winged Folk, battering them with hurricanes and
blizzards that left them besieged and helpless, unable to free themselves from
his spells. - -/
While
the Mages of the two races were occupied in dealing with these menaces, the
evil pair smote the Dragonfolk with the Cold Magic, almost annihilating their
race, for they needed the sun's energy to survive. At last, the few survivors,
worn beyond endurance by weakness, grief, and suffering, gave up the deadly
secrets of the Fire-magic, including the making of explosive weapons and the
knowledge of storing power in crystals.
The
world was in turmoil, all Balance irrevocably upset. In the oceans, the gentle
Leviathans turned, too late, from their meditations to find themselves beset by
Fire-magic. Explosions ripped through the depths, slaying without mercy. The
survivors were beset by as«ies of Mer-folk, called up with the Old
Magic
by Chiannala. Peaceful to the core of their beings, the Race of Leviathan could
not retaliate. Instead they retreated, dwindling in number all the time. And
somehow, during the retreat, the Caldron of Life, which had been their creation
and chiefest charge, was stolen by the Mer-folk, and found its way into the
hands of Incondor and Chiannala.
Turning
the Caldron to Negative ends, they summoned the Death Wraiths—spirit-vampires
that sucked the very life-force from living souls. This power of Necromancy
they turned upon the besieged Winged Folk. The desperate Skyfolk gathered all
their remaining numbers down to the smallest child and joined minds in one
last, desperate throw—a single, coordinated blast of power aimed at the evil
pair. But Incondor and Chiannala had prepared for this. Using the Dragonfolk's
Fire-magic, they had constructed a great crystal to absorb the magic of the
Winged Folk and trap it, rendering their race mortal and powerless forever. I
The
Magefolk were in desperate straits; their numbers had diminished to a handful,
there were Weapons lost, or powerless, or in the hands of the enemy. But the
last hope of the Universe-is that Evil will always turn upon itself. With their
goal in reach, inevitably Incondor and Chiannala came to vie between themselves
for leadership. Using the Caldron, Chiannala sapped the life-energy of vast
armies of Mortal slaves to fuel her power. Using the great crystal that stored
the stolen magic of the Winged Folk, Incondor increased his own power—and by
now all the powers were their province. The world was blasted with fire and
ice, flood and tempest, earthquake and lightning, as the two strove. Mighty
armies of Elementals were unleashed to turn upon each other to their mutual
destruction—and that of any living thing that chanced to be near. And finally,
inevitably, Chiannala and Incondor destroyed one another, and the Uni- j verse
breathed once more. The few survivors crept out into the ruins of a changed and
blasted world.
The
Leviathans, in desperation, had saved themselves ' breeding a small, fierce
race of warriors—the Orca—to end t threat of the Mer-folk and restore peace to
the seas. But fV some though they were, the gentle Leviathan hearts of the O;
abhorred the killing, and the blood upon their consciences v an intolerable
burden. So, when their task was complete, their
AURIAN •
3o5
race
was granted the mercy of eternal sleep and hidden away in a deep undersea
cavern, ready to be called to life again should the need ever arise. This
accomplished, the Race of Leviathan resolved never again to have dealings with
the aggressive, destructive Land Peoples. They shut themselves away from all
contact with the outside world and returned to their meditations and play. And
the peoples of the ruined world soon came to forget that they were anything
other than simple beasts.
In
atonement for giving away the secrets of the Fire-magic that had wrought such
havoc, the few remaining Dragonfolk retreated to the deserts and also cut
themselves off, vowing to abandon magic forever. They wished to avoid contact
with other peoples, but were frequently disturbed by warriors with more courage
than sense. At this time, many of the Dragons broke their vows and used the
power of the Fire-magic to take themselves to other worlds. Sometimes a curious
Dragon, hungry for outside contact, would kidnap a Mortal pure in spirit and
gentle in nature for a companion. Thus the legend grew that Dragons stole
maidens, since the suitable candidates were almost always young girls.
The
remaining Winged Folk, mortal now and bereft of their powers, turned the Harp
of Winds over to a Guardian who dwelt beyond the world—the Cailleach, or Lady
of the Mists, who lived outside of time on the shores of the Timeless Lake.
Diminished and without their magic, their martial skills grew perforce. They
kept to their own territory but defended it ceaselessly and ferociously against
outsiders/for they were shamed by their fall. The world soon learned to leave
them well alone.
And the
Wizards? Well, theirs was a different story. When the plague struck, the Chief
Wizard prepared for the worst. He called upon his son, Avithan, who was
renowned for his wisdom, to choose six of his folk with special skills—three
men and three women, to carry on the race if all should be lost. Avithan chose
Iriana, whose specialty was the beasts of the earth; Thara, who cared for
growing things; and Melisanda, whose Healing skills made her so reluctant to
leave her people in this time of crisis. With them went three men—Chathak, who
loved the Dragons and had knowledge of their magic; Yinze, a friend to the
Skyfolk; and lonor the Wise, ambassador to the Leviathan race^i^vithan went to
the Cailleach and be-
seeched
her to take the Six out of time for a hundred years, and she agreed—on
condition that he himself would leave time forever to be her soul mate, for the
Timeless Lake was a lonely place, and Avithan was fair to look upon, and a good
and wise soul besides. He agreed, and passed out of the world for all time, to
reemerge in legend as Avithan, Father of the Gods.
For,
when a century had passed and the Six returned, they found that the world had
changed beyond recognition. The other races of Magefolk had gone into their
self-imposed exiles, and the race of Wizards had been wiped out by the plague
and the Cataclysm that followed it. The lesser race of Mortals, breeding like
rats in the ruins of the scarred planet, were kings of the world—such as it
was.
The Six
put aside their horror and grief, and bravely set about their task of healing.
Iriana and Thara worked to reston the beasts, and make the world green and
fertile once mon Melisanda Healed the disease-ridden Mortals and animals. Tb
men traveled widely, garnering the surviving knowledge of the disciplines of
Fire, Air, and Water, for all powers must now rest in the hands of the Wizards,
who took the sole title ot Magefolk.
Between them, the Six set about restoring their race —a pleasant task, but one
to be undertaken with care and planning. As a ward against future misuse of
their powers, thev made the Mages' Code, and passed it on to their descendants
,> an incontrovertible law that each of the Magefolk must swta~ on their
very souls, to uphold. And, accepting the inevitable that the Age of Free3om
had finally arrived for the despisi Mortals—they set about teaching them all
they could, tl their race might grow in wisdom and responsibility.
For a
thousand years they labored; then, too weary to
more,
they chose to pass from their lives together, and fell n
legend
as Gods and Goddesses—Iriana of the Beasts, Thara of
the
Fields, and Melisanda of the Healing Hands; Chathak, God
of
Fire, Yinze of the Sky, and lonor the Wise, who became to
the
Southern races the Reaper of Souls, because he possessed a
part of
the Leviathans' lore, and they had created the Caldron,
which
was said to control the rebirth of souls. Avithan became
known
as the Father of the Gods, and the Cailleach as the
Mother.
But
what had become of the four great Artifacts of Po\v,-r'
AUR1AN •
3o7
The
Sword was hidden, awaiting the One for whom it had been forged, and the Harp
had been sent beyond time. The Staff of Earth was lost, and it was believed
that the Caldron had perished in the Cataclysm. People little thought that a
fragment had somehow survived, once again to cast Chance into the teeth of
Balance in ages to come.
Aurian
surfaced from Ithalasa's tale, dazed by what she had seen and heard. The
history of her people had been spread out before her like an open book. But for
all that, her goals seemed less attainable than ever. Miathan held one Weapon,
and two of the others were seemingly unreachable. Even the Staff of Earth had
been lost for ages uncounted. Only the presence of the Leviathan stopped the
Mage from a furious outburst of swearing. Instead, she contented herself with a
disconsolate sigh. "Well, you needn't have worried about what I'd do with
the Weapons! / can't see any hope at all of gaining them. I'll just have to go
against the Archmage without them—but goodness knows how."
"Do
not despair, Little One," Ithalasa comforted her. "You nou' know more
than your enemy about the nature of our world, and the pou'ers and peoples
within it. Maybe you will find unexpected allies. And now that you know the
fate of the Weapons, it may be that they will come to you in the end."
Some
chance, Aurian thought sourly, but was careful to hide it from Ithalasa. He had
done his best, and she was grateful. His next words made her more grateful
still. "/ can do one thing more to aid you, Daughter, though neither I nor
my people can fight for you. Such a thing is beyond our natures. But I will
give you a spell—the ancient spell to summon the Orca from their rest. Though 1
beg you, out of pity for their suffering, do not use it unless you are in the
direst need. But I know you would not." His thoughts washed over her, full
of love and approval, and mingled with them, the spell came into her mind—the
long-unused call to wake the warriors of the race of Leviathan from sleep.
"Ithalasa,
how can I ever thank you?" Aurian said. Truly, she was overwhelmed with
gratitude for all he had done.
"Prevent
another Cataclysm, Daughter. Restore peace to the world, if you can,"
Ithalasa replied.
Night
was falling, and Aurian was hungry once more, and very tired. The Leviathan
insisted that she eat and sleep before
returning
to her companions. The following morning they set out northward once more, the
Mage riding on her friend's broad back and trying to curb her anxiety and
impatience. But when they reached the forest-fringed beach where they had left
Anvar and Sara, there was no one there.
2 O
THE SLAVE/MASTER
rom the
familiar way in which the floor rocked and heaved beneath him, Anvar realized
that he was on board a ship once more. He was tightly bound with coarse rope,
and his aching head was throbbing in time to a hollow, muffled booming that
assailed his hearing with ceaseless monotony. He lay still for a moment, not
daring to open his eyes, his cheek resting on damp, splintery boards. It was
suffocatingly hot. He could smell tar and reeking bodies, vomit and excrement.
As well as the booming thuds that echoed painfully through his skull, he could
hear the clink of chains and the occasional crack of a whip, punctuated by
screams of pain.
Anvar
opened his eyes. He lay in a long, narrow, torchlit space that took up, he
guessed, most of the belowdecks area of the ship. Chained slaves, in rows of
four, sat at benches on either side of a narrow aisle; each row of men wielded
a heavy oar between them. The hulking figure of an overseer prowled up and
down, flourishing a vicious whip, while at the far end a bald giant with skin
like dark-tanned leather pounded on a heavy drum, setting the pace for the
rowers. Anvar had been thrown into the cramped space in the narrow bow, where there
was no room for oarsmen. A quick glance round showed no sign of Sara, and his
stomach tightened with fear.
Someone
was coming down the ladder that was attached to the wooden bulkhead behind the
behemoth with the drum. From the sudden smartening of the overseer's attitude,
the quickening of the drumbeat, and the richness of the man's loose robes,
Anvar decided that this must be the captain. He was a tall, emaciated-looking
man with a hook nose and a thin, straggling beard. His head was shaved completely
bald, except for a braided pigtail at the back, and his skin glowed like
polished wood in the dim red torchlight. His voice was deep and guttural as he
addressed the overseers. "Pick up the beat, you! Get these sluggards
moving, or you'll find yourself joining them!"
Anvar
was stunned. The man was speaking a language that was completely strange to
him—he could hear that quite plainly—yet he could understand every word! The
ability to
understand
and speak any language was a talent common to all the Mageborn . . . Anvar felt
a warning pain lance through his skull, and had to clench his teeth to keep
from groaning aloud. To turn his mind from such dangerous thoughts, he
concentrated on the captain's words.
"...
and swill this pigsty out! How can you endure the stench? I will not have us
coming into port smelling like a cattle boat! We are Royal Corsairs, and we
have a reputation to
uphold!"
A groan
of protest came from the overseer.
"It's bad
enough
having to live with these animals. Why should we have to clean up after
them?"
The
crack of the captain's fist hitting his face echoed in the confined space. He
staggered and fell, dropping his whip and hitting his head on the edge of one
of the benches. A murmur of appreciation ran through the shackled slaves.
"Because,
you stupid son of a donkey, if you leave them to wallow in their own filth,
they will sicken and die," the captain said testily. "They wear out
too quickly as it is—and if I have to squander our profits replacing any more galley
slaves, I intend to take it out of your bonus."
"But
that isn't fair," the overseer whined.
"Think
of it as a favor. If the crew lose out through your
carelessness, they'll
slit your throat
for you." The captain
grinned
evilly. "Get busy, Harag. And you, Abuz, pick up that
cursed
beat. I want to be in time to catch the Khisu's procurer
tonight.
He should be very interested in buying the pale-haired
wench
for His Majesty's collection, and the man will fetch a
good
price in the market. With the Khisu building his summer
palace,
the price of slaves is as high as the stars just now. The
Slavemaster
will find a place even for an illegal Northerner, and
his
gold will line our pockets. So think of that while you work.
It
might help to speed things along." He left, whistling.
Having
been doused with several pailfuls of seawater during Harag's rough swilling-out
of the slave area, Anvar could no longer pretend to be unconscious. As he
choked and spluttered, Harag seized a handful of his hair and pulled his head
backward, giving a low whistle of astonishment. "Souls, Abu*, you want to
see this one! It's true—Northerners do have eyes the color of the sky!"
With a shudder he dropped Anvar's hea 1
AUR1AN •
311
"Ugh!
Unnatural, I call it. I'm glad the captain is selling him —with eyes like that,
he's bound to be unlucky."
Abuz
nodded, never losing the rapid beat of his drum. "I know what you mean. I
saw one when I was young—a captive spy about to be executed. When his head was
struck off, those pale eyes stared right through me. Gave me nightmares for
ages. Northerners are bad luck, I think. Good thing we're nearly home."
"Should
we feed him?" Harag wondered. "The captain will have our hides if he
arrives in poor condition."
"Nah.
He'll only be sick, and you've just cleaned up. They can feed him in the slave
pens—at their expense!"
Anvar
closed his eyes in utter wretchedness. A slave! Oh Gods, no! And what of poor
Sara? Cursing inwardly, he struggled against his bonds until a vicious kick in
the stomach from Harag stopped him. Anvar doubled up, vomiting bile onto the
boards.
Harag
howled in fury. "Filthy swine! I've just cleaned that!" He raised his
whip and Anvar cringed, awaiting the blow.
"Stop
that, Harag!" Abuz bellowed. "I don't intend to lose my bonus through
your temper!"
Harag
turned, his whip still raised, his face livid with rage. "You mind your
own business, you lumbering ox!"
Abuz
laid the massive drumsticks down on top of the drum and rose to his feet. He
was so huge that he had to bend beneath the low ceiling. The slaves ^topped
rowing immediately, relief on their pain-wracked, sweat-drenched faces.
"Do I have to come down there and deal with this, Harag?" Abuz said. "Because
you're beginning to make me angry—and you know what happens when I get
angry!"
Harag's
swarthy face paled. Slowly, he lowered the whip.
"What
in the name of the Reaper is going on down there?" The captain's angry
voice bellowed through the open hatchway above. "Why have we
stopped?"
Abuz
flinched. "Sorry, Captain. Just having a little problem with the new
slave." Without waiting for a reply, he sat down hastily and picked up his
drumsticks, resuming a rapid beat. Harag, taking his temper out on the gasping,
glassy-eyed slaves, strode up and down, lashing them into greater efforts.
Anvar
curled around his bruised stomach and abandoned himself to utter misery.
A
cascade of cold water awakened him abruptly, washing away the pool of vomit in
which he had been lying. He heard the captain's voice rising in anger. "I
thought I told you to clean this place up!" There was the sick thud of a
fist striking
flesh.
"But
I did," Harag whined. "The mangy dog threw up
again!"
"Never
mind," the captain sighed. "Just get on with it." A stinking
sack was thrust over Anvar's head, and he was lifted by rough hands. As they
bundled him through the hatch, he heard the hubbub of what must presumably be
the docks. The sun's heat hit him like a hammer blow as he was carried
down a sloping, bouncing gangplank
and thrown down roughly, with all the breath knocked
out of him. Suddenly he was in motion—from the jolting, it seemed that he was
in a cart, and the multitude of sounds around him seemed to indicate a town or
city of some sort. He thought he understood why they had put the sack over his
head—if he should escape, he would have no idea where he was, or where to run.
Unfamiliar with the customs of this land, he failed to realize that it was also
to hide the fact that the captain was bringing an illegal foreigner into the
slave markets instead of turning him over to the city's authorities, as the law
demanded.
The
cart bounced along, jarring Anvar's aching head. The motion made him feel £ts
though he would be sick again at any minute. His body was baking in the heat of
the sun, and he w,i nearly suffocating inside the smelly sack. But at last the
sui heat vanished abruptly, and the faint light that filtered throu; the weave
of the sack dimmed. The cartwheels echoed hollow on smooth stone, then stopped.
"Greetings,
Captain." The light voice dripped false honey "You had a profitable
voyage, I trust? Are we buying today, or
selling?"
"Selling,
Zahn. Just the one this time."
"Only
one? Tut tut, Captain. You are usually one of my more dependable
suppliers."
"Be
reasonable, Zahn," the captain said irritably. "What could we
possibly gain from two months' duty patrol up the
AUR1AN •
313
coast?
We are the Khisu's Corsairs, you know. Sometimes we must do our duty, and
forget profit for a while."
"Your
loyalty does you credit, Captain," Zahn replied smoothly. "Shall we
inspect the merchandise, then?"
The
bonds were cut from Anvar's feet, and he gasped with pain as blood ran back into
the numbed tissues. He was pulled from the cart and hauled upright by strong
hands, and the sack was wrenched from his head. A short, wizened man with a
face like a steel trap stared at him openmouthed.
"Reaper
of Souls!" he gasped. "A Northerner. How dare you bring an illegal
slave into my premises!"
"Spare
me your righteous protests, Zahn," the captain said impatiently. "I
know how desperate you are for slaves—any slaves—just now."
His
words seemed to deflate the Slavemaster. "Where did you find him?"
Zahn asked with a frown.
"Washed
up along the coast. Shipwrecked, by the look of it, in that freak storm. We saw
some corpses and floating wreckage. They must have been blown far off course.
Normally, they have more sense than to venture into our waters." He
grinned wolfishly. "Anyway, enough of this. Do you want him, or shall I
turn him over to the Arbiters like a good little Corsair?"
The
Slavemaster pursed his lips and began to walk around Anvar, looking him
carefully up and down with an occasional pinch and prod. "Strip him,"
he ordered, and one of his handlers drew a knife and began to slit away the
ragged remains of Anvar's clothes. Anvar struggled wildly—then, feeling the
bite of cold steel against his naked flesh, he froze, swallowing hard .is he
realized where his guard had positioned the knife.
"What
are you doing?" the captain protested.
Zahn
grinned evilly. "Don't worry—I can sell him just as well as a eunuch—but
there will probably be no need. He may not speak our tongue, but I think he
understands!"
Sweat
broke out on Anvar's brow. He froze in position, hardly daring to breathe.
Though he was sickened by the touch of Zahn's overfamiliar hands on his body,
there was nothing he could do. His hands were still bound, and there was a
burly handler on each side of him, one holding the knife in its perilous
position. Anvar clenched his fists and shuddered. To take
his
mind off the examination, he concentrated instead on his
surroundings.
He was
in a large, circular chamber built of stone, with a domed ceiling. In the
center was a raised, roped-off platform, to one side of which stood a row of
large iron cages, empty at present. The walls of the chamber were pierced at
regular intervals by a series of shadowed archways. Only one of them was filled
with the glare of bright sunlight, leading to the outside
world.
"Well
. . ." Anvar heard Zahn say, and snapped his attention back to the slave
merchant, who was eyeing him thoughtfully. "He's in fair condition,
considering," he told the captain, "and he seems strong enough, with
that height, and those lovely broad shoulders." Zahn was eyeing him in a
frankly speculative fashion that made Anvar shudder. "Unfortunately,"
the slaver continued, "1 cannot sell him to a private client—those eyes
would put people off. Besides, there would be too many questions. But as you
know, the Khisu is desperate for more laborers. The Reaper only knows how they
go through so many slaves out there! Sheer mismanagement, if you ask me. Still,
this summer palace is the best thing for trade in years, and His Majesty pays
well. I think we can come to an arrangement. Of course, he will not last long
in our climate, but that is not our problem. Come, my friend. Let us discuss
the price over a glass of wine." He snapped his fingers at the two husky
men holding Anvar. "Take him," he said.
To
Anvar's utter relief, the knife was taken away. He was dragged through one of
the shadowy archways, and forced down a long, echoing corridor lit by lamps
that hung from chains set in the
ceiling. Bars of sunlight filtered
through a latticed wooden door at the far end. His
captors unlocked it and Anvar was thrust out into a dusty yard edged with
open-fronted workshops. A potter sat in one, turning a rough clay bowl on his
wheel. In the next, a draggled woman stirred a caldron of vile-smelling swill
over an open fire, pausing only to flick away a myriad of great black flies
that swarmed around her greasy face. Outside another booth, a man was plaiting
long, thin strips of hide into a whip. Anvar turned his eyes away, not liking
what
it
portended.
On one
side of the courtyard was a smithy. A skinny,
AURIAN •
315
sweating
little boy worked the bellows, keeping the forge at white heat while two
dark-skinned men in leather aprons hammered out chains and manacles. There was
no mistaking the smith himself. A squat black man, his skin tanned like
wrinkled leather from the heat of the forge, he was twice as broad across the
shoulders as Anvar, his muscles standing out like rough-hewn rocks. The two
guards approached him with respect. The smith's eyes widened at the sight of
Anvar. "Reaper take us!" he growled disgustedly. "Zahn is
getting desperate!" He advanced on Anvar, holding a hinged metal collar
that looked like a child's bracelet in his great hands. One of his assistants
followed, bearing a glowing, white-hot iron.
Anvar
struggled desperately, flinching away as the broad collar was placed around his
neck and the ends were closed together, but the guards held him firmly. The
smith was well accustomed to this delicate task, and caused him little pain,
though Anvar whimpered in fear as he felt the collar grow hot when the edges
were welded together with the searing iron. But the little boy, who had left his
bellows, was standing ready to douse him with cold water from a jar, and the
heat vanished at once. The child gave him a cheeky grin as he returned to his
former task, and Anvar felt like a craven fool. The coarse rope binding his
hands was cut away, and his hands were drawn round to the front and fitted with
manacles joined by a short length of chain. One of the guards produced another
chain which he attached to a ring on the collar. Nodding brusque thanks to the
taciturn smith, he gave a^sharp tug, preparing to lead Anvar away.
Like a
dog! Anvar, furious, humiliated, and still shaking from the jolt of fear that
had gone through him when the collar was sealed, gripped the chain in his
manacled hands and pulled back as hard as he could. Instantly the other guard
took a short, thick whip from his belt, and the heavy lash fell once, twice,
three times across Anvar's back and shoulders. He staggered, crying out with
pain, and the guard pulled sharply on the chain. The hard edge of the iron
collar cut into his neck and the lash fell once more, branding a line of fire
across Anvar's back as he staggered after the guard. The other handler
followed, his whip flashing down whenever Anvar stumbled or slackened his
They
took Anvar back inside the building, down a steep flight of steps into the
cellars beneath. He was thrust into a bare and gloomy cell that housed several
other slaves, all men. Their collars were attached at half height to rings on
the wall by a 1 handspan of chain, so
that they were forced to remain sitting up
1 at all times. Ventilated only by an iron grille set high on the wall,
the place stank of human excrement. Gutters led down to a dip in the center of
the floor, in which was set a noisome open drain. Anvar was later to learn that
the cell was swilled out, slaves and all, twice a day, and that was the limit
of the sanitation.
The
guards chained him by his collar to a vacant ring in
the
wall and left him, bolting the door behind them. None of the other slaves
reacted in any way to his presence. They werf sorry specimens mostly: filthy,
half starved, and covered in sores and scars. Some wept, some dozed, while
others stared blankly at nothing with hollow, vacant eyes.
Anvar
tried to reach behind him with manacled hands to grasp the chain that fastened
him to the wall. He managed to get a grip at last, though the iron collar
almost throttled him. He tore at the chain until his fingers bled, but it was
firmly attached to the collar at one end, and at the other, to the ring that
was bolted into the wall. At last he gave up, and hiding his face in his
bleeding hands, he gave himself over to despair, There was no escape, not now
at least. What would become of him? What was being done to Sara? And most of
all, what had happened to that faithless Mage? In his self-pity, he imagined
Aurian continuing her journey, free and uncaring about the t\ she had so
callously abandoned to their fate.
Despite
his anger at her, the thought of Aurian steadied
him. At
least she faced things with courage and determination,
What
would she say if she could see him giving way like this?
Nothing,
Anvar suddenly realized. She would simply get these
bloody
chains off, and get him out of here—and it wouldn't be
the
first time she had saved him. Anvar thought of Aurian's
past
kindnesses, remembered the closeness they had briefly
shared
on board the ship. He recalled that in bringing him on
this
journey, she had saved him from the Death Wraiths—and
remembered
why she had left him in the first place. It was his
own
fault. He had driven her away, and wherever she was, she
would
be facing difficulties of her own. At least he could take an example from her
courage. Anvar vowed then that whatever happened, he would endure—as he knew
that she would endure. "I will survive this," he promised himself
fiercely. "And one day I'll see Sara and the Mage again."
Sara
cringed back as far as her bound limbs would let her, shrinking into the corner
of the narrow bunk as the cabin door opened. The captain entered with a bundle
in his arms, followed by two brawny sailors carrying a large tub ,of water
between them. Another followed with a plate of bread and fruit and a tarnished
cup, which he set down on the table. The captain waited until his men had left,
then with a sweeping gesture, he drew a jeweled dagger from the sleeve of his
loose-fitting robe, Sara uttered a little shriek, but he merely leaned forward
and cut the ropes that bound her feet and hands. Then standing over her, he
made motions for her to undress, Sara clutched the neck of her tattered gown,
and shook her head wildly in denial, "No!" she gasped. "Please,
no." The captain laughed, and pointed at the tub of water, the bundle that
he had dumped on the bed, and the food on the table. Then with an ironic bow,
he turned and left the cabin, locking the door behind him.
After a
moment Sara slipped out of the bunk and ran to try the door, knowing the
futility of the act even as she did it. It was locked, of course. She was not
sure whether to be glad or sorry. In a way it was a comfort to-hayt^ this solid
piece of wood between herself and the men who had laid hands on her on the
hrach. She shuddered at the memory. After Aurian's warning about the sailors on
the first ship, she'd been half crazed with terror—but when the captain set
eyes on her, he had shouted some orders in his harsh foreign tongue, and they
had brought her down here. Apart from sleeping for a while—she had no idea how
long—she had kin here, trembling, ever since, the sound of every footstep
filling her with dread.
Now it
seemed that the captain wanted her for himself, Well, Sara decided, it was
better than being raped by his unsavory-looking crew. He'd been courteous, at
least , , . Fear was such a familiar companion by now that practicality
asserted itself. The fruit on the table, though strange to her, looked ripe
sis -
MAGGIE
and
luscious, and it smelled so good ... Oh well, she thought. Might as well
be.ravished on a full stomach! The cup held a light, spicy wine that Sara found
delicious, although in her dehydrated state she would have preferred water. The
contents of the tub looked clean enough, but she had no intention
of
risking it.
After
her meal, Sara felt much better, and turned to examine thAurSle on
^e^.^^^^^^^^^^ia^ ana' <jcytaff A&wJ/; ^ har of coarse soap, a comb
carved from some white bonelike substance—and a richly embroidered' hooded robe
that tied at the waist with a silken sash. As she shook out the folds of the
robe, something fell out and rolled across the cabin floor. It turned out to be
a little glass vial of perfume. Sara sniffed the fragrance appreciatively.
Despite the dangers that lurked all too close, things were looking up.
Although
the water in the tub was shallow and only lukewarm, the bath was a glorious
luxury. She washed her hair too, drying it afterward as best she could with the
damp cloths and combing out the tangles and snarls until it fell in its usual,
glimmering cascade of rich gold. The robe felt wonderfully soft and cool
against her bare skin, and the perfume was rich and sweet. It felt so good to
be clean again. She only wished she had
a
mirror.
The
sound of the door opening made her jump. Sara backed hastily away, wondering
belatedly if it had been a mistake to make herself presentable once more. The
captain stood in the doorway, smiling approvingly. Then he gestured toward the
door. "Where are you taking me?" Sara asked suspiciously, forgetting
that he could not understand her.
The
captain shrugged. Abandoning all pretense of patience, he swept down on her in
three rapid strides and grabbed her wrists, tying them in front of her with the
trailing ends of her sash. Ignoring her shrieks and struggles, he called on a
brawny sailor to hold her still while he fitted a veil of some unfamiliar
diaphanous material over her head and pulled the deep hood of the robe down to
cover her face. The sailor threw her over his shoulder with careless strength,
and she was carried
away.
Like
Anvar, Sara was placed in an uncomfortable, jouncing cart, traveling blind.
After a while, she knew from the tilt of
AURIAN '
319
the
vehicle that they were climbing a steep hill. Then the road flattened, and the
cart drew to a halt. Sara heard voices, followed by the grinding creak of huge
gates opening. Then they were in motion once more.
They
stopped, and Sara heard the cheerful patter of a fountain. The captain helped
her down, and she found herself standing on glassy stone that felt delightfully
cool to her bare feet. He pulled the hood from her head. She saw his outline
through the translucent veil, and that of another man to whom he was speaking
with rapid eloquence. Then he lifted the veil and the other man gasped. Sara,
blinking, echoed his gasp at the sight of him. He was short and chubby, his
face elaborately painted with cosmetics, his eyes outlined with kohl. He wore
many glittering necklaces over brightly colored robes, and gold earrings
pierced his ears. His shaven head was painted with intricate swirling designs
in gold. The overall effect was painfully dazzling.
At
least, Sara thought smugly, her appearance seemed to dazzle him, too. He was
almost jumping up and down with excitement. There was a rapid volley of talk
between the two men, then the fat man gave the captain several bags that
clinked, and seemed to be heavy. Sara felt a sudden stab of panic. He was
selling her? As he turned to leave she tried to grab his sleeve, forgetting
that her hands were bound. She didn't think much of him, but he was the only
familiar thing in this strange place. He shrugged her off, and leaping aboard
his cart, maneuvered the donkey carefully,, round in the narrow space of the
white-walled courtyard. The high, sturdy gates were closed and locked behind
him by two slender young men with shaven heads and curiously effeminate,
painted faces. Sara felt a wild urge to run, but there was nowhere to run to.
The walls that surrounded her were very high. Her eyes filled with tears that
spilled unchecked down her cheeks, since her hands were still bound to her
waist by her sash.
The fat
man clucked in concern, and patted her arm, "Weep not," he said, in a
high, reedy voice.
Sara
stared at him in astonished relief. "You speak my language?"
He
nodded vigorously. "Little," he beamed, "Khisu speak good. He
teach. You like Khisu. Weep not, lady. Spoil." With a
I
gentle
hand, he stroked the tears from her cheeks. "Be proud.
You for
Khisu—your word, King."
"King?"
Sara gasped.
The fat
man nodded again. "Khisu many beautiful lady.
Want
always beautiful lady. Want you, for sure." He gave her a
dazzling
smile, showing a gold tooth at the front. "Come," he
said.
"Bathe. Dress. See other lady. Many lady. See Khisu this
night.
Weep not. He like."
The
ladies' quarters were a labyrinth of many interconnecting rooms, their walls
and floors richly decorated with pastel tiles and intricate mosaics. There were
rooms with silk-covered couches, and tables, chairs, and chests that were
inlaid with gold; rooms with wide, low beds curtained in drifting white muslin;
rooms with fountains, pools, and huge, circular marble baths. There were shady
courtyards and gardens full of exotic flowers and vivid butterflies. The air
was laden with mingled perfumes and the sweet piercing song of bright-hued
birds in
cages
of gold.
The
women drifted in and out, some like silent ghosts in their diaphanous robes.
Others gathered in chattering flocks around the edges of pools, or splashed and
soaked together in the communal baths with a complete disregard for their
nudity. A few gossiped together on the soft cushions of couches. There were
more of them than Sara could count, and each was more
beautiful
than the last.
Sara's
companion detached half a dozen dusky beauties from one group, jabbering to
them in their own language, with an occasional gesture toward her. Their
amazement at her golden hair seemed no less than his own had been, and they
crowded round her, exclaiming loudly and fingering her heavy tresses. The
little man silenced them sharply and issued what seemed to be a stream of
instructions. Then he turned to Sara with a smile. "Zalid, I," he
said, pointing at himself. "You
want,
you send. You?"
"Sara,"
she told him, realizing that he wanted her name.
"Sara.
Good. Like desert wind. Go with lady now. Bathe, dress, eat. Later, see
Khisu." Unbinding her hands, he delivered her into the care of the girls.
Sara
was ushered into a luxurious suite of rooms. She ate first, the chattering
girls serving her with spiced meats, fruit,
. AURIAN
• 321
and
strange, flat, leathery bread. She drank wine from a jeweled goblet, and looked
around her sumptuous chambers, wondering if she had strayed into a dream. Then
she bathed again, in a deep pool of steaming water scented with flowers and
herbs. After her bath, two of the girls massaged her body with fragrant oils.
Sara
relaxed beneath their hands, enjoying the pampering. As Vannor's wife she had
been used to such attentions, and over the last few days she had missed them
dreadfully. After the terrors and hardships of her flight from Nexis, the harem
was a haven, not a prison. She was not concerned about meeting the
—what
did they call him?—the Khisu. She knew she was beautiful. She had used her
looks to twist Anvar and that lout Vannor around her little finger, and had no
doubt that she could do the same with this King. She felt a flutter of
excitement. A real, live King! It was the chance of a lifetime! Sara stretched
like a cat, thinking how far she had come in the last few years. This was a far
cry from marrying the baker's son!
Anvar,
indeed! Sara scowled, irritated by the slight pang of guilt that marred her
self-congratulation. She had not seen him since their capture. She shrugged.
He'd been alive then, so they must have plans for him, and he was already a
servant, so things couldn't get much worse. Besides, it served him right for
dragging her off on this insane journey! She meant to survive, to take care of
herself. With that, she put Anvar out of her mind.
They
brought great heaps of clothes for her to choose from
—embroidered
robes of translucent silk in a myriad of colors, veils with less substance than
a summer^morning's mist. They brought gilded sandals, and perfumes, cosmetics,
and more jewels than Sara had seen in her life. She took her time choosing,
combining the materials for maximum effect. She was in her element now. This
was what she was best at.
Ar last
she was ready. Sara stood gazing at herself in a full-length mirror of polished
silver, and the vision that stared back at her took her breath away. Gods, she
thought, I'm stunning! I've never looked so beautiful! Although her heart was
bearing rather fast, Sara waited with calm confidence to be summoned into the
presence of the King. The dazzling creature in the mirror smiled at her
enigmatically. This was going to be child's play.
V^hapter £ 1
THE BRACELETS
OF ZATHBAR
__ nch by inch, Aurian searched the
deserted beach, and •••I found the remains of a fire and signs of a violent
scuffle. Her heart turned over. What had happened here? A few clear tracks—the
prints of strange, pointed boots—still remained. A dull gleam in the sand
caught her eye. Digging down, the Mage unearthed her own dagger. With a sinking
heart, she tried to reconstruct what had happened, toying absently with the
knife as she thought. No strange prints leading to or from the forest. The
invaders had come by sea, then. Sure enough, there was a deep rut at the
water's edge, where the prow of a boat had been pulled up onto the sand. No
bodies. No blood. Had Anvar and Sara been captured alive? If so, where were
they now? Aurian, full of self-recrimination, cursed her tardiness. Why had she
not returned sooner? Why had she ever
left
them?
"Such
thoughts are foolish, Daughter, and ultimately destructive," Ithalasa
chided her gently. "You did what you must. If you wish to find your
companions, perhaps I can set you on the proper track." He told her that
the ships in these waters came and went down a great river that emerged farther
down the coast. His cousins, the river dolphins, had reported a city, many
days' journey upriver. If her companions were anywhere, they would be there.
"Though you were right to describe them as foolhardy," he added
dryly. "Only an imbecile would light such a beacon in an alien land, to
summon who-knows-what! But now, you must decide your own course. If you wish to
travel north in search of the Weapons, I can take you a goodly distance, though
we do not venture into Northern waters as a rule. But if you seek your
companions, your way lies south, and I will bear you to the mouth of the river
Khazala—the Lifeblood." Aurian was in a dilemma. She ought to head north
with all speed, for time was against her. As her pregnancy progressed, her powers
would gradually wane,
vanishing at about six months to leave her bereft of
magic until the child was born. Aurian had no wish to linger in the Southern
Kingdoms, with
their
hostility toward Magefolk, nor to have her babe born here. Ithalasa could take
her to her own lands in easy stages, with little risk of trouble on the way.
But the Mage blamed herself for the plight of Anvar and Sara. She never should
have left them. Though it meant a greater risk and a grave setback to her
plans, her conscience would never let her rest if she abandoned them now.
Eventually, heavy of heart and filled with doubts, she asked her friend to take
her to the river's mouth.
"Take
comfort, Little One," he told her, as they resumed their journey.
"Who can fathom the workings of FateP It may be that you have tasks to
perform in these lands, and you may even find part of what you seek. Such an
act of friendship and honor will surely turn to good."
Aurian
thought of her love for Forral, which had begun in friendship and honor and
ended in tragedy, and forbore to reply. But parting with Ithalasa was hard.
When she left him, with many tears, at the broad delta that formed the river's
mouth, Aurian felt as though she were leaving part of her soul behind. She
thought of Forral and Finbarr, of Vannor, Maya, D'arvan, and even her
mother—and of Meiriel and the Archmage, who had betrayed her so bitterly. Was
her life always destined to be filled with grievous partings?
"Stop
that, idiot!" Aurian chided herself as she sloshed through the sticky red
mud of the delta. "Self-pity won't help!" She wiped her tears on her
ragged sleeve, smiling a little as she recalled how Anvar had once scolded her
for that habit. In this case, perhaps she was heading fpr a reunion, not a
parting. Aurian prayed it would be so.
The
Mage had not reckoned on the journey upriver taking so long. The valley was
broad and flat-bottomed, hemmed in on either side by towering cliffs of reddish
stone. She wondered what lay beyond them, but a mortal dread of heights meant
that climbing was to be avoided wherever possible, and besides, she had neither
time nor the energy for side trips. The journey was tough enough as it was.
Aurian
could see why the river was named Lifeblood. Its broad, sluggish waters were
tinted with the same rusty red as the cliffs that towered on either side. The
thin strip of land between the cliff and the river was a flat expanse of
stinking red mud and stagnant, reed-choked pools, and because of the
treacherous,
swampy ground, Aurian was forced to travel by day. She felt horribly exposed on
the naked mudflats. The sun hammered down on her like a great weight, burning
her pale skin, and the air seemed too thick to breathe. She was unable to shed
her clothes because of the whining, biting insects that swarmed around her,
settling to feed on any exposed flesh. Her hands and face were soon swollen
with itchy red blotches, and the effort of will it took not to scratch them was
tremendous. Aurian knew that she could use her power to create a shield between
herself and the little horrors, but she was reluctant to expend her waning
energy in the use of magic, and was wary of using it in a land where it was
forbidden.
By the
second day, Aurian was already exhausted, and suf-fering badly from the heat.
Though she had braided her long, thick hair out of the way, its sweat-soaked
weight pulled painfully at her scalp and made her dizzy head ache. By noon, she
could stand it no longer. She stopped to rest, but found no ease beneath the
broiling sun. There was no shade anywhere, and she was unable to immerse
herself in the river to cool down. While hunting the small, eellike fish that
were the only food supply to hand, she had encountered great lizards, bigger than
herself and armed with long toothy jaws. Apart from that, the river was full of
leeches. Of the two, Aurian thought she would almost prefer to deal with the
lizards, but was anxious to avoid both, The Mage's head throbbed. The back of
her neck, where the braid hung down, was unbearably hot. It was no good. Her
hair would have to *gb, She was well past the point of heart-searching over
such an obvious decision, having lately beeo, involved in much graver choices.
Using a stagnant, reed-fringej pool as a mirror, she took out the dagger she
had given Anvar and hacked off the braid. Oh, the blessed relief! Aurian felt
literally light-headed. The discarded braid lay pathetically Q| the ground like
a dead snake, caked with dried mud and sweat, and snarled with bits of weed and
other nameless things. Aurian stared at it in dismay, Gods, she thought, what
am I coming to? She had always taken such care of her hair, as Forral had
taught her when she was a little girl. It seemed as though she had cut away
part of her life with him. "I don't want a stupid Prince. I'm going to
marry you." The memory of those childish words twisted in her guts like a
jagged knife.
On an
impulse, Aurian picked up the braid and washed it in the little pool. It
immediately unraveled from the cut end, and the mass of hair floated in the
water like a cloud at sunset. Leaving the other end tied, she fished it out and
whirled it around her head to dry it as best she could. Then coiling it tightly
round her hand, she stowed it in one of the deep pockets of her leather tunic,
where its clammy dampness soon seeped through to her skin.
"Idiot!"
Aurian told herself, "Sentimental fool! You cut the bloody thing off so
that you wouldn't have to carry it around!" But all the same, she felt
better about the whole business— until the pool settled and she saw her
reflection. What a mess! Although she had never been vain about her appearance,
Aurian was appalled. Painstakingly, she used her dagger to trim away the bits
that straggled round her face, until it didn't look so bad. And it was
certainly more comfortable and practical in this climate, she comforted
herself, as she got to her feet and trudged on.
That
day she also solved the problem of the insects, quite by accident. Catching sight
of a ship in the distance coming downriver, Aurian had no recourse other than
to fling herself facedown into the mud and roll, camouflaging herself and lying
perfectly still on the ground until the galley was out of sight. It was then
that she realized that the stinking mud that coated her skin was a perfect
shield, not only against sunburn, but also against the bloodsucking gnats that
had plagued her so. Thanking providence, she went on her way^^much relieved,
stopping
and
again to renew her protection as the mud dried and ked in the strong sun. My
own mother wouldn't know me now, she thought-=and wondered what was happening
to Eilin, so far away in her Northern home. Would the Archmage take
his
spite on her? Aurian shuddered, wishing that she had ic way of warning her. But
there was nothing she could do except grit her teeth, and go on with the task
at hand.
By the
fourth day, the land was gradually becoming less boggy. Aurian began to come
across little strips of cultivated land with the odd tethered goat, and crude
huts of woven rushes—the hovels of peasants and fishermen. This meant that she
was forced to switch to traveling by night, hiding in the leech-haunted reed
beds by day for lack of anywhere better. The
326 •
MAGGIE FuRty
constant
danger of discovery placed a terrible strain on her nerves. She had hoped to be
able to steal food from the peasants to supplement her inadequate diet of fish,
but these people were so desperately poor and wretched that she could rarely
bring
herself
to do it.
On the
sixth night, Aurian came to land that was totally cultivated. Every precious
bit of soil between the river and the cliffs had been used. The dwellings that
she came across had a more solid appearance, constructed as they were from withy
and daub, and thatched with the ubiquitous rushes. Stunted trees had begun to
appear, and in addition to the welcome cover they provided in this more
populated area, Aurian was delighted to discover that they bore a harvest of
nuts, though in her own lands, these would be well out of season. Still, who
was com plaining? Aurian thanked the Gods for such a boon.
Two
nights later, as she rounded a bend where the lon^ river valley kinked back
upon itself, Aurian came upon the city. The sight of it took the Mage
completely by surprise, making her forget the weariness of eight days' hard
travel. She had never seen anything like it! Bone-white in the moonlight, the
buildings clustered thickly on the flat ground on either side of the river,
then rose almost vertically on perilously constructed terraces hollowed back
into the cliffs that loomed above the valley on either side. Narrow,
sinister-looking warships crowded the riverside wharves, together with smaller
craft and low, flat barges whose workmanlike appearance was much more
comforting.
The
city was much bigger than the Mage had expected,
and its
architecture seemed strange to her. The roofs were flat, or domed, or twisted
into slender, fluted spires. Doors and windows tended to be arched, rather than
the square utilitarian shapes with which she was familiar. Impossible bridges,
looking slender as threads from the ground, were suspended across the chasm
hundreds, even a thousand feet above. The very thought of them made Aurian feel
sick and dizzy with her irrational terror of heights. She was puzzled by the
lack of protective walls, not realizing that beyond the cliffs the city was
guarded by something more powerful, more terrifying, than any defense that man
could devise.
Aurian
pushed her draggled hair out of her eyes and tried
to get
her tired brain to work. It would be easy enough to get into the city, but once
inside—what then? How could she find Anvar and Sara in a place that size? Were
they there at all? Were they even still alive? Why, oh why had she left them in
the first place? The questions circled in her mind, but she found no answers.
Belatedly
remembering her exposed position, Aurian turned right, toward the cliffs, and
took shelter in a grove of low, twisted trees. She recognized them from others
she had encountered on her way upriver, and as she had expected they held a
bountiful crop of ripe nuts. With the child in her belly sapping her energy
ever more quickly, Aurian was starving. Hurriedly, before she lost the last of
the moonlight behind the dizzying cliffs, she gathered a large pile of nuts
then sat down m comfortable concealment =among the roots of an old tree to eat,
cracking open the hard shells with the hilt of her dagger. Aurian felt better
for the food. Turning to the problem at hand, she began to employ Forral's
method of breaking it into manageable steps. So what were the first steps here?
Stop worrying, to begin with! If Anvar and Sara were here, she would find them.
If not—she'd deal with that when the time came. But first things first. In
order to enter the city without arousing suspicion, she must steal some clothes
to replace her ragged fighting gear. She had to look enough like the natives to
pass as one of them, so she would need to see what they looked like and come up
with an appropriate disguise. Fortunately the language would be no problem.
Having accomplished her disguise, she would need whatever passed for money in
these parts. Aurian realized with grim amusement that she was about to add thievery
to her growing collection of skills, both magical and martial. Stretching her
aching limbs, she allowed herself to relax. Now that she had a plan of sorts,
she could rest for a while, hidden in the sheltering trees,
xhausted,
she fell dead asleep among the roots of the tree. MIC was still asleep at dawn,
when the bird hunters came with their dogs and nets. The dogs were on her in a
flash, their yelps awakening her just in time to draw her sword and defend
herself from their masters. The hunters were no warriors. Aurian killed one,
and put another two out of action before their comrades managed to bring her
down in their nets. By that time
the
commotion had attracted other peasants from the fields around, and Aurian found
herself lying helplessly tangled in the nets, in the midst of an astonished,
vociferous crowd. "See that pale skin!" "Look at that hair—the
color of blood!" "A warrior?" "A Demon?" "A
ivomanT' "She killed poor Harz!" "Fetch the Elder!"
Elder
be damned, Aurian thought, and moved her hand a little, to summon Fire-magic to
burn away the nets. The movement was injudicious. The peasants saw, and a heavy
blow from a stave sent her down into unconsciousness.
Aurian
awoke with a blinding headache, to find herself lying on the marble floor of a
long, white hall. She was trussed in the nets, which had been bound tightly
with rope. Her staff] was still in her belt, but her sword was gone. The Mage
curs«£ softly. It looked as though she had been taken to the city, andt brief
period of observation told her that she was in some kind ot hall of justice.
The judges, she discovered, were respectfuUfj addressed as Arbiters. There were
three of them, dressed alik in long white robes and flowing white headdresses,
sitting b? hind a table on a raised platform at the far end of the chamber.
Their faces were masked in white, rendering them anonymous and expressionless.
To Aurian it was an unnerving sight. In her country, white was Hie color of
death.
From
tales that Forral had told her, Aurian thought that the brown,
dark-haired, fine-boned people
must be the Khazalim. In that case, the use of her
magic would mean instant death—and she had already seen the bowmen that stood
guard on the balcony that circled the upper gallery of the hall, She decided to
leave magic as a last resort—to wait, and see if she could bluff it out. While
her captors awaited their turn, Aurian heard the Arbiters deal with other
cases. The puniL1 ments were unremittingly harsh. The loss of a man's hand
theft; castration and stoning, respectively, for an adultei couple. Gods, what
would it be for murder? Fear clenched a of ice in Aurian's stomach, and she
tensed herself, ready ttf her life dearly. Not here though, not with those bowm
they
wanted to execute her, surely they would take her outside . . .
It was
Aurian's turn. Her captors dragged her before the impassive Arbiters and placed
her upon her knees, still bound, while the village Elder, his face haggard
through hardship and pitted with the scars of disease, told his story. When he
had finished his tale the Arbiters turned to the Mage, and she felt their cold
eyes pierce her, taking in her alien appearance. Then the man in the center of
the trio spoke. "Have you aught to say for yourself?"
How
thankful she was that as a Mage, she knew their language! Aurian's brain had
been working with the lightning speed of desperation to concoct a plausible
story that might save her life. Since they seemed so keen on fidelity, she had
decided on rape. Haltingly, Aurian explained that she had been I traveling with
her husband and his sister (in case Anvar and Ir Sara were somewhere in the
city) and that they had been blown [south by the storm and shipwrecked. She had
lost the others r;and made her way upriver in search of them. Eventually, she
ihad fallen asleep beneath the tree and had awakened to find Herself molested
by a gang of ragged men (that part was true, at ny rate). Half asleep and
believing that she was about to be raped, she had defended herself as best she
could, She was prepared to die rather than yield herself to any man but her
husband .
The
Arbiters conferred in low-voices, then the spokesman in the center turned back
to Aurian. "This tale does not explain your prowess at fighting."
Aurian
fought to stay calm, wishing that she could see his face. "In my country,
many women train as warriors."
"I
see," Resting his arms on the table, he leaned forward, L and she saw his
eyes narrow behind the mask. "And how do you | explain your knowledge of
our language? Only the demon sor-Mwrers of the North have such facility with
our tongue. Can you Ely that you are one of those sorcerers?" A low babble
of astonishment came from the onlookers, people closest to her backed hastily
away, their eyes wide •> fear. Aurian gulped. She had betrayed herself. She
took a breath, thinking qyjckly, hazarding her life on a gamble.
"I
was. But I fled their corruption, to be with my husband." What would he
make of that?
"And
is your husband also a sorcerer?" "No. He is a Mortal man, and our
joining was forbidden. That is why I fled, renouncing the evils of sorcery
forever. I never intended to trespass in your lands, and bear no ill will
toward your people. I deeply regret what I have done, but truly, it was an
accident. All I want is to find my husband and leave this place. I am alone and
bereft and afraid. For compassion's sake, will you not let me go?"
The
Arbiter drew himself upright. r'Compassion? There is no compassion for
wrongdoers in this city. You have taken a life. Forbidden! You are a foreigner
trespassing in our lands. Forbidden! You are a sorceress. Forbidden! What right
have you
to
compassion?"
Aurian
dropped her eyes. "None. Yet I ask it anyway. It
may
be—it is all I have left."
Again,
the Arbiters conferred. The man in the center, who obviously wielded greater
authority, seemed to be arguing with the other two. At last he turned to her.
"I believe that you art telling the truth, at any rate, for had you not
renounced your sorcery, you could have used your evil powers on those who
captured you, or to escape from us. You have not done so, which implies that
you mean no harm. And truly, I pity you, for you are alone and bereft, indeed.
Your husband has not reached this city. If he had, he wotftd have been brought
to us, in accordance
with
our law."
His
words hit Aurian like a physical blow. She had no need to feign grief or
dismay. Anvar and Sara must be dead! She was to blame, and all this had been
for nothing. When the Arbiter spoke again, his voice was less harsh. "By
law you should die for your crimes, yet surely the Reaper of Souls would look
upon us harshly for condemning a woman in your straits. Yet we cannot let you
go. So we will give you a choice. As an alternative to execution, you may risk
the Arena, where warriors—criminals like yourself-—fight to the death for the
entertainment of the Khisu and the people. You are said to show skill as a
warrior. Perhaps, if you fight well, you will win your freedom—or if you wish
to seek your husband further, you will have a choice of
following
him to the Granaries of the Reaper. Do you accept this judgment?"
It was
not a question, and Aurian knew it. But at least it left her with one slim
avenue of escape. "I accept—and I am grateful for your mercy," she
said.
"One
thing more ..." The Arbiter beckoned to an official of the court and spoke
to him in a low voice. The man left the room, and presently returned bearing a
gray metal box, intricately chased with strange, arcane symbols that made
Aurian shudder. The Arbiter blew away the coating of dust and raised the lid,
withdrawing something that she could not see. He ordered her guards to unbind
her, approached her cautiously, and with a surprisingly gentle touch, fastened
something around each of her wrists. As the second catch snapped shut, Aurian
lurched and fell, her scream of agony echoing in her ears. It felt as though
she were being wrenched inside out. A creeping weakness overwhelmed her, as
though her very soul were being leeched away. She felt strong arms beneath her
as the Arbiter lifted her to a bench by the wall and held a cup of wine to her
lips. Aurian sipped it gratefully. Her muscles would not support her, and her
head was swimming. But far worse than that, somewhere within her, unplaceable,
there lurked an absence—a cold gray void that seemed ever to slip away from her
seeking mind. "What have you done to me?" she whispered.
The
Arbiter sounded shaken.J'I have placed upon you the Bracelets of Zathbar
Wizard-Bane—artifacts won from a Dragon's hoard, long ago. The secrets of their
making were lost in the mists of time. I had no idea that they would affect you
so severely, but they are necessary, if you are to live within our lands. They
are set with spellstones that negate your sorcerous power, drawing it into
themselves, and they will act as a safeguard for my people against any attempt
on your part to employ your evil powers upon us."
Aurian
felt a flash of rage. Zathbar Wizard-Bane, indeed! Why, these people who
protested so strongly against the use of magic had actually employed Negative
magic to bind her powers! Oh Gods, Aurian thought despairingly. How am I ever
going to get out of this?
The
warriors' quarters at the Arena were pleasant—for a prison. Aurian's room was a
cell in that it had barred windows and a sturdy door, but the smooth white
walls and brown tiled floor were spotless, and there was a table, a chair, a
chest, and a narrow bed. Pegs were attached to the walls to hang clothing, and
a gay woven rug on the floor provided a splash of bright color. Aurian
remembered little of her journey to this place. Someone had helped her to her
cell and removed the bonds that had been placed upon her, and she had fallen
asleep on the bed
utterly
spent.
When
she awakened it was dusk. An oil lamp burned in niche high in the wall,
enclosed behind an iron grating, pit
, sumably in case she decided to set herself on fire, the Mage thought
wryly. The pain and weakness had passed, leaving only the hideous gray
void—the absence of her magic.
Aurian fought the panic that threatened to choke her. Don't be a fool,
she told herself, or you'll never get out of this. But oh, thai drear, chill
emptiness . , . Get used to it, she told herself implacably. Fast.
She sat
up, scanning the room, and saw a generous meal on the table. Ah, that looked
good! She seemed to have been hungry forever. Though it had cooled, it was
good. There was some kind of spiced, savory porridge made from cooked pulses, a
haunch of roast meaj^that turned out to be goat, and strange, flat bread. There
was a bowl of fruit, and white cheese so strong that it made her eyes water,
and wine, a rich, dark red, fruity and strong. Aurian gorged herself, making up
for her days of fasting. Then she returned to the bed with a brimming cup of
wine and the bottle, propped her back against the wall and put her feet up,
squinting at the dancing flame of the lamp that doubled and blurred in her
vision. Gods, that wine was strong! Or was it simply affecting her because she
was so spent?
The
Mage felt curiously numb and detached. The theft of her powers, her current
predicament, and the loss of Anvar and Sara—she couldn't face any of them, not
yet. She knew she ought to be making some kind of plan, but she simply could
not bring herself to care. Since her flight from the Academy she had been
constantly driven, constantly on a knife edge. Now
she was
imprisoned and forced to be still, and her mind and spirit were making the most
of the opportunity to rest and renew themselves. The wine helped, too. She
found herself drifting into a doze . . .
There
was the sudden snick of a key turning in the lock. Aurian shot bolt upright,
blinking in the dazzling sunlight that poured through the barred window of her
cell. She reached for her sword, but it was gone, of course. A tall,
brown-skinned man of middle years entered, bearing a tray. The Mage made no
move, but watched him as he went to the table and set his burden down. His head
was completely bald, and he wore a red patch over his left eye, A pale, jagged
scar ran down his face from beneath the patch. Beneath his loose red robes, his
body was broad in the shoulder and rangy, reminding her, with a pang, of Anvar.
He
turned to her, bowing deeply. "A propitious day to you, warrior." His
voice was deep and smooth.
Aurian,
reacting instinctively to his courtesy, inclined her head in reply. "A
propitious day to you, sir—and yours will be more propitious than mine, I
fear," she added dryly.
The man
smiled. "That remains to be seen, Eliizar am I, Swordmaster of the
Arena," He bowed again,
Aurian
got to her feet, rubbing her painfully stiff neck, and
responded
in kind, "Aurian am I—and a fool, it seems, for
ig to
sleep sitting up!" As she spoke, she wondered why the
!•••
'celets had not impaired her ability to understand the local
language.
Could there be a loophole^n the spell?
Eliizar
smiled, "You were wrary, indeed—and hungry, too, it seems," He cocked
an eyebrow at the scant debris from her previous night's supper. "I
thought it best to let you sleep. We have masseurs here who can remedy your
stiffness, but first, let us break our fast together, I am curious as to your
history, and I feel sure you have many questions that you would wish to ask
me."
Breakfast
consisted of eggs, hard-boiled and shelled; the ubiquitous flat bread; cheese,
honey, and fruit; and a covered pot from which issued the most tantalizing
aroma . . . "What's this?" she asked Eliizar.
His
eyebrows went up in surprise. "You do not know liafa? Why, you have never
lived! This is the warrior's boon—it gives
strength,
alertness, sustenance." He poured a cup of steaming black liquid and
handed it to Aurian, who grimaced.
It
looked like mud! Inhaling the heady aroma, she took a sip—and choked. The taste
was strong, and very, very bitter. "It—it doesn't taste the way it
smells," she said sheepishly.
Eliizar
smiled, and ladled a spoonful of honey into her cup, stirring vigorously.
"Try again," he prompted.
Aurian
picked up the cup as though it were a viper, but not wanting to lose face, she
drank again. This time her face lit up with delight. With the honey smoothing
out the bitterness, the drink was delicious—and stimulating, too. Aurian, who
had such difficulty waking up in the morning, approved. She began to tackle her
breakfast with a will.
"How
came you here, Aurian?" Eliizar asked, drawing her attention from the
food. "How comes a lady to be a warrior? Swordswomen are unknown in this
land."
Aurian
repeated the story she had told to the Arbiters. When she mentioned her two
missing companions, Eliizar's good eye narrowed thoughtfully. "Ah,"
he said. "Then there-may be some truth in the rumors after all."
"What
rumors?" Aurian pounced on the words. The Swordmaster hesitated. "It
may be nothing," he said at last. "You know how a rumor can grow from
nothing—" Aurian clamped her hand round his wrist. "Tell me!"
Eliizar looked away.
"Very well," he
said reluctantly. "There
was talk in thejyiarket some days ago ttet a Corsair ship had found outlanders
farther up the coast, and that one was a woman of surpassing fairness. But no
outlander has been seen in the city to my knowledge, save yourself."
"If
they had been captured, what would have happened to
them?
Please tell me."
"They
would have been brought before the Arbiters, as you were. That is our
law," the Swordmaster said brusquely. "But if they had not?"
Aurian persisted. "Well, there have long been rumors of an illegal trade
in slaves, but then the woman would have been sold to a house of pleasure. You
can be sure that she has not. Word of such a wonder would have reached every
man in the city by now, without a doubt. Leave it, Aurian. Whatever has
happened to them, it cannot affect you." Eliizar swallowed hard, looking
unhappy.
"Warrior, you must concentrate on your own survival in this place—for as
long as you can. The minute you entered the precincts of the Arena, you came
under a sentence of death, be it soon or late."
Aurian,
dismayed, let go of his arm. "But the Arbiter said I would have a chance
to win my freedom!"
The
Swordmaster shook his head. "It was cruel and wrong on his part to dangle
such a hope before you," he said flatly.
"Then
he lied? There is no way—"
"Impossible!"
Eliizar rose abruptly. "Here, you are naught but sword fodder for the
Khisu's entertainment. He is a cruel man, as I know to my cost. First I must
place your level of skill against the other warriors—I have your sword, to
return to you. You will train with them under supervision—we only fight to
death
within the Arena itself and in the Arena, always. Be
led.
When you do fight there, if you overcome your first
inent
you will then fight two together, then three. If, by some miracle, you survive
all that—we pit you against the Black Demon."
Aurian's
scalp prickled. "And if I defeat this Demon?"
"Then
you win your freedom. But it is impossible. No one has ever defeated the Demon.
No one can."
Aurian
stood, straightening her shoulders. "I will defeat him," she growled.
"When do we start?"
Eliizar
shook his head sadly, and left without another word. Aurian heard the key turn
in the lock. She shrugged and returned to her breakfast, refusing j:o countenance
the insidious fear she felt for herself, and for her child. She would need to
keep her strength up. After she had eaten she rested for a while, then began to
put herself into the deep meditation of Forral's long-neglected swordsman's
exercises. Whatever was to come, she would be ready. She had to be.
Ckapter 22
THE INVISIBLE
UNICORN
gain!"
Maya shouted. D'arvan gathered his exhausted • HHH limbs and rushed toward her across the forest
clearing, 'jj swinging his wooden
sword wildly. The warrior sidestepped neatly, stuck out a foot and tripped him.
The Mage went down like a felled tree, sprawling facedown in the mud and last
year's leaves. "I think that's enough for today," Maya said
tactfully, the corners of her mouth twitching with suppressed mirth as she went
over to help him up.
"You—you
vixen!" D'arvan spluttered, wiping the mud
from
his eyes.
"I'm
sorry, pet, but it is a standard move." Maya offered him her hand.
"If you like, I'll teach it to you tomorrow."
"Why
bother?" D'arvan scrambled up and retrieved his cloak that hung from a
nearby bough, wiping his glum face on the end of it before slinging it around
his shoulders. "We've been at this for about two weeks now, and I still
hardly know one end of a sword from the other!"
"It'll
coivt.e, don't worry. Two weeks is no time at all in sword training—especially
when starting from scratch at your
age."
Her
words did nothing to soothe his irritation. "So it's my age, now, is it?
It seems I can't win. When she teaches me magic, Eilin treats me like a child,
and now you tell me I'm in my dotage!" ;
"When
you act like this, I can't help thinking that Eilu has the right of it!"
Maya snapped. °>' >i
Seeing
the scowl on her face, D'arvan made an effort to shake off his gloom, afraid of
jeopardizing the love that was blossoming between them. He managed a lopsided
smile. 'T sorry, Maya—I know I'm out of temper this morning." He p his arm
round her shoulders as they began to wafle *«ck toward I the tower. He shivered, and it was not
just the cooling of b body in the chill gray winter's day. "I didn't sleep
well la-night—every time I closed my eyes, I had nightmares."
"Why
didn't you wake me?" The warrior tightened her
rt to I
was f
"I'm I
;put I
AURIAN •
337
arm
round his waist, her voice full of sympathy. "What were you dreaming
about, that was so dreadful?"
"It
was my brother—well, half brother. I kept dreaming that he was creeping up on
me with a knife—trying to kill me, as he tried once before." D'arvan
swallowed hard. He was still in thrall to the dregs of his dreams, feeling a
tension between his shoulder blades and dry tightness in his throat—the
lurking, all-pervasive terror of the stalking assassin, of the hidden knife in
the dark.
"Well,
I'm not surprised, considering—" Maya stopped in mid-stride and turned to
him, her eyes very wide. "D'arvan, you don't think it could be true, do
you? I mean, the two of you were so closely linked. You don't think he has
found out where you are, and he's coming to—"
D'arvan
gasped at the truth to which his own fear had blinded him. Her instincts were
always much surer than his own. "Dear Gods—Eilin!" he shouted.
"He'll come to the tower! Quick!" Snatching Maya's own sharp blade
from her scabbard, he plunged away through the trees, leaving the warrior, with
her shorter stride, straining to catch up.
"D'arvan,
you fool, wait!" she called after him. "You can't—" But he had
already left her far behind.
D'arvan
had almost reached the border of €lte trees that hemmed the grassy sward beside
the lake, when Eilin's mental shriek for help rocked him back on his heels.
Panting, he redoubled his pace, forcing his way through branches that sliced,
whiplike, across his chest and face, tripping over roots that seemed to rise
and reach out for him, twining about his ankles nd knees. He was too
preoccupied with thoughts of his brother > wonder why the forest seemed to
be so much denser, his way tirough it far longer than it had been before. Davorshan!
How had he managed to pass the wolves that guarded the valley? What sorcery had
he used to creep up on them like this? The Mage gasped out a curse. If only he
had paid more attention to his dreams! n
When
P'"xvan reached the lakeside he stopped dead, con-'used and dismayed. The
border of trees now ended right by the hore, digging in with writhing roots to
churn and obliterate the smooth, grassy slope that had been there before. That
was not the only change. The island tower had been transfigured
beyond
all recognition. Huge vines snaked up round the once smooth walls, scratching
the stonework and tapping at the hardened crystal of the windowed rooms.
Thickets of thorny bramble and sloe choked the wooden bridge and the ground
before
the tower door.
Round
the mainland end of the bridge, the apple trees from Eilin's orchard had
gathered in a tight knot. D'arvan watched
in amazement as unseasonal fruit swelled on each bough with uncanny
speed—but the reason failed to occur to him until a branch whipped back with
snakelike speed and hurled an apple like a stone from a slingshot. He dodged,
but the hard fruit drove with bruising force into his shoulder, missing his
face by inches. A fusillade of apples followed it, forcing him to duck behind a
tree for his own protection. But its roots began to tug themselves out of the
ground in a shower of soil as it moved to give the orchard trees a clear shot
at their target, The entire Valley was in turmoil; every growing thing was
moving to protect Eilin, Mistress of Earth-magic. And mistaking him for another
intruder, they were blocking him from going to her aid! Taking a firm grip with
both hands on Maya's sword, D'arvan began to hack at the surrounding branches,
frantic and unthinking in his haste.
A
sinister rustle passed through the ranks of the assembled trees. A crimson mist
began to loop and roil among the reaching branches—the rage of the forest. A
sound like the whistling howl of a gale filled D'arvan's ears as the boughs
began to toss and sway, their twigs tike bony fingers grasping at his hair and
tearing at his eyes and clothing. His knuckles dripped blood as the branches
clutched and smote at his hands, trying to knock the sword away. Far away, it
seemed, beneath the snarling, raging din of the forest's fury, he heard Maya,
crying for help. Torn, D'arvan tried to turn back to her, but his way was
blocked by a thicket of holly trees that bristled with glossy, dagger-pointed
leaves. Taking advantage of his hesitation, the forest flung roots like earth-encrusted
tentacles around his ankles. One sharp jerk and he was down. The roots began to
tug him away, farther back into the deep heart of the forest. Briars looped
round his hands, which still clutched the hilt of the sword, and dug clusters
of sharp thorns into the tender skin of his wrists and the backs of his hands.
Dust devils swirled across
AllRIAN •
339
the
ground, flinging dead leaves, earth, and pebbles stingingly into his eyes.
"Help
me . . ." Once again Eilin's cry seared D'arvan's mind; it was weak now,
and despairing.
"I
can't!" he gasped aloud, tears of pain and frustration running down his
face. Already the knees and elbows of his clothing had been torn to ribbons on
the rough ground, and the skin beneath was scraped raw. Already his hands were
becoming numb, their circulation cut off by the ever tightening loops of vine.
Soon he would lose his grip on the sword, then "he would be helpless to go
to his teacher's aid ...
Of
course! Fool! What he been thinking of? He was an Earth-Mage, too! No wonder
the forest had taken him for an enemy, hacking at it like some stupid,
untutored Mortal! Straining to focus his whirling thoughts, to remember what
the Lady Eilin had taught him over the past weeks, D'arvan gathered his power
and reached out with his mind, trying to contact the heart—the very soul—of the
forest.
It beat
back at him furiously, its intelligence obscured behind a mist of seething red
rage. But D'arvan persisted. "I'm a friend! A friend! I'll help you to
help the Lady! See, I'm an Earth-Mage, her own pupil. See?" Beseechingly,
he held his powers out, as Eilin had shown him, open to the scrutiny of the
forest. He summoned the moist, heady scents of spring's burgeoning and the
ancient musk of the mother soil that cradled the seed; the dapple of sunlight
in the beech tree's shade and the diamond-dance of the lively stream; the
silver of moonlight and the silk of morning mist; the stark white shfoud of
winter's mourning and the poignant exuberance of autumn's fire.
And
something changed. Like the snick of a key unlocking a door, like the falling
away of chains, like the relaxing of winter's claws upon the land with the
coming of spring, the forest accepted him. The howling died away to a muted
murmur, and D'arvan felt relief like the lifting of & massive weight as the
ire of the trees ceased to hammer at him. The roots and vines loosed their grip
and fell away, and a clear avenue opened before him, across the churned ground
and over the bridge, leading right to the door of the tower! Scrambling to his
feet, D'arvan ran, a single errant branch poking him hard in the back to hasten
him on his way.
The
vines across the door fell back with a slithering rattle as D'arvan approached,
sword in hand. As he jumped past them into the kitchen, he wondered if they
would come after him, but some force seemed to be preventing them from entering
the building. When he reached the bottom of the spiral staircase, the young
Mage discovered the reason. He staggered back, gagging on the reek of evil
magic. Choking, with streaming eyes, he pulled himself upright using the
smoothly curving stair rail and began to haul himself, step by step, up the
metal stairs.
The
upper rooms that led off the staircase were utterly devastated. D'arvan flinched
at the destruction, as he peered into room after room. The windows were
cracked, the wooden benches overturned and splintered, the tender young
seedlings torn and trampled underfoot. Now that he had opened his mind to the
use of his powers, the Mage could feel their distress acutely, their tiny,
soundless cries of pain piercing his mind and wringing at his heart. But each
room was empty of people, and reach though he might, he could no longer touch
Eilin's mind. Chamber after deserted chamber he passed during his ascent, and
found the same appalling destruction. Then, rounding the final curve of the
staircase, he stopped. At the top of the stairs was a figure that bore in its
left hand a sword that was dripping with blood. Davorshan. At the sight of D'arvan,
his face contorted into an evil, leering grin. "Hail and well met,
brother," he said. "It took longer than I had thought to find you—but
the weeks of wandering lost on those blasted moors will be well repaid by your
death!" Raising the blade, he stepped forward,
murder
in his eyes.
Davorshan
had the advantage of height—Maya had taught D'arvan that much. Grasping his
blade in a hand that was suddenly wet and slick with sweat, the Mage began to
back slowly down the stairs, feeling his way with careful feet since he knew
better than to take his eyes from his brother, even for an instant. Davorshan's
hatred scorched into his brain—like the rage of the forest, but deeper,
closer—far more intimate. They had been linked for so many years—how well his brother
knew him! Inexorably, Davorshan's malice ate into his mind, -working on his
fears and self-doubts, chipping away at his confidence and courage.
"Half-breed!" his brother spat. "Spineless, gutless, powerless mongrel!
Did you really
think it would
work,
AURIAN •
341
D'arvan,
running away to hide behind the Lady's skirts? And what have we here?"
His
merciless, rummaging will unearthed a memory—to D'arvan, the most precious of
all. "So!" Davorshan's cruel laughter mocked him. "What have you
been up to, brother mine? Rutting with a little Mortal bitch, since you can't
manage anything better! Is she any good, D'arvan? Perhaps I'll try her, after
I've killed you. Or maybe I'll do it first, so you can watch! Where is she, eh?
Where have you hidden your Mortal slut?"
Red
rage flooded D'arvan's mind. His hand, holding the sword, began to shake. Yet
Maya's training held firm. She had taught him better than to be gulled by a
transparent gibe. Instead he began to gather his powers as he continued to back
away, wondering which aspect of his Earth-magic he could use against his
brother. The plants upstairs were too small, but . . . Could he bring the vines
that enveloped the tower to his aid? If they could break through a window—
"Oh,
no you don't!" Davorshan's voice was a snarl. "I won't waste my time
on a contest of magic, D'arvan—not on her ground!"
"Really?"
D'arvan lifted his hand, ready to strike.
"I
warn you! Do you want to be responsible for Eilin's death?"
D'arvan
stopped in mid-gesture, his eyes flicking involuntarily past his brother to the
top of the stairs.
"Well
done." Davorshan sneered. ^It has finally occurred to you! Had she been
dead, you would have known it!"
"Where
is she?" D'arvan cried. "What have you done to her?"
Davorshan
shrugged, and held up his dripping sword. "Don't depend on her coming to
your aid, though you gave me no time to finish the job. But if you want to
bring magic into this, remember where my talents lie. I can raise the waters of
the lake to swamp this tower! And when the tower collapses, where will Eilin
be, eh?"
"Bastard!"
D'arvan grated through clenched teeth.
"No,
brother. You're the bastard. Eliseth told me that much. You've leeched my power
all our lives—the power that
should
have rightfully been mine—and when I kill you it will all be mine! You should
never have been born!"
So that
was how Eliseth had subverted him! D'arvan felt his brother's resentment, his
burning greed and the unreasoning rage that consumed him. When it reached a
crescendo, Davorshan would attack. He felt carefully with his foot for the next
step down, and found it to be the broader landing of one of the tower rooms.
The glimmerings of a plan came into his mind. He stretched his lips wide in a
mocking grin. "Oh no, my brother, you're wrong. Eilin told me the whole
story. I'm the child of our mother's love. She hated Bavordran, and she only
had you to allay his suspicions. I may be the bastard, but you're the one who
should never have been born!"
"Liar!"
Davorshan charged heedlessly down, his face twisted, his bloody sword flailing.
D'arvan wrenched himself to one side, into the open doorway of the room, and
stuck out his foot as he had seen Maya do only that morning. He felt the hot
wrench of tortured muscles as his brother's momentum twisted his leg to one
side, unbalancing him—but as he fell, he heard thudding and clanging as
Davorshan tumbled headlong down the metal staircase. It had worked! D'arvan
used an upturned bench to help himself to his feet. Sweat sprang out on his
brow as fire and ice lanced agonizingly up the injured leg, which would not
bear his weight. He staggered, falling again.
Spitting
out one of Maya's favorite oaths, D'arvan pulled himself to the stairs and
began to slide down, step by step, on his rump, as he and Davarshan had done so
often as children. The memory hurt like a knife twisting in a wound, but
childhood was over now, and the soul companion of those days had turned into a
murdering monster. He had to get to the bottom to finish Davorshan, if yet he
lived—for otherwise his brother would surely finish him.
By the
time he reached the bottom, his face was soaked with sweat and tears. Davorshan
lay facedown on the broad kitchen flags at the foot of the steps, unmoving. D'arvan
prayed he might already be dead. The hilt of the sword was ice in his trembling
hand as he perched on the lowest step, directly above his brother. "Oh,
Gods," he prayed, "please don't force me to do this!" But
Davorshan moaned just then, and stirred, rolling onto his back. Though his eyes
were glazed, the hatred, uncon-
AURIAN •
343
querable,
still twisted his mind. Still and always. D'arvan faced it at last, and
accepted. Lifting the sword high in both hands, he drove the point down through
his brother's heart—and felt pain unspeakable ram through his own breast as
their minds linked for the last time. Screaming, he convulsed, his arms
clutched round his chest as he doubled over.
"Brother
..." Davorshan's broken whisper fled through D'arvan's mind, as his
brother's soul fled his body. D'arvan felt the pain in his chest give way to
the searing wrench that marked the passing of a Mage, A Mage who had died by
his hand.
"D'arvan!"
Maya's gruff voice was a ray of light that pierced the dark well of the Mage's
grief. Numbly, he lifted his head to look at her. Dropping down beside him on
the step, she put her arms around him. Tears, tears that he himself had been
unable to shed^ flooded her face, and he knew she understood. Yet her voice, when
she spoke, was surprisingly matter-of-fact. "You killed him." It
needed no answer.
"The
way things stand, he won't be the last," Maya went on. "It's never an
easy thing, for most of us. It never should be. All we can do is try to
distance ourselves a little and get on with our lives as best we can. But I
promise you that never again will it be as bad as this first time. The worst is
over now, love."
D'arvan
clung to her, oddly comforted by her blunt words. How like his Maya, to
dispense compassion and common sense in the same breath. How lucky he was to
have her, in all this ruin and death . . . "Eilin!" His voice
cracked. "Maya, she's upstairs. Hurt—badly, I think!"
"Seven
bloody demons!" Maya leapt to her feet. "Where?"
"At
the top." He tried to get up, and sank back down again with a yelp of
pain.
"You're
wounded?" She whirled back sharply.
"Wrenched
my leg, doing that tripping move of yours. You go on^I'll follow as best I
can."
Maya
bit her lip, nodded, and fled upstairs.
D'arvan
made slow and painful progress, hauling himself up by his good leg and the
stair rail. He was only halfway up when he heard the ring of booted feet on the
metal treads and
-S~.-*
May a
reappeared round the curve, abruptly stopping her headlong descent when she saw
him. "She's dying."
Maya
was right. D'arvan knew it as soon as he saw the Lady, who lay in the wreckage
of her chamber like a crumpled bundle of rags. He had not known that one body
could hold so much blood. It was everywhere, splattered and smeared across the
bed and walls, pooled on the floor, soaking her robes that were rent and sliced
in a dozen places. Her skin already held the pale translucence of imminent
death. Maya propped
him against the wall with his weight balanced on his good leg, and ran
back to Eilin. The old D'arvan would have retched and turned his eyes away from
the horror. The new D'arvan felt his guts twist—but with outrage. In one grim
instant, his grief and guilt at killing Davorshan vanished. "/ will not let
this happen!" His voice sounded alien and distant, even to himself.
"D'arvan, there's nothing we can do for her." Maya was on her knees
beside Eilin, her voice choked with grief. "Even a Healer couldn't—"
"My father can."
"What?"
D'arvan
felt very calm. It was a dangerous thing to try, a desperate thing—but it was
their only chance. "Maya, get out of here. You mustn't be caught up in
this."
"Damned
if I will!" She scrambled to her feet, her hands and knees stained with
blood. "You haven't time to fight me over it." She picked up the
Lady's staff from the floor and handed it to him. "Here. You'll need this
for support—in more
ways
than one."
"Stubborn
bitch!" He kissed her mouth, overwhelmed by love for her, and felt the
tension of her lips melt as she return
his
embrace.
"Pigheaded
bastard!" she retorted. "Be careful, D'arvan She stepped back,
unsheathed her sword, and flung it out of the door. "You can't have iron
near the Phaerie, the legends say,
she
explained.
"Really."
D'arvan was annoyed with himself for not knowing that. "Do they say
anything else useful?"
"Umm
. .
. yes. You have to call him by
three true
names.
Hurry, D'arvan."
Leaning
on the staff to support his injured leg, D'arvan
AUR1AN •
345
gathered
his powers, hurling his mind and spirit forth, and tried somehow to reach the
mysterious other place where the Phaerie were said to dwell. Once more he
invoked the essence of the forest—its scents and colors, all its moods through
the changing days. The sounds of drowsy bees and bright birds, the rustle of
leaves and ripple of stream, the scuttling dash of rabbit and squirrel, the
soft, careful footfall of deer and stealthy glide of fox and weasel. Taking a
deep breath, he called, using both voice and mind. "Hellorin! Forest Lord!
Father! In the name of Adrina, my mother, I summon you!"
Nothing
seemed to be happening. Yet so clear, so real was his vision of the forest that
he could almost see it taking shape around him. The ruined chamber faded from his
sight, and as if through a shifting mist he saw trees take shape—the stately
silver columns of beeches, a sturdy oak gnarled like the thews of a giant,
supple willow and martial holly bristling with spears. Gay hawthorn like a
flower-decked maiden and slender rowan, ethereal as a dream. Through the trees
starlit water glinted— with a start he recognized the lake and its island,
though the tower had vanished. He could smell the heady summer scent of the
grass that covered the solid earth beneath his feet. But it was winter outside!
How could this be? D'arvan's eyes widened. Maya was standing ro one side of the
forest clearing, her mouth agape, her hand reaching automatically for her
missing sword. And at her feet, the still form of Eilin lay.
"Who
summons the Forest Lord?". Th^ voice was deep and sad as the autumn
wildwood, as light and merry as a summer breeze amidst the treetops. Before the
mighty oak a figure stood, obscuring the great tree with its immensity. He was
baked in shimmering, changeful gray and green, and so vast was he that the
silver glinting in his long dark hair was the light of stars. His brow was
circled with a diadem of golden oak leaves, and above them towered the shadowy
branches of the proud stag's crown. Once more he spoke, his voice like winter's
bite, like the gladsome warmth of a new spring day. "Who dares summon the
Lord of the Phaerie?"
D'arvan,
awestruck, almost dropped to his shaking knees. He took a firm grip on Eilin's
staff and reminded himself that this—this being—was his father. He bowed
deeply, at a loss for
words.
This was far beyond his wildest imaginings. What could he possibly say to one
such as Hellorin?
"My
Lord, allow me to present the Earth-Mage D'arvan— your son." Maya's gruff
voice cut through the silence.
"What?"
the Forest Lord thundered, transfixing her with his glare. Lightning flashed in
his eyes, beneath darkly frowning brows. As he raised his hand, the very trees
seemed to quail. D'arvan suddenly found that he could move. Leaning on the staff,
he limped across to Maya, placing himself protectively in front of her.
"It's true!" he cried. "I called you by your true name of
Father, and you answered. My mother was Adrina of the Magefolk, and in her name
I summoned you, for we have dire need of your help. The Lady Eilin, my mother's
friend and Guardian of this Valley, is dying." It all came out in a rush.
Before D'arvan's astonished eyes, the awesome figure vanished. "Where has
he gone:*" D'arvan looked wildly around. Then, from behind the oak stepped
his father—shrunk now to normal, Mortal size, but not a whit diminished in
might and majesty. Great muscles etched and shadowed his bare chest beneath the
cloak. Strong legs, clad in dark leggings and tall boots, were planted wide
apart on the forest floor. A ghostly image of the antlered crown still rose
above his oak-circled brow. His stern, kingly features and hard mouth were
gentled now, and the expression in his dark eyes was indecipherable. "My
son?" The deep voice was soft, and lilted with a
thousand
questions. ""-
The
Forest Lord strode forward, and strong hands clasped D'arvan's shoulders. Dark,
fathomless eyes searched his face, and D'arvan found his own eyes brimming with
tears. "My son," Hellorin murmured, the beginnings of a wondering
smile lifting the corners of his sculpted mouth. "My own son, and 1 never
knew I had you."
"Father
. . ." D'arvan whispered. Dropping the staff, he flung his arms round
Hellorin's broad shoulders, and there, in the starlit forest clearing, father
and son embraced at last.
"D'arvan?
Lord Hellorin?" Maya's hesitant voice broke into their silent communion.
The tears in her eyes were evidence that she was far from unmoved by their
reunion—but ever practical, she gestured toward Eilin's stricken body. "My
apolo-
AURIAN •
347
gies,
Lords, but the Lady's condition is desperate. We may already be too late."
The
Forest Lord lifted an eyebrow. "Who is this temeritous person?" he
asked his son.
"This
is Lieutenant Maya, a peerless warrior, a brave and true companion,
and"—D'arvan's voice rang out with proud defiance—"my own lady."
The
Forest Lord burst out laughing. Maya was scowling, and D'arvan gestured
urgently for her to be silent, fearing the furious outburst that he knew was
coming. "I fail to see what is so amusing," he said icily.
Hellorin
took a deep, gasping breath, wiping his eyes. "Ah, my son," he
chuckled. "How good it is to see you already carrying on the ancient
traditions of our people!"
"What?"
D'arvan was stunned.
"Do
you pay no attention to the legends?" his father asked, his eyes dancing
with mirth. "All those stories about the Phaerie luring Mortals away to be
their brides—and bridegrooms for that matter, for the ladies of my people would
make my life a misery, indeed, if I were to deny them their chance at the
occasional lusty Mortal stud!"
He
turned to Maya with a deep bow. "Lady Maya, I am honored to meet my son's
Chosen, and I apologize for my unseemly mirth. In my opinion, he has chosen
very well, indeed." His gaze traveled over her like a caress—so blatantly,
potently lecherous that D'arvan found himself grinding his teeth.
Maya
crimsoned, uncertain whe'ther'to be indignant or flattered. Then drawing
herself up to her full height, she looked Hellorin coldly in the eye. "My
thanks for your courtesy, Lord, but this is hardly the time. Might we, perhaps,
consider the urgent business at hand?"
D'arvan
groaned and covered his eyes with one hand, and Hellorin whooped with mirth.
"An excellent choice, indeed! D'arvan, you have a she-wolf on your
hands!" His voice became sober. "Fear not, little warrior. The Lady
Eilin will come to no further harm. The Phaerie honor her for her work in this
vale, and I would not allow her to die. In summoning me, you brought yourselves
into my kingdom, where time holds no sway. Her life is suspended here—suspended
and preserved. But I must know who irresponsible for this atrocity, and why.
You are
right—this is no light matter, and my instincts tell me it is part of a greater
pattern of mischief. So let us make ourselves comfortable, children. Tell me
what has come to pass in
the
world outside."
He
waved his hand, and the clearing in which they stood wavered and blurred. The
surrounding trees became the pillars of a great hall, their branches linking
overhead to form a roof. At one side, where the crimson-berried hollies had
stood in splendor, a fire blazed in a huge fireplace. The floor was covered
by a
deep green carpet.
D'arvan
gasped. "Why, it's like the Great Hall at the
Academy!"
"And
from whom do you think the Magefolk stole the
design?"
Hellorin's voice held a grim edge that vanished with his next words.
"Come, sit."
D'arvan
retrieved Eilin's staff, and Maya helped him limp
to the
deep, comfortable chairs beside the roaring fire. A huge
gray
hound was sprawled before the flames, taking up all the
space
in front of the broad hearth. Though Hellorin had made
no
visible summons, the doors at the far end of the hall opened,
and a
tall, copper-haired Phaerie lady entered, gowned in green
and as
slender as the willow she resembled. Her eyebrows went
up at
the sight of the bloodstained strangers, "Will you bring
refreshments,
please?" Hellorin asked her. "And convey the
Lady
Eilin to our Healers."
Her
brown eyes^idened at the sight of the Earth-Mage, "Lady Eilin! My Lord,
what evil is this?"
"That
is what I intend to find out." He waved her away. "Summon the
Phaerie, my dear. I believe that this event may mark the end of our long
waiting."
The
Phaerie woman's eyes burned. "At once, my Lord!" In a soundless
explosion of golden light, she vanished.
Hellorin
chuckled at Maya's dumbfounded expression. "We generally use the
doors," he said dryly. "Melianne is rather
excitable,
however."
D'arvan
was utterly exhausted, drained in body and spirit by the events of the day. At
first he thought the ripple in the air before the hearth was a trick played by
the firelight on his tired eyes. Then he heard Melianne's sharp voice coming,
it seemed, out of thin air. "Barodh, you oaf, get out of the way!"
The
AURIAN '
349
hound
leapt up and slunk guiltily to its master's side, whining. Where it had been
lying, the shimmering air began to glow, forming a globe of golden light which
cleared to reveal a low, round table. On its snowy cloth reposed a flask of
clear yellow wine and three crystal goblets. Bread and fruit took up the
remaining space, and the fragrance of the food made D'arvan's mouth water. But
his attention was diverted by Maya's anguished cry: "Eilin!" He swung
round in his chair to see the body of the Earth-Mage surrounded by the same
golden light. Even as he looked, she was gone.
"Do
not worry, Maya." Hellorin's voice was soothing, "My Healers far
outstrip those of the Magefolk in skill. Eat, children, and rest yourselves—and
tell me your tale," He poured wine for them, and handed them the sparkling
goblets, Maya, about to take a sip, suddenly hesitated, and the Forest Lord
smiled. "Legends again, Maya? Well, you need not worry about that one.
Tasting our food and drink will not put you any further into my power than the
two of you have already pur yourselves by summoning me,"
D'arvan
met Maya's eyes and shrugged. This was his father, after all, and he had helped
them so far. He took a sip of the wine and saw Maya do likewise, though she
still looked suspicious. Somehow, the thought that she would follow him, even
into this, warmed him as much as the drink—which was potent enough. D'arvan
felt it course through his body, as though his veins were running with liquid
fire. His weariness fled, and the room seemed to come jnto sharp and vivid
focus around him. The tight, hot ache of his injured leg vanished as though it
had never been.
Hellorin
pressed food on them, and as they ate, D'arvan told of Miathan's perfidy, the
breaking of the Mages' Code, and the fall of the Magefolk into evil, Hellorin
said nothing until D'arvan reached the end of his story, telling of Davorshan's
attack on Eilin and his brother's death, followed by the desperate summoning of
the Phaerie Lord. As he faltered into silence, his father leapt from his chair,
one fist pumping skyward in a gesture of victory. "At last!" he
exulted. "At last!" Outside the hall, a chorus of glorious Phaerie
voices cried out in wild celebration. Maya leapt to her feet with an
exclamation of dismay.
"Father!"
D'arygjn's shocked voice cut through the Forest
Lord's
rejoicing. Breathing hard, Hellorin resumed his chair. "Oh, my son,"
he gasped, "if you only knew how we have waited down the endless years for
this news! For goodness' sake, sit down, girl." He waved an irritable hand
at Maya who was still on her feet, her eyes casting round the hall for a weapon
of
some
kind.
"My
Lord, how can you rejoice at such a grim tale?"
D'arvan
asked in cold reproof. "Have you forgotten my mother? I'm Magefolk as well
as Phaerie, and you mock both my grief and that of all folk who suffer because
of this evil!"
Hellorin
looked abashed. "My deepest apologies to you both. Please, Lady, sit down
and let me explain; then perhaps you will understand my unseemly joy."
Maya
gave him a savage look. "This had better be good," she growled.
Hellorin winced.
"You
have been taught that the Universe is shaped by Chance and Balance," the
Forest Lord began, pouring himself a cup of wine. "You may not know that
the Magefolk were brought into this world to maintain and guard the Balance, as
others were on other worlds, lest Chance gain a stranglehold, and the Universe
be destroyed by Chaos, Chance's bastard
child."
Maya's
fingers drummed impatiently on the arm of her
chair,
"I'm
getting to it, woman, I'm getting to it!" Hellorin
snorted.
"To shorten a lengthy tale, we Phaerie have always been, well, rather
unpredictable—and we wield great powers of the Old Magic. The ancient Magefolk
feared us, believing us agents of Chance, which was, in a way, quite true. They
contrived to shut us out of the world—to imprison us in this Elsewhere, which
"we cannot leave unless summoned, and from which we might not influence
the events of the world. We arc-also unable to bear children among ourselves in
this place-hence our need for the occasional Mortal or Mage, immune to the
Magefolk spells, to increase our race."
D'arvan
froze, paralyzed by a new fear, a new grief, "You mean you used my mother
. . ." he gasped,
"No—never!"
Hellorin reached out to grasp his arm. "Do you think we Phaerie are
monsters? No child is born to us, save through deepest love ... It tore my
heart when Adrina re-
AURIAN •
351
turned
to Nexis to fulfill that ridiculous promise to her father. I wept, and raged,
and cursed—desperate to go to her, to find her and bring her home. But I could
not come unless I was summoned, and no one summoned me—until today." His
voice was choked with grief.
"Oh,
Father," D'arvan whispered, too moved to say more.
Hellorin
took a long swallow of his wine. "Now it may be clear to you why we are
unfriends with the Magefolk. They robbed us of our freedom, over many a long
age—and they were wrong to do so. You see, Chance is as essential to the world
as Balance. Without us, the Magefolk began to stagnate, becoming more
introspective, more proud and self-willed. In their pride, they created the
four great Artifacts of Power, of which the Caldron is but one. When the
Cataclysm came, we almost escaped them, but failed. Then, in our bitterest
moment, came our greatest hope. The Sword of Flame, the greatest of the Four
Weapons, was given into our keeping by its makers, who desired that it should
be taken out of the world until ir was claimed by the One for whom it had been
forged. When the time was right, they told us, we must return it to the world,
setting traps and guards about it to ensure that it would only fall into the proper
hands.
"
'But how shall we know whose hand was meant to hold Ins thing?' we asked.
"
'That will be your test,' they told us.
"
'How shall we know when the Sword is needed?' we begged. . ^
"
'You will know,' they said, 'A time will come when the Magefolk will dwindle
and foil, and fell upon one another like wolves. Brother will slay brother, and
ambition betray trust, and the world will fell into great evil. That will be
the time,'
"
'But how shall we return the Sword to the world?' we asked.
"
'How can we guard it, where we are powerless?*
"
'That,' they said, 'is your problem.' So I asked them; 'What is to be our
reward for undertaking this great task?' "
Hellorin
paused, his eyes gleaming. "They promised us our , using the Sword to
circumvent the ancients' spells and bring us back into the world. We swore
fealty to it, and to the One who will wield it. When he claims it, we will
follow him
back
into the world, to fight at his side against the evil. Having overcome it, we
will be free, as once we were. Free, my children!"
"When
brother slays brother," D'arvan whispered. "So the
time is
at hand. But how will you return the Sword, Father?
How
will you guard it?"
The
Forest Lord would not meet his eyes, but simply sat, staring into the fire, his
face shadowed by sorrow. The silence
stretched
between them.
"I
take it, my Lord, that this silence means that you intend to use us,
somehow," Maya said bluntly.
Hellorin
looked up at last, nodding. "D'arvan, I'm sorry," he said.
"There are age-old laws governing dealings with the Phaerie. Laws I made
myself, long ago, for the sake of my people. When you summoned me, you put
yourself under those laws, and I cannot alter them, even for my son. You asked
a boon of me—the saving of Lady Eilin's life—and I granted it. Now you are
beholden to me, and I can demand a service from you. Do you understand?"
"You
want us to guard the Sword." D'arvan's disappointment in his father warred
with his understanding of the Forest Lord's predicament. A ruler should obey
his own laws, and Hellorin had the responsibility for his people on his
shoulders. "I'll try," he said at last, "but Father, I ask only
this—I beg you, leave Maya out of it."
"No,
D'arvan! We/e in this together!"
"D'arvan,
I cannot," The voices were simultaneous in their
protest.
The
Mage looked from his father to his lover with mounting annoyance. "Will
you two stop that!"
Maya
and Hellorin looked at one another and burst out laughing. "Ah, what a
woman!" Hellorin said. "How I wish I could keep you both here with
me! But we are in the grip erf events much larger than any of us." He held
out his arms an1 gathered both of them in a close embrace. "I promise you
wi not be parted, though you must be sundered as lovers until our tasks are
complete. That being so, the large events must wait a while. You need time
together—as far as time applies here— and a room is ready for you. Go,
children, and rest—or not, as
AURIAN •
353
the
case may be!" His eyes twinkled wickedly. "I will call you when it's
time to go."
They
met again in the Great Hall, after the passage of a night by wordly standards,
but far too short a time by those of D'arvan and Maya. Hellorin embraced them
once more. "Are you ready, children?"
They
nodded. They were, as far as they might be. During their time alone they had
shared fears and secrets, exchanged their own private vows, and loved one
another endlessly, trying to store up memories for the time they must spend
apart. "Will Eilin be all right?" Maya asked, and D'arvan marveled
once more at her courage as she stood, straight and composed, before his
father.
Hellorin
nodded. "Our Healers say she will recover, and she will stay with us in
safety and honor until this businesss is
done."
"Thank
you," Maya said simply. "Lord—have you any idea how long that will
be?" There was a catch to her voice, and D'arvan suddenly realized that
she was as afraid as he,
Hellorin
shook his head. "Until the One claims the Sword, that is all we know. Let
us hope, for all our sakes, that he hurries!"
Maya's
eyes twinkled. "What makes you so sure that it's a man, my Lord?" She
stepped back to let D'arvan say his own farewells.
Hellorin
embraced him roughly. "How it grieves me, to ilose the son I have only
just found." , j,
"It
grieves me to lose you," D'arvan whispered. "I hope, rfien this is
all over, we'll be able to make up for it."
Hellorin
nodded gravely. "And now, my son, you must ce us into your world," he
said.
D'arvan
stared at him. "Me? But how?"
"Do
as you did yesterday. Summon the forest. The real st. Use the Lady Eilin's
staff that you bear—it has more yer than you imagine."
It was
easier than D'arvan had expected. Eilin's staff emed to want to go home, of its
own accord. Within a few iths, they stood on the banks of the lake at sunrise.
The ;s was scarred where tree roots had gouged it, and though
vines
had retreated from the tower, the stonework was
scored
and the windows broken, leaving the building open to the elements. "It
would break Eilin's heart to see this," D'arvan
murmured.
"She
will not." As Hellorin spoke, the tower blurred—and vanished. In its
place, on the island, stood an immense red crystal. As it caught the sun's
first rays, it glowed with pulsing brilliance and hummed with power, dazzling
the eye. Within its glittering facets, the outline of the Sword could be
glimpsed, shimmering with its own ghostly light.
"That
will never do!" Hellorin waved his hand—and the massive gem clouded and turned
gray, taking on the appearance of a huge, rough boulder. Vegetation swarmed up
to cover its sides, and moss and lichen appeared on its grainy surface.
May a
gasped. "How did you do that?" she demanded. "I thought you had
no power in this world."
"I
do it through D'arvan," the Forest Lord explained. "He brought me
here, and he is part Phaerie, like me, and part Mage, and the Magefolk made
these rules. But we must hurry. I can only bend their magic so far."
Already strain was showing on Hellorin's face. "Now, my dearest
daughter—"
"Wait!"
Maya ran to D'arvan and threw her arms around
him.
"I
love you," she whispered.
"I
love you, too." He kissed her one last time, and stepped back reluctantly
as the Forest Lord raised his hand.
Maya blurred—and
vanished. In her place appeared the most beautiful creature-that had been seen
since the dawning of the world. A unicorn—insubstantial—made up it seemed from
all kinds of light: starlight's glimmer, gossamer moonlight, silken dawn
mistlight, and incandescent sunbursts where her hooves touched the ground. On
her forehead was a long, slender, wickedly pointed silver horn.
"See?"
Hellorin said softly. "Our warrior still bears her sword—for it will be
her task to protect the Sword of Flame. Only you can see her; to all others she
will be invisible. To be worthy of the Sword, the wielder must be wise as well
as courageous. In order to approach the Sword of Flame, the One must discover a
way to see the Unseen—for in no other way can our Invisible Guardian be
passed."
"Passed?"
D'arvan shouted. "Killed, you mean?"
AUR1AN •
355
"No,
no!" Hellorin forestalled him. "I do not mean killed. It is part of
the spell that if Maya becomes visible to any person save yourself, her
Guardianship will be suspended and she will return to her normal shape. There
will be no need for killing. Besides," he added, "would a being who
was worthy of the Sword of Flame wantonly slay such a beautiful creature? I
think not."
D'arvan
shook his head. "And what do you have in store for me?" he asked
tightly.
"You?
You are Earth-Mage and son of the Forest Lord. You bear the Lady's staff, and
the forest will do your bidding. You must bring back the wildwood to this
Valley, to fill it with an impenetrable barrier of trees. The wild things will
dwell here, and be sustained, and the wolves will be your friends and share
your task. You will guard the Sword from all enemies, but the forest will
shelter the enemies of evil, and you will guard and sustain them—yet they will
never see you, or know of your presence. You and Maya will share your
Guardianship until the One comes for the Sword, when you will be freed and
reunited —as we all will be at that time." As he spoke, Hellorin's outline
began to shift and shimmer. "I can stay no longer. Farewell, my son—-and
forgive me," He vanished.
D'arvan
looked at the unicorn. The fierce, beautiful creature snorted and pawed the
ground, flinging up clods of turf in sunburst explosions. Then she trotted to
the Mage and rested her head on his shoulder, and her huge dark eyes were
fathomless pools of sorrow. D'arvan flung his arms round her strong, arching
neck beneath the sweeping mane, his throat tight with tears. "Oh, my
love," he murmured, "how I'll miss you!"
The
invisible unicorn snorted and tossed her head.
"You're
right," D'arvan said. "I had better get started."
Turning,
he lifted the Lady's staff and began to summon the forest.
Chapter 23
DEMON
__ he Arena buzzed with the noise of the
excited crowd. I^BB The sweeping tiers of marble benches were tightly packed
with sweating bodies, all crushed together. Excitement was at fever pitch, the
crowd's attention alternating between the sanded circular fighting area on the
floor of the massive stone bowl, and the flower-decked royal balcony where sat
the frowning Khisal—the Prince who was the only heir to the throne—and the
smiling Khisu Xiang and his new Queen, the Khisihn, whose wedding was being
celebrated today. The crowd gawked at the balcony with great curiosity. It was
indeed a day of wonders—that the Khisu, content for so long with his harem of
beauties, should have finally elevated another lady to be his consort in place
of the old Queen, dead these many years. Rumor said that she had been slain by the
Khisu's own hand. Wrinkled, sharp-eyed crones nodded sagely to one another.
"The young Prince'11 have to watch his step now," they were saying.
"He never had his father's favor. If the new Queen drops a son, Khisal
Harihn will find himself in a sack at the bottom of the river, like his
mother!"
They
watched the early bouts with scant attention and less patience, waiting for the
real entertainment to start. There was a new warrior to fight today. A
foreigner—and, Reaper preserve us—a woman! A sorceresfre and as fierce as the
Black Demon itself! Rumor had it that she had laid an entire village to waste,
downriver. Because of this, the Arena had filled early that day. Outside the
gate, hundreds of disappointed people were still
being
turned away.
In the
warriors' yard beneath the stone tiers of the Arena, it was shady and cool.
Aurian, alone in a corner, was going through Portal's exercises, trying to
prepare her body and mind for the coming ordeal. It was difficult to suppress
the fear she felt for her child, knowing that this day's exertions and peril
might spell the end for the hapless mite. If she had had her magic, she might
have been able to protect it, but as it was . . . "Oh, Chathak," she
prayed, "protect this child, the child of warriors."
AURIAN '
357
Aurian
was vaguely aware of the eyes of the other combatants fixed curiously upon her.
They were strangers to one another, kept apart lest unfortunate friendships
develop between them. They met only in closely monitored training sessions, and
even then were not allowed to speak to each other. She had trained with several
of them over the last weeks, astonishing even Eliizar with her prowess. Apart
from training, her days had been spent pleasantly enough in eating, resting,
and bathing in the Arena's large pool. Aurian was as ready as she could be. She
forced all thoughts of her erstwhile companions, and even her child, from her
mind, in order to gain the inner calm and poise that she would need to save her
life and regain her freedom, for despite Eliizar's warning, she was determined
to try.
Despite
his initial reluctance, Eliizar had become a friend, as had his plump, motherly
wife, Nereni, who took care of Aurian, since she was the only female warrior.
Through their talks, Aurian had discovered that Eliizar had been a warrior of
great prowess and an officer in the Royal Guard. He had lost his eye during an
assassination attempt on the Khisu, when he had singlehandedly killed all four
attackers. Since cripples were not tolerated in Khazalim society, Eliizar's
only options had been slavery or death for himself and his beloved wife.
Fortunately, in a rare gesture of gratitude, Xiang had intervened, and Eliizar
had been rewarded with the post of Swordmaster at the Arena. "And a cruel,
backhanded reward it was," he had confided to Aurian. "I am forced to
send strong, healthy young warriors to their deaths to pleasure a bloodthirsty
mob. How can a man live with such a thing and still sleep at nights? Yet I have
no choice but to remain. To leave this post would mean death or slavery, and
for poor Nereni also. Truly, I hate the Khisu for what he has done to me."
"Are
you ready?" Eliizar's voice brought Aurian back to the present. The large
wooden doors that led to the killing grounds had been opened. A warrior was
limping in, aided by two attendants and bleeding from several wounds. Two
armored Arena guards carried his opponent—a mauled and bloody corpse. Aurian
recognized the twisted features as belonging to a brave, laughing young man
against whom she had sparred only two days before.
358 •
MAGGIE FuRty
Eliizar
wiped his face with a shaking hand. "May the Reaper forgive me," he
murmured, and Aurian's heart went out to him. Impulsively, she laid a hand on
his arm. "Eliizar, you must get out of here. When I win my freedom, you
and Nereni should come with me to the North. I will have need of a true friend
and a good warrior, one eye or no."
Eliizar
looked at her in amazement, then turned away as the great gong sounded,
summoning the Mage to combat. "Forgive me, Aurian," he whispered.
"Nothing
to forgive," said Aurian lightly. "If this is my only road to
freedom, I would choose it in any case. See you later, Eliizar—and think on
what 1 said. I meant it." She dropped a daring kiss on the top of his bald
head, then, striving for calm, she stepped into the tunnel, whispering a
warriors' prayer that Forral had taught her long ago. She was ready. She
had to
be.
Aurian
stepped out of the shadowy tunnel into the white-hot glare of the Arena. A
mighty roar went up from three thousand throats, echoing and reechoing within
the confines of the bowl until she was rocked, buffeted, borne aloft by the
sound. She lifted her sword—her own Coronach that had been returned to her—to
salute the crowd. The sunlight ran like liquid fire down the keen edges of the
blade. Aurian lifted her face defiantly, shaking back her hair, which was too
short now to braid. The stench of sweat, dust, and blood was in her
nostrils—the scent of battle.
Then
Aurian saw Ke^r opponent—and was
brought up short. She had been expecting one of the hulking warriors that she'd
sparred with when Eliizar was placing her level of skill. Instead she faced a
stranger—a wiry little man whose muscles stood out like knotted rope on his
arms and legs. The top of his head barely reached her tightly laced breasts.
What is this? the Mage thought scornfully. Do they mock me? Even as she was
thinking, he darted in, his blade a
silvery blur. Cold fire coursed down
her left arm, followed by a drench of hot blood as he danced back out of
striking distance. Aurian, for a split second, gaped at the gash, just below
her shoulder, where the point of his sword had sliced down. Portal's voice rang
in her mind. "Never underestimate an opponent—however he may look."
Icy common sense doused Aurian's battle-heated blood.
She
circled the little man with newfound respect, trying to gauge his next move,
probing for a weakness in his stance. Then the wretch was in again, like
quicksilver. Aurian dodged, swinging her own blade by instinct, feeling the
draft of his sword's tip against her thigh. There was a ripping noise, and the
hem of the ridiculous fighting kilt that the gladiators wore was flapping in
tatters against her bare skin. Again she felt the warm, telltale trickle of
blood as she backed away. Not serious this time. A mere graze, it stung, no
more. But her own swing had caught him. She was too tall—her instinctive
decapitating stroke had just caught the top of his head. A strip of flesh hung
over his left eye, and blood streamed from the scalp wound down his face. He
was circling now as she was, awaiting an opening. As he caught her eye he
grinned—a brave smile, saluting her, Aurian found herself smiling back,
returning his salute with a barely perceptible tilt of her blade. He had
courage—and he knew that she had. Aurian found herself wishing that she could
fight at his side, rather than against him.
She
lunged—he feinted. Stalemate. Circle once more. The crowds were restless, they
wanted action. A scatter of boos and catcalls could be heard. The little man
lashed out and Aurian rolled beneath his blade, swearing as hot agony shot down
her wounded arm. She landed on her feet, facing her opponent. Her blade had
caught his ankle as she rolled. Pure accident, or Portal's unstinting training
taking over? He was limping badly, his foot half severed and losing a lot of
blood. The crowd roared, hungry for the kill. To Aurian they were the enemy,
not the courageous warrior. Stop that! she warned herself. This isn't the
Garrison. Sentimentality here will mean your death.
Aurian
braced herself, taking the weight and grip of the sword with her right hand and
balancing it as best she could with her next-to-useless left hand, which was
locked in a death grip around the hilt. The little man was reeling, his face
glazed with sweat and blood. Without warning, Aurian moved swiftly to her right
so that his vision was blocked by the hanging flap of scalp over his left eye.
He turned—but too late. Aurian felt a screaming agony in her left arm as her
sword bit through bone —then his head was rolling, bouncing across the sand as
his body swayed then toppled in a welter of blood that fountained from the
severed neck. The death howl from the crowd almost
T
knocked
her flat beside him. Rocked back on her heels by the din, Aurian stood over her
dead opponent, lifting her streaming blade and kissing it, in a warrior's
salute to the fallen.
It was
lucky that the crowd's roar warned her. Blinded by tears, Aurian had not seen
her next opponents leave the tunnel's mouth. Now they were nearly upon her.
Dashing her bloody hand across her eyes, she turned to face the new challenge.
What was this? Two men, one armed with a long spear, the other with only a net.
Aurian blinked in confusion. This was completely outside her experience. They
fanned apart, right and left, until she could not watch both. Then, too late,
she understood. The warrior with the net was a blind—a distraction. She had to
watch the one with the lethal spear that was leveled at her chest. If she took
her eye off him, he could hurl his spear, or rush her. But while she watched
the spearman, the other could creep up behind her with the disabling net.
Rage
swept through Aurian like a forest fire. Unfair! But this time she caught
herself, forcing herself to stay calm and think. Never mind fair—she had to win
her way out of this. All the time she was thinking, Aurian had been backing
away, trying to keep both men in her field of vision. Soon they would have her
trapped against the stone wall that ran round the edge of the Arena. She caught
the glance of understanding that flashed between her two foes. So they wanted
her there! Aurian didn't understand why, but if that was their idea, she was
having none of it. ^
She
feinted right,' then made a sudden dive to her left, toward the net bearer.
From the corner of her eye, she caught a flash of movement as the spearman made
his cast. Aurian felt the heavy point go through her calf, grazing the bone and
tearing the muscle. She almost fainted with pain and shock— but the desperate
leap had taken her far enough. Her wrists were jarred as the keen edge of her
sword hit the netmans knees. He crumpled to the ground in a pool of his own
blood,
crippled
and screaming.
The
spearman, weaponless now, ran to grab the net while Aurian was disabled. Once
enmeshed in its folds, she would be finished. There was no help for it—she
needed the spear, with its longer reach, to defend herself. Aurian dropped her
sword and seized the wooden shaft, wrenching the barbed metal blade
out
through her leg, feeling flesh and muscle tear as she did so. Dizzying,
nauseating agony engulfed her and her vision blurred. There was no time to get
to her feet. Almost blindly, Aurian flipped the spear around, plunging the butt
end into the fallen net. With a sharp, sideways tug, she twitched the tangled
meshes right out from under the spearman's reaching hands.
It was
the last thing he had expected. To gain the net now, he would have to come
closer—closer than was wise without a weapon. In the split second of hesitation
while he weighed the odds, Aurian acted, sliding the smooth spear butt out from
under the net as she reversed it—and threw.
The
spearman had already fathomed her plan. He was already running, and Aurian,
still on the ground, was not in a position to throw strongly. But the range was
short—and it was enough. He stumbled, fell forward, the bloody point of the
spear embedded in his back. Could she have killed him? Surely not, Aurian
thought dimly. But dead or not, he did not rise. On the other hand, if she
failed to get to her feet, it would not count as a win for her, either.
The
howling of the crowd receded as a welcoming veil of darkness swirled around the
Mage. It would be easy to let go— to slip into unconsciousness . . . She had
won so far ... Maybe they would let her live to fight another day . . .
What,
and go through all this again? "No!" Aurian told herself firmly.
"Get on your feet, warrior!" Groping for her sword, she set its point
in the bloodstained dirt and dragged herself blindly upright, leaning on the
strong blade. The pain brought tears to her eyes. Her injured leg would not
support her, her back ached where she had wrenched it in her fall, and her left
arm was next to useless. She was weak from exertion and loss of blood. Oh Gods,
she thought. How can I face another opponent like this? Fleetingly she longed
for her lost powers. If it weren't for these accursed bracelets, she thought
bitterly, I could save myself yet. But wait! The bracelets stopped her from
putting forth her powers, but would they stop her from taking power in? She
remembered the riot in Nexis, and how she had used the anger of the mob to
bring the rain.
Aurian
concentrated with all her might, turning her will inward to pull, as she
normally turned it outward to manipulate . . . And it was coming! She pulled in
energy from the heat of
the
sun, from the very life-force and blood lust of the mob that surrounded her. To
them it seemed like a sudden chill in the air, a brief shadow passing across
the face of the sun, though no clouds marred the sky.
Aurian's
ragged breathing steadied, her vision cleared. She could not Heal her wounds or
even still the pain, but the weakness of blood loss had left her and her body
felt the renewed strength of her borrowed energy. For the first time, Aurian
wondered why there was such a delay, though it had given her the respite she so
badly needed. The cries of the crowd returned to her consciousness, crashing
against her like a tidal wave. What were they chanting? ''Demon! Demon!'1 There
seemed to be some confusion. No more opponents had appeared. Aurian leaned on
her sword, husbanding her strength. She saw Eliizar, standing on the sands
before the flower-decked royal balcony. He seemed to be caught up in some kind
of debate with the
King.
A
solution was reached, apparently. The Swordmaster approached her, shaking his
head. "Unheard of," he said, "The crowd wants you to miss the
last ordeal of combat with human warriors. They demand that you face the Black
Demon—and His Majesty has concurred. The new Khisihn, for some reason,
disagreed, but the Khisu has prevailed."
Aurian
pulled herself upright, and looked Eliizar in the eye. What a farce! she
thought with some irritation. My fate hanging on a Royal quarrel! "All
fight," she said resignedly. "Bring on your Demon.***
A tear
ran down from Eliizar's one good eye, as he embraced Aurian briefly.
"Farewell, bravest of warriors," he said. "I am sorry it had to
end thus. May the Reaper be merciful to you." And he was gone.
Thanks
for cheering me up, Eliizar, Aurian thought rue fully. The westering sun beat
down on the back of her neck as she waited. Flies buzzed, hovering around the
blood that trickled stickily from her wounds. The crowd was hushed now—
expectant. Aurian took one unsteady hand from her sword hilt to wipe the sweat
and dirt from her face. She was desperately thirsty, but told herself sternly
that that was the least of her worries. What was this Demon that they all
seemed so afraid of? What form would it take?
A
rumble of wooden wheels echoed in the tunnel mouth. A great iron cage, pulled
by a dozen strong slaves, was wheeled into the Arena. As the cage halted, one
slave darted up and pulled out the thick iron pin that held the door shut, then
scurried away with his fellows as fast as he could, into the safety of the
tunnel mouth. The wooden gates boomed shut behind them, sealing off the only exit.
Aurian waited. The thick bars of the cage were set close together, preventing
her from seeing what was inside. A dark, shadowy shape stirred restlessly
within.
There
was a sudden, rumbling roar that made the earth tremble beneath Aurian's feet.
A blood-freezing sound, full of fiiry and menace. The crowd shrank back,
buffeted by the noise. Then slowly the cage door swung open, its metal hinges
screeching—and a huge black shape with eyes of flame flowed lithely down onto
the sand. A great red mouth opened in a snarl of defiant challenge, exposing
curved ivory fangs longer than the Mage's hand, Aurian gasped, and her hands
tightened on the hilt of her sword.
The
Demon was a great cat, larger than Aurian could have imagined in her worst
nightmares. Twice the length of a man from nose to tail, it stood as high as
her waist. Its yellow eyes blazed like fire as they fixed on their prey.
Slowly, deliberately, it began to stalk her, its claws like great steel
scimitars gleaming against the bloody sand,
Aurian
planted her feet firmly and lifted her sword, her heart sinking, her fear
sending that same heart banging wildly against her ribs. How could anyone hope
to fight such a. creature? How could she fight it, hampered as she was by
injury and exhaustion? Then her eyes met those of her foe, and with a sudden
shock, her mind touched the mind of the massive cat. It was intelligent! Or
rather, she. A Queen—the matriarch of her own people—captured, humiliated, and
bent on vengeance!
The
Mage gathered her scattered wits and reached out with her mind.
"Wait," she said.
"Why?"
The reply was loaded with derision, but Aurian sensed the astonishment
concealed beneath. It was coming closer—too bloody close—almost within pouncing
distance, Aurian was almost glaji that her injured leg prevented her from
running—almost.
She tried again. "I'm not your enemy. I am a captive, too." Steady,
Aurian. Don't plead. "All men are my enemies."
"I
am not." The Mage kept her mental voice firm. "The people here are my
enemies, too. Why kill each other, when we have the same foes?"
The cat
paused with one huge paw uplifted, seeming to consider. Then it fell into a
menacing crouch. "You lie!" it snarled. "Die!" And sprang.
But
Aurian, a lover of cats, had seen the telltale wriggle of the haunches before
it launched itself, and was already diving forward beneath the pounce. She felt
claws rake her side like white-hot irons, and heard a yowl of furious pain as
her sword point grazed the cat's ribs. She tried to get to her feet to turn and
meet her enemy, but the injured leg collapsed beneath her, then the cat was on
her, flattening her facedown in the dirt and knocking the sword out of her
grasp—out of reach. For the space of a few heartbeats, neither moved. The crowd
held its breath. Again, the Mage sought the mind of her foe. "You're
making a big mistake," she warned. If her plight had not been so
desperate, she would have laughed at her own temerity.
The
cat's cruel amusement flicked across her mind like a whiplash. "Surely,"
it mocked. Slowly, very slowly, Aurian eased herself up a little, not even
daring to spit the sand from her mouth. Like a searing brand, the great claws
raked lightly across her back, shredding her leather vest and scoring the
tender skin beneath. Antian cried out in pain, unable to stop herself, but she
had achieved her goal. Her right hand was now beneath her, groping for her
dagger that she had stolen back from Eliizar and had concealed, inside her
vest. The cat had unwittingly helped her by all but annihilating the garment,
and the long, flat blade slid easily into her hand.
Suddenly
a mighty swat from a huge paw knocked her rolling, over and over; the beast was
playing with her as a per cat plays with a mouse. This time Aurian landed on
her back, a sharp catch of pain hampering her breaching. Her ribs? Or the
child? Unable to place the location of the pain, Aurian felt a jolt of fear.
The great cat leapt on top of her, tensing its claws to disembowel her—and
froze, the tip of the Mage's dagger pricking its throat.
Aurian
stared into the fierce golden eyes, only inches from her face. "Stalemate,
I think," she said. There was no reply, but she caught the faintest
flicker of doubt behind those blazing eyes. The crowd, to a man, was on its
feet—waiting. Aurian forced herself stay calm, to take the gamble. "They
say that if I slay you, I will win my freedom," she told the cat.
"Have they offered you the same? Of course, if I make a move, you may slay
me—or you may not be quick enough."
The cat
growled menacingly. Aurian's thought cut through the sound. "You have
nothing to gain from my death but a quick meal—and I assure you, you'll find me
very tough." This time the cat seemed to respond to her humor, relaxing a
fraction. Aurian pressed her point home, "But what if we refuse to kill
each other? Do you think we could fight our way to freedom? If not, we could
certainly take a lot of them with us into death. What have we got to lose? Do
you want to stay here, caged and captive for always?"
"Men
are not to be trusted." The cat's tone was flat.
"Very
well." Aurian had been hoping it wouldn't come to this. She looked once
more, frankly, into the cat's eyes, "You must decide that for yourself.
But you are the most beautiful, the most brave, the most magnificent creature I
have ever seen. I would be your friend, but if that is not possible, I will not
be responsible for your death." Moving with careful deliberation, she
removed her dagger from the cat's throat and flicked it away from her, sending
it bouncing and skidding across the sand.
The
crowd gasped. For a moment, everything was still— then the cat opened its huge
jaws, its long, lethal fangs gleaming white in the sun. The Mage flinched and
closed her eyes against the sight of her approaching death—but at the last
second the great head swung to one side, and a rasping tongue like a steel file
licked the oozing blood from the wound on her arm. Aurian opened her eyes in
astonishment, and the cat's golden gaze met her own. "My name is
Shia," she said. "Drink my blood, and be Friend." She backed
away slightly, removing her weight from Aurian's body, Murmurs of confusion
welled from the crowd,
Aurian
sat up weakly, unstrung with relief. Placing her mouth to the cat's ribs she
licked salty blood, mixed with sand. "My name is Aurian," she said,
"and I am honored." Then,
greatly
daring, she reached out her bloodstained fingers and caressed Shia's broad,
sleek head. And a sound that had never been heard before echoed across the
stunned Arena—the slow, bass rumble of the big cat's purr.
The
crowd, cheated of a death, erupted into wildness. Boos and jeers resounded, and
missiles rained down into the Arena— fruit, sweetmeats, drinking goblets—even
shoes. The tunnel doors swung open, admitting two dozen armed and armored
guards. They approached reluctantly, fanning out to form a loose circle around
Aurian and Shia as the Mage struggled to her knees. Shia trotted obligingly
over and retrieved Aurian's sword from where it lay, dragging it back with the
hilt held carefully in her mouth. Propping herself with Coronach, Aurian tried
out her injured leg. She could balance herself without support while standing
still—but moving? Not a chance. But they didn't know that. Sword in hand, she
stood back to back with Shia as
the ring of guards
tightened around them. "Right," she called out
grimly. "Which of you sons of pigs wants to be first?" Shia snarled a
menacing echo to her words. Their assailants looked at each other dubiously.
Apparently no one wanted to be first.
Eliizar
emerged from the tunnel at a run and crossed the sands to the royal balcony.
The Khisu got to his feet, and all sound ceased. "Your Majesty," the
Swordmaster cried in a quaking voice. "The decision of life or death for
this warrior rests with you. Death is the usual penalty for one who fails to
slay his foe, but this woman—thifr-warrior—has honored us with the bravest
performance in the history of the Arena. None will forget this day. Will you,
on the joyous occasion of your wedding, grant her your clemency?"
Bless
you, Eliizar, Aurian thought.
On the
balcony, the King considered, wavering. It would be a munificent gesture, and
worthy of a Khisu, but the Arbiters had told him about this dangerous
foreigner, and he wasn't sure that he wanted her at large in his land.
Aurian
watched the Khisu, holding her breath. This was her first good look at him. He
looked younger than he must be, but his expression was wolfish and feral.
Beneath level brows, his dark eyes glinted with pitiless cruelty. Black hair,
falling past his shoulders, showed no sign of gray, and he sported a
drooping
moustache. He had a lean, lithe, hard-muscled killing machine of a body and
looked as though he used it frequently— and well. Gods, Aurian thought. I
wouldn't like to fight him! I might like to bed him, though. The thought, so
inappropriate to her desperate situation, shocked her. But it was undeniable.
His aura was irresistibly sexual—and equally dangerous. He was like a magnificent
wild beast.
Then
suddenly the Queen—the new Khisihn—stepped forward from the shadows of the
balcony and murmured into the Khisu's ear. Her face was veiled, but the bright
flash of golden hair was unmistakable. Sara! Aurian sagged against Shia's
flank, dizzy with shock. How in the name of all the gods had the wretched woman
managed this?
Sara
had been equally stunned by the sight of Aurian in the Arena. What evil luck!
If that rotten Mage should tell the Khisu that she was already married, all the
hard work she had done to win him would have been for nothing! She stepped up
to him and whispered in his ear, glad that he was proficient in her language,
though she was making progress at learning his. "Kill this woman,
Lord," she said. "Make me a gift of her death." Xiang stared at
her in amazement. Was this the gentle creature that had so charmed him?
"Please, my love." Sara smiled beguilingly, and the Khisu found her
impossible to resist. His thumb began to turn down in the traditional death
signal and—
"Stop!"
Prince Harihn strode forward from the rear of the balcony. "It is the
Khisu's custom to bestow gifts on his wedding day," he said.
"Somehow, I seem to have been overlooked so far." He smiled at his
father without warmth. "Give her to me, Father. Grant me the gift of this
woman's life." His voice, deliberately loud, rang across the Arena.
The
Khisu found himself the focus of hundreds of curious eyes. He glared at his
son. "In the Reaper's name, why?" Harihn shrugged. "You've been
telling me for long enough that I need a woman of my own—and this foreign
warrior presents a challenge that I can't resist."
Sara,
who had managed to follow most of the exchange, felt the moment slipping away
from her. "Lord," she protested. "I beg you, give me this
woman's death."
"There,
my son." The Khisu shrugged. "See what a coil you have me in? I must
disappoint my son—or my new bride." He bestowed a dazzling smile on Sara,
before turning back to the Prince. "Surely this woman cannot be so
important? She is hardly a beauty, and any man would think twice before bedding
such a she-devil. Come," he cajoled, a hard edge in his voice.
"Choose another gift, Harihn. If it is a woman you want, I will give you
the choice of any woman in my seraglio. Every one is in the fullness of beauty,
and skilled in the arts of love."
Harihn's
jaw clenched. "No," he said flatly. "I want that one."
Father and son glared at each other, all pretense of friendliness abandoned.
The Khisu thought rapidly. What was Harihn up to? Was he simply trying to
embarrass his royal father in public, or make trouble between him and his new
bride? Or did he have some other motive in taking this sorceress into his
household?
Xiang
made his decision. Most likely the witch would stick a dagger into her
benefactor at the first opportunity, which would solve his problem. If not . .
. well, there were other, less public ways of dealing with the matter.
"Very well, my son," he said loudly, for the benefit of the rapt
crowd. "I cannot refuse you. I give this brave warrior into your
care." He raised his thumb in the gesture of life, and the crowd
applauded. Sara gasped.
"My
father, I thank you," Harihn said, and vaulting dramatically over the
balcony, he crossed the sands toward Aurian.
The Mage
consulted briefly with Shia. "It seems our lives have been saved—for now.
Shall we go with this man?"
"I
trust him not."
"Me,
neither. But I think we should risk it. It's better than being hacked to pieces
by these armored idiots!"
As the
Khisal approached, Aurian bowed low, wincing with pain and gritting her teeth
to keep her temper at the speculative way his eyes lingered on her breasts,
which had been exposed by the ruination of her leather vest. "I thank Your
Highness,"
she said.
He smiled.
"Bravely fought, warrior. The honor is mine. Will you come with me?"
He extended a hand to help Aurian, and the great cat growled warningly.
"I'm
afraid you've also inherited my friend," Aurian said.
The
Prince glanced dubiously at Shia. "Willingly," he lied, "save
that my father did not include her in our bargain."
"Tough!"
Aurian was heartily sick of this charade, and she knew that she had reached the
end of her strength. "Where I go, Shia goes," she said flatly.
"Would you like to try to stop her? Or perhaps you're more afraid of your
father . . ."Harihn scowled at the mention of his father, and glanced up
at the crowd. Aurian knew that he feared the cat, but was afraid of looking a
fool, if Shia should ruin his triumphant exit. "She will be very friendly
toward a friend of mine—and your people would be impressed by a Prince who
could tame such a creature," she suggested.
Harihn
brightened at her words. "Very well. Will it let me help you?"
"She
will."
The
Prince scooped Aurian theatrically into his arms and left the Arena with the
great cat pacing watchfully at his heels. The crowd cheered delightedly. They
seemed to have forgotten that only a few minutes before, they had been howling
for Aurian's blood. The last thing Aurian saw as they entered the tunnel was
the Khisu and Sara glaring savagely, naked fury on their faces. Aurian felt an
uneasy chill creep up her spine. What did this Prince intend for her, anyway?
"Keep hold of my mind," she warned Shia. "I daren't pass out
yet."
nvar
had been spared the humiliation of the slave mar-^^—— ket. After several days
spent languishing in the squalor and despair of the noisome cellar, he and some
fifty other slaves had been chained together in groups of ten and marched, by night,
down through the narrow, twisting alleys of the city to the wharves. As dawn
was breaking, they were herded into open barges and rowed some miles upriver in
the broiling heat to the site of the Khisu's summer palace.
The
area was a hive of activity. The huge new edifice was being built on a series
of terraces that had been hewn by hand, at the cost of many slaves, back into
the face of the towering red cliffs. The air was thick with dust and rang with
shouted commands. The beat of hammers and chisels, the crack of whips and the
groans of the tortured slaves echoed in a ceaseless cacophony between the
canyon's walls of red stone that trapped all sound and heat in a simmering
caldron of suffering.
Already
the massive blocks of white stone that had been ferried down from the upland
quarries were being set into place. Teams of exhausted slaves were hauling on
the ropes of the great hoists that lifted the blocks, while others swarmed over
the stepped banks of wooden scaffolding that lined the half-built walls, or
mixed vast quantities of mortar that stood in constant danger of drying out in
the baking sun. Whole camps of masons and master carvers and carpenters labored
at their crafts, and architects strode around the site carrying rolls of
parchment and an air of self-importance. A huge outdoor kitchen had been built
on the flat ground near the river to feed the laboring hordes, and sweating
cooks worked ceaselessly, seemingly oblivious to the stench and dust, amidst a
cloud of swarming flies.
Anvar's
group was off-loaded at one of the flimsy wooden piers that projected out into
the sluggish river, and the Slave-master for the site came to look them over,
his expression sour. "Is this all?" he demanded of the barge-train
captain. "I need three times as many. The palace will never be finished at
this rate. Slaves last no time at all in these conditions!"
The
captain spat on the dusty ground. "Don't take it out on me," he
grumbled. "I only bring them—however many. Maybe if you treated them
better, they'd last longer." He glanced disparagingly round the dusty,
noisome work site.
"Don't
tell me how to do my job, you dockside layabout! If the Khisu's accursed palace
isn't finished on time, heads will roll—and I'm not taking the blame!" the
Slavemaster retorted. "How I'm expected to work with the rubbish you
people have been sending up here—Look at that one!" His finger shot out in
the direction of Anvar, whose light skin and hair made him very conspicuous in
the group of slaves. "What in the name of the Reaper is that supposed to
be?"
The
captain shrugged. "How should I know? I only bring them, remember? Zahn
doesn't tell me where he gets his slaves, and I don't ask questions—it's not
healthy. As long as he keeps sending them, you'd be wise just to use them, and
keep your mouth shut. Who cares what color one bloody slave is anyway? Zahn?
Not if there's profit in it! The Khisu? All Xiang cares about is getting his
God-blasted palace finished. Just do what you usually do—work the bastard till
he drops and bury him out of sight somewhere, or throw him in the river for the
lizards: If anybody asks, / never saw him. I'm off now. This place
stinks!"
"Some
help you are," the Slavemaster grumbled. "Tell Zahn I need more—and
the quality had better improve, or someone just might whisper in the Khisu's
ear that someone has been importing illegal Northerners,"
The
captain spat once more. "I don't tell Zahn anything— and I would watch my
mouth if I were you. Knowing him, you're likely to wind up buried under your
own foundations." He turned on his heel and left.
The
slaves were put to work at once. One by one, each man was unshackled and
questioned as to whether he had any particular skills, such as masonry or
carpentry. If they had, they were lucky, for they were sent to assist the
artisans and spared much grueling labor in the brutally hot climate. As the
overseer worked his way toward him, Anvar found himself in a dilemma. Should he
pretend to be ignorant of their language, in the hope that it might give him a
chance to escape, or should he claim the knowledge of carpentry that his
grandpa had
taught
him, and so survive longer in this terrible place? But he was spared the
decision. As the overseer approached him, the Slavemaster intervened. "Not
that one," he snapped. "I don't want him around too long. Put him on
the pulley gangs."
The
pulleys—the worst work on the site, as Anvar soon discovered. Twenty slaves at
a time hauled on thick ropes that raised the massive stone blocks up the half-finished
walls. The more blocks that were raised, the higher the walls became, and the
greater the effort required from the struggling, exhausted slaves. The death
toll was appalling. Once a block had begun its ascent there could be no
stopping, for if momentum was lost the stone would fall, and might crack as it
hit the ground, incurring a huge waste of time and labor to hew and transport
another from the quarries. And the Khisu wanted his palace finished. So if a
slave was unlucky enough to lose his footing or collapse from exhaustion in the
line, he would be trampled by those behind him, who would, in their turn,
struggle desperately to keep their own bare feet from slipping on the slimy,
bloody pulp that had once been a man.
It was
a nightmare unending. From dawn to dusk, the work rarely halted. Food was
scarce and unsatisfying—a thin mush of cooked grain doled out morning and
evening. Water was insufficient for the slaves' needs in the burning sun, and
many collapsed from heatstroke. Brutal overseers with whips stalked the lines,
never permitting the pace to slacken. Clouds of biting insects assailed the
slaves, and snakes and scorpions came scuttling from beneath the shelter of the
blocks as they began to lift, scattering at random toward the bare feet and
legs of the helpless slaves. It took many agonizing hours for a man to die from
their venom.
By the
end of the first day, Anvar's fair skin was burned and blistered by the fierce
sun. His hands and shoulders were bloody and raw from the friction of the
coarse ropes, and his bare feet were scored and lacerated from the uneven,
gritty ground. His back was striped with whip cuts, his head throbbed from the
relentless heat, and his tongue was swollen in his parched mouth. His
pain-filled world had shrunk to a single thought: keep moving. Endure.
In the
blessed cool of evening, another gang replaced the exhausted survivors at the
pulleys, and the work went on by
AURIAN •
373
torchlight.
Anvar and the other slaves on the day teams were herded into a high-walled
stockade. No attempt had been made to provide sanitation, and the place stank
like a cesspool and swarmed with flies. A handful of gruel was doled out to
each slave as he passed through the gate, and a long stone trough within the
compound was filled with muddy river water. Anvar fought for a drink at the
trough, where men crowded and jostled like beasts for the unsavory water. Then
he staggered away from the mob and lay in the filth where he fell, too
exhausted to think, or even register the pain of his abused body. It seemed
that he only slept for an instant, before he was awakened with a kick to begin
another day of toil and torture.
There
was no doubt that if Anvar had been of true Mortal blood, he would never have
survived this terrible place for two days together. But somehow, while he
slept, his Mage blood worked automatically to heal and restore him enough to
face another day of dreadful suffering, though it could only do so much. Anvar
had not been trained in the Healing arts, and Miathan had stolen the active
element of his powers. Food and rest were needed to restore the energy used in
the Healing process, and these were in desperately short supply. So, day by
wretched day, his condition began to deteriorate, the Healing becoming less and
less effective and only serving to prolong his misery.
The
overseers were amazed by his endurance, and wagers began to be made concerning
how long this strange, pale-skinned Northerner would last. Anvar was oblivious
to it all. His exhausted, pain-wracked mind afid body only worked at survival
level, and the luxury of thought was a long-forgotten dream. All that remained
was a faint spark of consciousness, a stubborn, relentless manifestation of the
will to survive.
Aurian
opened her eyes. Moonlight shone in dazzling star-and-diamond shapes through
the lattices of delicately carved shutters, forming lacework shadows on the
pale, thin sheet that covered her bed..She was confused—her coming here was all
a daze, and she was still half asleep. But something had awakened her.
Something wrong. What? The back of her neck prickled. Something. Some vague,
formless fear that brought back the irrational childhood urge to hide her head
beneath the covers,
hoping
that the unknown terror would be unable to find her there. Aurian tried to pull
herself together, reminding herself sternly that she was a warrior. She lay
very still, concentrating with all her senses to locate the source of the
wrongness.
Ah. She
had it now. The silence. Each night since she'd come to these lands, the
darkness had been filled with the rhythmic, creaking chirrups of nocturnal
insects that formed a shrill nighttime chorus. Now everything was
still—utterly, utterly still. Aurian could hear herself breathing in ragged,
shallow gasps—could hear the thunder of her own heart. Despite the warmth of
the room, icy sweat slid down her spine. What else? She was missing something.
Shia! Aurian could hear only the sound of her own breathing. No one else was in
the room.
Shia
was gone!
Aurian
looked wildly around her, but the room was growing darker. Something was
sapping the moonlight from her window, consuming it, drowning it in an
overwhelming wave of utter blackness. Something stirred in the corner—she could
feel it as it moved, creeping, no, gliding silently toward her. It passed in
front of the window—and her blood congealed to ice at the sight of the shape
that haunted her most nightmarish memories. Nihilim! Miathan had sent the Death
Wraiths!
Aurian
tried to move, to reach for her sword—no, that was no good! The Wraith
advanced, uttering the weird, cruel bass chuckle that she remembered so well.
The wave of leeching coldness and terror that spun out before it washed over
her . . . The spell! Finbarr's spell! What was it? Her mind was in a whirl of
panic—she couldn't think! She couldn't move! Her tongue was frozen in her
mouth, her limbs were frozen to the bed! It swooped down on her, its great maw
drooling long ropes of slimy, clinging darkness—to engulf her, as it had engulfed
Forral . . . "Forral! Forral\"
"For
pity's sake, Lady, wake up!"
Aurian
blinked; her vision cleared. She was sitting up in bed, in a room aglow with
lamplight. Before her, instead of that hideous shape of evil, was Harihn,
shaking her shoulders, his tanned face gray with shock. Her left arm was bound
up in a sling, and her throat was raw with screaming. Shia was by the bed, her
snarling face a demon mask of fear and fury, her slitted
yellow
eyes glaring—glaring at something that wasn't there. It wasn't there! As
Aurian's nightmare faded, the great cat suddenly relaxed, shaking her head in
bewilderment, her ears still flattened, the tip of her black tail twitching
back and forth. And as the bitter tide of reaction to her dream flowed over
her, Aurian began to shake uncontrollably, weakened by her wounds and undone by
the vivid memory of Forral's hideous death as the barely healing scars in her
emotions were ripped asunder by what she had just experienced. Unable to help
herself, she collapsed in a storm of hysterical weeping.
She
heard Harihn curse, heard him call a servant to fetch the surgeon. Then he was
back at her side, patting her shoulder awkwardly as she wept. "Hush, Lady,
hush," he soothed her helplessely. "It was only a dream—a bad dream
from the fever. I am here—your Demon is here. Nothing can hurt you, I
promise."
Then
the surgeon was there. Aurian vaguely remembered the round-shouldered, wrinkled
old man who had stitched the torn muscles of her calf, quaking all the while
under the baleful glare of Shia, who had barely been able to restrain herself
from attacking this puny creature who was causing her friend such pain. Now he
was all bustling efficiency despite the comical long white nightgown that he
wore. The sight of him was so ludicrous that Aurian wanted to laugh, but she
couldn't stop crying, and somehow the laughter and sobs mingled so that she
couldn't get her breath. She fought free of Harihn and clutched her bandaged
aching ribs, wheezing .helplessly as tears poured down her face.
Aurian
heard the surgeon tsking, then a cup was forced between her lips and she choked
on a coldly burning brew, coughing and spluttering and causing further pain to
knife between her ribs. "Deep breaths, Lady, if you please," she
heard the surgeon chanting patiently, speaking to her as though she were a
small child. Then she heard Shia's voice in her mind, sensible and comforting.
"Enough, my friend," the cat said, "or you will harm
yourself."
With a
superhuman effort, Aurian got control of herself, enough to swallow the rest of
the draft. The tight knot within her unraveled, and she could relax, though she
was still shaking as she leaned back against the pillows and wiped her eyes.
Harihn
looked relieved. "By the Reaper, Lady, but you frightened us all!" he
said.
"Nonsense!"
the surgeon said briskly. "It was only the fever. You were very ill, Lady,
for several days." He leaned over to place a hand on her forehead.
"It has broken now, so you should have no more bad dreams. And you will be
pleased to know that your child is safe."
The
child! She had forgotten all about it! And days, he had said. There was
something she should be doing—something urgent—but the memory of Forral haunted
her, and she felt weak and confused by the aftermath of her dream ... Oh Gods,
that hideous creature! Aurian shuddered. "Wine?" she gasped, trying
to force the memory away.
The
surgeon smiled. "I know my patients are mending when they ask for wine. Is
there any here, Your Highness?"
"Should
she have it?" the Prince asked anxiously. "I mean, what with the
drug—and she has not eaten anything . . ."
"That
can soon be remedied." The surgeon went to the door and gave orders to a
hovering servant.
While
she waited, Aurian tried to piece together what had happened. "How badly
was I hurt?" she asked the surgeon.
His
wizened face creased in a frown. "Lady, you gave me some work! But your
arm is healing, and your ribs were simply cracked, not broken. They will soon
improve with care. As to your leg ... The muscles were badly torn. I fear there
will be some scarring." .^
"Never
mind that. Will it be all right?" The surgeon hesitated. "It
should," he said at last. "That is, if you give it a chance to heal,
Lady. You must stay off that leg for ten days at least, and more if
possible."
"What!"
Aurian shot bolt upright, wincing at the pain from her cracked ribs. "I
don't have that kind of time!" "Lady, you must."
"But
there's something I have to do—it's important!" Desperately she tried to
remember what it was.
The
surgeon frowned at her as though she were a petulant child. "Suit
yourself," he replied frostily. "But if those muscles have no chance
to heal properly, you will be crippled, or at best ft that leg will always be
weak. You must stay in bed until I tell f
you
otherwise. If not, you have only yourself to blame for the consequences."
Aurian
swore viciously and thumped the pillow with her fist, frustrated by the
limitations of Mortal medicine. If only she had her powers, she could Heal her
injuries in no time!
Just
then the servant returned with a cup of warm broth. "Drink this,
Lady," the surgeon told Aurian, "then you may have your wine."
Despite her frustration, Aurian realized that her stomach was churning, not
just from emotion, but from hunger. She drank the broth down eagerly, then the
surgeon handed her a goblet of sweetish red wine.
"Have
no fear, Highness," he told the Prince. "Together with the drug it
will make her sleep again, which is all to the good. Perhaps then we can all
return to our rest." His voice held an acid undertone.
Aurian's
hand tightened round the stem of the goblet in panic. She couldn't sleep! What
if it returned in her dreams? But it was too late. Already she had drunk most
of the wine, and she could feel a drowsy euphoria stealing over her. It felt
good, after what she had just undergone. She heard herself giggling, as she
held out the cup for a refill.
The
surgeon tsked disapprovingly, then shrugged. "It may be for the
best," he sighed, as he poured more wine. "Whatever she dreamed
about, it gave her a severe shock. You ought to have some too, Highness. You
look—" That was all Aurian could remember.
• /
"You
look exhausted. Why not have a servant watch this ungrateful woman? You have
more important things to concern you, and you must sleep."
Harihn
dismissed the surgeon with brusque thanks. The wretch was so officious! But
since he was so skilled in his art, he invariably managed to get away with it.
The Khisal rubbed wearily at his gritty eyes, and turned back to the mysterious
lady whom he had rescued so impulsively from the Arena. She slept peacefully;
the terror that had haunted her face was smoothed away in repose. What had she
dreamed, to cause such anguish? Had it been her husband's name she had cried
out? His inquiries to the Arbiters had revealed that she had probably been
widowed, and the_sunjeon had told him that she was with
child.
That had come as a shock. Given her condition, her performance in the Arena had
been near miraculous! Silently saluting her courage, he bent over and tucked
the thin sheet more closely around her shoulders.
The
Demon lifted her head and snarled, baring long white fangs. "Hush,
you," Harihn soothed, keeping a wary eye on her. "You should know by
now that I will not harm your friend." The cat dropped her head back to
her outstretched paws, contenting herself with a black look for the Prince. She
had remained on guard all through Aurian's illness, treating all who tended her
friend with similar suspicion. Most of the servants were afraid even to enter
the room.
Deciding
to take the sturgeon's advice after all, Harihn poured himself some wine.
Opening the carved shutters that stretched from the floor to the ceiling, he took
his cup out into the balmy, moonlit peace of the garden. Ah, how he loved this
place! The small, walled area with its grassy lawn and flowering plants and
trees was a haven of green in this arid city. His mother had created it when
she came here, a captive bride, to this small but exquisite palace on the south
side of the river— the opposite side from the Arena and the Khisu's sumptuous
dwelling. Her refusal to live in the same house with her Lord and his harem had
been but one of the reasons for her murder. Xiang, used to the subservient
women of his land, had not been able to deal with her pride, and her
contemptuous hatred, never concealed, of the man who had taken her by force
from the Xandim, her own people".
Harihn
crossed the lawn to sit on the low marble coping that circled the pool where
carp swam in gilded splendor. The scent of huge white blossoms from the tree
that overhung the moon-silvered water was intoxicating, but his thoughts were
elsewhere. After all these years, he still missed his mother. He remembered her
vividly—her long brown hair, her flashing eyes, the indomitable spirit that his
father's brutality had never quenched. Harihn dwelt here for the same reasons
that she had —to maintain his independence and to keep as far from Xiang as
possible. But it hurt. This place was haunted by his mother's memory, and
perhaps that was his own fault, for he had never allowed it to be changed.
There had been some raised eyebrows, to say the least, among his servants when
he had placed the
AURIAN •
379
flame-haired
foreigner in his mother's old suite of rooms. Somehow, though, it had seemed
the right thing to do. Her spirit, her courage and pride and refusal to
surrender in the Arena had called back such powerful memories of his mother that
he had been compelled to intervene, to help this woman, though he had been too
young to save the other.
Since
then, of course, he'd had time to consider his rash act, and had wondered, more
than once, what had possessed him. All he'd had from the lady so far was her
name—Aurian. Where had she come from? What was her history? How had she —a mere
woman—learned to fight so well? That she was one of the witch-breed of Northern
sorcerers made him nervous, despite the bracelets she wore that, he had been assured,
would negate her magic. Not for the first time, Harihn wondered if he had
bitten off more than he could swallow. He had never thought, for instance, that
it would mean giving shelter to the fearsome Demon! And the Khisu, of course,
was furious with him, but that was nothing new.
Thinking
of Xiang, Harihn had to admit that there were advantages to his deed. It had
been most enjoyable to see that look of thwarted rage on his father's face, and
that of his bride. Now why did she want the warrior dead? Harihn was convinced
that the women must have been traveling on the same ship. Two foreigners
appearing in the city at the same time? It was more than coincidence. He smiled
to himself. If his mystery lady could provide him with information to the new Khisihn's
disadvantage, that might give him a new^and necessary lever to use against the
Khisu. Harihn's mouth twisted in a bitter grimace. The hatred his father bore
for him was no secret. In that respect, this Aurian could prove useful, indeed.
She could fight like a demon—that much he had seen for himself—and she had her
own Demon to help her. Between them they made a formidable team. The Khisal
smiled to himself. Perhaps, in saving her, he had made the right decision after
all.
When
Aurian awakened, it was broad daylight. The Prince had gone, and a stranger was
drowsing in a chair by her bed. Aurian gasped. The man was huge\ But Shia was
asleep on the bottom of the bed, curled up with her tail wrapped over her eyes,
and the Mage took jjLais a sign that her new warder could
be
trusted. She wondered if he would bring her some food. Her mind felt clear now,
but her insides were cramped with hunger. She reached out to touch his arm, and
the big man snapped to attention at once, his face a picture of guilt. Aurian
saw the fear in his eyes, and instinctively sought to soothe him. "Don't
worry," she said. "There's no harm in your being asleep. Everyone
else was." She smiled at the oblivious Shia. "Only—I'm terribly
hungry. Do you think you could arrange for some food? And some liafa?"
While at the Arena, she had become addicted to the stuff.
The
giant leapt to his feet, nodding fit to loosen his bald head, his broad brown
face breaking into a shy smile. Aurian's eyes widened. He must have been almost
seven feet tall, his shoulders so broad that she wondered how he could fit them
through the door. He bowed, and left the room with a speed that belied his
enormous bulk.
He
returned very shortly, bearing a tray almost as wide as his shoulders. From the
contents, Aurian decided that whatever time of day it was, it was not breakfast
time. But she didn't care —her mouth was watering. There was a thick soup, a
roast fowl, and the meal was rounded off with fruit, cheese, honey, and the
usual flat bread. A flask of wine and a brimming jug of liafa competed for the
small amount of remaining space. "Why, this is a feast!" Aurian
exclaimed. "Thank you, thank you very
much!"
Shia
stirred, smelling the food, her golden eyes lighting up as they fixed on the
-tsay. Aurian sighed. It wasn't that she begrudged sharing with her friend,
however . . . But her friendly giant had even thought of that. Tucked beneath
his arm, where he had been carrying it to leave his hands free for the tray,
was a bulky, cloth-wrapped object. He unwrapped it with a flourish, presenting
it to the cat without a sign of fear. It was a haunch of raw meat. Shia, to
Aurian's utter astonishment, purred loudly and rubbed the side of her face
against the man's
hand.
"Why,
thank you," Aurian told him with a smile. "That was very considerate
. . . Shia! Not on the bed, please!"
"Why
not? I'm hungry, too!" Shia gave her a black look, and dragged her meat
out into the garden.
Aurian
could wait no longer to attack the food. "What's
your
name?" she asked the huge man indistinctly, with her mouth full. He simply
looked at her, shaking his head and waving his hands in front of his face.
"His
name is Bohan. He cannot answer you, for he cannot speak." As Harihn
entered, Bohan prostrated himself, touching his forehead to the floor. The
Prince gestured negligently, and the huge man left the room. "I sent him
to serve and to guard you—he is a eunuch, as is proper."
"Poor
man!" Aurian gasped. "How cruel!"
Harihn
looked surprised. "Cruel? How so? All ladies of rank are served by
eunuchs. How else would the sanctity of their persons be guarded?"
Aurian
shuddered, thinking of Anvar. Anvar! Great Chathak, how could she have
forgotten him?
The
Prince shrugged. "It is of no consequence. I trust he is
satisfactory?" He settled himself comfortably on the bottom of her bed and
casually helped himself to a leg of her fowl. Aurian took another huge
mouthful, reluctant to lose any more of the bird. "How are you
feeling?" Harihn asked, and she choked getting it all swallowed. She took
a gulp of wine and a deep breath.
"Hungry,"
she replied pointedly, then regretted her churlishness. After all, she was very
much indebted to him, and dependent, at the moment, on his continuing goodwill.
The
Prince smiled tolerantly. He was handsome, Aurian thought, with his black
curling hair, thick level brows, and dark, lustrous eyes. His face was gentler,
less angular and wolfish, than that of his father, but the same pride was in
his bearing, and his body was lithe and strong. She was, however, beginning to
find his condescending manner very irritating, and had to force herself to keep
a rein on her temper. "My apologies, Your Highness," she said.
"I'm afraid I'm never at my best when I first wake up."
"You
may call me Harihn," he told her, with the air of one conferring a
singular honor, "and I have no objections to you eating while we
talk."
Thanks
a lot, the Mage thought sourly. "Thank you very much," she said
aloud. "You may call me Aurian."
Harihn
raised an eyebrow. "Of course."
With an
effort, Aurian restrained herself from flinging her
•
BJI^H
breakfast
in the complacent idiot's face. It was good, and she needed it. Instead she
gave him a very direct look. "Harihn, why did you rescue me?"
The
Prince smiled. "Lady, you have naught to fear from me. You are more
valuable to me alive than dead. You see, I need you—and your Demon, if she will
help. I saw you fight in the Arena, and I need your skill to protect me. My
life is in danger from my royal father—not to mention his new wife. If she
should give him another heir—" He made a slicing motion across his throat.
After a
moment, Aurian discovered that her mouth was open, and hastily shoveled some
food into it, to give herself time to think. She had almost started to tell him
why she couldn't possibly stay—but she realized that the self-absorbed young
Prince would hardly take her problems into consideration. Besides, she could
not leave until she had found Anvar and, even more important, discovered a way
to remove these bracelets that crippled her powers.
The
Prince was frowning, obviously wondering why she was not overcome with delight
at the prospect of being his bodyguard. "Excuse me, Your Highness,"
Aurian said hastily, managing to dredge up a smile from somewhere. "I'm
overcome by the honor you do me. But ... the surgeon must have told you of my
condition. How can I defend you adequately when I've grown great with
child?"
Harihn
shrugged. "I appreciate your frankness in discussing this delicate matter
with me, of course . . ." The distasteful curl of his lip gave the lie to
his words. "However, it may not be a problem. You have your Demon to
assist you, and besides, your condition may lull any would-be assassin into a
false sense of security. After all, who would expect a pregnant concubine of
possessing warrior's skills?"
Aurian
choked again. When she had regained her breath, she pushed the tray away, her
appetite abruptly gone. "Did you say concubine?" she demanded.
Harihn's
eyes widened. "Surely you did not expect me to marry you? My people would
never countenence a foreign sorceress as their Khisihn!"
"Of
course I didn't! I thought you wanted me for a body-
AURIAN '
383
guard,
not—" Aurian spluttered angrily, all restraint scattered to the winds.
"You must be out of your mind!"
Harihn
assumed such an air of benign patience that Aurian wanted to throttle him.
"The surgeon warned me you might react in this way," he said.
"Being pregnant, you are not in your right mind at present—and I have your
history from the Arbiters. I appreciate that as one newly widowed, your
sensibilities may be raw, but it is not permitted for a woman to be without a
man to govern and guard her. How could it be otherwise? You need a man's
protection—a home and a future for your child. If you leave here, you will be
at the mercy of the law, and the best you can hope for is slavery—or a return
to the Arena. Could your child survive another such bout? Could you? I think
not. I have no idea how things are managed in your own land, but here, as a
widow, your husband's brother, or some relative, or even his closest friend,
would take you into his family as his concubine, or even as a wife, if he
wished. You are a stranger here, and have no one to do you this service. Surely
you cannot be insensible of the honor I do you?"
Great
Gods! He was actually preening\ Aurian cursed her imagination for coming up
with the idiotic story of a missing husband. She cursed the ridiculous laws of
this land that passed women around like possessions, and cursed this arrogant
young booby who thought he was doing her such a favor! What gall! Then she
pulled herself together, and started thinking with frantic haste. Maybe that
tale about Anvar being her husband would stand her in good stead, if he coujd
be found . . . She took a deep breath and crossed her fingers beneath the
sheet. "But Your Highness," she blurted out, "what about my
husband?"
Harihn
frowned. "Aurian, your husband is dead."
"But
what if he isn't?" Aurian protested. "We don't know for
certain." At her words, the image of Forral's face rose before her with
such painful clarity that she gulped back a sob. Oh, Forral, forgive me, she
thought. "What happens if he comes here only to discover that I've become
another man's concubine?" she went on, unable to suppress the quiver in
her voice. "Please, Your Highness, surely you could put a search in
motion? I beg you ... As a woman alone in a strange land, I throw myself upon
your mercy." Well, groveling had worked
with
the Arbiters. If only the Prince would take the same bait . . . But as Aurian
forced tears into her eyes, she saw Harihn's expression harden.
"Lady,"
he said flatly, "to find the one you seek would be impossible."
Drat
it! I've outfoxed myself! He has no intention of finding Anvar, Aurian thought,
because he wants me himself. She had no other recourse but to persist.
"What, with light skin and light hair, and blue eyes? I'd have thought he
would stand out in this city. If he was brought here with Sara, surely someone
must remember having seen him?"
"Exactly!
And in all this time, there has been no word of such a man—What did you say? He
was with Sara? The Khisihn? Why?" Harihn leaned forward, his eyes suddenly
intent.
What
had got into the man? Aurian wondered. Could she use this sudden interest to
her advantage? "Did Sara not mention him?" she fished.
"She
most certainly did not! Should she have? Were they together? Why did she not
speak of him? Is this something I could use to discredit my father?"
Harihn's questions tumbled over each other in his eagerness.
So that
was it! Aurian fought to suppress her relief. If she handled this right . . .
She assumed what she hoped was a shocked expression. "I'm not surprised she
didn't mention Anvar to the Khisihn. She's his concubine. That's why she wants
me dead, Harihn=*-in case I betray her secret! Of course if poor Anvar is dead,
it won't make any difference, but if he's still alive, it would put your father
in a very embarrassing position."
The
Prince let out a whoop of triumphant laughter. "Ah!" he said.
"You are repaying my investment already! I wondered, when I rescued you,
if you two knew one another. Two outland-ers arriving so close together was too
much of a coincidence. I wonder what my father will say when he hears that his
precious new Khisihn is another man's concubine!"
Aurian
sighed. What an innocent! "Sara will say that I'm lying, or that you are
lying, and the Khisu will believe her of course, and then we'll both be in
trouble," she said flatly, and
Harihn's
face fell. "What you need is proof," Aurian urged him. "If you
could only find Anvar . . ."
The
Prince's face lit up. "By the Reaper, Lady, but you are clever! I never
would have thought of that. What a pity that you are a foreign sorceress. You
would make a far better Khisihn than that she-jackal of my father's. You are
worth your weight in the treasures of the desert!" It seemed an odd sort
of compliment, but Aurian let it pass. Harihn leapt to his feet. "I will
send a man down to the docks at once—the trail should start there, if
anywhere."
"Harihn,
I don't know how to thank you," Aurian told him, in an excess of relief.
"As soon as I'm on my feet, I'll repay your kindness, I promise. With your
permission, I'll start training your personal guard in Northern fighting
skills. Then, if your father should make a move against you, you'll have as
much protection as possible." And when I go away, she thought, at least
you'll still be defended.
"Lady,
you have my heartfelt thanks." Harihn faced her, his front of arrogance
replaced by gratitude.
Aurian
realized that he was very much afraid of his father —and very much alone. And
now she intended to betray him— to win his trust and use what aid he could
offer her, and then, as soon as it was expedient, to leave him. In that moment
she hated herself. How far would the ripples of Miathan's evil spread? Were
they beginning to engulf her, too? Aurian forced a smile, but she was shuddering
inwardly, despising herself for what she was doing. "Your Highness,"
she said, "it will be my privilege to help you." And may the' Gods
help me, she thought.
Onaptcr 25
THE PRISONERS
he
Nightrunners had made their home in a safe and secret honeycomb of caves,
reached from the ocean via a tunnel where waves beat into a shadowed opening in
the cliff. This entrance, with waters that were deep enough to float a ship,
opened into a vast cavern, hollowed out aeons ago by the sea's ceaseless pounding
in the constricted space beneath the cliffs. A gently sloping beach of shingle
narrowed as it curved round, to be lost in deep waters that lapped the sheer,
sea-smoothed walls at the rear and opposite sides of the cave. Anchored in the
pool were four small ships, their lines lean and swift, the figureheads at
their prows carved and painted with skill and love in the shapes of legendary
beasts. A cluster of smaller boats were moored by the beach, which sloped up to
a broad shelf of flat rock, the wall behind it pierced with dark entrances to
the maze of corridors and chambers where the smugglers dwelt.
The
cavern was lit by lamps and torches fixed in brackets to the rock itself, or
mounted on tall wooden poles planted firmly in the shingle. Their flickering
light was picked up by glittering fragments of mica and fine veins of ore in
the walls, and thrown back in splintered rainbow gleams that echoed the sparkle
of tears in Zanna's eyes.
She
didn't want to leave. Why, in three short months, this place had become her
Home! They let me have a life here, Zanna justified herself, against the guilt
that dogged her love of this place. Though Dulsina's sister Remana had been so
kind and welcoming, she had not tried to coddle Zanna as though she might break
apart. In the secret world of the Nightrunners, everyone made themselves
useful.
Zanna
paused in the entrance to the massive cavern, assailed by memories of the day
she had first arrived in this place. She had been weary and chilled to the
bone—and not a little afraid. Despite Dulsina's assurances, the reluctance of
the smuggler crew to accept her had left her uncertain of her welcome in their
hideaway. But from the moment Vannor's daughter had stepped unsteadily down the
springy gangplank with a whin-
AUR1AN '
387
ing,
fretful Antor in her arms, Remana had been a fount of comfort and reassurance.
The
tall, gray-haired woman, older and stouter than her sister, but with the same
upright carriage, brisk manner, and shrewd, twinkling gray eyes, had taken
Antor in one arm and put the other around the tired girl's shoulders, cutting
short Zanna's attempt at an explanation with a flood of brisk and friendly
chatter. "Never mind that, child—you look quite worn out! I don't suppose
these useless men even thought to feed you, did they? No? I thought not! Men!
The only way to drive any sense into them is to hit them over the head with an
oar. What? Dulsina gave you a letter for me? Wonders will never cease! I know
it's not easy to get messages to this place, but my sister is the worst
correspondent . . . Here you are, my dear—the kitchen. We'll get you fed and
warm in no time . . ."
As she
spoke, Remana had been leading the bemused Zanna through what had seemed, at
the time, to be a maze of interconnecting caves and tunnels. At last they
reached a low arched entrance at the end of a corridor, and passed into the
warm, fragrant cavern that was the communal kitchen. In the Nightrunner
community, even kitchen duty had its place. It was left to those unable to
perform the more arduous tasks of survival—the old and the very young. In this
way, everyone, even the children, contributed to the welfare of the close-knit
group. A sense of belonging was fostered at a very early age. It was a good
system, in Zanna's opinion—better than that of the city, where the poor were
bonded like slaves, and little children and folk too old to do manual
work^begged in the stinking streets, or were forced to turn to crime in order
to survive.
The
kitchen was loud with chatter and brightly lit with many lamps, its
smoke-stained walls glowing a soft red with the warm light of the cookfires.
Even at this early hour, the place was filled with a businesslike bustle. A
budding young girl, one of the goatherds who tended the small flock that grazed
on the cliffs above, was pouring warm, fresh milk into cans that stood in an
icy pool at the back of the cavern, where the sea penetrated through some
subterranean chink in the rocks. A boy sat at the edge of one hearth, stirring
a caldron of porridge. By its side steamed a kettle of fragrant tea, made from
dried flowers and sea grass that grew at the top of the cliff. An
old man
with gnarled hands was gutting fish in a corner, and the fruits of his labors
were baking on griddles at a nearby fire, supervised by his wife. One old woman
was beating gulls' eggs in a basin, watched hungrily by the small boy and girl
who had climbed the sheer cliffs to collect them. The mouth-watering aroma of
new bread filled the air.
Antor
caused a sensation. Within seconds, the little boy had been taken over by a
vociferous group of delighted old fisherwives, and was being bathed and fed,
pampered and cos-setted and exclaimed over. Remana, having made sure that they
were not neglecting the business of breakfast in their zeal, turned her
attention to Zanna, seating her by the fire with a large bowl of porridge, a
cup of the steaming tea, and a hunk of warm new bread and pungent goat's-milk
cheese. Pouring some tea for herself, she sat down on the other side of the
hearth to peruse Dulsina's letter while Zanna ate.
"Well!
My poor dear girl, you have had a time of it, haven't you?" Zanna blushed
beneath her scrutiny as Remana looked up from the letter with lifted brows.
"Don't worry, child—we'll take good care of you both, and you can stay as
long as you like! Be assured that you are welcome here, my dear—very welcome,
indeed!"
And so
it began—one of the happiest times in Zanna's life. She was given a chamber
close to Remana—a tiny curtained cubicle that, like many of the living areas,
had been chipped painstakingly out of the rock during the many years that the
Nightrunners had dwelt in..this labyrinth of caves. The delightfully eccentric
furnishings were made of driftwood, and brightly colored rag rugs covered the
floor. Thick woven hangings helped take the chill from the walls, for only the
kitchens and the main living and work rooms had fireplaces, vented via natural
faults in the cliff.
"But
aren't you worried about the smoke being seen?" Zanna had asked Remana.
"Not
a bit, my dear. For one thing, by the time it filters up through all that rock,
there is very little smoke to be seen. For another"—Remana's eyes grew
large and round as she lowered her voice—"no one ever comes to this
desolate part of the coast. You see, the area is haunted!"
"Haunted?"
Zanna gasped.
AURIAN •
389
Remana
burst out laughing. "Zanna, if you could see your face! It's naught to
worry about. There is a massive standing stone nearby, out on the far headland
of the bay—a great, towering black thing that looks very sinister—especially in
the moonlight. Leynard's grandfather, the first of the Nightrunner leaders,
discovered that the local fishermen and herders were very superstitious about
it, so he arranged some 'hauntings'— you know, mysterious lights around the
stone at night, ghostly voices on the wind, the sound of invisible horsemen
passing by —all the usual old rubbish. Now, no one will come within miles of
it. Mind you . . ." For an instant, her brow creased in a frown. "I
must admit that the animals are also afraid of it, but truly, there's nothing
to worry about. In fact we bless the stone, because it keeps us safe. I'm only
warning you in case you go riding up there. The vicinity of the stone is best
avoided, if you don't want a spill."
"I
can learn to ride?" Zanna, the stone forgotten, could barely contain her
delight.
"You
mean that father of yours never taught you?" Remana looked shocked.
"I've heard Dulsina say that Vannor was over-protective of his daughters,
but by the Gods, that's going too far! Of course you can learn to ride—it's
something every girl should know. Later in the year, when the weather improves,
I'll teach you to sail, too . . ."
And so
it proved. Remana, as good as her word, lost no time in recruiting a young
smuggler named Tarnal as Zanna's instructor, and she soon became an insatiable
horsewoman, going out with the towheaded lad every day that the uncertain
midwinter weather permitted. The Nightrunners kept a troop of swift, sturdy,
surefooted ponies that usually ran wild on the grassy headlands, but came
happily down a narrow, sloping tunnel whose entrance was concealed in a clump
of gorse at the top of the cliff, to be stabled safely below in the caves when
the eastern coast was lashed by storms.
Zanna
adored her rides with Tarnal. From the clifftop above the smugglers' cave, the
view was glorious. Below and to the right was a pale sweep of crescent beach,
embraced by cliffs and cradling the shining sea. Some half league away on the
opposite horn of the crescent was a green knoll crowned by the stark and
sinister standing stone, and behind were the vast,
curving,
green-gray swells of the empty moorland. Astride her beloved pony, a shaggy,
gaily marked piebald that she had named Piper, Zanna would ride for miles
across the moors with the smuggler boy, their hair, dark brown and palest gold,
streaming behind them in the winter wind. They would return at dusk, tired but
exhilarated, their hands and faces tingling painfully from the cold, to hot
soup in the kitchen and an affectionate scolding from Remana for staying out so
long. Though she missed her father, it felt as though Zanna were truly coming
home.
Zanna
had wondered at first why she could see no evidence of actual smuggling, but a
chuckling Remana had soon put her right. "Oh, not in winter, dear child!
This is our quiet season, you might say. The seas are far too rough to risk our
ships at this time of year, and to be honest, there's little to trade."
She had
explained to Zanna that the chief activity of the smugglers was to ply their
trade between the coastal villages, transporting locally grown foodstuffs and
crafted wares between the communities on a baiter system, thus cutting out the
ruinous tariffs charged by the Merchants' Guild, and allowing the poor peasants
to enjoy a few of the luxuries that would otherwise be denied them. "Of
course, your dad, as Head of the Guild, is officially against such criminal
behavior." Remana had remarked. "Fortunately, he holds the private
belief that the merchants make profit enough, and the peasants should enjoy the
fruits of their labors. Besides"—she winked at Zanna—"there's also
the little matter of our Southern partnership! At least there was . . ."
Her face had clouded over, and she had said no more, but Zanna knew that she
was thinking about Yanis. She vowed to herself once more that before it was
time for him to set out again, she would come up with some kind of plan for him
to defeat the Southerners.
As the
winter days sped by, Zanna learned many things from her smuggler friends. The
old men had taken her to their hearts, and showed her how to fish with a line
in the tidal pools outside the cavern. At low tide, they fought for the
privilege of teaching her to set crab pots along the rocky reefs, near the
mouth of the cave, that protected the hideout from the close approach of other
ships. In the spring, Remana had promised her, when it was calm enough to teach
her to sail, she herself
AURIAN '
391
would
show Zanna the secret of navigating the one safe route through the treacherous
maze of submerged reefs.
In
winter, much of the work for the younger, fitter men involved repair and
maintenance of the ships and their gear. While snowstorms raged outside, the
women showed Zanna how to mend nets and ropes and sails, and how to make the
rugs that protected their feet from the cold stone floors, by hooking shreds of
rag through coarse sacking. They also taught her the secrets of their beautiful
and intricate weaving, to make the warm wall hangings that brightened up the
gloomy darkness of the caves.
These
were companionable times, filled with chatter and laughter, gossip and teasing
among the younger women. There was a great deal of talk about the handsome,
wind-bronzed young men, and who was in love with whom, and who would marry. At
these times, Zanna was content to listen, and keep her own counsel. Though
Tarnal had become her devoted shadow, she had already decided that she would
marry none other than Yanis, for she had loved him from the first day she had
set eyes on him. Fortunately, or perhaps- unfortunately, the leader of the
Nightrunners had no idea, as yet, of the fate she had mapped out for him—and
now he might never know, for Zanna had to leave.
Zanna
had paused in the shadowed entrance to the great harbor cavern, paralyzed by
the rush of happy memories that had assailed her with such pain. Angrily she
shook her head, and brushed her tears away. This was doing no good! For three
long months she had been happy—until word had come of the recent catastrophe in
Nexis. Word of monsters, hideous beyond imagining, that had caused so many
deaths. Word of the Archmage seizing power, and holding the city in a grip of
terror. And no word of Vannor, who had been missing without trace since that
horrific night when so many had died.
When
Remana had told her the news, Zanna's guilt at leaving Vannor had returned to
overwhelm her. She had known at once what she must do. She must return to Nexis
to find her dad, or at least find out what had happened to him. Of course, if
the Nightrunners discovered her intentions, they would never let her go—so that
was why she was sneaking around now, late at night, preparing to make her
escape.
It was
fortunate that there had been several days of stormy weather, and the horses
were stabled below in the caves. The blizzard raging outside would make the
journey more difficult and dangerous, but Zanna was sure she only needed to get
as far as some kind of shelter that night. Then, having lost the pursuers that
Remana would no doubt send after her, she would be able to continue in
daylight. Surely it wouldn't be too difficult to find her way over the moors to
Nexis? She hoped not.
Zanna
peeped around the side of the archway to look for the watchman who guarded the
ships at night. He came into view, his footsteps crunching on the shingle
beach, and she heaved a sigh of relief. So far, her plan was working out. The
watchman was Tarnal. She had forced herself to wait, with scant patience, until
the night when he would be on duty. Taking a deep breath, Zanna stepped out to
meet him.
"You're
up late!" Tarnal sounded surprised, but as she had expected, his brown
eyes brightened at the sight of her.
Oh
dear, Zanna thought, I hope I don't get him into too much trouble! She arranged
a smile on her face. "I couldn't
B sleep," she told him ruefully. "Even though we're
underground H here, the storm still
seems to bother me." *
"Ah,
that happens to a lot of us smugglers," Tarnal assured her. "It means
you're weather-wise, as we call it. You have the makings of a good Nightrunner,
Zanna."
He
grinned at her shyly, and she understood all too well what was on his mind.
He'd been mooning after her for ages, but of all the times to .wart getting
romantic . . . Oh dear, Zanna thought. Not now, Tarnal, please!
"Anyway," she said briskly, "since I couldn't sleep, I thought
I'd come down to the stable to see if Piper is all right."
Tarnal's
face lit up.. "Good idea," he said. "You never know with horses
in this wild weather. Tell you what, I'll come along in case you need any
help."
Oh no
you don't, Zanna thought grimly. If you get me alone in that nice, warm,
bracken-filled cavern . . . "That's very kind of you, Tarnal," she
said swiftly, "but if Yanis found out that you'd left your post, you would
be in a lot of trouble!" She gave him a conspiratorial wink. "Stay
here, Tarnal, I'll be back shortly, don't worry." With that, she beat a
hasty retreat, praying that he wouldn't take it into his head to follow her.
AURIAN •
393
The
stable cavern was warm with the press of animal bodies. As she entered,
replacing the heavy hurdle that barred the exit behind her, Zanna could hear
the soft huffing sound of horses breathing in the shadows, followed by a rustle
of straw and a scrape of hoof on stone as the sleepy creatures became aware of
her presence. Great, lustrous eyes swung in her direction, gleaming like jewels
as they reflected the light of the lamp that she carried. Stretching on tiptoe,
Zanna reached up and placed the lamp carefully in a niche carved high in the
rocky wall on her right-hand side. There were strict rules about keeping any
kind of flame away from the tinder-dry bracken that covered the cavern floor.
One spark, and the cave would become an inferno within seconds.
Shuffling
through the deep-drifted bedding, Zanna moved along the wall until she came to
the row of pegs, hammered into a natural transverse crack in the stone, that
held saddles and bridles. Rummaging under a pile of bracken, she unearthed her
warm cloak and the bundle of food and belongings that she'd hidden there
earlier in the evening. Rather than lugging the whole lot, along with the
ungainly, flapping saddle, through the mass of restless animals, she decided to
catch Piper first, and bring him here. Unhooking his bridle from its peg, she
took an apple from the pocket of her skirt, and wriggled her way carefully
between the milling horses, calling softly for the piebald pony.
Piper
came to her calling. She had been teaching him to do this by bringing him a
treat every tinae she wanted to ride him. Zanna smiled as he snuffled greedily
into her palm and scrunched the fruit in a single bite. While he was looking
for more, she slipped the bridle into place and fastened the buckle quickly.
Then, despite her hurry, she threw her arms around Piper's arching neck,
burying her face in his streaming black-and-white mane to stifle her sobbing.
Oh Gods, she did love him so! And Remana, and Yanis and Antor and Tarnal, and
all the others . . .
The
pony snorted, and turned his head to nibble at her pocket, his ears cocked
forward hopefully. She had no more apples, however; all he found was her
handkerchief, which he tugged out anyway. Zanna's sobbing turned to shaky laughter.
"Why, thank you, you clever creature!" she told him. Having
fe
retrieved
her chewed and rather soggy possession, she led the pony to the place near the
wall where she had left her belongings.
Tethering
Piper to a handy peg, Zanna turned to lift the saddle down—always a stretch for
her, because of her short stature. Placing it carefully on the pony's back, she
stooped under his belly to find the dangling girth—and jerked upright with a
yelp as a hand grasped her shoulder. "Tarnal! I told you not to—"
Zanna spun round, her heart hammering with shock
—to
find herself in the arms of Yanis.
"I've
been waiting for you to make a run for it, ever since we told you about your
dad," the smuggler said. But there was sympathy, not anger, in his face.
"Yanis,
please don't stop me," Zanna begged. "I must go
—I
can't bear it! I have to know, don't you see .
. ." Her eyes overflowed
with tears.
"I
know, girl. In your place, I'd feel the same," Yanis told her gently.
"But rushing off all alone in a storm is no answer. Why, there's hard men,
experienced men, been lost out on those moors in the blizzards, and all we've
found come spring was their bones picked clean by wolves. If we found anything
at all,
that
is."
Zanna
stared at him in dismay. For a moment she had hoped to persuade him . . . But
though it was obviously not to be, her agile brain was already at work on a new
plan. Yanis would be watching the horses like a hawk at first, but if she could
allay his suspicions long enough . . .
"All
right." She sighed, and wiped her eyes. "I'm sorry, Yanis, I didn't
know the moors were so dangerous, but now you've explained it to me."
Zanna caught her breath, suddenly very conscious of his arms around her, aware
that this was the first time he had touched her since the day of her arrival.
She didn't want him to let her go, but if her new scheme was to work, it was
imperative that she fool him into thinking that she was resigned to her fate.
Sighing, she pushed him away, and
turned
to go.
"Wait!"
Yanis caught hold of her arm. "I know what you're thinking, Zanna—that you
only need wait a while and then you can try again. Only it won't work,
see?"
AURIAN '
395
Zanna
gasped, furious that he had outguessed her. "And just how did you manage
to work that out?" she said acidly.
The
young smuggler's face darkened. "I know what you think of me," he
said stiffly, "but that's the first time you've come near calling me daft
to my face. Well, let me tell you something—there's stupid and stupid, and it
didn't take much for me to realize what you were up to. All I did was put
myself into your shoes for a minute. I would never have given up so easily, and
I knew for sure that you wouldn't, loving your dad like you do!" His grip
around Zanna's arm tightened, as he continued. "The Nightrunners can't let
you go running off to get killed, you little idiot! I won't let you! I'm a
patient man, believe me, and it's winter, so I've nothing better to do. Get
used to having me around, girl, because I plan to be your shadow from now
on!"
Zanna
stared at him openmouthed, too outraged to speak. She stared into that rugged,
handsome face, those dark gray eyes that were sparking with anger, the mouth
that was hard now, and unyielding. Not long ago, Vannor's daughter would have
been overjoyed at the thought of having Yanis constantly at her side. Now, the
idea filled her with rage and frustration. "Damn you!" she yelled—and
kicked him as hard as she could in the shin. "I might just as well be your
prisoner!"
With a
stifled curse, Yanis let go of her arm, and Zanna fled from the cavern with
tears of anger streaming down her face.
f
"I
might just as well be your prisoner!" The Earth-Mage Eilin glared at the
Forest Lord. "You deliberately took my staff and gave it to D'arvan, so
that I could not return to my Valley. You could hardly wait to seize the chance
to tamper with the fate of the World Outside once more!"
Hellorin
looked at her steadily, but made no reply to her charge. The suspicion dawned
on Eilin that he was simply waiting for her anger to run its course—after all,
what need had he <> waste his breath in fruitless debate? No matter how
much he might storm and argue and protest, she was utterly in his lower.
The
Mage found that she was shaking with rage. "Meddler!" she spat.
"It was^ ever so with the Phaerie. It's of no
consequence
to you that the Atchmage rides roughshod over all the world. Just so long as
you can exercise your influence on events, what do you care? Don't you realize
that I am the only Mage left in the North to oppose Miathan? You've let those
two children loose in my Vale with my staff to face the Archmage alone. In the
name of all the Gods, my Lord—they need me!" "No, Eilin, they do not
need you." Hellorin spoke softly, but the underlying power of his voice
sent a shiver across the smooth, silver-gray bark that coated the walls of the
chamber. The Mage fought to hold on to her anger; the legendary temper of the
Magefolk was the only thing that had saved her from being overawed by this
stupendous immortal. Eilin folded her arms and her lips thinned into an
obdurate line. "Why not?" she demanded. "Give me one good reason
why not!"
"Because
I am Lord here, and I say that they do not!" When Hellorin frowned, it was
as though a cloud had passe <' over the sun—though there was no sun in this
changeles timeless Elsewhere. As Hellorin's dark brows drew together, Eilin
shivered at the sound of a distant growl of thunder. "Have a care,
Magewoman. I do not meddle, as you call it, through idleness or spite—though
the debt your people owe to mine is a sore temptation . .
." Hellorin's voice was a blade of ice, and Eilin took an
involuntary step backward, rubbing at the goose-flesh that pricked her skin.
"So that's what this is about!" she hissed. "Revenge—pure and
simple! Oh, you may protest your innocence, Lord, but if I had not been a
Mage—"
"Had
you not be"eh a Mage, you would never have survived the murder attempt by
one of your own people," Hellorin told her flatly, his eyes glinting with
irritation. "Had you not been a Mage, you would never have come here to
plague me!" "If I plague you, let me go!" Eilin countered
swiftly. "By all the Gods, Eilin, is there no telling you? /—ca>
not!" Hellorin threw out his arms in a gesture of defeat, a.m stamped
across the mossy-green carpet to the deep window embrasure, where a flagon of
wine and two goblets stood on the sill. Throwing himself into the window seat,
he poured wine for them, and held
out a cup to her.
"Here—sit down, you wretched
woman, and stop bristling! Let us end this wrangle, once and for all!"
"But—"
AURIAN •
397
"Eilin—please?"
The
Earth-Mage was disarmed by the change in Hellorin's voice. Biting her lip, she
crossed the room to him, and perched tentatively on the edge of the window
seat.
"You
look just like a little brown bird, poised and ready to fly away at the
slightest hint of danger." Hellorin's chiseled mouth had softened in a
smile.
Eilin,
much to her dismay, found the last shreds of her righteous anger melting like
sunrise mist. "Little brown bird, my eye!" she retorted tartly, but
despite her best efforts, she found that her lips were twitching as she took
the goblet from his hand.
Hellorin's
eyes never left her own. "Rest you, my Lady," he said softly.
"Your Healing is but lately accomplished, and you need time to regain your
strength. It does you no good to agitate yourself in this way."
"Is
that why you won't let me go yet?" Eilin seized eagerly on his words.
"Do you mean that when—"
"No."
The word held a terrifying finality. Hellorin sighed. "Lady, I have put
off this explanation lest you be distressed beyond the limits of your
strength—and because I feared that you would not believe me." He took her
hand in a firm, warm grip, and his fathomless eyes bored into her own.
"Eilin, you must try to understand. What I am about to tell you is the
absolute truth—I swear it on the head of my son. When you were brought to us,
your injuries were fatal, even to one of the Mageborn. My Healers brought you
twfck from the very brink of death. In this place, where the Phaerie are
empowered and time holds no sway, it was possible for them to do this. But
thanks to your Magefolk ancestors, their power—our power—no longer t-xtends
into the mundane world. In short, you have been Healed in this world, but not
in your own. If you try to return—"
"No!"
Eilin choked on the cry. Her blood was ice in her veins. "It can't be
true—it can't]" But the lines of sorrow on the Forest Lord's face, the
overflowing sympathy in his eyes, convinced her beyond any words that he spoke
the absolute truth. Eilin, after the tragedies of her life, had believed
herself more than a match for any disaster that Fate flung into her path—but
I
this
last cruel jest on the part of destiny felled her with a single,
lethal
stroke.
The
impenetrable citadel of fierce Magefolk pride, with which Eilin had surrounded
herself after the death of Geraint, began to crumble and totter at last, and
the Mage felt as though she were falling into pieces along with it. "I
cannot leave?" she whispered. "I can't go home—ever?"
The
pain in Hellorin's eyes said everything. "I fear not, Lady," he told
her sorrowfully. "At least, not unless—"
But
Eilin never heard those vital, final words. They were drowned in a sound of
endlessly breaking glass, as her adamantine fortress exploded into shards that
were falling, falling like her tears . . .
Hellorin
could only hold her helplessly while she trembled and wept. She had been
dreadfully weakened, of course, by her injuries—far more than she realized—but
he was utterly shocked by such profound distress. To see Eilin brought so low
was more than he could bear: she who was so fierce and proud— and how he
admired her for that! No one had stood up to him so well in aeons—save little
Maya, of course! We have been out of the world too long, indeed, he mused. They
seem to have produced a wild and wonderful breed of women in our absence. But
even the strongest of women occasionally needed help.
The Lord
of the Phaerie gathered his powers and . . . "ENOUGH!" he roared. The
air was ripped apart by a tremendous thunderclap, and-toghtning arced across
the chamber in a searing flare. Eilin jerked to her feet, cramming her knuckles
into her gaping mouth. Her tangled hair was a bristling aureole from the
residue of power in the room, and her eyes appeared enormous in a chalk-white
face. Hellorin smiled at her. "Much better!" he said briskly.
"And now that I have your attention,
Lady
..."
Seizing
the hand of the startled Mage, the Forest Lord pulled her after him out of the
room, and rushed her, clattering, down the wooden spiral of stairs that twisted
inside the walls of the slender tower. Ignoring the incredulous stares of his
subjects, Hellorin towed her through the seemingly endless series of halls and
chambers that made up his citadel, until at last they crossed the imposing
Great Hall where Maya and D'arvan
AURIAN •
399
had
rested, and burst through the great arching outer doorway and into the open.
Without pausing, he hurried her down the steps of the outer terraces, and
across the meadow toward the misty outline of the woods beyond.
"Hellorin,
wait! I can't—" Eilin's breathless wail halted the Lord of the Phaerie. He
turned to see that she was in real distress. Her legs were shaky, and her chest
was heaving with the unaccustomed exertion that had come too soon after
recovering from her dreadful wounds. But at least she was speaking again, and
that irate glint in her eye promised well for the resurgence of her fiery
spirit.
"Well
run, my Lady," he told her—while thinking it was just as well that she had
no breath for the blistering retort that was written all too clearly across her
face. Putting his arm around her, he turned her back to face the way she had
come— and was gratified by her gasp of pure delight. "Forgive me for
rushing you out in such a rude and rough fashion, Lady," he said gently,
"but I wanted very much to show you this." There, before them,
climbing up and up from the gentle swell of the grassy meadow, was the pride of
Hellorin's heart: the citadel and home of his people.
The
Phaerie, consummate masters of illusion that they were, had excelled
themselves. Combining nature with magic, they had created a true entity that
actually lived and breathed around them—unlike the oppressive heaps of
soulless, murdered, hacked-out stone that formed the dwellings of Mage and
Mortal. Glowing like a jewel in the st/ange, golden half-light that was an
unchanging feature of this timeless Otherworld, the citadel took the outward
form of a massive, craggy hill. Its walls and balconies were cliffs and ledges,
its windows were concealed by glamourie from outward view, and its many slender
wooden towers, such as the one in which Eilin had been staying, were groves of
soaring, living beech. Level areas boasted glades and gardens with translucent,
bright-hued flowers that sparkled like spun glass in the eerie amber light.
Streams and fountains decked the hillside in diamond-glitter, and cascaded down
the sheer rock faces like drifting silver veils.
Hellorin
let out his breath in a contented sigh. Down through all the ages, this sight
had never failed to move him with a pleasure so intense that it was almost
pain. He smiled at
Eilin,
who stood beside him as though she had been turned to stone. Her face was rapt
and glowing.
"Beautiful,
is it not, beyond all words?" he murmured. "Though your exile must be
bitter, can such a place as this not ease your sorrow, Lady?"
Eilin
sighed. "A little, perhaps — in the course of time." "Ah, time —
but time, at last, may mend all things." Seeing the Mage's quizzical
frown, Hellorin was swift to enlighten her. "Your exile need not last
forever, Lady — only for as long as we ourselves are imprisoned here."
"What?"
Eilin gasped. "But I don't understand." "It has all to do with
our magic, and its limitations," the Forest Lord explained. "The
power of our Healers cannot extend into your world, but when we Phaerie are
released from our exile, our Healing powers will also be freed from their
restrictions. You can return in safety then, and be well and whole again as you
were before."
Eilin
was still frowning. "But I thought the Ancimi Magefolk had imprisoned you
here for all eternity."
"Ah,
of course! Now I perceive your confusion. I explamcu the prophecy to Maya and
D'arvan, but I had forgotten that you would not know. But you are weary, and
the midst of a meadow is no place for lengthy tales. Come back with me now, my
Lady, to my Great Hall in-the citadel, where you can be refreshed and rest in
comfort. Then I will tell you all that you wish to know ..."
"So
your — our — freedom depends on the One who comes to claim the Sword of
Flame?" Eilin felt crushed all over again with disappointment. Almost, she
wished that Hellorin had spared her these ridiculous notions. A Phaerie
prophecy was too fragile a thread on which to hang her hopes!
"You
must have faith, Lady." Hellorin took her hand. "Believe me, had you
known the Dragonfolk as I did, their words could not have failed to comfort
you. Events are in motion — we have only to wait."
"Yes,
but for how long?" A tear trembled on Eilin's laiL,. , "Events are in motion as we speak,
out there in the world! My I
AURIAN •
4ol doing goodness-knows-what with this magic sword of yours—"
II..
_._._ 1-_.-- I...-•„!__.____I. «?*?,--,--- -^-~—-~ *-—--
—'-1"-""' '--
\ icwn
u« +01
doing
goodness-knows-what with this magic sword of yours—" Her words were lost
in a sob. "They need me, Hellorin! While I am forced to kick my heels in
this—this Nowhere, and I don't even know what is happening—" To her
dismay, she was weeping again.
"Hush,
Lady, hush," Hellorin comforted her. "There, at least, I can ease
your mind. Come, Eilin, I have one more wonder to show you."
Taking
the Mage's hand, he led her away from the fire, toward the far end of the hall.
There, to Eilin's puzzlement, a short flight of stone steps ended in nothing.
They simply went halfway up the wall—and stopped. Above them, the wall was
hidden by a rich hanging of green-gold brocade. Hellorin mounted the steps,
taking her with him, and pulled the curtain aside.
Eilin
gasped. There, set high in the wall, was a glorious window of glittering,
many-hued crystal shaped like a sun-n.rst. Around the edges, the richly colored
panes sent pinpoints »t jeweled light cascading into the chamber. In the center
was a single, circular pane, set at eye level from the vantage point of the
stairway.
"Here."
Hellorin guided her forward with an arm around her shoulders. "Look
through my window."
"Oh!"
The Mage blinked, rubbea her eyes—and peered closer. "By all the Gods,
it's Nexis!" She swung around to face him, suddenly suspicious. "Is
this more of your Phaerie trickery?"
"Upon
my oath it is not!" The Forest Lord's eyes glinted with annoyance.
"Gods, but if you are not the most contrary, stiff-necked creature ever to
come within these walls!" Suddenly he began to laugh softly, shaking his
head. "Nay, but I have not enjoyed such a battle of wits and wills since I
lost my poor Adrina . . . Trust me, Lady Eilin—you I would not deceive. This is
my Window upon the World, left me by your \retched ancestors, no doubt to
tantalize me with all that the Phaerie were missing! It was through this casement
that I first saw Adrina, collecting her dealing herbs in the forest . . ."
He
ease
you, Lady, we will come here whenever you wish and keep vigil together, until
our exile may be ended at last.
The
Earth-Mage looked up at the Lord of the Phaene, suddlly and utterly moved by
hi. kmdness. How could her ancestors have been so cruel as to shut this
magnificent, kindly, arelt hearted being away from the world? Her fingers
t.ght-Son^ hand,gand fo'r the first time in their -quamtance she smiled at him.
"Thank you, my Lord,' she sa.d simply. 1 would like that very much.
CKapter 26
A BARGAIN
WITH DEATH
nvar's
endurance had finally reached an end. After many days—he had lost count of how
many—in the slave camp, he was laid low by a fever carried by the whining,
biting insects. One morning he found himself unable to rise, his body wracked
by shivers and delirium. The overseer rolled him over with a sandaled foot.
"This one is finished." The words echoed weirdly in Anvar's receding
consciousness. "Get the others to work, and we'll see to him later. What a
pity-already he has won me a month's wages. Had he lasted a little longer it
would have been more."
These
were the last words that Anvar heard as he was drawn down, down into a spiral
ing blackness. In that moment, all pain and sorrow and weariness lifted from
his heart, and gladly he let go, to commence the final journey.
For
several days after her talk with Harihn, Aurian did little but eat and sleep,
and argue with the surgeon about when she could get out of bed. The search for
Anvar had made no progress, and she was anxious to get matters moving at her
speed. But the surgeon remained obdurate, and to her dismay, she was prevented
from trying out her injured leg by Shia, who had come down unexpectedly but
firmly on the side of the wrinkled little man. Since the great cat never left
her side, Aurian found herself helplessly confined to bed, waited on hand and
foot by the gigantic Bohan. Out of gratitude for his devotion, and the well-meaning
concern of both Shia and her host, Aurian tried to curb her irritation, but her
frustration was mounting with each passing day.
Harihn
spent a good deal of time with the Mage, and in the course of their
conversations, told her about the city-state of Taibeth, to which she had come.
It was the capital city and northernmost outpost of the Khazalim, most of whom
lived a nomadic life in the arid wilderness to the south of the great river
valley, or dwelt jn scattered settlements to the west, farther up the river.
"It is a difficult land," he told her, "and the
Khazalim
are a difficult people—fierce, Warlike, and merciless to their enemies. My
father is a good example of our race."
With
that, he went on to speak of his unhappy childhood. The Prince's mother had
been a princess of the Xandim, who lived far across the desert and were
renowned for their legendary horses. She had been captured on a raid and wedded
to Xiang, but her spirit had proved too proud and independent to suit the
Khisu. When Harihn was a boy, Xiang had finally had his mother drowned in the
river by assassins, claiming her death as an accident. Her son had spent his
childhood roaming the Royal Palace, lonely and unloved, a constant victim of
his father's brutality. But the Khisu had never taken another Queen, and as
sole royal heir, Harihn's life had been preserved —until now.
Harihn,
to Aurian's dismay, refused to let go of the idea of somehow using Anvar to
discredit the new Queen. "Truly," he said, "your husband may yet
prove to be a weapon for me against my royal father."
"Now
wait a minute," Aurian broke in. "I'm not having Anvar put in danger
because of this feud of yours."
"Danger?
Feud? Aurian, you do not understand." The Prince leaned forward, his eyes
intense. "Your husband is in the gravest of danger, if yet he lives. If
the Khisu discovers the connection between this man and his new Khisihn, then
Anvar's life will not be worth a grain of sand. And what of the Khisihn
herself? I saw her ruthlessness when she pleaded for your death. She would
never leave your man alive to give away her secret! Nay, I must intensify the
search at once. I would rather have this pawn in my hands as soon as possible,
not only for your peace of mind and for my benefit, but for his own safety."
Nonetheless,
it was another four days before the search yielded .any results. Aurian, driven
mad with impatience, had finally won the right to be allowed out of bed. Her
persistence had worn down Harihn, the surgeon, and Shia, to the point where it
had been decided that Bohan should carry her outside, and settle her on a
comfortable chair in the lavish walled garden, with her injured Jeg propped up
on a footstooJ. She was sternly forbidden to get to her feet, however, and the
eunuch remained in constant attendance on her to see to her every need.
Well,
it's progress at least, Aurian thought glumly. At first she had badgered the
Prince to remove those accursed bracelets and let her Heal herself, but he had
told her that the secret of their unlocking had long been lost by the Khazalim.
Besides, according to an ancient law, the freeing of a sorcerer within the
bounds of the kingdom would result in all parties concerned being flayed alive.
Though the Mage had grudgingly dropped the matter, it only served 'to increase
her despair.
Aurian
sat by the ormanental pool in the shade of a flowering tree, inwardly fuming.
Shia, having utterly lost patience with her irascible friend, had taken herself
off to sleep in the shade. The Mage was moodily shredding the waxy, perfumed,
trumpetlike blossoms between her fingers and throwing the fragments into the
pool, where they were instantly seized by the greedy golden carp—and just as
instantly spat out again. But they kept trying, all the same. Stupid things,
Aurian thought grouchily. You'd think they'd learn.
Just
then Bohan, who had been sitting on the grass nearby, leapt to his feet at the
sound of approaching footsteps, and hastily prostrated himself before his
Prince, who came hurrying along the terrace, his face alight. "News,
Aurian," he cried. "I have news at last!"
Aurian
tried to rise, but he pushed her gently down again into the chair. Pain lanced
through her strapped ribs, but she ignored it. "Tell me!" she cried.
Harihn dropped to the grass beside her, panting in the enervating heat, and
poured two goblets of wine from the jug on the low table beside her. "We
located the captain of the Corsair ship last night," he said.
"Naturally he was reluctant to admit to illegal trade in foreigners, but a
brief sojourn in my dungeon soon changed that!" His eyes sparkled with a
savage glee that Aurian found distasteful. Like father, like son, she thought.
I ought to be more careful.
"It
seems," Harihn continued, "that he sold your Anvar to a notorious
slave trader named Zahn. My men paid him a visit this morning. At first he
denied all knowledge of the matter, but when offered a simple choice—a large
bribe on the one hand, or a visit to his friend the captain in my dungeon on
the other—he became most helpful. It is just as well," he said, frowning.
"Had I been forced to arrest Zahn, it would have attracted the Khisu's
attention. Zahn is his main source of
slaves
to build his summer palace. If my father had found out about your husband,
things might have gone very badly for us
all."
"Never
mind that," Aurian prompted impatiently, not interested in any of this—a
mistake, as she was later to discover. "Where is Anvar? What did you find
out?"
"Try
not to hope too much, Aurian." Harihn's face grew somber. "Zahn sold
him to the work gangs building my father's summer palace upriver. The Khisu
only wants it finished, and cares not how many lives he wastes to gain his
ends. I visited the place once. The brutality with which the slaves were treated
made me sick." He took hold of the Mage's hand. "Aurian, your Anvar
went there several weeks ago, and slaves die in that place like flies. And you
Northerners have not the constitution for this climate. It is almost certain
that he is dead, Lady."
"No!"
Seeing her stricken face, he went on quickly. "But I have readied a boat,
and I will go myself, at once, to see."
Instantly
the old glint was back in Aurian's eyes. "Good," she said. "I
thought I would have to talk you into it for a minute. How soon can we
start?"
Harihn
stared at her, taking in the strapping on her ribs that was visible through the
gauzy white robe that she wore, the leg tightly swathed in bandages, and the
left arm still in a sling to immobilize it as much as possible. Fading bruises
lingered on her arms and her pallid face. "Aurian, you cannot go," he
told her firmly.^.
Aurian's
jaw tightened. "Would you care to wager on that,
my
Prince?"
At any
other time, the journey upriver would have been very pleasant. Aurian and Harihn
reclined on cushions beneath a shady canopy, the ever attentive Bohan fanning
away the swarms of insects that hovered over the sluggish waters. Though Harihn
had forsaken his extravagant royal barge for a plainer craft in order to
attract as little attention as possible, there was an unmistakable air of
luxury about the voyage. Fruit and wine had been provided, but the Mage was far
too anxious to eat. She sat bolt upright, gazing upriver, willing the bargemen
to row faster. Never in her life had she bitten her nails, but she was doing it
now.
Harihn
watched her, a frown on his face. "Aurian," he said at last.
"Must you fret so?"
"What
do you think?" Aurian snapped. "How can I not fret when Anvar is
suffering so badly? I blame myself for this." Her voice was bitter.
"Aurian,
what could you have done?" The Prince sat up and laid a soothing hand on
her arm. "You take too much upon yourself. What's done is done—remember
how near you came to losing your own life. You might have turned your back on
Anvar, as the Khisihn has done, but you did not. What more can you do? Whether
we come in time or no, we will not come any quicker for your worrying."
"I
know," Aurian said miserably. "I just can't help it."
As the
barge approached the jetty at the site of the summer palace, Aurian could see
for herself how badly the slaves were abused, and how much they suffered. Her
throat constricted with fear. Surely Anvar could never have survived this? Why,
oh why had she ever left him? Her knuckles tightened, the nails of her clenched
fingers digging into the soft wood of the barge's rail.
When
they were safely moored, Bohan carried the Mage ashore and set her down on the
dusty ground while Harihn sent for the Slavemaster. They waited. Aurian was in
a fever of impatience. Shia, to her disgust, had been made to stay behind, but
Harihn had brought his surgeon with them. The little man was frowning, his lips
pursed in disapproval at what he saw. When Aurian caught his eye, he responded
with a slight shake of his head. "Oh, please," she began to pray,
even though she knew now that the Gods she had grown up with had only been
Magefolk like herself. "Please . . ."
The
Slavemaster duly arrived. Recognizing his Prince with a start, he dropped to
the ground, quaking all over. Harihn hastily summoned him to rise and drew him
to one side, out of earshot. Their discussion seemed interminable to Aurian.
Though she was unable to hear, she could see the Slavemaster spreading his
hands in denial and shaking his head vehemently. At last Harihn tired of the
argument, and snapped his fingers. Immediately two grim-faced palace guards,
armed with great curved scimitars, climbed out of the barge and positioned
themselves on either side of the Slavemaster with drawn blades.
The
Slavemaster sank to his knees, pleading. Pointing! Aurian turned her eyes in
the same direction. The slave compound.
Harihn
returned to her, his expression grim. "Anvar is here," he said.
"Bohan will take you to him at once, for the news is grave. The
Slavemaster says he is dying."
The
stench in the compound was overwhelming. Bohan set Aurian down beside the
solitary occupant, who was huddled on the far side, in the scant shade afforded
by the wooden palisade. Aurian gasped. Anvar was scarcely recognizable; his
reddened skin was peeling and blistered, his lips cracked, his body covered in
bruises and sores beneath the sweat and grime. He barely breathed. Aurian took
her arm out of its sling and pulled his head onto her lap, wiping the dust from
his face with the trailing sleeve of her robe. Her vision blurred with tears.
"Quick!" she snapped at Bohan. "Fetch some water!" The
eunuch hurried off, and Aurian beckoned the surgeon over.
His
face was grave as he made his examination. "This man is dying," he
said flatly.
"Surely
you can do something?" Aurian pleaded. For the first time, the surgeon's
professional mask slipped. He laid a sympathetic hand on her shoulder.
"Lady, I can do nothing—only end his suffering and speed him on his way. It
would be by far the kindest thing."
"Damned
if you will!" Her eyes blazed with such fury that the surgeon threw
himself flat on the ground in terror. "Get out of here!" Aurian spat.
"(j&/"
As the
little man scrambled away, she reached forward and took Anvar's scarred hands
in her own. As her tears fell on his face, Aurian's heart was wrenched by a
stab of excruciating memory. She had been through this exact experience before—
when Forral died! Her indrawn breath was a sharp hiss. "Curse you, Anvar,
don't die on me, too! I can't face this again! I won't
let you
die!"
She
gripped Anvar's hands in an iron grasp, as though she could drag him back to
life by main force. Desperately she fought to access her power—to reach himv to
Heal him—but her will slipped away like water trickling through her fingers,
drawn into the dead gray vortex that was the power of the bracelets. Aurian
gritted her teeth against despair. "No," she
• •
- .. i . .!_:.
i——————.1"
But the
harder she tried, the more she felt herself weakening as her power poured into
the bracelets. Her vision darkened, her awareness of this foul place and the
sun's merciless heat slipped away until her consciousness hung, it seemed, by a
single thread of will. But that thread was made of adamant. She struggled on,
down a tunnel of endless blackness, refusing to give in.
A
gentle touch on Aurian's shoulder snapped her back. She found herself slumped,
faint and dizzy, over Anvar's motionless form, her mind reeling from the shock
of the sudden transition. She could no longer feel him breathing. No! It
couldn't be over! Bohan swam into focus, kneeling beside her on the filthy
ground, a jug of water beside him. With a gentle finger he touched the tears on
Aurian's face, his own eyes brimming with sympathy. And something clicked in
the Mage's mind. She remembered the Arena—remembered drawing strength from the
crowd around her. "Bohan," she whispered, "will you help
me?"
The
giant hesitated for a moment, fear in his eyes. Then he nodded. "Put your
hands on mine," Aurian told him. He did as he was ordered, his great hands
engulfing both those of the Mage and Anvar. Aurian took a deep breath.
"Good. Now stay absolutely still and relax. Lend me your strength, Bohan,
to save Anvar's life."
Aurian
concentrated—concentrated as she had never done before, straining to breach the
barrier that was the power of the bracelets. Then it came. Like a floodgate
opening, Bohan's strength flowed into her, supplementing her own. Through a
reddish haze, she saw the rust-colored stones of the bracelets pulse and glow
like tiny embers as they sated themselves on her magic. A scorching heat ate at
her wrists, but she paid no heed. With a sudden shock, she realized that the
bracelets stored power—not just her own, but the powers of all the Mages who
had borne them before her. If she could access that power, even for an instant,
she could break down the very walls of Death itself! But how to release it—what
was the key? Come on, Aurian urged herself. Think! Anvar's life depends on it!
She found her thoughts turning to him, then, reaching for the essence of the
man. Anvm-.* Those piercing blue eyes that held his
The
memory of that smile went like an arrow to her heart, and her heart turned over
in her breast ...
And
Aurian's vision was suddenly blocked by a vast, darkly shrouded form that
loomed over her, towering into the sky. "Aaaah," it said, its voice a
deep, dry, rustling whisper like leaves turning in a midnight graveyard—like
worms that seemed to eat into her very soul. "So, this time you think to
cheat me?"
Aurian
swallowed hard, gathering her courage to answer back—to defy Death itself. And
from somewhere the courage came. "If that's what it takes," she
replied. "You have had enough from me and mine. Seek your prey
elsewhere!"
Death
laughed like a blade drawn up Aurian's spine. "A fool you are, to believe
that matters are so simple. Yet in your ignorance you have found the only coin
which will permit you to bargain with me. Many before you have tried to make
such a bargain, but I warn you that my price is high—and both of you will pay
it, ere we meet again." The Specter loomed forward threateningly, and
Aurian bit her lip, steeling herself not to shrink away from His overwhelming
Presence.
"You
have courage, Lady." This time the voice held an undertone of respect.
"And for all my evil reputation, never believe that Death is merciless.
Far from it. If your coin—the coin that you and this man both possess—is good,
and not counterfeit, you may yet have the best of the bargain. Remember that,
when you come to pay my price!"
The
figure disappeared-in a blinding flash of red light. The power within the
bracelets, suddenly released, coursed through Aurian—through Bohan, throwing
him backward—then through Anvar. Aurian felt her soul rushing outward to meet
the soul of her companion—to enfold it safely, and bring him home again.
Aurian
blinked, baffled for a moment to find herself back in the squalor of the slave
compound. Then she saw that her wrists were bare. The bracelets had crumbled
away to fine, powdery ash that was already dissipating as she watched.
Anvar
stirred beneath the Mage's hands, his brilliant blue eyes opening to meet her
own. All traces of his hurts had vanished. Later, Aurian would realize that in
that flash, her own
I
hurts
had also been healed, but now she was simply consumed with relief, and
gratitude, and wonder for the miracle that her own indomitable will had
wrought.
"Aurian?"
Anvar's voice was barely a whisper in his parched throat.
"I'm
here." The Mage could scarcely find her own voice.
Bohan
was at Aurian's elbow, proffering a cup of water, but her hands were shaking
too much to take it, and she was afraid to lose her tight grasp on Anvar, lest
by doing so she would let him slip away from her again. Instead she propped
him, while the eunuch held the cup to his lips.
"Witch!
You've betrayed us all!" The sun was blotted out as Harihn's shadow fell
across the little group on the ground. His eyes, stretched wide with horror,
were fastened on Aurian's wrists, where the bracelets of Zathbar had been.
"Harihn
. . ." Aurian began urgently, but the Prince's jeweled sword had already
flashed free of its scabbard. She tried to get to her feet, but was hampered by
Anvar, who had seen the danger and was also struggling weakly to rise as the
blade arced down.
Bohan
moved with an agility that belied his immense size, flinging himself between
the Mage and Harihn's blade. He had drawn his own short sword, and metal
clashed with metal, showering Aurian and Anvar with sparks as he turned the
blow aside. Harihn's wrist twisted down and outward from the back shock of the
blow, and Bohan's left hand shot out to grasp it, tightening his grip until,
with a cry of pain, the Prince dropped his weapon. Aurian saw his chest swell
with a deep breath as he prepared to call his guards.
"Stop!"
Her voice, though not loud, was like a whiplash. From her kneeling position,
she addressed the Prince, speaking low and rapidly. "If you kill me, Xiang
will want the bracelets back. What will you say to him? You can't produce them—
they're gone. He has waited for a chance like this, he'll say you removed them.
He has a new Khisihn now, remember, a chance to have other heirs. He'd enjoy
having you flayed alive. Think about it."
Harihn
paled, as her words spelled out his dilemma so succinctly. Aurian pushed her
advantage. "We're ready to leave, aren't we?" •-«-•»
He
nodded.
"Good.
Then let's get out of here before anyone notices what has happened. We can work
something out when we get back to the Palace."
"The
surgeon saw." The words grated from between Harihn's teeth. "He came
gibbering to me with some tale of sorcery. Others must have heard."
Aurian
frowned. "Right. Get something to wrap Anvar in, so no one will see that
he's been Healed. Bohan will carry him to the barge, and you can take me."
She forbore to mention that she too had been Healed. In fact, she had only just
noticed. "I'll cover my wrists with my sleeves so no one will see that the
bracelets are gone, and when we get to the barge," she went on, "you
curse the surgeon for lying—be furious with him." "I think I can
manage that," Harihn muttered grimly. "Just make sure nobody believes
what really happened and get us out of here as quickly as possible. You can
offer the surgeon a bribe or something later. All right?"
Harihn
scowled. "Very well—for the present. But this matter is not ended between
us—Lady."
"Fair
enough," Aurian said evenly. "Just get on with it." Bohan
fetched a blanket from the artisans' camp and tarried Anvar down to the barge
while the Prince followed with Aurian. He carried W sti^y,\m We
averted,\i\*'^ro &t!£\«& with anger. When he had stowed her safely on board,
Aurian watched with horror «s he carried out his charade with the hapless
surgeon, who backed away in terror, right down to the very end Of the jetty, as
his Prince bore down on him in wrath. His screams rang out as Harihn seized a
whip from a nearby overseer and lashed him across the face and shoulders,
punctuating the blows with shouts loud enough for the entire camp to hear.
"Liar! Fool! How dare you come to your Prince with such
a
tale!"
The
surgeon fell on his face, wailing. The Prince threw away the whip and advanced
on the poor man—and Aurian gasped with horror as he lifted the surgeon bodily
and hurled him into the river. Hordes of the great toothed lizards appears as
if by magic, converging on their helpless, thrashing victim, noirincr a/ail was
rut short in a flurryinc
face
and ripped to pieces. Then there was only silence—and a spreading red stain on
the waters.
Harihn,
stony-faced, leapt into the barge and signaled the oarsmen to pull away. There
was not a sound from the shocked onlookers as his voice echoed across the
water. "So perish all who lie to their Prince. Remember that."
Aurian,
utterly sickened, turned away from the carnage and made Anvar comfortable on
the cushions, pulling the blanket away from his face.
"Are
you all right?" he whispered.
Aurian
nodded, bemused by the irony that he should be asking her. She patted his arm
gently. "You rest—I'll be back in a minute." She turned to Bohan.
"Take care of him, please." The eunuch nodded, and she took his hand.
"Bohan, I can't thank you enough for your help today. I'm forever in your
debt."
The big
man smiled, shaking his head.
"Yes,"
the Mage corrected him firmly. "Somehow I'll find a way to repay you, my
friend."
Steeling
herself, Aurian made her way to the bow, where the Prince sat, staring
sightlessly at the muddy river. "I hope you're proud of yourself,"
she hissed. "How can you justify such a monstrous act?"
Harihn
spun to face her, wretchedness and disgust on his
face.
His eyes glinted with unshed tears. "The man was a surgeon!" he flung
at her. "He thought he had seen a miracle! How could he resist telling
others, arid proving our undoing in the process? The slave was dying—dead in
fact. Your actions
were
against all nature!" His voice curdled with bitterness. "Did you not
think there would be a price to pay? A fair bargain, was it not? A life for a
life—my servant in exchange for your man. You robbed the surgeon of his life,
Aurian, by your deed. I was merely the agent. Only hope it ends here—for the
Reaper may exact a higher price for the soul that you snatched from his
grasp!"
"Superstitious
nonsense!" Aurian snapped, unnerved by his words. She seemed to remember
something—something about a price, and true coin^ but it eluded her. Death had
already wiped his words from Her mind. "I simply acted in all good
"And
how many lives may be lost in the future because they will be denied the
surgeon's skill?" Harihn's voice was rising to an hysterical pitch.
"How will his family take comfort from your good faith? And when my father
has me flayed alive for loosing a foreign witch on his people, what will
you—"
"Enough!"
Aurian leapt to her feet, rocking the barge. Her voice was shaking. "Very
well. The fault is mine. I take responsibility. But your law put those accursed
bracelets on me in the first place, and the same law brands me a criminal for
using my powers to save a life, and condemns you by default because I did it
whilst in your custody. Were I faced with the decision again, / would do the
same thing—not only for Anvar, but also for you, or for anyone else that I
cared about!"
She sat
down beside him once more, her voice softened. "I'm sorry, Harihn, for
bringing such trouble upon you. This is a shabby way to repay all you've done
for me, and I'll try to think of a way to protect you from the consequences.
But can't you see—/ had no choice?"
Harihn
tore his eyes away from hers. "Lady, I fear you," he said frankly.
"You talk of repeating the same act, had you the need—but I tell you
plainly, were you before me in the Arena once more, I would not lift a hand to
save you, knowing the consequences as I do now."
Aurian
tried desperately to think of a way to mend matters. "You speak of
consequences, but the thread has not unraveled yet, and the tale of our lives
is unfinished. I hope in the end that you won't have clause to regret saving my
life, Harihn. It may be that I can help you, now that my powers are
unfettered."
Harihn
flinched. "No!" he cried. "Do not tempt me with your evil! I
would never gain power by such ends."
"Now
you see what an awesome responsibility the Magefolk carry," Aurian said.
"Such power is a constant temptation—and a constant burden. Think of the
slaughter, if I backed you in a revolution. Think of the deaths on my
conscience then. But to use my power to save a life—I cannot believe that to be
an ill deed."
Harihn
sighed. "I think I understand—a little. Lady, leave me for a while, go
tend to your husband. I have much to think upon—and much to regret."
They
had almost talked the journey out. Aurian was surprised to see the city around
them once more, and the ornate contours of the Prince's boathouse in the
distance. But she could not begrudge the time she had taken to reach some form
of understanding with Harihn. His fear of sorcery was the fear of all his
people, and in a way they were right, she thought, remembering with a shudder
the Nihilim that Miathan had unleashed, and the terrifying ferocity of
Eliseth's storm. Those two had sold their souls for power, and the thought
sickened her. Would she finish up like that? Never, Aurian vowed to herself.
Not wanting to think about it, she went to the stern to check on Anvar.
He was
sleeping, but his eyes opened at her approach, as though in some way he sensed
her proximity. Perhaps he did. When she had pulled Anvar back from death, their
very souls had touched. Who else could say they had shared such closeness? Yet
Aurian found herself reluctant to approach him. She was stricken with guilt
that she had abandoned him to such suffering. How could she face him now? He
must hate her, surely? But as she hesitated, he reached for her hand, holding
on to it with surprising strength, as though she were still his only anchor on
life. "I thought you wouldn't come," he whispered. "I almost let
go. I'm sorry, Aurian. I should have known better."
Aurian
stared at him, tears in her eyes. He was sorry? "Oh, Anvar," she
murmured. "How can you ever forgive me?"
"You
came," he said. "You're always,*here when it matters. Why did it take
me so long to realize that?"
Aurian
was completely taken aback. "I made a proper mess of things with my temper
this time," she insisted. "I should never have left you like that.
You can hit me when you're feeling better—I deserve it."
"No."
The stubborn set of Anvar's jaw was an echo of her own.
"Then
I'll do it myself!" She made a parody of punching herself in the jaw and
falling over, and he laughed. Oh, thank the Gods that he was all right, that she
had arrived in time. In an excess of relief she hugged him, and felt his arms
tighten round her shoulders.
"Have
you found Sara?" His words were like a drench of
icy
water. Aurian pulled away from him, frowning. Always bloody Sara! And how in
the world was she going to tell him that Sara had betrayed him—had abandoned
him for a King and not lifted one finger to find him, let alone help him. It
would break him for sure. She looked away from the hope in his eyes. "Sara
is fine," she evaded. "She came out of this better than any of
us."
To her
intense relief, at that moment the barge bumped up against the edge of Harihn's
jetty. "Here we are!" she said briskly. "Let's get you inside,
and get you cleaned up and fed. Bohan—that's the enormous fellow—will take care
of you. Don't worry, you can trust him. When you've rested, I'll tell you
everything that's been happening." Quickly she beckoned to Bohan to take
Anvar up to her rooms, and got out of the way before he had time to ask her any
more awkward questions.
Anvar
lay in bed, watching the light breeze stir the filmy gauze canopy that
protected him against insects. Silken sheets felt cool and luxurious against
his newly bathed skin. This time, for some reason, the Healing had not had its
usual enervating effect, and he felt alert and tingling with life—and
fabulously hungry. Not surprising, he mused, feeling his protruding ribs with
bony fingers. His body tensed as he recalled the horrors of the slave camp, and
his hands flew automatically to the unyielding iron collar, the mark of slavery
that had still to be removed from his neck. "No!" he told himself
firmly. He mustn't think of that.Tt was all over now. Aurian had come for him,
as he had prayed she would. She had saved him again.
Anvar
was reminded of his first meeting with the Mage, when he had run away from the
Academy's kitchens. He had awakened between clean sheets in a room in the
Garrison, with all his hurts Healed, to see her smiling at him. He had not
trusted her then. But this time I'll do better, he promised himself. He would
repay her by taking care of her, at least until her child was born. The Gods
knew, she needed him, though he would have a hard time convincing her. She was
so bloody stubborn and independent! He would just have to make her understand.
And Sara, too, he thought guiltily. How could he reconcile the two? Sara would
never tolerate having the Mage with them.
"Tough!"
Anvar, speaking aloud, startled himself with his own vehemence—and his own
conclusions. But the truth had begun to dawn on him during his imprisonment in
the cells below the slave market. Sara, the love of his childhood, tugged at
his heart. How could she not? But she was no longer an innocent girl. She had
hardened. There was a calculation now in her manner—something tainted, that he
dared not trust. It had taken their time alone, when they were shipwrecked, to
show it to him. Aurian's absence then had left a void within him—as though part
of himself had gone. Gods, how he had missed her! How his heart had lifted, to
see her again! The thought of the Mage had given him courage—had given him hope
through all the terror and torment. He had known that she would come—it was
Aurian that he trusted. Not Sara. Aurian.
But you
love Sara, part of Anvar's mind protested, and he knew it was true. But did he
love what she was now—or what she once had been? And did he love Aurian? She
was a friend, a true companion, but a Mage? Could I love a Mage? he asked
himself. Gods, I don't know. I just don't know. But I know who I'd rather have
beside me in a tight spot!
Anvar
heard the door opening, and the rattle of a tray being set down. Someone moved
on the other side of the gauze that shrouded his bed. It must be the taciturn
Bohan, bringing some food. But to his surprise, it was Aurian who thrust aside
the curtains. Anvar smiled, delighted to see her again, even after only an
hour's absence.
"How
are you feeling?" Aurian asked.
Anvar
thought she looked worried. Was she still feeling guilty about his suffering in
the slave camp? "I'm fine," he hastened to reassure her. "In
fact, I don't need to be in bed at all—except that your friend Bohan put me
here and made me stay!"
Aurian
made a droll face. "He did that to me, too," she told him
sympathetically. "Sometimes he's a little overzealous. Here, I've brought
you something to eat." She put the tray down on the bed, forestalling him
as he made a grab for the food. "I know you're ravenous, but take it
slowly," she warned him. "We don't want you making yourself
sick."
Anvar
nodded, knowing that she was right. "Where are we?" he asked her,
between bites. "What is this place?"
Aurian
grinned. "Ostentatious, isn't it?" she said. "It belongs to the
Khisal—the Prince. He rescued me from the Arena, and—"
"He
rescued you from the what?"
Aurian
paused to pour herself some wine. "I suppose I had better start from the
beginning," she said. While he ate, she told him of her dealings with the
Leviathan, her discovery that he had been captured, and her terrible trek
upriver in search of
him.
"I'm
sorry about your hair," Anvar interrupted. "It was so
beautiful
. .
."
Aurian
shrugged. "It just wasn't practical in this heat," she said, but the
compliment made her smile, nonetheless. "Besides," she went on
quietly, "I missed having you around to
brush
it for me."
Anvar
reached out and took her hand. "In that case, you'd better start growing
it again," he said firmly.
Aurian
was staring at him as though she could hardly believe her ears, and he was
surprised, and shocked, to see tears in her eyes. "I didn't think you'd
want . . ." she whispered.
It tore
Anvar's heart to see her so vulnerable. She was always so brave, so
self-sufficient, that he tended to forget that she needed comfort and support,
just like anyone else. He gripped her hand more tightly. "Aurian, what
happened was just as much my fault as it was yours," he told her firmly.
"I behaved abominably to you on the ship, and afterward. Let's put it
behind us. We need each other. I'll make Sara understand
somehow."
She
flinched and looked away at the mention of Sara's name. "I'd better tell
you the rest," she said grimly.
Anvar
felt alarm tighten his throat. But she'd said that Sara was safe . . . Seeing
the bleak look in the Mage's eyes, he decided it would be wiser to let her tell
the story in her own
way.
Aurian
spoke of her capture on the outskirts of the city, and how they had used the
bracelets to take her powers, and condemned her to fight in the Arena. She had
reached the climax of her fight with Shia—now that took some believing— when
she was interrupted by a fearsome clamor. They heard shouts from outside, and
the sound of weapons clashing.
Aurian
spun round. "What the—Xiang!" She was up off the bed and running for
her sword, which stood propped in the corner, but even as she moved, the door
burst open and several men-at-arms rushed in, bearing loaded crossbows. Anvar's
warning cry froze in his throat. Aurian whirled—and fell, clutching at her shoulder,
above her right breast. Blood spurted between her fingers. The bolt, which had
torn through her flesh and right out the other side at this short range,
clattered off the wall behind her and fell to the floor, leaving a bloody
smear. Instantly, the Mage was surrounded by a circle of soldiers, their
crossbows cocked and aimed at her. Anvar, who had leapt from his bed regardless
of the danger, only had time for a brief glimpse of her motionless form before
he was seized and dragged from the room.
Ckaptcr £7
REVELATIONS
— AND BETRAYAL
nvar's
captors bound his hands tightly behind him, with cords that cut painfully into
his wrists. The soldiers were far from gentle, leaving him with a new set of
bruises to replace the ones that the Mage had Healed, but Anvar had more to
concern him than his growing discomfort. What had they done with Aurian? How
badly was she hurt? Were these the Prince's guards? Had he repented of his
hosp'i-tality? Why had he tried to attack them back at the slave camp? The Mage
had had no time to explain. Anvar wished she had been able to finish her tale.
As it was, he had no idea what was happening. But he had time enough to worry
about it. They left him in Aurian's chambers, guarded by two grim-faced,
taciturn soldiers, and there he remained for over an hour, with only his fears
for company.
Xiang
swept regally into Harihn's audience chamber, arm in arm with his Khisihn, and
surrounded by an entourage of guards. Seating himself in the Prince's gilded
chair, he motioned for someone to fetch a seat for Sara as the captain of his
guard approached with a deep bow, and began to make his report. ^
"The
palace has been secured, Your Majesty. The Khisal is in our custody, and his
sorceress has been disabled by our bowmen. We have her below in the dungeons,
unconscious, but under heavy guard."
"Well
done." Xiang smiled his approval. "You have captured the Demon?"
The
captain nodded. "Indeed, Sire. It cost us several men to overcome it, but
we have it unharmed as you ordered. It too is imprisoned below, awaiting
transport to the Arena."
"Excellent!
And the slave?"
"My
men are bringing him now, Your Majesty."
"Very
well. You may bring in the Khisal, also."
The
Khisu settled back in his son's chair, smiling trium-
AURIAN •
421
phantly.
As soon as the message from his Slavemaster had reached him by carrier bird, he
had put his plans into action. Harihn had overplayed his hand this time! What a
fool the boy was, to free the sorceress from the bracelets, and allow her to
practice her evil arts before witnesses! And all to save the slave who,
according to the Khisihn Sara, had kidnapped her from her native land. It had
all been part of some plot to overthrow him, Xiang had no doubt. Harihn was in
league with the two foreigners, but he had underestimated his father, and now
he would pay! For releasing the sorceress, he had put himself under automatic
sentence of death. Xiang wondered whether to keep his son alive for a while, to
suffer the terror of the threat hanging over him. The sorceress, of course,
would be executed as soon as possible. Unfettered, she was too much of a threat
to be left alive.
There
was a stir at the doors of the chamber, and the guards dragged Harihn into the
room and cast him, white-faced and trembling, at the Khisu's feet. Xiang smiled
with cruel enjoyment, savoring the terror in his son's eyes.
At last
the soldiers came for him. Dragging Anvar through a long series of corridors,
they thrust him between a pair of huge doors inlaid with bronze. The vast,
high-ceilinged room beyond seemed filled with soldiers. The young man that
Aurian had identified as Harihn was cowering before a man enthroned on the low
platform. If Harihn was the Prince—this could only be the King!
Then
all thoughts fled from Anvar's mind at the sight of the golden-haired figure
seated to one side of the throne, regal and resplendent in jewels and fine
silken robes. "Sara!" he shouted joyfully. He struggled to reach her,
but the guards held him fast. The cold aloofness of Sara's demeanor did not
waver as Anvar was hurled to the floor by the Prince's side. With his hands
bound behind him, he was unable to save himself, and his forehead cracked
against the marble floor. As he staggered to his knees, blinking to clear the
exploding lights that obscured his vision, the King began to speak, addressing
Harihn.
"Well
met, my son," Xiang said, sneering. His eyes gleamed with triumph. "I
am informed that you have laid yourself open to a charge^efe treason, by
releasing a known sorceress
from
the bonds that constrained her power, against the laws of this land. What
answer do you make to this charge?"
Anvar
managed a sidelong glance at the Prince and saw the young man's face contort
with shock and panic. "No!" he howled. "It isn't true! I did not
release her! She escaped from the bonds herself—"
"You
lie." The Khisu's voice cut through his son's terrified protestations, and
Anvar saw sweat break out on Harihn's forehead. "Furthermore," Xiang
went on, "you have stolen one of my slaves—a rare specimen from the
Northlands. My Khisihn has told me that this creature was responsible for
kidnapping her from her home, in league with your sorceress. I can only assume
that you are consorting with the Khisihn's enemies for one reason—to bring
about her overthrow, and mine." He turned to Sara. "Is this the
slave, my Queen?"
The
words hit Anvar like a death blow. "Queen!" he shouted, too horrified
to consider the consequences. One of the guards hit him hard across the mouth.
"Silence!" he roared. Anvar went sprawling, tasting blood in his
bruised mouth.
Sara's
gaze flicked contemptuously over her former lover. "That's the one,"
she said coolly.
"Very
well," Xiang replied. "What shall we do with him, beloved? The choice
of his punishment shall be yours." Sara shrugged. "Kill him,"
she said offhandedly. Anvar went cold all over, numb with shock at her words.
He could not, would notjpelieve that she had so callously ordered his death.
"Wait!"
Harihn cried. "The slave is mine!" "What did you say?"
Xiang's voice was grating and cold as a knife against stone.
"Your
informant lied, Your Majesty," Harihn said. "I own the slave."
Tearing an arm free from the grip of the guards, he produced a crumpled
parchment—the deed of ownership for a slave. "I bought him from your
Slavemaster with good gold, not three hours ago—and with good reason."
"You
have already been condemned as a traitor," the Khisu snapped. "Your
ownership counts for nothing!"
"Father,
hear me out," Harihn shouted, his voice cracking with strain. "I did
this for your benefit! This slave is the living
proof
that your Khisihn has betrayed you, and must die! She is his concubine!"
Anvar
gasped.
"No!"
Sara shrieked. "He's lying!"
"Silence!"
the Khisu roared. His face was livid. "Now," he growled at his son,
"I will have the truth of this, before I end your miserable life. Where
did you get such a preposterous tale?"
Harihn
trembled as he faced his father. "From Aurian— the sorceress. Did you not
think it strange that the Khisihn wanted her death so badly when she fought in
the Arena? It was because she knew the truth—as well she ought. This man is her
husband."
Anvar,
already reeling from the revelations of the day, was stunned. Aurian had told
Harihn he was her husband? Why had she lied to the Prince?
The
sound of the Khisihn's mocking laughter echoed shrilly through the room.
"She said he was her husband?"
"You
deny it?" Harihn suddenly seemed less sure of himself.
"Of
course," Sara replied calmly. "She lied to spare herself a traitor's
death. This man is not her husband—he is her servant, her accomplice in my
kidnapping. Do you think I, the Khisihn, would lower myself to lie with a mere
servant?"
The
scorn in Sara's voice went like a knife through Anvar's heart, and he missed
the look of shock and outrage on Harihn's face. He steeled himself against the
pain, telling himself that she didn't mean it—that she was at the Khisu's
mercy, and only trying to save herself.
The Khisu
turned his glowering gaze on Anvar, and spoke ro him in the Northern tongue.
"Well, slave? What say you? On the one hand, my son says that the Khisihn
is your concubine. She, however, accuses you of being her kidnapper. Weigh well
your reply, for lives depend on it—including your own miserable
existence!"
Anvar
hesitated, so confused by this tangle of betrayal and lies that he didn't know
what to say. If he supported Sara's story, it would mean his own death, not to
mention Aurian's and the Prince's. On the^other hand, Sara's life was at stake
. . .
He wavered, trapped in the dilemma, only knowing half the facts and unable to
make a choice.
"See?"
Sara shrilled triumphantly. "He can't say I'm lying! He's only keeping
silent to protect his mistress! My Lord, be-
j lieve me. I would never betray you! But your son would— \ indeed, he already has, by conspiring
with the sorceress against
both of
us!"
A look
of relief crossed the Khisu's face, and he smiled at his Queen. "You are
wise as you are beautiful, beloved. How could I doubt you?" He gestured to
his guards. "Kill these traitors. Then I will deal with their
sorceress."
Darkness.
A cold, damp floor beneath her. Agony in her right shoulder, spreading fire
down her arm and side. Nausea clutching at her throat. Aurian caught her breath
against a moan. There must be guards about. Better if they believed she was
still unconscious. No one could see her in this black hole— not without Mages'
sight. She had recognized the livery of Xiang's soldiers, and could hazard a
fair guess at what must have happened. Aurian lay very still, facedown on the
hard stone floor where she had been carelessly tumbled. With her extra Healer's
sense, she checked first on the child within her. To her relief, all seemed
well. The mite must be hardy indeed to survive all that had recently been
happening to its mother.
Mother.
It was the first time she had used the word, even in her thoughts. Despite her
pain and discomfort, despite her peril, Aurian's lips curved in a smile. She
had accepted the child at last, and her love and pride for this tough little
survivor heartened her considerably. It was taking after its indomitable
father, she decided, and the thought of Forral strengthened her resolve. She
turned her attention to the wound on her shoulder, and began to control the
searing pain. Without that to impede her concentration, Aurian set about
repairing the damage. She would be needing to use that arm, her sword arm, she
thought
grimly.
It was
more difficult than she had expected. Aurian had never tried to Heal herself,
but she knew from her lessons with Meiriel that there was considerable risk
involved. Healing took a great deal of energy; partly from the Healer, but
partly from the patient. That was why magical Healing was so debilitating
to both
parties. In Healing herself, she had only her own strength to draw on, and she
knew that unless she was very careful, she stood in grave danger of burning
herself out completely, and killing herself. There were precedents. But oh, it
was difficult to school herself to patience, to proceed with care, stopping
frequently to rest. Aurian was keenly aware that time was very much against
her. What was happening up above? How long had she been unconscious? Not long,
she comforted herself. The blood from her wound had still been fresh and
flowing. But Harihn had said that his father sought his death, and if Sara was
involved, Anvar's chances of survival were slim. Forcing herself not to think
about it, Aurian returned to her work. It was her only chance of helping them.
Step by step, working as fast as she dared, she set the damage to rights,
painstakingly reconstructing the torn flesh and muscles, knowing that a mistake
made in haste could cripple her arm for good.
Done at
last! Aurian moved the wounded arm and shoulder experimentally, wishing she had
time to rest the repaired tissue. Never mind. It would do. Not quite as good as
new yet, but it would serve her purpose, and improve with time. But there was
no doubt that the work had taken its toll. She felt limp with exhaustion, only
wanting to lie where she was on this filthy, freezing floor and sleep until her
body had recovered itself. Well, no chance of that. Mindful of the risks of
overtaxing herself and being unable to return to her body, Aurian extended her
consciousness carefully outward, Peeking the sparks of human awareness that
would mean guards.
She had
gone no distance—no distance at all—when Aurian encountered a set of thoughts
that made her heart leap with joy. Shia! The great cat was imprisoned in the
next cell!
Shia's
thoughts were scorching with fury. "There were too many of them! They used
nets!"
Aurian
could feel her friend's pain as she struggled against the entangling bonds.
"Patience," she soothed her. "I'll get you free—only stay still,
and don't attract attention."
"Very
well," Shia grumbled reluctantly. "But when you do —those men are my
meat!"
Aurian
had no quarrel with that.
Now—how
to gee out of the cell? The Mage regretted that
her
powers had been weakened by the Healing. Impelled by her growing sense of
urgency, she'd have liked nothing better than to demolish the heavy door in a
single blast! However . . . Again, she sought for the guards. Ah. Over a dozen of
them, but in true mercenary style they were all congregated in the guardroom on
the upper level, away from the damp, noisome chill of the dungeons. There was
only one on this floor, stationed at the bend in the passage by the foot of the
stairs, ready to give the alarm if anything stirred. Even better, she could
sense the angry, frightened presence of other captives—a good number—occupying
other cells farther down the passage. She fervently hoped they were Harihn's
guards, imprisoned down here ouc of che way.
Aurian
crept to the door of her cell. Instead of blasting it, which was not only
physically impossible for her at this time, but would bring all Xiang's guards
down on her, and possibly the low ceiling as well, she turned her remaining
power to manipulating the lock, feeling for the worn, stiff tumblers with her
Healer's senses much as she would probe a wound for damage. Ah. Pressure
here—and there. The Mage gathered her will
and—pushed.
The
rusty lock grated open. Aurian froze, her body tensed for combat. Had the guard
heard? Apparently not. Disgust at his inattention warred with her relief.
Forral would not have tolerated such laxity! Opening the door only enough to
squeeze herself through, lest the rusty old hinges betray her with their squeak,
Aurian sidled afohg the low, arched passage on silent feet, suppressing a wish
for her warrior's clothing. Not only would this thin robe be awkward in a
fight, but it was useless against the piercing cold of the dungeons, which was
already stiffening her muscles and eating its way into her very bones.
Aurian
could see the profile of the guard silhouetted against the yellow torchlight at
the bottom of the stairwell. The fool's eyes were turned away from her to look
longingly up the steps toward the warm guardroom, instead of down the corridor
he was meant to be guarding. Serves you right! Aurian thought, as her arm went
around his throat in the quick, lethal throttling hold that Maya had taught her
so long ago. But she had never killed with her bare hands before, and was
unable to suppress her shudders as he slid soundlessly to the floor, his
windpipe
crushed and eyes staring wide with shock. Clenching her teeth, the Mage quickly
rifled the still twitching corpse for sword, knife, and keys, trying to avoid
the accusing stare of those horrid eyes. Then she ran, as quickly as she could,
back down the corridor to Shia's cell, feeling keen relief at leaving her
grisly handiwork behind.
As
Aurian sliced through her restraining bonds, the great cat exploded into motion
like an uncoiling spring—and fell heavily to her side, her numb limbs refusing
to support her. "Shh!" Aurian warned, and knelt to rub the cold legs
and paws. Though curses seemed not to be a part of the cat's mental vocabulary,
Shia's tirade of low, spitting snarls sounded so much like a stream of human
invective that the Mage had to smile. "Listen," she told her friend,
"once you're on your feet, go to the bottom of the stairs and guard this
corridor. Wait for me there, while I free the other prisoners."
"Those
men?" Shia's eyes blazed with a savage light.
"Not
those men," Aurian said firmly. "Once I've freed the good men, we'll
deal with the bad ones, I promise."
"What
good men?" Shia sulked.
"Trust
me." With a hug, Aurian sent her out, taking the opposite direction
herself, toward the other cells.
A low,
nervous murmur of voices betrayed the presence of the men occupying the cell.
"Who's within?" Aurian called softly, and the sound ceased abruptly.
"Yazour,
captain of the Khisal's guard. Who are_yo«?" The voice was young, but firm
and strong,-despite the fact that the owner was imprisoned to await the dubious
mercy of his cruel king.
"The
Lady Aurian, the Khisal's sorceress," Aurian whispered back. At her words,
a frightened muttering broke out among the men in the cell, and she heard
Yazour hushing them hastily. "Lady, can you release us? His Highness has
dire need of our help."
Wasting
no time, Aurian opened the door, struggling a little with the heavy lock. She
belatedly remembered that the men would be unable to see in the dark passage,
and spotting a burnt-out stump of torch affixed to a bracket on the wall, she
lighted it with a careless wave of her hand.
"How
did you . ^—.-iLady, that is forbidden," a stern voice
chided
her. The captain of the guard, recognizable by his shoulder insignia, stood
before her, his brows knotted in a disapproving frown.
"If
you want to save the Khisal, this is no time to be particular," Aurian
said flatly, approving the way that he accepted her words with a brusque nod.
Taking the bunch of keys from the lock, he sent one of his men along the
passage to open the other cells. A practical man, then. Like his Prince, he
seemed young for his responsibilities. There was no gray in the long black hair
that was tied neatly back from his face, but his stern demeanor and the honest,
level gaze of his dark eyes promised to Aurian a fund of courage and common
sense. She had no time to register more, for at that moment a hulking figure
thrust to the front of the soldiers, elbowing them effortlessly aside.
"Bohan!
Thank the Gods you're all right!" Aurian reached up on tiptoe to hug him,
and saw his face break into an astonished but delighted smile. Sword cuts on
his body and bruises on his arms and face showed that he had sold his freedom
dearly, but his strength seemed undiminished as he returned her hug with
bone-cracking force.
"Someone
comes!" Shia's warning thought rang clearly in Aurian's mind.
"Deal
with him," she told the cat. "Quietly, if you can." "My
pleasure!"
There
was the sound of a scuffle along the passage, then silence. "What was
that?7* Yazour demanded sharply.
"My
friend the Demon from the Arena, dealing with one of Xiang's guards. You had
better warn your men that she's on our side!"
"By
the Reaper!" Yazour muttered, his eyes very wide. The struggle in the
guardroom was bloody, but brief. Aurian sent Shia in first, and the cat erupted
into the room in a whirlwind of teeth and claws, wreaking havoc among Xiang's
horrified soldiers. Aurian followed with Yazour and his men, the latter arming
themselves quickly from fallen bodies, or weapons stored within the room. Then
they began to work their way up through the corridors of the palace, fanning out
as they went to deal mercilessly with any enemy that they encountered along the
way. It was vital that no one remained alive to carry
word to
Xiang. At last they reached the main levels, and the long hallway that led to
the audience chamber, and discovered why they had met with so little opposition
thus far. The corridor was bristling with guards. "Xiang must be
within," Yazour whispered to the Mage, after a quick glance around the
corner.
"Now
what? We'll never get through that lot without them raising the alarm,"
Aurian said, groaning. Weary as she was, it was easy to feel discouraged. She
was sickened by the bloodshed that had already occurred, and was finding the
great curved scimitar with which she had armed herself difficult and awkward to
handle after being used to the straight, two-sided blades favored by her own
people. It was no easy matter to learn an entirely new technique when your life
was at stake.
Bohan
tugged urgently at her arm, pointing back the way they had come. Aurian
frowned, trying to decipher his gestures. "You mean there's another way
in?" she asked him. The mute nodded vigorously.
"Of
course!" Yazour muttered. "The kitchens! A passage leads to the back
of the audience chamber, so that food can be brought there easily."
Swiftly
they made their plans. Aurian, with Bohan, Shia, and a small group of soldiers,
would take the back rout£ and storm the chamber. Yazour and his men, when they
heard her signal, would mount a frontal attack on the guards at the doors.
Aurian quickly assembled her party and they slipped away, with Bohan leading.
In the
kitchens, the terrified servants were being held by some half-dozen of the
Khisu's guards. If Aurian had expected any help from them, she was quickly
cured of the notion. As soon as the fighting started, they took the opportunity
to flee, keeping the widest possible distance between themselves and the tall,
flame-haired warrior and her ferocious Demon. Occupied as she was with two
soldiers who were bent on hacking her to pieces, the Mage could only hope they
wouldn't flee toward the throne room and give the game away. Panting, she
backed toward the door, defending herself as best she could with the clumsy
scimitar. Then the looming figure of Bohan appeared behind her assailants, and
a great hand closed around each of their necks. Shia moved in to finish them,
her claws ripping through flesh and gm&^'This is fun!" she told
Aurian.
"I'm
glad you're enjoying yourself," Aurian replied faintly, taking a
much-needed minute to catch her breath. The place looked like a charnel house,
and the ridiculous, flimsy robe in which Harihn had clad her was drenched with
blood. The Mage made a quick tally of corpses. Good. All the enemy dead—and two
of their own, she realized sadly. "Come on," she summoned her
remaining men, and they followed Bohan through the low doorway that had been
hidden in the shadows of an alcove at the back of the kitchen.
There
was no door at the far end of the passage—the flight of steps up to the throne
room ended in an archway, screened by a hanging curtain. Carefully, Aurian
moved it aside, just enough to peer through a small crack. She was almost
directly behind the throne, and could see Harihn nearby, held firmly between
two guards and looking sick with fear. She need not have worried about being
noticed, for the eyes of everyone in the room were fixed on the clear space at
Xiang's feet. Anvar knelt there, bound, his eyes tightly closed, his face
bloodless with terror. Over him stood a black-clad figure with an upraised
sword, and—
"Now!"
Aurian yelled. Shia sprang past her, reaching the Khisu in a single leap and
crushing him to the floor beneath her as her powerful jaws closed around his
throat.
"Drop
your weapons! Nobody move, or the Khisu dies!" Aurian shouted. She heard
the sound of savage fighting outside as Yazour and his men wejtf into action,
and beckoned her own troops into the room to pick up the fallen weapons of
Xiang's guards. Though she wanted to go to Anvar, she stepped up instead beside
the stunned Prince and bowed, catching sight as she did so of Yazour, who
appeared briefly in the main doorway to signal that all was well. "Your
Highness," Aurian said clearly. "Today you declined the use of magic
to win your throne. Now I offer it again—through Mortal means. Only say the
word, and you are Khisu."
Harihn
stared at her for a moment, trying to take in the sudden change in events. She
nodded affirmation and the Prince, with a sudden smile, walked across to his
father. Aurian followed him. Xiang's face was contorted with terror. All the
cruelty of his expression seemed to have transferred itself to the
face of
his son, and the Mage was dismayed by what she had wrought.
"Well,
my father," Harihn said. "How does it feel to be the victim? My
mother would have enjoyed seeing you thus!"
"My
son, I beg you—" Xiang, in his terror, had lost control of his bladder,
and a dark stain began to spread across the floor. "Please—"
It was
plain to Aurian how much that word had cost him.
"Begging,
Father?" Harihn's eyes glittered. "Oh, I like this. Beg some
more."
"My
son . . . Please—I'll do
anything—"
Harihn
turned away in disgust. "No!" It was as though the word had been
wrenched from the depths of his soul. Getting his voice under control with an
effort, he turned to face his watchers. "I do not want the throne,"
he said flatly. "Today I have learned all too well how power corrupts. The
power of sorcery." His gaze flicked coldly towards Aurian. "Royal
power." He glanced scornfully at his father, then across to Sara.
"And the power of one man over another." He looked down at the
crumpled scroll of Anvar's ownership that was crushed in his fist.
"Father, you may keep your throne and your life—if you swear that me and mine
will be allowed to leave this land in safety. You have no need to worry, I will
not be coming back —ever. Do you agree, and will you swear to this?"
The
Khisu nodded—too quickly, Aurian thought. She had seen the flicker of contempt
in his eyes. "You have my word," he said.
"Release
him," Harihn ordered.
"Wait."
Aurian, still staggered by Harihn's refusal of the throne, placed herself
within the Khisu's sight.
"Xiang,"
she said, "I have no confidence whatever that you will keep your
word." His gaze slid uneasily away from hers, and she knew she had been
right. Thinking quickly, the Mage assumed the most menacing expression she
could manage. "In order to guarantee the Khisal's safety, I place my curse
on you, and all the people of your land." She heard gasps of horror from
behind her.
"What
are you doing?" Harihn shrieked at her.
"Only
this. While the Khisu keeps his vow, all shall be spared. But if he
shoulc}J>jeak it, then his entire kingdom will
be
consumed in fire, and his people also. Crops will burn in the fields. Eyes will
shrivel, and flesh will melt. All shall perish in agony. Do you hear me,
Xiang?"
"I
hear." His voice dripped hatred.
"Then
mark them well—lest what I say should come to pass."
The
Khisu nodded, glaring at her—but she knew that she had him well and truly
frightened now. "Oh, and another thing," she could not resist adding.
"I've decided that you must become a better ruler in the future. There
will be no more cruel games, Xiang. The Arena will be closed at once, and all
the slaves will be freed immediately."
"What?"
Xiang roared, forgetting, in his rage, the peril of his position. At a nod from
Aurian, Shia tightened her jaws a fraction, snarling. The Khisu choked, and
lapsed back into a sullen silence.
"I'll
be watching, Xiang," Aurian lied. "No matter how for away I am.
Remember, the curse is merely postponed. If you break your vow, it will fall
upon you! Let him up, Shia," she added aloud, for the benefit of the
watchers. "He has work to do. Get out, Xiang, and take your soldiers with
you. See them off the premises, Shia."
"You
mean I don't get to kill him?" Shia's thought was petulant.
"I'm
afraid not."
"It's
not fair!" The-cat loosened her jaws reluctantly, her blazing eyes never
leaving the Khisu's face. One of Xiang's guards, though quaking at the
proximity of the Black Demon and the Outland Sorceress, went to help him rise
from the wreckage of his chair. A brave man, Aurian thought.
Sara,
who had remained silent while the conflict unfolded, rose to follow him,
shooting a glare of venomous hatred at Aurian. But Bohan had freed Anvar from
his bonds, and he waylaid her, his eyes beseeching. "Sara, wait. You don't
have to go with him. You're free now. You can come with us . . ." His
voice shook with the strain of still hoping to find her innocent in the face of
all he had witnessed. Gods, can he not accept it now? Aurian thought
despairingly.
Sara
turned on Anvar with a look of utter scorn. "You
fool,"
she said, sneering. "Do you really think I'd go with you, a mere servant—a
slave—when I can be a Queen?"
Anvar
flinched as though she had struck him. "So," he said softly, "I
was right not to trust you! You were lying when you said you still loved
me!"
Sara's
laugh rang out, loud and brittle, cruelly mocking. "And you believed me,
you dolt! I knew you would! I planned it that way—because it was expedient, and
to pay you back for abandoning me to a butchering midwife and that toad of a
merchant. Come with you, indeed! You're pathetic, Anvar. Go and crawl behind
the skirts of your mistress—she appreciates you! As for me, I'll despise you
until the day I die!"
Anvar's
eyes hardened to the chill ice-blue of a winter sky. "Wait!" The word
cracked out, harsh and commanding. Sara turned slowly, unwillingly, gaping in
astonishment.
"Bad
mistake, Sara." Anvar's tone was coldly mocking. "In your arrogance,
you seem to have forgotten one important detail. Xiang no longer has an
heir—and he'll be looking to you to get him another!"
Sara's
fate blanched to a ghastly greenish-'white. All at once, she began to tremble,
seeming to shrink in on herself, her haughty demeanor vanished. Suddenly she
bit her lip, held out her hands beseechingly. "Anvar, I—"
"No,
Sara, not this time. Not ever again. You got your wish, and it's up to you to
deal with it." Anvar's voice was like steel. "Get out, Sara. Go to
the King you wanted so much. Start thinking of a way to dupe him, as you duped
Vannor and I— only you had better hurry!"
Sara's
face turned ugly with rage. Drawing back like a snake, she spat into his face,
then turned, in a swirl of golden skirts, to follow Xiang. As she scurried out,
Anvar sank to his knees, his face a mask of grief. Aurian had been both baffled
and amazed by his exchange with the girl—but she knew that now was not the time
to ask. Instead, she hurried to comfort him, her heart wrenched by the bleak
emptiness in his eyes. Anvar tore himself away from her touch.
"Please," he said wretchedly, "leave me alone." He turned
away from her, hiding his face in his hands. Aurian retreated, respecting his
mood. When he had repudiated Sara, she had almost burst with pride for him—but
she knew how much it had cost him. She sat
•'«
I
down
beside him on the floor, feeling drained by all that had
happened.
The
Mage felt a hand on her shoulder. "Aurian!" Harihn stood over her,
his expression matching the chill in his voice.
"What?"
she sighed, and got to her feet feeling grievously ill-used. Considering that
she had just saved his life, he seemed scarcely overcome with gratitude!
Harihn's
fists were clenched, his face scarlet with rage. "Lying bitch! Thanks to
your machinations, I've lost a throne today!" he stormed. "You
ungrateful snake! How dare you deceive me into thinking this lowly slave was
your husband?"
Aurian
gasped. How had he found out?
"By
the Reaper, you'll suffer for this!" Harihn reached out to seize her, one
hand uplifted to strike.
"Leave
her alone!" Anvar stepped between them. "She did not lie to you, Your
Highness. I am her husband."
"What!"
Harihn choked. "You mean . . . You mean it's
truer
Aurian's
astonishment was no less acute. In wondering gratitude, she sought Anvar's
eyes. He put a possessive arm round her shoulders.
"Of
course it's true," Anvar told the Prince. "Sara lied to everyone. Did
you expect her to tell Xiang she had betrayed him? Furthermore, Aurian did not
lose you the throne—she offered it to you, and you turned it down! I think you
owe my Lady an apology—and"your thanks for saving your life."
The
Prince looked utterly deflated. "I—I beg your pardon," he muttered,
his eyes downcast. "I should have known," he said at last. "The
mere fact that you can speak our language as she can . . . Does this mean that
you are also a sorcerer?" Aurian gasped. So much had been happening, it
had never occurred to her to wonder. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw
Anvar turn pale.
"No,"
Anvar said hastily, "and I don't know why I can speak your tongue. I think
the Lady may have passed on the talent with the spell that she used to bring me
back from death . . . But what will you do now, Highness? Aurian may have
frightened your father for the time being, but we can't expect it to
last!"
Aurian
gave him a questioning look, but he was studiously avoiding her eye. She
frowned. Why had he changed the subject so quickly? Yet . . . Anvar was no
Mage! Surely his explanation could be the only possible one?
Harihn
was looking at her. "Will you really smite the Khazalim with your curse,
sorceress?" he blurted out, fear behind his words. "I have
relinquished the throne, but these are still my people. If—if my father had
refused to agree, would you really have destroyed them?"
"Bless
you, no!" Aurian said. "I wouldn't even know where to start. But
Xiang didn't know that." She gave him a wicked grin.
The
Prince looked astonished, then relief flooded his face. He burst out laughing.
"Why, you . . . You are absolutely outrageous!"
"That's
what I'm always telling her," Anvar said with a shrug, "but what can
I do?"
"Take
my advice, and beat her more often. She has a habit of taking control of events
that is most unbecoming in a mere woman!"
"That
sounds like a good idea," Anvar growled, ignoring Aurian's indignant
glare. She was even more infuriated when the Prince took him completely
seriously.
"Very
well," Harihn said. "I have much to attend to, if we are to leave
before nightfall. I believe I will travel north. My mother's people may take me
in—if we get through the land of the Skyfolk. You will come with me, will you
not? You will never get across the desert alone."
"I
think that suits us, don't you, dear?" Anvar turned to Aurian, his eyes
glinting, and she realized that he was paying her back for the lie that she had
told about him.
"Of
course, dear," she replied sweetly, restraining an urge to kick him.
Inwardly, however, she was relieved. Now that she had found Anvar and regained
her powers, she could not afford to waste more time in these lands. But she
needed Harihn's help a little longer, and was uncomfortably aware that her debt
to him remained unsettled.
When
Harihn had gone, Aurian turned to Anvar. "Thank you for supporting
me."
He
shrugged. "Jt .was the least I could do. I suppose you
had
your reasons for lying to the Prince?" There was an edge of disapproval in
his voice.
"Of
course I did! Harihn decided to make me his concubine—that's the law hereabouts
for an unaccompanied woman. I was badly wounded in the Arena, and he saved my
life. I was helpless, without my powers, and I needed Harihn's help to find
you. I was forced to lie. He left me no choice."
Anvar
scowled. "You mean ... I can't believe it! Did he —did that bastard . .
." He was almost choking with rage.
Aurian
laid a hand on his arm. "No," she said gently. "He didn't touch
me, once I told him about you. I don't believe he likes it, though!"
"Well,
he had better get used to it—fast!" Aurian could not help but smile at
Anvar's fierce expression. "Thank you, Anvar," she said, touched by
his support. "But we must be careful. To get back north, we need Harihn's
help to cross the desert, but with his soldiers to back him, we're very much
outnumbered."
"Oh
Gods, what a situation! But—" Suddenly Anvar looked sick. "Does this
mean that Sara was forced to—to . . ." Anvar, I'm sorry, Aurian thought.
But for his sake, she had to be brutally frank. "You saw her today. You
heard what she said. What Sara is doing is her own choice. I used Harihn to
find you. She could have done that through Xiang, but she was too busy
furthering her ambition. And if she'd had her way today, you would be dead by
now. What sort of woman would do that to the man who loved her?"
Anvar
shuddered, and his face
grew stern and
grim. "That's what I thought," he said.
CKapter 28
ESCAPE FROM
TAIBETH
s the
afternoon progressed, the courtyard of Harihn's palace turned into a scene of
utter chaos. The entire household was mobilizing, ready for departure. Barrels
and waterskins were hauled up from cellars and outbuildings and trundled down
to the river to be filled, for the Prince would need them in crossing the
desert. Light silken tents were rolled around their poles and stacked in a
corner, ready to be loaded onto the mules that had been picketed in a long line
down one side of the courtyard. Food for traveling was being prepared, along
with fodder for the horses and pack animals. Soldiers of the Prince's guard
milled about the yard with their horses, adding to the general confusion.
Harihn
had freed his slaves in accordance with Aurian's edict. Some would be staying
behind to search for long-lost friends and families, but many had chosen to
follow their Prince into exile. He was moved by their loyalty, but the
organization involved in crossing the desert with so many folk was a nightmare.
The Khisal was constantly on the move, trying to be everywhere at once. All
around, farewells were being said, freed slaves were celebrating, and people
were sorting possessions, trying to make impossible choices, for everyone must
travel light. A horse broke loose, panicked by the noise and confusion, and
plunged across the courtyard, scattering people and goods alike.
Anvar,
entering the courtyard, covered his ears against the din. This is ridiculous!
he thought. To his annoyance, the Prince had summoned Aurian from her chambers,
cutting short her much-needed rest, to help sort things out. She was talking to
Harihn now, and he could hear her straining to be heard above the general
racket. "Start ferrying the soldiers and horses across the river, and get
them assembled on the other side. That will clear a space, at least. Then we'll
get the rest sorted out." Harihn nodded gratefully and went off to speak
to the captain of his guard. It took a while to get the fivescore troopers
moving down to the river, but Aurian was right—it did clear a space. After that
it wa* fasier to apportion tasks. The courtyard
ft
was
cleared of those who would not be joining the exodus, and the mules were loaded
and sent, one by one, down to the ferry. Now that it was easier to count heads,
Harihn looked worried. Anvar strolled across with Bohan, to hear him talking
again to
the
Mage.
"There
are some three dozen folk coming with us from my household, and horses must be
provided for them," the Prince said. "With animals needed to carry
the extra food and water, that leaves us few spare mounts, and a very small
margin of safety. We must get through the desert before the food and water run
out, yet we dare not push too hard and risk losing
horses."
"Is
there no water in the desert at all?" Aurian asked.
"There
are twelve oases, and we will need them all," Harihn replied. "It is
a journey of many days, even if we keep to the shortest route. We could not
hope to carry enough water to last us right to the other side."
Anvar
approached them, shadowed by Bohan. His iron collar had been cut away and he
walked taller now that it had gone, though its weight had been nothing compared
with the heaviness that lay on his heart. The Prince turned to him. "And
how does it feel to be free?" he asked.
Anvar
heard the gibe in his voice, and knew that Harihn was deliberately taunting him
with the reminder of his previous, lowly station. He looked at him coldly.
"I find the change very welcome," he said shortly, deliberately
omitting Harihn's
title.
"Indeed,
many things have changed in a short time," Harihn replied smoothly, but
Anvar was gratified to see his mocking smile replaced by a scowl. "In one
day, you have ceased to be a slave, and I have ceased to be a prince. She is a
great leveler of men, your Lady."
"At
least she won't be forced to be your concubine now,"
Anvar
snapped.
Harihn
rounded on him, his face dark with rage. "How dare you speak to me like
that! Guards! Take this churl and
have
him flogged!"
"No!"
Aurian intervened quickly. "He meant no disrespect, Your Highness. I'm
sure he'll apologize." She glared warningly at Anvar. Their eyes locked in
a clash of wills, but
Anvar
discovered a new, unexpected stubbornness within himself. His mouth tightened
in unconscious refusal. Aurian turned her head slightly, out of the Prince's
line of vision, and mouthed "Please?" She looked tired and upset, and
he was suddenly ashamed, knowing that the last thing she needed today was more
trouble. Anvar sighed. "I'm sorry, Your Highness," he muttered.
"There,
that's settled," Aurian said hurriedly. By the look on Harihn's face, it
was anything but settled, but luckily they were interrupted by Yazour, who was
escorting two people. The Mage's face lit up with joy, as she ran to hug them.
"Eliizar! Nereni!"
"Your
Highness, these people have asked to see the sor— the Lady Aurian," the
captain reported.
"Don't
I know you from somewhere?" the Prince asked Eliizar, who bowed low.
"I
am—was—Swordmaster of the Arena, Your Highness," Eliizar said. "Now
the Khisu has ordered the Arena closed, and the city is filled with rumor and
unrest. We heard that Aur— that the Lady Aurian is traveling north with you.
Once she offered to take us with her, so we have come to pledge ourselves to
her, if she still wants us."
"Of
course I do! My dear friends, I'm so pleased to see you again! We can manage
two more, surely, Harihn?" Aurian pleaded.
The
Prince scowled. "You seem to be gathering a loyal entourage of your own,
Lady. First my eunuch and that dangerous animal, then your mannerless husband,
and now the Swordmaster of the Arena. If you remain here much longer, you may
end up as Khisihn yourself!"
"I'm
not remaining here, and neither are you," Aurian retorted sharply,
"and you should be glad of an extra sword, Harihn. We're glad to have you,
Eliizar, Nereni. I have not forgotten your kindness."
"I
have something for you," Eliizar said. He handed over her precious staff,
which had been left behind at the Arena, and forgotten during her illness and
her subsequent worry over Anvar.
"By
all the Gods!" Aurian exclaimed. "I really am grateful to have this
back, Eliizar^
The
Swordmaster looked at Anvar. "I see you got your husband back, too,"
he said.
Nereni's
eyes twinkled mischievously. "He's far too precious to her to be a mere
husband!" She turned to Anvar. "You are a fortunate man. Do you know,
she fretted herself sick about you all the time she was at the Arena? How glad
I am that she
found
you again."
Anvar
was dumbstruck. Aurian had told these people that he was her husband, too? She
had actually been that worried about him? He realized what it must have cost
her, with Forral so recently dead. "I'm glad she found me, too,"
Anvar said firmly, trying, without success, to catch the Mage's eye. "And
I agree with you—I am a very fortunate man."
"It
is time we were leaving," Harihn said tightly. As he walked stiffly away,
Anvar took hold of Aurian's resisting elbow and drew her into an embrasure in
the courtyard wall that overlooked the stunning view of the river, the city,
and the dramatic cliffs opposite,
Aurian,
scarlet with embarrassment, looked as though she wished the ground would
swallow her up. "Anvar, I'm sorry," she said hastily, looking
anywhere but at him.
"No
need. Lady, I'm grateful—and very honored." She looked at him sharply.
"Then you understand?" "Lady Aurian, the Khisal says that we
must leave now. He seems rather annoyed." Eliizar bowed his head in
apology for
interrupting
them.
"All
right," Aurian sighed. "Bohan has horses for us Anvar wished he could
have had a little more time alone with her, but there was no help for it, not
now.
The
Prince's party were the last to be ferried across the river to join the
soldiers and other members of his household. It looked like—as indeed it was—a
small army, with Harihn s soldiers formed up around his retainers and the
baggage-train of mules, whose burden consisted mostly of water. Of necessity,
they would eat light during the desert crossing. Yazour, a veteran of desert
travel, rode forward, acknowledging Aurian with a smile as he addressed his
Prince. "Your Highness, we must go L now, while daylight remains. The
cliff road is perilous in the 1 dark."
They
rode up from the river crossing, past the scattering of white houses that edged
the city of Taibeth. There was no one else in sight. All the inhabitants,
hearing the incredible rumors that were spreading like wildfire, had gone into
the city itself to find out what was happening. The land swelled in a gentle
rise up from the river. At the top the road divided, the right-hand fork
leading to the capital, the left climbing gradually upward toward the looming
cliffs. Soon the houses thinned; the deserted fields between them were tinged
with red as the sun sank. Yazour looked worried. Time was pressing.
When
Aurian got her first glimpse of the cliff road, she gasped with dismay. Looking
hardly wide enough even for one rider, it snaked perilously back and forth,
literally carved into the soaring curtains of red stone. It was so steep that
it had been cut in a series of shallow steps. In some places it actually seemed
to hang out over the dizzying drop, while in others it vanished into the cliff,
tunneling through the striated columns of rock and emerging from the other
side. Yazour had sent up the first contingent of soldiers, and already they
looked like crawling ants against the vastness of this giant work of nature.
The captain rode up to Harihn. "If you will lead the way, Highness . .
." "No,"
Yazour
frowned, "But you must go up now, Sire, while there is still some measure
of daylight, If the Khisu should—" "Yazour, there are women and children
here. Should I go ahead in safety, leaving them to pick'their way in darkness?
These are my people. Get them up first, and this lady. The Khisu will not try
anything, if he knows what's good for him." He glanced at Aurian.
"But
Highness—" the captain protested. "Obey my orders, Yazour, Now!"
Yazour
rode off, dismay written all over his face. Since he had fallen in with the
sorceress, the Prince had grown ever more rash. Had she enchanted him? But that
was nonsense. In the brief time they had fought together he had discovered
respect for her. In fact, Yazour admitted, he liked her. It was simply that at
long last, Harihn was acting like a prince and a man. It would take some
getting used to.
Aurian
drew hep~horse close to Harihn's black mount,
"Well
said, Highness—with one exception. I'm going to wait with you."
"But
Lady—"
"Don't
argue, Harihn." She looked up once more at the precipitous road, her hands
clammy on the reins of the bay horse that Harihn had given her. The thought of
climbing all the way up there made her feel physically ill. "When I go up
there, the last thing I want to see is that bloody drop. In fact, I'm not sure
I can do it at all . . ." She made a wry face at her own irrational fear.
"Aurian!"
the Prince protested.
"It'll
be all right." The quiet, familiar voice at her shoulder was full of
understanding. "At least that's what you told me," Anvar went on.
"Remember the beach?"
Aurian
remembered Anvar's swimming lesson, and his terror of the water. And her so
angry with him that she could have cheerfully drowned him on the spot.
"If
I could do that, then you can do this," he assured her, "I'll be
close, if you need me."
Aurian's
turn to begin the ascent came all too soon, it seemed to her, although while
they waited the sun had gone down and the valley bottom was shrouded in deep
purple shadow, and the red rocks of the clifftop glowed crimson with sunset
light. They dismounted at the bottom of the narrow track and Yazour handed each
of them a torch to light their way. The Mage took her flaming brand
reluctantly. "One hand for the torch and one to fead the horse," she
moaned. "What on earth am I going to hold on with?"
"The
path is wider than it looks, my Lady," Yazour told her. "Stay away
from the edge and all will be well."
Aurian
gave him a sour look. "Fine," she said faintly.
"Don't
worry, Lady," Anvar said. "Look—I'll go first, and you can follow me.
Just don't look down, and you'll be all right,"
Biting
her lip, Aurian began her ascent. The path was fairly smooth and the torches
brought the dusk down around them so that the bottom of the abyss was lost in
darkness. Nonetheless, she kept her eyes resolutely averted from the drop,
fixing them on the ground at her feet and trying not to think of the plunge
into empty air that waited just to her left. The real
difficulty
lay in turning the sharp corners where the path zigzagged. Suddenly the
hindquarters of Anvar's horse vanished from sight around the bend, and there
was nothing ahead of her but the vast, dark gulf below. One slip going round
there . . . She stepped back, reeling, pressing her back against the comforting
solidity of the cliff face, unable to move. Her horse, impatient to follow its
vanished companion, nudged her with its nose, pushing her nearer to the brink
and almost making her drop the torch. "Stop that!" Aurian, shaking
with shock, her heart in her mouth, smacked him hard on the nose, and the
animal backed up a step, his eyes wide with astonishment,
"What's
happening up there? Why the delay?" Harihn's voice came from farther down
the path.
Aurian
took a deep, steadying breath. "Don't be feeble," she scolded
herself. "If Anvar could overcome his fear of water, surely you can manage
this!" For certain, no one could come to her aid. The path was blocked in
front and behind with horses. "It's all right," she called back,
wishing it really was. Keeping her back pressed firmly against the rock, she
sidled, step by shuffling step, around the corner, followed at a respectful
distance by the chastened horse. Once she was around, and the solid, sloping
path was before her once more, Aurian could have collapsed with relief, but
there was still a long climb ahead, and she was holding up progress. Her dry
mouth set in a grim line, e lifted her torch and trudged on.
It was
a grueling climb. All in all, there were nine of the terrifying bends to
negotiate, before they reached the top, and the higher they climbed, the more
tired and balky the horses became. Aurian's back and legs began to ache until
every step was torture and she was gasping for breath. The drop switched from
her left side to her right, then back again as the trail twisted back and
forth, and the only time she gained a brief respite from her fear was when the
road plunged into the cliff, creating blessed, solid walls on either side.
Twice during the ascent she heard a bloodcurdling scream from above, and men
and horses plummeted past her, dangerously close. The dull, wet sound of their
eventual impacts left her sick and shaking,
"Aurian!
Are you all right?"
The
Mage looked dazedly around. There was level ground in front and on either jide
of her—she had reached the top!
Gently,
Anvar pried her fingers away from the torch and the horse's reins and handed
both to Bohan. Then putting an arm around her shoulders, he led her away from
the edge. In the shadow of the rocks that lined the clifftop trail she clung to
him, flinging her arms around his neck and burying her face in his shoulder. He
held her until her breathing steadied and her
trembling
eased.
"There,"
Anvar said softly, his breath tickling her ear, "I
told
you you could do it."
Aurian
raised her head to look at him, and made a face.
Harihn
stood at the brink of the cliff, looking down for the last time at the land he
would have ruled. They were celebrating in the city. Fireworks were arcing into
the air on comet-tails of silver sparks, to blossom with a bang into giant
flowers of red, gold, and green in the night sky. Their light was echoed on the
ground by the flames from the burning slave markets.
"Regrets,
Prince?" Aurian had come quietly up behind him, Anvar a shadow at her
heels. "If you want to return, I'm sure the people would welcome
you."
He
shook his head. "I have no stomach for a revolution. Besides, that place
holds evil memories for me. My way lies onward now. Xiang will get himself a
new heir, no doubt." "Not with this queen, he won't." Harihn
turned abruptly to face Anvar, "What do you
mean?"
Anvar's
eyes smoldered. "I mean, Highness, that Sara—the Khisihn—is barren. She
lied to your father as she lied to me. As things stand, you're still the only
royal heir. You can go back one day—if you wish."
Harihn's
eyes widened. "Are you sure?" J
"Absolutely
certain, Your Highness."
"Aurian,
did you know of this?"
The
Mage shook her head, equally stunned by Anvar's ;
news.
The
Prince threw back his head and roared with laughter "Balls of the
Reaper!" he exclaimed in malicious delight, i "What a joke on my father! I wish I
could be there when he f
finds
out!"
Anvar's
thoughts had obviously been moving along the «imr lines. He looked sick, and
Aurian finally understood the
significance
of his rejection of Sara. When Xiang found out that she was barren, she would
be worthless to him—and her life might well be in danger. Anvar, though he had
seen through her at last, felt guilty at leaving her to her fate. But does he
still love her? Aurian wondered. Then she wondered why the idea bothered her so
much.
The
Prince's caravan reassembled itself for the long trek ahead, and they set off
once more. The track twisted and turned between tall rock formations that had
been eroded into weird, contorted sculptures, like a frozen forest of stone.
Holes of varying sizes had been worn right through some of them, and the light
wind whistled and hooted eerily through these like the wailing of tortured
souls, making the horses flinch and toss their heads uneasily.
After
about an hour, the track appeared to end abruptly, simply dropping off into
space between two tall stones, beyond which was a steep, boulder-littered slope
that seemed to glitter strangely in the light of the rising moon. Below, the
desert spread out. Aurian, riding at the head of the column with Harihn,
Yazour, and Anvar, caught her breath in sheer disbelief. "Great
Chathak!" she exclaimed in a strangled voice. "Is— is that what I
think it is?"
In the
waxing moonlight, the desert glowed. The wind drifted skeins of glittering sand
in luminous streams of mixed and muted color: red, blue, white, and green. The
dune ridges caught the light and sparkled piercingly like frost on a winter's
dawn. Even now, with the moon just rising, the Mage was forced to shade her
eyes with her hand.
"Indeed
it is," Yazour replied to the question she had already forgotten.
"The entire desert is composed of gems and gem dust. See how bright it is?
That is why we must travel by night. In sunlight, the glare would burn out your
eyes. We must camp well before daylight, for once the sun rises, everyone must
be safely under cover."
He
showed Aurian and Anvar how to veil their eyes with the long trailing ends of
the desert headdresses they all wore, pulling the gauzy veils across their
faces and attaching them to the headband at the other side, Aurian found that
she could see quite clearly through the thin stuff, but it cut out the already
increasing glare. The eyes of the horses and mules were bound
with
scarves of the same material, but Shia refused to have anything to do with such
nonsense. She was still sulking at having had to bring up the rear during the
cliff ascent, lest she frighten the horses. "I don't need that
man-stuff," she told Aurian disdainfully. "I'm a cat. My eyes
adjust!"
They
rode out into the glimmering sea of gems, looking like wandering ghosts in
their pale, veiled headdresses and flowing desert robes. The horses' feet
flicked up clouds of fine gem dust, leaving behind them a trail that glittered
like cold fire, and covering themselves and their riders with a cloak of
scintillating light. What gems were these, that could hold such dazzling
luminosity? Aurian felt a lump in her throat. Like the joyous beauty of the
leaping whales, the eerie beauty of this place was almost heartbreaking in its
intensity. But it was deadly as well as beautiful, she learned from Yazour. In
the proper season, great sandstorms could blow up in minutes, and the sharp
edges of the windblown gems would strip a man's flesh from his bones just as quickly.
Furthermore, the sea of jewels was said to attract dragons.
"Dragons!"
Aurian gasped. "There are dragons here?"
"Only
in legend," Yazour replied. "They were reputed to dwell in the desert
where they could easily sustain themselves. You know that they fed on
sunlight?"
"What
a tale!" Anvar scoffed. "I'll believe it when I see it, Yazour."
"Pray
that you never get the chance," the young man told him seriously.
"Dragons aTfc said to be unsociable and chancy creatures, easily angered,
and best left alone."
They
rode on through the night, too tired now to talk. Aurian was relieved when at
last Yazour, casting an eye over the seemingly changeless horizon, advised that
they should stop and camp. She was weary beyond belief. Was it only yesterday
morning that she had found Anvar and brought him back from the clutches of
death? So much had happened since then, and seemingly without a moment's
respite. When she dismounted from her horse, she felt her knees buckle beneath
her, but thankfully there was nothing for her to do. Bohan was instantly at her
side to relieve her of her mount, and Harihn's soldiers pitched the light,
silken tents with great speed and efficiency. Even the horses and mules were
picketed in shelters of their
own,
for no living creature could stay outside during the hours of daylight.
In the
bustle of setting up camp, Aurian lost track of her friends, except for Shia,
who stuck to her like a shadow. Collecting their slender ration of food and
water, she went in search of Anvar. She found him sitting alone in the doorway
of a small tent, a waterskin by his side, his food lying untouched as he stared
blindly out at the torchlit camp. His mouth was turned down at the corners, his
brooding face lined with sorrow. Aurian was about to creep away, unsure about
intruding, but he turned toward her, seeming once again to sense her presence.
"You know," he said, without looking at her, "you've never once
said 'I told you so.' "
"I'd
sooner cut my tongue out!" Aurian protested. "Why should I want to
add to your pain?"
Anvar
sighed. "No, you wouldn't. You're too bloody fair! You warned me about
Sara, but instead of listening to you, I drove you away. And look what
happened!"
"Anvar,
I should never have left you. Me and my stupid temper! I'll never forgive
myself."
"Then
that makes two of us," Anvar said grimly. "Why did I not see which of
you could be trusted? I've done a lot of thinking, coming across the desert. Of
how you defied Miathan for me at the Academy, and how kind you were when I was
your servant. How you went out in the snow on Solstice morn to get me a guitar.
And what did I do?" His voice rose in self-derision. "I said hurtful
things to you-T-drove you away—because I was defending Sara. And what did you
do then? You saved me from death in the slave camp. You claimed me as your
husband, while she only wanted me dead so that she could be a queen! Gods, I'm
such a fool, Aurian. A blind, wretched fool!" He was shaking with anguish.
Aurian
put an arm around him, comforting him as he had comforted her on the clifftop.
He leaned against her shoulder as she stroked his fine, tawny-blond hair.
"You know what I would do if we were back in Nexis?" she said softly.
"I'd take you round every tavern in the city and get you more drunk than
you've ever been in your life. Forral always said that that's the only medicine
for a broken heart."
The
eastern horizon was beginning to lighten, and already
I
the
rising glare was enough to force them back into the tent. Aurian dropped the
flap behind them, shutting out the dazzling light. Anvar grinned at her
sheepishly. "When next we reach a city, I'll take up your offer with
pleasure—but I must confess that I'm not so much heartbroken as disappointed,
humiliated, and plain bloody furious with myself for being so gullible!"
His mouth twisted oddly. "I blame myself for letting you down . . ."
Aurian
squeezed his hand. "Don't punish yourself for that, Anvar—it's all over
now! Sara was your childhood sweetheart— you loved her! You didn't know how
much she had changed! Why don't you get some sleep now? Maybe things won't seem
so bad once you've rested."
He
smiled ruefully. "Looking after me again, huh? I thought it was supposed
to be the other way around."
"Don't
worry, you do your share. Now go to sleep—or else!"
"Or
else you'll set that monster on me?" Anvar eyed Shia warily. She looked
awfully big in the cramped confines of the tent.
"Don't
worry about Shia. She's a good friend. She'll look after us both." Aurian
stretched out a hand to stroke Shia's sleek head, and was rewarded by drowsy
purring. "I like him," the cat said.
"Do
you?" Aurian was surprised. Shia had never volunteered such information
about anyone else, not even Bohan. "I like him, too," the
Magrxonfided.
She
turned back to Anvar, who was curled on the cushions, asleep already. Through
the glittering dust that coated his face, he looked drawn and vulnerable,
weighed down with sorrow. On impulse, Aurian put out her hand and gently
touched his sleeping face. And then, as it had done in the slave compound, her
heart seemed to turn over within her—a pattern shifted and clicked suddenly
into place. Aurian snatched her hand back as though she had been burned, aware,
in that instant, that the surge—whatever it had been—was the same force that
had unlocked the power of the bracelets. She sat very still for a moment,
cradling her hand and waiting for her breathing to steady and her heart to stop
trying to fight its way out of her breast. "Did you feel that?" she
asked Shia experimentally.
"Feel
what?" The cat's thoughts were drowsy.
"Never
mind." Aurian tried to organize her shaky thoughts, but for some reason,
the only thing that would come into her mind was the image of Forral's face,
tender and glowing as it had been on the day they had first made love. Grief
and loneliness pierced her—a pain so acute that she gave a stifled cry.
Confused and wretched, Aurian gave in to her tears for once, and cried herself
to sleep.
Sometime
during the long, bright day, Anvar tossed and moaned, in the grip of some
nightmare. Then his seeking hand found that of the Mage, and in her sleep she
clasped it tightly, and his restlessness stilled. And that was how Harihn found
them at nightfall, lying close together, hand in hand. He looked at them for a
long moment, frowning, until Shia opened a sleepy eye. The Prince ducked
swiftly and silently away, dropping the flap of the tent behind him. Since the
man had gone without any attempt at harming them, Shia forbore to mention his
visit to Aurian.
p t e
r £ ?
SEWER RATS
he old
bakery had changed so much that Anvar, had he been there, \vou\A scarceYy Vvave
iecogt\Vied V\\s> cVvvVd-hood home. After Ria's death, Tori had lost heart.
His thriving business in the Arcade had been destroyed with the fire that
killed his wife, and he had been forced to fall back on his older, smaller
premises in the poverty of the laborers' district. But without Ria to clean up,
and without Anvar's labor, things had gone steadily from bad to worse. Despite
Bern's efforts to save the business that he would inherit, the bakery was in a
shabby state, its plaster crumbling and its roof sorely in need of repair. The
inside was cobwebbed and filthy, and badly in need of a new coat of whitewash.
No
wonder we've lost our customers, Bern thought disgustedly, as he took
tomorrow's loaves out of the oven. Tori, now a sullen, bitter man, no longer
bothered to get up early to bake a fresh batch each day. In truth, it was scarcely
worthwhile. Bern frowned at the pile of stale loaves that lay on the table
beneath the window. Everyone in the district knew the conditions under which
Tori's once famous bread was now made —and no one would touch it.
Just
then the object of Bern's gloomy thoughts came into the bakery. The flames of
the oven flared in the strong draft from the doorway, and a-*wirling cloud of
snow followed Tori indoors, the flakes lit like sparks in the glow of his
lantern. The new Council, in the pay of the Magefolk, had decreed that no more
money should be wasted on lamplighters. Crime flourished in the darkened
streets, and people were now forced to carry their own illumination.
"Rough
night," Tori grunted. "Bloody winter!"
"Wipe
your feet, Dad!" Bern knew before the words were out of his mouth that it
was hopeless.
Tori
shrugged, as he always did, and began to load the stale loaves into a sack that
he had brought from the empty stable. "I'm off to the tavern," he
muttered. "Harkas wants these for his pigs."
"Dad,
not again!" Bern protested. "We can't go on like
this!
If you brought home the money you get from Harkas, instead of drinking it,
maybe we could afford to fix this place up so our bread would be fit for people
to eat! Besides, he can't be paying you much. It's a long time since I've seen
you come home tipsy, let alone drunk!"
"You
mind your own business, Bern!"
"Mind
my own business? This business is all I—we—have, and you're letting it go to
wrack and ruin!"
Tori
scowled. "What if I am? What's the point in working, while those cursed
Magefolk bleed the city dry! Tithes here, taxes there ... I'd sooner burn this
place down than put another penny into Magefolk coffers!"
Bern,
thoroughly alarmed, strove to be conciliatory. "Look, Dad, why don't I
come with you tonight? I could use a beer myself, and maybe together we could
wheedle more money out of Harkas for the bread. What do you say?"
"No!"
The violence of his father's reply took Bern by surprise. Tori's glance slid
slyly away from that of his son. "Not tonight, Bern, eh?" he gabbled.
"It's filthy weather out there, and you've worked hard today. Don't drag
yourself through the mud and snow just to keep me company. You have a nice
rest. Come another night instead." He was out of the door and away before
his son could blink.
"What
the blazes is he up to?" Bern muttered. Pausing only to bank the oven, he
whisked his tattered cloak round his shoulders, lit a lantern, and left the
bakery, following the prints of his father's footsteps on the snowy ^ground.
Tori
was freezing. Carrying the sack in one hand and the lantern in the other, he
was unable to pull his cloak about him, and it was flapping wildly in the icy
wind. In trying to rescue it he dropped the sack, and loaves fell out to roll
across the ground, so that he had to stop and pick them up. "Bloody
Vannor," he cursed. "Don't know why I do it, now he's run out of
gold." In truth, of course, he knew perfectly well. He was aiding Vannor's
rebels out of pure hatred—to get back at the accursed Magefolk who had
destroyed his family, ruined his business, and wrecked his life. With that in
mind, a few stale loaves and a certain amount of risk seemed a small price to
pay.
Vannor
had set up his headquarters within the city's intricate sewer system, miseries
of tunnels built above the level of
the
major drains to take the runoff from heavy rains or snowmelt. Cleaner than the
actual sewers, they would remain fairly dry and habitable until the thaw. The
Magefolk had few supporters in th-s northern part of the city, so food and
other necessities were smuggled down to the rebels by allies who lived above.
The storm drain beneath Tori's home was an ideal base. With his bitter hatred
of the Magefolk, he could be trusted. In addition, the bakery oven was usually
alight; a little of its warmth filtered down through the earth to improve
conditions in the freezing drain. Karlek, formerly a siege engineer in the
Garrison, had broken a chimney through into the flue of the oven, so that they could
have a fire without its smoke being seen above, and of course the baker
provided them with a regular supply of bread. Really, thought Tori, Vannor and
his men were doing pretty well out of him.
It
wasn't far to go. Tori rounded the corner of the bakery and branched off into
the narrow alley that ran behind the high-walled stable yard. He paused for a
brief glance all around, but no one ever came into this dead end. Putting down
the sack, he bent with a grunt to lift a grating that was set into the cobbles.
Taking bread and lantern with him, the baker lowered himself into the drain,
reaching up to pull the cover down behind him. He was unaware that he was being
watched.
Bern
could hardly believe it when his father vanished into the drain. He moved quickly
from his hiding place in the shadows and sped across to the grating—just in
time to hear Tori's whisper echoing out of the-btackness beneath it, "It's
me, Tori, Look, I need to talk with Vannor. I think my son is getting
suspicious."
Bern
stiffened. Vannor? Vannor had been declared an outlaw! There were rumors all
over the city that he was gathering an army against the Magefolk. It took
seconds for Bern to reach the obvious conclusion—and the solution to his
problems. Tori would die for treason and be out of the way for good—and there'd
be a reward, of course! He could build up the business again . . . Bern
scrambled to his feet, and ran. Should he go to the Academy? No, the Garrison
was closer. They could surprise the rebels and catch Tori in the act. He'd make
sure of the reward first, though. The new Commander was a vile-tempered
mercenary hired by the Magefolk, the sort who'd sell his grand-
AURIAN •
453
mother
for a profit. Still, if he and his troops secured Bern's inheritance, who cared?
Heedless of the snow, Bern ran faster.
"She's
alive, I tell you!" Miathan's bony fists hammered with soundless violence
on the thick quilt that covered his bed. His face, below the bandage that
concealed the ruin of his burnt-out eyes, was twisted with frustrated rage.
Bragar
stepped close to Eliseth, to whisper in her ear: "Are you sure she didn't
fry his brain as well as his eyes?"
"I
heard that!" Miarhan turned toward the Fire-Mage with unerring accuracy,
and lifted his hand. A chill, misty vapor flowed rapidly from his fingers and
pooled round Bragar's feet, coalescing into the form of a glimmering serpent
that began to make its coiling way up the Mage's legs. Bragar bit down on a
scream, and tried, too late, to make frantic warding gestures as the cruel head
reached the level of his face. The serpent hissed, showing ice-pointed fangs
that glittered with venom.
"Miathan,
no!" Eliseth cried hastily. "He didn't mean it!"
"She's
right, Archmage! I—I apologize!" Bragar's voice was no more than a squeak.
The serpent vanished.
Miathan
cackled spitefully, a laugh cut off with shocking suddenness in mid-breath.
"So what are you going to do about it?"
The
Weather-Mage frowned, "About Bragar, Archmage?"
"No,
you stupid woman! About Aurian! She's coming! Coming for me, for all of us! She
stalks my dreams—corning after us with death in her eyes . . ",'
"Archmage,
how can that be?" Bragar protested. "She drowned in Eliseth's storm,
We all felt it—"
"It
wasn't strong enough!" the Archmage snapped. "Not like when that ass
Davorshan got himself killed." Eliseth gasped, and he cackled again.
"Oh, I knew all about you and Davorshan from the start. I may be blind,
but I don't miss much around here, let me tell you."
Eliseth
turned on him furiously. "That's beside the point," she said flatly.
"Aurian is dead. What difference does it make that we barely felt her
passing? It's not surprising, with the distance, and the ocean between us, not
to mention all the panic from her attack on you—"
"Eliseth,
you're aJo4>l," Miathan retorted, "Aurian is alive,
and a
threat to us all. If we're to keep what we've gained, she must be
intercepted." His spidery hands clawed at the crystal around his neck.
"And what about that accursed Anvar? I know he survived your blundering
storm!"
"Who
the blazes is Anvar?" Bragar interrupted.
Eliseth
gave him a blank look. "I've no idea."
"He
was Lady Aurian's servant." Elewin's respectful voice came from the
corner. The Chief Steward had been there so long, devotedly nursing his master,
that they had forgotten his presence. "My Lord Archmage never liked poor
Anvar," he continued, "yet he was as diligent a lad as ever I—"
"Shut
up!" Miathan spat. "Yes, he was her servant, against my wishes. I
want him dead, do you hear? His head on a spike! His heart ripped from his
living body! His corpse hacked to pieces and trampled into the ground! I
want—"
"Hush
now, Archmage," Eliseth murmured, handing him a cup of wine. "Bragar
and I will deal with Aurian and her servant, I promise."
"Not
Aurian, you imbecile! I want her brought to me alive! I want her—" Miathan
licked his lips in an unsavory manner, and lapsed into a crooning reverie.
Bragar
opened his mouth to protest, but Eliseth waved him silent. "Don't worry,
Archmage," she said. "You may leave the matter safely in our hands.
Stay with him, Elewin." Taking Bragar's hand, she hauled him firmly away
from the bed.
Elewin
bowed them^ respectfully out of the room. Then: "More wine,
Archmage?" He tugged the cup from Miathan's grasp. Slipping a twist of
paper from his pocket, he poured its contents, a greenish powder, into the
wine, and handed it back to Miathan. "Is that better, Lord Archmage?"
Miathan
drained the cup. "It's good. I don't recognize the vintage, but it's very
good . . ."He slumped back against the pillows, snoring gently. Elewin
took the cup from his hands and straightened; his subservience vanished.
Following the Mages, he crept downstairs to Eliseth's door. Setting an ear to
the panels, the Steward composed himself to listen.
Eliseth's
white-painted chamber was spacious and spartan, its furnishings elegant but
spare and uncomfortable. Bragar
squirmed
uneasily on a hard wooden chair, wishing that she wouldn't insist on presenting
such a chilly front to the world. He knew that the bedroom behind those doors
at the far end of the room was a den of luxury; a fur-carpeted, silk-hung,
perfumed temple dedicated to sensuality and lust. The thought reminded him
unpleasantly that since Eliseth had started taking an interest in Davorshan,
he, Bragar, had been pointedly denied access to that inner sanctum. How glad he
had been when that slimy youth had died!
"Wine?"
Eliseth took goblets from a cabinet in the corner.
"Have
you nothing stronger?"
The
Magewoman raised her eyes to the ceiling. "You're drinking too much,
Bragar," she snapped. "How can I depend on you if your brains are
permanently pickled?"
"Shut
up and give me a drink!" Bragar snarled. You wait, he thought. Someday
I'll make you pay for treating me like this. And when I'm done, you'll be
begging for mercy—or begging for more! The thought, along with the glass of
spirits that she grudgingly handed him, was some comfort.
"Well,
what do you think?" Eliseth's voice dissolved his fantasy. "Not that
there's any point in asking you," she said with a sneer, settling herself
in a chair near the fire, a glass of white wine in her hand.
"What
a shame you've no one else to ask," Bragar retorted,
le to
resist needling her about Davorshan's death. He had satisfaction of seeing her
face twist with rage. "What can I say?" he replied to her question.
"Miath'an's brains have clearly been addled by Aurian's attack. How could
she not have perished?"
Eliseth
frowned. "I'm not so sure," she said. "Remember how close Aurian
and the Archmage used to be? He should know whether she's dead, if anyone
does."
"Rubbish!
The old fool is senile, and you know it. We should put him out of his misery,
and take power ourselves!'
"Bragar,
you've the brains of an ox!" Eliseth snapped. "We need the Archmage
as a figurehead! He made sure of that when he spread the tale that it was his
power that destroyed the Nihilim! We were able to bribe that toad Narvish onto
the Council as the merchants' representative, and Angos at the Garrison is
nothing but &• thickheaded mercenary who will do
whatever
we say for a price, but they won't last long if Miathan is not seen to be
behind them! It is only the Mortals' fear of his power, and what will happen if
he withdraws it, that keeps the city in our hands.'"
"If
he's only a figurehead, why do we have to jump whenever he snaps his
fingers?" Bragar sulked.
Eliseth
took a sip of wine. "As a rule we don't—but if there is a chance that
Aurian survived, we cannot risk her returning. Miathan may want her alive, but
/ do not! I've been giving it some thought. We know she was at sea, and I know
the strength and direction of the storm I raised. If she is anywhere, it has to
be the Southern Lands."
"The
South? But even if we had the people, we could not send a force in sufficient
numbers to find her," Bragar protested. "The Southerners would take
it as an invasion, and a war is the last thing we need at present. Besides,
they're supposed to be hostile to the Magefolk. If that's where Aurian is, the
problem will take care of itself."
"Why
rely on it, when we have other means at our disposal?" Eliseth glanced at
him slyly.
Bragar
knew she wanted him to ask what she meant, so she could accuse him of stupidity
again. Refusing to play her game, he gulped the contents of his glass and went
to refill it. "You always did have a high opinion of yourself," he
said, sneering.
"How
dare you!" Eliseth rose to the bait. "I'm the only Weather-Mage in
the world! If I deal with them, the Southerners will be lucky to havejapy
survivors, let alone that redheaded bitch! I've seen the maps," she went
on more calmly. "The Southern Lands have huge mountain ranges and vast
deserts, and even jungle, if you go far enough south. With topography like
that, it's easy to produce violent weather. A sandstorm in the right place, or
unseasonal blizzards in the mountains, could solve our problem. It would also
soften up the Southern races for conquest," she added persuasively.
"Eliseth,
you can't!" The bottle jerked in Bragar's hands, splashing brandy on the
white tiled floor. "You'll alter the weather everywhere! It could take
centuries to restore the balance!"
Eliseth
shrugged. "So what? Who cares if we lose a few thousand Mortals to storms
or famine? With their numbers
AURIAN
- 457
reduced,
they'll be easier to control. We need not suffer, now we know Finbarr's
preserving spell. We'll have Elewin stockpile food in the catacombs, and keep
it indefinitely. It's not as though we had many mouths to feed nowadays."
Gods,
she was ruthless! Bragar was both impressed and appalled. Once he had been the
instigator of their plots, but now that it was time to act instead of talk, he
was finding himself increasingly out of his depth. It was one thing to talk
about Negative Magic, but having to deal with those things from the Caldron had
jarred his confidence badly. Bragar gulped his drink, remembering the horror of
the Wraiths, How could Eliseth be so composed? Her slender form looked delicate
and brittle as a spear of ice, yet she throve on situations that turned his
blood to water. His vision of her, submissive and conquered, evaporated. He was
losing this game; he knew it now. His one hope lay in going along with her—and
waiting for her to overreach herself. Then, at last, it would be his turn.
Bragar
decided on a change of tactics. "Maybe you're right—" He cut the
words off, alerted by a warning prickle at the base of his neck, by the merest
hint of a sound outside. Overturning his chair, he shot across the room and
flung the door open.
"Bragar,
what are you doing?"
The
Fire-Mage peered at the empty stairway, then closed the door, shaking his head
in puzzlement. "I thought , , ."
Elewin,
pressed flat to the wall round the curve of the staircase, let out the breath
he had been holding in a long sigh. That had been close! For a moment he
considered returning, but there was no sense in taking risks. He had heard
enough, and the information must be passed on. He hurried downstairs and let
himself out of the Tower.
Gods!
Would spring never come? This accursed winter was lingering forever. After
several hours within Miathan's warm chambers, Elewin shivered in the bitmgly
cold air. A new sprinkling of snow had fallen while he'd been tending the
Archmage, but the night skies were clear now, and the temperature had dropped
sharply. The snow, frozen to a hard, brittle crust, crunched loudly beneath his
boots as he crossed the courtyard, and Elewhrgianced nervously up at the lighted
win-
dow of
Eliseth's room. If they should hear him, and look out . . . He'd never be able
to explain why he was going to the library, especially at this time of night.
Miathan had no need of books nowadays, he thought wryly.
Since
Finbarr's death, the library had lain dark and empty. The preserving spells,
which required frequent renewing, were already decaying, and as Elewin pushed
open the heavy door he heard a rustling patter like wind-blown leaves as mice
and cockroaches scattered for cover. The Steward shook his head sadly. Finbarr
would have been appalled. The irreplaceable knowledge of centuries, which he
had tended with such care and skill, ending up as rat's nests! I must get
someone to see to this, Elewin thought, hating the notion of Finbarr's precious
volumes moldering beneath a shroud of cobwebs and dust. It was disrespectful to
the Archivist's memory to let his life's work go to ruin—but in truth, there
was no one to tend them, Most of the servartts had fled in terror on the Night
of Death, as people in the city called it, and few were willing now to come
near the Academy. Elewin was hard-pressed to maintain the basic necessities,
let alone spare a servant to dust books.
Not
daring to venture a light, the Steward groped his way across the long, musty
room, cursing as he bruised himself on the corner of a table, and fell over a
displaced chair. If only there had been a moon, to cast some light through the
tall windows. If only he had Mages' sight! At last he reached the farther end,
recognizing Jtjy feel the recessed door that led down into the catacombs.
Smiling in the darkness, he slipped an intricate key from his pocket. Eliseth
and Bragar thought all the keys to the archives were safe in their keeping, and
it was small wonder they wanted no one in the catacombs, considering what they
had stored down there! But they did not know that Finbarr had given Anvar his
own key. Elewin had found it among his scanty belongings, after he fled.
Entering the archives, the Steward carefully locked the door again behind
him.
The
walls of the corridor were icy to the touch, and Elewin had trouble lighting
the lantern. The flint kept slipping from his frozen fingers, forcing him to
kneel and grope on the floor, cursing. How things had changed! Once he had
thrashed any
AUR1AN •
459
servant
caught swearing in the Academy! But that was before he'd become a spy and a
traitor to the Magefolk. Their changes had forced the change in him.
Having
finally managed to light the lantern, Elewin relaxed a little as its mellow
glow banished the darkness, making the frigid air of the corridor seem warmer.
Thank the Gods! Being down here in the dark with those Wraiths was more than he
could bear! Though they had been disabled, it was easy to imagine that he could
hear them stirring . . . Waking . . . Elewin shuddered as he began to thread
his cautious way through the maze of passages and stairways beneath the
Academy. When he passed the room where the Wraiths were stored, he held his
breath and hurried.
The
blade came whistling out of the darkness, not half an inch from his face.
Elewin jumped back round the sharp bend in the corridor, almost dropping the
lantern in his fright. "It's me, you fool!" he hissed. "What the
blazes are you doing up here? You nearly took my bloody nose off!"
"Sorry."
The small, wiry form of Parric the Cavalrymaster appeared round the corner. He
was grinning from ear to ear. "I must be getting rusty. It was meant to be
your head!"
Elewin
was not amused. "Why didn't you wait in our usual place? What if I'd been
one of the Magefolk?"
Parric
shrugged, "You were late," he complained, "I was freezing my
bollocks off down there, Elewin. I had to move about, to keep warm!"
"Never
mind," the Steward sighed, It was clear where he was learning all his bad
language nowadays. "I have news for you. Come farther down where it's
safer, and we'll talk,"
"I
don't know why you're so worried," Parric grumbled. "Who in their
right mind would come down here on a night like this? I swear there's icicles
growing on the end of my—"
"Porricf"
The
Cavalrymaster chuckled.
The
ancient parts of the catacombs that Anvar had discovered were little more than
a series of natural caves, set low in the end of the promontory. They had been
stripped of their treasures now, and the footfalls of the two men echoed loudly
in the bare chambers. Singe the ancient spells that guarded their
contents
had been broken, damp had begun to seep in from the nearby river. The dark
walls were jeweled with ice crystals that splintered the lamplight, and the
floor was slick and treacherous underfoot. Elewin gripped the lantern tightly
to prevent it slipping from his numb grasp, and wished that Finbarr still
lived. In the Archivist's day, these caverns had been lit by Magelight, and
kept warm and dry by means of his spells.
"See?
I told you. Colder than a prostitute's heart down here." Parric pulled the
remains of a broken wooden chest out of a corner and sat down, motioning for
Elewin to join him. "I don't suppose you brought some food with you? Or a
bottle?" he asked hopefully.
"Didn't
get the chance. Sorry, Parric. I know there aren't many comforts where you men
are hiding out. Still, I have some news that will warm your heart better than a
bottle." Elewin grinned, savoring the moment. "The Lady Aurian is
said to be
alive!"
He
hardly got the reaction he had expected. The leathery, hard-bitten little
Cavalrymaster stared at him, tears welling up in his eyes and rolling unheeded
down his cheeks. Then turning abruptly away, Parric hid his face in his hands
and began to
sob.
"Parric!"
A very startled Elewin put the lantern down, and laid an arm across the man's
shoulders.
"I'm
sorry," Parric choked. He wiped his face, looking emBarrassed. "Not
what"^ou'd expect of a tough old bastard like me, is it?" He
swallowed hard. "But by the Gods, I was so fond of that lass! We all loved
her—her and Forral. We thought they'd both been killed—then Vannor told us
she'd been carrying Forral's child . . . Elewin, it's a miracle! A bloody
miracle!" He clutched at the Steward's arm. "Where is she? How is
she?"
Elewin
hated to dampen the man's joy. "Don't get your hopes up, Parric. It isn't
certain. But Miathan insists she's still alive, and that her servant is with
her—"
"What,
young Anvar? Well, I'm blowed! Forral always thought that lad had some good
stuff in him!"
"The
bad news is that they think she's in the Southern Kingdoms, if she's
anywhere."
"What?
How the bloody blue blazes did she get down there?"
Elewin
told Parric what he had overheard. "So you see how grave the situation
is," he finished. "If Eliseth tampers with the weather, it would not
only put Aurian in danger, but it could be catastrophic for our own folk—worse
than anything we've seen since the Cataclysm."
Parric
frowned. "This changes things. I'll discuss it with Vannor, of course, but
I think we'll be leaving the city now. We can't stay where we are if it thaws,
and we're too close to the Academy to assemble an effective force. But when
Aurian returns—"
"You
think she'll come back?" Elewin was surprised. "Aurian? Of course she
will! It'd take more than an ocean to keep that lass from Miathan, after he
killed Forral, I'll wager she's on her way back already—to settle with the
Archmage, And when she does we'll see a thing or two,"
"Parric!
We're talking about the Magefolk!" Elewin protested. "It won't be
that easy!"
The
Cavalrymaster sobered. "I know. That's why we need an army. Aurian can't
do it alone, just as we can't, without a Mage, But together, maybe . . .
Anyway, I must get back to Vannor with this news." He hesitated, his
expression thoughtful. "Elewin, why don't you come with me? If we move
elsewhere, you won't be needed here as an informant, and it's dangerous for you
to stay,"
Elewin
shook his head, though he was sorely tempted. "I'd better not. If I
suddenly vanish, Elfseth and Bragar will get suspicious and start searching for
me, and that might put your people in danger. And if you want to attack the
Academy, you'll need someone on the inside."
"But
it could be ages before we can do that!" "It can't be helped, I'll be
all right. Besides, Miathan depends on me. To see him this way—blind and
crippled—oh, I know it's his own fault, but he seems so helpless . . ."
Parric
clasped the other's arm, "Elewin, I know this is a trial for your
loyalties, and we're very grateful, but—"
"It's
not just that! The balance of power is changing within the Academy. Be warned,
Parric. Eliseth is the one to beware of now,"
I
"I'll
bear it in mind. Aurian always hated that bitch. Look, are you sure you won't
come?"
"I
cannot."
Parric
nodded. "All right. You're a brave man, Elewin—or daft. Forral always said
there wasn't much difference between the two. Farewell, my friend. Our prayers
go with you. Vannor will try to get word to you from time to time."
"Vannor?
What about you?"
"Me?
Personally, I have a sudden hankering to head south. It's warmer there!"
The Cavalrymaster winked, and picking up his own lantern, vanished into the
shadows at the back of the cave, leaving Elewin gaping in astonishment.
The
sewers ran the length and breadth of the city, a democratic highway connecting
the grand and lofty Academy to even the meanest of dwellings. Not the
pleasantest of places to lie low, but there was a certain satisfaction in being
able to move around under the very noses of the Magefolk, and it had been
simplicity itself to break through the thin stone barrier into the old part of
the Archives. The hole was hidden in a corner, where a spur of rock formed a
kink in the tunnel so that the opening was obscured by the shadow of the
jutting stone. Because of his slight stature, Parric had been chosen as
go-between. Holding his lantern out at arm's length, he squeezed through the
hole into the narrow drain beyond. Luckily the current low population of the
Academy, coupled with the cold weather, had reduced the smell, but he still
tried to hold his breath. Given time, a man could get used to most things, but
there were limits!
The
cramped drain continued for some distance back beneath the Academy's promontory
before connecting with the main sewers. The rusted stubs of an old inspection
ladder protruded, sharp and dangerous, from the wall, marking the junction.
Parric hooked the lantern to his belt and pulled on leather gauntlets to
protect his hands from the jagged iron, before he began, very carefully, to
climb. Any cuts or abrasions could be fatal down here—the chances of infection
were high. They had already lost two men; one to a poisoned rat bite and the
other to lockjaw.
AURIAN •
463
The
sewer was a tunnel of slick and rotting stone, with raised walkways on either
side of the stinking, sluggish channel. Parric was glad that the water level
was too low to reach the slanting mouth of the drain. He had sometimes done
this climb with all manner of filth cascading down on him, and it was not an
experience he cared to repeat. Emerging from the mouth of the drain, he made
his way along the walkway to his makeshift raft. Since the stream was low, he
could use it to return. When the torrent was in full spate, the journey had to
be made via the slimy, crumbling walkways, with the prospect of drowning in the
sewage-filled channel only a slip away. With the lantern that swung from his
belt providing the only light, Parric picked up the paddle and began to make
his way back through the network of tunnels that led to the rebels' hideout,
Parric
had almost reached his destination when he heard the first harsh sounds of
fighting. His heart lurched. Great Chathak, no! He steered his raft into the
side, his soldier's brain already working out the odds. Who had betrayed them?
No, that was for later. How long since the attack had started? How many of the enemy?
They had the advantage of surprise, but they didn't know these tunnels like
Parric did! Once on the walkway, he extinguished his lamp. While his eyes to
adjusted to the darkness he checked his throwing knives—one up each sleeve—and
pulled a long dagger from his boot. He left his sword sheathed. This was knife
work. With a grimace, he slipped over the side and began to wade, thigh deep,
up the stinking channel, gripping the edge "of the walkway to keep from
slipping on the sludge that coated the bottom.
Had
Parric not wanted information, the guard would have died instantly. As it was,
she only had time to feel a hand come out of nowhere to grip her ankle, before
a quick jerk pitched her headlong into the channel. Before the choking,
panic-stricken warrior could flounder to her feet, Parric was on her. He hauled
her up roughly, his knife against her throat. "How many of you?" he
growled, "Answer me!" He felt her stiffen against him.
"Great
Chathak—I know that voice!" she exclaimed. "Parric—is it really
you?"
"Bloody
right itjs! Now answer my question!"
I
I
"Parric,
it's me—Sangra! Gods forgive us, they said you were dead! Put that stupid knife
away, so I can hug you."
The
emotion in her voice was too intense to be feigned, and Parric felt a surge of
joy. Sangra was an old, old friend—a big, rowdy, rawboned girl with assets that
no fighting vest could contain. Ah, the tumbles they had had in happier days!
Grinning, Parric lowered the knife, and managed to get in a quick grope before
she turned to face him.
"Now
I bloody know it's you!" There were tears and laughter in her voice as her
arms went around him with a force that made his ribs creak as they hugged,
oblivious to the filth that coated them both.
"Sangra,
what's going on?" Parric disengaged himself reluctantly.
"The
baker's son betrayed you—or Vannor, at least. We had no idea that you were down
here. Parric, are any of the others with you?"
"Yes.
Quite a few."
"Gods!
I've got to warn our folk! We won't fight our own!"
"That's
my girl! Come on—quick!"
The
troops from the Garrison had Vannor's little force penned into a cul-de-sac,
and the fighting was fierce. The soldiers had brought torches, but most had
been extinguished in the battle, and in the half darkness it was difficult to
tell friend from foe. Sangra knew, however. She and Parric joined the melee
from the rear and plunged into the fray. Parric, with his small stature, found
itrcasy to worm his way through the press of fighters. His methods were
straightforward. Anyone he recognized, he spared. Any stranger felt the bite of
his knife. Sangra, in the meantime, was circulating, pausing to whisper to any
of Forral's old troops that she came across. The change in them was immediate.
Relief and joy shining on their faces, they turned their weapons on Angos's
vicious mercenaries.
It was
over very quickly. Vannor's rebels, freed from the pressure of the fight, were
able to take the offensive, and the mercenaries found themselves under attack
from both sides. Parric managed to break through to the merchant, to explain
what had happened, and before very long, joyous reunions were taking place
between the members of Forral's old band, over the bodies of the mercenary
dead.
AURIAN •
465
If
Vannor looked bewildered to discover that his little force had doubled to some
fifty-odd troops, he took it in stride, and when Parric introduced Sangra, he
greeted her with the utmost courtesy, manfully ignoring the fact that she and
the Cavalrymaster were in an appalling state after their immersion in the
sewer.
"If
we'd known you were all down here," Sangra apologized, "we would have
joined you. We've had an awful time up there since Angos brought his
mercenaries in to augment our forces. But we felt we had to stay. We thought
Forral would expect it, because of our Oath of Loyalty to the city, and because
we wanted to protect the people from the worst deprada-tions of Angos and the
Magefolk." She looked at Parric. "What do we do now? Angos is waiting
with more soldiers at the mouth of the drain, and now he knows you're here, we
daren't stay."
"Go
north," a decisive voice broke in. "It shouldn't be difficult to get
out of the city—Angos can't be watching all the drains. The Nightrunners will
take us in."
Vannor
grimaced. "Dulsina, will you never stop organizing?"
The
tall, dark-haired woman grinned at him. "Not while there's breath in my
body," she said cheerfully. "Besides, Zanna has been missing you,
despite the messages we managed to send. It's about time you saw your daughter
again."
"Wait
a minute!" Parric interrupted. "You know the Nightrunners? Enough to
leave your,<daughter with them?" The Cavalrymaster raised his eyes
imploringly. "May the Gods give me strength . . . Those bloody smugglers
were a constant thorn in Forral's side. He drove us all to distraction trying
to discover where they were hiding, and you knew all the time!"
Vannor
winked. "How do you think I managed to make my fortune?"
Parric
burst out laughing. "You villain! You were using them to trade with the
Southerners, for gems and silks and stuff, weren't you?"
"A
man has to get ahead somehow." The merchant shrugged. "Besides, my
criminal past is proving useful now. Come on, let's get going."
There
were few casualties among the rebels. But as they
left
the storm drains, Parric discovered the body of Tori, floating facedown in the
sewer with a knife in his back. He sighed. Miserable as the old man had been,
he'd been a good friend to the rebels. Still, it was better this way. At least
he would never know that his own son had betrayed him. Or would he? On closer
inspection, Parric saw that the knife was not a soldier's dagger, but a long,
saw-edged domestic blade—the sort that a baker might use.
The
rebels decided to use the sewers to make their way across the city, then travel
downriver to Norberth, following Aurian's route. Once there, they could contact
one of Yanis's agents, who would arrange a ship to take them to the smugglers'
hideout. It was a nightmare journey. Vannor's band were used to negotiating the
slick walkways, but the new additions had a difficult time of it. Every few
minutes, there would be a splash followed by curses, as someone fell into the
channel, and had to be rescued. Though the troopers made light of it, Parric
was concerned. He knew all too well the chances of losing some of their band to
the diseases that proliferated in this place.
As they
passed the drain that connected with the Academy catacombs, Parric heaved a
sigh of relief. Not much farther now to the outfall and blessed fresh air. He
was getting twitchy, bringing up the rear as he was. His instincts, developed
over many years, were telling him that he was being followed. Nonsense, he told
himself. Angos couldn't track us through that maze of tunnels! But it was no
good. Unable to stand it any longer, he dropped back.
"Got
you!" The cloaked figure, though tall, was slimly built, and no warrior.
Parric had no trouble subduing him, and at least the fellow seemed to be alone.
Then to his astonishment, a series of shrieks came from the muffled figure.
Without a doubt, his captive was a woman! He was about to rip the hood aside
when he heard the sound of footsteps hurrying too fast for safety on the slimy
walkway, and Elewin appeared, carrying a lantern. His face broke into a smile
of pure relief at the sight of Parric's captive.
"Thank
the Gods you've found her!" Elewin exclaimed.
"Found
who?" In the light of the lantern, Parric removed the woman's hood—and
gasped. "Lady Meiriel!"
AURIAN ' 467
The
Magewoman spat in his face. "Take your hands off me!"
"What's
going on?" Vannor, accompanied by Sangra and Dulsina, came hurrying up.
"Parric! We thought we'd lost you—" His eyes widened at the sight of
Meiriel. "What's she doing here?"
"Mind
your own business, Mortal!"
"She
escaped from the Academy." The Mage and Elewin spoke simultaneously, then
turned to glare at one another.
"You
say she escaped?" Vannor's eyes flicked from Elewin to Meiriel.
"Would someone care to explain?"
"It's
simple," the Healer said coldly. "I couldn't Heal Miathan's eyes, so
that bitch Eliseth locked me up—"
Parric
pounced on her words. "Couldn't—or wouldn't?"
Meiriel
spared him a haughty glance. "His eyes were utterly destroyed. But even if
I could have Healed him, I would not have done it. Not after his creatures
murdered my Finbarr!" Her voice was thick with hate. "Anyway, I
managed to escape tonight. I followed Elewin, and heard what he told you, about
Aurian being alive. I must find her—"
"She's
a/ive? Why the blazes didn't you tell me?" Vannor turned on Parric.
"There
wasn't time," he protested, "with the fight—"
"Fight?"
Now it was Elewin's turn to interrupt.
Vannor
nodded. "We've been betrayed," he explained.
"You
two must come with us," Parric put in. "You can't stay here now,
Elewin, and it isn't safe to leave her behind."
"Just
a minute." Vannor confronted Meiriel. "Why do you have to find
Aurian?"
"She
needs my help," the Magewoman replied. "Miathan put a curse on the
child. She's carrying a monster—"
"What!"
Parric exploded. "The bastard! I'll kill him!"
"Steady,
Parric." It took all of Vannor's strength to restrain his friend from
starting back up the tunnel. "This is not the time. We need to get away to
safety before we can deal with this."
They
set off to join the other rebels at the sewer outfall, Sangra leading the way
with Parric, who was still beside himself with rage and grief. Dulsina took
Meiriel into her charge. As they walked, Elewjjxjdrew Vannor back, out of
earshot of the
others.
"Listen," he said, "Lady Meiriel may be telling the truth, but
I'd caution you to take care. She may seem lucid now —but since Finbarr's death
she has been completely deranged. You're dealing with a madwoman, Vannor.
Whatever you do, don't trust her."
Lxhapter 3o
RAVEN
he
Prince and his followers broke camp at sundown, pausing only for a quick bite
of food before setting off again across the desert. Though the moon had not yet
risen, there was plenty of light. The gem sands burned and twinkled in a
multiplicity of crystal hues, holding the sunset glow long after it had left
the sky. Wisps of sand, drifted gently across the ground by the errant night
breeze, crossed their path like roaming wildfire beneath the stars. Aurian was
strangely silent and preoccupied, and Anvar, riding by her side, was marveling
at the surety with which Yazour seemed to find his way in this featureless
land. Moved by boredom and curiosity, he rode forward to ask him how it was done.
Anvar
caught the flash of Yazour's smile beneath his veils. "Ah," he said.
"It is the magic of my people. The desert is bred into our blood, over
endless generations ..." He laughed. "My friend, I'm teasing. There
are ways, to be sure—the lie of the land, the drift of the dunes in the
prevailing wind—but mostly I navigate by the stars!"
Anvar
grimaced. "I never thought of that! I suppose it's because the stars are
so different here."
Yazour's
eyebrows rose. "The stars are different? How strange! Tell me, Anvar, are
all things different in your northern home? What is it like there?"
Anvar
smiled, liking this young man, and wondered where to start. But he never got to
reply, for at that moment, his horse gave a scream of pain and lurched over, stumbling
and floundering in the soft gem dust. Anvar was thrown abruptly forward,
struggling to keep his balance and his hold on the reins. Yazour cursed
viciously and grabbed at his bridle, steadying the plunging mare and bringing
her to a halt as Anvar slid down. The animal was trembling, the tip of one hind
hoof barely touching the ground.
"Blood
of the Reaper! It's lame!" Yazour was examining the flinching hoof. The
horror on his face went far beyond the exingencies of the situation.
"What's
wrong?" Harihn's voice came harshly from above their heads as he pulled up
his stallion beside them.
Yazour
looked grim. "Anvar's mount has been hurt."
Harihn
shrugged. "A pity," he said coolly. "You know what to do, in
that case."
"But
Your Highness—"
"See
to it, Yazour!"
The
warrior sighed. "My sorrow, Anvar," he said softly. "If there
were only some other way—"
"What
do you mean?" Anvar was alarmed by the way Yazour was looking at him. As
though he were already dead . . .
"It
is the Desert Law." Harihn's voice was cold and remorseless. "We have
no spare horses—the last went to those friends your Aurian insisted on
bringing. Because we carry so little water, we cannot allow you to delay our
progress to the next oasis. The Desert Law states that you must be left
behind."
"What
did you say?" No one had seen Aurian approach. Her hand was on the hilt of
her sword. She pushed back her veils, and her eyes glinted with a fey, steely
light as she advanced on Harihn. "If you think I'll let you leave Anvar
here to die, then think again, Prince."
"Lady,
stay out of this. There can be no exceptions to the Law!" Harihn beckoned,
and a ring of soldiers materialized around the Mage, their crossbows cocked and
poised. "Will you fight my entire army for the sake of one man?" the
Prince asked softly. Aurian's cold eyes blazed. "Don't make the mistake of
threatening me," she growled. Shia, at her side, punctuated her words with
a menacing snarl. The Mage pointed a finger at the Prince. "I could strike
you down before those bolts had time to reach me. Would you care to
reconsider?"
"Lower
those weapons!" Yazour snapped. The troops, schooled to a man, obeyed
their captain instantly.
"How
dare you!" Harihn spat.
"He
has more sense than you," Aurian said, dismounting.
"I'm
sure we can solve this problem without violence, Harihn. Anvar, let me see your
horse."
Anvar
held the horse while the Mage, frowning with concentration, knelt to examine
the injured hoof. "Hmm," she murmured softly, "nothing to see—but
what's this?"
As
Anvar watched, her hands began to glow with a faint, violet-blue nimbus that
extended over the foot of his mare. The Mage's concentration was so intense
that it seemed to spread outward, affecting all the watchers. No one stirred,
or made the slightest sound. Just as the tension reached unbearable
proportions, there was a grating sound and something slid out of the soft,
sensitive sole of the hoof and into the Mage's hand. "There," Aurian
crooned to the mare. "That's better. Now to fix the damage . . ." The
aura flared, then vanished. Aurian straightened, mopping her brow, as the horse
set its hoof to the ground, lightly at first, then with increasing confidence.
A
murmur went through the assembled soldiers. Aurian was examining something in
her hand, her face suffused with rage. She held it out for Yazour's inspection.
On her palm lay a small sliver of metal. "The point of a dagger, if I'm
not mistaken," she said grimly. "It had been driven into the hoof,
and every time the horse stepped on it—The poor creature must have been in
agony! Whoever did it knew that with his horse disabled, Anvar would be left
here to die. This was no accident —it was attempted murder!"
Yazour's
face was livid. "My apologies, Anvar, that this was allowed to happen. I
swear the culprit will be found—and punished. Are you all right, Lady?"
"I'm
fine." Aurian was swaying on her feet.
"Let
me help you." Yazour assisted the Mage back onto her horse, and she turned
to Anvar, her expression troubled.
"Stay
close," she told him. "Until we know who did this, we can't take any
chances. I'll get Bohan to act as bodyguard." She whirled her horse
expertly on its hind legs, throwing up a luminous cloud of the scintillating
dust, and was gone, calling for the eunuch as she went.
Harihn
laughed scornfully. "Bodyguard, indeed! You need a wet nurse, Anvar. You
should have remained a slave—or a eunuch! No man spends his life hiding behind
a woman's skirts!"
"Why,
you . . ." Anvar leapt toward Harihn, ready to tear him from the saddle
and rearrange his too handsome face. He was brought up short by Yazour hauling
on his arm.
"No,
Anvar!" Yaaeur said urgently. "He wants you to at-
tack
him! If you threaten the Prince, his soldiers will seize you, and not even your
Lady herself could help you then."
Anvar
forced himself to breathe deeply, though he was trembling with rage. He looked
Harihn straight in the eye. "Another time," he growled. Then turning
his back on the Prince, he mounted his horse.
Harihn's
comments rankled. Anvar rode beside Bohan, isolated behind a barrier of rage.
As his horse's stride ate up the miles, so his anger fed upon itself. It was
too much. It was too bloody much! Would he never be master of his own fate?
First a servant, then a slave, and now, it seemed, less than nothing! And
because he had finally acknowledged his debt to Aurian, it was humiliating that
he should be forced to depend on her so much. For the Gods' sake, he had
promised Vannor that he would look after her\ What a joke that had turned out
to be! His furious thoughts chased in circles, as he rode through the night.
"Anvar?"
So
preoccupied was he that Anvar had missed Yazour's call to halt for the day. He
looked up to see Aurian, slumped in the saddle, pulling back her veil from a
face that was chalk-white, He knew that, due to her pregnancy, her magic was
taking a greater and greater toll on her strength, and her weariness was due to
the Healing of his horse. Gray guilt joined the red haze of anger in his mind.
"Lady, let me help you." Dismounting quickly, he went to her side. At
least I can fulfill a servant's tasks, he thought bitterly.
"It's
all right." Aurian slid to the ground, ignoring his outstretched hand.
Anvar
gritted his teeth and seized her horse's reins. "I'll take care of this.
You go and rest."
"I
can manage." She tried to take the reins, but he snatched them angrily
away.
"I
said I'll do it!"
"What
on earth's the matter?" The Mage had taken a step backward, her eyes wide
with astonishment.
"Nothing!
I'm the bloody servant, aren't I? So I'll take care of the horse! It's all that
people seem to think I'm fit for."
The
Mage stared at him, her lips set in a^thin line, and
beckoned
Bohan across. "Bohan, would you see to the horses, please? I need to talk
to Anvar."
The
eunuch led the animals away. Aurian walked off with Shia at her heels, plainly
expecting Anvar to follow. For some reason, that infuriated him even more.
Harihn's
men had just finished setting up their tent. Aurian led Anvar inside.
"Now," she said. "What's wrong?"
"What's
wrong?" Anvar exploded. "Where shall I start?"
"Why
not start with what made you so angry?" Her calm manner only made things
worse, when he wanted a good blazing fight to work off his anger. "All
right!" he yelled. "If you want to know, I'm sick of being rescued by
you! I'm not stupid, or feeble, or incompetent. I'm a man as good as any other,
but you make me less than a man."
"But
Anvar," Aurian protested, "what could I do? I couldn't let you die in
the slave camp. I had to use my powers again today to stop Harihn abandoning
you. Would you rather—"
"That's
just it!" Anvar jumped on her words. "Your powers! Your accursed
Magefolk powers! Well, let me tell you. Lady —/ had powers, too! There's Mage
blood in my veins, but Miathan stole my powers and turned me into a
servant!"
Anvar
was so carried away by his wrath that he didn't see Aurian's stunned
expression. He failed to notice that for the first time, Miathan's silencing
spell had failed. At the thought of the Archmage, the rage and resentment that
he had been forced to suppress for so long erupted beyond controlling. All
Anvar could see was Miathan—Miathan, smug and gloating—and around his wrinkled
neck hung the crystal that contained his powers, while he groveled on the floor
in agony. It was so real—so real!
Dear
Gods—it was real! Anvar's vision streaked and blurred, as though he were
standing still while the world flashed past, too fast for his eyes to register.
From far away, he seemed to hear Aurian's voice. "Anvar, no!" Then
the world whirled and settled, and he found himself in a dimly lit room— with
Miathan before him, asleep in bed, his eyes bound with a white cloth, and around
his neck, twinkling softly in the lamplight, the crystal. Unable to help
himself, Anvar reached out for the beautiful thing f .*,
. . And
there was a blinding flash of multicolored brilliance—a fierce, hot joyful
force engulfed his body—he was in the crystal—the crystal was in him—the
crystal was him!
Miathan
gave a shriek of rage—of pain—of tearing lose. Anvar fled; the world flashed
past him again in a blur of dizzy color; but the Archmage, not old, not blind
now but powerful and strong, was pursuing like a great, black dragon formed
from men's deepest terrors. The force of his rage was hot on Anvar's heels as
he fled—where? How could he find his way back? Miathan drew nearer . . . nearer
. . . Then suddenly a great glowing force like a spear of light shot past
Anvar. It ploughed into the Archmage, knocking him back, down, away . . .
"Follow!"
Anvar heard Aurian's voice and followed her gleaming light with relief, until,
with a soundless explosion and a wrenching jolt, he found himself sprawled on
the floor of the tent.
Aurian
lay nearby. Her eyes flicked open—and skewered him to the spot. Anvar braced
himself to meet her gaze. Anger he found there, and confusion, and worst of
all, a sick, sinking fear for his safety that was entwined with the memory of
an older, greater grief. It was as though her eyes were forest pools, and he
could see her thoughts moving like elusive fish beneath the surface.
"What
have you done?" Aurian whispered. "How could you do it?"
Anvar
could not repi^s. He felt oddly elsewhere, as though a fathomless space
surrounded him in place of the close silken walls of the tent. A space into
which he might so easily fall
. The
floor seemed to ripple and melt beneath him, and he seized the Mage's hand in
panic.
Aurian
sat up, peering at him intently. "Close your eyes," she said, her
tones suddenly crisp and businesslike. "Concentrate on your body. You came
back too quickly, and you aren't quite with yourself. Feel your body, Anvar.
Feel your heart beating, the solid ground beneath you, the heat of the tent on
your skin ..." She leaned forward until her face was close to his own.
Anvar
looked into the green depths of her eyes, saw the long, curling sweep of her
lashes, the clean arch of her brows,
the
proud, chiseled sculpting of her high cheekbones and jutting nose. Gem dust
glittered like a starfall in the slumbering fire of her hair, and he had a
sudden, vivid memory of her standing on the Tower stairs on a long-ago Solstice
morn, her head crowned with snowflake diamonds.
"Think
of your body—not mine!" Aurian said tartly.
Anvar
blushed. He had not considered that she might see his thoughts as clearly as he
could see hers. "It's all right, I feel better now." He couldn't meet
her eyes.
"Good,"
she snapped, "because you've some explaining to do."
Just
then Bohan entered, his eyes screwed up against the growing glare outside. He
carried their food and water, his expression reproaching them for their
forgetfulness.
"Bohan,
what would we do without you?" Aurian said. The eunuch's face was alight
with pleasure as he left.
"Eat,"
Aurian urged Anvar. "Traveling out of your body uses a lot of
energy,"
Anvar
found he was trembling, and took a hasty bite out of a strip of dried meat.
"Is that what I did?"
Aurian
sighed. "Yes, Anvar," she said with labored patience. "That is
what you did. Now in the name of all the Gods, will you please tell me what's
going on?"
At the
reminder of his narrow escape from the Archmage, Anvar froze, "He—he
couldn't follow us, could he?"
"No."
Aurian spoke reassuringly. "I hit him too hard. It'll take him a while to
find his body again. I wish I could have finished him, but when we are out of
our bodies, we're on another level of reality. A Mage can be trapped there if
his body is destroyed in his absence, but he can't be killed. Anyway, forget
Miathan. Let's talk about you."
In a
voice that shook with emotion, Anvar told her of Ria's death, which had
resulted in the discovery of his powers. He went on to describe what Miathan
had done to him, and ended with his escape from the kitchens and his meeting
with Aurian at the Garrison.
The
Mage was staring at him openmouthed. "That's monstrous!" Aurian
struck the floor with her fist. She looked utterly shaken. "How could
Miathan have done such a thing! If only I'd known. If only yov*-c«uld have told
me!"
Anvar
shrugged. "I probably wouldn't have. I didn't trust you then. I thought
you were like the others, and in league with Miathan. I know better now."
He swallowed hard.
"I'd
like to know how you broke Miathan's spell." Aurian was suddenly all
practicality again. "And also, what happened when you—went off like
that!"
"I
can answer the second part." And he told her what he had done.
"You
took your powers back?" Aurian looked thundecj struck. "No wonder
Miathan was furious!" She snapped fingers. "Furious! Of course!
Anvar, I've just worked out hoi you did it. In order for a spell like the one
that Miathan laid you to work, you had to believe you would suffer if you said
anything. Today you were so angry that it blinded you to the consequences—and
your rage gave you the impetus you needed to break free!"
Anvar
was appalled. "Do you mean," he said slowly, "that I brought
that suffering on myself all those years?"
"Of
course not. Your acceptance was only part of the spell. If you had still been
within Miathan's vicinity, I doubt you would ever have won free. But he is far
away, and his power must have been weakened by my attack on him. That and your
anger gave you the opening, and your powers drew you back to them." She
fell silent, staring at him as though he were a stranger. "I still can't
believe it, Anvar. You, a Mage."
"Does
it make that much difference?" It came out sharper than he'd intended—and
Anvar realized that he was afraid, mortally afraid, that she would react as
Miathan had done, and see him as some kind of monster.
"No!"
Aurian's denial was swift and indignant—then she looked away. "Yes,"
she sighed. "I—I can't believe it, Anvar— you . . . His son . . ."
"Don't
ever say that!" Anvar snarled. "I'm not Miathan's son, and never will
be! My mother was one of the Mortals he despised. You know what he did to me—to
you and Forral. Do you think I could ever be like him?"
Aurian
glanced away from him, shamefaced. "Fool that I am!" she said at
last. "You're right—oh Gods, you're right! You could never be capable of
Miathan's evil. You were as much a
victim
as Forral and I." She held out her hand to him. Can you ever forgive me,
Anvar?"
Weak
with relief, Anvar took her proffered hand. "My own dear Lady! I don't
ever want to become a Mage like Miathan, but I'm not afraid to become a Mage
like you. On the contrary, I hope I will. That is, if you'd teach me?"
"Me?"
Her eyes sparkled with delight.
"Well,
I must admit, I'm a bit stuck for choice . . ."
"Why,
you-—" Aurian burst out indignantly—and Anvar grinned. Aurian broke into
peals of mirth. "Wretch!" she jrowled. "I can see that this will
take some getting used to. I fwould be proud to teach you, my friend, if you're
sure you really want me."
"Of
course I do. Of all the Magefolk, you're the only one I'd ever choose."
After
that momentous day, their journey settled into a regular pattern. Anvar and
Aurian continued to share a tent through the daylight hours with Shia, who
guarded their privacy while the Mage began to teach Anvar how to use and
control his power. Now that Aurian's pregnancy was well into its fourth month,
they knew their time was short. There would be a limit to the theory she could
teach him when she could not demonstrate it herself. Their first task was
determining where Anvar's talents lay, and Aurian was amazed to discover that
he too had powers that crossed the whole spectrum of magic, though his
strengths and weaknesses-seemed to lie in different areas from her own. While
her dominant talents lay in the domains of Fire and Earth—not surprising, with
her parentage —Anvar found these harder to master. But he excelled at
Air-magic, and Aurian suspected that when they had more water available for
manipulation, he would be adept at Water-magic, too. Since these two domains
naturally combined to produce Weather-magic, it seemed that Eliseth might
eventually find herself with some competition. But that was for the future.
Anvar was a raw beginner, and he had a long way to go.
Each
day, through the daylight hours when the rest of the camp slept, Aurian would
drill him mercilessly until they were both exhausted. During her time at the
Garrison, Parric had taught the Mage thejjj^k of snatching valuable sleep
whilst on
horseback,
and this too she taught to Anvar. They spent their nightly journeys riding in a
light doze, secure in the knowledge that the horses would remain with their
companions. It earned them a good deal of teasing from Yazour, Eliizar, and
particularly Nereni, but they soon learned to play up to the ribald
speculations about their activities during the rest periods. It was safer than
letting out the secret of Anvar's newfound powers.
One by
one, the glittering nights and dazzling days ticked by, like bright beads
strung on a thread of travel. Yazour, to his frustration, had come no nearer to
finding the would-be assassin, but, perhaps due to his increased vigilance,
there were no further attempts on Anvar's life. They saw little of Hanhn. As
the miles increased between the Prince and his kingdom, he grew more aloof and
shorter of temper, and most of his people were content to give him a wide
berth. But at least he left Aurian and Anvar alone, and they were glad, though
Aurian often wished that she could talk with him, and perhaps ease his mind.
She knew how it felt to be exiled, and understood that he must be regretting
his decision to relinquish his throne. She often found herself wondering what
the future held for him.
Anvar,
however, had his own ideas about the cause of the Khisal's fey mood. From
certain veiled comments that Harihn had made, and from the way his eyes tended
to linger specula-tively on Aurian, and coldly on himself, Anvar began to
suspect that his news about Sara's barrenness had caused a change of heart in
the Prince. In short—he was thinking of returning to claim his throne, and he
needed Aurian's help to win it. Unaccustomed to thinking of women as having
free will, he saw Anvar as the main obstacle to his plan. Though he had no
actual proof, Anvar began to have a fair suspicion that Harihn had been the one
who had lamed his horse. Who else could have passed Yazour's guards
unchallenged? The two Magefolk were heavily outnumbered, however, and still in
need of the Khisal's help to survive the desert crossing. Anvar kept his
thoughts to himself, but as the journey continued, he remained constantly on
his guard, well aware that the farther they went, the more likely Harihn was to
make another attempt on his life.
Yazour
guided them well, steering an unerring course along the ancient route that
crossed the desert from oasis to
oasis.
Every two or three nights, a ragged outcrop of rocks would be seen in the
distance, emerging from the mantle of gem dust, and the horses and mules would
snort eagerly, picking up their pace as they scented water ahead. The Prince
and his followers would camp beside a stony basin that cradled a sweet pool
formed by springs originating deep within the ridge that stretched, according
to Yazour, right across the desert like a knobbly spine, most of which was
buried beneath the jeweled sands. Each life-giving source of water had a name,
and he taught the Mages to recite them in order, something that his people
learned in infancy. They encountered the first, Abala, on the third night of
their trek, and this was followed by Ciphala, Biabeh, Tuvar, Yezbeh, and
Ecchith, which would approximately mark the halfway point of their journey.
Fair Dhiam-mara followed, then Varizh, Efchar, Zorbeh, Orbah—and finally,
Aramizal.
"Wait
until we reach Dhiammara!" Yazour smiled at the Mages. "That, to my
mind, is the most spectacular sight in the desert, and well worth this hard
journey to see."
"Romantic
nonsense!" scoffed Eliizar, who had traveled the desert regularly in his
youth. "The fairest oasis in this waste is Aram izal—because you begin the
final step of the journey, and can see the mountains of the Winged Folk rising
in the distance to mark the end of the desert."
"Winged
Folk, indeed!" Yazour scoffed. "And you call me romantic! You might
as well expect to see a dragon!"
"Nonetheless,"
Eliizar insisted, "they exist. Their citadel is high in the inaccessible
peaks, where men cannot climb."
"How
do you know it's there, then?" Yazour countered.
"It
is there," Aurian interrupted, surprising them both. "I have it on
the best authority." She smiled, remembering her friend the Leviathan, and
looked dreamily away to the north, as though trying to see across the
intervening miles to the soaring lands of the Skyfolk.
Aerillia,
the city of the Winged Folk, was carved out of the highest peak of the northern
mountain range. The palace, an airy confection of hanging turrets and terraces,
was situated on, and within, the topmost pinnacle, and Raven's tower room
commanded a breathtaking view over the entire city. She was
looking
out of the window now, gazing over the snowy crags below at the lights that
twinkled sharply in the clear icy air. Her shoulders were slumped in dejection,
causing her great wings to droop, their glossy, iridescent black tips trailing
unheeded on the floor.
"Raven?"
The
Princess spun round, scowling. "Go away, Mother! I refuse to marry the
High Priest, and that is my final word on the matter."
"It
is not!" Grief and strain had etched new lines on Flamewing's face, but
the Queen's voice still carried its customary ring of authority. She paced the
small circular room, her red-gold wings rustling, her expression defensive and
angry. "You will do as you're bid," she told her daughter. "You
are a Princess of the Blood Royal, Raven, daughter of a Queen. You were brought
up to recognize that you have responsibilities to your people and to the
throne—one of them being that you must marry to advantage—"
"Whose
advantage?" Raven cried. "Mine? Yours? If I marry that corrupt old
monster, who will really benefit? He will, and that's all! He can do nothing to
help us, Mother. He's deceiving you, and all our people. He has no influence
with the Sky God. Have his sacrifices made any difference? All those lives—the
lives of our people, which we swore to protect— wasted, and still this dread
and untimely winter is upon us. And now his price for our salvation is my hand.
Which coinci-dentally will put him up an unassailable position of power. GUI
you not see that he's a fraud? How can you be so dense?"
"How
dare you!" The sound of the blow seemed to echo in the silence that
followed.
Raven
staggered, horrified, her hand pressed to her fact and tears in her great, dark
eyes. Never before had Flamewing raised her hand to her beloved daughter.
"Mother, please." Her voice was little more than a whisper. "You
know the way of our people. We mate for life. If I wed Blacktalon, I will spend
the rest of my days in misery with someone I fear and loathe. Though princesses
must marry suitably, never has one been asked to submit to this. I beg you, do
not force me to marry him. He is evil, I know it."
Flamewing
sighed. "Child, never in our history since the
AURIAN '
481
Cataclysm
have we suffered peril like this. Never has there been such sudden and intense
cold. Nothing will grow on our terraces. All the animals are dead, or have left
for warmer climes. This winter kills everything it touches. Blacktalon's
intercession is our only hope. Our people are dying, Raven! I am more sorry
than I can ever say, but I have no choice. Tomorrow you will wed Blacktalon,
and that's an end to it. Now—he wishes to speak with you, and you will be civil
to him. Your people need you, Raven. You were brought up as a Princess—now you
must act like one!" She swept quickly out of the room, as though the sight
of her daughter together with the High Priest was more than she could bear.
Blacktalon's
head was bald, and painted all over with arcane designs and magical symbols.
His face was haggard and cruel, with its hooked nose and burning, fanatic's
eyes. His wing feathers were a dull and dusty black, and his robes matched
their color exactly. His arrogance in the presence of a royal princess was so
obnoxious that Raven wanted to strike him. "I have come to make my
felicitations to my bride on the eve of her wedding," he said, leering.
"How lovely you look, my dear. I can hardly wait." He reached out
greedy hands to touch her.
Raven
backed away hastily, drawing her dagger. "Get away from me!" she
spat. "I'd rather die than marry you, you filthy old vulture!"
„ The
High Priest smiled, but there was no humor in his face. "Lovely," he
said. "Such a little spitfire! How glad I am that you feel this way. It
will make your conquest all the more enjoyable."
"Don't
count on it," Raven retorted through gritted teeth.
"Oh,
but I do, my dear. Once you are mine, a few sound thrashings will soon take the
edge off your temper!"
Raven
gasped. "You would never dare!"
"I
would hardly dare offer violence to the Princess, no." Blacktalon
shrugged. "How I chastise my mate, however, is my own affair—as you will
discover. Pleasant dreams, my little bride. Sleep well—while you have the
chance!"
After
Blacktalon had left, Raven wasted few minutes in weeping. Time had suddenly
become too precious for that, for she knew now that her only hope lay in
escape. It took her
about
an hour of pacing back and forth behind her locked door to formulate her plans.
She knew it would never occur to them that she might run away. The Winged Folk
were prohibited by an ancient law from leaving their mountain kingdom. Raven
had often wondered why, but no one seemed able, or willing, to tell her the
answer. But if anyone should leave, they were automatically condemned to death
should they ever try to return, and the prohibition was so ingrained that no
one from the winged race would normally even consider the notion. The very
thought of what she was about to do set Raven's hands shaking so much that her
preparations took twice as long as they should have done.
"I
have no alternative," Raven told herself firmly, as she put bread and meat
from her uneaten supper into a small bag which tied to her belt, and fished her
crossbow out from its hiding place under the bed. She braided her unruly cloud
of fine, dark hair and dressed in her flying clothes—a black leather kilted
tunic that left her limbs free for easy movement and leather sandals with
thongs that cross-tied to her knees. She decided not to bother with anything
else. Raven's race was impervious to normal cold, and she hoped to move quickly
away from the chill of this unnatural winter. Thrusting her dagger into her belt,
she went to the window. Launching herself from the sill would cause her no
problems. She had been doing it since childhood, when she had first discovered
the lure of unauthorized flights. For once, she was glad that her mother had
insisted that she .lake her share of the tedious burden of palace
administration. She knew the position of every sentry in the city and, more
important, how they might be avoided.
Another
of the unpredictable blizzards had blown up, and Raven flinched at the violence
of the storm outside. But though it was folly, she would have to set out now,
or not at all. If she should be caught, the consequences did not bear thinking
about. As she climbed onto the windowsill Raven hesitated, overcome by the
magnitude of the step she was about to take. If her mother had been right after
all, she was betraying her entire race. Furthermore, if she left the mountains
her life would be forfeit. There could be no returning. Thoughtfully, she
touched the side of her face, where the imprint of her mother's hand still
burned, and remembered the cruelty in Blacktalon's eyes. That
AUR1AN '
483
was
enough. Taking a deep breath, Raven leapt from the sill and spread her great
dark wings, catching the air beneath them to halt her plummeting fall. Swooping
round the shadowed side of the pinnacle-palace like a hunting bat, she launched
herself away from her home and the lands of her people.
Flying
in the teeth of the blizzard was even worse than she had imagined. Visibility
was poor to nonexistent in the whirling white cloud. The strong wind gusted and
eddied, buffeting her mercilessly, and on several occasions, almost hurling her
violently against the walls of the city's delicately wrought towers. If she'd
had time to spare for thinking, Raven might have comforted herself with the
thought that her escape must certainly go undetected, but it was taking every
scrap of her concentration merely to stay airborne and to avoid crashing into
obstacles. Her sense of direction was hopelessly confused, and she could only
pray that she was keeping a level line of flight and, more important, not going
round in a circle that would eventually return her to the city—and Blacktalon,
Raven
was chilled to the bone. It was an unfamiliar sensation and decidedly unpleasant,
as well as frightening. Her ears and teeth ached from the wind's bite, and her
wings felt stiff and slow to respond. Even her mind was becoming sluggish and
confused. How long had she been flying? Why was she all alone in this lethal
storm? Where had she come from, and where was she going? How much longer could
her aching wings keep her aloft?
Suddenly
Raven's left foot hit something hard and jagged, It was caught and wrenched,
throwing her forward, off balance. She rolled helplessly head over heels in a
tangle of flailing limbs and thrashing wings, bruising herself on icy rocks as
she slithered to an undignified halt, upside down in a snowdrift. Too battered
and shaken to do anything else, she burst into tears.
Hours
later, Raven opened her eyes. For a moment fear obscured her thoughts, but she
was not the daughter of a Queen for nothing. She breathed deeply, forcing
herself to be calm, and took stock of her surroundings. There was little to
see. Her aching body was crammed into a narrow crevice between some rocks, and
a barrier of drifted snow obscured the opening. Gradually her mind returned to
the previous night, and she shuddered at her narrow escape from death. She had
crashed
right
into the mountain. Hesitantly she uncurled herself to
examine
her injured foot, afraid of what she might find. It was
bad
enough. The lacings of her sandal cut into the swollen flesh,
and it
was badly bruised and torn. Gritting her teeth against
the
pain, she melted snow in her hands to clean the abrasions.
Snow
might reduce the swelling too, and she would not be
helpless
as long as she could fly ...
Raven
gasped, remembering her fell among the rocks as she had landed. Her wings
. .
. There was no room to move them in the crevice. With frantic haste she
began to dig her way out, scooping great chunks of deep-piled snow aside with
her arms. Dimly now, she remembered crawling into the niche, instinctively
seeking shelter from the storm. The way
out seemed farther than she recalled, but at last the final inches of the snow
wall collapsed beneath her determined assault, and she burst into the open.
Using
the rocks for support Raven hauled herself up, wincing as her injured foot
touched the ground. It would be of little use for a while, but her wings were
her chief concern. Leaning on the rocks for balance, she extended the once
glossy black spans. They were stiff, but there was no pain and seemingly little
damage. She'd lost some feathers, her plumage was battered and bedraggled now,
but the snow had broken the worst of her fall. "Well, there is only one
way to find out!" Taking a deep breath she launched herself upward as best
she could with one leg injured. She overbalanced and almost went sprawling, but
to her relief, her wings took her weight and she began to beat steadily upward.
Now that her main worry had been quelled, she would need to look around her and
decide what to
do
next.
The sky
was an absolute joy after looking so long at nothing but gray clouds. Raven
reveled in the soft rose, the delicate green, the translucent blues and
dazzling gold of the sunset. For a time she was too captivated by its beauty to
look down, but when at last the colors faded from the sky, she was astounded to
find them echoed on the earth beneath! For a moment her head whirled with
disorientation, but when she looked directly below her, she could see the
plateau from which she had taken off. Why, she had landed on the very last of
the mountains. As its slopes descended, the snow cover thinned and eventually
van-
AURIAN •
485
ished,
leaving dark tumbled rocks stretching down to a dark and sinister forest below.
Beyond, the rippling sea of sunset hues extended as far as she could see. Raven
caught her breath. She'd come south, then, and this was the legendary jeweled
desert!
The
winged girl returned to the plateau to rest. She tired easily after the night's
exertions, and she needed to think—and eat. Having no experience of journeying,
she attacked the contents of her bag voraciously, with no thought of where her
next meal might come from. As she ate, she considered her next step. Raven had
left the palace with no idea of where she might go, or how she was to live.
For the
first time, Raven was truly afraid. What if the folk out here were like
Blacktalon or worse? But the thought of the High Priest and the fate that
awaited her was enough to steel her resolve. She would have to find help,
however. Raven was a pampered Princess, and she had sense enough to realize
that she had no notion of how to survive alone. Besides, she told herself, if
they threaten me, I can always fly away again. The question of where to go was
easily decided. She could not return north. They would be hunting for her now.
The thought of pursuit made her shudder. It was essential that she go
immediately. South, away from the mountains of her birth. The sparkling sands
seemed to provide enough light for her to travel by night. Taking a deep
breath, Raven flexed her wings and launched into the air—heading south, across
the glowing desert,
CKapter 31
DHI AMM
AR A
ehold,
fair Dhiammara!"
____
"You're joking!" Aurian turned to Yazour in patent disbelief. By the
eighteenth night of the journey, the desert's beauty had begun to pall. The gem
dust got everywhere— in her hair, her throat, even inside her clothes—and
because the oases they had visited were needed for vital drinking water,
bathing had been forbidden. The Mage felt unspeakably filthy, and she itched.
Her babe stole the nourishment from her slender rations, leaving her constantly
ravenous, even though Bohan and Anvar always forced some of their food upon
her. The intensive teaching sessions with Anvar had deprived them both of
much-needed sleep and she felt tired and short-tempered, her eyes gritty and
stinging from the dazzle of the sands. She was definitely not in the mood for
jokes.
Aurian
slowed her horse, lifting the veil from her eyes, and squinted against the
glare. Silhouetted against the moon-bright sky, the solitary mountain loomed
impossibly high. Its top was oddly truncated, as if it had been lopped off by
some gargantuan sword, and the sheer sides gleamed with a mirror brightness, as
though polished. The structure showed no signs of weathering, and that too, in
this place of scouring sandstorms, was absolutely impossible.
"That
can't be a natural formation!" Aurian accused.
"I
agree, though no one knows its history," Yazour replied. "Close up,
its scale is staggering. It may look enormous now, but distance is deceptive in
the desert."
He was
right, Aurian discovered. It took several hours' hard riding to reach the
towering peak, and by the time they approached its sheer walls the horizon was
growing pale. The mountain was immense, its size exaggerated further by the
fact that the land did not rise gradually toward it. The slender cone erupted
cleanly from the surrounding sands, like an island from the sea. For the last
miles of the ride it had been impossible to take in the entire structure, and
now they had reached its feet, all that could be seen was a vertical wall of
darkly gleaming rock that stretched out of sight above them and for miles to
either
side. Yazour turned aside, parallel to the polished wall, and in a short time
Aurian saw a darker shadow on the stone, a narrow opening just high enough to
admit a horse.
One by
one the riders led their animals through the entrance and into the cool
darkness beyond, and torches, stacked to one side of the opening, were kindled
and set into brackets on the walls. As the light grew, Aurian stared around her
in disbelief. The cavern was huge, its ceiling lost high in the shadows above.
To her left, half of the floor space was taken up by two pools, the higher set
on a stony shelf, its waters trickling down in a small cascade to the lower. A
sloping stone ramp led to the upper pool, where the horses and mules were being
taken to drink. The floor of the cavern was level rock, drifted in places with
glowing gem sand that had been blown inside by the wind. This, along with the
reflections from the glassy walls, served to augment the torchlight.
"This
place is incredible!" Anvar, at the Mage's side, was looking around him
with wide eyes.
"The
lower pool is for bathing," Yazour said. "We keep a goodly stock of
food and fuel here, so we can replenish our supplies—and today we'll feast, or
so it will seem, after all this rationing. We will rest here for two or three
days before going on."
"Wonderful!"
Aurian smiled at him, tacitly apologizing for her recent moodiness. "I
never thought I'd get tired of riding, but right now I never want to see a
horse again! I could kill for a bath, a hot meal, and a long sleep."
"Then
you shall have them." Anvar put his arm around her and led her away to the
right, where a series of small fires were being kindled close to a vent in the
rock that drew the smoke away out of the cavern.
Since
Anvar had regained his powers and started learning from the Mage, their
relationship had altered subtly. Everyone except Bohan and Shia, who were party
to the secret, accepted him as Aurian's husband, but even when the two of them
were alone, Anvar's old subservience had dropped away, to the point where he
had been very firm about her taking extra food from himself and the eunuch.
Aurian, to her surprise, had found herself not minding Anvar's new
assertiveness. Since their escape from Nexis she had been forced to be the
strong one, to
shoulder
the burden of their journey, and having someone share j the responsibility had
come as a relief. Although her occasional 1 lack of patience as a teacher,
coupled with their mutual exhaustion, had led to some sharp words between
them—Anvar, it seemed, had Magefolk stubbornness to match her own—a close and
comforting friendship had developed between them that did much to ease the
loneliness that was their common bond. The Mages shared a fire with Eliizar and
Nereni. While they waited for supper to cook they talked, glad of the
opportunity after the enforced isolation of the desert camps. Eliizar, free of
the Arena and back with a military company where he belonged, seemed to have
shed years during the journey. His one eye glowed with enthusiasm as he spoke
of the desert that he loved. Nereni, plump and smiling, was also glad to have
left the Arena, but was finding the journey a trial. Aurian sympathized. If
she, an expert horsewoman, was wearied by the continuous riding, she hardly
dared imagine what it must be like for a beginner like Nereni.
Anvar,
who'd had little opportunity to ride during his time at the Academy except when
Aurian had invented the occasional errand to give him an outing, was also
feeling the strain. "It's all right for you," he teased Nereni,
rolling an expressive eye at her rounded backside. "At least you've got
some padding between you and the saddle!"
She
threw a spoon at him, making him duck, and the four of them collapsed in gales
of mirth. Bohan, having cared for the horses, joined them t<r*at, as did
Shia, who had been exploring the cave. "I don't like it," she told
Aurian. "I see nothing, but it feels—prickly."
The
Mage, intent on Nereni's delicately spiced stew, was not paying much attention.
"Maybe you have sand in your coat," she replied absently, and soon
forgot the conversation. Now that she was full of good food, she found that her
eyes refused to stay open any longer. The outline of the flames seemed to dance
and blur in her vision, and the quiet sounds of conversation receded.
"Here
you are, sleepyhead. Do it properly." She blinked, brought back to herself
by Anvar's voice. He was holding out a blanket. "I wanted to bathe—"
she protested, but the words were swallowed in a yawn.
"Do
it tomorrow. I don't mind sleeping with a dirty woman."
"You're
just as dirty—" Aurian began indignantly—and fell silent in dismay as she
grasped the import of his words. Without the tent to shelter them, they would
have to play out the charade of their marriage to the full. Why hadn't it
occurred to her that this awkward situation might arise?
"It's
all right," Anvar said softly, and wrapping the blanket snugly round her
shoulders, he gathered her into his arms as they lay down. The warmth of his
body felt good after the cool air of the cave, and soon she was relaxing
against him drowsily. It had been so long since she had felt comforting arms
around her at night ... As Aurian drifted into sleep, her heart ached with
longing for Forral.
The
fragrance that teased her into wakefulness reminded Aurian so strongly of the
Arena that she opened her eyes expecting to see the white walls of her old
cell. Instead she saw Anvar, holding a steaming cup. "I have a surprise
for you," he said. "Your friend Eliizar brought his own supply
of—"
"Liafa."
Aurian beamed, reaching greedily for the cup.
"Well!
And I thought Eliizar was exaggerating when he told me how much you loved that
stuff. That's the first time I've seen you smile this early in the day."
Aurian
stuck her tongue out at him. "It's all right for some. You look as though
you've been up for ages."
Anvar
grinned. "The men—being the earliest risers—had the first turn at
the.pool."
All
traces of the sparkling dust had gone from his skin. His hair, curled and
darkened now by the water, had grown during his time in slavery, and to keep
the damp strands from his face he had copied Yazour, tying the errant locks
back with a thong at the nape of his neck. It suited him, Aurian thought.
"What
are you staring at? Have I missed a bit?"
"Who,
me? Nothing." Aurian floundered. "I'd forgotten what you looked like
under all that dust!"
"Well,
it's the women's turn now, so you'd better hurry up if you want to get rid of
your own dust."
"Suits
me." She put down the empty cup. "It's a pity, really. I must be
worth a fortune in gems right now."
Nereni
was in the_pool, splashing and laughing with the
ft
ft ft
other
women of Harihn's household. The Mage shed her dusty clothes and stepped into
the water. It was not as cold as she had expected, and while it was shallow
enough for standing, there was enough depth to swim. The bottom was coated in a
soft layer of gem sand, doubtless shed by generations of dusty travelers. It
gleamed underfoot, reflecting the torchlight from the walls. Nereni waded over
and handed her a slab of rough soap. "Ah, I see you are returned at last,
from the country of dreams."
"Real
soap! Nereni, you think of everything."
"But
of course—and as well, for you warriors!" Her plump face dimpled. "I
must go to prepare the day meal, but I will fetch you a cloth to dry yourself,
and some clean robes."
When Nereni
had gone, Aurian washed thoroughly, glad to get the dust out of her hair. Mine
is growing again, too, she thought. Maybe I'll get Anvar to braid it for me
soon. By the time she had finished, the other women had left the pool, but she
lingered for a while, enjoying the peace and solitude. At last, prompted by
hunger, she went to rinse beneath the little waterfall before getting out.
The
Mage had no suspicion of danger—not until it was too late. As she placed her
hand against the smooth wall where the waterfall trickled down, a strident
clamor tore the air like the shrieks of a vast, unimaginable beast in torment.
The rock seemed to come alive beneath her fingers, trapping her hands, her
arms—sucking her body inexorably into its soft, clinging maw. Aurian, despite
her struggles, was snatched into the darkness beyond. Within seconds the wall
had closed behind her, blank and featureless once more.
Anvar
was racing toward the pool before the first heart-stopping echoes could die
away. Yazour and Eliizar were close behind, their weapons drawn. By the time
they reached the edge he was floundering through the water, searching for any
trace of the Mage. They joined him, Yazour diving cleanly beneath the surface,
Eliizar breaststroking across the pool. Then the clamor ceased abruptly,
leaving only Anvar's anguished cries: "Aurian! Aurian!"
The
atmosphere in the camp was tense with apprehension. The women and children
huddled together in the farthest corner away from the sinister pool, guarded by
armed warriors. A
squad
of bowmen had their weapons trained on the still waters, ready to shoot at the
first sign of a ripple on the smooth surface. A grim council had gathered by
the Prince's fire, and Harihn looked fearfully round at the faces of the small
group. "Some beast must have taken her," he insisted. "What else
could have done this?"
"Sire,
the pool was empty," Yazour protested. "I had it searched thoroughly,
and there is no underwater access. There was no blood, or any remains—"
"No!"
Anvar cried. The cup of hot liafa that Nereni had forced upon him spilled,
soaking into the blanket that she had draped around his shivering shoulders.
Yazour glanced at him apologetically, and Nereni took his hand, her tearstained
face filled with pity.
"There
must have been a creature," Harihn insisted, with a nervous glance at the
pool. "What else could make such dreadful cries? What if it should return?
Must others die to convince you?"
"There
is no proof—"
"We
could search again—" Eliizar and Yazour, wet and shivering in their own
blankets, spoke simultaneously, but Anvar heard the doubt in their voices.
Harihn shook his head and stood up. "It is pointless. She is surely dead.
Prepare to leave, Yazour. We dare not linger in this place."
"You
bastard!" Anvar flung his blanket aside, and leaping over the fire,
leveled a punch at the Prince. The blow, with the impetus of his body behind
it, knocked Harihn sprawling. Anvar landed on top of him, hitting out at him
blindly. "Coward!" he screamed. He was aware of blows on his body,
but his rage made him oblivious to the pain. He felt strong arms pulling him,
dragging him off the Prince. Anvar fought the new assailants in a frenzy,
resisting their attempts to pin him down, until a drench of cold water hit him
hard in the face. The shock brought him sharply to his senses. Eliizar and
Yazour were holding him down. Nereni stood over him, a dripping bowl in her
hands.
Anvar
blinked water and tears from his eyes. "I thought you were my
friends," he muttered.
"We
are, Anvar," Yazour told him sadly, "but the Prince, unfortunately,
is right.^ He gestured to one side, pointing at
r
the
small group of children who huddled together, weeping and terrified.
"Would you sacrifice them also?" the warrior asked softly.
"I'm
not leaving her!"
"You
most certainly are not!" Harihn was scowling, and Anvar noted with
satisfaction that his face was beginning to bruise and swell. The Prince kicked
out viciously, catching him beneath the ribs, and Anvar convulsed in pain.
"Sire!"
Yazour's voice rose sharply in disgust at the cowardly attack. "He will
die if you abandon him here!"
"You
have your orders, Yazour. For attacking me, this churl deserves to die! Anvar
will be left behind."
"Your
Highness, the man is distraught! You cannot hold him responsible for his
actions ai such a time."
"I'll
have him executed now, if you'd prefer." Harihn wiped blood from the
corner of his mouth, glaring venomously at Anvar, who smiled grimly.
"Any
excuse, eh, Harihn?" Anvar said. "Well, at last you have what you've
wanted all along—but it's too late. You may get rid of me, but you'll never
have Aurian now!" Turning his head, he spat at the Prince's feet.
Harihn's
face was livid. "Silence, dog!" he roared. "Yazour _make certain
that all provisions are packed or destroyed! As you slowly starve, Anvar, I
will rejoice in the thought of your suffering."
"If
Anvar is to be abandoned, he will not be alone." Eliizar's voice rang
outWI would rather stay with him, than travel another mile with you!"
"And
I!" Nereni strode bristling to her husband's side. Anvar tried to protest,
but he was astonished into silence by a voice that seemed to come from within
his own head. "I too will stay." He stared in amazement as Shia's
face appeared, her eyes blazing into his own. Bohan joined her, nodding his own
silent support.
Harihn
shrugged. "Very well."
"At
least leave them horses, sire, and some provisions," Yazour protested.
"No!
And if I hear another word from you on the subject, you will die beside
them!"
The
warrior blanched. "All this time I have served you," he
said
tightly, "and I never knew what you were. I look into your face, and I see
your father." Turning his back on the Prince, he walked away to assemble
his men.
The
friends were guarded by a ring of bowmen while the others made their
preparations for leaving. Though Anvar was desperate to continue the search for
Aurian, Harihn had left orders that they were to be shot if one of them so much
as stirred. While they waited, he tried in vain to persuade his companions not
to sacrifice themselves, but Eliizar and Nereni were united in their
indignation at such an idea, and Bohan looked hurt at the mere suggestion.
Shia, though she did not speak again, snarled at him so fiercely that Anvar
would have backed away if he could. She looked so savage that he wondered if he
had imagined her voice in his mind. As soon as night fell outside, the Prince's
company departed, and the cavern seemed eerily quiet after they had gone.
Anvar, without a word, got up and strode back to the pool. The others fanned
out to search the cave once again.
Anvar
sat, lost in wretchedness, beside the cavern entrance, his aching head buried
in his hands. Reflected dawn light gleamed through the opening. They had
searched all night, and still found no sign of Aurian, How long had it been
now? He cast his mind back over the hours since their arrival in accursed
Dhiammara. They had eaten first—their laughter during that feast seemed like a
distant dream now^-and slept in each other's arms through the remainder, of the
day and part of the following night, Then Aurian had gone to bathe in the pool.
Oh, Aurian! Why didn't I just let you sleep? he thought. She had been lost for
the rest of that night, the following day, and another night of frantic,
fruitless searching. Surely there could be no hope now?
Someone
touched his shoulder, and he turned to see Nereni. "Yazour hid some
supplies for us at the back of the cave. Come and eat, Anvar. This does you no
good."
"How
can you expect me to eat?" Anvar wanted to shout at her to leave him
alone, but he knew that she was grieving too, and concerned for him.
She put
a maternal arm round his shoulders. "I'm sorry," she murmured.
"I koqw how much you loved her."
"You
don't!" he retorted bitterly. "I didn't know myself— not until I lost
her.''
Nereni
went away sighing. Anvar wished that she and the others had saved themselves,
and gone with Harihn. For himself —he didn't care. What a cruel irony. Until
these last weeks, when his discovery of magic had brought them so closely
together, he had never admitted the depth of his feelings for Aurian—and now it
was too late. It had all started long ago, ever since that wonderful Solstice
night when they had celebrated with Forral . . . But Anvar had hidden the truth
from
himself
then.
I knew
in my heart that she was not for me, and never could be, he thought
despairingly. But Aurian's love of Forral, my own hatred of the Magefolk, then
the return of Sara, all allowed me to run away from the fact that I loved her.
How could I have been so blind? Self-protection, he thought ruefully, Aurian's
love for Forral was unswerving while he lived, and has remained that way since
his death. I knew she'd never want anyone else. And now I'll never even see her
again. Never again will I feel the comfort of her friendship, the joy of her
presence.
She's
gone—
"She
is not!" The voice was Shia's.
Anvar
looked up through scalding tears. "What did you
say?"
"Frame
your thoughts clearly, man. You're not very good at this. But you are of the
same kind as her, so I can talk to you —if I choose to! Put asidcrfhis useless
grief and. think! Aurian is my friend, and our minds are linked. If she were
dead, I would surely know. But if she lives, why can I nor reach her?"
"Great
Gods, you're right!" Hope flared like a beacon in Anvar's breast.
"She told me that the Magefolk knew when one of their kind died. So if she
were—"
"Then
you wovAd have known ako," Shia finished for him.
"But
if she's beyond your reach, where the bloody blazes is
she?"
"Clear
your mind, man. Listen." Shia sat, curling her tail neatly around her
paws. "When you two were in the tent, doing things—"
"We
did not!"
"Not
those things, stupid!"
"Oh
. . . You mean the magic."
"It
always gives me a most unpleasant prickly feeling in my fur." Her tail
twitched. "I get it in this cave, too."
"Then
it wasn't a beast? You think Aurian was trapped by magic? But I've been all
over that wretched pool, and never felt a thing."
"If
Aurian had felt it, would it have trapped her?" Shia asked pointedly.
"So
whatever it is, it must still be there!" He scrambled to his feet and ran.
Anvar plunged
into the pool. What exactly was he looking for? Some hidden opening, perhaps?
He paused, up to his waist in water, looking around wildly. It couldn't be
underwater— the pool had been searched from end to end. Then it came to him.
Where was the obvious place to put a door? In a wall, of course. His eyes went
automatically to the smooth flat surface where the waterfall trickled down.
"Anvar!
What are you doing?" The others had gathered on the brink of the pool.
Ignoring them, he waded across to the wall and began feeling along it with both
hands.
"I've
found it!" Anvar's triumphant shout was drowned in the strident shriek of
the alarm. His jubilation became horror as the stone began to melt beneath his
hands, turning clinging and viscous, sucking him in like quicksand, drawing his
head and shoulders inside. The stuff enveloped him—he couldn't breathe. Anvar
flailed in panic, then his fkce broke through into air, though he could see
nothing in the utter darkness beyond,
"Aurian?"
he called. There was no reply. But his body was almost through the constricting
portal. He felt a glassy surface beneath his fingers and clawed at it
frantically, trying to haul himself forward—then his feet were snatched in an
iron grip. Something was pulling him back! "No!" he howled. He was so
dose—he had to go on! But inch by inch he slid backward, until his cries were
drowned once more in the suffocating ooze of the portal. There was a jerk on
his ankles—and he shot out into the pool on top of Bohan, who hauled him, struggling,
to the water's edge.
"Imbecile!"
Shia's claws were sheathed, but the swipe from her massive paw knocked him
flying.
r
Anvar
sat up groggily. "Damn you!" he snarled at Bohan. "I was almost
through."
"We
had no choice," Eliizar protested. "What good would it do, to have
you both trapped?"
"Think!"
Shia's thought was a whiplash across Anvar's mind. "We need a way to keep
the portal from closing, so we can all get in, and more important, out
again."
"Anvar,
did you see her?" Nereni asked anxiously.
"I
saw nothing—it was too dark. But I called, and she didn't answer," he told
her miserably.
Eliizar
frowned. "But I examined that rock when I searched the pool, and it was
quite impervious."
Anvar
stared at him. "So it only responds to Magefolk," he said slowly.
"Sorcerers?"
Eliizar gasped. He backed away hastily, making a sign against evil. "But
you are not—"
"I
am, Eliizar—just like Aurian."
Nereni,
though wide-eyed, was more practical than her husband. She tugged urgently at
Anvar's arm. "Can you use this sorcery to open the way for us?"
Could
he? Anvar had no idea how the magic of the portal worked. He was still too much
of a beginner at this kind of thing, and there had been little time for Aurian
to teach him much . . . Then the solution came to him in a blinding flash. One
of the first spells that Aurian had taught him, with the terror of the Nihilim
still fresh in her mind. "Nereni, I think I can!" -r
Anvar
positioned himself before the featureless stone of the portal. Bohan stood
behind him, his massive arms locked round the Mage's waist. Eliizar and Nereni
waited on the brink of the pool, not daring, to the Swordmaster's obvious
shame, to approach any closer.
"Are
you ready, Bohan?" Anvar glanced back over his shoulder. The eunuch
nodded, tightening his grip. "Now!" Anvar muttered, and placed his
hand upon the stone.
Again,
the shrieking clamor rang out. The rock became fluid and clinging, clutching at
Anvar's arm to draw him within. But this time, Bohan held him firmly, fighting
the pull. Anvar concentrated with all his might, trying to block out the shrill
distraction of the alarm. He had to get this right .
Sweat
broke out on his brow. Extending his free hand, he carefully constructed
Finbarr's time spell—and toppled backward with Bohan into the water as the
force that pulled at them suddenly ceased. Anvar struggled to his feet,
spluttering and panting, and reached out to the stone. Bohan forestalled him—
and thrust his own fist straight through, pulling it out again with ease.
"It
worked!" Anvar yelled. "Eliizar, it worked! I've taken the portal out
of time! We can go through now!"
Shia
bounded forward, needing no further urging, but Eliizar stood back,
white-faced. "I—I cannot!" he gasped. "Anvar, forgive me, but
sorcery ... I cannot!"
Anvar
grasped his shoulder. "Don't worry, Eliizar, we all have our fears."
With a pang, he remembered saying the same thing to Aurian, on top of the cliff
... "I must go." He turned back to the portal, where Bohan and Shia
waited, plainly anxious to be moving. "You and Nereni stay here, and wait
for us. We'll be as quick as we can."
"Wait!"
Nereni came running, splashing through the water in her haste.
"Here." She thrust a bundle into his hands, "Here is a water
bag, and food—the poor girl will be starving. And I put in a robe for her, and
her boots—and she might need these," She handed him Aurian's sword and
staff, "Hurry," she urged, and reached up to kiss his cheek. "Hurry,
Anvar, and come back safe."
It was
difficult to force a way through the viscous rock without the spell of the
portal to draw them. Shia, bristling with impatience, went first, with Anvar
and Bohan helping her by pushing from behind. Anvar followed, feeling the cat's
massive jaws grasp his collar to pull him through. It was pitch-dark within,
even to his Mage's night-vision. He turned and groped for Bohan's hand, and
Shia helped him haul the eunuch through. Bohan had brought a torch, but when he
kindled it, the flame gave no light.
"What
on earth . . . ?" Anvar gasped. He could see it flickering in midair like
a pale, disembodied wraith, but that was all. It illuminated absolutely
nothing.
"Magic!"
Shia spat disgustedly. "You make some light!"
Anvar
sighed. Fire-magic was not his strong point, but ... By dint of
much^cpncentration, he managed to form a
rather
wobbly ball of Magelight—and fell back, screaming, as the interior chamber
burst into eye-searing brilliance.
"Put
it out!" Shia roared in agony. Anvar snuffed his flame, his eyes watering
and blinded with crimson and green spots of dazzle. He picked himself up—only
to be flattened again, as the entire chamber lurched into motion with a
grinding roar, rushing upward with terrifying speed.
As
Anvar's vision cleared, he saw that the chamber was now illuminated by a soft
glow that seemed to emanate from the walls. His mind reeled dizzily as he
realized he was within a hollowed-out gem. All around him, the gleaming facets
reflected myriad images of himself, Shia, and Bohan. When he moved, the images
lurched and swooped, making him sick with disorientation. It was as though he
too were part of the reflections; as though his soul, his very self were being
sucked away into the walls. Beside him, Shia whimpered unhappily. It was the
first time he had ever heard the great cat show the slightest sign of fear.
"It's
all right," he said, trying to sound convincing. "Lie still and close
your eyes. We're being taken somewhere—maybe to the top of the mountain. It's bound
to stop when we reach
it."
"For
their sake, I had better not find whoever created this thing," Shia
muttered wrathfully. Her words made Anvar wonder just who the creators were.
This was far beyond the power of his own Magefolk.
"Now,
how do we~get out?" As Anvar had predicted, their strange conveyance had
eventually come to a juddering, spine-wrenching halt. He looked around,
confused by the images that curved into infinity on all sides. Then he saw it—a
pale, glimmering blue patch of Magelight that marked the area of his preserving
spell. He got to his knees and thrust an experimental hand toward it. To his
relief, the spell was still in operation, and his hand passed easily through
the wall of the gem.
"Let
me go first!" Shia shouldered past him. "If anyone is out there, /
want to deal with them!"
They
emerged onto flat bare rock that was shadowed in the half darkness of another
cavern. Looking behind him, Anvar saw a featureless wall of polished stone,
with nothing but the telltale glimmer of his spell to mark the point of their
exit. He
AUR1AN '
499
prayed
that the spell would last. This was the first time he had tried anything so
complex without Aurian's help, and he was still uncertain of his raw, untried
powers. The roof of the small cavern was low, like an inverted bowl, and the
wall through which they had come swept round in a broad semicircle, its ends
marked by a massive stone archway, through which the faint light came. From
beyond the arch, Bohan was beckoning. Anvar hurried to join him.
Beyond
the archway was a broad apron of stone, a ledge over . . . nothing. Anvar
reeled back from the dizzy brink, swallowing hard. As far as he could see, the
chasm below was endless, its sheer walls stretching away on either side and
plunging down into a gut-churning nothingness, in the midst of which glowed the
faint and sickly light that illuminated this massive maw in the body of the
mountain. Some hundred feet away, on the opposite brink, there was another
jutting tongue of rock like the one on which he stood, with a similar archway
behind it.
His
mouth gone suddenly dry, Anvar prayed that the ledge on which he stood was more
solid than its counterpart looked. Apart from the sheer impossibility of scale,
Aurian, with her terror of heights, would never have managed to get across. Yet
there was no sign of her anywhere. Anvar refused to countenence the
obvious—that she might have plunged to her death over the precipice. But if
that was unthinkable, only one alternative remained. Something must have taken
her across. Furthermore—he thought, recalling her terror on the cliff—she must
have been very much against her will. He glanced up at the low roof, where
stalactites hung like dripping fangs, hoping to find some means of crossing: a
rope, handholds cut into the stone—anything at all. There was nothing.
A
shrill, thin screeching, like metal grating against metal, sent Anvar spinning
in the direction from which the unnerving sound had come. Framed in the
opposite archway was a creature that turned his blood to ice. Its bloated,
spherical body was wider than a man is tall, and it moved on a weird
conglomeration of jointed, angular legs—too many for Anvar to count in that
frozen moment of confrontation. And not all of its limbs were used for walking.
Others sprouted like hideous growths from its dully gleaming body, some ending
in cruel pincers,
others
in deadly keen blades like curved knives, still others in clumps of fingerlike
manipulators that clenched and unclenched vn ceaseless motion, grasping at the
air. There was no head. Clusters of brilliant lights, like eyes, were dotted at
intervals around its swollen body, mounted on the ends of writhing limbs. With
nightmare slowness, these twisted in the air, turning their blinding beams
unerringly in the direction of Anvar
and his
friends.
"Dear
Gods preserve us!" Anvar, in unthinking terror, began to back slowly away
toward the sheltering archway.
Beside
him, Shia gave a bloodcurdling snarl. "Scatter!" she snapped, as the
hideous creature suddenly came scuttling toward them—straight across the thin
air of the chasm!
The
great cat leapt to one side and Anvar dived for the shelter of the archway. The
creature paused on the stony apron, its myriad limbs clicking and rattling, its
eyes swiveling, turning their beams this way and that—to fix upon Bohan, who
stood, utterly paralyzed with fear, on the very brink of the precipice. Once
again, Anvar heard the tortured, metallic shrieking as the angular legs
stirred, and began to advance, step by step, toward the eunuch.
"Get
him!" Shia's thought seared into Anvar's mind as she launched herself at
the monstrosity, fastening her jaws around one of the slender legs. The
creature's eyes swiveled toward her and several sets of limbs, their pincers
clacking together, their blades whistling through the air, snapped around—to
meet on thin air as Shia darted ottt of reach.
In its
moment of distraction, Anvar dashed across to Bohan and yanked him back from
the edge. "Spread out," he yelled. "Surround it! Keep it
confused!"
Bohan,
his paralysis vanished with the hope of a plan, drew his sword and moved to one
side, waving the bright blade to distract the creature. As it lumbered toward
him, Shia darted in again from behind, fastening her teeth on one of the legs.
The limb flipped upward, hurling her against the side of the arch. Anvar had
snatched up Aurian's sword and ran in to chop at one of the swiveling eye
stalks. There was a shower of sparks and a jarring backshock ran numbingly up
his arm, as metal shrieked against metal. Anvar gasped, more from surprise than
pain. This was no natural beast—it was a crafted thing!
AURIAN •
Sol
The
break in his attention almost cost him his life. Anvar looked up in time to see
one of the arced blades descending, aimed straight at his head—but Bohan moved
quickly in from the other side, fastened his huge hands round one of the legs,
and yanked, his face crimson and contorted with exertion. Despite Bohan's
phenomenal strength, the creature did not budge, but the move was enough to
deflect its blow at Anvar, who ducked back as the sharp edge whistled
harmlessly past his face. Shia bought the eunuch time to escape by diving right
beneath the curving belly of the monstrosity, swiping at the metal legs in a
whirlwind of claws. It whirred and clicked, spinning violently round on the
spot, but its killing limbs could not reach beneath its body. Anvar watched,
horrified, as the cat deliberately began to inch toward the edge of the
precipice, the creature, reacting with mindless fury, moving with her as it
tried in vain to reach its tormentor. It reached the brink—toppled— and
suddenly was gone. Shia with it.
"Shia!"
Heartsick, Anvar raced for the edge—and saw two sets of claws, digging for dear
life into the crumbling stone at the brink.
"Help
. . ."
He
heard Shia's wailing cry, at the extreme of anguish— then Bohan was there,
grasping frantically at the black paws, heedless of the yawning drop beneath.
But even the eunuch's strength was not equal to the weight of the cat's massive
body. Slowly, he began to slip forward, his feet sliding on the stone. Anvar
flung himself down at the edge of the chasm and reached down to Shia. With a
bone-cracking effort she dug the claws of her hind feet into the stone, raising
herself just enough for him to grasp two handfuls of loose skin at the base of
her neck. The struggle seemed to take hours. Anvar pulled until he thought his
arms would snap, sick with fear that he might slide forward to his own death. But
with the two men supporting her weight, Shia was able to haul herself upward,
inch by painful inch— until at last, with a heave and a great sliding rush she
was up, safely back on the ledge.
Anvar
rolled away from the brink and lay panting. His arms, freed of their burden,
were aching, their muscles locked. "What a stupid thing to do!" he
raged at Shia. He felt the cat's mental equivalent of a shrug.
"It
worked, didn't it?" But for all her bravado, she sounded shaken.
Anvar
had to smile. "It did indeed—and it saved all our lives."
"As
you humans saved mine. My thanks to you both."
"It's
Bohan you should really be thanking." Anvar clapped the eunuch on the
shoulder, and the huge man grinned.
"It
took all three of us to defeat the creature." Shia paused, growling
softly. "If Aurian met it alone ..."
"Oh
Gods . . ." Anvar shuddered, thinking of her facing the fearsome metallic
beast, naked and unarmed as she had been. He thrust the thought away, and got
to his feet. "I'm not giving up. We have to go on."
"I
agree—but how?" Shia looked across the yawning gulf of the cavern, her
tail twitching unhappily.
"That
thing managed . . ." Anvar forced himself back to the edge, trying to work
out how the beast had achieved the crossing. "There must be some way that
we can't see. Shia, come over here. See if you can sense any magic at
work."
"There
is!" The cat backed away from the brink of the chasm, her fur bristling.
Anvar
knelt beside her, feeling along the edge. Though his eyes told him nothing was
there, his searching fingers encountered smooth stone that continued, as far as
he could reach, out across the chasm. "There was a bridge here all the
time. An invisible bridge. We can cross!"
Bohan
had gathered-ap their discarded bundle. Now he hesitated on the lip of the
precipice, frowning. Looking ques-tioningly at Anvar, he gestured across the
chasm and made vague passes in the air with his hand.
Anvar
understood all too well. His own stomach was churning at the thought of
crossing that dizzying drop with nothing, seemingly, beneath him but thin air.
"No, my friend," he said ruefully, "unfortunately I don't know
how to make it visible. We're just going to have to be very careful."
Bohan
shuddered.
Anvar
went first, crawling out onto the invisible stone on his hands and knees. It
took more courage than he had known he possessed to make that first move out
into nothingness. He fought down the clutching panic that threatened to unman
him
AURIAN •
5o3
with
thoughts of Aurian and forced himself to inch forward, feeling for the limits
of the span with hands that shook violently. He tried to call back to the
others, but only a strangled squeak emerged. Anvar cleared his throat and tried
again. "Be careful, it's very narrow and there's no rail. Move slowly—the
surface is very smooth. We daren't rush this."
Time
stretched out into an endless nightmare. Anvar tried at first to keep his eyes
on the opposite wall of the chasm, but it didn't help. It seemed to grow no
nearer, and he found himself wondering if there was some evil magic in the
bridge that kept his goal receding, trapping him endlessly suspended over the
abyss until his strength gave out and he plummeted to his death. Anvar closed
his eyes—and immediately felt better. He realized that he had no need of
vision—the bridge was invisible anyway—and he could progress much more easily
if he shut out the sight of the sickening drop beneath him. He crawled on with
painful slowness, feeling blindly for the edges of the span on either side with
sweating hands, the thunder of his heart loud in his ears.
"I'm
across!" The feel of the stone had roughened beneath
Anvar's
groping hands. He could no longer find the edges of
the
bridge, and opened his eyes to find himself safely on the
ledge
at the other side. He crawled out of the others' way and
collapsed
gratefully, his cheek pressed to the blessed, solid rock.
, His
body ached and trembled with tension and he was drenched
' in
sweat, but he could have wept with relief. Bohan and Shia
joined
him and all three rested for a while, too overcome even
to
speak.
Finally
Anvar forced them into motion once more, though the eunuch looked exhausted,
and even Shia's lithe stride was unsteady. Anvar never paused to think of the
emotions that drove him beyond endurance, beyond even hope. He only knew that
he had to find Aurian, or perish in this mountain as she had done.
They
had expected to see another curving blank wall beyond this archway, but instead
it opened out into a long narrow chamber with a high vaulted ceiling. Once
again the stone had a fused, glasslike surface, as though it had been melted
and recast into its present form. A weird, reddish half-light washed the
chamber, seeming to come out of nowhere, and the air
prickled
with a high-pitched, distant humming that produced an irritating resonance in
the bones of Anvar's jaw and skull. But his attention was elsewhere. Arranged
along the right-hand wall of the chamber was a row of tall, oval-shaped gems
that glistened dully like frosted moonstones. They looked like nothing so much
as the cocoons of some sinister giant insect, and Anvar, looking at them, felt
disquiet stir in his breast. With Shia and Bohan following, he went to examine
the nearest.
He found
a single clear facet in the front of the frosted gem, like a window upon the
interior. Anvar peered through— and jumped backward with a strangled
exclamation as the bony, grinning face of a human skull leered at him—seeming,
due to some trick of the gem's internal structure, to leap out at him from its
crystal tomb.
Shia
pushed past Anvar, standing on her hind legs to look into the clear facet.
"This is what becomes of those who penetrate this place," she
growled. "Imprisoned in crystal by the metal creature."
Anvar
suppressed a shudder. "You don't think—" "I hope not! But all
the same, we must search." Shia t ted away to the next crystal and stood
upright to peer into u Anvar, sick at heart, followed her.
One by
one they investigated each cocoon in the row. Anvar had to steel himself to
look into each one, dreading what he might find. All contained bones, mostly
human, but some belonging to other creatures. Some were intact, but others had
been cruelly crushed^and hacked by the metal beast's appendages. Some were
unrecognizable, but there was one skeleton of a great cat that made Shia snarl
savagely, and two of the crystals contained small, human-seeming skeletons—with
a fanlike tracery of bones springing from each oddly jointed shoulder. Winged Folk!
Anvar was astounded. When they reached the last cocoon, he hesitated.
"Let
me look," Shia said. She peered into the aperture, while Anvar watched,
dry-mouthed. At last she got down, her tail twitching with emotion.
"Aurian is in there."
32
THE CITY
OF THE
DR
AGONFOLK
urian
was suspended in the milky light within the gem, inaccessible through the thick
crystal that sealed her tomb. She was frozen like a statue in alabaster, the
only color about her the brave flame of her hair. Her eyes were closed as
though in sleep, her pale lips slightly parted. Anvar saw that much before
tears misted his vision. "No!" he howled, the cry dragged up from the
raw depths of his despair. He was barely aware of Bohan pulling him away from
the crystal, and did not see Shia taking his place at the pane. His knees gave
way and he sank to the ground, overcome with anguish.
"Wait!"
Shia's voice flashed into his mind. "She breathes!"
Anvar
turned on her. "Don't be stupid," he shouted. "She's dead, damn
you! It's just a trick of the crystal. You saw the others—the bones!"
Shia
cuffed him hard, her eyes aflame with rage. "I saw her breathe!" she
roared. "Get her out, human!"
Slowly,
Anvar picked himself up. "If you're wrong about this ..."
"Look
for yourself. Look long and hard this time. See with your head, not your
heart."
The
sight of Aurian's pale, lifeless, face was a knife through Anvar's heart, but
he steeled himself to look. A minute passed, and another. He stiffened. Had he
imagined it? Another minute. He saw it again, the slightest lift of her breast,
almost imperceptible—but definitely there! "Dear Gods," he whispered.
"Shia, you're right! You're right!" Wild with joy, he hugged the
great cat.
"Of
course," Shia told him smugly. "Cats are wise, Anvar. The other
remains were very old—perhaps they starved, or died from their injuries. But,
we still have a problem. How do we get her out?"
How
indeed? An hour later, Anvar was ready to scream with frustration. They had
hacked at the crystal, battered it with the hilts of their_swords, and in
Shia's case, thrown herself
on it
with teeth and claws. It shrugged off their efforts, remaining unscathed and
utterly impervious. Anvar stepped back, panting, and scowled at the unyielding
gem. "This is no good," he said. "It's absolutely
unbreakable—yet the creature has put her inside. It must open somehow. Shia, do
you feel magic here?"
The cat
had flopped to the ground, despondent. "I feel something," she said,
"but different—not like a spell." She scraped the smooth stone floor
with her claws, searching for the right words. "It feels as though the
crystal is magic, but it doesn't do magic, if you can understand that."
Anvar
couldn't—and he was afraid to try any of the spells from his limited repertoire
lest he trigger something in his ignorance that might harm the Mage within. He
ran his hands over the smooth walls of the gem, racking his brains for a way
out of their difficulties—and pulled back with an oath as his fingers caught on
a sharp edge. "Bohan, did you manage to knock a piece out of this?"
The
eunuch shook his head emphatically. Sucking his bleeding fingers, Anvar
investigated the place. It was high up around the side of the crystal, but he
could see nothing to mar the flawless surface. Then a smear of blood led his
eyes to the spot. He felt again, more carefully this time, and found a hollow.
A place where a single facet was missing, its absence concealed by the internal
reflections of the gem. Anvar frowned. "There's a perfect piece missing. I
wonder . . ." "A key?" Shia was"quick to follow his
thought. "If it is, we must find it, and quickly. Who knows how long
Aurian can stay alive in there?" Anvar froze as a dreadful thought
occurred to him. "What if the creature had it?"
"One
way to find out. Stop fearing the worst—and search!" Shia was away,
quartering the chamber.
It was
Bohan who finally found the missing piece, tucked behind the crystal in a niche
in the wall. Anvar snatched it from his hand. It was bigger than his fist and
pointed at its inner end, its smooth broad facets catching the light along
their edges. Holding his breath, he reached up and pushed it into the hollow,
turning it to fit. It settled into place with a click—and Anvar stepped hastily
back as the gem flared with a dazzling white light that sank slowly away to
leave the crystal transpar-
AURIAN •
5o7
ent,
all traces of its former milkiness gone. Distorted, broken reflections of
Aurian's body could be seen within—then a crack snaked down the front of the
gem. It opened down its length like a hinged shell, unfolding into two hollowed
segments with thick walls. Anvar rushed to catch the Mage as she slid out of
the space within—and found he had hold of a demon.
The
monster—the hideous spider creature—it had hold of her! Aurian struggled wildly
in the clutch of the horrid limbs. She fought instinctively, striking out with
fists and feet, as Maya had taught her long ago. There was an oddly
human-sounding grunt as she connected, and the grip on her body fell away.
"Very
nice! He goes to all this trouble to rescue you, and you hit him!"
The
voice in her head was reassuringly familiar. "Shia!" Aurian rolled
over and looked around dazedly, blinking in the weird red light. She barely had
time to recognize Shia and Bohan before Anvar seized her, half lifting her in
an embrace that took her breath away.
"Oh
Gods, Aurian, it's so good to see you alive!"
With
her head buried in Anvar's shoulder, the Mage was unable to see his face, but
his voice sounded ragged and choked. Aurian tried to answer, but her throat was
too parched for speech. Anvar took one arm from around her long enough to
rummage in a bundle at his side and come up with a waterskin. He supported her
while she drank, rationing her, much to her annoyance, to small sips. She made
a grab for the bag as he took it away.
"In
a minute." His voice was firmer now. "You haven't drunk for about
three days. You'll make yourself sick."
"Days?"
Aurian groped in vain to remember. It was hard to read Anvar's face in the dim
red light, but she thought she could see the streak of a tear on his cheek.
"Was I ill? Did I dream that awful spider-thing?" She groaned.
"I feel as though I've been on a three-day drinking bout with Parric."
Her mouth still felt dry, her head was throbbing, her stomach burned, and she
had the same unnerving gaps in her memory that were usually the result of too
much ale.
"I
think you migbi^want this." Anvar fished her desert
r
robe
out of his bundle. Aurian gasped, suddenly conscious of her nudity—and the
memories came flooding back of her swim, and what had happened subsequently.
Anvar helped her into the robe, and gave her more water and a little flat cake
of Nereni's bread, cradling her in his arms as she ate. She nibbled it slowly,
feeling as though she might be sick at any minute, but once it was down it
stayed down, and she began to feel better, and ready for more.
As she
ate, the Mage pieced together her story. Having been captured by the portal,
she had made the same accidental discovery as Anvar—that Magelight triggered
the rising of the gemlike conveyance. On reaching the top, however, she had
spent a long time trying to find a spell to make it descend, and return her to
the others. When her efforts met with no success, she had decided to leave the
crystal, hoping to find some other route down. "I got out of it in much
the same way as I got in," she went on. "It sucked me out through its
wall—and that was when I met the spider-thing! You've no idea what it was
like!"
"We
do," Shia assured her grimly. "We met it, too!"
Aurian
shuddered. "I couldn't fight it—did you know it was impervious to
magic?"
Anvar
shook his head. "I never thought to try."
"Just
as well. It seemed to have the ability to throw the spell right back at the
user—I very nearly fried myself before I found that out! Anyway, it grabbed me
..." She swallowed hard, trying to keep her voice under control. Anvar
hugged her closer, and she gave hin*-a grateful smile. "I was fighting . .
. After that, I don't remember. It only seemed to be a split second before Shia
was telling me I'd hit you," She raised her hand to a lurid bruise on
Anvar's cheekbone. "I hurt you, Anvar. I'm sorry."
"That
wasn't you. That was Harihn."
"Oh,
Anvar, you haven't been fighting?" Aurian was dismayed.
"Wait
until you hear the whole story." Assisted by Shia, and with the occasional
confirmatory nod from Bohan, Anvar told her what had happened. Aurian
interrupted with astonished delight when she discovered that he and Shia could
speak to one another, and again to heap bloodcurdling curses on Harihn's head,
when she heard how the Prince had abandoned
her
friends to die. When her rage had calmed enough to let her hear the rest of the
tale, she shuddered to hear of their fight with the monster, and Shia's near
loss in the depths of the abyss.
But
when Anvar began to describe their crossing of the invisible bridge, it was too
much. "No! Don't tell me! I'd rather not hear about that bit, if you don't
mind," she apologized.
When
Anvar had finished his tale, Aurian looked at the faces of her companions,
utterly moved by their courage and loyalty. "My dearest friends, you've
been so brave ... I don't know how to thank you . . ." She ran out of
words, and brushed away a tear.
"As
long as you're all right," Anvar told her, "you and the child."
Aurian
looked at him fondly. "We seem to be unscathed, thanks to you three. The
question is, what do we do now? We've been trapped here by that turd Harihn, If
we don't find something within these tunnels to help us, we'll starve. Besides,
Anvar ..." Her eyes lit up with excitement. "Don't you realize what
this place must be? The crystals, the metal creature immune to magic—it all
points to one thing. We've found the lost civilization of the Dragonfolk! There
must be artifacts here —knowledge, weapons, perhaps even the Sword of Fire
itself—that we could use against Miathan!"
Anvar
shook his head in exasperation. "You never give up, do you? What if we
find more of thosjr spider-monsters? What if there's worse?"
"After
my last experience, do you think I'm not worried about spider-things?"
Aurian shrugged. "But to be honest, Anvar, I don't see any alternative. We
certainly can't go back the way we came. The only way out is through these
tunnels."
Though
they all longed for sleep, they decided to press on at once. Food was in short
supply, and though the passages of the mountain fastness held little hope for
their salvation, there was nothing to be gained in lingering. The only other
exit from the long chamber was a huge arched doorway at the far end. A wide
ramp sloped in a curve up a broad tunnel whose roof, pointed like the archway,
was high above. Shia led the way; the Mages, by unspoken cojisent, followed
together, Bohan brought
sio •
MAGGIE FURRY
up the
rear, his sword drawn. Anvar had returned Aurian's gear to her, and she was
relieved to feel the familiar weight of the sword at her hip once more.
The
disquieting red light of the chamber had been replaced by a soft amber glow
that emanated from a network of shining veins that webbed the smooth, seamless
stone of the passageway. The air whispered softly past their faces without
moisture or mustiness, and the walls and floor bore little trace of webs or
dust. The irritating hum had faded as they climbed. Aurian found herself
relaxing a little. She had not realized how much the high-pitched buzz had
bothered her, until it was gone. "You know," she said to Anvar,
"this is like a spiral staircase—only there are no steps. I suppose
dragons might have had difficulties with stairs. But if this corridor was built
to accommodate them, they must have been even bigger than I thought."
He
nodded glumly. "And more powerful than we thought, if they could create
this place, and the metal creature. We should be careful."
It was
easy to lose track of time as the unchanging tunnel wound on and on. After a
while, rooms began to appear, leading off from either side. To Aurian's
frustration, some were sealed with great doors of metal or crystal that would
yield to neither force nor magic. Other rooms were doorless or open, but
whether large or small, all were completely empty, their only illumination
coming from the dim stoneglow of the passage that shone through the wide
entrances, Shia reported no further signs of magic.
"What
kind of ridiculous place is this?" Aurian complained, as they explored yet
another abandoned chamber. "What's the use of it all?" She felt
leaden with exhaustion, and her headache had returned.
"How
the blazes should I know?" Anvar snapped. He sagged against her, grinding
his knuckles into bloodshot eyes. The Mage glanced sharply at his slumped form,
noticing for the first time that Bohan looked similarly weary. "How long
is it since you've slept?"
He
groaned. "Days—I don't remember. Not since you disappeared."
"Anvar!"
Aurian scolded. "Why didn't you tell me?" Tak-
ing his
arm, she led him to the rear of the small room and sat him down, propped
against the wall. "This place is about as defensible as we can get. We'll
rest here."
They
each took a small sip of water from the dwindling contents of their sack, Anvar
pouring some into Aurian's cupped hands for Shia to lap. The Mage insisted on
taking the first watch. "I was doing nothing all the time you poor souls
were searching for me," she told them. "It's only fair." No one
had the energy to argue.
"Wake
me next," Shia told her. "We can share the watching. I need less rest
than you feeble two-legged folk."
Aurian
left them asleep and sat to one side of the entrance, her sword ready to her
hand. She began to count time by tapping her dagger on the palm of her hand to
mark the seconds and switching hands when each minute had passed, but soon gave
it up. The counting lulled her, and she found herself beginning to nod.
Instead, she thought about her child. It must be about five months now, though
it was hard to work out the time exactly—Magewomen were taught to suppress the
monthly cycles that were such a bother for Mortals, They usually became aware
of their pregnancy after the second month, and Aurian thought that was about
right, She had certainly felt the child's presence once it had been pointed out
to her. Not much longer before my powers vanish entirely, she thought, and what
will we do then? If we ever escape from here, that is. What could have prompted
Harihn to such treachery? Did I really misjudge him so badly?
The
Mage wondered what was happening in Nexis, Miathan would use the powers of the
Caldron to enslave the Mortals he despised, with Eliseth, Bragar, and Davorshan
as willing accomplices. What had become of her friends? Had Vannor and Parric
survived? What of Maya and D'arvan, and her mother? While her powers were
crippled by the bracelets, she might have been unaware of any deaths among the
Magefolk! She shivered, despite the warm air of the chamber, and longed for
Portal's sturdy old cloak, which had been lost in the shipwreck. Its familiar
weight on her shoulders had always been a comfort. But cloak and Forral were
gone, and she was cold and alone in this dark place,
Aurian,
lost in sorrowful thoughts, was startled by a cold
black
nose poking into her face. "Thought so," Shia said.
"You're almost asleep. Time I took over!"
The Mage
was quick to agree. It would be a relief to escape for a while into oblivion.
She crossed the chamber to where her friends slept, and lay down beside Anvar.
As always he seemed to sense her presence, and turned to put an arm around her,
murmuring her name in his sleep. Aurian snuggled close, and felt her burden
lifting. At least I have Shia and Bohan, she thought, and especially Anvar.
The
next day, if day it was, they encountered the trap. After a frugal breakfast
that left them with slender rations, indeed, they resumed their weary trudge,
winding ever upward round the featureless stone spiral with its empty rooms
until their feet dragged with exhaustion. Aurian was close to despair. Had she
been wrong in her hope of finding the lost knowledge of the Dragonfolk? Did it
really matter? We're doomed to die here, she thought. This bloody mountain will
be our tomb, and that will be that.
Suddenly
Shia, stalking ahead as usual, stopped. "Magic!" she growled.
"You're
right," Anvar said. "Aurian, do you see it?"
A few
paces in front of them there was a silvery disturbance in the air, like the
illusory shimmer above a stone pavement on a hot day. It stretched across the
passage like a curtain, barring their way.
Danger
or not, Aurian was glad that something had occurred to break the monotony of
the trek. She walked forward cautiously, staff in one hand, the other held up
before her, palm foremost. As she reached the roiling, silky distortion, two
things happened. The shimmer vanished—and all the light in the tunnel went out.
Taken by surprise, Aurian took another step forward, striking a ball of
Magelight above her head. As it flared, there was a low, thunderous grinding
from above, drawing her eyes upward. Her breath caught in her throat as a huge,
squared-off block of the ceiling detached itself and came plummeting toward
her.
To
Aurian, everything happened in nightmare slow motion. The block seemed to float
downward as she plunged forward. One foot slipped and she fell, twisting,
facing back in the direction from which she had come.
"Aurian!"
Anvar was hurling himself forward, diving into the narrowing gap between stone
and floor. The massive block plunged inexorably down, smashing Anvar into the
floor with a jarring crunch that shuddered the walls.
"Anvar!"
Aurian's shriek tore her throat. Her Magelight went out, plunging her into
darkness. Her mind reeled with hideous, unbearable visions . . . Anvar,
pulverized beneath tons of stone . . . She collapsed against the wall, retching,
choking on sobs—
And
leapt about a yard into the air as a hand touched her shoulder.
"It's
me!" Anvar's strangled voice was almost lost in her squeak of fright.
"You!
You can't ... I saw . . ." Aurian found it impossible to get the words past
her chattering teeth.
Anvar,
it seemed, was having similar difficulties as they clung together, shaking.
"Illusion," he gasped.
Illusion?
Illusion! Aurian's Magelight rekindled, flaring fiery red as anger boiled up
within her. She drew back, staring at Anvar's ashen face. "You fool! You
bloody idiot! I thought you were dead, damn you! How could you do such a stupid
thing!" she stormed. Tears of shock and rage ran down her face and she
dashed them angrily away.
Anvar
grabbed her shoulders. "Because I'm not prepared to lose you again! I'd
rather die, don't you understand?" he yelled, his fingers digging hard
into her flesh.
Oh.
Aurian felt her anger draining away. She understood— she had felt the same way
about Forral, She shook her head, unwilling to accept the implications.
"Anvar . . ."
He
looked away from her, biting his lip. "Never mind. Forget it."
"If
you two have quite finished!" Shia's mental voice was a welcome
distraction, but Aurian could tell from the steely tone that the cat too was
angry at the scare they had given her. She was nowhere in sight; still hidden,
presumably, behind the illusory block of stone. "How you expect anyone to
get their thoughts through such a turmoil as you have been throwing up, I have
no idea!" Shia went on irritably, "But since you've finally deigned
to listen to me, have you anything constructive to sug-
8est?" -.*
Suddenly
Aurian found herself giggling helplessly. That started Anvar off too, and they
laughed together until their ribs ached and they were wheezing for breath. The
little ball of Magelight, bright gold now, flickered and bobbed above Aurian's
head as though it too were chuckling.
"WELL?"
The thunder of Shia's voice finally
sobere them.
"Sorry,
Shia." Aurian grinned at Anvar, speaking her thoughts aloud for Bohan's
benefit. "I suggest you walk straight through. The block is an illusion—as
Anvar so conclusively proved!" She gave him a mock-fierce scowl.
Stunned
silence from Shia, then: "Could I only curse, like you humans!"
Though the words came from her mind, they sounded as if they were spoken
through clenched teeth. "We're coming through!"
"No,
wait!" Aurian's cry was drowned in a grating rumble from overhead. There
was an anguished howl—and Bohan came hurtling through the wall of stone, Shia a
black projectile at his heels. There was a deafening crash, and the Mages
clutched each other as the floor of the tunnel bucked and heaved beneath them.
Clouds of dust billowed up, and tiny fragments of stone stung their skin.
As the
dust began to settle, Aurian was relieved to see Bohan and Shia, safe.
Coughing, she stretched out a hand to the block—and touched solid stone.
"It
really fell this time!" Anvar sounded shaken.
"I
think I understand," Aurian murmured thoughtfully. "It's a time trap,
Anvar. What we saw, what we thought had hit you—" She groped for words.
"It wasn't an illusion. What we were seeing was the future*."
"But
why? Surely if it was a trap, it might as well have fallen in the first
place?"
"I'm
not sure." Aurian frowned. "Presumably, the Dragons would recognize
their own magic, so it would act as a warning to them that the trap was there,
and they should get through quickly. But any strange Magefolk, like us, who
came blundering in—Well, if I hadn't taken that extra step forward, I would
have seen the thing falling and stepped back."
"And
we would have eventually discovered the illusion," Anvar finished for her,
"gone through, and—"
"It
would have got us anyway. What a bloody devious people!" She was
annoyed—and more than a little unnerved. "What kind of power must they
have had, to play tricks like that with time?"
Aurian
turned to the others, and was surprised to see the much rubbing his buttocks
with one hand, and shaking an igry fist at Shia with the other.
"Are
you two all right? Bohan, what's wrong?"
Shia's
voice was loaded with disgust. "This lumbering ox wasn't moving fast
enough—so I stuck my claws in his backside!"
A
strangled squawk from Anvar proved that he too had heard the cat's words.
Aurian found herself spluttering helplessly. Bohan's indignant expression and
Shia's angry glare only made them worse. The Mages leaned against each other,
helpless with laughter.
"But
how did you know the stone was really falling this time?" Aurian asked
Shia, when she had finally got her paroxysms under control. Now that they could
both speak to her, the Mages had fallen into the habit of voicing their
thoughts aloud. It made things much easier.
Shia
sat, primly licking a paw, though her twitching tail betrayed that she too had
been shaken by their near miss. "I didn't. But cats never take
chances!"
"Really,
smart-paws?" Anvar retorted. "What about when you nearly went over
the cliff, fighting that spider-thing?"
Shia
glared at him. "That was different!"
"Oh?"
"Something
has occurred to me." Aurian interrupted the impending fight. "That
awful howl we heard as you came through—was that you, Bohan?"
The big
man looked perplexed.
"Well,
it certainly wasn't me," Shia declared.
"But
that means you can speak!"
Bohan
opened his mouth, but nothing emerged. Aurian could see his face growing redder
and redder with the exertion, and went to him quickly. "Don't, Bohan.
You'll hurt yourself. Obviously the problem isn't physical, but I'm too weary
to try mind-Healing just now. I promise you, though, if we get out of this
place, I'll help you find your voice." He smiled at her, but
the
longing, the hope in his eyes wrung Aurian's heart. She patted his hand gently.
"Let's rest now. I think we all need some time to recover before we go
on."
This
time, folly though it might have proved, no one even thought to suggest keeping
watch. Careless in their weariness, unstrung by the shocks of the past hour,
they slept like the dead, huddled close for comfort like lost children. When
Bohan finally awakened Aurian, light had returned to the passageway, and the
stone had lifted to open the tunnel behind them. The trap had been set once
more.
They
swallowed the meager remnants of their food and water, but their last meal was
marred by a sense of unease. Had the stone reset itself? Or, horrifying
thought, had someone—or some thing—crept up while they slept to renew the
spell?
"Nonsense,"
Aurian argued. "If anyone had been here they'd have let us know about it,
you can be sure!" Nonetheless, there was a crawling between her shoulder
blades that no amount of common sense could shake off, and looking at the
others' faces, she knew they felt the same.
As they
went on, the tunnel began to straighten, its gradient growing steeper as they
climbed. There were no more rooms now, and soon the very light began to change,
as gradually the glowing amber veins in the stone were replaced by a
constellation of many-colored gems that shone, like those in the desert below,
with their own mysterious gleam. Soon the way was illuminated only by the
flickering gemlight that surrounded them on all sides, as though they trod the
starry paths of the Universe itself. "How beautiful it is," Aurian
murmured. "I'm glad we got the chance to see this, even if—"
"Even
if we die for the experience?" They were almost the first words that Anvar
had spoken since they had awakened. After his outburst the previous day, a
constraint had fallti between the Mages, as if both were anxious to avoid what
hi^ words had revealed.
Aurian
was suddenly sick of it all. Nothing's changed, sht told herself. It's still
Anvar. Words said in the heat of the moment—what real difference does it make?
If we die, it won't matter anyway, and if we don't—well, it'll keep, and in the
meantime there's no sense in ruining a good friendship over it. She took his
hand. "Don't despair," she told him. "Think of all
the
times we've almost perished since we left Nexis, yet we never did. Something
will turn up, you'll see. We're too tough a team to kill, you and I."
Anvar
squeezed her hand and met her eyes at last, suddenly looking more cheerful.
"You're right," he said, "and we'll go through a lot more
together, before we're done!"
"Light!
Light ahead!" They turned simultaneously toward Shia's cry.
Daylight!
It filtered wanly past a sharp angle in the tunnel, dimming the star-glitter of
the gems. Shia had stopped, bristling, before the bend. "There's magic ahead,"
she warned, halting their headlong rush.
Aurian
took a step forward, but Anvar, who had not relinquished her hand even as they
ran, pulled her back toward him, "Oh, no you don't," he growled.
"This time we go together!"
They
crept forward, peering anxiously round the corner of the passage.
"Chathak's bloody balls!" Aurian swore. The tunnel ahead of them was
blocked by a large gem, resembling the impervious doorways that had defeated
them lower down. The daylight twinkled through its polished facets—so near,
yet, unless they could find a way to pass the obstacle, it might have been a
million miles away.
"That
noise is back," Anvar said suddenly. "Do you hear
it?"
Sure
enough, the irritating, high-pitched hum was tickling the base of Aurian's
jawbone. "What is that?" she demanded crossly, fighting back an urge
to burst into tears of sheer frustration.
"I
think it's coming from the other side. Shia! Get yourself round here!"
"I
hear you." The great cat slunk round the corner with a black look for
Anvar. "There's no need to shout!"
"Sorry.
Gin you tell whether the magic is coming from the stone itself, or is there
another trap in front of us?"
"I
don't think so. It's in the crystal itself."
"Right."
Anvar pressed forward, but Aurian caught his arm.
"Hold
on there," she told him. "You made the rules, remember? Together, or
not at all!"
Together
they examined the crystal, running their hands
over
the smooth, hard surface. "Just the same as the others," Anvar said
despondently. "Unlike the one that imprisoned you, there's no key to these
door crystals. It's a dead end."
"It
can't be!" Aurian aimed a savage kick at the obstruction, howling a curse
as the toe of her boot hit the unyielding gem. "That does it!" In
unthinking rage she raised her staff, unleashing a sizzling bolt at the
crystal.
"Aurian,
no!" Anvar, shielding his eyes, was thrown back hard against the side of
the passage. Smoke curled through the corridor as the gem began to hiss and
pulse with light.
"Stop!"
Dimly, Aurian heard Shia's urgent cry. "You're making it worse! The magic
of the stone is growing!"
To her
horror, the Mage realized that it was true. The gem was acting as the bracelets
had done, leeching her powers into it to increase its own. The staff trembled
in her outstretched hand as energy surged through her body and along her arm,
bleeding and weakening her further by the second. No longer was she putting
forth her power—the stone was pulling it from her! Her guts twisted in panic.
"Help me," she cried. "I can't stop it!"
Something
hard cannoned into her, knocking her breathless to the ground. The staff was
wrenched from her hand in a shower of sparks, breaking the deadly bond of
magic. Aurian, gasping like a stranded fish, saw Bohan, fallen half on top of
her, drop the smoking staff with a grimace of pain. The glare from the crystal
dimmed, and the smoke began to clear.
"You
and your blasTtd temper, Aurian!" Anvar was examining Bohan's hand.
"I
know. I'm sorry, Anvar. It was a stupid thing to do. Is Bohan all right?"
"More
or less." The eunuch echoed his words with a nod.
Anvar
held out his hand to help her up. "Aurian, we have to stop scaring each
other like this!"
"It's
a bargain!" Aurian scrambled to her feet, turning back to the crystal.
"All the same, I have an idea . . ." She remembered the bracelets
sapping her power as she tried to help Anvar in the slave compound.
"Be
careful!" Anvar said hastily.
"I
will. I've learned my lesson. No daft fireworks this time, I promise." She
pressed her hands, then the side of her face, flat
against
the crystal, probing its interior with her Healer's senses, feeling for the
delicate lattice that was the framework and life of the stone. Since her powers
had been sapped by her rash act, it took her a long time to find the weakness,
the chink in its defenses, that she sought. But it was there. At last, it was
there! Aurian probed with her will—and pulled . . .
Ah, now
the tables were turned! The Mage felt her palms tingling as power flooded back
through the fault in the gem. She drew upon the stone's energy until she felt
ready to burst, unable to contain so much magic. Aurian began to wonder if she
had overestimated her ability to handle the power woven into the structure of
the stone. Again she felt the chill clutch of fear. If only she had taught this
to Anvar, so that he could have helped her! If only she had some way to store
the surplus power! But . . .
"Get
back round the corner!" she yelled, straining to contain the force until
they were safely away. "Cover your eyes!" Flinging out a hand, the
Mage hurled a mighty flare of energy at the wall, shielding herself quickly as
she did so. It exploded as it hit, the concussion impacting violently back
against her shield, but her defenses held. And as for the crystal—her job was
done. Without the energy that held it together, the gem collapsed with a
slithering whisper into a heap of fine powder at her feet. Aurian let out her
breath in a huge sigh of relief.
Anvar
appeared round the corner, looking pale. "I thought we agreed not to
frighten each other anymore?" He spoke quietly, but there was a glint of
anger in his eyes.
"Anvar,
I'm sorry. I never thought ... I didn't realize that so much energy would be involved."
She brightened. "But it worked, didn't it? And no harm done in the
end."
"No
harm?" Shia spat. "What about the harm to my nerves?"
Anvar
sighed. "I have to admit—it worked. But if you ever do anything like that
again ..."
"All
right," Aurian agreed. "I won't. I'll teach you instead, and the next
time, you can do it!"
Together
they scrambled over the pile of fine crystal dust and peered through the
opening that Aurian had created. The Mage's heart sank. "By all the
Gods—if this isn't the absolute end! After all that, it doesn't even lead
outside." Throwing her
r
staff
to the ground, she sat down on the mound of dust, her head in her hands.
"Aurian,
look at this!" Anvar sounded excited. "You look at it. I've seen
enough of this accursed place!" "Don't be silly." He yanked her
firmly to her feet. With a groan, Aurian picked up her staff and followed
him—and stepped back quickly with a sharp oath as she saw the drop that yawned
beneath her feet. They stood inside a tower—a circular chamber that stretched
up and up, deceiving the eye. The walls were seamless, formed of translucent
white stone and pierced in a spiral all the way up by circular windows of
crystal that cast sword-thin shafts of daylight down to the floor—except that
there was no floor. They stood on a ribbon of stone that clung to the walls of
the tower, spiraling up into the limitless heights above. Below them was a
sparkling shaft, lit by the focused beams from the windows, and at eye level,
suspended seemingly on thin air above the drop, a great spherical crystal spun
and scintillated, filling the air with the unnerving, penetrating hum that they
hac/ /iearc/ in the corridor, and in the red-lit chamber,
far
below.
Anvar
lay on his stomach, hanging over the edge of the shaft in a way that made
Aurian's stomach flip over. "This is amazing! Do you want to bet that it
goes right down into that chasm we crossed?"
Aurian
groaned. "Anvar, come away from there!" "Yes, do," Shia
added, sounding far from happy. "This place is crawling with magic!"
Anvar
ignored them both. "Of course it is. Don't you see, this is some kind of
magical pump. That's why the air was so fresh on the lower levels—this makes it
circulate!"
"Very
clever, Anvar." Aurian did her best, but failed to keep the despair from
her voice. "It is also, you may have noticed, a dead end. We'll have to go
back down."
Anvar
scrambled up from the brink. "I don't think so. The path—" he
indicated the strip of stone on which they stood—" —this dragon stairway,
if you like—still goes upward. I think there'll be a way out at the top!"
Aurian
looked up at the path, which curved away ever higher from where they stood, and
down again, at the bottom-
AURIAN •
521
less
shaft. She swallowed hard and looked at Anvar. "I thought we weren't going
to frighten each other anymore?" He grinned. "You already broke that
promise." "This isn't funny!"
"I
know. But it's our only way out. Look, it isn't all that narrow. It was built
for dragons, you know. Come on, Aurian. I'll hold your hand. You must do
it."
"All
right." Aurian sighed. "But Anvar, if we get all the way to the top
and there's no way out, you're going straight down that shaft headfirst!"
Afterward,
Aurian preferred not to recall that climb. It seemed to go on forever as she
sidled up the sloping ramp, Shia and Bohan following her, her back pressed hard
against the tower wall. They climbed until their legs were trembling with
weariness, but the Mage refused to halt. "No," she pleaded. "Just
get it over with." But in the end, it was clear that in their famished and
exhausted state, they would never make it to the top without resting. Aurian
sat huddled as far away from the edge as she could, her eyes tightly closed.
After a time they went on, their muscles cramped and their heads swimming,
until even Aurian had forgotten the drop beneath in her preoccupation with her
aching limbs. It was with a sense of disbelief that she finally saw the archway
above her. She staggered into the blessed daylight, and . . ,
"Be
careful!" Anvar grabbed her arm, yanking her back against the side of the
doorway. Aurian, reeling, fell to the ground. "Anvar," she gasped,
"I hate you. I absolutely hate you."
She was
awakened by a gentle hand shaking her shoulder. Anvar"s face was close to
her own. "I'm sorry," he said. "I let you sleep as long as I
dared, but we must get moving while there's still daylight. Do you still hate
me?"
Aurian
groaned, aching all over. "That depends. Did I really see what I think I
saw?" "I'm afraid so."
"In
that case, yes." Moving very carefully, she peered over the edge of the
platform that topped the tower. The sky—ah, how good it was to see the sky and
the sun again after their nighttime journey through the desert and the long
days passed in the gloomy halls hengath the mountain. And despite her
fear,
the view was staggering. The tower stood at one end of an oval plain that
stretched about a league—a crater scooped into the top of the mountain. The
jagged walls of the peak were higher than the roof on which she perched, and
shielded the vale below from the worst of the desert's blinding glare. And in
the vale ... a gleaming city. Aurian caught her breath. It could only be the
lost city of the Dragonfolk.
It was
arranged, not in lines and angles like a human city, but in a series of
interlapping circles joined like a spider's web, all converging on a massive,
conical structure like a great spire that was higher even than the tower. The
sun struck fire from its pointed tip—and not surprisingly, for the edifice had
been carved from a single, massive green gem. When Aurian had finished gaping,
she discovered that all the buildings in the city were similarly constructed,
each from a colored jewel that blazed with coruscating light. Most were
rounded and single-storied with broad, flat roofs where, the Mage supposed, the
Dragonfolk would have basked, absorbing the sun that was their lifeblood. There
were several towers, domes, and minarets, all intricately carved and chased,
but the highest buildings were the tower from which she looked and the huge
spire in the
center,
Anvar,
it seemed, had seen the view while she slept, and was ready to be practical.
"I've seen a lot of birds down there. I suppose this is their resting
place when they cross the desert. If we can find a way to trap them, we'll have
food. And there must be water down there , . , Surely even the Dragonfolk would
need
that?"
"So
we go down." Aurian had already noticed the spiral path, a twin to the one
on the inside of the tower, that wound down—and down and down—to the city
below. "Damn and blast them!" She struck the stone with an impotent
fist, and burst into tears. "Why couldn't they have put railings on these
bloody stairways?"
"I'm
sorry, love." Anvar stroked her hair. "But—"
"I
know, I know." Aurian sat up and sniffed, scrubbing at
her
face with the sleeve of her robe—and caught Anvar's eye,
remembering
an occasion long ago when he had chided her for
doing
just that. "Take no notice of me, Anvar. I'm being an ass.
Lead
on, then—since you seem to be in charge where high places are concerned!"
It was
far worse going down. The path seemed to tilt crazily beneath Aurian's feet,
and there was nothing below her but thin air. The others were having similar
difficulties, and the sun had long since dropped behind the high mountain walls
when they neared the bottom. With the path shrouded in gloom and their
attention fixed upon their feet, they barely noticed the shadow that plunged across
them. Anvar, in the lead, turned to Aurian. "What about some li—" His
face froze in horror. The Mage had no time to look behind her. Something struck
her hard, wrenching her from the path. Wiry arms grasped at her—she caught a
glint of steel. She was falling, falling . . .
I
i
CKaptcr 33
THE STAFF
OF EARTH
urian!"
Sick with dread, Anvar hurtled down the spiral «——_ path, followed by Bohan and
Shia. The ledge reached the ground on the opposite side from which the Mage had
fallen, and he raced around the base of the tower, not daring to think of what
he might find. He almost ran right into the fighters. A small figure, its
identity obscured by the dusky shadows that flooded the bottom of the crater,
was struggling with the Mage. Aurian was alive!
"Stay
back!" The voice was shrill. The stranger, cloaked in deepest black, was
using a handful of the Mage's hair to pull her head back. A gleaming, naked
blade lay across Aurian's
throat.
There
was no time to wonder how Aurian had survived the fall. Anvar measured the
distance between himself and the fighters, weighing the chances of a surprise
attack. Not good, he thought. If I could see better . . . Magelight flashed
between his fingers. He heard a yelp of shock from the stranger— and Aurian
took advantage of her opponent's distraction. There was a scuffle and a grunt
of pain, and the positions of the assailants were suddenly reversed. The dagger
spun away, lost in the struggle, Bohan chasing after it. Aurian had her foe
down and was attacking with both fists, spitting curses.
Anvar,
rememberirrg the blind rage of his fight with Harihn, rushed forward to grab
Aurian's arm. "All right," he said, panting. "You've won!"
But when he tried to pull the Mage to her feet, she fell with a cry of pain.
"You're wounded?" Anvar dropped down beside her.
Aurian
was swearing furiously. "Wrenched my knee, landing," she muttered.
"That was how she got the advantage—and because I was scared out of my
wits!" She shook her head in puzzlement. "But why did she break my
fall?" "It's a she?"
"Bloody
right!" She struck her own Magelight with an ease that made Anvar sigh
with envy. "You ever see a man fight like this?" Her arms and face
were bloodied with long, deep scratches. "Added to that, I sacrificed a
handful of hair to get
AURIAN
- 525
out of
the hold she had on me." Aurian snorted with disgust, rubbing her scalp.
Her face was gray in the Magelight, and Anvar knew that her fall must have
terrified her—as it had terrified him.
"I
don't know why she broke your fall, but I thank all the Gods she did," he
said shakily.
Aurian's
composure was crumbling, and for a moment Anvar thought she would fling herself
into his arms, as she had done after their terrible ascent of the cliffs of
Taibeth. But instead she took a long, shuddering breath, making a visible
effort to pull herself together. "If I start thinking about it, I'll go
into screaming hysterics," she said firmly. "Let's take a look at our
prisoner."
Stifling
an insidious feeling of disappointment, Anvar turned toward the girl, and
Aurian moved her light to illuminate the huddled, weeping figure. "Gods
save us!" For the first time, Anvar got a good look at what he had
mistaken for a dark cloak. "She has wings!" Sending Shia and Bohan off
to make sure there were no other Winged Folk lurking nearby, Anvar bent to
examine the strange captive.
She was
very small and finely made—not much over half Anvar's height, though each of
the great black wings that sprang from her back was longer than her body. The
pinions were jointed, so that their upper sections rose beyond her shoulders,
higher than her head, while the lower parts dropped to her feet in a graceful
tapering sweep.
As
Anvar pulled her hands away from her bruised, tear-streaked face, she glared at
Aurian with eyes that were huge and dark. "She hit me!"
The
words were strangely accented, and Anvar guessed that his Magefolk ability to
communicate in all tongues was in operation once more. "What did you
expect?" he told her angrily. "You were trying to cut her
throat!"
The
winged girl spat at Aurian's feet. "In my country she would die for
striking a Princess!"
Aurian
groaned. "Not royalty again!"
Raven
stared at /the tall, grim-faced woman who could fight like a demon, and her
stomach clenched into a tight, cold knot of fear. Who werejhese horribly big,
wingless beings? She
r
526 •
MAGOIF,
had
never seen anything like them. What were they doing in this deserted place?
What would they do to her? The man with the unnerving, sky-colored eyes grabbed
her arm roughly. "Are there any more of you about?" he demanded.
Raven's
mind worked quickly. "Of course!" she snapped haughtily. "Do you
think a Princess would be unescorted? Let me go, ere I call my guards to make
an end of you!" "She's lying," the redheaded woman said.
"Tell us the truth!" The man's grip tightened, making her squirm and
gasp with pain.
Raven
was inwardly raging, but that stern, ice-blue gaze made her quail. "1 am
alone," she confessed. She was unable to stop her tears from com'mg. Yot
au mstarvt, she thought she saw his expression soften with pity, then he looked
at the woman and his face became grim once more. But it was a chance—if she
could only get him on her side . . .
Raven gazed up at the man with imploring eyes. "Please don't let her hurt
me again!" The tall woman snorted with disgust. "Listen, you can drop
that terrified-little-girl act. It's not fooling anyone. You're older than you
look, I'll wager, and I've the scars to prove that
you're
a menace."
Raven
was furious at the exposure of her ploy. "How dare you! I am a Princess of
the Blood Royal!"
"Not
here, you're not," the woman growled. "You're our prisoner, and in a
lot of trouble. You attacked us first, remember. I still owe you for pitching
me off that tower."
Well,
that was true enough, Raven admitted to herself. Yet despite her attack on the
woman, these people hadn't actually harmed her, though they could have killed
her at once if they'd wanted. And she was so tired of being alone . . .
"Lady,"
she said at last, "I beg pardon for that. I—I saw you coming, and I was
afraid. I thought if I surprised
you
. . ."
To her
utter surprise, the woman grinned. "You didn't do too badly, considering.
Why did you slow my fall with your wings, though? If you had dropped me from
that height, you could have killed me outright."
Raven
shrugged, making her dark, glossy feathers rustic "I thought if I had a
hostage, the others might not hurt me,'
Just
then a hulking figure emerged from the shadows.
AURIAN •
527
Raven
gasped. And she'd thought the others were big! Behind the wingless man was a
fearsome dark shape with flaming eyes. Raven was all too familiar with the
savage great cats, who lived on the northern side of her own mountains, and
waged a constant war with her folk. She shrieked, and tried to run, but the man
pulled her back to his side.
"It's
all right," Anvar reassured her. "Shia is a friend, and in her own
way, she can talk to us."
"She
says that you really are alone, but she's found a camp of sorts—with some
food." The woman chuckled. "She's cross because Bohan here wouldn't
let her eat any of it. Seriously, though, is it your camp? We're all dreadfully
hungry."
"What
I have, I will share with you," Raven offered, anxious to make some
gesture of friendship, "I caught some birds, but there was nothing to make
a fire. Besides, I was never taught to cook," she added frankly, "so
my hunger is as great as yours."
The
woman caught the man's eye and shrugged, "Lead on, and our thanks to
you," she said.
They
walked through the empty city, the tall woman limping slightly and leaning on
the man's arm for support. Introductions were made, although everyone was too
concerned with the thought of food to say much more than that. Raven had set up
her camp in a building that consisted of a single large chamber with walls of
misty blue crystal. There was no door to close, and no furnishings or signs
that there had ever been any, though shelves and niches had been carved into
the walls and a pile of assorted gems had been stacked along one side. The
chamber's best asset was a small spring-fed pool in one corner, which absorbed
the attention of the thirsty strangers for a considerable time.
Raven
produced four good-size birds that she'd caught on the wing, as she had often
done at home for mere sport. The strangers took charge of supper with a
capability that she envied. The men—Anvar and the huge Bohan—took the fowl
outside to clean, while Aurian, the tall woman, scrabbled around in the pile of
gems. Raven was mystified. What use would jewels be to her out here? Then all
became clear—and her eyes nearly popped out of her head with astonishment.
Aurian selected ajarge, flatfish piece of crystal and set it
down in
the middle of the floor. She sat down cross-legged and held her hands over the
stone, her eyes narrowed with concentration. Within minutes, the gem was
glowing hot and giving off a warm light that set the walls of their shelter
twinkling cozily. Raven stared in utter disbelief, half afraid and almost
unable to believe her good fortune. "You are Magefolk?" she
whispered.
Aurian
nodded briefly, still preoccupied with her task. Raven clutched at her, the
words spilling out before she could stop them. She had never intended to go
back, but . . . "Will you help me? My people need you desperately!"
Aurian
sighed. "Raven, I don't know if we can. We're trapped here ourselves—but
tell us about it while we eat. It must be serious if it has driven you out here
alone."
Anvar
and Bohan returned with supper cleaned and plucked, and the Mages contrived to
spit the birds on sword blades and wedge them in position over the fiery gem.
"Can I help you heat that thing?" Anvar asked Aurian. She shook her
head. "I'm expending very little effort, but the crystal boosts my power.
This Dragon-magic has its uses."
While
they ate, Raven told her story. Her people had lived in their isolated mountain
fastness for centuries, growing hardy crops in terraced valleys and tending
their flocks of hill goats and ground birds. But in the last months, an
unnatural, un-seasonal winter had laid waste to their civilization. She told
the Mages of sudden, lethal snowstorms, of biting cold that had ruined the
land, and the-ascendancy of the evil, power-hungry High Priest. Raven shuddered
as she spoke of human sacrifices, of atrocities committed in the name of
salvation, of the helplessness and desperation of her mother, the Queen.
"Then Blacktalon insisted on taking me as his bride," she said.
"I knew he planned to depose Flamewing and consolidate his hold over the
Skyfolk, ruling in my name."
She
described her escape from Aerillia in the storm, and the hardship and suffering
of crossing the desert, flying by night from oasis to oasis, exhausted and
hungry, but driven onward by fear and desperation. Tears stood in her eyes.
"I didn't want to run away. It was my only hope—I would not have survived
Blacktalon's cruelty for long—but it tore my heart to go. Even at the risk of
my life I would return, if I
thought
I could do something. Could you help us? Please? My people are dying!"
Aurian
looked away, unable to meet her eyes.
Anvar
both saw and sensed the Mage's distress, and knew what she must be thinking.
Eliseth. Who else could have brought down this unnatural winter? The Winged
Folk had fallen victim to the Magefolk's pursuit of Aurian. An uneasy silence
had fallen in the chamber. Abruptly, Aurian thrust the remains of her supper
aside. Without a word she hoisted herself up with her staff, and limped out of
the chamber. Anvar followed her outside.
Aurian
was sitting with her back against the wall of their building, shivering a
little in the cool desert night, her eyes fixed blankly on the sparkling
heavens. "Go away," she said, without turning.
"No."
Anvar sat down beside her. "Stop blaming yourself."
"Who
else should I blame?" There was a thin edge of anger in her voice.
"All this started because Forral and I—"
"Don't
be stupid!" Anvar snapped. "Aurian, we've been through this. It
started because Miathan turned the Caldron to evil. It started because of the
blind, arrogant prejudice of the Magefolk toward Mortals! You've suffered
enough, without tearing yourself up over the Winged Folk."
"How
can you say that?" Aurian flared. "We're all responsible!" Her
eyes hardened. "Yes, even you, Anvar. You brought Forral, raging, into
Miathan's chamber that night, and forced the Archmage to release the
Wraiths!"
Anvar
turned suddenly cold. "I've always wondered if you blamed me for Forral's
death," he said quietly.
Aurian
remained silent, refusing to look at him. Not knowing what else to say, he went
back inside with bowed head and heavy steps.
Raven
looked up as he entered. "Did I say something wrong?" she asked him
anxiously.
Anvar
stared at her as though returning from a dream, and collected his scattered
thoughts. "No—nothing. She needs some time to think."
Shia
was not fooled. "Should I go?"
He
shook his head, "She wants to be alone."
The
light of the crystal was dying. Anvar lay beside it, but its residual heat did
nothing to pierce the bitter chill inside him. Why now? he thought. Why, after
all this time, should she accuse me? But she had every right. During the months
of their journey, he had thrust away the memory of his part in Forral's death,
not wanting to believe it and hoping against hope that Aurian did not. Aurian .
. . surely if she blamed him, she must hate him? Anvar tossed restlessly,
tormented by guilt and misery. It was hours before he finally fell asleep, but
the Mage did not return.
Aurian
sat long into the night gazing blindly at the stars and trying to come to terms
with her guilt and confusion. Her angry, unguarded outburst to Anvar had
horrified her. She hadn't meant to accuse him—the words had come from nowhere,
as the thought had come into her mind. Do I really blame him? she thought. Has
this been at the back of my mind all along? Suddenly she was startled out of
her thoughts by a glimpse, out of the corner of her eye, of a stealthy movement
in the darkness beyond her. The Mage reached quickly for her sword—and caught
her breath as a figure emerged from the.
shadows.
"Forral!"
The exclamation froze in Aurian's throat as he stepped toward her. This pale
wraith was not the lusty, living man she had known and loved! His image
wavered, oddly translucent and cloaked in an eye-deceiving glimmer. His ghostly
face was frowning and s&d. Aurian felt herself redden with shame, as she
heard his gruff voice in her mind. "That wasn't very fair to Anvar, was
it, love? I taught you better than to waste time dealing out blame. Miathan's
evil is spreading, and that's no way to deal with it!"
"I
know. I'm sorry," she whispered unhappily. The ghostly figure smiled, his
expression softening into a wistful, loving look. Beckoning, he began to walk
away from her. "Forral, wait!" Aurian pulled herself up on her staff
and limped hastily after him, following him into the shadows of the abandoned
city.
She
couldn't catch him. No matter how fast Aurian tried to hobble, Portal's shade
kept the same tantalizing distance between them, though he never went out of
her sight. At last
he
stopped, turning toward her, and she realized that they had reached the
mysterious cone-shaped edifice that was the center and focus of Dhiammara. The
humming power that emanated from the structure seemed to vibrate within her
very bones, but she kept her eyes fixed on the beloved figure of Forral. She
limped toward him, her hand outstretched, longing to touch him once more.
"Don't!"
The warning was sharp enough to halt her, though Forral's voice had been
gentle. He shook his head, his expression one of deepest sorrow. "You
can't touch me, lass. I'm breaking rules as it is, coming to you like
this." He smiled ruefully. "We were never ones for rules, were we,
you and I?"
"But
I want to be with you!" Her voice caught on a sob.
"I
know. Oh, my dearest love, how I've missed you! But I don't begrudge you your
life, and that of our child. Besides, you bear a grave responsibility. The
times ahead won't be easy, love, but I know you'll manage." His face shone
with pride for her. "You've the courage and determination to succeed, you
and young Anvar."
Forral's
words grew gradually fainter as he spoke. His shade seemed to be dissolving,
drifting away from her like smoke on the wind. "Don't leave me!"
Aurian cried in anguish, as his image faded.
"I'm
being called back."
His
voice was distant now. "Take care of our babe, love . . . Remember ... I
love you . . . But I'm gone . . ."
"No!"
Aurian flung herself forward to the space where he had stood. "I love you
too, Forral," she whispered. Leaning her head against the cool, tingling
wall of the building, she gave way to her heartache, her body shaking with
sobs.
Aurian
never knew how long she wept there. But it was not long. As her tears fell on
the smooth wall of green crystal, the humming began to increase in volume and
pitch. The Mage, her thoughts filled with Forral, never noticed—until a door
snapped open abruptly in the stone beneath her, pitching her headlong inside.
"Oh!"
Aurian sat up, wiped her eyes, and looked around. She was in a wide corridor
that had been carved out of the gem. Its interior glowed with a dim green light.
The air was stale, and heavy with an oddly spicy scent, but it was freshening
rapidly
as the cold, thin air of the plateau whispered through the open portal. Once
again she felt the living mind within this place, the sense of an alien power
that tugged at her, urging her farther within. The Mage resisted, wanting only
to remain where she was, to hug the precious memory of her meeting with Forral
to her as she might clutch at a dagger driven into her own breast. But the
power was persistent, and Forral had told her in no uncertain terms that she
had responsibilities.
"Oh,
all right," Aurian muttered ungraciously, groping on the ground for her
staff. "But you'll have to wait until I fix this wretched knee. Whatever
you are, I want both legs under me when I meet you!"
The
Healing was surprisingly easy, and the Mage could have sworn that the
mysterious power was actively helping her. Whether it was true or not, it
reassured her. She stood up, and despite the growing sense of awe that this
strange place engendered, she crept forward into the depths of the building.
Once
again the corridor wound in an ever-climbing spiral. I'm getting sick of this,
Aurian thought. You'd think that once in a while they might vary the design!
Her smile at her own temerity faded abruptly as the passage opened into an
airy, circular chamber: a dead end. The light was brighter now through the
green crystal walls, and she suspected that dawn must be breaking outside. The
floor of the empty hall glittered in the growing illumination, and the Mage saw
that it was inlaid with a delicate mosaic of gold in an intricate whorled
pattern that led both her eyes and her feet to a great sunburst shape in the
center of the room. As Aurian stepped onto it there was a sharp, deafening concussion
like a clap of thunder. She recoiled, throwing up an arm to shield her eyes as
a blinding beam of sunlight, focused by some hidden aperture in the domed
ceiling, shot down to strike her in a blaze of gold.
"Aurian
has gone!" Shia pawed roughly at Anvar, her eyes aflame. "What
happened between you last night, human?"
Anvar
came abruptly awake. "Gods, we have to find her! After last night, there's
no telling what she'll do!"
Wan
dawnlight shone through the crystal walls of their dwelling. Bohan was packing
up the remains of their supper
while
Raven watched wide-eyed from a corner. "What is happening?" she
asked. "What has become of the Mage?"
Anvar
almost choked on his resentment. If she hadn't decided to saddle them with her
problems . . . "Come on, you!" he said harshly, yanking her to her
feet. When they got outside, Shia was already quartering the ground. "Cats
don't usually hunt by scent," she told him, "but I think I can track
her. It looks as though she went into the city."
Gradually
the dazzle faded from her vision. Aurian could see once more—and could scarcely
believe what her eyes were telling her. The hall of the sunburst had vanished
completely, and she stood in a vast chamber that was formed entirely of gold:
walls, floor, and rounded ceiling. In the center was a towering, haphazard heap
of gold and gems, and on top of it— Aurian had to steel herself not to run.
Couched on the jeweled pile, lit by a single ray of buttery sunlight that
streamed through an opening in the apex of the dome, was a huge golden dragon!
The
Mage drew her sword and backed away, looking for a means of escape. There was
none. Apart from the aperture in the high ceiling, the room had no exits at
all. Aurian suffered a nasty moment or two before she noticed that the dragon's
eyes were closed, and that it had not moved an inch since she'd first set eyes
on it. She remembered the devious time trap. The Dragonfolk were famed for
their cunning—could it be feigning sleep to lure her closer?
Nonsense,
Aurian told herself firmly. Why, something that size could catch you in
seconds, if it wanted to take the trouble! Squinting against the flaring golden
light, she peered at the motionless creature, reluctant to go any closer, and
saw at last the reason for its stillness. The bluish glimmer was difficult to
see against the gilded brightness of the dragon's scales, but it was
undoubtedly there. Someone had imprisoned it—taken it out of time using the
same spell that Finbarr had taught her so long ago! Her Magefolk curiosity
winning out, Aurian crept closer to the slumbering monster.
It was
difficult not to be afraid, though she knew that the dragon was helpless. It
was immense, easily big enough to fill the Great Hall of the Academy, Aurian
thought. But it was
beautiful,
with the sun highlighting the elegant lines of its sinuous body. It lay curled
like a sleeping cat, its slender, tapering tail draped across its fearsome
jaws, its vast wings stretched protectively over its treasure. Those wings!
Aurian was fascinated by them. They were ribbed like the wings of a bat, but
between the golden struts was stretched a fragile, translucent membrane
spangled with darkly gleaming scales in a silver network of veining like the
thin wire that bound the grip of her sword. The Mage recalled both Yazour and
Ithalasa saying that dragons fed by absorbing the sun's energy directly through
their wings. It looked as though they had been right.
"Well,
now what?" Her muttered words sounded obscenely loud in the stillness of
the chamber. Aurian fought the conviction that she had been lured here by the
mysterious power for a reason—to do the most foolhardy thing that she had ever
contemplated. She had been deliberately led to this place, but whether it was
for her benefit, that was another matter! Yet when she looked at the
magnificent dragon, she found herself moved to unexpected sympathy. Poor thing,
she thought. How long have you been trapped like that? Well, I only hope you're
grateful . . . Backing away to what she fervently hoped was a safe distance,
Aurian took the staff from her belt and began to unravel the spell.
As she
did so, an intense feeling of Tightness washed over the Mage—a confidence that
suddenly vanished, leaving her weak-kneed, as the dragon raised its head. Huge
faceted eyes of slumbering fire pinned ""her to the spot with an
unblinking stare. The dragon opened its mouth, showing teeth like curved and
gleaming swords—and Aurian's fear turned to sheer delight as the air of the
chamber came alive with light and music. Whirls of pure, ever-changing color
flowed across the ceiling and walls. The air flickered and flashed with
shifting tatters of rainbow. The colors danced and swirled to a music so pure,
so utterly perfect that the Mage's eyes filled with tears. Rounded and
mellifluous but strengthened with an underlying metallic edge, the fluent
cascade of notes was hard and mellow as gold. As Aurian stood, lost in wonder,
her powers were hard at work analyzing, remembering, finding patterns. After a
time, meaning began to emerge from the breathtaking display of light and sound.
This was the speech of the Dragonfolk!
"I
said, who awakens me?" There was an edge of irritation in the fluid fall
of notes, underlaid with a plangent yearning. "Why do you not answer? Are
you the One, come at last?"
After
the dragon's music, Aurian's voice sounded dull and feeble to her ears. "I
don't know," she confessed. "Am I?"
The
dragon seemed to have no trouble understanding her. Its chuckle sent prisms of
light bouncing through the chamber, making the colors tremble and dance.
"You have courage and honesty, at any rate. If you passed the first test
by unsealing the temple door, there is hope, at least!" "/ opened
that door?"
The
creature snorted. "Of course! This temple has been sealed for centuries,
ever since the Dragonfolk quit Dhiammara! Our Wise Ones decided that since we
departed in sorrow, after the Cataclysm, then sorrow would be the key for the
One to unlock our ancient wisdom once more. Your tears were the only thing that
could open that door, Wizard." The dragon cocked its massive head, looking
at her sidelong. "I take it they were your tears?
The
Mage was taken aback. "Well, of course they were! I— I was grieving for
someone very dear to me, who died . . ."
"Grief,
eh? Most appropriate." There was smugness in the dragon's tone.
Aurian
clenched her fists, "I'm glad you think so!" she snapped.
"Personally, I don't find it particularly clever to make use of another's
suffering!"
"Who
are you to question the wisdom pf the Dragonfolk,''" Aurian was flattened
by the dragon's roar. The colored lights of its speech exploded into jagged
shards of white lightning that seared into her vision. The Mage picked herself
up and glared at him, so angered by his bullying arrogance that she forgot to
be afraid. "Who am I?" she cried. "I am Aurian, daughter of
Geraint, Fire-Mage. My father died trying to unlock the secrets of the
Dragonfolk's so-called wisdom, so don't expect me to be impressed with your
powers! Spare me your games, dragon. I have no time for them! The
Magefolk—Wizards, you used to call them—have turned to evil. The Caldron has
been found, and the Nihilim let loose into the world. What, in your infinite
wisdom, do you suggest I do about that?"
The
dragon's eyes flared bright crimson. "Then the ancient prophecies have
come true! You must be the One!"
"The
one? Which one?" Aurian realized that she was shouting. "I don't
understand!"
"I
see that the centuries have done little to moderate the infamous Wizardly
temper," the dragon snapped. It rattled its wings in irritation, sending a
small avalanche of gold and gems cascading musically down its sloping treasure
pile. "I speak of the Sword, you imbecile! Chierannath, Sword of Flame,
whose making was preordained by the greatest of our Seers, to combat the misuse
of the other Great Weapons! You dare speak to me of loss and grief? I, who have
been sundered from my people, from my friends and loved ones, to wait here,
frozen in time, until the Sword should be needed! My task, ignorant one, is to
identify the One for whom it was forged. And now you have come, disturbing my
slumber with your questions and your
puny
rage!"
Aurian
spoke with the calm of deep shock. "Are you saying that the Sword—the
mightiest of the Great Weapons—was crafted centuries before my birth
specifically for m?"
"That
remains to be seen." The dragon sounded skeptical. "I admit that when
I imagined the One, I had more of a ... heroic figure in mind."
"So
you'd be happier if I were some hulking, muscle-bound warrior, would you? Well,
hard luck!"
The
creature's eyes flashed with a dangerous light. "Watch your words. I will
take nr*abuse from a puny, two-legged Wizard!"
Aurian
swallowed hard, remembering the last fix in which her temper had landed her.
The dragon had no right to complain about people being quick to anger!
"Very well," she said. "Assuming I am the One—what happens
now?"
"Assuming
that you are—you will complete the third test, which is to re-create the lost
Staff of Earth."
Aurian
was speechless. Re-create the Staff? Impossible! Doubt slid insidiously into
her mind, and disappointment swamped her. He's right—I can't be the One of whom
he speaks, she thought miserably. But she took a firm grip on her staff and
straightened her spine, knowing that if she gave up without trying, she would
never be able to live with herself.
The
dragon was watching her intently, its curious eyes unblinking. "Well? Do
you intend to stand there gaping forever?"
Damn
you, Aurian thought. "Am I allowed to ask questions?"
He
laughed. "Very good! I may answer three questions— but not the obvious
one. Make them count, Wizard!"
The
Mage remembered what she had heard of the history of the Staff. "I was
told the Staff had been lost during the Cataclysm," she ventured.
"Was it destroyed, then?"
"Yes."
That was all he said.
Don't
do me any favors, Aurian thought sourly. "But," she went on,
"you said re-create—so the powers of the Staff must still exist . .
." In a flash of inspiration she remembered Anvar regaining his powers,
and how the Archmage had stolen them in the first place. She thought of the
crystal door underground that had sapped her powers, and the bracelets of Harihn's
folk . . .
"Was
that a question?" The dragon broke into her train of thought—deliberately,
Aurian was sure.
"No,"
she said hastily, trusting her intuition. "This is my second question: is
the crystal that holds the power of the Staff within this room?"
Starbursts
of light filled the chamber. "Yes!" the dragon sang. "And now
you must locate it."
Aurian
swore a bloodcurdling oath. Now she knew why the dragon had such an
uncomfortable bed. It was a decoy and another test. Somewhere in that pile, indistinguishable
from all the other gems, lay the crystal that she sought. The Mage was
horrified. It'll take years to search through that lot, she thought. Think,
Aurian! There must be a better way! And there was, she realized. Because, by
her nature, she had always been drawn to her father's Fire-magic, she had a
tendency to neglect Eilin's side of her heritage. Now, at last, it would come
into its own.
Grounding
the heel of her staff firmly, the Mage gripped it in both hands and summoned
the powers of Earth: the slow, heavy lives of the mountains and stones, the
soil's fecund womb, the exuberant springing of growing things, and the bright,
brief lives of cj£%tures that crawled or ran, spawning in
f
the
endless cycle of life, death, and ultimate decay from which new life would
spring. By all these and more, which were the essence of its very creation,
Aurian called upon the powers of the Staff of Earth.
And the
powers answered! Aurian's staff almost jerked from her hands, to point at the
heart of the dragon's couch. The serpent-carved wood began to hum and vibrate,
and to blossom with a thick emerald light. The dragon gave a startled squawk
—the most unmusical sound she had heard it make—and scrambled aside wich a
speed that beJied its massive size as its bed began to shift and shudder,
spilling in a glittering cascade f across the chamber. From the center of the
pile an answering ray of green shot upward. Aurian dropped, protecting her
head, as a mighty explosion of gems and gold shot violently outward to rattle
against the walls.
In the
silence that followed, the Mage discovered, to her relief, that she had kept a
firm hold on her tugging staff. She stood up shakily, bruised all over from the
hard-flung treasure, to find the chamber flooded with a rich green light. The
dragon's head snaked out from beneath a protecting wing and she heard the rasp
of air in its throat as it sucked in a huge breath. "Upon my word,"
it said, sounding awed, "you do nothing by halves, Wizard!"
The
staff pointed unerringly to the center of the room. There, in the space that it
had cleared so vigorously for itself, a glowing green gem, about~fhe size of
Aurian's circled finger and thumb, sat in solitary splendor. The Mage
approached it cautiously, narrowing her eyes against the intense emerald
radiance of the stone. She halted an arm's length away, prevented from going
closer by the energy that pulsed from it like a wall of green fire. Not until
she had remade the Staff would that power be tamed and contained so that a Mage
could wield it and survive. But how could it be done? Aurian ran her hands down
her own staff, feeling Anvar's skilled and lively carvings beneath her fingers.
The twin serpents that coiled around it were so lifelike that she could almost
feel them move . . . That gave her an idea . , .
There
was, however, one last thing to settle. Aurian turned to the dragon. "I
want to ask my third question."
The
creature seemed surprised. "Ask, then. But I warn you, I cannot tell you
how to accomplish your task."
"That's
all right. What I want to know is, If I re-create the Staff, do I get to keep
it?"
The
dragon threw back its head and roared—but with laughter, not the rage she had
expected. "Temeritous Wizard! No one ever beat your race for sheer gall!
Yes, you may keep the Staff, for you will have earned it. But be warned—always
be aware of the forces at your command, and the destruction you might wreak.
Never make the mistake that the users of the Caldron have made!"
Approaching
the stone as closely as she dared, Aurian concentrated her powers, not on the
gem itself, but upon her own staff. She passed her hands over the familiar
surface, her fingers tingling and bathed in light as she strove, using the
magic of the living Earth, to breathe life into the wood. Beneath her fingers,
the serpents stirred, their carved eyes winking into sparkling awareness.
Forked tongues flicking in and out, they raised their scaly heads from the
Staff. Aurian bent her will upon them, instructing, commanding. Holding her
staff by its iron-shod heel, she held it out to touch the crystal. The serpents
reached forth and took the stone, grasping it tightly between them in their
fanged jaws.
An
overwhelming surge of force ran up the staff, almost knocking the Mage off her
feet. She swayed, holding on tightly > ablaze with the power of the stone.
She felt her form expanding to embrace the room, the city, the desert . . . She
encompassed the entire world—each stone, each blade of grass, every creature
that drew breath. She was all of them, and they were her, and she gloried with
them in the miracle of their creation! Aurian's cry of triumph rang to the very
stars as she raised aloft the newly created Staff of Earth . . .
Shia
had lost the Mage's trail. Leading the anxious companions through the city, she
had brought them at last to the foot of the towering green cone—and there
Aurian's scent had disappeared. "I don't understand," she told Anvar.
"It reaches this place—then stops."
Anvar
cursed. "Don't be ridiculous! It must be there somewhere, for goodness'
sake U She can't have vanished!"
Shia
glared at him. "Would you like to try?" she said
pointedly.
Anvar
sighed. "I'm sorry, Shia. I don't know what to do, either. We've been all
around this thing, and there isn't an entrance anywhere." He gazed up at
the steep, glassy sides. "And she couldn't have climbed—"
His
words were drowned by the deafening roar of an explosion. The cone blazed with
a piercing viridian light, the entire edifice rocked right down to its
foundations. Anvar and the others were thrown down as the earth cracked and
lurched beneath their feet. A great wind seemed to come from nowhere, howling
and shrieking between the city's buildings and whipping up choking clouds of
dust and debris.
Anvar
struggled unsuccessfully to rise. "She is in there!" he cried, above
the noise of the sudden storm. "She must be! Great Gods, what has she done
this time?"
34
EARTHQUAKE!
nvar
pressed his body flat to the ground as the earth shuddered and heaved. Nearby
he could see the others, all similarly flattened by the force of the tearing
gale and the quaking surface beneath them. He choked on the wind-borne dust,
and rubbed his streaming eyes to see Raven nearby. The winged girl, unable to fly
in the storm, was whey-faced and weeping with terror. Even as he watched, a
gust caught her beneath her wings and half lifted her from the ground, rolling
her over and over. Bohan grabbed her wrist as she slid past, his weight
providing an anchor for the winged girl who caught at his clothes with her free
hand and clung to him, her face contorted in a silent shriek.
A
hideous grating sound from above his head drew Anvar's attention upward. Before
his horrified eyes, a network of gaping cracks snaked up the tower's green
sides. "We have to get away from here!" he screamed, trying to
scramble to his feet only to be thrown down again by the keening wind that
snatched his words away.
Shia,
because of their mental link, was the only one who heard him. "How?"
The one word was harsh with fear.
The
cracks were widening, and to his dismay, Anvar saw that nearby buildings were
suffering the same fate. The circle of destruction was spreading out from the
tower to engulf not only the entire city, but the tortured bones of the
mountain itself. He flung himself to one side, as the ground tore apart beneath
him in a widening fissure. Too late! Anvar screamed as the earth crumbled
beneath him, pitching him headfirst into the yawning chasm whose edges were
already closing back together.
Pain
shot up his leg as a strong grip closed around his ankle. Anvar lurched to a
halt, dangling upside down over the closing gap. Faint as he was with terror,
he hardly felt his other ankle being seized, knowing only that he was being
pulled to safety as the jagged lip of the chasm gouged painfully into his
stomach and ribs, ripping his thin desert robe. The grinding edges of rock
snapped ^shut, missing his trailing fingers by
inches.
He felt himself being hauled roughly to his feet—and came face-to-face with
Aurian.
"Get
inside!" She shoved him toward a doorway—an aperture in the face of the
green tower that had not been there before. Shia was crouched inside, her face
creased in a snarl. Bohan, fighting the gale with all his strength, was tugging
the winged girl toward
the entrance. Anvar felt Aurian's arm around him, forcing his
faltering steps up the spiral corridor that wound into the heart of the
disintegrating building. With a quick glance back to see that the others were
following, she dragged him forward. Choking showers of green dust fell from the
crazed ceiling above, blinding them. Anvar's feet slid and stumbled as chunks
of emerald erupted from the cracking floor. Aurian suddenly halted, cursing,
and he saw that the way was blocked by a cave-in. Before Anvar could blink, the
Mage had raised her free hand, holding something that blazed with a dazzling
green light. There was a blinding flash, an explosion of magic that knocked him
clean off his feet, and the passage was clear once more. Aurian wrenched him
upright, almost pulling his arm from its socket, but Anvar pulled back,
frightened by the unbelievable intensity of the power he had just witnessed.
"What was that?" he shrieked.
"Staff
of Earth," Aurian replied brusquely, as if it were the most normal thing
in the world, "Come on!"
The
Mage hauled the astounded Anvar along until they entered a circular charnjjer
where a golden mosaic glinted through the fallen dust on the floor. Pulling him
across the chamber at a half run, she pushed him against the far wall. His
heart lurched as he felt himself falling—he put out his arms to save
himself—and his hands passed straight through the stone as his body was gripped
by the viscous substance of a portal like
the one
in the oasis.
Once he
had passed through into the darkness beyond, familiarity gave Anvar the
presence of mind to scramble out of the way of the entrance, so as not to
impede the others. Shia was next—he could feel her coat, gritty with dust as
she brushed past him, spitting and snarling—followed by an hysterical Raven.
The winged girl was shrieking at the top of her voice and striking out blindly
in terror. A flailing wingtip caught Anvar in the face as she struggled, but
though he wanted to
reassure
her, he was wheezing helplessly, unable to catch his breath, and crippled by a
stitch in his side. He felt a warm, sticky trickle of blood down his ribs and
belly where the skin had been torn on the edge of the chasm. Like all flesh wounds,
the abrasions stung furiously, exacerbated by the sweat that drenched his body.
Though he was stunned by Aurian's revelation, all he could see was the jaws of
the chasm closing . . . closing . . .
Raven's
struggles had ceased. Bohan was comforting her with his silent, solid presence.
The chamber was becoming cramped with a further pressure of bodies as Aurian
joined them. "Cover your eyes!" Her voice rang through the darkness.
The flash of Magelight was visible even through Anvar's closed eyelids and
shielding hands, but for a dreadful moment nothing happened. He fought a
stifling panic, imagining himself trapped and crushed within the collapsing
tower. Suddenly, after what seemed an eternity, his stomach leapt into his
throat as the chamber began to lurch unsteadily downward in a series of
shuddering jerks. "Thank goodness! I thought we'd left it too late, for a
minute." Aurian's matter-of-fact voice was like balm. With a sigh of
relief, Anvar let himself slip into oblivion.
"There,
my friend—does that feel better?" It did. The damp cloth was soft and cool
against Anvar's face, washing away the gritty dust that clogged his eyes and
mouth. He opened his eyes, and saw the plump, comforting face of Eliizar's
wife. "Aurian, he wakes," she called.
Anvar
was reassured by the cheerful ring in her voice— until he saw the Mage. Aurian
had changed\ She filled the whole of his consciousness, looking taller,
fiercer, more vibrant and more beautiful than he had ever seen her, glowing
from within with an awesome power that surrounded her like a cloak of light,
Anvar swallowed hard. This was a Goddess—some mighty Queen out of legend! This
was not his Aurian!
"What—what
happened to you?" He got the words out with difficulty, awed by her
presence and fighting an urge to shrink away from her. "You're
different*."
Aurian
shook her head. "It's the same old me, I'm afraid. Do I look so
dreadful?" Her smile was replaced by a fleeting frown. __
"No.
Not dreadful." Somehow, her uncertainty was reassuring to Anvar.
"Magnificent!"
The
Mage grimaced. "And that's given everyone such a shock? Eliizar nearly
fainted away at the sight of me."
Anvar
knew she was evading his question. "What happened to you?" he
persisted.
"Don't
you remember? I found it, Anvar! The Staff of Earth!" From a fold in her
robe, where its dazzling light had been concealed, Aurian produced the
Staff—and Anvar quailed ' from the power that pulsed through its slender,
glowing length. This was the source of the fire that imbued the Mage. But . . .
Anvar frowned. Those were his carvings—he'd know them anywhere. It was Aurian's
old staff—but changed. At the top, where there had been no ornamentation, the
twin heads of the serpents reared up, holding between them, in their open jaws,
a green gem whose incandescence could outshine the very sun. Anvar shielded his
eyes, unable to look directly at the
brilliant
stone.
Aurian
tucked the Staff back into her robe, shielding its light. "When I learn to
control it properly . . ." She spoke calmly, but her eyes blazed with a
savage excitement. "At last we'll have a weapon against Miathan!"
Anvar
shuddered, suddenly afraid, thinking of the earthquake that had almost killed
them all, and remembering what the Archmage had done with the Caldron. Would
Aurian create such ruin in her pursuit of revenge?
Anvar
noticed that Aurian's face was taut with strain. She was struggling to keep her
voice light and calm as she continued, speaking too quickly to give him a
chance to interrupt. "I Healed those scrapes of yours—they were full of
dirt from the edge of that chasm—so you're bound to feel drained for a while.
Nereni will get us something to eat, and I'm going to awaken Raven now. She was
so hysterical that I put her to sleep for a while. Before she wakes I want to
try to do something about language. She can understand us, but now we're back
with the others, there'll be problems. If I can fix it for her to understand
the speech of the Khazalim, we'll all be able to communicate." "Can
you do that?" Anvar was
surprised. "Well—I've never heard
of such a thing being tried before, but I think I could manage. Remember, her
people were Magefolk before
they
lost their powers. The understanding of languages should lie within her—if only
I can free it." But before he could speak again, Aurian was gone.
"Are
you well?" Nereni sounded anxious. Anvar had forgotten she was there.
"Just tired," he told her.
Nereni
nodded. "No wonder you were shaken," she said. "Down here, we
thought the mountain was about to collapse!" With a worried frown, she
glanced across at Eliizar, who was tending Shia and Bohan. Though they seemed
little the worse for their experiences, the Swordmaster's face was ashen.
"Anvar."
Nereni hesitated. "What did happen up there? What caused the earthquake?
Aurian has changed—enough to frighten Eliizar out of his wits when you came
through the wall at the back of the cavern."
So that
was where they had come out! Anvar had been wondering how Aurian had brought
them back. "Weren't you afraid of her?" he asked, avoiding her
questions.
Nereni
shrugged. "I hardly know—I was so relieved to see you all, I never thought
..." She smiled confidingly. "Sometimes, I think women are more
practical than men—but never let Eliizar hear that I said so! Anyway, you must
eat. I will prepare us some food, then perhaps you will tell me how you found
that one!" She gestured at Raven, who was awake now, and conversing
quietly with Aurian in, Anvar noted with surprise, the language of the Khazalim.
I would never have believed she could do it, he thought, and shuddered
inwardly, wondering what other powers might now be at the Mage's disposal.
After a
time Aurian persuaded Raven to meet the others around the fire, and Anvar was
relieved to see the winged girl responding gratefully to Nereni's mothering.
While they ate, night fell across the desert outside. Aurian looked across at
Anvar. "I think the time has come to tell our friends what brought us to
the South."
With
that, she began to give the others a brief history of Miathan's perfidy, which
had brought herself and Anvar to the Southern Lands. Anvar noted that she had
omitted all mention of Forral, and the fact that the two Mages were not wedded
as they claimed, and wondered. But perhaps she was right. It did
546 •
MAGGIE FuRty •
no
harm, and given the customs of these people, surely it was more convenient to
keep up the charade for a little longer? Without giving anyone time to speak,
she plunged on into what had happened within the mountain, and how she had come
to possess the Staff of Earth.
Anvar
was certain that Aurian was leaving things out of this part of her tale. They
had become so close after she had saved his life in the slave camp that he
instinctively knew when she was hiding something. He felt a growing sense of
unease. Why had Aurian left out what had happened after they'd parted that
night? What had drawn her to the emerald tower? She claimed that the door had
opened when she had leaned on it. A complete fabrication—he knew as much from
trying the same thing himself. Anvar struggled with his suspicion. What was she
trying to conceal?
"Then
the dragon said I had proved that the Sword was crafted for me." Aurian's
words brought Anvar abruptly out of his worried thoughts. "You have the
Sword?"
The
Mage shook her head. "It was sent into hiding. The Dragonfolk gave it to
the Phaerie to take beyond the world. If the Seers were correct, they'll return
it when word of this new evil reaches them. The dragon told me I must find it,
and circumvent the traps set to guard it. He said that the Phaerie have an
incentive to fulfill their side of the bargain, and when the Sword is returned
to the world, its presence should draw me to it sooner or later." ^
Silence
followed het words. All eyes were riveted on the Mage. Anvar tried to meet her
eyes, but she bit her lip and looked away. "What about the missing parts
of the story?" he demanded. "How did you get into that tower? How did
you know to go there in the first place? If this dragon exists, where is he
now? And, more to the point, what did you do to cause the destruction of the
city?"
"Are
you calling me a liar?" Aurian's voice was dangerously quiet. Anvar saw
hurt and disappointment on the Mage's face, and knew that he was being hard on
her, and unfair perhaps. But he had to know the truth. The Staff was to
powerful to risk her becoming corrupted, as Miathan had been with the Caldron.
Thinking of that, he became uncomfortably aware of the others listening to his
words. Eliizar's face was
rigid
with fear and mistrust at all this talk of sorcery, and suddenly Anvar
understood the age-old Magefolk compulsion to keep their business to
themselves. This was between himself and Aurian. "We need to talk,"
he told her in a low voice, using their own language—but his words were drowned
by the staccato ring of hooves on stone. Anvar turned to see the veiled and
shadowy figure of a lone horseman riding through the cavern entrance, ducking
low to avoid the lintel, the draft of his passage making the torches flicker
and smoke. Eliizar let out a whoop of joy. "Yazour!"
They
crowded round the young captain, all talking at once, other considerations
forgotten for the moment. Yazour loosed the string of horses he had been leading,
and the thirsty beasts, used to the ways of Dhiammara, made their way up the
ramp to the upper pool, taking their burdens with them. Nereni persuaded
everyone to stop crowding the tired man long enough for him to sit by the fire,
where they all crowded around him again, their faces expectant.
Yazour
took a grateful swig from the water sack and rubbed a hand over his dusty and
unshaven face, looking round at them all. "All here—including our missing
Lady! I see you found the supplies, then—And who is this?" He looked
won-deringly at Raven, who smiled back shyly.
Eliizar
grinned, plainly much more at ease now that another warrior had returned.
"I win our wager," he told Yazour, "You see—the Winged Folk da
exist!'1
"Indeed
they do—and if you had told me they were so pretty, Eliizar, I would have been
climbing those very mountains even now, in search of them!"
Raven
blushed crimson, and Anvar, despite his troubles, had to smile.
"I
wish I had come sooner," Yazour was saying, "but I had my oath of
loyalty . . ."He shook his head sadly, "It was a difficult decision
to make, but I was so sickened by what the Khisal had done— Well, in the end I
could stand it no longer. I knew I had to come back for you. I persuaded the
guard to turn a blind eye while I slipped away—I knocked the man out, to spare
him Harihn's wrath when my escape was discovered—and traveled back as
quic4*ljft as I could."
"There's
no chance of the Prince following you?" Aurian's voice was sharp with
concern.
Yazour
shook his head, his face gone suddenly bleak. "Even Harihn is not that
stupid—he'll save his own hide. You see, we are in grave danger, my Lady. The
weather has changed out of season, and we must leave first thing tomorrow night
and cross the desert as quickly as we can. It will be a difficult crossing— we
are ill equipped with what little I could bring—but we must make all haste, for
our lives' sake. The sandstorms will be upon us at any time, and if we cannot
reach safety before they
arrive
. . ."
This
had to be Eliseth's work! Anvar clenched his fists. The Magefolk had absolutely
no concern for the innocent lives that might be—had already been—lost in the
process of Aurian's destruction! And it only served to heighten his concern
over Aurian. What would she be capable of, now that she wielded this new power?
He glanced at her as she sat, intently discussing plans with Yazour. What had
happened to the trust they shared? Why had she lied?
There
was no opportunity, in the excitement of Yazour's return, for Anvar to speak to
the Mage, but at last, after dawn had broken, everyone lay down to rest in
preparation for the journey ahead. Aurian had been avoiding him all night, and
now she chose to lie down on the other side of their group beside Shia. Anvar
found himself missing her presence by his side, and cursed himself Jfor a fool.
But though he wanted to stay awake in order to tackle her in private about the
discrepancies in her story, his eyes refused to stay open, and before long
he was
fast asleep.
Some
inner prompting awakened Anvar. Some vague, unconnected feeling of distress
drew him out of sleep while the bright midday sunlight still reflected through
the mouth of the cave. He opened his eyes and sat up, and saw that Aurian was
missing. The Mage was not far away. Anvar found her seated alone by the pool,
wracked with sobbing, the knuckles of one hand pressed to her mouth as she wept
with the brokenhearted abandon of a hurt child. Concern and pity overwhelmed
him, and in that moment Anvar knew that whatever she had become, whatever she
might do with her new and awesome power, he could not help but love her.
AURIAN
-549
Aurian,
lost in her misery, barely reacted to Anvar's presence as he sat beside her.
"Don't cry," he murmured, not knowing how to comfort her. "It's
all right—I'm here."
"What
if you are—you think I'm a liar!"
Anvar
recoiled from the venom in Aurian's voice. Aware of her raw emotions, he forced
himself to sound calm. "It wouldn't be the first time I've been wrong
about you. You've been proving me wrong ever since we met, I'm glad to
say." She looked at him then, a pleading look that went to his heart like
a dagger. He tried to gather her into his arms, but she pushed him away.
"The
dragon," she began shakily, all in a rush, without looking at him,
"you wanted to know about the dragon. Well, he's dead. I killed him—as I
destroyed the city." Anvar forced himself to remain silent, knowing better
than to interrupt her now that she had started to speak.
Aurian
was struggling to keep her voice under control. "The city, Anvar, it
wasn't there at all. What we saw—what we experienced—was the distant past. When
the Dragonfolk left Dhiammara they destroyed it, but locked it in time, in the
instant of its destruction—until the wielder of the Sword should come. Once
that happened, the spell was freed and the city began to collapse." Her
voice choked on a sob. "I wanted to help the dragon. I wanted to take him
out of time again, but he wouldn't let me. He said he had chosen to stay
behind, and now that I had come, his task was done." A tear rolled down
her cheek. "He wasn't lovable, Anvar, he was arrogant and sly and
ill-tempered, but . . . Oh, he was beautiful and clever—and he spoke in music
and light! He had waited so long, and for all we know, he could have been the
last of his kind, and it was my fault . . ." Aurian began to cry again,
hiding her face in her hands. "I never even asked him his name . . ."
"Hush,
silly." Anvar stroked the Mage's hair. He was grieved by her grief but at
the same time he felt almost lightheaded with relief. How could this woman, who
could mourn the death of beauty and courage and self-sacrifice, turn to evil?
"It wasn't your fault," he comforted her. "You didn't choose to
be the one he was waiting for. This path was set out for you, for all of us.
The drago^ was right, Aurian. He died centuries
before
our time. What you saw was a ghost, if you like—in a
city of
ghosts."
With a
half-articulated curse Aurian turned to stare at him, her eyes wild and wide,
one hand held up before her mouth. "How did you know about that?"
"Whatever
it is, I don't. Do you want to tell me?"
"I
don't want to! You'll think I'm lying again!"
"Look,
I was wrong—"
Aurian
hushed him with a brusque motion of her hand. "This power we're dealing
with—well, you were right to be concerned. The temptation to fall into evil as
Miathan did is great, and we must guard each other constantly. That's why I
should have told you everything. It's just that—I couldn't, before. It hurt too
much. But . . ." In a low, shaking voice, she told him of her meeting with
the specter of Forral, and how it led her to the green tower.
Anvar
was speechless with dismay. Portal's ghost, haunting them—watching them. He
shuddered, not wanting to accept this, not wanting to believe . . . Somehow he
found his voice. "Aurian, forgive me, but are you sure you didn't imagine
this?" "How could I, you ass? Forral led me to the tower! How else
could I have found it so quickly? I knew you wouldn't
believe
me!"
"I
do believe you—and I'm sorry I doubted you before." He swallowed hard.
"I wish I hadn't made you tell me, that's all. It scares me, Aurian."
"After
what I said to yt»u the night I saw Forral—" Aurian looked away from him,
twisting at the corner of the blanket.
"That
has nothing to do with it—"
"Anvar,"
she interrupted him determinedly, "I owe you an apology for that. We all
played our parts in that terrible business—you, me, Forral himself—though it
hurts to admit it. But I truly don't hold you responsible for his death, and
neither does he—I know that now. What else could you have done? You couldn't
have fought the Archmage on your own! The way Forral reacted—and Miathan—that
wasn't your fault! You were
trying
to help!"
Anvar
sighed. "I only wish I could so easily exonerate myself for what I did
that night."
"Is
that why you came with me? Guilt?" Her voice was
sharp.
Anvar ran his ringers distractedly through his hair, not wanting to continue,
but somehow compelled to answer her question. "At first it was—guilt and
fear, to be frank. Later, after you saved me in the slave camp, I told myself
it was loyalty and gratitude." He looked into the Mage's eyes. "But I
was wrong. Now I want nothing else but to be with you, to take care of you and
the child."
"The
child?" The two words contained a world of questions.
"I
care about the child because I owe Forral a debt, but also because—well, I feel
there's a bond between us. It's like me, the offspring of a Mage and a Mortal,
not quite one thing or the other. I know how that feels, Aurian, and though it
can't be the child of my body, it is the child of my heart—not least because of
what I feel for its mother."
Aurian
looked at him wonderingly. "I never knew. Somehow I never thought of it
like that."
"You
don't mind?" Anvar held his breath.
She
shook her head. "How could I mind? Besides, with my powers due to leave me
. . . well, I'm not ashamed to admit that I need you, Anvar, we both do."
At long last she smiled, and Anvar had to steel himself not to ruin their
fragile bond by kissing her then and there. Instead he hugged her and ruffled
her hair, trying to mask the tenderness in his voice with briskness.
"Well, now we've settled that, I suggest we get some sleep. It'll be time
to leave soon."
Anvar
awoke at dusk, with Aurian asleep in his arms. In her unguarded slumber the
glory of the Staff had dimmed, and she looked worn and vulnerable, and all too
human. Beneath the thin blanket, the slight bulge of her pregnancy could now be
seen, and he felt awash with tenderness for the Mage and her unborn child.
Wayward tendrils of her hair, which she had never been able to control since
she'd cut it, straggled across her face, moving gently with the rhythm of her breathing.
Anvar smiled, thinking of her hair when it had hung past her waist in a cascade
of fiery crimson, and how he had combed it for her the night that Forral had
died. How wonderful its silken weight had felt, running through his fingers! I
loved her then, he thought. I loved her, and couldn't admit it to myself. How
could I, as nothing bu*4wr servant? How dare I admit it now?
-
She'll never love me, he thought sadly, not with all that stands between us—the
memory of the past, and the ghost of Forral shadowing our lives. If I had not
gone to him that night, he might still be alive now. No matter how Aurian
excuses it, how could I ever expect her to love me after that? In that moment,
as he looked down at the sleeping Mage, Anvar's decision crystallized. I still
owe her a debt, he thought. A debt of blood, for Forral's life. Even if it
costs me my own life, that debt must be repaid—and one day, I'll find a way to
do it.
Anvar
reached out, as though touching her would seal his vow, and gently brushed the
wayward curls from the Mage's face. To his dismay she stirred, opening her
eyes, and he snatched his hand back as though he had been burned as the raw
power of the Staff of Earth blazed into life within her once more. But already
she was learning to control it. Even as he watched, the glory dimmed as she
strove to contain it within
herself.
Aurian
sighed. "Morning already?" she murmured sleepily. Anvar glanced
toward the mouth of the cavern, wishing that they need not always be so driven,
longing for some time alone with her. But such a luxury seemed as unattainable
as the moon. "Nightfall, I think," he told her. "We had better
wake the others. It's time to go."
The
remainder of the journey across the desert took a score of days, some of the worst
days that Aurian could remember. Ever wary of the imminetite of the storms,
Yazour pushed them hard, driving the companions and their horses to the limits
of their endurance. Aurian found herself envying Raven, who had flown on ahead,
following the string of oases to reach safety at the desert's edge as fast as
she could. Since Yazour had been unable to bring any tents for them, the
companions were forced to spend the broiling hours of daylight in the open,
shaded by makeshift shelters of blankets and with their eyes, and those of the
horses, bound in layers of cloth to filter the blinding glare. They had no pack
animals, so food and water were tightly rationed and everyone suffered badly
from hunger and thirst.
Worst
of all, there was the unrelenting heat. During the earlier part of their
journey, there had always been the restless night breeze to cool them as they
traveled, but this had ceased
with
the weather's unseasonal change, turning the desert into a suffocating oven.
Each night the day's stored heat rose in a wave from the desert floor to engulf
the riders, leaving the air turgid and stifling. The encrusted coats of the
horses were dark and soaked with sweat, and their breathing, clogged by clouds
of gem dust, came thick and wheezing from their laboring chests. The riders
were drenched in sweat that ran stingingly into their eyes beneath their
cloying veils, sweat that left their desert robes clinging clammily to their
bodies as the life-giving moisture was lost to the dry desert air.
Shia,
with the thick furred coat of a mountain dweller, suffered badly. At least the
others were able to ride, but she was forced to lope along behind the horses on
her own legs. Built for short bursts of speed, she was finding the grueling race
across the burning sands almost beyond her endurance. In addition to her
dreadful weariness and thirst, her paws became raw and blistered from the
friction of the hot gem dust, and before long, she was leaving a track of
bloody prints behind her as she ran.
Only
her love of the Mage kept her going. And each day, when Aurian should have been
resting to conserve her own energy, she spent herself in Healing the exhausted
and suffering cat, trying to lend Shia enough of her own faltering strength to
continue. Anvar, who was looking increasingly worried as time went on, did his
best to help, but he was no Healer, and his efforts were of little practical
use except that they loaned the Mage an increment of strength to keep her going
from day to day.
As time
went on, Aurian became more and more frantic. The crossing of the desert was a
race against time, and she knew she was losing. Her body was beginning to grow
ungainly now with her advancing pregnancy, and already she was finding riding
more uncomfortable. Even with the Staff of Earth, she knew that she was
overtaxing her own fading powers, and because of this, they were failing
rapidly. Soon they would vanish completely, and—Whenever she thought of it, she
was overwhelmed by a wave of choking panic. How could she help Shia then? How
could she safeguard herself and her child, and defend her friends from the evil
of the Archmage and his cohort Eliseth? —
*
The
worst of it was, that under the Law of the Desert, Shia ought to be abandoned.
On the worst days, the cat even begged them to do it, gazing pitifully up at
the two Mages with eyes that were distant and glazed, and pleading with them to
leave her, or put her out of her misery. Aurian would grit her teeth,
forbidding Anvar with her steely glare to tell the others what Shia had said.
But they were already thinking it—she could see it in Nereni's frequent tears,
and in the guilty way that Eliizar and Yazour were avoiding her eyes. Even
Bohan, her loyal tower of strength, was beginning to look uncomfortable, and
eventually, she knew, she would have Anvar to contend with. Although he had so
far refused to press her on the subject, knowing how much Shia meant to her,
she knew that his concern for herself and the child were pushing him toward the
unthinkable option. All that Aurian could do was to expend herself mercilessly,
forcing herself with the entire strength of her indomitable will to defy them
all, to keep Shia going somehow until the end of the journey.
They
were still a few days from the desert edge when the worst happened, and Aurian
finally succumbed to the heat and her own exhaustion. The others, having always
lived in this hot climate, had been able to endure the broiling temperatures,
and Anvar had built up a certain amount of resistance from his grueling
captivity in the slave camp. Aurian, however, had been cossetted; first as one
of the Arena's chosen, and then in the cool comfort of Harihn's palac?. Even
so, she might have managed— except that she was driving herself beyond the ends
of endurance. Each day her suffering grew worse, until at last she was overcome
by what Yazour called the heat sickness.
Though
her robes clung stickily to her body, Aurian was
wracked
by shivers. Her head pounded, and she was dizzy and
nauseated,
unable to keep down any food and too weak and
fevered
to heal herself. All she could do was cling desperately to
the
pommel of her saddle, and try to stay on her horse. By the
time
they reached the last oasis, Anvar had to lift her down, and
she was
barely aware that he did so. But as he laid her gently on
the
ground, the Mage was prevented from sinking into wel
come
oblivion by a cry that echoed in her mind—a faint, pitiful
rrv for
help. Aurian tried to sit up, brushing feebly at Anvar's
restraining
hands, ignoring the pain that lanced through her head. "Shia!" she
gasped. "Where's Shia?"
It took
a great deal of determination on Anvar's part to persuade Yazour to go back and
find Shia, but Aurian became so frantic that finally the warrior relented. It
was an hour before he returned, with the great cat slung limply across the
shoulders of his faltering and terrified horse. In the meantime, Nereni had
been sponging the Mage's fevered body with cool water from the oasis, while
Bohan brought her water—as much as she could keep down. Anvar had been pacing
back and forth, coming to look at Aurian then striding back to peer out across
the dunes, his dusty face furrowed with concern as he cursed himself for not
being able to help the Mage, and also for being so worried about her that he
had forgotten Shia, He helped Bohan lift the cat down from the trembling horse
and laid her by Aurian's side, stroking the sleek black head now dulled and
harsh with dust, hearing the faint rasp of her tortured breathing.
After a
moment Shia opened her eyes, their light a dim echo of its former golden glory.
Her thought was as nebulous in his mind as a fading wisp of smoke.
"Goodbye,"
Anvar
clasped her bleeding paws, feeling the spark of life within the great cat
flicker, feeling the beating of her great heart beginning to falter.
"Goodbye—my friend," he whispered.
"Goodbye
be damned!" Aurian-'s voice cracked across Anvar's grief like a slap in
the face. He dashed the mist of tears from his vision to see her sitting up,
her eyes smoldering grimly, her face pale but resolute. Before he could stop
her, she had reached across to Shia, linking herself irrevocably fo the great
creature,
"No!"
Anvar caught the Mage's limp body as it slipped sideways, freed from the
control of the mind that was far away in an unbreakable trance as it fought to
keep Shia's soul within her failing body. Helpless and desperate, he clutched
her, unable to reach her, his heart gripped by icy dread. He knew what she was attempting—had
she not done the same for him in the slave camp, when she had sought his
fleeing spirit and brought it safely home? But this, time she was weakened,
exhausted, and
ill.
And she would have no strength left to return. Frantically, he cast forth his
mind as Aurian had taught him, seeking her, trying to find even a slight trace
of her passing. But though he searched and searched, he knew that she was lost
to him.
"Anvar!"
A dim echo, the voice penetrated faintly into his consciousness, pulling him
back. A hand was shaking roughly at his shoulders. To his surprise, Anvar saw
the western horizon burning with the last traces of sunset light. He'd been
gone that long? Fear snagged at his breathing, but then he felt the faint
movement of breath in the body that was still clutched in his cramped and
aching arms, saw an answering lift of the great cat's ribs. They still lived,
then—and Aurian was still fighting. Yazour let go of his shoulders, squatting
before him in the open mouth of the makeshift shelter of blankets that had been
rigged over himself, Shia, and the Mage.
"By
all the Gods ever spawned, man, I've been frantic! I thought we'd lost you
all!" Yazour's face betrayed a mixture of relief, concern, and annoyance.
"What happened, Anvar? What can we do? Have you seen the sky? The storms
will be upon us. at any time." He gestured at the western sky that was
hazed and fuzzy on the horizon, and shot through with spars of lurid j orange
light. * Anvar's voice grated in his
parched throat, but his words fell strangely calm upon his own ears.
"Aurian is linked with Shia—we can't move them. You'll have to leave us,
Yazour. Take the others and go QQW, make a dash for safety while you still can.
Save your own lives."
"And
will you come with us?" Yazour's voice was very
quiet.
Anvar
knew there was no hope; he could do nothing now, to help the Mage and Shia.
Already they were as good as dead. The sensible thing would be to go with the
others, to save himself and the Staff of Earth—and take the fight back to
Miathan in Aurian's name. He knew it all too well—he even knew that the Mage
would want him to do so—but he looked down at Aurian's still form, and
remembered his anguish in Dhaimmara, when he thought she had died within the
crystal of the spider-creature. He remembered the terror that had pierced him
when the great stone had fallen in the tunnel, and how he had flung himself
beneath to die with her, rather than
be
tortured again by her loss. The Mage's breast still rose and fell, in that
shallow parody of life. He knew, better than anyone, the strength of her
stubborn will. How could he abandon her while yet she lived? How could he go
through the years, knowing that he had left her, helpless, in the desert of a
foreign land?
Anvar
looked at Yazour, and shook his head. "Don't be stupid," he said.
Chapter 35
THE
WELL OF SOULS
he door
was ancient, its thick weathered wood as gray _——— and heavy as a block of
stone, the time-blunted carvings on its panels obscured by the weight of years.
As Anvar put a hand to it, vague shapes and intertwining patterns seemed to
leap out at him, outlined in silvery Magefire—fire that leapt sizzling from his
fingers, turning his hand into a blazing torch. Anvar flinched, sickened by the
sight of his own bones shining darkly through the incandescent flesh, but he
felt no sense of heat or pain. Soundlessly, the door swung open, and he stepped
through. As he took his fingers from the panels, the fire in his hand was
snuffed out, shrouding his surroundings in shadowy
gloom.
Shimmering
gray mist coiled around him, cutting off his vision as effectively as a
curtain. Then, like a curtain, it parted to reveal a stooped figure whose form
was obscured by a hooded gray cloak. The apparition held a staff in one hand,
leaning on it in a way that gave the impression of great age. In its other hand
a shuttered lantern cast a single, silvery ray upon the white, gleaming-wet
pebbles of a path. As the vision turned its head, Anvar caught the intelligent
gleam of a piercing dark eye, and the fuzz of a grizzled beard within the
shadows of the cowl. In that moment, the old "man seemed as familiar as
though Anvar had known him always, yet he could not recall having met him, or
anyone like him, in his life. In fact, he realized with a shiver, he could not
remember anything. He frowned. How had he come to be here? Where had he come
from? As though he could hear Anvar's confused thoughts, the old man gave him
an encouraging smile, and beckoned to him to follow. At first the path led
through a narrow, steep-sided cutting. Drooping trees overshadowed the way,
forming a tunnel, and the high banks on each side were stacked with rounded
mossy boulders and the feathery green fountains of ferns. The air was soft with
clinging moisture, and musked with the scents of leaf mold, wild garlic, and
wet greenery. Anvar felt the tension in his breast beginning to relax as he
took deep breaths. The
AUR1AN •
559
damp,
fragrant air was such a relief after the scorching desert ...
The
desert! Anvar stopped dead, straining to catch at the fleeting memory. He'd
been in the desert, and— The old man caught his arm, with a warning shake of
his head. The very tension of his body implied a desperate urgency. Hurry, he
seemed to be saying. No time for such thoughts. He let go of Anvar and
lengthened his stride, the faint gleam of his lantern vanishing rapidly in the
misty dusk. Anvar, panic-stricken at the thought of losing his only guide in
this strange, fey place, hurried to catch up.
With a
suddenness that took Anvar's breath away, the narrow track opened out into a
valley. The clinging murk vanished, leaving only a silken, silvery ground mist
that swirled underfoot, displaced by his soundless passage and that of his pilgrim
guide. Catching a brief glimpse of the ground beneath his feet, Anvar realized
that the path had vanished, and he was walking on a short, crisp carpet of
turf. Above him, millions of stars speckled the velvet night, and the rounded
curves of hills rose on either side, shouldering against one another and
standing out as blacker humps against the star-crazed heavens. The silence wove
a tangible spell around the mist-wreathed vale as Anvar, with no memory of the
past or thoughts of the future, trailed after the hunched and shrouded figure
with the lantern, as though this following were what he had been born to do.
The
grove loomed out of the darkness as though it had materialized from a dream,
holding for Anvar an eerie familiarity. But surely he had never set foot in
this weird, unearthly place before—except, perhaps, in dreams. The huddle of
ancient trees bowed in upon one another as if to conceal a mystery; as though
they whispered secrets to each other through the endless night. For an instant
the thought of the desert flashed again into Anvar's mind. To his horror the
scene before him began to ripple and distort, as though he had dropped a stone
into the cogent, fathomless well of the trees' meditations. He held up his
hand, and found it becoming vaporous, insubstantial; the dark skeletal outlines
of the trees were clearly visible through the fading flesh.
The old
man swung round sharply with a warning hiss— the first sound that AQvar had
heard him make. His breath
s6o •
MAGGIE
puffed
out in a cloud before his face, spangling his bushy, graying beard with
droplets that winked like stars in the light of the silver lamp. The
incongruence of the sight diverted Anvar, concentrating his wayward thoughts
upon this strange here-and-now; and to his relief the scene before him
steadied, and his flesh became solid once more.
The old
man turned back to the grove and bowed low, three times. To Anvar's surprise, a
path appeared between the ancient, hoary trunks, as though the trees had
accepted them and stepped back hastily to allow their passage. Anvar, awed and
not a little afraid, followed his guide, passing through the archway of living
wood into the heart of the grove.
In the
center of the ring of trees, cupped in a circle of soft, mounded moss, was a
pool—the very womb of this magical place. Though it was overhung by protective
branches, not a leaf marred its still, dark surface. Anvar followed his strange
guide to the brink, looked down—and recoiled in astonishment, stepping back
hastily. Instead of reflecting his own face framed by the lacework of branches
above, the waters, of un-guessable depth, held nothing but endless starry
infinity! Anvar's head reeled. His heart pounded, as though trying to beat its
way out of his chest. He had the utter conviction that if he should fall into
those waters, he would be falling forever . . .
The old
man gave a long-suffering sigh. Then, to Anvar's horror, he gestured firmly at
the terrifying pool—and spoke at last, his voice as dry andaead as graveyard
dust stirring on the chill winds of midnight. "Never believe that Death is
merciless. Now comes the second part of the bargain. But remember, the third
time will decide all . . ." With that, he vanished.
Anvar
spun, looking around wildly, knowing in his heart that it was hopeless. His
guide had gone. The only thing he understood was the clear edict to return to
the pool. He hesitated, afraid to go near that dizzying brink. As though they
had somehow sensed his reluctance, the trees began to shudder with anger as a
hissing echoed through their branches.
Hastily,
Anvar returned to the pool, and the tumult of the trees died away. As he drew
near it, spars of light flashed and flared from the darkness of the glassy
surface, making him flinch and shield his eyes. He approached with trepidation
and
AUR1AN •
561
knelt
upon the brink, feeling more secure that way. It was as well that he had. The
starry universe within the waters was spinning in a furious whirlpool of light,
dragging him down, down into its dizzying vortex . . .
Anvar
felt himself leaning perilously out over the pool, his nose almost touching
that spinning surface. He was overbalancing . . . Unable to draw back from the
hypnotic whirling, he dug his fingers deep into the yielding moss of the bank,
pushing backward with all the strength of his rigid arms. He blinked as a fiery
speck, rare and brilliant amidst the swirling whiteness, came spinning up
toward him from the depths. The spark enlarged; resolved itself; took on
glowing shape and form ... A cry ripped from Anvar's throat. He was flung
violently backward as a figure erupted from the waters, showering him with
crystal drops that burned like fire. A despairing voice called his name as
Aurian struggled and thrashed in the center of the pool, fighting with all her
strength against being sucked back down into the whirling nothingness.
"Aurian!"
Memory returned to Anvar in a shocking flash, and with it confusion. Where was
the oasis? But there was no time to wonder. The Mage was weakening, dragged
down by a great black burden larger than herself—Shia. Anvar knew somehow that
if he entered the pool it would mean the end for them all. He stretched out as
far as he could, leaning out to the utter limits of his reach. Aurian's wild
flailings made it difficult —he missed her once, twice. Although she still
seemed to be wearing her desert robes, as was he, there seemed to be nothing he
could get hold of. "Your hand," he yelled at her, praying that she
would hear. "Give me your hand!"
He saw
her shift her grip on Shia, saw the whiteness of the arm that she flung out
toward him. He plunged perilously forward, made a wild grab, trying to fling
himself backward as he felt his fingers close around her wrist. The combined
weights of Aurian and the cat dragged at him, he felt himself slipping . . .
Anvar flattened himself against the ground and hung on with all his strength,
his arm strained to breaking point. If he could have used both hands— But the
other was still anchored deeply within the soft moss, the only thing that was
stopping him from following theJWtage into the pool. Deeply rooted as it
T
had
been, Anvar could feel it beginning to crumble beneath his fingers, beginning
to tear away and—
As the
moss gave completely, plunging Anvar forward, a I hand came down out of
nowhere, clamping his wrist like eagle I claws. Long, jagged nails bit into the
thin skin, crushing tendon and bone and making him cry out in agony, but he did
not relinquish his hold on the Mage. With an effortless twitch, the hand flung
him clear of the pool, and Aurian and Shia with him. Though it had let go of
him, Anvar could feel the imprint of the ghastly hand scorching his flesh. His
skin was bloodied and torn where the nails had scored deep, crescent-shaped
gouges. Biting his lip against the pain, he rolled onto his back —and his heart
contracted to a ball of ice as he looked up at the scarred and ravaged face,
the burnt-out sockets that had once held the terrifying gaze of the Archmage!
Miathan
was robed in black, and his face was hideously disfigured. The skin around his
empty eye sockets was blackened and cracked, suppurating and showing nauseating
glimpses of red flesh and the white skull beneath. And set into the dark hollow
of each socket was a faceted gem. The jewels burned with a glaring light—now
white, now red—giving his skull-like face the soulless menace of a gigantic
insect. But it was his smile, most of all, that struck terror into Anvar's
heart. Aghast, speechless, Anvar was paralyzed by that face, and its expression
of gloating evil.
A hand
grasped his^shoulder. Aurian was using him to pull herself to her feet,
trying'to put him safely behind her. Her eyes burned silver with hatred. Anvar
could feel her fear in the slight tremor of her fingers, but it did not show in
her face. Shamed by her courage, he tried to rise, but the Archmage made a
contemptuous flicking gesture with his fingers. His crystalline eyes flared
with unholy light, and a bolt of searing blackness lashed across Anvar, hurling
him down again in gasping agony.
"How
dare you!" Aurian stood defiantly before Miathan, and her voice thundered
forth like a landslide. "It is forbidden to use magic in the Place Between
the Worlds!"
The
Archmage's laughter rang out, cruelly mocking. "Fool! You quote the Law of
Gramarye at me, who taught you all you know? I dare ANYTHING \" His clawed
and bony hand
lashed
out, flinging a whiplash of blackness at the Mage. She gave a cry of pain and
doubled up, crumpling to the ground.
Though
his eyes were gone, it was plain that the Archmage was using the arcane magic
of the jewels to give him sight. The cold, hideous glitter of his empty gaze
swept across Aurian and Anvar, and on his ghastly face was a contemptuous
sneer. "That's better," he said. "Grovel before me—where you
belong!"
Aurian
pulled herself to her knees and spat at Miathan's feet. "I'll never grovel
to you, you piece of filth! But one day I will kill you, you have my word on
that!"
Miathan
laughed again. "Really?" he sneered. "I doubt it —helpless as
you are with Forral's brat in your belly! You'd have done better to submit to
me, girl. You would have had power at my side, as much as you wanted! Instead,
you are nothing—a hopeless fugitive crippled by a half-Mortal abomination.
Without your powers you're as helpless as a beggar woman, and like any street
whore, you'll be ripe for the taking of any man who passes—including this
cowardly, bastard scum!" He turned to Anvar, his voice curling with scorn.
"You will have what you wanted now, eh? Her powers have gone, Anvar, and
your long wait is over. Who knows, she might even like it; she seems to enjoy
defiling herself with Mortal offal such as you!"
Miathan's
persuasive voice had the power to hold its victims in thrall. Anvar looked at
Aurian, helpless before him, and felt his long-suppressed desire beginning to
stir. He heard Aurian gasp; the fear and sudden doubt in her eyes pierced him
like a sword as he realized that they had been tricked. He glared at the Archmage,
his mind cleared by the scouring of his anger, which burned like an icy flame.
"I
am no Mortal, Miathan," he said evenly, "as well you know. I regained
my powers that you stole. And you need not project your lusts on me; the Lady
knows full well which of us wants to defile her—and which will protect her!
Aurian may be helpless, but if you come near her, you'll have me to reckon
with!" But Miathan had the Caldron, and Anvar's words were empty, and he
knew it. Even so, he saw Aurian give him a grateful glance, tempered with a
grimace at the idea of needing
his
protection. It was so characteristic of her that it buoyed him, despite their
peril.
Miathan,
undisturbed by the failure of his ploy, roared with mocking laughter. "You
should have stuck to your earlier ambition of being a minstrel, boy. Already
you are affording me the amusement I expected. For know this . . ." His
voice turned suddenly hard. "I did not save you both from the Well of
Souls, out of the goodness of my heart."
"Too
right—you don't have one!" Aurian snapped. "Quiet!" His outflung
hand sent a lash of darkness cracking hard across her face. She staggered, but
refused to cry out, biting her lip against the pain.
Anvar,
boiling with rage where he had been cold before, tried to launch himself at
Miathan, but the Archmage froze him with a casual gesture, continuing to speak
as though nothing had happened. "I might have let you perish here, and
saved myself a good deal of trouble—had I considered you a threat. But I have
not finished with either of you. It would grieve me, Anvar, if your death was
painless and swift, and as for you, my dear"—he turned to Aurian with a
chilling leer—"I have other plans. Until we meet again in the flesh, you
can entertain yourselves imagining your respective fates, but for now,
farewell!" As the Archmage spoke his final word, the scene began to waver
and dissolve before Anvar's eyes. He closed them for an instant, to stop the
dizzy whirling, and when he opened them again, he was back at the oasis. A sickly,
sulfurous light lay over the dunes, as the sun struggled to pierce the ominous
banks of cloud on the horizon. I must have fallen asleep, Anvar thought. Gods,
what a nightmare! But at that moment Aurian's eyes opened, and in them was
horror, and a sick, sinking dread that matched his own.
Aurian
was unable to explain what had taken place at the Well of Souls. Her best
gue^ss was that Anvar had fallen asleep, and his anxious spirit, freed from the
fetters of the waking world, had managed to cross into Death's domain to reach
her. But his tale of his encounter with the Reaper of Souls, and the specter's
talk of a bargain, filled her with a vast disquiet. It seemed so familiar,
somehow . . . Surely, when she had won Anvar back from Death's clutches in Taibeth,
the Reaper had
said
something similar ... If only she could remember . . . And how had Miathan come
to be there?
Aurian
grimaced at the strip of dried meat in her hand. Her hunger was blunted by
guilt for having exposed herself and Anvar to the Archmage—and by the fear that
twisted her guts. Miathan had been right. Her powers, stretched past their
limit when they were at their most vulnerable, had utterly vanished, leaving
her defenseless. "Damn Miathan!" she muttered. "Why did he have
to come back now, at the worst possible time?" With an oath, she flung the
offending food away from her.
Anvar
reached out of the shelter and retrieved the meat. Dusting it off carefully, he
put it back into her hand. "Be sensible, Aurian. You need to eat," he
told her.
Aurian
looked at Shia, who was sleeping now, recouping her strength. The cat
remembered nothing of what had taken place, though she and Aurian had both been
Healed of their infirmities in the Well of Souls. What else could I have done?
the Mage thought. Had I not acted as I did, Shia would be dead. She prayed that
the price of Shia's life would not prove too high.
"You
did what you had to." Anvar's quiet voice broke into her thoughts as
though he had been reading her mind.
Aurian
took his hand. "Thank you for that. But we're in so much trouble now, with
the storm coming, and Miathan on the loose, and my powers gone." She
couldn't control the tremor in her voice. "Anvar, I'm scared," she
confessed. "Without my magic I'm so vulnerable. Now that Miathan has
recovered from my attack, anything could happen." Aurian shuddered.
"And what about the Staff? I don't think he knows that we have it, but if
he should find out . . . Anvar, do you remember the shipwreck, when he
possessed my body and tried to kill you?"
Anvar
nodded, looking puzzled at her switch of subject. Aurian took a deep breath,
dreading what she had to say. "What if happens again, now that Miathan has
recovered? Anvar, if he should get control of the Staff—"
"No!"
He was ahead of her now. "Don't say it, Aurian—"
"I
must. If I—if Miathan should gain control of me, you'll have to kill me, Anvar.
You'll have no choice—as I would have no other recourse if-k-shappened to
you."
"I
am not going to kill you! I won't!" Anvar's voice dropped to a horrified
whisper. "I can't."
Aurian's
heart went out to him, but she met his gaze without flinching. "I'm sorry,
my dearest, but you must. If Miathan gets the Staff, it will be the end of
everything—and better we die, than let him take us. You heard what he said, at
the Well of Souls."
Anvar
hardly heard her last words. He knew that the endearment had slipped out
without her being aware of it, but ... He fought to keep the jubilation from
his face, not wanting her to withdraw from him, as he knew she surely would.
Whatever she might feel for him, she was still grieving for Forral, and would
be stricken with guilt at the thought of replacing her childhood love. It's too
soon; give her time, he told himself, and prayed to all the Gods that the
Archmage would let them have that time.
Miathan's
chamber was dismal and chill. The blaze that he had left in the huge fireplace
was sunk to sullen embers clogged with pale ash, and the lamps were guttered
and dark. Dull light streaked through the curtains, announcing the dawn of
another grim day over Nexis. The Archmage's body lay on the bed, just as he had
left it, looking pale and gelid as a corpse in the dim, bleak light. His
hovering consciousness shuddered, and shrank from returning to this cold,
pain-wracked housing, but it had to be done. Miathan braced himself and plunged
downward, slipping back into his corporeal form with the ease of long
practice.
Entering
his body was worse than falling into an icy pool. Miathan swore vehemently,
steeling himself against the pain. Since Aurian had attacked him, he had
suffered the agony of his burnt-out eyes, and he knew it would never leave him.
With Eliseth's help, he'd discovered enough of the magic of the Drag-onfolk to
permit him to use crystals to give him back a form of sight, but the sharp
edges of the gemstones chafed the tortured sockets. Still, it was better than
living blind. He cursed that mad bitch Meiriel, who had refused to Heal him,
and that treacherous worm Elewin, who had helped her escape.
Miathan
reminded himself that lying here raging would bring him no nearer to his
revenge. He pulled his robes around
him and
hauled his creaking bones from the bed, though he was shaking violently from
the cold, and from reaction to the prolonged journey Between the Worlds, which
had so depleted his energies. Leaning on his staff, the Archmage hobbled to the
fire and threw on an armful of logs, deciding to let them blaze of their own
accord, rather than waste the last of his strength on kindling them by magic.
He filled and relit the lamps by hand, frustrated to impotent rage by the
fumbling efforts of his weakened state.
By the
time Miathan had finished, the room was already cozier. The fire snapped and sizzled,
dispelling the arid silence and sending tongues of orange flame over the
resinous logs to brighten the dank air with the tingling scent of pine. Warm
lampglow mellowed the dismal daylight, gilding the silver dish of bread and
fruit on the table. The Archmage turned to the food that he kept in his
quarters for his return from a journey beyond his body. He poured wine, with a
stab of irritation as he noticed that the flask was almost empty. Were Elewin
here, such an omission would never have occurred! But the Steward was gone, he
reminded himself bitterly, turning traitor as Aurian had done, Aurian!
Miathan's tongue slid over his lips at the memory of her falling before him,
tortured by the pain that he had inflicted. When he had her back in his power he
would teach her the true meaning of pain! Once he had broken her to his will he
would take her—and at last, he had the means . , , Smiling to himself, Miathan
sent out a mental call to summon Eliseth. He hated to confide in her, but there
were things she ought to know.
Eliseth
was in the Archives when she heard the Archmage's call. She cursed and pushed
her hair back from her face with a hand that was black with dust. What did the
old nuisance want now? Since that vermin Elewin had gone, Miathan seemed to
think she had nothing better to do than run around after him! And was he
grateful? Not a bit—even though she had found a cure for his blindness! Only
she had thought to seek answers in the moldering records stored beneath the
library, after the escape of Meiriel and Elewin had drawn her attention to
Finbarr's neglected catacombs. Bragar, of course, was too stupid to think of
making use of the awctent wisdom stored there, but Eliseth
had
realized that any extra knowledge might give her the advantage—not only over
Bragar, but over Miathan as well.
Eliseth's
searches in the cold, dirty tunnels had been far from pleasant, but the results
had been well worth the discomfort. While finding a way to restore Miathan's
sight, she had discovered much more besides, matters of dark and arcane lore
dating back to the Cataclysm, which the Archmage had no idea of—nor was she
about to enlighten him. She had found no solution to the problem of the
Wraiths, but she had unearthed a great deal of information pertaining to the
Caldron, and she knew how to make better use of it than Miathan had. She only
needed to find out where the old fool had hidden it ... Eliseth smiled as she
went to answer the Archmage's summons. His mental voice had held overtones of
triumph, and she was anxious to discover what he was up to—and how it fitted in
with her own plans.
Eliseth
listened, incredulous, as the Archmage told her how he had sensed the presence
of Aurian, Between the Worlds, and how he had tracked her to the Well of Souls,
and Anvar with her. The existence of another Mage came as a considerable shock
to Eliseth. "Aurian's servant? One of «j?" she gasped. "Did you
know about this?"
"No."
Miathan shook his head, but she knew that he was lying. "I had my
suspicions," he said. "I knew she must be getting help from
somewhere. But I hardly thought it worth mentioning—the notion seemed too
farfetched."
"That's
an understatement! How could he have been here at the Academy without us
knowing? Where did he come from in the first place? Who were his parents?"
Miathan
shrugged, his voice suspiciously bland. "Who can say? He came to us as a
Mortal, the son of a baker, but it seems that his true father was of a
different stamp. Anvar is a bastard —a half-breed with a Mortal mother—but as
to which of the Magefolk fathered him . . ." He shrugged again, the
picture
of
innocence.
Eliseth's
eyes narrowed. This is too glib, she thought. You know too much. Well, here's a
turnup! The great Archmai: prone as the rest of us to using a Mortal for
pleasure. But to 1 so careless as to father a child—no wonder you were upset
Aurian's pregnancy! There was no time now to consider wli
advantage
this might bring her. She turned back to Miathan, before he could see where her
thoughts were tending. "So where does this leave us? I don't understand
you, Archmage. Why did you not kill them, and be done with it?"
Miathan's
fist slammed down on the table. "How many times have I told you? I want
Aurian alive\"
Eliseth
bit down on her anger. Despite what the bitch had done to him, he still wanted
her! Concealing her rage, she took up the weapon of common sense. "But
with respect, Archmage, you're asking the impossible! Aurian is too far away
for us to capture her, and if you wait until she comes to you—Well, you said
yourself that the risk was too great. And alive, will she not always be a
threat to us?"
"Her
intransigence will be dealt with!" The gems in Miathan's eyes flared red,
betraying his anger. "Besides," he continued, with a chilling smile,
"Aurian's capture has already been dealt with. She and Anvar were not the
only minds I encountered in the Southlands. I have found one who, for his own
reasons, can be easily bent to my will."
"What?"
Eliseth was dismayed. She had underestimated the development of Miathan's new
powers badly, if he could already control Mortal minds with such confidence!
"Our
experiment using human sacrifices has worked out better than I had
expected." Miathan drew her attention back to him. "We can certainly
proceed, Eliseth—but I need more power, to keep my Southern pawn on a close
rein. Tell Angos that more Mortals will be required—tonight!"
"But
Archmage," Eliseth protested, "there is already unrest at these
'disappearances.' We must be more circumspect—"
"You
have your orders! Tell Angos to proceed at once!" Miathan's faceted eyes
gleamed. "I wish I had known about this sooner. With power gained from the
ritual spilling of Mortal life, nothing is beyond us! And I need that power,
Eliseth. Aurian is currently in the Southern desert, but when she leaves it, I
have a surprise for her! She will discover then what it means to defy the
Archmage!"
Eliseth
stormed out of the Tower on the wings of rage, sending the first poor terrified
drudge she found to summon Angos, Captain of Mercenaries, to the Academy. She
glared
after
the retreating servant, her fists clenched, her body rigid with determination.
Thus far/she would obey Miathan s orders,
but no
further. ,
"So
you're determined to bring her back, Miathan? she muttered. "Well, / may
have a surprise for J^' ^"l* swiftly she crossed the courtyard to the dome
in which she did her work of controlling the weather. So Aurian was in the
desert? Excellent! She would never come out alive! Smiling grimly, Eliseth went
to unleash the sandstorms.
Vxhapter 36
BATTLE IN
THE WILDWOOD
ate at
night, Vannor walked with his daughter Zanna, along the torchlit shingle beach
in the smugglers' great cavern. Fragments of shell crunched softly beneath
their feet, and the only other sound was a hushed, soothing sea song as the
waters lapped gently against the sheer walls at the rear and farther side of
the cave. The companionable silence was broken by Vannor's sigh. His reunion
with Antor and his daughter had been joyous, but the brief time spent here with
them had flown—and tomorrow he would be leaving again.
"Cheer
up, Dad." Zanna squeezed his hand, much to Vannor's chagrin. Why, he
should have been consoling her\ But his middle child, just turned sixteen,
possessed common sense far beyond her years. She was his favorite, taking after
him in all ways—including looks, unfortunately. He smiled at her, taking in her
sturdy, compact little body, her plain, pleasant face, and her brown hair,
pulled back from her face in no-nonsense braids. "I thought you'd want to
go with me," he said.
"You
should have taught me to fight, then, like the Lady Aurian," Zanna
replied. "The maidenly arts that caught my sister a husband are wasted on
me." She sighed, betraying her true feelings. "I wish I could
come—but I'd only hold you back. Besides, I'll be of more use here."
Vannor
put his arm around her, hugging her close to his side. "Well, you seem to
have it all thought out. Do you have any plans your old dad should know
about?"
Zanna
smiled, a secret little smile that added a new maturity to her face. "I
have, indeed, but you must promise to hear me out before you start
yelling!"
"All
right." The merchant wondered what she was up to.
Zanna
hesitated for a moment. "I'm going to marry Yanis."
"What?
Are you out of your mind? Over my dead body will you wed some base-born
outlaw—"
"Dad,
you said yould-jiear me out! You can't be choosy
now,"
Zanna reminded him. "You're an outlaw, too! It may not be what you want,
but don't you see the sense of it? I'm not cut out to be a merchant's wife, all
decorative and ladylike." She made a wry face. "Besides, you know how
merchants go for looks. You can't afford a dowry that would tempt one to take
me—and I'm needed here. Yanis has been struggling since he took over. Oh, he's
brave, and full of ideas, but he doesn't know how to plan\ But I do—I'm not
your daughter for nothing!
Vannor
gaped at her, astonished and—reluctantly—impressed. "But he's twice your
age!" he objected.
"Not
even thirty," Zanna corrected swiftly, "and you have no room to talk
about age differences!" Vannor flinched, knowing her vehement disapproval
of Sara, and changed the subject hastily. "Was this his idea?"
"Certainly
not!" Zanna was all indignation. "But Remana will help me. She thinks
it's time he married—"
"Hold
on! You mean Yanis doesn't know about this?"
Grinning,
Zanna shook her head. "No—but / don't p/an to let that stop me'. Dulsina
says—"
"Dulsina
again!" Vannor growled. "I might have known she'd be in this
somewhere!" He tried to quell the fond smile that was creeping over his
face at the thought of his indomitable housekeeper. When he was outlawed,
Dulsina had insisted on accompanying him into the sewers, where she had proceeded
to organize and mother his ragtag band of rebels, learning to shoot a bow and
wield a deadly knife in the process, with the same calm interest tharshe would
have shown in trying out a new recipe. Now she had come with him to join the
Nightrun-ners, and was reorganizing the lives of his family again, as though
she had never left off.
Vannor
shook his head. "Dear Gods!" He suddenly found himself ceasing to
worry about his levelheaded daughter. His sympathies swung instead toward the
unsuspecting leader of the smugglers. Poor Yanis didn't stand a chance!
"Come
along, Dad." Zanna tugged at his arm. "Here comes Parric, with the
others. It's time to say goodbye."
"And
that's another thing—" Vannor began—and shut his mouth abruptly. He had no
right to burden his daughter with his doubts about Parric's pigheaded
insistence on traveling south, in search of Aurian. He should be coming with
us, to the
AtlRIAN •
573
Valley,
Vannor thought. Even supposing the Lady will help us, how will I set up a rebel
base without his help? It's all very well to say I'll have Hargorn to help me,
but the man is a soldier, not a strategist! I just don't have the military
experience for this —and Parric is going off to get himself killed for nothing!
The
Cavalrymaster came out of the opening that led from his lodgings, and smiled to
see Zanna with her dad. He was glad the little lass had come to say
farewell—he'd grown right fond of her. Why, if he'd been a few years younger .
. . Parric stifled the thought. Vannor wouldn't stand for a randy soldier
tumbling his favorite daughter! Besides, her attentions were fixed
elsewhere—and good luck to her. Yanis wasn't bright, but he was a handsome
catch, and Parric knew whose hands would hold the reins of that marriage! He
chuckled, wondering if she'd had the chance to break the news to her father. By
the stunned look on Vannor's face, it seemed she had. Sure enough, as he
approached, Zanna gave him a sly wink behind her father's back. Parric fought
to keep a straight face, feeling absurdly pleased that the lass had chosen to
confide in him. Even if it did imply that she saw him in a more fatherly role
than he liked . . .
"Better
get a move on!" Idris, the weatherbeaten, pinch-faced captain of the ship
that was to take them south, hailed them from the deck of his vessel. "The
tide won't wait, you know!" Parric grinned and made an obscene gesture at
him, before turning to Vannor.
The
merchant looked troubled, as he had done since the Cavalrymaster had first
broached what Vannor called "this crazy scheme." Parric decided to
beat him to it, for he had no time to argue the whole thing out again.
"It's all right, Vannor," he said firmly. "You'll manage, and
I'll manage—and I'll be back as soon as I've found Aurian."
"//you
find her," Vannor muttered doubtfully. "You have no idea how big the
Southern Kingdoms are—not to mention the hostile, warlike nature of the
Southerners!"
"But
that's why Aurian needs my help . . ." Parric might as well not have
spoken.
"Added
to that, you've saddled yourself with an old man and a mad Mage," V§njnor
went on, but to Parric's relief, he
shut
his mouth hastily as the old man and the mad Mage came over the sands toward
them with Sangra, who had refused to be left out of the expedition.
"Ready
to go?" the warrior asked cheerfully. Parric could have kissed her—but
that could wait. "Get them aboard, love," he told her, "I'm just
coming." He turned back to Vannor. "You're right about one thing—I
wish we could have persuaded Elewin to stay behind. The journey here took it
out of him, and he's in no fit state to go traipsing around the South."
Vannor
shrugged. "Meiriel will be in good company— you're all bloody mad! I don't
know why Elewin is so sure that he's the only one who can take care of
her—she's been lucid enough since she came with us." Suddenly his gruff
reserve broke, and he flung his arms around Parric with tears in his eyes.
"I'll miss you, you idiot," he muttered. "Take care of
yourself—and for the sake of all the Gods, come back safe."
"Count
on it." Parric returned the hug, his own voice choked with emotion.
"Don't worry about commanding the troops, Vannor. They know their
business, and they'll keep yon right. Besides, once you've found Eilin, she'll
give you the help you need. I'll be back before you know it, and what's more,
I'll bring that wife of yours with me."
"I
hope so, Parric, I truly hope so."
The
following evening, Vannor stood with Dulsina and Zanna on the grassy clifltop
as the pallid sun set over the hills behind him. The air was chill with the
unnatural winter that had lingered this year, but the view was glorious. Below
and to his right was a pale sweep of crescent beach, embraced by cliffs and
cradling the calm, shining sea. Some half-league distant on the opposite horn
of the crescent was a green knoll, crowned by a stark and sinister standing
stone. Directly below the merchant's feet, a vee-shaped niche hid the
beginnings of a narrow crumbling path that descended the cliff. Apart from the
secret tunnel for the horses, this perilous, well-guarded ledge was the only
landward access to the smugglers' stronghold.
"Having
second thoughts?" Yanis approached, panting from his climb up the steep
path. "You ought to," the smuggler went on. "Why take your folk
inland, Vannor? It's safer here,
AURIAN '
575
and
you're welcome to stay. Your children are brokenhearted that you're leaving
them again."
"That's
what I've been telling him," Dulsina put in.
The
merchant sighed. "This place is no good to us as a fighting base, Dulsina,
as you very well know! All these objections are only because I wouldn't let you
come!"
Dulsina
shrugged, and raised an eyebrow. "Your mistake, Vannor," she said
serenely. Vannor scowled, wishing they would leave him alone. It was bad enough
parting from his children again. Tney were all he had, now . . . Nonsense, he
told himself. Sara is with Aurian, and she'll be all right . . . And Parric had
promised to bring her back. Vannor hated to admit that this was really why he
had allowed the Cavalrymaster to talk him into his crazy scheme.
"Anyway,
Yanis," he said, picking up the thread of the conversation. "It's my
children and your people that I'm thinking of. They'll be safer if we're away
from here."
"But
the Valley has an evil reputation now," Yanis protested. "They say
the Mage Davorshan was killed there."
"That's
exactly why I'm going! Davorshan's death was no accident, I'm sure. After what
happened to Aurian and Forral, the Lady will protect us—you can count on
that."
"But
the risk in getting there! Angos is combing the countryside looking for
you!"
"We'll
be careful. And the Valley is a far better base for us —more central, and
nearer the city."
"That's
what worries me," Yanis said glumly. "Well, I'll let you go. If we
hear any news of Parric in the south, I'll try to get word to you. The Gods go
with you, my friend. And don't worry, I'll take care of your children."
"Goodbye,
Yanis—and my thanks for all you've done," Vannor told him, reflecting that
in the case of one of his children, it might end up being the other way around.
"Take
care of yourself," Dulsina told the merchant, "since I won't be there
to do it for you!" she added tartly.
"Goodbye,
Dulsina." Vannor hugged her. "Take care of Zanna for me, won't
you?"
"As
if Zanna couldn't take care of herself!" the housekeeper snorted.
"It's you idiot men I'm worried about!" With that, she left him to
say his farewells to Zanna.
But
there was little need for words between father and daughter. They had said it
all already. "Don't you dare marry that smuggler of yours before I get
back!" he teased her gruffly. "That's a wedding I don't want to
miss!"
Zanna
hugged him. "Then you'd best get a move on, Dad." She looked up at
him through her tears. "I don't plan to wait forever, you know!" For
a long moment they looked at each other. Zanna bit her lip, and her arms around
him tightened. "Bye, dad." She whirled, and was gone.
The
merchant turned away, back to his waiting rebels. Perhaps it was the confusion
of the departure, perhaps it was the tears in his eyes—but he never noticed
that he was one man short.
As soon
as Vannor's troop had vanished over the nearest rise, the gorse that concealed
the horses' tunnel parted. Zanna emerged, followed by Dulsina, dressed in
warrior's gear—and the grizzled veteran Hargorn, carrying two packs. He looked
at them and shook his head. "The Gods know why I let you talk me into
this," he sighed. "Vannor will have my bollocks off— Begging your
pardon," he added hastily, to a frigid look from Dulsina.
Zanna
grinned. "It's because you love us," she teased him. "Are you
ready, Dulsina?"
The
housekeeper smiled wryly. "I hope my old walking muscles come back
quickly," she said dubiously.
"With
respect, ma'am, they had better!" Hargorn snorted. "We can't afford
to let you slow us up—and you'd better hurry, if we want to catch the others
now! Vannor won't notice if we slip in quiet, at the back."
"Don't
worry, Hargorn. If Vannor can do it, then so can I. The man hasn't walked
anywhere in years!" With a hug for Zanna, Dulsina shouldered the pack, and
raised her eyes heavenward. "The things I do for Vannor," she sighed.
"The
things you do for love, you mean," Zanna murmured softly, as Dulsina
strode away into the dusk. Smiling, she began to pick her way back down the
cliff to find Yanis.
Where
in the Pits of Torment are we? Vannor wondered. The partings with his family
and friends seemed like a long-ago dream. The rebels had been wandering for
days on these bare,
AURIAN '
577
blighted
moors that stretched from the sea to Eilin's Vale. Because they had been forced
to keep to the winding valleys for concealment from the searching bands of
mercenaries—far more numerous than Vannor had expected—they had soon become
lost. And now they were doubly lost in this pitch-black nighr, for clouds had
dropped to the hills, shrouding them in a thick clinging mist that brushed the
merchant's face like cold cobwebs.
Vannor
curbed, as he'd been cursing for days. What had the Magefolk done to the
weather? By the calendar, it should be haytime going on harvest, and these
hills should be basking in sunshine, swathed in the vivid green of young
bracken and the cloudy purple of early heather, the sky a deep blue bowl filled
with the wild, bubbling joy of the skylark's song. But spring had never come
this year, let alone summer, and the land was withered and sere. People would
be starving now, Vannor thought. Those who had died in the Night of the Wraiths
might have been the lucky ones.
The
grim, wintry weather preyed on the merchant's spirits, sapping his courage and
hope. If only Parric were here, with his military skills and unquenchable
spirits! He wouldn't have got them lost in a fog! If they had had horses, instead
of having to make this slow and winding journey on foot, they could have
reached the sanctuary of the Valley days ago! But there were no horses to be
had. The smugglers had not had enough to supply them, and most of the others
had probably been eaten already, Vannor suspected. Parric had trusted him to
take care of the rebels—and a fine mess he was making of it! "I'm no good
at this!" he muttered helplessly. "Oh Parric, why did you have to
go?"
In
desperation, Vannor had left his band and crept to the top of this hill, hoping
to pierce the mist that lay in the Valley like a deep gray river. But it was no
good. Even up here, he could see nothing. "Fional? Hargorn?" he
whispered to the scouts who had accompanied him. There was no reply. Confound
them! Had he not warned them to stay close? Sound carried in fog, and he dared
not call out to them. The hills were alive with Angos's soldiery. If they were
lost, there would be no chance of finding them_JTL this murk. Angry at their
stupidity
and
worrying about their safety, he set off down the hill to rejoin his troop.
Vannor
had walked for some time before the dreadful truth dawned on him. His scouts
were not lost—he was! He had reached level ground long ago, sure he was heading
the right way—but there was neither sight nor sound of the rebels. Van-nor's
heart began to thunder, and a clammy sweat trickled between his shoulder
blades. When he had been sure he was heading in the right direction, he'd been
all right, but now . . . The cloying mist swirled around him, confusing him
beyond all hope of finding his bearings. Vannor choked on panic. Was the ground
really level beneath his feet? Was he moving in the wrong direction, and
heading straight into the arms of the enemy? He fought a desperate battle with
himself to keep from running blindly into the darkness, fleeing from the fear
that threatened to consume him . . . With an effort, Vannor got hold of
himself. Steady, he thought. Calm down, you fool. What would Parric have done
in this situation? He wouldn't have got himself lost, for a start—but that's no
comfort!
He
stopped and took a swig from his waterflask, wishing it contained the fiery
liquor he used to keep at home. What now? He could wait here until the mist
cleared or dawn came, whichever happened sooner. Or he could try to retrace his
steps, in the hope that he would blunder into his troop. He knew the most
sensible course was to stay put, but the cold was piercing and inactivity
galled him, forcing his mind into futile imaginings. Was that a
sound?"t)ver there? Or that way? Was it his people? Or the enemy? Again
and again he was on the verge of racing after illusory noises, though common
sense told him that he risked losing himself even more completely on these vast
stretches of moorland. In the end, with his nerves frayed to breaking, Vannor
gave up. Better to be moving, he decided, to try to retrace his steps. At least
that must surely bring him closer to his people. Turning himself carefully to
face back the way he had come, Vannor set off again into the fog.
Damn
and blast it! The tilt of the ground beneath his feet and the strain on his
thighs were no illusion. For some time, Vannor had been wandering uphill
again—a hill far steeper than the one he'd climbed before! How could it have happened?
He'd been so careful! Dismayed and disgusted with himself, the
AURIAN '
579
merchant
sat down heavily and put his head into his hands. It was no good. Maybe he
could think more clearly if he rested a little.
Vannor
sat up with a jerk. It was still foggy but there was dingy gray light around
him, and he could see yellowish, withered turf for a few feet around where he
sat. He must have dozed! Then he heard again the faint noise that had awakened
him. From somewhere on the hillside above him, the sounds of fighting carried,
through the fog. His fear for his troops churning in his belly, Vannor
scrambled to his feet and ran, with drawn sword, up the incline.
The
steep slope seemed to stretch on forever, but the clash of battle was growing
in his ears. At last, Vannor saw vague, dark shapes ahead of him. Distance was
deceptive in the mist, and he was into their clutching limbs before he knew it.
Trees! Thank the Gods! There was only one place on this grim moor that boasted
trees. He must be near the edge of the Valley. But he could hear the fighting
ahead of him, its noise still undimin-ished. Flinging up an arm to protect his
face from the tangle of springy branches, Vannor began to force his way
through.
Flinging
caution aside, the merchant crashed heedlessly through the undergrowth until
finally he broke through into a clearing where the sound of fighting was loud
ahead. "Halt, Vannor—traitor and outlaw!" The voice was loud and
harsh. Vannor stopped, lowering the arm that obscured his vision. From the
trees came a ring of unshaven, flint-eyed mercenaries, bristling with naked
steel.
"Drop
your sword." The circle parted and Angos stepped forth, cold, callous
amusement on his face. "Some rebel!" he said, sneering. "You
never stood a chance, you fool."
Almost
of its own volition, the sword fell from Vannor's numb hand. He had failed his
people! Parric had been wrong to trust him! In the forest, the sounds of battle
faltered, and ceased. One by one, the rebels were pushed into the clearing,
their numbers fewer than before, the merchant saw with a sinking heart. Their
hands were bound behind them, and they were forced to kneel on the ground at
swordpoint. Vannor's gaze searched the demoralized captives, picking out
faces—until he saw one face that turjjed him cold with horror. There—un-
cloaked
and unmasked, her long black hair straggling across a bruised and filthy
face—was Dulsina.
A blow
from a mailed fist caught him hard across the face, sending Vannor staggering.
Through swimming eyes, he saw Angos, standing over him, grinning evilly.
"The Archmage wants you and Parric for questioning. If you survive, he has
a nice little public execution planned." His cold gaze flicked over the
captured rebels. "What, no Parric? Has the little runt abandoned you? Or
is he hiding elsewhere?" He shrugged. "If you know, we'll get it out
of you. If not, we'll find him, never fear. I don't think we need bother taking
the rest of this scum, though. It's not even worth notching good steel on them.
Archers—"
The
mercenary's voice was drowned in a thunder of hoof-beats. Before Vannor's eyes,
Angos jerked and stiffened, his chest exploding in gouts of blood as though
he'd been pierced by a sword. His body was tossed into the air, to land in a
crumpled heap several yards away. Pandemonium broke out among the mercenaries,
but before they could lift a sword or put arrow to bow, the trees around the
clearing came to life. Boughs and roots writhed forward, clutching them in a
deadly embrace. Thorny twigs gouged at eyes, and branches ripped soft bellies,
spattering the ground with offal and gore. Then, drowning the screams of agony
and the crack of breaking bones with their wild song of death, the wolves
erupted into the clearing in a seething mass of gray.
It was
over in seconds, though Vannor, taking in every detail of the hideous
slaughter, knew that he had seen enough to furnish himself with endless hours
of nightmares. As the wolves finished their bloody work, the frozen calm of
shock left him, and he fell to his knees, doubled over with vomiting and
moaning in terror.
Vannor
opened his eyes to witness what his numbed brain had been trying to tell him
for several minutes. The wolves and trees had known which people to take! The
bloody remains of Angos and his men were strewn across the clearing. Not one
had survived. But in the one clear space, the bound and terrified rebels
huddled together, wild-eyed and trembling—but totally unscathed! Beside them
stood the biggest of the wolves, alone now, for his companions had melted away
into the forest. He
AURIAN •
581
pricked
his ears questioningly at Vannor, whined—and wagged his tail!
Shaking
his head in disbelief, the merchant approached the wolf, his hand outstretched.
As he closed the distance between them, the animal backed away, his tail still
wagging furiously. Vannor picked up a dagger from the discarded weapons that
lay about the clearing, and having wiped it clean of blood on his cloak, he
began to free the others. "Nobody hurt the wolf," he warned in a low
voice.
"Nobody
hurt it?" someone muttered incredulously. "Nobody's going near the
bloody thing!"
There
was a swell of nervous chuckles from among the rebels, and their courage gave
Vannor the strength to take charge once more. He yanked Dulsina to her feet.
"You," he said sternly, "have some explaining to do!" He
glared at his assembled troops. "In feet, it took a conspiracy to hide her
all the time we were marching—so you all have some explaining to do!"
Everyone
looked at Hargorn, and the veteran shrugged. "Well, Parric was depending
on me to keep you right—and since you were trying to set up a permanent camp
without a cook and quartermaster . . ." He grinned. "I couldn't let
you make a mistake like that now, could I?"
Luckily
for Hargorn and Dulsina, an urgent whine took Vannor's attention away from the
miscreants. He looked around to see the wolf, still waiting patiently on the
far edge of the clearing. Beyond him, the trees had somehow moved aside,
leaving a clear path through the forest. The wolf turned and ran along the
path, then stopped, looking back over his shoulder at Vannor. The merchant
looked at his rebels and shrugged. "I don't know what you think, but it
looks to me as though we're being welcomed."
As the
weary rebels followed the wolf toward the sanctuary of the Valley, D'arvan
closed the ranks of trees behind them, concealing their passage and all signs
of the carnage in the clearing. Maya was wiping her horn on the grass,
cleansing Angos's blood from the sparkling weapon. She looked wistfully at the
departing back of her dear old friend Hargorn, and gave a sad little whinny.
D!acv£n knew that she wanted to follow her
former
companions—and he knew how she felt. He laid a comforting arm across the
unicorn's warm, gleaming back, wishing the men could see him—wishing that he
could talk to them, and tell them they were safe. He longed for companionship.
The forest was proving a lonely place for its Guardian—and it must be worse for
Maya. "Well, my love," he said to the unicorn, "Hellorin told us
to shelter the enemies of the Archmage —and I can't think of anyone better than
our old friends from the Garrison. And others will come in time. It may not be
much of an army yet, but at least we've made a start."
It was
dusk by the time the tree had been felled and stripped of its branches. Parric
watched from the rainswept beach as it was towed to the crippled ship by rowing
boats. "Well, that's it," Idris said. "We'll be off now, Parric,
and do our repairs as we go." He looked heartily relieved to be leaving
this desolate place.
"But
surely you'll stay until the new mast is in place," the Cavalry master
protested.
"Not
a chance, mate. Take you to the South, Yanis said— and that was all. I'm not
stopping here until the bloody Horse-lords come, thank you very much! From now
on, you're on your own." He spat into the sand. "Besides, I've my
crew to think about. I've never seen such storms at this time of year. No, I'm
running for home, and grateful."
"But
you know these people ..."
Idris
raised his eyebrows in astonishment. "Who told you that? We trade with the
Khazalim, farther south—we don't know this lot at all. Bunch of savages, or so
I've heard!"
Parric
took a deep breath, counted to ten, then swearing a vile oath, he grabbed the
smuggler captain by the throat. "Then why the bloody blazes didn't you
take us to the Khazalim?" he grated. Idris freed himself with a struggle
and stepped back hastily, giving Parric a dirty look as he straightened his jerkin.
"Because," he said, "I'm not going any farther south in this
weather—and I'm not taking that bloody Mage another inch! She's been a pain in
the arse all the way here, and she's nearly had the crew in mutiny, with her
orders and complaints! Besides, her sort are bad luck—look at the storms we've
had, if you doubt it! I'm sorry, mate, but she's all yours—and I
AURIAN •
583
wish
you luck:with her!" With that, he got into the last boat. His men rowed
away, fighting the boiling surge of the breakers, and leaving Parric fuming
helplessly on the shore.
"Parric
. . ." Sangra interrupted the Cavalrymaster's heartfelt swearing. Taking
his arm, she drew him away from the others. "Cursing won't do any good,
love. We must get the supplies they left us under cover, and Elewin needs a
fire. He's in a bad way."
Parric
nodded, knowing that she was right. During the unending misery of the storms,
the old man had almost died from cold and seasickness—and Meiriel had refused
to help him, haughtily insisting that it was not her business to waste her
powers on Mortals.
They
found an overhang—it was too shallow to be called a cave—among the rocks of the
cove, and sent Meiriel and Elewin inside. Sangra began to haul the supplies
into shelter, while Parric gathered driftwood. Looking at the sodden pile, he
knew no Mortal could ever get it to light. And Elewin looked terrible. The
Steward huddled, wracked with coughing, in the back of the shelter. Seeing his
gray fitce and bloodless lips, Parric felt a pang of alarm. Remembering
Aurian's talents, he suggested to the Mage that she use her magic to light the
fire.
Meiriel
looked at him as though he were a cockroach—a particularly stupid cockroach, at
that. "I can't do Fire-magic," she declared. "I'm a Healer, not
a Fire-Mage."
Something
snapped inside Parric, He leapt forward, seizing the Mage and twisting one arm
up behind her back. With the other he drew his knife, laying the blade across
the exposed white skin of her neck. "If you're a bloody Healer, then do
your job," he snapped. "Heal Elewin now—or I'll slit your worthless
throat!"
"Parric,
don't move!" Sangra's quiet warning broke the tableau. The Cavalrymaster
glanced up to see several strangers blocking the entrance to the shelter. They
were warriors—there was no doubt about that. Their rain-darkened hair was long
on both men and women, tied back for battle in intricate braids. Though they
were small of stature, there was wiry strength in their knotted muscles,
witnessed by the great swords that they carried. They were clad alike in
jerkins and breeches of supple leather, and the men^were clean-shaven. One of
the women
stepped
forward, and spoke some words in a fluid, rolling tongue.
"That's
torn it!" Parric muttered. "I can't understand a bloody word they say!"
He felt his knife move against Meiriel's throat as the Magewoman laughed
harshly.
"I
can," she shrilled triumphantly. "She said put down your weapon,
Parric. She said that we're their prisoners." #
v^napter 37
CONFRONTING THE SPECTER
he
horse floundered, pitching Aurian forward and almost jolting her over its neck.
She reacted quickly, throwing her weight back in the saddle as she pulled on
the reins to help her stumbling mount regain its balance. Murmuring
encouragement, she patted the neck of her weary stallion, grimacing as her hand
came away coated in a layer of sweat and dust. Although the horse rallied
bravely at the sound of her voice, she knew he was at the end of his strength.
The Mage looked ahead, to where a line of distant mountain peaks marked the end
of the desert, and cursed under her breath. They had traveled all night and
dawn was breaking now, but those snow-bright pinnacles never seemed to draw any
closer. Aurian wondered whether they had any hope of reaching safety before the
horses dropped beneath them.
It was
the third night of their journey from the final oasis and the companions had
made the best speed they could, given the dreadful conditions of heat and
thirst. They had been able to carry little water, and had been forced to travel
at a slower pace than they would have liked, to conserve the strength of Shia
and their mounts. There had been one consolation, however. The sky was covered
by low, bulging swags of lurid yellow cloud that hid the sun and allowed them to
travel during fart of the day, although they were still forced to get under
cover at midday, when the light was at its brightest. Unfortunately, Aurian
thought, glancing up with a shudder at the ominous sky overhead, those clouds
presaged the coming of the storms.
Almost
as if the thought had spurred the treacherous elements to action, Aurian felt a
breath of hot wind stir her robes. Her hands tightened unconsciously on the
reins as she glanced across at Anvar. Though his face was hidden by the desert
veils, she saw him tense with alarm in the growing light. The wind was
strengthening, driving the rolling clouds across the sky with ponderous speed
and tattering their stacked towers to rags. Before the Mage's eyes, patches of
clear sky began to show,
I
forcing
her to squint against the glare of the sands that brightened faster than the
sunlight. Aurian bit her lip; fear like a fist clenched around her guts. It was
already too windy for a shelter —thin skeins of glittering gem dust were
snaking across the desert floor, threatening worse to come. "Run!"
Aurian had no need of Anvar's warning cry. She spurred her horse forward,
forcing her mount toward the safety of the desert's edge as fast as its weary
legs would move.
It was
not fast enough. About a league out from the edge of the desert the clouds
thinned and cleared, and the blinding disc of the sun burst forth. Aurian
clamped her hands over her eyes to shut out the agonizing glare as Shia's pain
seared into her mind. The horses screamed, trying to rear and bolt blindly away
from the source of their torment. The Mage wrestled with the reins, sightless
and disoriented, trying desperately to control her maddened, plunging beast.
She was pierced by terror that she must have lost Anvar—until his mount
blundered into her own, almost unseating her. Wild with fear, the horses ran,
keeping close to one another through herd instinct. Aurian hung on tightly,
trying to keep mental contact with Shia, to guide her friend's blind flight.
Through her link with the cat, she could sense Anvar doing the same, and prayed
that they were fleeing in the right direction.
Then
mercifully, miraculously, the white glare vanished, cut off as though it had
never existed. The horses stumbled to a halt, their limbs trembling. The
dazzling afterimages gradually cleared from Aurian's sightpand she saw Anvar
close by, looking over his shoulder, transfixed with horror.
The hot
wind tore in gusts at their clothes, whipping up stinging dust devils of the
sharp gem sand. And behind them, blowing up from the south and east and
obscuring the sun, great dark clouds were rolling across the desert floor from
horizon to horizon, gaining on them even as they watched,
"Sandstorm!" Aurian shrieked. "Run!"
They
ran. The horses, knowing instinctively what was behind them, put on a burst of
speed that astonished Aurian. Shia ran to one side, out of the way of the
pounding hooves. With her life at stake, she could run. But how long could she
keep up the grueling pace? How long could any of them? Could they hope to
outrun the wind itself?
Streamers
of sand swirled around them, already beginning to tear at Aurian's robes,
abrading the skin of her face as the sharp-edged dust worked its way beneath
her veils. The pain acted as a spur to horses and riders, speeding their
flight. Aurian caught glimpses of the way to safety ahead of her, appearing and
vanishing in the far distance through the shifting curtains of sand—a steep
cutting in a shallow cliff with trees growing at the top of it. Blessed,
thickly planted trees; ragged and ravaged by the desert, but enough to shelter
them from the force of the deadly storm. But they were too far away. As the
wind ripped the shreds of her veils from her blood-streaked face and her nose
and mouth filled with choking sand, even as Aurian was forced to close her eyes
on the vision of safety ahead, she knew it was too far. She could sense the
gloating malice of the Weather-Mage behind the power of the storm, and she knew
that Eliseth had won.
Anvar
sensed, rather than saw, Aurian falter, and hauled on the reins with all his
strength to pull up his crazed horse, looking wildly around for his friends. Of
Shia there was no sign, and he could not touch her mind. Twisting in the
saddle, he peered through shredded veils to see the Mage with her hands over
her face to protect her eyes, using her knees to control her mount with the
skill that was a hallmark of Fame's teaching. But this was no Northern
war-horse, trained to such methods, and he knew it was only a matter of time
before the panic-stricken beast went berserk and pitched her off. Pain clouded
his mind as gem dust scored his flesh through robes that were in ribbons, but
Anvar could feel Eliseth's triumph, and it goaded him to a towering rage such
as he had not felt since the night he snatched his powers from Miathan. Aurian
was powerless to counter the attack—if anything could be done to defend them,
it would have to come from him. Suddenly decisive, he leapt from his plunging
horse and flung the reins at Aurian, forcing her to drop her scoured and bloody
hands from her face in order to grab them. Ignoring her startled exclamation,
he whetted his anger on the edge of his fear, and wielding it like a sword, he
extended his consciousness as the Mage had taught him, flinging his power out
into the face of the storm.
Peace.
There was^sudden, blessed stillness within the en-
chanted
bubble of Anvar's shields, though the storm flung itself with increasing fury
against the shimmering, translucent barrier that surrounded himself and his
friends. He saw Aurian struggling with the frantic horses, her streaming eyes
fixed on him in astonishment. The ground heaved nearby as Shia emerged, shaking
gem dust from her coat in a glittering shower and sneezing violently. The cat
had had the sense to lie down and bury herself, so that the sands had given her
some protection from their own cutting force. That was all that Anvar had time
to glimpse before Eliseth flung the focus of her power at him in frustrated fury,
sensing his magic from afar.
His
shields were shattered from the force of her blow—the storm was upon them once
more! Grimly, Anvar closed with Eliseth, his consciousness straining to
confront the core of her will. He felt her recoil in shock at the identity of
her assailant, and used her hesitation to reassert his power, driving the storm
away from his friends. Eliseth struck back like a viper, but this time he was
expecting her, and his shields wavered but held. Their battle settled down into
deadly earnest as they waged a desperate struggle, their wills locked and
stalemated; Eliseth was unable to pierce his shields, while Anvar was forced
into a position of defense, too occupied with maintaining his frail barrier to
strike at her. The air around the shields crackled and hummed, glowing now red,
now blue with the stresses of the magical battle, and erupting into showers of
piercing white sparks. ""*•
Anvar
lost all track of time as the deadly battle continued. Though minutes or hours
might have passed, it felt as though he had been locked forever in this endless
combat, and as Eliseth's malice sapped his strength, he felt himself beginning
to tire. He was new at this game, unused to fighting with magic, but Anvar
gritted his teeth and held on, though his face contorted with strain and his
knees were buckling beneath the relentless force of Eliseth's will. If he
should falter now, they would be lost . . .
The
hand shaking urgently at his arm was an unwelcome break in his concentration.
Anvar's shields wavered, sagging ominously inward beneath the force of the
storm. Aurian was yelling into his ear, her voice shrill with strain as she
fought to
attract
his attention. "Drop your shields, Anvar! Drop them and strike, while you
still have the strength!"
He
shook his head despairingly. "It's too late!"
Aurian
muttered a savage oath. "Here—use this!" She thrust something into
his hand.
Anvar
felt a tingling surge flood through his body, coursing along his veins like
liquid light. The Staff of Earth! Struggling to focus its unruly new power, he
dropped his shields— and struck.
He had
failed—he knew it instantly. Air and Water, the elements of Weather-magic, were
foreign to the Staff, and so its power was limited. Anvar, inexperienced as he
was, used it clumsily, without the deadly precision that Aurian might have
commanded. The focus of his power was weak and uncoordinated, dissipating
before it reached its target to leave him exposed to attack.
"Dead
and buried, Anvar! Flayed, dead, and buried without trace!" Eliseth's
shrieking laughter mocked the Mage as she lashed back at him with the full
force of the storm. He dropped to his knees, bleeding and choking, mauled by
the gnawing teeth of the dust . . .
A
hand—groping—catching at his sleeve ... It found Anvar's wrist—then his hand
that still clutched the Staff. The hand clasped his own, tightening his fingers
round the serpent-carved wood. Then came the touch of Aurian's mind—not an
intrusion, but a tentative questing—a touch more gentle, more intimate, than
any physical caress. Though the Mage had lost her power, their minds had been
linked through the power of the Staff, which he had carved, and she had imbued
with magic. Ah, such closeness! Anvar knew, without question, what Aurian
sought. Gladly, trustingly, he surrendered his powers ro her, holding them out
for her, putting them into her hands.
"Now!"
Anvar never knew whether she had cried the word aloud, or simply into his mind.
She snatched his magic, wove it into the Staff's power, and forged it into a
shield. Such was the force of her act that the sand underfoot was blasted away
from them, leaving them kneeling in a shallow crater as the storm's fury ceased
once more.
Far
away in Nexis, Eliseth staggered backward as her magic rebounded against a
solid wall of power, recoiling against her like a physical blow. The building
shook as though in the grip of an earthquake and she was spun across the floor
of the weather-dome, colliding with the great map table and striking her head
as she feJl.
"Eliseth!
What's happening? I could feel the magic clear inside the Mages' Tower—"
It was Bragar. He lifted the dazed Weather-Mage to her feet, his shields
springing up to form a fiery wall around them both, protecting her from the
vicious backlash of magic.
For
once, Eliseth was genuinely glad to see him. "Aurian!" she gasped.
"She attacked me!" Bragar must not discover that she was disobeying
Miathan's orders—he was too craven to join such an overt rebellion, and she
needed his help.
"What?
But how?" Bragar wore his usual expression of perplexity. "The
Archmage said she'd lost her powers—"
"He
was wrong!" Eliseth was already gathering her scattered thoughts into the
beginnings of a new plan. Anvar she could defeat, but he and Aurian together
were too much. But if she could sunder them . . . And there was a way, she
knew: one weak link in Aurian's defenses that had always existed. But Eliseth
was not prepared to risk exposing herself again to the power of the two renegades.
Not when she had poor, malleable Bragar to do it for her! Turning to the
Fire-Mage, Eliseth gave him her most seductive smile. "I'm sorry, Bragar,
I didn't mean to snap. I'm so glad you'f? come," she murmured, "for
only you can help me now."
"Don't
worry, Eliseth, I'll protect you!" Bragar cried. Gods, he was so simple!
Chuckling inwardly, the Magewoman quickly outlined her plan.
"I'm
ready," Bragar cried. The Weather-Mage looked with satisfaction at the
sturdy, flaming barrier that he was maintaining with all his strength. If her
ruse should fail, then she, at least, should be protected from the
consequences! Sheltered safely behind the shields of Bragar's magic, Eliseth
turned her will back to Aurian and began to weave an illusion, and an irresistible
lure . . .
The
minds of Aurian and Anvar were still linked, through their clasped hands upon
the Staff. There was comfort in their touch, and strength. Aurian, not daring
to let go even for a second, used her free hand to wipe the blood and sand from
her face. Beyond their shield, the storm still ravened, though its impetus had
slackened now.
"We
didn't finish her, did we?" Anvar's thought came into the Mage's mind, as
clearly as if he had spoken aloud.
"No,"
Aurian replied. "We shook her—but she'll be back."
In
wordless communion, they reviewed their options. Should they risk dropping the
shield to strike at Eliseth before she could recover herself, or try to
maintain it for the length of time it would take them to reach the desert's
edge? It would be a long walk—their horses were gone, and would certainly be
dead by now. It was Shia who settled the matter. The great cat huddled flat to
the ground with her paws over her eyes, unable to function beneath the
onslaught of the magic that existed within their shield. She would never make
it, Aurian knew. She looked at Anvar, knowing that in that moment they reached
a decision, their minds in total harmony. They would fight.
Aurian
rose unsteadily to her feet, still clutching tightly to Anvar's hand, which
held the Staff. Once more she took up his raw power, and that of the Staff of
Earth, combining them with the skilled force of her will and feeling buoyed and
strengthened by the closeness of his touch. Abandoning the shield, she gathered
herself . . ,
And
froze. Through the drifting curtains of dust, a figure came walking—the
familiar, spectral shape of her lost love. Forral was calling . . . Spellbound
by the apparition, Aurian let go of Anvar, taking her hand from the Staff and
sundering their link. Unaware that she had left them at the mercy of the storm,
she moved like a sleepwalker toward the specter of the murdered warrior.
Shielding her eyes with her hands from the stinging sand and peering between
her fingers through its whiplash skeins she saw him moving just beyond her
reach as he had in Dhiammara, beckoning to her to follow him into the teeth of
the storm.
"Forral
. . ." The word was little more than a whisper. The Mage took a faltejiqg
step forward, then another . . .
I
Aurian
felt, rather than saw, that Anvar had restored the shield. As the sand around
her dropped and settled, he came from behind her with an inarticulate curse. A
rough hand grabbed her shoulder, pulling her back, and he barged past her, blocking
her view of Forral's ghostly form. "No! You can't have
her!"
he howled.
"Let
me go!" Aurian shrieked. "Forral, wait!" As she struggled with
Anvar, the shield faltered once more, then held, but though he was burdened by
the need to keep up their only defense, he still held her back. "You had
your chance!" he shouted at the specter. "Aurian belongs with the
living! Get away from here! Leave us alone!"
"Aurian,
no\" Shia's mental voice was filled with anguish. From the corner of her
eye, the Mage saw the great cat struggling desperately to rise, and falling
back, defeated. But caught as she was in the lure of Eliseth's spell, even this
failed to move her. "Let go, damn you!" she spat at Anvar. She lashed
out, striking him across the face.
Anvar
caught her wrist, so tightly that Aurian gasped with pain. The side of his face
was branded with the mark of her hand and his expression was tight with misery,
but his eyes burned. "That's the second time you've hit me for saving your
life. I thought you were over that nonsense."
"You
don't understand!" Aurian yelled. "I love him!" "I don't
understand?" Anvar's face was twisted into a tortured mask with the strain
of fighting a battle on two fronts, maintaining his shield off" the one
hand, while struggling to restrain the Mage. "Forral is dead," he
told her brutally. Aurian flinched, hating him in that moment, but his fingers
were locked about her wrist, preventing her escape as he smote her with the
unbearable, implacable truth. "He's dead, you fool, but you're alive—and
so is your babe. You have no right to rob it of its chance for life. This is
absolutely wrong, and you know it." Anvar looked straight into her eyes.
"I understand because I love you—and if I were in Forral's position, I'd
love you too much to want to kill you and our child."
His
bluntness struck Aurian as though he had returned her blow. Unable to deny his
words, she could only return hurt for hurt. "That's what this is about,
isn't it?" she retorted bitterly. "You want me for yourself—that's
all you care about! Well, /
don't
love you, Anvar. I hate you! Whatever happens, I'll never love you as long as I
live!"
Aurian's
words reverberated in the shocked silence between them. Anvar flinched as
though she had dealt him a mortal blow—then with a curse, he let go of her
wrist, almost hurling her away from him. "Go then, if it'll make you
happy. Follow your precious Forral into death! Kill your child, if it means
nothing to you! Run away from your responsibilities and abandon your
friends!" He turned away as if in scorn, but Aurian saw his slumped and
shaking shoulders, and knew that he was weeping. She looked yearningly at the
beckoning shade of Forral, but his face was suddenly eclipsed by a vision of
Anvar— the hurt in his blue eyes, the ugly mark on his face where she had
struck him. Aurian suddenly knew that if she followed Forral into death, she
would miss that face, and Anvar's loving and loyal presence, beyond all
bearing. But she loved Forral. To choose another over him would be an appalling
betrayal!
Yet
Aurian wavered, unable to take that last, crucial step. She knew that Anvar
loved her, and if she went with Forral, he would go through the same anguish
she had felt when the swordsman died. When she had saved Anvar's life in the
slave compound, their very souls had touched. He had clung to her hand then, as
though she were his only anchor on life. Sara had already betrayed him—how
could she do the same? Surely, after all they had been through together, she owed
him more than that.
Tears
flooded Aurian's face. It felt as if she were tearing out her own heart, but
she straightened her shoulders and faced the shade of Forral squarely.
"I'm sorry!" she cried. "I can't! I can't come with you!"
As her anguished cry tore the air, the spirit-shape flickered—and vanished.
Aurian
sank down in the sand, undone by her grief—but only for a moment. She had no
time now, to weep. Suddenly the Mage felt a new strength flooding into her, a
sense of freedom and a new maturity. She had made her choice. Life over
death—the future rather than the past—and whatever that future might hold, she
was committed to it now. "Get up, you ass," she told herself firmly.
"Anvar needs you."
Anvar
had turned his back on Aurian, unable to watch her go to her own death. Though
his vision was blurred with tears, he held firmly to the Staff, still using its
power as a shield against Eliseth's venom. He tried not to think of what was
happening behind him, knowing that he needed to concentrate on his defense
against the storm—but his heart betrayed him. In his mind's eye, he saw how it
would end. Aurian would penetrate his shield and walk out into the storm,
embracing death in her foolish pursuit of a vanished dream. There would be
nothing left of her. The sand would strip her to the
bone .
. .
The
Mage fought to master his anguish, but his will was weakening. If Aurian hated
him, what was the point of continuing the battle? It would be so easy just to
throw the Staff away, to drop his shield and walk after her, following her
beyond this last boundary, as he had followed her for so long . . . As he
finally abandoned all hope, the Staff fell from Anvar's fingers . . .
And was
caught by a hand that seemed to come out of nowhere—a strong, capable hand,
square-palmed, long-fingered, nicked with the old white scars of many battles.
A hand that could bestow either death or healing . . .
Joy
engulfed Anvar like a soundless explosion of light. Aurian's face was
tearstained and grim, haggard and haunted, but she faced him squarely, her chin
lifted in that old determined gesture that he knew so well. Rejoicing, Anvar
put his hand on hers, and ,felt an answering jolt of power as their wills
combined with the might of the Staff.
"Now,
we get the bitch!" Aurian's tight, swift grin was conspiratorial, and
through tears of relief, Anvar found himself grinning back as he offered up his
powers once more. Aurian seized them, dropped the shield, and struck.
Their
blow was impelled by a new strength, their wills a mighty weapon forged from
shared pain, and a new sense of purpose in Aurian's mind. With the power of the
Staff, it was enough. As their blow struck its target, Anvar felt a distant
echo of the agony that marked the death of a Mage. His shields brightened and
blazed, a sure protection now against the lethal gem sand—but there was no need
for them. The storm had vanished. Overhead, stars were shimmering in a clear
sky that
was
washed in the west by the glory of sunset. Anvar looked up, amazed. Hours had
passed in their struggle and the battle had lasted a whole day—but it was over
at last.
Miathan
had been away from his body in trance, resting for the night ahead, when he
would perform further acts of sacrifice to increase his power. He would be
spending a great deal of time away from his body in the weeks to come,
occupying the form of his new Southern pawn while he set in motion the forces
that would result in Aurian's capture. Confident in his own authority, he had
never realized that Eliseth might seek to thwart his plans.
The
final attack on Eliseth brought the Archmage sharply back to himself, jerking
him abruptly into his body as the bed began to shake beneath him. Disoriented
by the sudden transition back to corporeality, he staggered to his feet,
stumbling as the floor beneath him shuddered and lurched. With a deafening
bang, an explosion of blinding light in the courtyard outside shattered the
casements of his room, showering him with glass. With his ears ringing, Miathan
brushed off splinters and made his way cautiously to the window. The curtains
blew wildly, shredded to smoking tatters. He brushed them aside to peer out
—and gasped, aghast at the devastation. This was impossible! What had happened
while he'd been out of his body?
The
courtyard was choked with drifts of glittering sand, and the Archmage had to
fight his way through to the blackened shell of the shattered dome. Clawing his
way through the smoking rubble, he finally reached the ruined inner chamber—
and saw Eliseth kneeling over a black and twisted corpse, the scarcely
recognizable remains of Bragar. The stench of charred flesh filled the room,
and the Archmage fought down a wave of nausea.
"Aurian
. . ." Eliseth whispered. She was shaken but un-scarred. Bragar had taken
the full force of the blast, sacrificing himself in order to shield her. How
had she duped the witless fool into that? Miathan wondered, then put aside all
thoughts of the hapless Fire-Mage. Bragar had always been an idiot. But it was
clear that Eliseth had deliberately disobeyed him, and made an attempt on
Aurian's life.
Shaking
with rag£, ^Miathan turned his menacing jeweled
glare
upon the cringing Weather-Mage. Slowly, he advanced upon her, his fists
clenched at his side with rage. "What have you done?" he snarled.
"What have you done?"
Aurian
dropped the Staff and fell to her knees, trembling with exaustion and the
aftershock of magic. Anvar sank down beside her. "We did it," he
murmured, still unable to believe it.
"We
killed her."
Aurian
nodded. "I felt a death-pang," she whispered. Her face was bloodless,
and Anvar caught her as she began to sway. "I'm all right," she
muttered—her usual, automatic response— but she was trembling violently as she
lifted her stricken face to look at him. "Anvar, I—"
"Aurian,
after what you've just been through—after all the dreadful things I said to
you—don't you dare apologize to me," Anvar scolded gently.
"But
I—" Aurian's voice was choked off in a torrent of
wracking
sobs.
"Ah,
love . . ." Anvar gathered her into his arms, stroking her hair as she
wept. "My dear, brave Lady . . ," The magnitude of Aurian's decision
filled him with awe. She had been forced into a cruel choice—an impossible
choice—yet she had made it with courage, and if he knew the Mage, with complete
honesty. And having made her decision, she would stick to it. Even as he
comforted her, Anvar felt a crushing weight of worry lift from his heart. Ever
since the night of their escape from Nexis, when*TJhe had railed at him for
saving her life, he had been haunted by the fear that she would choose that
road in the end—would leave him to follow her lover into death. But now the
fatal crossroad had been reached, and the crisis safely passed. Aurian had chosen
life over death—had elected to stay with him, rather than follow Forral.
Though
he grieved for Aurian's grief, Anvar's spirits lifted like a joyous burst of
song. Oh, they had a long road ahead, to be sure. Forral had barely been dead
for half a year, and Aurian would still mourn him for some time to come. She
would continue to fight against loving someone else with all the strength of
her stubborn nature. Nonetheless, this was one battle that Anvar intended to
win—and now he possessed the strength and determination to match her own
indomitable will.
Anvar
smiled to himself. My dearest Lady, he thought, how much I owe you! First you
made a Mage of me, and now you've turned me into a warrior, too! And someday
I'll pay you back, I promise, by making you happy again. Anvar tightened his
arms around the weeping Mage. "Do you know what I would do if we were back
in Nexis?" he murmured. "I'd take you around every tavern in the city
and get you more drunk than you've ever been in your life!"
Aurian
looked up at him gratefully, swallowing hard, struggling to find her voice.
"It's—it's a long way back to Nexis," she said at last.
"We'll
do it," Anvar assured her. "And who knows, maybe we'll find you a few
taverns along the way!"
"If
we do, I'll definitely take you up on your offer," Aurian said ruefully.
Anvar
was pleased to see the flash of her old spirit beginning to return. In her old,
automatic gesture, she wiped her face on her sleeve, and he gave a mock sigh.
"You know," he teased, "I don't think I'll ever break you of
that revolting habit!"
Aurian
glared at him, on the verge of a scathing retort, and Anvar chuckled.
"Why, you . . ." she snarled, but her lips began to twitch in a
smile, and suddenly she threw her arms around him, hugging him hard, "Dear
Anvar," she murmured. "Thank you."
Shia,
forgotten in the heat of the battle, crept up to them, laying her head in
Aurian's lap. "You won a brave victory, my friend. I'm glad you
stayed," Anvar heard her say.
"We
both are," he added softly.
"My
friends," Aurian whispered, and reached out to caress the cat. She looked
at Shia, then at Anvar, and took a deep breath. "You know," she said
slowly, "in spite of everything. I'm glad I stayed, too."
Aurian's
hair was wildly tangled and full of sand; her face was filthy, tear-streaked
and abraded by the glittering dust; her clothes were a mass of rags. But to
Anvar, as he held her in his arms, she had never been more beautiful. There was
so much, in that moment, he wanted to say to her, but it could wait for the
future—the future Aurian, whether she knew it or not, had granted him at
last.__^
As dawn
began to glimmer over the jeweled sands, Aurian looked up from her trudging
feet to find that they had reached the end of the desert at last. Slowed by
weariness, the Mages and Shia had walked all night, praying that they would
reach safety before the sun rose. Though Aurian was footsore and tired, though
her spirits were shadowed by a lingering sadness, her heart felt strangely light.
I'm sorry, Forral, she thought, but I couldn't come with you—not yet. I didn't
believe you when you said it would be wrong to throw my life away in grief—but
you were right, my love. You were right. There is more to life than sorrow and
revenge. There is friendship, and hope, and new life to follow death—and maybe,
if fate is kind, I'll live to see your son take his own place in the world.
Aurian
halted abruptly, reeling with astonishment. Son? she thought. How the blazes do
I know it's a boy? But, she realized, she did. For certain. Stunned, she turned
her thoughts inward—to feel not just a spark of life, but a mind. A tiny,
unformed child-mind, but the mind of a person nonetheless— her son. For the
first time, he knew her—recognized her—and his small, barely focused thoughts
reached out to her trustingly, and with the uttermost love.
"Anvar!"
Aurian shrieked. Her thoughts were awhirl with an uncontainable excitement that
simply had to be shared with her dearest friend. He turned back to her, and Aurian
closed the space between them as though she, like Raven, were winged. She
hugged him tightly, laughing at his startled expression, her words tumbling
over one another in her anxiety to communicate the good news. "Anvar, it's
a son! I felt him! He knows me! I—he loves me, Anvar!"
"You
did? I mean, he is—he <&#? Oh, Aurian!" Anvar swung her around
until she was giddy, his blue eyes bright, his face transfigured with joy. And
suddenly, as if joining their celebration, a glad cry rang out from the rise
above them, where the edge of the forest met the desert. Blinking back happy
tears, Aurian looked up to see Yazour, with his arms around Eliizar and Nereni.
Beside them was the vast, familiar form of Bohan, his face split in a happy
grin as Shia bounded up the steep cutting to meet him. Aurian and Anvar looked
at each
other.
"Thank you, Anvar, for making me stay," Aurian said softly. In
answer, he smiled—that rare, wonderful smile that had always had the power to
touch her heart. Aurian reached out to him, and he took her hand. Together,
they went to greet their friends.
Miathan,
brooding in his Tower, flung his crystal away with a snarling curse, wishing
that he had never decided to spy on Aurian just then. How dare she be happy!
How dare she rejoice in that accursed swordsman's bastard brat! And with the
other abominable half-breed, of his own conceiving! Well, he'd have his revenge
on them yet. "Let's see you rejoice, Aurian, when you give birth to that
monster you're carrying," he muttered.
Still
muttering darkly, the Archmage went to retrieve the crystal, which had rolled
into the fireplace, chipping and scarring the marble hearth. All was not yet
lost, he consoled himself. He still had a weapon or two in his armory, and
Eliseth's rebellion had not interfered too badly with his plans. His revenge
would be all the sweeter for waiting—and this time, he would not fail!